StFINMCIALrANCIIOS!
N ANCHORJn financial matfers i as jmporfant
an anchor' for a craft at sea.,?; 'Some ' people just
drift through lifer TJiey. do not have an. anchor to t
Iholl them in a safe harbor. This in always ,ari ufl-;
satisfactory way of living. One of the anchors of life is an
active savings account with a strong, safe financial jnstitu
tionT Open an account with this bank and . provide for
joucseltan anchor-to windward.
4 Z PAID ON "SAVINGS
NEW BERN
BANKING & TRUST CO.
i -r -
His Speech Before the. Senate De-
,ctare& it & Product of Pro
i -tectiveThebry, -.
Senator Simmob" folvn homr and a
quarter, addressed the; Senate, upon , the
subject of reciprocal, trade with Can
ada.
AS SPRING ARRIVES
everybody gets the buildingfever,
and lumber sales jump aheiid.
But a rush of business does not
mean that we shall be at a dis
advantage in fulling your orders.
With our superb facilities fur
handling both large and small or
ders, we can serve you quickly,
and will pive you only the best of
pine lumber.
BEGIPRQCIH
'rteasmajj iyingstoner Cntif
: f Democrats XJet Control, ijji .'
Wahinpton.' Marah " 11 Armronria-
tion at the last session orCongrea ag
gTegated t,02B,489,662 according to the
statements Issued by former flepresert-
i tsiivea.Tawnev. of Minnesota., -end
UrdecTareJ titmseir opposed, to t 1 Livingston,-; of Georgia, who wenn
Broaddus c Ives Lumber Col
A COMPLETE LINE
EDISON PHONOGRAPHS ANI
SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS
IF INTERESTED CALL AND HEAR
LATEST RECORDS.
WILLIAM T. HILL
"THE SPORTING GOODS MAN"
Phone 53,
1
1
I
i
OF I
nronninn 1
ntfib
snxiv of thit M
I!
91 Middle Street g
upon the ground of -.iniquities' and dia
rirainatioBa.f'Hs refuted tha'auggfc-
tionof some that Reciprocity is a De
cratlc doctrine-He said from 'its in
ception -St has teen -regard f"aethe
handmaiden of protection; tthat;it ad
mirably fitted in with the protective
theory, but nd no place in a tariff for
revenue.-,- - o .
, He Bhowed that it had been repeated
ly endorsed in Republican 'iplattorma as
an aid to protection, while' the' Demo
cratic platforms' and handbooks had al
ways treated it as a part of the protec
tive system.
y Taking up the agreement he showed
that the articles covered by it imported
into this .countrjrfrom Canada in 1910
mounted to $17,000,000; 40,000,000 of
(biif ere the product of the farm, soil,
forest and our: fisheries practically all
of these products are put upon the free
list resulting in a loss i of over $4,1f0 000
in revenue The-othe'r $7,000,000 were
manufacture j products, largely the man
ufactureof farm products and. that the
duties on many of these are ncfw pra".-J
tically prohibitive and ths slight raduc
tions proposed in this agreement leave
them Mill urotective. $ i
He said it thereTore appeared that the
bill was about six-seventh fjeS trade
and one seventh protection, while the
principle of tariff for revenue, if recog-
hizfld at all, is recognize! only to a neg
ligible degree. Th ) Senator declared
himself opposed bath to free trade and
protection. He siid both views Were
bad and vicious. The Deraocratic par
ty, he declared, had never, been a free
trade party and never would be.
, He denodncei ths trert? because of
the discriminuions aeainst the farmers
and in favorof the manufactufeTfl, Thai j-j
while it put the farmer s product upon
the free list it did not reduce the price
of the manufactured things'hebad to
buy. He insisted if the products of the
farmer and land owners were to be put
upon the free lift to reduce the cost of
living, the manufactured things which
the farmer buy's and which enter into"
the cost of living should likewise be re
Juced. t. ' -'
cillio;i DOiiii:-:
feGOuGRESS-STiLli
Coutinae And
Will, .gays poo.-
spictively chairman and ranking Demo
crat of the House Appropriations Com
mittee the, last Congress. MrTaw-
nejp says this is less than.. Sl.000,0C0 in
excess ef the total etimate' f Pres
dent Taf t, on which the appropriations
are based, pays high tribute to the-Exe-
eutive for good faith in acrutin!zing es
timates and compute -that the Burpius
of revenues next year will nt be less
than $26,62,000,. which with any part of
the Treasury cash balance -may be ap
plied to the sinking-fund.
Against this, Mr.-Livingston says the
last session" record demonstrated that
until the Democratic perty comes into
complete .control of the" Oaverntaent
"this billion-dollar mark for a session's
appropriations, established four years
ago at the first session of the-Sixtieth
Congress, cannot be- substantially low
ered, if lowered at all."
Death of William t Hurtt. v
for Fau:;Ens
Craven County Educational V n4
Mr. William T. Hottt, ,of thi&, city,
died at,L S tewarl'd Sanatorium yester
day morning", March 11th, at the age of
64 years. . .
Mr: Hurtt was a son of the late Ma
jor Daniel W, Hurtt, formerly a resl
dent o( New Bern.
, The deceased was a Confederate Vet
eran and a member of the Knights of
Hrmony. . ;
Funeral services from . Centenary
Methodist church this afternoon st four
o'clock. Interment in Cedar Grove
cemetery.
PltES CURED IM 6 TO ,14 DAYS
PAZQ OINTMENT is guaranteed to
cure any case of Inching, BlJbd, Bleed
ing dr Prbtrndin? Pils"in"6 to 14 days
or money refunded. 60c. - - " "
AWNINGS
-j-
We have the agency for Hettrick
Bros., Awnings, both store and rei- .
deuce. If you jire In need of an Awa-,
ing we can furnish you.' Place your
order before the Summer rush.
Fit, Qtmliiy andJrice Guaranteed.
To see samples and get prices, call
phone 172, or addresa P. O. Box 446.
t i Tiimi-n r nfi ill!JJli1HIAi
wmamnauu
CARLOAD
BUCK'S
QTniw
UlUILU
A
N.
RANGES
l-l . 1 JLl ' ' 11
Co ppra'tive Tjofon1 Holds Its
An importint fathering- of the edo
catlonal interests of this section,- was
the' meetipg yesterday, at noon, t th
courf house of the Craven County BMu-
eational and Co operative 4Jehn. There
war about twenty members present,. -
The meeting wm opened b? nraver
ffered by Mr: Daniel- Lane of Belair
.and. the, feting ;then proceeded, tot dis
cuss various matter? ot importance.
The senae 6flhe meeting wasobe of r
gre.t at the failure of the legislgture to
pass the Torrenis land registration law
which Would tend to Increase all land
values arid add to the safety of loans. r
- ine estaDinnroent, oi county larm
high schools wSa strongly favored by
A." B. Whitford, of No. 2 township. A
committee was appointed to meet the
board of education of Craven county to
work for, the establishment -of this
school, and it was directed to j-eport at
the next' county meeting, and . meet
with the board of education on May li
In various parts of the-TState the corn
growing contest has created very 'great
interest,and world records have beeaes
tablished in the Carolines and on this line
it was advised that three acres be put
in corn, tha. object being not only
ti "raise a large amount of eorn,
but to produce the same at the
lowest cost. The . president 6f the
county union is D. P. Whitford, of Er-
nul, and A. R. Whitford, acting secre
tary. ' ,-" . t
' ' IM;
l.OOCT yds., of English long
Cort, worth 15c, will be on
sale today at 10c. The great
est bargain we have had for
somef time. J. J. Baxter.
Defeated, But Had a Good Time.
New Bern went to Klnston yesterday.
and played at baseball and tiiad a spell
ing bee, the contestants Deingvpnpils
J. 5. BASSICHT --BJ!DVVR- CO.;. mE WX II: t'
ELlWDODiFENCE
ti
'A
TakiQ np wheat he showed that-as
'oDg as it remains what nature and the
farmer's toil ha made it, it was made
from under this agreement, but tht
minute it entered the fliur mills and
was' converted into an eatable product;
it goes off the free list; likewise, -b&fleyi
when the farmer sold it it Is tree, as
the brewer sells it.'it is made ' dutiable;
live animals, as the (armor sells them.
are free, but as soon as.the packers
have slaughtered them their product
goes on the dutiable listvl '
He declared, aa in the ease oTpuUing
hides on the free liat the benefit "of any
reduction In the price of ; the farmer's
product would not insure to the contora-
er, but td the flour mills, packing hom
Lea and breweries. who would put the
f . - . l -i t i S . r .1 .'.t
Havma; in vuair pocnqia wiuvoargo um
consumerthe aauie ai reiora.jcJ
'. -He said while the 'standard price of
what was Axed Jo "urope, that ' price
was modified. I y the tircumstaneei and
eonditiooi ' surroondinff the- domestic
market and h.' showed that wheat
always Uom 10 W 15" cents bigner h)
AjDerican,thanvCinadian 'markets' bet
causa of modifying. local, conditions ip
these markets, tha Americao; producers
having W.OW,000 .domesUc .eoosumer
and the Canadians only about 8,UOQ,00oC
Ha. insisted If ".the price of wheat Jell to
Chicago and Minneapolis It Would fall
)flk!North Carolina, brcaus "the . Noftb
Carolina, ': price ,VU .I -the CLicaeo
prkf ."plua j tha ' freight; ; But "t"fce
sii J, W It trus some" toa'ead
td, tdat this ikgreemant would only ft?
duct the price of farm producU in the
territory near i the snaiaa- border.
Uina the accuring betifftta to the con-
the ciB8ntd to that terrltoiyi';
; He 'd on of the chief srgumrptu
!inftof of the treaty wa tht the con-
e,.oo.R.ven o ty vanndi wmiM ocn
tlio markets tl Dial country for our
ma:njlarluril pro liicU, Urw'rrn 1 to
hvtlprs from one or two tolti'm n i l rn-n
tf North Caiollns Mkinj him In tdlf
M lbs tr'.y upon I'm g' .un.-l l!
th'-y repili-d ' Wit i.jir.in 1 t'-t
It l wjuld t'.i-m tn i-rl ii i j ('..', 'a
i:h t'.nr p- ' I! I a I t -. i !
ithi.t- i.'''ir yr ' ' " -
the harvester trust would get $196,000,
the.automobile trust $96,000, and the
coal trust $544 JKW. In other worts.
these Jhree trusts would get about $760,
000 of the $1,025,000 of the remitted
duties. ,
v Be said the farmers and the land
owners would have to pay the price-of
these concessions' made Jn the interest
of these Jtrostt they "would have to take
less fortbeir products in order .that
these tiusts might . make-1 la-ge prfjfits
on their, Canadian sales.-. There , was
nothing, he said, in the relative profits
of tha farnefr and. the manufacturer
lhat justified the latter in asking the
farmer .to make the s sacrifices In or
der that bis brofits might be Increased,
especially, when tlose trust manufact
urers and oporators. are -telling their
prodacta to he Canadian xduspmer at
lesser rate Mum they charge the Ameri
can cbnaomerr j." i
. . . i . . .. ".. .
vit-ifatraue by wnicn we exchange
the domettie market of millions of Am
erican- farmers lor., a foreign market
mbetly for thee great trustee, r
': "Referring to the tfiiiand ficheerfr
larra nroaucu. be sstu the farmer waa
0 i getting ton much; for bit product
ne uhi am ge mucn ;pjvr; oo per enrf
of what the consumer had t pay. The
high eot of living " was- largely 'due to
tha big profit ef if)o middemeo, the
mn'ufcturer, Jobber and reUder of tha
from the graded schools of the two pla
ces,' and Kinston won out at both games
In the ban game New Bern showed
no form, being specially weak at this
bat. The score 20 to 2. -
'Ip. the spelling match, eight on each
side, twaaets of 25 minutes each, th
visitors hs'd 80 misses to Kinston ' 2L
The contest was at the school bulldiug'
with some 300 persona in tha audience.
Between forty and fifty went from here
and war treated splendidly by th Kln-
atoh people so that the twn defeata left
f arm? preducta, fColrar : .wheat; did not
ftyra; than kcover,xphaea, frTsklng
year m anl year out the cotton farms
bad bat Utile margin left In profits.
. tie lajd he wanted to see, tha rott of
Uvmz rducef. but we do not want to
make bread so cheap that wheat and
cim will not bring the cost ot prod'N
ton. . Do we wait to -see clothing
cheap that the man who raise .cotton
out of which they are mads cannot sup
port bis family in eonfort and educate
hie children! . ! , - r -r
-Already, he said the profits of manu
facturing and comntorce weri so much
more attractive than those "of farmin
that the farmers wr leaving the farm
for th town and the boys and girls the
plow am! h for the eolton ftiillit ami
tha atorra. . V.'e are jndinn; rniliiimi
iry, millions for gofd
no hard feelings,
Ward Committees, Notice.
TWWard CommitUes are called t
meet It the city ball (tomorrow)' Mod
da night at 8 o'eloek. for the purpoee
of naming a data for hsldlnj the city
primary, -
T. r. MCUAttiur,
" Ch'mn. of Com'.
4?
cs
NEW BERN, N.C
Bank
OyPA10.ON
b SAVINGS.
STRONG
COURTEOUS
PROGRESSIVE
PROGRESS.
' III whatever undertakittj you inay be engaged you
most be progressive in order to succeed. You will
r.need the services of a live, up-to-date' tank to assist
I jw m the transactoo of your financial affairs, and that
" requirement js mei in every respect if you associate
youfseUwitJi uii institution.
: Small and large accounts, either subject to check or
in our Savings Department, are cordially invited.
WM.DUNN
C.D.BRADHAM
. VICE PR EST.
TA.UZZELL
. CASHIER
SBhi
.M:Mmi mM itmrtJ
P
We'w just received our new
' Queen Quality ' styles or S faring
and they're beauties. V(fe did not
believe such footwear possible at the
firice. The makers have outdone
themselves. Smart, snafafry styles with
. jrlenty of comfort - and service just
"what you have been looking for. You 11
buyhere eventual-" ,0f to-day 9
J. J. BAXTER
ELKS TEMPLE, NEW BERN, N. C.
on rural fry
null, re '.t! '
a
1.
.il '. li t sr (rricnl(urai ro'i--
I H ) n '. i'l i -if rTnria ti ma'"! f.irn
r a a" .- f l.v, I -it a l'it rf s t!
of.ta of the farm rp small Our farm
1
I lhft
( .'1 1 -
I r
' r I
in dulH a
th tint r.
... :it r ' r.
. Al80 a full line Barbed Wire for he;.-, and cut!
Poultry '.Wire,; Rubber- Roofing, Paint a and O.'
; Sfovra and Ganges and 3 general line of 1
Write us or call, ve can ;ivc you n;;l.t prir
i fr
('
1 I
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y I- to
. r !'.
i it
t r
1 t
li fin
it t.f T"li
till
rf t'
I -j
1 ! a
B 1
"Soul ConKlowneu U ttXL" ,
'3 ' .. - - - -
At the BaDtiat.Tsbrnle tonlsba
Rev. Allen C. Bhuler -wfik nmch the
Bftb f a series of aermona vb.cn bare
draw such immenas crowd, -and this
speclal number of . tha series ' will J
doutt be hearq by .the largest toogT
gatioa'ever art ambled in the church.
'Soul. Consciousness, in :Ht,
bhal) we Know aa we are Koowa
that place beyond" will be the aabjaet
of tonight's disc sura. A. full choir
will sjng at this service. t: i
StraDgera and visitors id in city are
moat eordlally'invhed. f p ' ,
ieSEOFMfEtrfe
..' GIVE TBS FIGURE3L'
Editor Journal' v '
1 am exceedingly gratified ler by
proceedinvs of our worthy Hoard of
Alderman, that thef have at lait dater
ml nd to employ an xpet accwuitsot
to sp how the fiiane of our city hae
Un r,od4. - This Is astfpUtbe
r!K!'t direction al 1 am sure su-a a
lip wiir m't' with the Sppraral of
i7 cl.'.-"i Intlilac.'y. I lr'it t' at
t'.U trx-rt i'l be a diintprt J r'trtj
' rnT ; '.r-nt Sn l wlllv t J
i f r t favnr ff I'i .If
; i it tot j"'.-:. r.t ,! t t a r 't
rii 5 r 1, '.V I 1 II I Ut '
v ! x' t f i t 7 te '
'. Y' j r- -r t: at i' l
11:
-2a.
iili
.rf
iA
Another shipment of that Famous Liggett Chocolates received
by ' express.
037. ,4 SATURDAY CANDj AT 29c PER POUND.
Anything In the Drnsline. ! Presaiptions Called for and
. ; - ; Delivered.
QStmptUg Company
ON THE COR.-., ir,."1
NER 'The
OPPOSITE
' THE
tbsr-orricE
- 7T -
60a -Dress Oodds 39 c.
50c:Silk 26c.
l$i.bOBfbad
'liEEE "CEidT;!' FEWl CF 00B-MCUMES
j.'iv-,''.
...;5URET.'W.-E0NDSi;"
Insurance:- Fire, 'BurLty! Flatc diss,"
' Boilcrn; Automobile; ,i
Accident, Mcallh end ' Live' Stock.
4
t - r !
1 i '
ire .
:t:o