Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Aug. 11, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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I shape, to get aVinar with a mit-lmum ... i.LLUU LutLI aaaaj y ol bset tWpwe'.i f w o it innn-m UUUU.l&L t V. t , c ' SV SCfclPTION BATES Qm Ynt . . $4 00 ' Six Months.-; . . . 2.00 Thias MonthaH' . . . 1-00 . ttoa Month . . . . .60 T Advertising rate furnished upon ap plication to una office. "" Entered at the post-efflce, New- Bern. u 4 ateood cum natter. Sew Bern X. Q August 11, 1812 ',ew oera onouia wave ware' hnnao Mew Bern is the ideal place for the .central warehouse that the Farmers Union Is planning; to locate somewhere in wis section, it is in the mdst of State and it has good water and rail road transpbitation. : Ar d while Mew Bern is suited as the location for, the warehouse, the latter ,y. ia something that New B. ro cro well ., afford, to strive for. It will add to th? ? prestige of thin city as the market and uimruiuus i or mm wnoie eastern sec tion and the men here who make a practice of gettlig behind the guns when Intro is something to be done that will add to the city's comn.ercial and industrial greatness will, we lope, ' gtt behind this new rroject and see that some other place leu suited foi the purpose does not get the warehouse, The central warehouse will be an ad anion co Me city s eommtrce that v, ill be worth til and more than it will cobi ,. in the form of ioducemeu s fur its lo-a twn here. Putting Money Through the Suds. more man half a million dollars of , old paper money washed to the crisp BfSs of; new In the Federal govern- . ment a currency laundry was placed in r.irr-.nlataKn o . : -"-. oumu people navi an awful prejudice sguinst dirty mon ey, while others are mighty glad togei , it whether it is diny or not. - Thegovernmtnfs laundry is thus e . auarce or g-eat satisfaction to a con derable proportion of the population . wnue io many o hers it is but anotbei grim suggestion that their main con cerq ia not In connection with the qual ly of t lie rm ney they get in possessiun of hut with the quantity. While some are annoy d b)cause money Is dirty, many, many more aie ' at their wits' ends becaus,.. money i scarce. Farminc a Condition Or 9 Prn. f tv " fession? . One of Ihe best features about Mr. Crosby's address yesttrday to the " Farmers' - Union - was tha mnhi v.uicii jie piacea upon the need for li a rarmer to eialt liis calling. Fai m tg haa c "me to be considered, he said, not ;.,a proieeeion out a condition. And meny v farmers, declared. If they trade hom once "a . year or such a msttei r will say that they are horse'raders be j rore'tbey will admit ihaf they are farm - ersv f The sp3akt"iayvave painted th. picture darkeman it -really is. But farmer should be- proudof being a farm er. And if there are any who are nm :; pnmd of their c alllD' thev want tn ra. vise their views at once. It is one o: the most wholesome, and- at the earn- , ; .V "" , -.... ; . .. . . : "mo uu i, mg .ut-'y uiviui Ul lives. " And farhjers sbeuld exalt their call- fngs not alone because bf the gtorj . there ia In being producer but .al because better and larger jt suits ar. attained when Ihe iworker rejoices li his work. -, is ". .Great YleW3'cf CnilTtffad To - tatocsA" . , According to the fepsrt of the Uni ted States De irtment of Agflfpnurs, the corn eond Jorr- -ta Morth Carclint now ia 86. A year ago its 7$t'f The ten yrar average is f&sSo il seenn that much of the complaint about' bid cots appears not to have been justified; The country over; the corn crop, ac Ct !,ng to the latest stimale;.- will bt t' 3 1. rK'est in t' e nation's history, with to cTtcp'lons.-. The crop of oats wf1' ' t.' e !'r-ot that the country haa v re Thefi will ; ba a greater ; sj ' y than ever before and th - will tie a previous i'ecTrvl. ' Sstoes will be the second f -ry of the nation', " ' rf f-rsin-sndpota y i.l ta In u'li'e evry day ia 7 tb -)-, l Monday at 4$ I'ollockJJStreet. . le'P w tne in y cr euiv idw. Governor Wilwn's sp e h of artepi- ante i it p cy woukI In n'esse the N !w Yifk T ibu-w n . ' e New'tors P a Tb y fin I M ' " " Tb N' Yo K World explain h w t is tht Vitiy live pp-r. n bristj Bg with ideat h t ah w igor of thought and thoroughness of invest gation appears to the Trbune end Press mild and lacking in color and strengih- It u because of the previous and customary environment of its two esteemed con- tempoiaries, the World shows. Here is its way of accounting for the eo'or- blindness of the Press an1 the Tribune: For yea's the Tribune and Press were ardent supporters of Theodora Boose vett. They came to associate political progress with the Rooieveltian vocabu lary. When they found that Governor Wilson called nobody a crook, or a burg lar, or a pickpocket, or a highwayman, or a thief, or a jackass, or a brigand, or a traitor, or a robber, they natural ly concluded that the speech must be devoid of force and initiative and sin cerity. Tbey are quite uoable to understand bow a candidate can make a r. ally pro gressive Speech without calling anybo dy a liar. NUMBERS ENJOY BLACK MOUNTAIN BLck Mountain, N. C , August 9 The season here is now in full awing. Every train brings new arrivals, and t is hard to get accommodations in many instances. Cool weather for the past week, as low as 48 degrees last Sunday, but now it is 66 to 75 daily, and everyone Is enjoying the coolness, except those who fail to bring the clothing, which is much heavier than the summer garment cf the low coun try. The Y. M. C. A. season is about er.ded, s me 50 guests nuw but the ses sions hive dosrd. Lat week the Black Mountain Irn inaugurated ita first dance of the tea son. These dunces are very popular, and the invitations are sent out freely and gladly accepted. .The second dance was given last night, and while the night was cloudy, there was a large number io attendance. Other parties at the Inn during the past week wss Mrs. Lord's, totheguejts, and a Marsh mallow Roast in the dining hall, the "rjast" taking place in the immense (In place, low pointed switches being served the guests on wbioli were stuck in the marebmallows. the Inn is tha special favorite of New Berniar.s. Mrs. McGraw ia the pi opri tress, and is very popu'ar. The table is excellent, with all vegetables and fruits from the farm of the Inn being served, thus assuring the fresh est and best in quality. Among the 1 t r arriv ils from New Berj are Mrs. L. M Jor.es, Mis Mary Jones, Mrs. R. D. V. Jones, Master Robert ami VI iss Elsie Jones, Miss Isabslle.Sim rrcms, Mr. C. T. Bennett and wife late of he Gaat n Hotel. Miss Lottie and Mr Thornton Bennett. Montreat ia having a good sized crowd at its s u ions. The crowd at rlla.-k Mountain are enj ying every day, excursions to all point, Mt Mitchell, fiidgecrcst, Asheville. A nu nber of campinar parties are "ioagh ng it" tnd at night camp 6na can be seen near the mountain tops, showing h re caop-rs have ,kcaed for the nigHt THE LAST MAN WHO COULD BE SPARED. (Harnett Reporter.) From the way h : i figurir.g in the Asjoc a ted Press and other' newspaper rep rt of the pioreid nga Of Cor grew, Senator Simmons is about the test man on the Demoeralie side who could be spared from; the Senat at this time. La ir.g aside for the time being all that can be said en the subject of tha Sena torial contest ' in ''out State, 1t 1s do questionably a g-eat honor to North Car l in a and our people that ?we fur nished tha man who is selected by fnl low Senators to lead the national fight of the Democratic party in the Unfed States Senate for the principal great issues upon which- the -party i going oeiore tne nation in tnu campaign. xr 1100 REWARD tlOflf Vs. The . readers ; of this papeif will "be plot se d to learn that there, is; at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and tha., is Catarrh, Haifa Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medu-at fraternity, Catarrh being a constitutional disease, rraoires a con stitutional treatment, ! Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct (y noon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system; thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, sna aivine tb patientetreneth by buildin? ud the constitution and assisting nature in do ing its work. :. The proprietors have so much faith in it curative powers that thev offer One Hundred Dollars for anv case that it fails to cure. Send for hat of. testimonials, - . V P. J. CHENEY it CO.,ToL.", O. " Sold by all DruKkts, 75o. ;Tak8 UalTi TanJTy ri"3 f r - s..?a:.oa. ; ,":' . ; ... i rTb9 Alfalfa Field at Ghent, New 3ern' newanburb. froiQ wbichlfalf a - Valley Elpoeltloa m IVlv, winning ursi nwnuro utw au svuijivMivni Pa. ExpoeltiotvifltV? This alfalfa was aowaf lPl07. Cut four times acTe. At second cutting in 19v, Misses Mettle fowler and Miry Nix on, who left New Bern in a buggy Wednesday last, reached Tretton that night,- Thursday night by good luck tbey were enabled to spend in Rich- lanls. The suacseding sunset found them at Catherine's Lake, and last night they were scheduled to arrive in Wilmingtonr 'Phone messages report that the young ladies are having the time of their lives. Mr. Jack Street left last nisht for Wilmington, it is understood, to meet the ladies there and conduct the' turnout safely over tbe Cape Fear river on their journey to Little River, S. C NEGRO ARRESTED THEFT CHARGED Because James Manning is an honest ni gro fteven Moselsy, also colored, will recover a valuable gold watch which was atolen from his nephiw to whom be had loaned it Manning says he bought a wa'ch from Andrew Brown, another negro When he found out that M seley's watch had been stolen, he tiOliAtd Moseley of the i umber, Moselev identifl d the watch as his property. Chief of Police Lupton on informat ion furnished by Moseley and Manning arretted Brown last night. Brown de nif d that he stole the watch but couldn't give a satisfactory explanation Of now he came to be in possessiou of it. He will be given a hearing Monday before Mayor McCarthy. Manning agreed to pay Brown $8 for the watch and had raid tie greater part of it when he found out that it was stolen property. The watch wss stolen from Moseley 's nephew, Aug ustus Adams one night of tberecent car nival after he had taken three drinks of l.quor and tecotr.e unconscious as a re- salt. Moseley says the wstch cost forty dollar i. . On Brown when arrested Chief Lup ton found a big bunch of kevs and tbe Chief thinks it very likily that the ne gro has been trying the keys on the locks of some of the pantries in this city. Tomato Oil In Commerce. ' Tomato oil, useful for varnish aM aa a fuel. Is now made from the watts) of the tomato-preserving industry, Ta the province of Pormo, Italy, whsrv 84,000 tons of tomatoes have been need In the last year, waste has been about 15 per cent, and partial freeing tins from water by pressing left a mass chiefly of seeds of about 4,000 tons. The seed mass, by cold com pression; yields 18 per cent of golden yellow oil. Indiscriminate Charity Wrong. One of the greatest Injuries you can W a, able-bodied idle man is to feed blnx. twice without payment John Boiriand.i. T0ira eeorate lEour V aggtcffloexMsoat and Make iC Ddh'tybu'wdrry Sehcf for hie; I am aaenbfbr.t esi manufacturers and f distributors of Wali paper in thd world. : I have 1.9 J They contain the rribk beautiM ana colorings ror riausranors, UDranes, lymmg rvooms, -dieting Rooms, Dens,, etc., that you have ever seen; and what will surprise you most are the low prices.- .Lalsa have their beau tiful Catalogue, illustrated , in color, ,showing ;what- handsome Decorations can bcu obtained at small expense by 'using their pa- pers as suggesred. ' , a - : . , . - ;, ... - . Drop me a postal card and I wiU call and show you the Pa pers and Catalogue of Subjections. " ; I can give you a' most ar tistic room at a very low pncc. Have your work done before thcruih comcc; and you v,ril! be better eaiicfied,; and by deal ing vith me you t t:7! rrve money to put in the Bank. , , - - tnree acre yteioeo ii.s pounas destooyed; a goldei. myth Moral Seems to Be Let Children Dls- oovsr tha THitrt About Santa ' - Claws fr Themselves,- It had been a hard Irear for the fa ther of the family and the coming of Chris Unas had something of terror In It for him when he thought of how much less In the way of gifts he could do than he would have liked. - But what hurt worst was that,, hav tng had to meet soma heavy bills, he found it would be quite- impossible to buy the bloyole that he had promised his boy Santa Claus would bring. He was sorry for the disappoint ment that be knew the lad would feel and he decided that it would be best not to wait and have the disappoint ment come on Christmas day. So he went to the ltd, a manly little chap, and said: "Look here, my boy, yon are old enough now to understand things. Each Christmas when you received gifts you supposed, and, Indeed, we told you, they were brought by Santa Claus. "As a matter of fact, Santa Claus Is only a make-believe, a tradition that has come down through the ages to help make the Christmas season brighter and happier and less selfish for children. The truth is that your mother and myself have always been , your Santa Claus. "This year, sonny, things have not been going very well with me and I cant Just afford that bicycle that you thought Santa Claus war going to bring you. "Be a brave little man about It and we'll have a merry Christmas anyway, and maybe early In the year I'll be able to get it for you. But I really can't afford It now. Tou won't mind Very much, will youT" "Why no dad," said the lad, though he had to fight a hit to keep the tears out of his eyes. "But," he said, thoughtfully, "no Santa Claus 1 Why, I believed in him. Say. dad, you haven't been fooling me about Jesus, too, have youT" St Louis Republic. Terms In. Modern Evolution. "Tea, it was romance, all right, even If It did turn out badly. It started at one of last spring's pic nics. She was plucking white daisies or something with the proper back ground In perspective. -He saw her and muttered: "Oh, you pretty squab!'". "Then what!" "Oh, she overheard It, all right, and in a roundabout way an Introduction followed." "Go on." "Well, It wasn't many weeks be fore he had her out under the trees In the moonlight, with a mocking bird accompaniment asking her: 'Oos duckie is ooT" "Next chapter." , "Tha first week m June he mar shaled ua sufficient courage to say: Say, chicken, let's get married' " "I sees short engagement eh?" . ?Yep; wedded - ..bliss not long, either. Along with other indignities alleged in her . divorce petition she says he called her a goose. He re taliated by saying no man waa ex pected to stay married with a chat tering guinea always around." "Now whatr "She' got her freedom yesterday. To night he's celebrating, declaring he'a glad he's rid of the , old ben." St Louis Republic . . it their new sample J was cot and exhibited at the Ohio suv wiumaji ngiium.it i riiiauu'i,! In 1908, yielding over four tons per wnici soia in neia at i9. per ion ORIGINATED IN A JOKE EXPLANATION OF HORACE QREE LEY'S ADVICE, "GO WEST." According to Statement of Kansas City Man, "Salted" Mlnea Gave the Great Editor tha Inspiration for Well-Known Words. According to Isom O. Stephens, who runs a little corner grocery store In Kansas City, the famous advice of Horace Greeley to "do West" was founded on a fake bit of persuasion In the form of a "salted" gold mine near Denver, Colo. In the Spring of I860 Mr. Stephens waa In Denver- then a mere frontier village whose chief enterprise was gambling at tbe time when Horace Greeley made the town a visit Steph ens waa one of a party of six who wasted considerable effort trying to get real gold out of the identical lo cality where the early day promoters produced extravagant wealth before Mr. Greeley's eyes. The ruse worked admirably. It was good for several col umns of the "Go west young man1 stuff right off the New Tork'edltor's trenchant pen. Mr. Stephens, by the way, has a re markable record as a pioneer. In four different states he "pioneered" years in advance of the railway Michigan, Kansas, Colorado and North Dakota. Mr. Stephens was born In a log house In the woods of Michigan In 1831. "I got the gold fever early In 1860," Mr. Stephens said. "My brother-in-law had been-4n Denver the year previous and had struck It rich in placer min ing. We learned of excursion rates of $40 from Atchison to Denver, which were cheap in comparison with the regular rates of $100 one way. "When we got to Denver the gold fever was running hlgli. Horace Gree ley, editor of the New York Tribune, and a member of his staff were In Denver. They sent back beautifully worded stories of the-grandeur of the west, and the possibilities of getting rich. My father had been a subscrib er to tho New YOrk Tribune ever since he built our log house In the Michi gan olearlng In 1828. "Our party got a tip on the mlnea that Greeley had written about and we went up near Boulder and tried our luck. Tho six of us showed a gross re turn of $1.27 worth of gold for the week's work. Discouraged and half starved, we trailed back to Denver. Shortly after -that we learned that the gold mines had been 'salted' for the purpose of arousing Mr. Greeley's enthusiasm. "Mr. Oreeley went back to New York that spring. It was the season to put ozone Into the lungs of a city man and make him think there was no place like the boundless west. He left a staff writer In Denver that sum mer. I followed the trail back to the states the same summer. A drought had seised the land. Everything was parched and brown. ' It was a desolate looking landscape. After I got back to Michigan I read the rosy accounts of the western country in the New York Tribune, but they didn't look good to me. Kansas City Times. Australia's Wheat Exports. Australia exported 728,000 tons of Wheat to date, compared with about 4.8.000 tons in 1910. Home DOOKS tor 1 9 1 2r Attractive "'if H BAQ LIVER robs you of energy, strength and ' " " r . - "-- "i ambitioo. T id yourself of the , burden, take 'r - " . - RED a LIVER REGULATOR (thx fowokb form) It ia a fine strengthening medicine for a torpid liver. The weakened organ responds promptly to its powerful reviving influence. It corrects the stomach and digestion. Purifies and regulates the bowels. Drives oat that languid half -sick feeling, makes you feel bright, vigorous and cheerful. Try it. Alk tor tk fenalne with the Rd X n the label. If oa cannot (e 1 renrt to w trill end by enftll fottpmU. SiunoM lAw Kf vlatr li pat up alto la liquid tons toi Ma Brator it. rrlc. tVtt pel BOttl. li it Oka Bad Z label. i. H. ZCILIN 4 CO.. Pnopa.. ST. Louie, mo. NATIONALUIFE INSURANCE Mm MONTPELIER VERMON1 . Chartered 1848 Purely Mm ual Progress in last Twenty Years January INCOME $2,218,360 IJanuary INCOME $9,156,450 ASSETS $7,625,780 ASSETS 53,4t5,2& Gross Surplus to Policyholders $6,574,746.24. Isbub the b?st forms of Life, Term, Endowment and Trusteeship Insurance and Life Annuities The Leading- Annual Dividend Company. The very beet 5 and 10 Year Renewable Term policies on tbe market! Renewable and con ver: able without re medical examination. Annual premiums frira $11 41 and upwards, which are annually reduced ly large cash dividends. We will be glad to furnish specimen policies upon re q jest. Correspondence Solicited. HOWARD S. ST YRON, District Agt., New Bern, N. C. H. M. HUMPHREY, Sta'te Manager, National Bank BIdg., GoldsboroN. C. Has since 1894 given "Thorough -Instruction under positively Christian influences at the lowest possible cost." RESULT: It is to-diy with its farulty of 32, a boarding patronage of S vT Its student body of 412, and its plant worth $140,000 THE LEADING TRAINING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGIN! $150 pays all charges for the year, including tabic board, rooin, i.ciiu. 1 1 n heat, laundry medical attention, physical culture, and tuition in ni hi : , i except music and elocution. For catalogue and application L!a:.k . REV. THOMAS ROSSER REEVES, B. A., Pr-ncii BLACKSTONE,VA. Founded 1838 TRINITY COLLEGE ITS STRENGTH LIES IN A Large, Well-Trained Faculty; Excellent Buildings and Equipment; Full, Well-Arranged Courses; Earnest, Hig'i-Minded Students; A Large and Loyal Body of Alumni and Friends; Noble Ideals and Tra dition'; An Inspiring History of Achievement and Service. Next Session begins September 11, 1912. let, Address R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham, N. C. i- - -1 -i-wrr.- 1 li r n I TTVsTT- TIT A IT aV tl BiaT S '.' '-aaaaamV . atV I II LL . . i . . '? .-;..;-. :..v , .- v . ' ... - m li i mEm i , aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaai I Mil linn,! m. i J . .. I I I I II kjt '. . - pal DINGtlAFJI ?5!l! O in all the CollagM Uwattend. North and South. VMtiUtio. KanltaHM and af aty N l Aaalnat Flra pronjonced tha BEST hf ISO doetois and by amy aVHInr raraat, H 4 1 lZZ',Z' P?n? t of entmij aenmtimtea our CUnuM. Far sad Carl m w , wmmmvp w uniy u maaum mpiRRISSSGHOQL; ' tosatiw iexwlIra-Stttpment Btl8B'.'Wll--tTsJBed Faculty of Jr " successful experience, Special care of tho health of students. - An -S . , instructor in each domitory to supervise living conditions of boys un- dcr hia care. Excellent library- end gymnasium : facilities. Large-: a!l.let!o f Fj-'I Trm pr"B f" ptpmber 11. ' Iv'. Ill.f , Ail J CATALOGUE, ADDRESS v - -i u. c. 1st, 1892. INSURANCE IN FOKCE $51,369,343 1st, 1912. INSURANCE IN FORCE $172,678,655 Chartered 1859 For Catalogue and Illus: rated Boob r i' Ww.Bw yearn. Our Oraduat bnl amaai a asqra -JKai, ffl - i
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 11, 1912, edition 1
2
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