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The Daily Free Press from Kinston, North Carolina • Page 6

Location:
Kinston, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SIX THE KINSTON FREE PRESS Stock Collars Big assortment. See them if you want the latest in Collars Special 100 dozen real soft ready for use ladies' handkerchiefs 4c each CHAS. A. WATERS The Telephone Store Phone 89 MR. BOERNER Expert Tailor Representing Schloss Bros.

Co. of Baltimore Will be with us Thursday, Friday and Saturday of This Week Showing Winter Woolens Come And See J. C. CO. Dr.

Albert D. Parroti Practice Limited to Genito-Uris ary, Rectal Diseases and Gor. eral Surgery. Office with Dr. J.

M. Parroti m. m. 8-9 At Hospital: 0. 66 A DOLLAR SAVED IS A DOLLAR MADE" Monday October 1st is the beginning of a new quarter in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.

Open an account with us and save money that usually goes for unnecessary expense. The small sums you thoughtlessly spend are saved by some one. Why not BANK it yourself? One Dollar Opens An Account For your convenience we are open Saturdays until Nine P. M. The Caswell Banking Trust Co.

TIME TO THINK ABOUT MOWERS The Johnston Nos. 12 14 to The lof The Farmes for This Section H. E. Mosely Hardware Co. KINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1917 One Prise Cash Store" Sweaters Mens, Ladies, Misses and Childrens Popular Prices A.

J. SOTTON SONS Telephone 84 One Cash Store" New Line. of Satin and Serge Dresses Just Received $13.75 to $27.50 CASEY THOMPSON CO. "Shamrock's Old Stand." Phone 378 For These Cool Nights, Wear The FAULTLESS Night Shirt or a PAJAMA THE MARYLAND TAILORING COMPANY "The Tailors Who Guarantee" DR. GEO.

E. KORNEGAY SPECIALIST In Diseases of Women Children Office Hours: 10 to 12. Office: 105 W. Caswell 81. DR.

IRA M. HARDY Hours: 8:30 m. m. to 1 Phone Connection. Offices: 104 West Caswell Street Weather Forecast: Yair tonight and Sunday; colder tonight, with frost in interior; light, Northwest winds.

Realty Deal. A. N. Taylor has sold to W. C.

Worthington 61 and a fraction acres of farm land near this City, for 350. Kinston Boy Honored. The Sophomores of Trinity College elected class officers recently, choosing P. F. Whitaker If Kinston president.

Red Cross Meeting. There will be an important meeting of the Red Cross in the Pythian's castle hall Monday night at 8 o'clock. LOCAL INTEREST not coming to Kinston as had been planned, especially since the music. tians had been "working hard trying to get up two good concerts," which were to include "such as 'William Tell', 'Poet and Peasant', etc." "The poon fellows" -the been the laughing stock of the regiment, and now they all deny being from Kinston." The Third Tennessee band, "not as good as ours," is going to Knoxville to play for something and is getting $1,700 to go on, Brewer declares. The expense of coming to Kinston for the Carolina band be only about $400, he says, "and you know by playing a concert at the theatre we could make half of that back." 46 We are now spending two hours a day in hispital school." Brewer visited the field artillery from this State at Greenville, S.

where he is stationed, and found Dan. Boney of Kinston washing dishes, George Fleming digging stumps and Bernice Pate keeping the incinerator. a hot fire." BURIAL OF MRS. PHILLIPS. three brothers and a number of other The Demonstration of the South Bend Malleable Range Continues Next Week If you buy a South Bend Malleable during the demonstration 1011 get a $10.00 SOUTH BEND set of aluminum ware free-.

Be and you get the best range on earth. NO Come Monday and let us show why the rust proof flues make the Bend Malleable last longer---and why the superior construction makes it a more convenient, economical range than any other. If you are open to conviction, we have the range to convince you. Oettinger's Furniture Store. The body of Mrs.

J. Phillips was brought here Friday afternoon. from Madison, in a sanitorium at which place she died Wednesday, and buried in Maplewood Cemetery. Mins. Phillips had been an invalid several years.

She was a devout Christian, and throughout her suffering retained her 'excellent disposition. She was a niece of Mrs. John Dillahunt, Mrs. L. Herring and Mrs.

Matt. Slaughter of this City, and great niece of Mrs. W. F. Mrs.

Pattie A. Taylor, A.I Pollock, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hamilton, all of Kinston, and Mr.

R. B. Grubbs of Grifton. Besides these relatives she is survived by her husband. two children, mother, father, three brothers and a number of other If you are overly particular about your shirts, we want you to come here and see the big, new line of distinctive and stylish patterns in our Shirts.

Besides exclusive patterns, you'll get your exact sleeve length--your cuffs will set where you want them. Generously cut shoulders and fronts; pre-shrunk neckbands and re-inforced buttonholes. Also--there's the Nek-bantab, a clever little device that opens the collar pocket for you even in the stiffest neckband. Emery Shirts- Shirts $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and up. Barrett Hartsfield Teachers' Examinations.

The rural teachers of the county. both white and colored, will be examined at the County Superintendent's office here Tuesday and Wednesday, October 9 and 10. A Vast Difference. There were 111 bales of cotton counting round as half bales, ginned in Lencir County from the crop 1917 prior to September 25, as compared with 917 bales ginned to Sep ember 25. 1916.

Freak Potato. Rev. John H. Griffith exhibited at The Free Press office Saturday a sweet potato in the shape of a very well-formed interrogation mark. "What am I the ignorant thing asked itself.

Got Tired of Fishing. According to a New Bern dispatch to the Raleigh News and Observer, Mr. Dempsey Wood, Kinston's famous angler, told a reporter there that he had actually "caught fish until he was tired" on a recent trip to the vicinity of Morehead City and Beaufort. Could Not Fill Appointments. Mr.

L. L. Matthews of Clinton, who was to have filled the appointments of Rev. Willard O. Bodell at Woodington Sunday morning and Kinston Sunday evening, will not be able to come and has cancelled the engagement.

Mr. Bodell, pastor of the Universalist Church of the Eternal Hope, is now in the North, lecturing. Four Sons Happily Located. Judge and Mrs. Oliver H.

have given three sons to the Nation's defense. Capt. Matt. Allen and Will Allen are with the field artillery at Greenville, S. C.

Lieut. Reynold Allen is with an infantry regiment at Columbia regiment at Columbia, S. C. Their fourth son, Connor Allen, is in the legal department of the Federal Land Lank at Columbia, which puts all four close together. Pastoral Play by Pastoral Players.

You Kid!" was the offering at the Grand Theatre Friday night. Five or six persons were in the cast. The plot dealt with the carryings on of El village hotel clerk, a constable, a girl in a sunbonnet, a city young woman and the hero. At the end of the first act the hero had made love to the young person in the sunbonnet, got arrested for speeding, made the constable drunk and whipped the clerk. The criticism stops there.

The first act was awful. It was not 3 presentation, but a perpetration. The girl in the sunbonnet tried to sing, but semed not to have her heart in It. The poor thing probably was distressed over having been dragged down into the depths by the rest. KINSTON MUSICIANS GUYED OVER THEIR 'CHEAP TOWN', SAYS "You know there are only 10 boys in the band from Kinston out of the 28, and it makes the rest sore for people refer to it as the 'Kinston band', says Earl.

Brewer, bass drummer of the 119th Infantry Band, in a letter to Joe F. Ballard, who used to be assistant leader of the band. Blurting out everything that's on his heart, Brewer says: "The Kinston boys have certainly been guyed some about their cheap town; and you know how they felt last Christmas about being forgotten. It seems that the band is disappointed about Welcome Daughters of Confederacy We want them to have the best Eastern Carolina affords. F.

F. BROOKS SON "Something to Eat" Subscribe to Free Press "Make Hay While The Sun Shines" Interpreted to fit the times: Save some tobacco money for the "rainy day." IN THIS BANK IS THE PLACE TO SAVE. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINSTON CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS $175,000 N. J. ROUSE.

President D. F. WOOTEN. Cashier DR. HENRY TULL, Vice-Prest.

J. J. BIZZELL. Asst. Cashier W.

B. HARVEY, Teller DIRECTORS W. L. Kennedy Taylor C. Felix Harvey Dr.

Henry Tull Hi. 11. McCoy David Oettinger J. H. Canady S.

H. Isler H. E. Moseley N. J.

Rouse.

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About The Daily Free Press Archive

Pages Available:
26,792
Years Available:
1898-1923