Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Oct. 6, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO NEW BERN .DAILY JOURNAL 5 'V- . 5 r3 ,, r,' V I F1 5 GEnTAiriLY -ECUS : STI mmrn ? "Papa's Diapepsln,; c'urw erfc , burn Gas, Sourneae and Indl- ; ' - - gettlon in fi mtautea, " V.; ' Sour, gassy, upset stomach, indi i gestion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when ",. the food you eat ferments into gases 'V,,Vand atubborn lumps; your head aches , it and you feel sick and miserable, that's .i i: t '., 'f , when' you realize the magic in Pape's f Uiapepsin. it manes sucn miseryjvan- ". , ish in five minutes. J" If your stomach is in a continnous i' (.revolt if you con't get it regulated, ' ' please ,for your sake, try Diapepsin. '' It's so needless to have a bad stomach h-, - make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take a little Diapepsin. There will not be any distress eat without fear. It's because Pape's Dia pepsin "really does" regulate weak, out -of-order stomachs that gives it it's mllions of sales annually. Get a large fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. It is the quickest, surest stomach relief and thre known. It acts almost like magic , it is a scientific, harmless and pleasnt preparation which truly belongs in every home. ' UONZO'S PRESSING CLUB Fifty and seventy-five cents per suit. Strictly cash. Quick service. Clothes called for and delivered. Tbone 284 86 CRAVEN STREET Foley-Kidney Pills TOM 10 IN ACTION QUICK IN RKSULTt CHv prompt relief from BACKACHR, KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE, RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of the KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of the BLADDER and all unnoying URINARY IRREGULARITIES . A positive boon to MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY PEOPLE and for WOMEN. NAVI MIQHEOT RECOMMENDATION & A. Dt1, 27 Washington Bt., ConneravUlei ta.. u in mi Kn jear. newriieioi: "inn tell n3rd ioaoh from my Itidneji and bind It I Bad linn back achoi and my kidney actios eras too fraqnant, cauMnc ma to losa much sleep M alf bt, and in my bladder there was oonstanl Mia. I took Foley Kidney Pills for some time. Sad am now free of all rouble and again able M a up and araand. Foey Kidney Pill kava aat W remain inih tioa.' O R SALE BY ALL DEALERS KAN RECORDS HIS r.C: SERIES ...- ; ' im A. : 1 " -s. Thief Arretted After School Girl Had ; Trailed Him Left Qdd Book ; 'New York. Mart Rohn, 14, after attending Normal school, returned to her home on the fifth floor of 440 East 16fitb treet. She was .climbing the staira when a man dashed past her, almost knocking her down, and fled to the atreet- Th girl' found that the door of her home had been jimmied and the place robbed. She ran to the street, caught , sight of the van halt a block away and trailed him along Elton avenue to 150th street. There she saw Pollcemaa Frazler and told him her story. . . , : - The policeman grabbed the man and took him to the Morrlslana police station. He said he was George Burke, hut refused to give" his ad dress. According to the police he ad mitted robbing the Rohns, after sev eral pieces of Jewelry found in bis pockets were identified by Marie as belonging to her family. In his hurry to leave the Rohn house the burglar left a small memo randum book behipd. On tin outside was written" Burke's name.. It had an alphabetical index and on several pages were found nameB of persons whose homes have recently been robbed, so the police said. The book also contained a lis of valuables tak en from each place and the names of pawnbrokers who had bought or loan ed money on the articles. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A HA, O JOHN, WHAT IS THE TROUBLE NOW? Why haven't you heard the latest? They brought old man economy down last night in an automobile and he is telling some strange stories. He was hung up on the fence for weeks watching the sheep feeding in the pastures, watch ing the wool grow, watching the shears clipping it off and went to the factory and and wacthed every process until he was able to purchase the best line of foreign and domestic woolens that has ever been his good fortune to do.and his correct fall fashions are now ready, prices lower than the lowest. He is again stopping with. R. SAWYER, MERCHANT TAILOR, 51 South Front St., New Bern, N. C. and is thanking the public for their liberal patronage in the past season and do earnestly solicit a continuance of same. He remains, Yours most respectfully, LATEST ECONOMY. A FINE VESTIBULE 2 1 A .'vf- V' 3 4 i & fit riIP?iM DOOR gives tone to a house. You can get one heTe at compar atively little expense. Take your choice of a variety of designs too. There are all kinds of woods, golden or quartered oak, cherry, ma hogany, etc. Come and see them. Nothing you can add I V to your house will so much improves its tone and appearance. Tolson Lumber & Man'fg. Co. Ofnce Yards and Factory, 129 E. Front St. New Bern N. C. Da.;v. s. p.ai?,sford .'.QUITS THE MINISTRY The. other day William & Ralnsford walked Into the study of Bishop. Greer and1 demanded that' he be depos ed from; the Epis ' copal ministry. His only explana tion, was that he M would not return to the pulpit. U der . the canonical law Bishop Greer . was 'obliged to . comply with ' his request. . Stern, tight-lipped, domi nant, sRainsford turned on his beel and .walked out as he had entered alone. For thirteen years Ralnsford, as rec tor of St George's church, had without question been the most Important min lster of any faith in New York. One day, without foreword or explanation, he resigned. His friends said that he was in ill health. Hard on the heels of that statement, Ralnsford left for a hunting trip through East Africa, a task that would tax the strength and endurance of any man. From time to time he has returhed to outfit for an other expedition. Now he- is to bead a party sent out by the American Muse um of Natural History and will Bpend three more years in African Jungles. He is strong as a bull moose, he tingles with nervous force, he could run in a Marathon or fight in the ring and he can keep his secret What ever it is, it is his alone. No one has ever shared it Ralnsford had attracted attention In Toronto 'by the virility and splendor and unconventionallty of hla ministry. Old St. George's church In New York was about to be abandoned, when J. Pierpont Morgan sent for Ralnsford to rejuvenate it Other eminent minis ters had refused the task. "I will take it," said Ralnsford, "on three conditions. The church must be absolutely free. You must buy out those pewholders who will not surren der their seats. I must have $10,000 a year to spend as I please, apart from my salary, which you may fix to suit yourself. All committees save that of the vestry must be abolished." "Done," said Morgan. The church had been burdened with a floating debt It was spiritually dead. Ralnsford left ft the livest wire of the diocese, with an endowment of $400,000, and had raised $2,500,000 for its support He went into the back rooms of saloons and brought his re cruits to his classes. Until they learned that the rector could fight as well as he could pray, there was a fight every Sunday. Ralnsford always won. He charmed the poor girls away from the vile dance halls by opening a dancing floor in the parish house and danced with them himself. An apostle of the poor, and almost a So cialist in his personal views, he made St George's the largest parish in the country with a membership of more than five thousand. Its social centers are the busiest oh the east side. The intellectuals from university and slum gathered to hear him preach. Then one day he walked out From that day he has elected to be stern and silent and salf-centered a determined exile from his home. . No one knows why. Behind that protec tive shell of silence is there a trag edy concealed? J. W. Copeland, of Dayton, Ohio, purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for his boy who had a cold, and before the bottle was all ueed the boy's cold was gone. Is that not better than to pay a five dollar doctor's bill? For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement) OI5G One Man's Unforgetable Meeting WItht Rattler. "V - 4 fDead"; Snakeahlp Seamed a Worthy .'.,. Trlxe, But-:, He Has " Never -. Re-'-." " grafted the. Cautloa of Hla , Traveling Companion. The day was warm, very warm, and the horses toiled up the sun baked, Austy Blue Ridge mountain road. Up, up we went by slow degrees, every fresh winding of the road disclosing new and more beautiful panoramas of valleys, farm strewn and river bisect ed, and distant hills, and yet farther distant valleys and. misty mountains in the . background cloud crowned and sun besprinkled. And so we slowly approached the summit As we rounded a bend in the road we saw stretched out as straight as a piece of string a dead rattler and annexed to its tall a splen did string of rattles. The snake had not long been dead, for his skin was certainly in prime condition, and the beauty of that diamond marked scaly covering made into a belt or cut up into purses was apparent. But I was more interested in the buttons that give out the dread warning that sets a man; looking in 20 different direc tions at once. I wanted those rattles, and, full of impetuosity, I reached for my Jack knife and made to spring out upon the ground; but my older companion, realizing the delay that would surely follow and appreciating the snail's pace at which we were traveling, put his veto upon any diversion or delay. The snake was very much dead, would not run away, would be there when we returned; the dead chestnut along side the road would mark the spot, and with a g'lang to the horses we kept going and left the snake behind. But certainly those buttons were fine ones, and would grace any one's den, and as we were delayed at our destination on the mountain top,, I re gretted that I had not taken that rat tler and, bringing It along, skinned It. So In due time we returned, and at last came to the dead chestnut tree, and we looked for and did not find our rattler. Some one, no doubt, had come that way appreciative of a fine snake skin or needing rattlesnake oil for rheumatism, and had carried his snakeship away. His markings in the dust were plainly seen, and as I jumped from the rig and looked a lit tle more closely at the spot where he lay so very dead I could plainly see where the snake, after enjoying his sunbath, had crawled into the bushes and gone down the mountain side. It has always been a matter of snake painting with me when I Imagined my jumping from the rig alongside that very much alive snake, of his colling and striking like a -flash, of the mad rush to town for whisky, and the town ten miles away. Well, I am not pleased over the painting, yet the pic ture comes like a panorama before my eyes every time I see a diamond backed rattler in a zoo or even see a picture of a rattler in a book. Un knowingly, this was a case of allow ing a sleeping' rattler to lie. The new Crossetts are here. Smart shapes that set the pace pr style in men's foot wear. All the comfort kinks and fashion fan cies that have made Crossetts footwear favorites. Get yourS. Mill Hj Mr. Jas. V. Churchill, 90 Wall St., Auburn, N. Y., has been bothered with serious kidney and bladder trouble ever since he left the, army, and sayss: "I decided to try Foley Kidney Pills as they had cured so many people and I soon found they were just the thing. My Kidneys and bladder are again in a healthy -condition. I gladly ' recom mend them. For sale by allfdealers. (Advertisement) f TRADE MARK M$4 io $G everywhere i ttutiq: a njrc iirTT ma Maker North AtiirujtonJluM. Standard Shoe Co. The Home of Good Shoes 114 Middle St. New Pern, N. Z, NATIONA L LIFE Z L COMPANY MONTPELIER VERMONT Chartered 1848 Pur ly Mutua EL Progress in Last Twenty Years January 1st. 1892. ASSETS INCOME INSURANCE IN FORCE $7,625,780 $2,21t,360 $51,369,348 January 1st, 1912. ASSETS INCOME INSURANCE IN FOHCE $53,445,289 $9,156,450 $172,678,655 Gross Surplus to Policyholders $6,574,746.24 Issues the best forme of Life, Terms, En-iowment and Trusteeship Insurance and Life Annuities. The Leadintt Annual Dividend Company. The very heat 5 and 10 Year Renewable Term policies on the market. Renewable and convertable without re-med cal examination. Annual premiums from $11 41 and upwards, which are annually rtduced by large cash dividends. We will be e lad to furnish specimen policies upon request. Correspondence solicited. HOWARD S. STYRON, District Agt., New Bern, N. C. H. M. HUMPHREY, State Manager, National Bank Bldg., GoldsboroN. C. t 1: s rf I I New Bern's t 1 3 '-'lit f i ' i i Cloaks, ouits, ewest ALLEN, 85 Middle Street tore for Women i Opened up for Business Oct 5th With a full line of the Newest Styles in fit 2. A Special Department in KI ILLIMERY, U Flowers, Feathers, Ribbons, g ji Parioian in T Skirts, Dresses, Waists, Dress Goocls and i Muslin Underwear. , rJodiG.;;TnmmPr1 t JnrrJmm "HaW',Tm1oi;H8ita.CMira 8 HatS. .. a n n ; r '.j-i ' Hi'K"'.! w . i.i ..' .i " . ;. j' i , .m, n vj. . .".,.,1.. - m tv (",";,, vii iff i mm m m . m . r u mm n' v- Mi i '.v , u ' . j ri s . m A 1 ti . :hu - " , " r , . M. - ? y.y ...,..-.-''" ...-"-.- - - - - - ............. ...-...-.... 1 - v ' . ' '
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 6, 1912, edition 1
2
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