Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / June 11, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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LSTAIUCIIO) ...IN . - ; ; 1878 ivrt- 2 CA "11 I'M ' TIIISTIETH, YEAR Vv. Tin rvrr" luu LAIXl pa r .r 'T i.U' i.iUiiL f ;' UR banking system has hen planned to protect the peo- j ) pies money. If you do not use the facilities afforded by , , i h Bern Bankmg and Trust Company accepta depoaitsub ject to check in any amount,' thus affording protection for the mon ey which is being used for current expense, against lose by fire, burglary or any other mishap. v " , ' . 1 t- ' t YOUR ?ATlit)NAGE ft CORDIALLY INWTED. 1 4 J t La mm 1 7 in. Wlio to - Hot Yet SpM Your ' Smnq and ' I t I J j V ( 4 , ' T f J r W 4 Aw V , J ' You certainly Should riot fail . to see), our elegant "showing of stylisr'ana dependable jgoods beforernaki 'ingVour purchase. , If you "Surant the best you .can; ' , t - - - i . - v v t- -v place your confidence in anything you may purchase rv ',Miv- f , t ' ; hare..- - We urge you to cofne and see what this store r Eyerj though you have no intention pf buying ?or?( we honestly believe, that we;can interest "nine out of every ten people who come, to- 6ee our offenngs. ' When you .select anything here, it" matters' not what z , price. yott'pay,ryou; are qertain of getting -v 1 v n 'v- tion .ori the4uality.of our goods. Georgia Jury Awards Man; $ 10,- " 000 For nog KUIed In ail- : road Wreck. - Atlanta, Ga. June 10 Ten -thousand dollars was the value placed en a hog by a jury in the superior court setting here now in the ease of J. D. Debow of Nashville, Tenn., against the Vicks burg, 1 Sbreveport, & pacific . railroad. The hog in qilegtim was ."Premier Longfellow's tival," a pedigreed pork- Sr who was Isilled in a railroad accident and on which. Mr. D6bow .' had set a valuation of $20,000. ,- The animal was pine feet long( three feet high and weighed more than1 1,000 pounds. A s ' ,IL m W 1 i i LL Does the edge- o(-"your lawn looJk ragged ?Then why not invest in a -Phila- deljjhiar ' LawnJMiower and triniit.;.J. S. BasnrghtlHdw. i' 1 : "tang Haired freBchers and Sap Head- , - 'e4 folks I f, -Will form a prelude to Rev A. C, Shu- ler'fc sermon at the Tabernacle ,-cnarcb tonight on iTbe Most Dangerous Thing iin the Wond., - V f ' 1 - Jjuring my recent illness, "and while out of the kdtffte ftays'. Mr;-:Shulftt, "JNew Bern seems to have been over run1 with all sorts of preacher and jioa. triner, I find those of,tW long hair va riety have flooded our town with liter-? ature. teaching maiy false and damn? able doetrines, . mialeading man peo ple; an at thif ervice tonight I am go ing to give some light on these matters, I invite the public to attend the service. 'Peerless Iceland Freezers, you i'dbn't break them, tliey freeze quicker and last long er: Phone 229s Miller. - Big Strike Oaw " L' Philadelphia, June 10th WltH over ten thoufand men: out on strike the mammoth plant of the Baldwin Laoomo tive Works laj ' draping along, . badly crippled, rawer tnan- tnree tnoutana of its employes reported for duty when the day shift went to work.; -J r ki a meeting of the district council of the Allied Locomotive .Building Trades, to bo held, reports from eath of the 17 onions represented In 1 he plant will bo heard, and it is expected that a formal order for a general strike win follow.' .- -tVit'-Vs, ;-v ; ' ' -'A 1 - . - . y We know;what to buy' and wc ..tfA Knowjvnat tO: Sell.;;-f ; ' ; If, we tan. make i-'yov feel 'that it r is simply ;jmpos-" sioie.jo surpass our vaiues, we are ariving nome tne truth and driving to, our store the trade we ; deserve, '.becausrVfJout clean, farsighted .merchandising; .V 61 POLLOCK. ST; . '-"TRE-STC'E TO FilT n'rf.Ti I.1 if. Ol'Jt wouldn't sleep fbrthe devilish flies Sunday - morn ingii Ask theas'night Hdw. Qo, for their remedy.' KaKliig of the Maine bo Occasloa Tor '',.-.V,'8IOW. .. ' Wsahingtoo, June 10. Secretary of War Stimeon today expressed himielf in favor of holding appropriate services in memory of the kalne sailors mbot bodies are expected to be recovered mhrtt the wreck of the. sunken battle- hip le eiponed, Etimson de'ard that In hia opiolon, the racing of the Maine should Devcf b PiJe a aliow, but that the ocaion hou!J be arconf' ii the dignity U d- wn-M, He tit d thtt wliijn the wwk nl ri' rhl tak from It ami any 1 1. I... , ! ..r,d luhmfrfMl woul'l 1 turn-j y,Bra i f 1 ov r to the Na?y .IJppartnif nl. IM ' f the War Ocpurtrntnt wouiil fji i' a la any fitting rlte to mark 1 . , i , 4i no, . ! s aeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeee eeee t e ; "i cf ry-.lcas V !-rViI Service FOR SA LB 24 ii. p. g; Ai : : II reterans of Luth Sides to Mset . Jo Friendship at tlanassas . ( Where Fifty Years Ago " They Tried to Kill' Tach Other.-'' ' . ' The Manassas National Jubilee which has-been arranged for July, in celebra tion of the' fiftieth aonivsary of the First battle of -The Great WaK, will culminate July 21, next, , when Presi dent Taf t will address the Blue and the Gray at their Love Feast and Reunion. There will be a spectacular reprenention consisting of f of toy-eight maidens, each representing state in' the order they were admitted to the Union, all clad in in the Red, White and Blue and bear! ing the name of the state across her breast, -. These maidens clasped hand in hand,' singing vtho National air, .will represent the Reunited Nation. , ''' ' Mrs..' Mary -Speed Mercer, of Elm City,- N. C; has written a new national hymo which with; specially arranged words had been adopted" by the com mittee as "The Manassas! National An them.," The public school children of Manassaaro now learning the music whfcb is said rto be' .exceedingly fine. The choru runs as follows:" : , :i'";:-j.r "Americal AHhaU to theel v " Thanks beto God, who made us free. . North, South, EastfWest, hind clasp- United, We thy children stand." , . -The address of the President on the occasion .will beat the junction df Grant Avenue'aod Lee Avenue, the two principal Btreeta of the town, under the grateful shade of trees grown during the last twenty-five years.' A The Manassa Jubilee colors will bo a unique, arrangement . representing th0 cordiality which.; exists - between onion and, confederate Veterans..- The - pre- vailiosT deBiim." will bo the Red.; White and Blue of the Unfted States flag, but Li. - . .. ..ii . me conieueraie oaiiie nag win appear here and there showing' that peace and harmony .exist between tho two . i The badges which; are ; now being worked out, by professionals will bo ar ranged on the same.principle. a i urant Avenue w manassas u ma nn- est. Residence Street of ' .that historic town an waa.aeoicatea uctooer. vtn. 1902 by excursionuts from the Grand Army Encampment then ia session in Washington.. Co the-comer of Grant and Lee Avepues,; it ia projected that statues of these two- eminent generals will sometime be erected. , .'-f ; The Juhilre .Committee specially re quest every veteran of ther .War to dress a postal at onoefor a full program including name of writer and army ser vice, l including also-a" brief, patrkic sentiment . .These cards' are to be pre' servea .lorever in tne uarnegte futile Library as perpi ; I mernoriala "of 'an extraordinary The CommiUr froin Manaseat intro duced to t! o Prfsiilont yestbrday hi' eluded, Lieut. G'rge C Round, of tho Manassas Picket I'ott of JiAoa Veter an, Cap t V? est wood Jlutchiaon, Ad jutant of Ewell Camp of Confederate Veterans, Vt. llervln U.' Roop, Prsi dent of Eastern CAtlure, and Q, Ray mom Psic!', Te, Pp. iidfint of Manassas Busines League, '' ;' The Jubilee Commlltee have a sag geHtfon before them to form tho Bloc and Uie Gmy in two lioes on the Henry Hill at, bh noooof the Zlit of July and let thrm , msrch alowly pait each other, ech otie ehnk ir;r tht band of those in the (i'her ri,'i.e In tokea of mutunl ira'-.n J r-jard. Vi'a it n't! -'io I ' ire In the I. Is tiiry f t!..- tl.st the mwi ho I fo; t t . Ii - "'n r on one of the grnt ' 'i of l.'.nry met l'y il.e ;wt h'T, tl.cy s rtibt each ot!. ra I.f.? Tl. f..-'.J 1. t'. . ar.J Iiv Ft ! I I '.Kiut4) -r'. 1' " : t' i ' ' I '' rn two ! "V i ' 1 a ' Ah KxcitingCareer Fighting JDrink andiTol acco Evil Carrie Ka- tiou Passes Away." v Leavenworth, Kan.,- Jane lO.-Carrie Nation, the Kansas saloon smasher is dead. v ' ---.i ' ' Paresis was the cause of. her death. For several months Mrs. Nation1 had suffered of' nervous disorders, and on January 22d she eptered tho sanitarium in which she died.' , . f I ' S ' . Carrie Moore was born in Ken tuck v in 1846. In early life ahe married a man aaaictea to intoxicants; This cre-i a ted jt her an intense aversion to sa loonsi' vWbeO he died she determined to devote her life to the suppression oT bar Thorns.-j-Jt r'- ' f- Later she; -,t - "ovfld-to Kansas and married pavid Nation whopympathized with her temperaneJpnnciples.'" After considerable peaceful itt'uor to stop the drinking of alcoholic , beverages she de elded, to become militant r ' : , Mrs. .Nation first saloon' smashing wai done in the bar room of the Cary hotel at Wichita, Kana. on Pectmber -,.u jnAn'i fL . . g j , j -i J . iiu,4iw. can remain eu in jail 'several days as a result.- i -,,--, Mrs, Nation made herself conspicuous In many cities bv ehterinir ealoona and resorts fiod delivering talks on the evils of drinking. . y The7 lastve moathsot Mfli Notion's life wav in marked contrast tosher for mer activity.' Once she saw4 a physipiao at the kanitariam smoking, a cigarette: She made no remonstrance, merely say ing that she had done what sfce eould tq Lh ,E,iGECFE;K;;ESE!!ltCE:v . -This bank is not satisfied to serve its patrons 'V in any ordinary manner, eztendidg ooty tMfavV' . cilities w hicn it is 'customary tor .banks. to-afford. -" . It is. the,. constant endeavor M ur officers" to" handle each account in the manner suitedto' the ' depositors individual , !nee ds to render at all - times iervice1 of the highestchcterT.jWecor drally invite yotfio ppe6; either 4 Recking ' or 'savings account and place at your disposal all of ''AIM!' i J 3 llllll i' ''iniirniiKlluiiiiiiiiiii . - H .1 n 'eradicate the eviL'V 1 'B.PaintwmJcovel 35Qf quare- ft . two coats an,d under4 favorable t conditions will spread over ?00 square f;'Fpr further Information consult the-- J S; 'asnigh't .." V ... M l J I I II III, ,.(., , ' -Plant wm Bear Cottolene, Bull'ochsville, t3a., J nn 10.- -Mr. J. J. Stanahan, superintendent of the Cold Spridgs SUtlon, of tho United ? States Department of Fisheries at this place, has perfected, be says' through expe riments carried 00 tor" the past 4 year, a practically Iin tie is Cotton, planV ( -Too purpose' pf his experiments.. Jn this line la U secure a larger ptant bearr ing bolU filled with larger seed which,.; will be much richer 104011 than the reg-; lartolantVVf i''-?'Ni''' a In 'the course of ten ywrg Mr. Stana- h"ai expects to produce a cotton plant that will yield one hundred bushels of cleaa teed to tho aero, J " ' 1 20,Leonard Cleanablff Re frigerators; :; porcelaln-, lined, quartered oak cases.;' They save iceana.iooic oetier inan any other.' "Ask rne thief price. J: S. MilierA ' Matumoskeet load Will BoBttUt . Raleigh, N. C, Juue 10-Mr. Gilbert L. Gilbert, of New. York; representing New York capitalists made an oTer to the StaU to build the Uattamutket Railroad to extend 105 miles from Lake Mttamuikect, la Hyde . county, to Washington, N.C The State owns a controlling Intereat- part ef the road b 'r.g already grild and tlie proposl t i was aecrptcj subjict to fights of py, terminals and dock facilities be i acurcd by the people along the r jte. . -, . The Pick of the Parasol iciion. Pfodii ... . I :. " This is the best way to class our showing of Summer Parasols for ladies and children. . They are surely the best of the heap. So pretty T that they command instant and rapt attention as soon as they are seen. So new that you will be forced to admit never seeing anything like them before.,. And so reasonable that you can easily afford to nave one to ; match every dress. . The' showing consists of all the latest styles, J apane&e. Mandarin, f and the 17th century prevailing, in colors thatrival the rainbow and are j, just as beautiful. . , v Do hot miss this parasol parade. You will be sorry if you do. Your J friends will ail ho under one of our parasols this Summer. So if you i don't, want your friends to get ahead of you-you had better get ahead ofHoenv- '1 V - t. Here Are riints of the Prices Whkh Range From 50c. to $5.00. 1 I BAXTER ELKS TEMPli :Syu ,Titv:;r.J:;v't'- - specials FORr:o::D;;ifA::DTHisvEEK Ger.tb horsey '.'or ladies j r.r.i ityll.ih ri3 for men at. D-r-.it'.j-tlcv. terry Livery ::ul!i Trent St. Z i th I .1 '! V I, r . h r.-.h. ;rm f'if t) t ) , 1 i i t:.i r An , J i ! J tie. , eT -"r. J. V. ' Come to Coplon'a for anythbig andmathlflg you need, for me a wosmo and children to wear, Becauso-wf bay wjth.tbe Idea In . view ;at', seeing now mucn more we can oner uid j- h v c. .Hwima, 7 . Comfort, Service and Style can ' ' be had In Coplon'a Shoes at least ? cfo-t. Satisfaction Is the grat . thing in buying shoes, we abb '. luU-ly guarnU-e the fullest satis-" ' faction in every particular. .We hava the mirt of s1ks yo a!mlre . hjmI nec'l end every pair ia car-, fully fauH. Wo offer y'u nt v ,ti'y jw p'iik'.h at falrent lew ct, t, but our kkI M-rvire cwts 1 y, i i,.Hi!r!y nothing, , . tZ.T.O Women's Velvet rumpa "I ' . f 1 f s. 1: sip y.i,v-'v tim valves 1' . , i f"r ',mi-ii, all V $1 t,- , .if -,, ?-, - IV: i , 'i i'u:. ! ',( I.
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 11, 1911, edition 1
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