Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Oct. 10, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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'1 - -: rV r it ' .1 . ."If" i -C'V-fiT1... . f . . -. - . , ;; i .a;;;;1 ;.. ,.-:'.,v- ?''." - - I the know ledp, of V mutual fer iof j, ' ' ' "" "in ' '"f f'A 11RST STOil k Jio Indication, Gai, Heartburn or ' Plapepsla five mlnutea after - 'taklng "Pape'a DiapepaIn'.M reirularv more tuns a million stomach sufferers in the Unittd , States, tngland ana uanaaa ia-e rape Diapepsin, and realize not only im mediate, but lasting relief. ' This harmless preparation will digest ' anything you eat and overcome a sour fassy or out-of-order stomach five minutes- afterwards. 1' your meals don't fit comfortably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead In your stomach, or if you have heart burn, that Is a sign of indigestion. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a dose just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or intestinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous ordors. Pape's Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if yourstomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases contain jiore than sufficient to thoroughly cnre Almost any case of dyspepsia, indigestion or any other atomach disorder. .Foley. Kidney Pili TOMIO IN ACTION - QUICK IN RESULT! Qhr prompt relief from BACKACHE, KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE, RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of tha KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of th BLADDER and all annoying URINARY IRREGULARITIES. A posittT boon to MIDDLE A (JED and ELDERLY PEOPLE and for WOMEN. MAVI MIOHEST RECOMMENDATION my kidney aetioa nhle end ania able up and emend. Fo ey Kidney Filia aare i MfVi-i-iriari--r T OR SALE BY ALL DEALERS DEO 6. A. Dm rli, ?n Washington St., Connerrrill, lad., is in hli 85th year. H writes m i "Ikavi ff.Mil miwk tmm m V bMnAVB Bf, (i hlftfL Za laadsaranbaekaohsiand Va too frequent, catulay me to lose msjen aieei aa slant, and in my blender there was constant Jb7 I took Foley Kidney Pills lor aome time. mA mm now free of ail rouble and again able l mm ml vim to your house will so much improves its tone and appearance. Tolson Lumber & JMan'fg. Co. i Utnce laras ana ractorj, us i, : i xrY L.ffO - , y A STiilJsci-iTb: fox- tliL tt Aih v; 1 X-' ARAPAHOE ITEMS. k I i moflet eousin. war coma not a 11...,,,,,-..,-,.. v:s "J iO'-y y-J.V-rf ' U ji Ar.ohoe.-OcUi .-Cottoi picking .ik '.-V' v cnoseu on. ofta. intlful worn. II VV -A VT Oll " j&Wi T . ArajMhoe-vOcU? .-Cotton picking time is now1 on,; and the" Jar mer JM Arapajifte;.are Jf njoying tftfeH ! Mr. ;' Clifford ;: NnnS reternetf home I Aim . Jiew BernfdUynight,, jC ; 'T 'VMiwea thel' and Neva Brinsdn .of Bairda Creek spent Sunday in Arapahoe with friends. : J Mr, Neave of Washington D.' C, who is staying in our midst now re- turned Com a trip to Tuscaora and Ayden last week. He reported a pleasant trip. Mr. Manly Willis also went to Tus carora and on to Ayden returning last week. There is much sickenss at Arapahoe now. Master Lind Johnson, who has been very low of hemorhagitf fever is slowly improving, also Mr! Church 'Martin. Little Lila Mae Brinson who was very sick of typhoid fever is much better so she is up, but unable to walk again yet. Messrs. G. W. and E. S.'Brinson have been right sick but are better now. Mr. and Mrs. James Lupton of Lupton, N. C. are visiting relatives and friends near Arapahoe now. Miss Gertrude Golden of Punta Gorda, Florida, is visiting friends in and near Arapahoe now. ' Mr. and Mrs, Major Broughton were in Arapahoe Sunday. Mr. J. J. Walker filled his regula monthly appointment here Sunday and Sunday night. Money makes the mare go lame hit ting the pace. HA, O JOHN, WHAT IS THE TROUBLE NOW? Why haven't yon heard the latest? They brought old man economy down last night in an automobile aind 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 ourchase 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 DOOR t feives tone to a house. You a can get one here at comparj y atively little expense. 1 ake your choice of a variety of 0 designs too. There are all j kinds of woods, golden or a quartered oak, cherry, ma- hogany, etc. Come and see Y them. Nothing you can aaa L .ee 11- ijivun m. ,. . ..,;:. ,. ..r", . T-7-.,r--f.T- p pc, T nMY.-f r fe1 Kis'l tnt haunted hla .twdlpTr.prom.th. V ', liiV3-.Tf- 1 2 I f- 4,11 , ' an man 1 It waa but a ahort time after Lari mer built hla bungalow until bia pop ularity was established In our neigh borhood of orange; groves and mag nolia treea.- Hia studio waa a place for aignt-aeern, aa well as a pleaaant re sort, for friends and neigh bora. Others succumbed to Lorlmer'a In fluence because they found Mm re sponsive and congenial, but I Imagined that he attracted me because he was my contrast It was be, himself, who discovered that our natures, beneath the surface, were positive and not neg ative, and with that discovery be swept away all imagined barriers between us. placing me at once In the heart of the company that haurited hi bungalow. He said to me one day aS he looped a Persian drapery behind his model's chairt .Tlsdale. you have the depth of artist-Instinct, but; you haven't the gift of expression. ?You don't even talk.; . These others, tor; .Instance," waving his -hand in the direction of the chatterers Just gonethase others talk about everything they feel, and, dear boy, they have so little to tell!" Hla tone to me waa like a velvet touch,' an.d his ayes held a steel-blue gleam that made me love to look at hlm.; 1 knew that he knew my inner aelf, and that whatever that self might be, It was valued by him. I shall never forget the kindly sym pathy that shone from his eyes when he realized one special day that I needed him , to understand me. I had gone to him, troubled about my moth er'a orphaned . cousin Lucy, who had come to us to live, having no other place to go. I wanted to befriend her, to make her. happy, and I could not even tell her that she waa welcome. She was a little daisy maid, blossom ing into womanhood almost In a day, under our soft akleS and In our south ern California breezes. As I entered the studio. Lorlmer's clean-shaven cheeks, his locks of dark hair thrown off his forehead, the friendly eyes under his heavy brows, made a fit crown to his tall form standing before the easel. I can see the very dab of ochre on his thumb. He was busy at one of his wonderful wood interiors, touching in the sun light by hints of yellow on the lichen covered trunks. "Yes. Tlfldale." Lorimer said, after I had looked for a long time over his shoulder without speaking, "I feel the Joy of utterance. Why, man, think what a relief to weep in grief! That Is what It ia to paint, to sing, to be a poet." "I can do none of these things," I answered slowly. "No, but after all, perhaps within vou mav be artist or noet. Life has an intensity, a value, that this hasn't,? and Lorimer lightly struck His can vas. A woman it is always a woman that Intrudes upon men's friendships. She is a sort of earth, trespassing upon a kind of heaven. This time, it was, of course, the daisy maid, and it is difficult to know whether she made earth heaven, or brought heaven to nnrth Lorimer, and L suddenly, awokejto T. W. CoPeland. of Davton. Ohio. purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for his boy who had a cold, and before the-bottle was all used the boy's cold was gone. Is that not better than to pay a hve dollar doctor s bill? For sale by all dealers. (Advertise me nt uove 1 mumtAm T Mai fffi MM .and IhAM WhV 1 1 1 ) TO ) M - J k W . I tf : - could not t have taken Iwttwwomw II :i4x- - 'V ' ;' nfi and been satisfied? . A My vary silence was confession alter Ma ina1 at lover fA Tjiicw and then he admonished gravely, fisdale, rei member we are her courtiers, ana tne courtiers stand aside when, the queen passes, choosing whom she' will," Oh! but It was bard to rive another man fair play; hard for ns both. Lorl mer's face grew thin under the strain, and a river of fire seemed to flow in and out of my heart. At last, Lucy consented to alt for her portrait. One day, hidden in sport behind some studio trumpery, we watched her enter. Lorlmer's hand waa oh my shoulder- As fortune had decreed, my. handkerchief lay on the floor. Her own hand had so em hroldered! the sauare of linen that it seemed too dainty for the pocket of my shaggy coat; but when I carried the sheer and pretty thing, she seemed close. Now,- Lucy looked hastily to right and left, then, believing herself alone, she caught up the handkerchief and pressed it to her Hps; then she thrust it Into her gown, and as she went awar. ahe covered the place with her hand, as though a bird had flown into her bosom. Lorimer KriDoed my shoulder, but the 1lood leaped to my face for joy. and then ran back 111 a tide of shame, because I was so poor, a creature. I felt mv ahort and sturdy figure grow more plebean in contrast to my friend; I saw my unruly shock of sandy Hair; my features my limbs; my hands and feet; all that the world calls man. We -were silent, for I know not how long, listening to the Clock that Lori mer timed his hours by. Finally, It was he that spoke; "Don't fear for me. Tladaie: what von live. I can paint Mine is a lesser gift than yours, yet still a Joy. God be with you! I see before you, wire. home, children; for me, a cold thing art!" The world has since made a rapture of Lorlmer's genius, but in my still moments I can hear his sigh across the continent He was right: the de votion of a life is a soul's expression. The life speaks! Mania for Palaces. Th discovery of an Intruder at Mrlhoroueh House. ' in London, Is reminiscent of the adventures of "the boy Jones" in the early years of Queen Victoria's reign. In December, 1840, hA eained access to Buckingham pal Reereted himself there for several days. He was detected by the princess' royal's nurse and nanaea over to the police. The privy council examined him, but did not think there waa any cause for alarm, .and he was sentenced to three months inmprlsonment as a rogue and vagabond. But no sooner was he at liberty than he made two other attempts to enter the palace. On the last occasion the magistrate gave him the chance of enlisting in the navy, where h'e was speedily cured of his mania for acquiring a royal domi die. Their Advantage. "There Is one class of men who cer tainly ought to have a grip on the pub lic." "Who are they?" "The dealer In suit cases." Mr. Jas. V. Churchill, 90 Wall St., Auburn, N. 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 manvpeople 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 all dealers, i, (Advertisement) - 1 i VAVJ LINE OF Misses' Juniors' Ladies COATS i SUITS AT POPULAR PRICES Coats from $5.00 to $18.00 Suits from $5.00 to $25.00 You will find it distinctly to your advantage to in spect our Showing before buying elsewhere. J. J. Department Store NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY MONTPELIER Chartered 1848 Progress in Last January INCOME $2,216,360 January INCOME $9,156,450 ASSETS $7,625,780 ASSETS $53,445,289 Gross Surplus to Policyholders $6,574,746.24 Iseues the best forme of Life, Terms, Endowment and Trusteeship i i i :r a Tko I noinir Annual Dividend CoTODanV. insurance auu uie num'"". "- " ,. . . - The verv nest 5 nd 10 Year Renewable Term policies on the market. Renewable ana ennverrame wimoui rt-iu""'u" .... premiums from $11 41 and upward?, which are annually reduced by Jsree cash dividends We will be ehd to furnish specimen policies upon request. Correspondence solicited. HOWARD S. STYRON, District Agt., tfew Bern, N. C. H. M. HUMPHREY, State Manager, National Bank Bldg., FOLEY &HARGETT Graduate Veterinarians Office and Hospital 66 BROAD STREET, Phone 735 NEW BERN, N. C. BAXTER. - Elks' Temple. VERMONT 'lr'ly Mutwa Twenty Years 1st. 1892. INSURANCE IN FORCE $51,869,3-18 1st, 1912. INSURANCE IN FORCE $172,678,655 1 GoldsboroN. C. Cotton ! Cotton! ! E. B. Elliott, representing J. E. Latham, is in the market for cotton. A1E parties having Cotton to sell will do well to see him before selling. E. B. ELLIOTT, 6 Craven St. Phone 74S J Is" J j-V
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1912, edition 1
2
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