Eastern reflector, 6 January 1911


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Agriculture is the Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1911.
Number .
SENATOR PHARR, OF
BURG, PRESIDENT
DOWD SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE
NORTH CAROLINA CITIES.
Caucus Tuesday Night Names
Both and These
Are Elected When Senate And
House of Representatives Con-
Today, January 4th, at noon the
general assembly of North Carolina
mt in Raleigh to continue in
for sixty days. Both branches
organized by electing the officers
chosen at the caucus held Tuesday
night.
In the senate caucus Senator L. V.
Bassett, of Edgecombe, was caucus
chairman, and the following officers
were
President N. Pharr, of
Mecklenburg.
Principal O. Self, of
Jackson.
Reading Squires, of
Caldwell.
E. Hooks,
of Wayne.
M. Staley, of
Wilkes.
Assistant G. Hall, of
Cumberland.
In the house caucus
H. W. Stubbs, of Martin was
made chairman of the caucus, and
the following officers were
C. Dowd, of
burg.
Principal G. Cobb, of
Burke.
Reading Scott Poole, of
Cumberland.
i D. Kins-
land, of Haywood.
G.
of Lenoir.
Assistant H. James, of
Halifax.
For the speaker and principal
of Those Above Five
Thousand.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington. Jan.
of the following North Carolina
was given out
Raleigh, Asheville.
Winston, Greensboro.
Durham, Concord,
City, Fayetteville,
Gastonia, Goldsboro,
High Point, 6.995;
9.961; Rocky
Salisbury,
Washington, Wilson,
WATER RISING RAPIDLY.
Stock in Low Grounds Should Be
Looked After.
Observer R. M. Hearne advises
that the water in the river is rising
rapidly, with the outlook that it is
to go much higher. Already the
banks of the river have overflown,
and the water is out into
the adjacent low grounds. He says
that people who have stock running
in these low grounds should lose no
time in getting the animals out to
high land.
EARTHQUAKE IN RUSSIA.
Does Much Damage to Life and to
Property.
Coble The Reflector.
Russia, Jan.
of buildings were de-
and many lives lost in a
lent earthquake which almost de-
a city of some import
this morning. The loss of life
is not known. Great Assures were
opened in the ground and buildings
damaged. The population is in
The shocks were felt in various
parts of Russia and Turkestan.
FATAL FIRE NEAR RALEIGH.
Colored Woman and Her Daughter
Lose Their Life.
Wire to The Reflector.
Raleigh, X. C, Jan. Sanders
a colored woman, and her two
were burned to death early this
morning in a farm house near
The husband and father was
sleeping in an adjoining room and
was awakened by the fire. He got
out with difficulty but the fire had
made such headway that he could not
save his family.
DESTROYED BY FIRE EARLY
THIS MORNING
LOSS INSURANCE
Legislature Meets.
By Wire to The Reflector
Raleigh, Jan. North Car-
legislature met at noon today
and organized for business by
the nominations of the Demo-
caucuses held last night.
clerk there was no opposition and
these nominations were made by ac-
For assistant sergeant-at-arms
there were eight candidates, but D.
H. James, of Halifax, formerly of
Pitt, won on the first ballot. He has
this position through several
terms.
Master Thomas Griffin, who has
been sick for several days, is much
improved .
Mrs. R. M. Elks, of Grimesland,
is visiting Mrs. W. M. Moore.
Robin in Court
Wire to The Reflector.
New York, Jan. G.
Robin was for the second time taken
to the Criminal court building this
morning to plead to the indictment
against him for the larceny of
To prevent another attempt at
suicide he was taken in a patrol
wagon guarded by four policemen.
Great efforts were made by his
friends to be allowed to take him in
an automobile, but remembering his
former experience, this was de-
Robin plead not guilty and in de-
fault of bail, he was locked
up in the tombs.
Gallagher on Trial.
By Wire to The Reflector.
York, Jan. J. Gal-
who shot Mayor Gaynor last
August, was placed on trial today for
assault with intent to kill William
Edwards. The jury box was filled
in fifteen minutes.
Students Were The r
AH Escaping Unhurt, I r
Their Tm Col-
Records Destroyed- Building
Was a Gift by Washington Duke.
Wire to The
Durham. Jan. early this
morning totally destroyed main
building Trinity College, known us
the Washington Duke building. The
loss is near with In-
The building contained
class rooms, dormitory and
offices. It was to have
been torn down but the new building
is not yet ready for use. Forty
dents were in the building, and all
of them unhurt, but many
of them lost their trunks. Valuable
college records were also lost. The
building burned was the oldest on
the campus, and was a of the
late Washington Duke.
Woodland Items.
Woodland, X. C Jan. are
having some very rainy weather for
the new year.
Miss Nobles spent part of
last week in Ayden.
We are glad to hoar that Miss
Ella May, who has been sick for the
past week or so, able to be up
again.
Mr. Amos Jackson and Miss Gene-
Edwards were married near here
last Tuesday. Miss Edwards was
visiting Miss Bessie Kittrell at the
time of the marriage.
We understand that Mr. John
Grubbs of our neighborhood, has re-
moved to Virginia.
Hanging is too good for a painting
that is badly executed.
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mm
FEWER THAN IN ANY RECENT
YEAR
THINGS LOOK ABOUT THE
The Few Denote a
lion mi and
it ill go Right on Without Any In-
to Breaking in
Helpers,
The f contentment and sat-
that exists in the business
circles of can shown
in no better than In the few
take place at the new
year. As has been its custom for
many years past, The Reflector man
made . hurried trip the
y ascertain what
have taken place for this
hew year, and found that there were
very few in most instances the firms
and their helpers going on
tot, G. M. Holden, of Greene county
has been added to the sales crew o
the brokerage business of J.
min
Mr. Oscar has retired as
for the Com-
Messrs. W. i. Rice and
both retire at C. T. ant-
Mr. C. Tunstall ft
Clark retires from the
store of W. B. Brown.
The firm of Baker Hart has been
to Hartley, the new
of the business
Mr. W. Greene retires from the
store of Patrick
Mr. W. L. Barnhill i at
Pharmacy and is succeeded by Mr.
D. S.
Mrs. R. AI. frame retires and is
succeeded by Maggie Brown at
the store of a. n. Ellington Com-
Mr. It. T. Cox retires at Frank
Wilson's,
Mr. John B. Congleton retires at J.
J. G. to lake a business
college course and is succeeded by
Mr. H. L. Hodges. Mr. J. L. Jackson
formerly with the Central
tile Company, also taking a position
as bookkeeper for this firm, succeed-
Mr. C. D. Tunstall.
-Miss Harding retires from
the store of C. B. Bradley.
Mr. P. Davenport retires as man-
ager of the Mercantile Coin-
pan.-, and will move to to
engage in business there.
it
GREENVILLE, N. G.
Report Condition of The Sank
of Greenville, Greenville, N. C.
At Close of Business December
i. .
. . v. ;
. .
; .- . .
fr
f . . .
. ft
.-
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts
Overdrafts
Building and Fixtures
Cash Items
Cash and Due from Banks
Total
3859.96
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock
4,186.73
Profits
Deposits
Total
10,470.8
I to Loan
We take pleasure in calling attention to the
above statement, and at the time Cs
expend thanks to our customers and
friends with the Greetings of
the New Year.
R- L. DAVIS, Pres.
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier
FIRE AT
DO YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT
Yon Should For the
MONEY in Bank is safe from fire and burglars; in your home it is not. I
MONEY in Bank is safe from careless handling; in your pocket it is not.
MONEY paid by check guarantees to you a permanent receipt; cash
handed out does not.
MONEY in Bank is a starter towards economy, always ready for use,
or to be added to.
is provided with safeguard for the protection of its depositors,
and endeavors to its customers the best service.
We will be glad to have your business.
C. S. CARR, Cashier
is estimated at and there was
Insurance on the building and
. oil the furniture.
Mrs. had to climb out the
window to save herself.
Residence and Ail Contents Burned
Ti-is Morning.
Early this morning the dwelling
house and practically all contents, of
Mr. Dan in Grifton, was de-
by Are. Upon up Mr.
built a in the cook
for breakfast to be prepared
and went out When be returned
the ceiling of the room was all on
Are and the dames spread so rapidly After all, children deserve a good
that building was consumed with ideal of Indulgence tor the. presiding elder of this district of the strongest and best
all contents suck on pointed conference in the
HEW ELDER. Elizabeth City, on Sunday made his
I first visit to Jarvis Memorial
His First Visit to Greenville church. He preached a
did sermon to a large congregation
. Sunday morning, and all who heard
Rev. J. T. Gibbs, D. D., the new him were delighted with him. He is
Church.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
IT'S
TRADE CONDITIONS
FOR THE YEAR
INSTITUTE.
1910 BEEN AS 1909
High Priced Commodities Retarded
More Optimistic
Any Other
Most Lines and Banks Have
Prospered.
Richmond, Va., Dec.
street's tomorrow will
say for Richmond and vicinity. This
week marks the closing of the year's
trading and as usual, there is little
activity in any line, many of the mer-
chants are making their annual in-
and factories are shut down
for their usual house cleaning. The
experience of those engaged in mer-
pursuits the country over,
have largely been the experience
local traders. The year has shown
one of irregular trading, slow col-
and distributing finance,
however, when summed up, with the
exception of a few lines, progress is
noticeable to a greater or less de-
Probably no one factor in re-
trade has been as potent as
the high prices of many staple com-
Locally many houses re-
port progress and a feeling of op-
is expressed when looking to
the trading for the coming year.
Apparently there is a greater feel-
of as to trade in the
South than in any other section.
Manufacturers and jobbers of shoes
report a fair years trading, though
not up to that of 1809, they, however,
anticipate greater sales for 1911. The
unsteadiness of the hide and leather
markets has affected all dependent
lines. Manufacturers of trunks and
bags have had the largest volume of
sales in their experience and the
demand continues up to the present.
Manufacturers and distributors of
paints, oils and varnishes, report an
active years trading, though profits
have been held down by the extreme-
high price of oils. Local drug
houses have had the largest year's
trading in their history. Building
and construction work was active
during the first months of the year,
but later a decrease was noticeable.
Trading in hardware and kindred
lines has been fair, the fluctuation in
prices in this line being less than in
many others. Manufacturers of
paper and paper specialties have had
a good years trading, although the
has not been up to the aver-
age. In this line manufacturers are
confident about business for 1911.
Manufacturers of flour have had a
geed year trade with
them has shown a large increase;
they express satisfaction with the
outlook. Manufacturers and whole-
of groceries and specialties
have had a satisfactory year, though
high prices of many staple articles
has retarded buyers purchasing in
large quantities. Wholesalers of
dry goods and notions have made
during the year and their
travelers report encouraging pros-
for 1911. The high prices of
cotton produce, and in some
lessened the possible profits.
Manufacturers of tobacco and cigars
report 1910 among their best year,
To He Held In Pitt County, January
11th and 12th.
institutes will be held at
Farmville on Wednesday, January
11th and at Grimesland on Thurs-
day, January 12th, at
o'clock. Interesting programs have
been prepared for these meetings
and lectures will be made by W. H.
G. M. and Frank Parks,
of the State department of
At the same places and dates
for women will be conducted by
Mrs. W. M.
All farmers and their wives, sons,
and daughters, and all others inter-
in farming and the
of the farm homes, are urged to at-
tend these and join in the
discussions. The boys especially,
should attend and learn about the
corn clubs.
A premium of will be given for
the best loaf of bread baked and ex-
by a girl or woman living on
farm, and also a premium of
for the best five ears of pure-bred
corn exhibited.
These institutes are for the
fit of farmers and their families, and
should have a large attendance.
Do Railroads Waste a Day
Nothing else has so startled the
public, in all the prolonged dispute
between shippers and railroads over
the proposed rate increase as the
statement, vouched for by no less an
authority than Louis D. Brandies,
that wasteful methods are costing
the railroads of the United States
between and
a year. This sum, as The Wall Street
Journal points out, is from to
per cent, of the gross earnings. Many
editors note that it is practically the
same amount that Senator Aldrich
said he could save if he had the job
of running the United States govern-
Mr. Brandies is counsel for the
eastern shippers who have been stat-
their arguments against higher
freight rates before the Interstate
Commerce Commission in Washing-
ton. Before calling his witnesses Mr.
Brandies said he was going to show
that the railroads ought to meet the
crisis which they say confronts them
by rather
than by rate increase. To
resort to the latter method, he de-
is merely to enter upon a
circle of ever increasing
freight rates and ever-increasing cost
of
We are Receiving Our
NEW
Dress Goods
Coat Suits and
JACKETS,
and Children's SWEATERS;
large variety of styles SHOES
in all leathers for men, boys,
ladies and children.
Our shoes are sold on their
merit and if you want
and your money's worth
come to see us.
Our stock embraces nearly
every article you will need in
; you home, Farm, or personal
j requirements- We have our
; store filled with goods and
cordially invite you to come to
see us.
Style Leaders
Greenville, N. C,
both as to sales and profits, and they
anticipate even greater activity
the coming year. Distillers and
distributors of and
liquors report increased sales for
1910. Manufacturers of
report substantial gains in volume of
business and in profits, they express
great confidence in the good prospects
for 1911, especially, in the South. Lo-
cal banks have prospered and a ready
demand for available funds has not
been lacking. Retail dealers in
touch with the consuming public,
have shared in the fluctuations of
trade and its affects, and while prof-
its have not been as large as in some
years, the years trading may be
classed as fair. Collections have
been irregular, almost beyond com-
but as the year closes,
is shown and more dis-
counts are being taken,
LOW HOLIDAY RATES
To Baltimore
via
CHESAPEAKE LINE
Tickets sold December 7th- 9th-20th-2 st-
22nd-23rd-24th-30th-31st. Final limit Jan-
6th, 1911
APPOINTED STEAMERS
PERFECT DIKING ALL OUTSIDE STATEROOMS.
For reservations and tickets apply
F. R. T. P. A., st, Norfolk, Va
Get in The Reflector Contest,
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t-
Carolina Home and Farm sad The Eastern Reflector.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T.
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for
Advertising Rates on Application
X. C. J
B. of
in Wednesday evening to re-
Mr. J. K. Green a day or two.
If you need any of your tools carts
or wagons repaired, see Harrington
Barber Company, they do you
and cheaply.
Mr. J. E. Green left Thursday
for a visit in
county.
Shoes and pants of
weight and style at A. W. Ange i
Company's.
Mrs. A. T. of
came In Wednesday evening to
a few days with her mother, Mrs. I
E.
For cheap and good goods, go t
Harrington, Barber Company. The
are pleased to serve you.
Davis, of
Wednesday night with Mis
Rattle C.
Don't forget the cheap dress
at A. W. Company's.
Mr. F. F. after spending
holidays at home, returned
day to Wake forest, where he n
his of medicine.
Mr. B. of
was town Thursday.
On Wednesday evening, the
the Episcopal church of our tow
was the scene of the prettiest wed
ding our have attended i.
some time, when Mr. Me
and Miss Miriam
two of the popular young people i
our community were united in mar
The Church was very festive in it
holly and but the
of four tall arches of white, drape
with evergreen, suggested the sun
vine clad arbors of oriental land;
As one glanced up the aisle
the altar the effect was very pleas
indeed. These arches were
ranged over the curtail aisle, the las
o o terminating at the chancel rail
This one supported from the top i
of white marriage bells
and it was here the bride and
took their place at the beginning o;
the Impressive ceremony.
Shortly after 7.30 Miss
Cox, a cousin of the bride and Mr
Royal of our town, marched
up the aisle, Miss Cox officiating a
the organ, while Mr. Adams assist-
ed in turning the pages of her mus-
Ac the first strains of
bridal chorus pealed out the voice;
of six young ladies in white,
Helen Adams, Hulda Cox,
Cox, Pearl. Clyde
and Olivia Cox, were heard at th
door singing the fitting words
this familiar march as it guided
toward the organ. Following
the Singers came the ushers, Messrs
Fountain Cox and Bryan.
placed the carpet of
aisle, the first couple of at-
made their way toward the
altar. During the singing of the
sweet bridal chorus these couples
drew up in front of the chancel In
Mr. Charlie
Lawhorn with Miss Lela Brown, of
Williamston; Mr. Hugh Smith, of
Farmville, with Miss Lena Cobb, of
Mr. Lester Johnson, of
Mount, with Miss Nellie John-
son, of Greene county; Mr.
Johnson with Miss Corinne
Mr. Roy Cox with Miss
Mr. Herbert with Miss
Cox.
The bridesmaids so daintily
In evening dresses, and the
in dress suits, made a
leasing picture as formed a
about the altar. Mrs. Joe
Ayden, the dame of
nor, and looked very imposing in
of old rose with silver trim-
lings.
Miss Esther Johnson, sister of the
ride, made a charming maid of
on or.
Iii a handsome dress of cream and
her, and draped in her misty veil,
bride looked very queenly as she
the aisle on the arm of her
They were met at the Chan-
steps by the groom with his best
Mr. The
ring service which made
em man and wife, was conducted
y Rev. B. F. of New Bern.
t the end of the service the
with words from Sidney
aider, was effectively rendered by
Hulda Cox. Ow-
to the efforts of Miss
the entire musical program
g the service was a decided
Monday from a visit in Greene
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
are selling quite a number of
carts and wagons. This looks like
the farmers mean business.
Mrs. R. u. Chapman and
Misses Kate and Mamie, spent
Sunday with friends near Plymouth.
Use plenty of salt on your meat,
this you will find at A. W. Ange
Company's.
Miss Pearl Hester returned Mon-
day from a visit in Ayden.
Mr. Herman
day for Richmond to enter school
there.
Harrington, Barber Company
are getting out some nice ceiling,
and turned work now at
mill. Give them your orders.
Misses and Jeanette Cox
spending the holidays at home,
returned Tuesday to resume their
Studies, Miss to
Salem and Miss Jeanette to Greens-
Miss Irene Smith, of Farmville, is
visiting Miss Hulda Cox.
Miss returned to
Graham this morning where she is
teaching music.
The A. g. Cox Com-
shipped by the first new year's
freight over cotton planters and
over Cox back-bands and Quite a
number of other articles.
TOBACCO SALES FOB DECEMBER
And For The Season to December
81st
Mr. C. W. Harvey, secretary of tie
Tobacco Board of Trade, furnishes
us the following figures of the
of leaf tobacco on the Greenville
The sales for the month of De-
were pounds at an
average price of
For the season from August
to December 22nd, the sales were
7,7752-33 pounds at price
of
The will re-open, after the
holiday suspension, on next Monday,
9th.
and as most of it was
new, it was much enjoyed.
After leaving the church, the bridal
arty proceeded to the home of Mrs.
f. U. Cox, an of the bride, where
delightful reception De-
fruit salad and cake was
erred.
At the bride's home, open doors
-ere kept next day and in the front
a handsome array of presents
ere seen. Many valuable gifts in
-liver, linen and china, will prove
heir beauty and usefulness in the
home that is soon to ha stab-
shed. But these were not all the
bride and groom received, for
good wishes of our whole town
o with them for their future
and happiness
N. C, Jan.
tattle C. returned to Clayton
Sunday morning, where she is teach-
Messrs. W. L. House and J. W.
left Sunday for
to spend a few days.
Solid comfort is what yon want,
aid you will it if you bu; one of
V. W. Ange Company's felt mat-
Mr. H. J. return to
Forest Monday, after
he holidays with his parents, Mr.
ind Mrs. C. H. ton.
Mr. Chas. Miller, at Vanceboro,
moved his family here and has
a position with the A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Company.
Harrington, Barber Company are
in position to grind your corn and
Wheat any day.
Miss Johnson returned
Punishing Married Loafers.
The law dealing with wife de-
provides for the punishment
of men, abandon and fail to
support their The
s ambiguous. It has been found
impossible to punish men who
their families and live on
hard-earned dollars of their
wives and children.
Chief Justice Olsen will endeavor
to put an in place of the
in the law. The Change is necessary
and just, for and
shirkers who do not abandon their
families often worse than de-
But if the law is amended merely
to for the imprisonment of
such loafers the poor families will
gain little or nothing. the former
could be compelled to k for the
State and their earnings sere paid to
the wives, a real reform would be
; Such proposals have been
at meetings of
the in the way are en-
o. Let us hope that the threat
of imprisonment may prove sufficient-
Record-Herald
Saves Two Lives.
my sister or myself might
living today, if it had been for
Dr. King's New writes
A. D. cf N.
C, R. F. D. No. we both had
frightful coughs that no other rem-
could help. We were told my
sister had consumption. She was
very weak and had night sweats but
your wonderful medicine completely
cured us It's the best I ever
used or heard For sore lungs,
coughs, colds, hemorrhage,
asthma, hay fever, croup, whooping
bronchial
supreme. Trial bottle free. and
Guaranteed by all druggists.
Population Roads.
There is not a county in North
Carolina which is not eager-
awaiting the announcement of the
census figures. There has been con-
gratification in all which
shown material increase of pop-
Taking this sentiment as its
text, The Review preach-
es a little sermon on good roads
which Is as pointed as it is true.
cays The Re-
actually shown a loss of
population In the rural districts
while the adjoining county of Gull-
ford, which has a sys-
of macadamized roads, shows a
gain In population of over
GO per cent, in ten years. As
agricultural lands go, Rockingham is
the better of the two. Today
are of good farmers who
have left this county and settled in
solely because they wanted
to get the benefit of good
The Asheboro Courier says that.
Randolph as well as Rockingham
lost population to on the
account, and it is probable that
some other neighbors could testify to
the same thing. all
the counties in the matter of per cent
increase in population during the
past decade, and its intelligent road
policy is In no small degree
for this fact. Moreover, what
the highways have done for
other highways will do in every meas-
for ether
Observer.
Death cf Mr. S.
A number of people in
SATURDAY AFTERNOON BY MIS-
take I placed two bundles in some
one's buggy at Savage's stable. The
bundles contained two suits of
clothing. Party having these please
return to, or A. J. arm-
felt sad and shocked when the news
reached them that Mr. William
Spencer Roach had- quietly and peace-
fully passed away at his home at
miles from Greenville,
on Saturday morning, about o'clock
of paralysis, this being the third
stroke he had suffered.
He was a faithful member of the
Episcopal church and also belonged
to tho Masonic order. He lived a
true, upright Christian life and was
Q loving husband and father.
Mr. Roach was about years of
age, and leaves a widow and live
daughters, Mrs. Emily
Mrs. John Berry, Mrs. L. E. Smith
Mrs. Stokes, and Miss Lela
Roach. He also leaves two brothers
and one sister. These have our
sympathy In their sad be-
The funeral took place
Sunday afternoon, at St. John's
church, conducted by Rev. J.
H.
Mr. Roach was postmaster at Cox-
ville for several years.
To take any interest in family
ties a girl has to get married so that
are her own,
Record of the Year From
January to December.
aid it-.-. .--. r-r
by tho Pennsylvania labor unions.
Mir km by explosion sailors killed by
explosion n United States cruiser
Charleston during practice In Philip-
pine waters.
David Josiah Brewer,
ate justice States supreme
in
Stale Senator P.
declared guilty of bribe taking
by a vote colleagues, to at
Albany, N. V.
Alexander Agassiz. natural-
son of celebrated
of university, at sea; aged
at Los Angeles.
In the mine near
Ky.
Mining killed at Las Es-
Mexico.
Robinson, bankers
and brokers In New York, Boston,
Chicago and Worcester, failed with
liabilities. The Mexican Na-
Packing Co., incorporated in
New Jersey and operating in Mexico,
failed with liabilities placed at
000.000.
Boycott The Connecticut
boycott case decided in favor
HISTORY DAY BY DAY.
of the plaintiff with award of damages SO. King of Abyssinia;
against the individuals who instituted
tho boycott amounting to
The States naval
tug Nina lost on the voyage from
Hampton Roads to Boston with a crew
of on board.
Notable Occurrences
the World.
A REMARKABLE DEATH ROLL.
Wonders of of Mis-
Interest, Accidents,
Wrecks and Floods A
logical Review.
Value of all farm products in the
United States for 1910 was
tho largest record made and an
increase over 1900 of
Corn is king, with a production of Holland, the
wrecked in a gale near the
island of persons per-
The Central Foundry Co., a
steel corporation operating foundries
in several states, failed with liabilities
placed at over
Volcanic Eruption of volcano
Costa Rica, destroyed SO lives.
lives lost on the Pacific
Navigation steamer Lima, strand-
ed in the strait of Magellan.
Railroad killed and In-
in a head-on collision near Ma-
con. on the Georgia Southern and
Florida railroad.
Herbert Gladstone, whose
father, W. K. Gladstone, great
twice a scat In
the house of lords, elevated to the
peerage.
Anti-foreign riot in Canton;
mutinous soldiers killed.
in Philadelphia; aged Gen. St.
noted veteran of the
civil war, in Philadelphia; aged
beats wheat with tons; Nell the actor, in
3.125,713,000 bushels; value
Cotton crop, Hay
Wheat crop,
bushels; value,
The census of 1910 shows an in-
crease in population over 1900 of
JANUARY.
Agnes Booth, widow of
Brutus Booth and at one time a
star actress, in Mass.; aged
Ci.
Charles W. Morse, convicted
New York banker, began a fifteen year
sentence in the United States
at Atlanta.
Aviation Leon
pioneer experimenter, killed
by the fall of a monoplane at
Bordeaux, France.
Darius Ogden Mills, banker
and capitalist, at San Francisco; aged
Hubert Latham, French
beat the records for altitude of
heavier than air machines by ascend-
nearly feet at
France.
Gifford chief forester,
removed by President Taft.
Flora Adams Darling, found-
of the Society of the Daughters of
tho American. Revolution, in New York
city; aged
Francesco Paola
noted cardinal, in Rome. Gen. New-
ton Martin Curtis, of Fort Fish-
in New York city; aged
Aviation meet opened at Los
Angeles.
Fred won the three
cushion billiard championship of the
world from Alfredo De the Cuban
champion, in New York; final score
to
Steamer Czarina wrecked
on Coos Bay bar, Oregon coast;
drowned.
United Mine Workers of
North America met at Indianapolis.
Conference on uniform legislation met
in Washington.
Lathrop, Hopkins Co.
and J. M. Flake Co., Stock Exchange
brokers, failed in New York as the re-
of the collapse of the Hocking
pool; total liabilities about
National Tho organized
teer militia of tho United States be-
a permanent adjunct of the reg-
army establishment by the opera-
of the Dick law.
Railroad killed and In-
in tho wrecking of a passenger
train on the Canadian Pacific at the
crossing of Spanish river, Ontario.
Ezra Kendall, well known
comedian, at aged
It. Walsh, convicted Chi-
I banker, began serving a year
term In the prison at Leaven-
worth. Kan.
Paris Tho river Seine exceeded
high water mark In Paris, endanger
Inc the city and paralyzing traffic
Panama Libel Case; Indictment of
New York World in tho Panama libel
case quashed In tho United cir-
court in New York city.
Paris Rising of the
checked; square miles Inundated; loss
estimated over
miner killed by
the Colorado Fuel and Iron
., at
New York city, aged
Philadelphia ear men went
out after long deliberation.
Count
president of the German
tag, in Berlin; aged
a. Strike people killed and In-
In Philadelphia during a riot re-
from the strike.
B. defeated Battling Nelson
for the lightweight championship at
Richmond, Cat, in rounds.
Revolutionists
defeated at losing In all.
Clay Clement, actor, in Kan-
City, Mo.; aged
Searing Co. private bank-
in New York, failed owing
Two villages and a mining
camp buried In the mountains of north-
Idaho; over deaths.
MARCH.
Don Domingo de
president of the republic of Pan-
at Panama; aged
Upward of deaths from
in the mountains of Wash-
Johansen, Swede, set
the world's Marathon record by run-
miles yards in hours
minutes seconds. .
Mining miners killed by
explosion In the gold diggings on Doug-
las island, Alaska.
In Rogers pass,
British Columbia, caused the loss of
upward of GO lives.
General walkout In Philadelphia
to aid the striking street car men.
Louis James, actor, at
Mont.; aged
Thomas Collier for-
mer United States senator and a noted
political leader, in New York city;
aged Dr. Louis editor
Christian Herald and promoter of
worldwide philanthropy. In New York
city; aged
killed and seriously in-
by an explosion In a starch
at Roby,
Schaeffer. noted
player, at Denver.
State wide strike declared In
Pennsylvania in sympathy with tho
Philadelphia car men's strike.
Over fishermen per-
in wrecks caused by a storm on
the coast of Japan.
At Jamestown. N. Y., causing
of
Phil Daly, noted gambler, at
Long Branch. N. J.
George Cannon, cousin of
Leroy Cannon, one of Americans
by hanged at
conspiracy by order of President
Barney
broke tho world's auto
record for mile by driving a car over
the course In 27.33 seconds at
Bench. Fla.
Railroad deaths in a
wreck of Rock Island railroad trains
Pt Green Mountain. la.
Barney Old field won the
mile auto event at Beach,
Fla., covering the In minutes.
Railroad killed and
injured In a collision at
Germany.
APRIL.
L Robert Patterson, pres-
of the Chicago Tribune company,
in Philadelphia;
Airship Gorman balloon
wrecked In flight near Stet-
tin and lost with three passengers in
the Baltic sea.
Prof. William Graham Sum-
social scientist, of Yale, at En-
N. J.; aged
Col. Duncan B. Cooper, one
of the convicted murderers of Senator
E. W. Carmack, pardoned by
nor Patterson f Tennessee.
Costa Rica shaken; loss
Chinese Natives attacked foreign-
and burned missions at
China.
Premier resolutions
limiting the veto power of the
of lords carried in the house of com-
mons by majority.
The steel trust Increased the
wages of about employees over
per cent.
National Suffrage
met In Washington.
Ignacio Mexico's
chief diplomat, at Mexico City.
Airship German balloon
Deutsch struck by lightning during an
ascension near and wrecked,
killing four passengers.
Annual congress
of the American Revolution met
In Washington.
Labor; Philadelphia car men's strike
ended with some advantage to the
strikers.
Samuel Clem-
ens tho author, at Red-
ding, Conn.; aired
Lake St. Charles, La., blocks
burned; loss about
Violent snow and wind storm,
with freezing temperature, caused de-
of budding fruits in the
lake region, extending south to
Tennessee.
Personal Governor Charles E. Hughes
of New York appointed justice of the
United States supreme court to
the late Justice Brewer.
fa-
Norwegian novelist, poet, play-
wright and patriot, in Paris; aged
Dedication of the Hall of
American Republics in Washington.
Louis French
won the London Dally Mall
prize by flying from London to
Manchester, miles-. In minutes
actual time.
The British house cf lords
passed the notorious Liberal budget
bill.
Gen. E. P. Alexander, noted
Confederate veteran and writer on the
civil war. at Savannah, aged
Annual Hireling of tho Unit-
ed Confederate Veteran at Mobile,
Ala.
MAY.
J. P. S. civil
war veteran and national guard com
at Lebanon, aged
Alexis, deposed president of
Haiti, at Kingston, Jamaica; aged
about CO. Rear Admiral Philip
born. U. S. N. retired, noted naval
constructor, at Washington; aged
Joint conference of farm-
at St. Louis.
Loss of by the burning of
a glass factory at Ford, Pa.
Earthquake In Rica; province of
nearly destroyed; estimated
of life over
Mining Accident n at Pales,
Ala., entombed miners.
Obituary; Edward vii. England, at
Buckingham aged Rear
Admiral B. H. U. S. N. re-
tired, veteran of the civil war,
and wars, at San-
Barbara, aged
New England arbitration
and congress mot at Hartford,
Conn.
ax
Shocks
Cat. vicinity.
congress
opened at Aires. Argentina.
National Association of
Manufacturers met York.
boilers of American Tin
Plate company at Canton, O.
ed, killing men and injuring upward
of
Obituary Pauline sis-
of the late Manuel Garcia and like
him a noted opera singer. In Paris.
Halley's The parsed
through the tall of Halley's comet at
p. m. New York time.
Dynamite exploded at the
barracks of the guard at
Rio. Cuba, destroying
The United of
America, otherwise the employing
printers, met In their 24th annual con-
at Washington. National com-
of the Naval and Military
Order of tho War
met at New York city. The
conference on international
met at Lake. N. Y.
John A. former Unit-
ed States minister to Austria, In Wash-
; aged
World's Sunday School
association met at Washington.
Violent shock at Salt Lake
City.
IS deaths by the sinking of
tho steamer Prank H. Goodyear near
Port Aux Lake Huron.
The Hotel a large
summer resort on Bluff Point, totally
destroyed; loss about
Submarine The French sub-
marine rammed by a ferry-
boat In Dover strait and sunk with her
crew of
Railroad killed and In-
In a wreck on the Val-
near Pa.
Dr. Robert Koch,
bacteriologist, discoverer of a con-
cure, at Baden-Baden; aged
Glenn H. flew from
Albany to New York, following the
course of the Hudson river, winning
tho New York World's prize of
Government forces repulsed
In an attack upon Estrada's
at
South Union of South African
states proclaimed.
Britain King v. pro-
claimed throughout the empire.
General Federation of
Women's Clubs met at Cincinnati.
U. deaths by the
JUNE.
I. Edward Jenkins, English
editor and writer, author of the sen-
political pamphlet
in London; aged Sir Fran-
Seymour noted English art-
in London; aged Dr. Elizabeth
Blackwell, pioneer woman physician
In England and the United States, in
London; aged
won the English Der-
by.
Polar Captain Scott's
tic expedition sailed from London.
William Sydney Porter,
known as In New
York city; aged
Several villages In east
Hungary wiped out; deaths.
Southern Italy shaken;
upward of deaths.
Prof. Smith, Anglo-
American author and educator, at
Toronto; aped
Sir George noted
British publisher. In London; aged
II. acres of warehouses and
dwellings burned In Seattle; loss near-
Herman American
actor distinguished on the London
stage; aged
Storm Cloudburst in the
valley. Prussia, destroyed lives.
C. K. Hamilton a Cur-
biplane from New York to Phil-
and return, winning
prize; time, New York to
SO miles, hour Phil-
to New York, hour min-
Walter B. established
new altitude record by as-
In a
plane Indianapolis.
Flames followed collapse
of roof of the Montreal Herald build-
and caused loss of lives.
World's missionary con-
opened In Edinburgh.
Obituary John Austin Slovens, found-
of the Eons of the Revolution,
Newport, R. I.; aged
Walter S.
now world's altitude record by ascend-
feet at
IS deaths in New
City electric rainstorm.
killed and nearly
Injured la a collision near
a Mica, France.
Personal Theodore
welcomed In New York on his re-
turn his African and
trip.
of tho packet City of on the
Mississippi river near Park. Mo. I WE DON'T WANT
Mining Explosion in the v. o
Wellington mine at .
. land, caused tho death of is. miners. Chill and Fever
, do It. iv
at
W to Convent gathering of .
v.- s UM w
m-------
;.
-r--





Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
CAKED.
Scene in His School
A very beautiful and touching
incident occurred at the Memorial
Baptist church last Sunday morning.
At the close of the lesson of the Phil-
class, the president of
the class. Miss Moore,
arose and in beautiful thought, sen-
and manners, present-
ed to Prof. W. II. their
teacher for the past year, a handsome
g cane in token of their
appreciation of his work and their
for him. Prof. very
touchingly and tenderly responded in
receiving the gift and both class and
teacher were happy in their mutual
regard for each other. This is one
the largest and most interesting
Classes any Sunday school of the
town ever had and few teachers have
ever felt more real interest in a class
than Prof. does in this one.
A WORD TO THE TRADE.
The is Prepared U do Lin-
Composition.
Mr. J. E. Banning arrived this
morning from to take
a position with the Reflector as as-
operator. Now
two machine operators so that
can be run day and night
when necessary, puts us In position
to turn out much more work, and
we arc prepared to do machine com-
position for papers of neighboring
towns on short notice. Let us know
what you want in the way of ma-
chine composition and we can do
the work for you. The home
need not be afraid of overcrowd-
us with orders for job printing,
for we are prepared to do all kinds
of work promptly.
A pretty home wedding was
at he residence of the bride's
mother, Mrs. C. on Wash-
street yesterday afternoon at
3.46 o'clock, when Miss Vina May
Wilson and Mr. Lewis B. Garris, of
Greenville, were united by Rev. J. H.
Hall in the presence of quite a com-
of friends. The home was beau-
tilled with the Christmas decorations
and the bride was charming in a most
becoming traveling suit of brown
cloth. Miss Ruby Hassell rendered
the wedding march as the couple en-
the room and took their places
before the minister, who, in most
manner, read the beautiful
marriage service of the Methodist
Church. After the ceremony was over
and congratulations were said, Mr.
and Mrs. Garris left on the 4.15 At-
Coast Lino train for Green-
ville, where they will make their
home.
The Is a young lady of ex-
charming personality, and
high character. Tor several years
She has been the stenographer In the
clerk of courts office, where, of
course, her duties brought her eon-
iii In contact with the members
l i the bar and county Officers and
as a mark the high esteem in which
was held by them, they presented
her a handsome bridal present. Mr.
Garris is a young man of sterling
chi who formerly lived in this
c y, but is now superintendent of a
pi mill rot- a big lumber company
in Free Press,
23rd.
RECEPTION AT
Miss Helen Cox Entertains In Honor
of Lucy
Ayden, N. C. Dec. Tue-s-
day afternoon from to Miss
Helen Cox was the hostess at a de-
reception, tendered Miss
Lucy and her bother,
Joe, of Greenville.
The decorations in tho reception
hall and parlors were everywhere
suggestive of the Christmas holidays,
holly and evergreens being
elaborately and tastefully used in
beautifying each room.
During the evening progressive
was played, Mr. J. C. Noble
making the highest score was
the prize, which he gave to
Miss
Later all were ushered into the
dining room, where chocolate and
wafers were served
The young ladies present
Misses Lucy Lee
Jimmie Davis, Sallie
Anna Lawrence, Annie Edwards, El-
Bridgers, Rosa Bland,
and Lizzie Blount.
The young men present
Messrs. Joe David Bland
Johnnie Adams, J. C. Noble, Ben and
Cleveland Buck, J. C. Gardner, Ned.
W. E. Tingle, Loyd and
Roy Turnage, William
Henry and Lester Cox, and as each
took their leave near midnight, it
was clearly evident that the few
hours spent as the guests of such a
hostess were highly enjoyed and that
in their opinion, in such a capacity,
Miss Cox could not be excelled in
grace nor hospitality .
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
A Long List For The Holidays of
The Last Two Weeks.
Register of Deeds Moore has is-
sued marriage licenses to the follow-
couples during the last two weeks
Institutes.
Editor
I wish to remind the brother far-
and their wives and daughters
that there will be held in Farmville
on Wednesday, January 11th, 1911, a
institute, also in Grimesland
on Thursday, January 12th, 1911, be-
ginning at 10.30. We will hear
by practical men along the lines
of advanced farming. Prof. will
be present to teach us how to grow
and primp also spray fruit trees, and
how to ship our fruit is we should be
happen to make any. I hope to meet
there many tillers of the soil, with
their good wives and
maidens.
At the same place and dates there
will also be held institutes for
men by Mrs.
G. T. TYSON.
Announcement.
By mutual consent with the ad-
of the late G. W. Baker,
a member of the firm of Baker
Hart, and to settle the estate of the
said G. W. Baker, the firm will be
dissolved on December 31st, 1910.
After that date the business will
be continued at the same stand by
J. N. Hart, the surviving partner
of the former firm of Baker Hart,
and Geo. B. W. Hadley, under the
firm name of Hart Hadley.
I take this method of thanking all
friends for the patronage given the
old firm, and respectively ask a con-
of their trade with the new
Arm. J. N. HART.
Taken Suddenly
While in her husband's store Sat-
night, Mrs. A. B. Ellington
was taken suddenly ill with acute
indigestion fainted. She was very
for a while, but alter being car-
homo to improve. She is
reported getting along well today.
WHITE.
Ernest Gray Everett and Stella
Lee Joyner.
W. A. Buck and Martha J. Clark.
Jesse Riddick and Sarah Rollins.
W. A. Forbes and Norma C.
Lawhorn.
U. B. and L. Ellen
Smith.
Williams and Ward.
Edward and Becky Dav-
D. Alexander and Julia Davenport.
W. F. James and Ruth
P. B. Thomas and Emma J. Kit-
J. E. Smith and Pearlie Garris.
T. S. Tyson and Sadie Carroll.
H. V. and Mary A.
Johnson.
V. A. Ward and M. Elizabeth Jones.
J. A. Reddick and Mary James.
Herbert Roberson and Nellie Web-
Amos Jackson and Geneva Ed-
wards.
L. Whitehurst and Carrie L.
Briley.
Monroe Wooten and Effie May
J. E. Willoughby and Bessie
ton.
J. H. Warren and Garris.
Joyner and Dot. Stocks.
COLORED.
Solomon and Annie Flem-
Fleming and Bertha How-
ard.
Frank Weeks and Hattie
son.
Jesse Highsmith and Martha Little.
Manuel Perry and Annie Clem-
James Pollard and Mary
Frank Johnson and Hattie John-
son.
Charlie and Mary Bradley.
Edwards and Hattie
son.
George Grist and Georgia Teel.
Washington Mills and
Cherry.
Erwin and Mary Barrett.
I. J. Fleming and Etta Smith.
Jarvis Tyson and Lillie Carr.
H. B. Latham and Mattie J. Todd.
William Brown and Sophia Sim-
mons.
Caesar Tyson and Allie Little.
Simon Dixon and Mary S. Garris.
J. L. Clements and Mary J. Page.
Noah Cox and Carrie Mills.
Wilson and Bertha
son.
Ola Atkinson and Hattie Hines.
Jacob Stocks and Lela Joyner.
Gatling Daniel and Mary Taylor.
David Brown and Bessie Brown.
L. H. Cox and Bettie Hardy.
Henry Strong and Alice Hardy.
J. B. Grimes and Annie Dixon.
J. A. Bryant and Ada Garris.
W. H. Ellison and Martha Evans.
James Tyson and Matilda Boyd.
W. H. Fields and Hannah Brown.
The total number of licenses issued
during the month was
ESTABLISHED 1875
S M SCHULTZ
Wholesale and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrels,
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages,
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, Tables,
Lounges Safes, P. and Gail
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Henry George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries, Peaches,
Syrup, Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Mat-
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts.
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Currants, Raisins, Glass,
Cakes
and Crackers, Cheese,
jest Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, and numerous other goods.
Quality and quantity cheap for cash.
Come to see me.
Phone Number
S M SCHULTZ
Cobb Bros. Co.
NORFOLK, VA.
Cotton Buyers, Brokers in
Stock, Cotton, Grain and
Provisions.
PRIVATE WIRE
to New York, Chicago and
New Orleans.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
J C. LANIER
DEALER IN
Monuments
Tomb Stones
Iron Fencing
Most women have a great yearn-
for blond hair unless they have
It.
A woman isn't self-made just be-
cause makes her own complex-
ion.
CHOICE.
FRENCH AND HOLLAND BULBS
Hyacinths, Tulips,
and Calla
Plant for beat results
All Cat Flower
at Short
Palms, and all Hat-
House Plants For Decoration
J. L. CO.,
Phone No.
A Fine Showing.
In this paper today The Bank of
Greenville makes a statement of its
condition at the close of business,
December 31st. This statement shows
the largest volume of business and
the largest deposits of any the bank
has ever published, and shows how
it has the confidence of the people.
The bank is excellently managed
and its business is constantly grow-
tomtit
At
SPECIAL TERM OF COURT.
MR. EUGENE WILSON DEAD.
For Trial of Congested Criminal
Docket.
George Crews, selling liquor, guilty,
sentenced to roads tor ninety days.
John and Howard Vines,
disorderly conduct, not guilty.
Sam Joyner, selling liquor, guilty;
sentenced four months on roads.
Judgment suspended in another case
against same defendant.
Stephen Whitley, selling liquor,
not guilty.
Will Humphrey, selling liquor,
pleads guilty; fined and costs.
Alex. Bailey, selling liquor, pleads
guilty; sentenced sixty days on
roads.
Ed. selling liquor, plead
guilty in three cases.
Cal. Hines and David Mitchell
gambling, Mitchell pleads guilty, and
sentenced ninety days on roads, Hines
guilty and charged all the costs.
Alonzo Savage, selling plead
guilty; judgment suspended on pay-
of
Fred Moore, selling liquor, pleads
guilty; judgment suspended on pay-
of costs.
Babe Brown, celling liquor, pleads
guilty In two cases; judgment
W. J. Manning, destroying fence,
not guilty.
Sheppard, colored, selling
liquor, not guilty.
Royall Barrett and Lawrence Gay,
affray, both guilty; Gay fined and
all the costs.
Royall Barrett, carrying concealed
weapon, guilty; fined and costs.
E. L. and Jesse
Baker, selling putrid meats, plead
guilty; judgment suspended on pay-
of costs.
Bob Hodges, selling liquor, pleads
guilty in two cases; judgment
pended on payment of costs; defend-
ant to appear at April term and an-
for his good behavior.
J. B. Whitehurst, carrying con-
weapon, not guilty.
Jesse Vincent, selling liquor, guilty,
sentenced four months on roads.
Judgment suspended in another case
pended on payment of costs.
Sam Obey, selling liquor, pleads
guilty; judgment suspended an pay-
of costs.
Tucker, selling liquor, pleads
guilty in two cases; judgment
pended on payment costs.
Henry Lewis, previously convicted
of celling liquor, was sentenced six
months on roads, and Nelson Hop-
kins eight months. The latter
pealed to Supreme court.
Professional Cards
Passes Away After an Illness of a
Week.
A little past, two o'clock this morn-
Mr. Eugene Wilson died at the
home of his mother, Mrs. Martha
Wilson on Dickinson avenue. H
was taken just a week ago with
and while all that medical
skill and loving attention cold
was done to relieve his Intense
suffering, the approach death
could not be checked.
Mr. Wilson was years of age,
and for several years was a sales-
man in the store of his brother, Mr.
Frank Wilson. He had a host of
friends who arc sorrowed at his
death. Besides the aged mother, he
is survived by two brothers, Messrs.
W. B. and Frank Wilson, and three
sisters, Mrs. Warren, and
Misses Nannie and Lillie Wilson.
These have the heartfelt sympathy
of a large circle of relatives and
friends in their sore bereavement.
Mr. Wilson was a member of the
Masonic fraternity, and his burial
will be with Masonic honors. The
funeral will take place from the res-
at o'clock, Friday afternoon,
the interment being in Cherry Hill
cemetery.
The pall bearers will be as fol-
P. J. Forbes,
W. W. Perkins, R. A. Tyson, Jr., R.
C. Flanagan, J. L. Home, R. E. Cox,
J. H. Manning, J.
E. Williams, E. L. T.
M. Hooker, D. S. Chapman, P. T.
Anthony, A. J. Moore, J. L.
son.
Rev. J. H. Shore will conduct the
funeral service.
VALUABLE SALE OF PERSONAL
property. On Monday, January
1911, at my home place, near Hill,
Pitt county, N. C, I will offer for
sale valuable personal property, con-
of mules, horses, all cat-
sheep, hogs, all farming utensils
and Implements used in connection
of said farm, all fodder, cotton
seed on said also all house-
hold and furniture. Having
sold the farm, now desire to sell
all personal property thereon. Lucy
E. Hyman.
LOOK, LADIES, THE SINGED STORE
on Main St. extends you the same
th rest room did. Ladles
tram the country are especially in-
to stop and 31-
J. S. Prop
are sometimes the result of
thought, but too often they are not.
If you to pick your
a magnifying
W. F.
IT LAW
Office opposite It. L. Smith
and next door to John
Buggy new building.
Greenville, . . S. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
formerly occupied by. J. L
Fleming.
Green ville, . . N. Carolina
C. D. M. Clark
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
Greenville, . .
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
in Building.
Greenville, . . A. Carolina
L. I, Moore. W. H. Long
MOORE LONG
IS At LAW
. . H. Carolina
CHARLES C. PIERCE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
in the courts. Office up
Phoenix building, next to
Dr. D. L. James
. . N. Carolina
Henry Clay Hooker.
Henry Clay Hooker passed away
Sunday night in his home, West
Main street, after a long illness.
He leaves a widow, Mrs. Carrie
Latham Hooker, and a daughter, Miss
Maude Latham Hooker, besides four
Rosa Hooker, Mrs.
Louise Forbes, Mrs. S. M. Abbott and
Mrs. Mamie four broth-
Lawrence and B.
of this city; S. T. Hooker, of
Greenville, N. C.
Mr. Hooker was forty years old. and
came here from his native town Green
ville, N. C, about four years ago. He
bad made his home since that time
in Richmond and was actively
ed in business here up to last spring,
when he was forced to retire on ac-
count of failing health.
Mr. Hooker's death will be
by a largo number of friends not
only in Richmond, but in many North
Carolina cities. He was a member
of Patrick Henry Lodge, Odd-Fellows
No. and took an active part in
the work of the order before his health
began to News Lead-
A very quiet but pleasant marriage
took place Christmas afternoon at
three o'clock, at the home of Rev.
W. H. Laughinghouse, when Mr.
r. S. Tyson and Miss Sadie Carroll
were happily united in the holy
bonds matrimony, Rev. W. H.
officiating. There
was a large crowd waiting in the
parlor expecting to witness the
but to their surprise the
bride and groom upon arriving
ed the sitting room and were
mediately married, only
the ceremony.
arms
SCHEDULE
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
Greenville, . . R. Carolina
Harry Skinner. II. W. Whedbee.
HARRY SKINNER
Greenville. . . N.
JULIUS EH OWN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office In building, on Third
street
Practices wherever his services are
desired.
Greenville,
Raleigh Mat
15th
YEAR ROUND
3.45 a. Atlanta, Birmingham.
points West, Jackson-
ville and Florida points,
Hamlet for Charlotte and
Wilmington.
THE SEABOARD
a.
with coaches and parlor car. Con-
with steamer for Washing-
ton, Baltimore, New
Providence.
THE FLORIDA FAST
12.05 a. Richmond, Wash-
and New York Pullman top-
day coaches and dining car.
Connects at Richmond with C.
O. Cincinnati and points West,
Washington with Pennsylvania
railroad and B. O. for
and points west.
THE SEABOARD
p. Atlanta, Charlotte.
Wilmington, Birmingham, Memphis
and points West. Parlor cars to
Hamlet,
6.00 p. m. No. for
Louisburg, Henderson Oxford,
6.00 p. Atlanta, Birmingham.
Memphis and points West, Jack-
and all Florida points.
sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
a.
12.45 p. Richmond 4.20 a.
m., Washington 7.40 a.
York p. m. to
Washington and w
York.
C. B RYAN, G. P. A.
Portsmouth, Va.
H. D. P. A.
Raleigh. N. C.
Barbershop
HERBERT EDMONDS
Proprietor
Located in business cf town.
Four chair in operation each
one id. d over by a ski d bar-
L dies waited mat their home.
S. J. Nobles
MODERN BARBER SHOP
Cicely furnished, everything n-
and attractive, working; the very
best barbers. Second to
Opp. J. R. J. G.
J. W. Perry CO.
NORFOLK, VA.
Fad-m of
Ties and Bags,
so-
N. S. Sc
ROUTE OF THE
NIGHT EXPRESS
Schedule in December
N. following schedule fig-
published as information ONLY
and are not guaranteed.
TRAINS LEAVE
Eastbound.
1.09 a. m., daily, Night Express Pull-
man Sleeping Car for Norfolk.
a. daily, for Norfolk and New
Parlor car service between
New Bern and Norfolk, connects for
all points north and west.
6.50 p. daily except Sunday, for
Washington.
Westbound.
1.25 a. m., daily for Wilson and
connects north, south and
west.
7.51 a. m., except Sunday for
Wilson Raleigh, connects fin-
all points.
1.58 p. daily, for and
For further information and
of sleeping car space, apply to
J. L. Agent, Greenville,
N. C.
When a woman has a good com-
herself she knows nobody
else's is genuine.
so much trouble it's
a wonder they should want to
row more.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
The Howe and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
t.
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE COMPANY, Inc.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year,
Six months.
rates may be had upon
application at the business in
The Hector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the post office at
Greenville, North Carolina, under
act March 1879.
FRIDAY, C, 1911.
Have you learned to write 1911
New year resolutions are almost
ready to go on tap.
The Girl from Rector's has also
If you started with new year
yesterday, stick to them.
You must love your work for your
work to love you.
The figures for this year are one
wiggle between three straight lines.
It will be years, or in be-
fore three of the same figures come
in a year again after 1911.
The warm January weather will
not last long, as a cold wave is on
the way.
When the legislature meets to-
morrow we feel like it is going to be
Speaker Dowd.
Raleigh is getting lively once more
and will be the of attraction
for the next two months.
If your new year resolutions have
held out until now, try to keep them
from being broken.
The new year
should be to do more and better
advertising.
A new year resolution for the
should quit the
business.
if you cannot work, you
spend the time while it is raining
Planning something for
It looks good to see the Training
school and graded school students
and teachers back at their places.
The price being paid in human lives
for aviation experiments is more
than it is worth.
Two things we would like to see
this year give to Greenville are an
opera house and a new modern ho-
tel.
The new year is here, and we hope
you will come early for a Reflector
subscription receipt.
A good resolution for the farmer
is to make more corn this than
he did last year.
A new year resolution for the
chamber of commerce should be
busy.
The merchants could make a good
new year start by putting some life
in the association.
Count that day of 1911 misspent if
its setting sun finds no good deed to
your credit.
May the new year bring happiness
prosperity, peace and contentment to
all our people.
Now that the holidays are over, let
everybody on the armor for
a good year's work.
Master yourself this year and you
will have accomplished much to your
credit.
The news comes from Greensboro
that Congressman John M. Morehead
will resign as chairman of the Re-
publican State executive committee.
They may have been worse, but
the streets are certainly bad enough
now, with the country roads equally
as bad.
Taken first and last the aviators
earn all they get out of
Herald.
Do you mean
killed
to include getting
Other candidates are said to be
after Mr. senatorial scalp,
but the way we see it they will not
get sufficient hold to pull it off.
The suggestion that Congressman
Morehead would resign the
can State chairmanship was in ad-
of the game. He held on to
the job.
---------o
Persistence in flying an airship
seems to be a pretty sure road to
suicide. Yet in the name of
science they keep on offering
big prizes to induce the to
risk their lives.
The Wilmington Dispatch has now
reduced one of its department heads
to That is
striking close home, Cowan, for most
of us have on
reaching the dinner table.
North Carolina Republicans are
putting in their bid early Their State
executive committee met in Greens-
a day or two ago, and endorsed
President Taft for re-nomination in
1912.
They are going to erect a
in New Orleans to Aviator
It will do him no good now,
nor will it compensate for having
tempted him with prizes to sacrifice
his life.
Out in the State of Washington
where it has been tried, they seem to
like serving on juries. So
well did it take that the governor de-
a petition that he recommend
the legislature a bill exempting
women from jury duty.
Greenville a good building
for the year 1910, many new
houses being added to the number in
We hope to see the coming
year do even better, for the watch-
word should be progress along all
lines.
It is not so much the number of
but is every one a worker.
While every town would like to have
more citizens, every one already has
some it would be better off without.
Ten men who make things come to
pass, are worth a hundred of those
who do nothing but live off of others.
If you can't help push Greenville
along this year, don't put yourself in
the way of those who are pushing.
Let one of your new year
be to do no kicking, but
for your town.
o---------
We hope every one has resolved to
do all he can for Greenville and Pitt
county this year. Lets make it a
good year all round.
The legislators are turning their
faces toward Raleigh to be ready for
the meeting of the general assembly
on Wednesday.
The Greensboro News says
hobble purse is the fashion
Right this time.
with the advent of the auto-
mobile and the flying machine, walk-
remains good for most of us.
The blind tigers being tried at this
term of court will have cause to re-
member it.
The can come to the new
square with the world ought to
to happy,
The planters on the lower coast
of Louisiana who experimented with
raising Sea Island cotton the past
season, made such success that they
will try it on a large scale next sea-
son.
is the first to get in
his Christmas bills, box rent due
notices having already put in their
appearance in the post office.
runs on the cash system, too,
without any over time waiting.
At the of The Re-
said that its resolution waS
to do all the good it could during the
year. We can think of no better mot-
to for this year, therefore shall go
on putting forth our best efforts to
be helpful.
An advance fashion note says
stripes will be worn much the com-
spring. They have already been
long the fashion, among criminals.
Yet some who ought to wear them
do not.
Let's talk it more than ever this
that this is Greenville
yours If you
This year is going to see Pitt
county complete a handsome new
court house and jail to take the place
Of those destroyed by fire last Feb-
The spirit of enterprise and
county pride shown by our excellent
board of county commissioners de-
serves the commendation of all our
people.
---------o
A Saint Louis professor has
ed it out that in the year just
a hundred and ten years hence, there
will be no babies in the United States
under five years of age. We do not
understand how there are going to
be any 5-year-old ones then, as they
can't be born that age. But the pro-
will not be here then to verify
the prediction or make an
so there is no use worrying
about it.
In closing the old year The Re-
wants to express a word of
appreciation to Its patrons. It has
been a good year for the paper, and
it made more improvements than
during any previous year in its his-
This is due to the confidence
the in the paper and the
liberal patronage they have given it.
While we have done our best to give
full value for every dollar that has
come our way, and believe that this
his been done, yet we are none the
less appreciative to every one for
his patronage. You are helping us
make The Reflector what it If,.,
we want to serve you faithfully We
believe all will be interested in know-
that the volume of business the
past year was large, and that we
come to the new year with many
more subscribers than ever before.
wish you each and every one a
prosperous and year,
THE FUTURE.
We have come to the close of an-
other year. The ending of one year
and beginning of another is a most
appropriate time for taking inventory
of the past and planning for the
This is not only a good thing
to do in a business way, but also in
every phase of life. Cast your
thoughts backward over the old year
to take stock of what you have ac-
then with your acquire-
and experiences as an asset,
turn to the new year with a deter-
of making it count for more
than its predecessor. Even should
the summing up bring a feeling of
gratification at what has been done,
let not this satisfy your ambition,
but may your resolve be that the
shall bring higher and better
attainments. The satisfied life means
to stop and rest where you are,
while the ambitious life means to go
onward and upward to better things.
The year 1910 has in most respects
been not unlike other years. It had
its quota of joys and sorrows. It dis-
its successes and failures. It
brought its victories and defeats.
There were days of sunshine and
days of clouds. Hope sometimes
perched on the highest pinnacle of the
delectable mountains and again it
groveled in the slough of despond.
Life was ever so, and will be to the
end of time. It takes the sorrows
to make us more appreciative of the
joys. It takes the failures and the
defeats to nerve us for the successes
and the victories. It takes the
clouds now and then to make us love
the sunshine better. If there were
only joy and success and victory,
and sunshine, we might become so
and unappreciative as
to forget God, forget that He rules
and that His hand guides our
Whatever the old year has been,
It was better to most of us than we
deserved. Have we done our best
Have we done done all the good we
could Have we been as mindful of
others as we might have been Have
we thanked God for the many bless-
He has bestowed A bit of self-
examination here disclose many
short comings. Then let us
endeavor to improve these. And let
Us begin the new year with good
hope, with faith in God to take care
of us and give us. strength to per-
form our duties faithfully. Unless
we the new year better than
the old one, fail to do our best.
------o
VICTORY FOR CIVIC RIGHTEOUS-
mayor on the charge of selling liquor,
forty-six cases were bound over to
the Superior court. This wholesale
arrest of blind tigers caused some-
what of a sensation at the time, and
was followed by a mass meeting of
citizens in which resolutions were
adopted expressing approval of the
steps taken by the officials to sup-
press this lawlessness, and pledging
support to them in their efforts,
have good effect. It is creditable
to Mayor Wooten and the police
of Greenville in apprehending
the offenders, and
developing
evidence against them, and it
is creditable to Judge Ward and Sol-
for the manner in
which the cases were handled in
their court, and also to the jurors
that brought in the verdicts in ac-
with the evidence.
The outcome of these cases is a
great victory over the lawless
here that has been setting the
prohibition law at naught with
grant violations. But the good work
done so far in checking this evil
should not stop at this stage. There
are yet some offenders who need to
be caught, and the town officers
should continue their with
the support of the people behind
them, until the sale of liquor is
stopped entirely.
The grand jury at the November
term of court found true bills against
those the mayor had bound over,
four of them were tried at that term,
three out of the four defendants be-
convicted. With so many cases
added to the already large criminal
docket, the county commissioners
requested the governor to give the
county a special term of court for
one week, to try these blind tiger
cases and relieve the docket. This
special term of court began on the
26th of December and continued four
days, disposing of a large number of
cases. Thirty-four of the blind tiger
cases were tried, conviction or plead-
guilty resulting in thirty-two of
them. These with the four previous-
tried made a total of thirty-eight
blind tiger cases with thirty-five con-
all the fall courts of this district,
made a great many friends among
the people of Pitt county. We have
heard many references to his ability
and the impartiality of his rulings.
and to the rapidity with which he
keeps the business of the court
He is a wise and a good judge.
Solicitor Charles L. adds
new laurels to his record every time
he comes. Pitt county people look
upon him as an able prosecutor for
the State, and they have the highest
regard for him. He is a tireless
worker and always does his duty.
The Durham Sun has not associated
with this shop for some time, though
we don't know why, but we are glad
to sec the statement that Mr. J. A.
Roberson is back at the editorial
helm of that excellent paper. It
means good for The Sun as well as
pleasure for Us readers, for there are
few editors who can equal Jim Rob-
J-
Our readers will remember that
about two months ago, through
gent efforts of the town officials, a
raid was made on numerous blind
tiger joints that existed in Green-
ville. In a single day and night
nearly fifty warrants were issued by
Mayor Wooten and served by the
Mr. Richard Edwards, editor of the
Baltimore Record,
was a recent guest of Charlotte, and
while there gave an interview to the
Observer that sounded the key note
to tho slow growth in population of
North Carolina and other Southern
States. He said this lack of growth
is largely due to sensational stories
about illiteracy, child slavery hook-
worm, pellagra, and things of this
kind that are circulated to the
of this section. He says it is
time for the South to stop talking
about these things. Not only does
it keep other people from settling in
tho South, but it frightens away some
who are already here.
January the Bar
The celebration, com-
the opening of the south-
end of the great Inland Water-
way from Boston to Beaufort, will
be held on the bank- of the canal
on January 6th. 1911, The towns of
Beaufort, Morehead and Oriental
have joined to give this
and make it a great success
the waterway now complete opening
up navigation with the north with
these three thriving and prosperous
cities.
The character of the celebration
will be a free oyster roast to all who
attend. There will be a toastmaster
and short speeches from United
States Senator-F. M.
of the National Waterways Com-
mission, Congressman John H. Small,
Congressman C. R. Thomas, govern-
or W. W. Kitchin and Congressman
J. Hampton Moore, of Philadelphia,
president of the Atlantic deep water-
ways association, and other
men. The railroads will give
special rates and the can
cure transportation from Beaufort
Morehead City and Oriental to the
celebration in the boats.
There is a committee of five
pointed from each of the towns, Beau-
fort, Morehead City and Oriental, and
these committees have elected Mr.
W. A. Mace, chairman of the Beaufort
committee, Mr. H. L. Gibbs chairman
of the Oriental committee, Mr. C. S.
Wallace chairman of the Morehead
City committee, Mr. C L.
chairman of the Publicity committee,
Mr. C. D. Jones, chairman of the
transportation committee, and Mr.
G. D. general chairman.
There are special committees with
Mr. W. S. Chadwick, of Beaufort,
chairman, and Mr. W. M. Webb, of
Morehead City, chairman,
Preparations are being pushed to
make this one of the most unique
celebrations ever expected to be in
attendance. Special invitations have
been issued to the chamber of com-
of Wilmington, Wash
Plymouth, Edenton, and Eliza
beth City, to join in this celebration
The public is cordially invited to
Star.
The Duty of a Newspaper Man
We have for the past few days
thought upon the real work of a news
paper man, that is the work that real
counts for most. Shall it be the
purpose of the newspaper to build up
or tear down, to discourage or to en-
courage people to make the most of
their opportunity
Answering the question from the
broad standpoint of the highest
and the greatest good to the
greatest number, which we feel is the
correct premises, we say unhesitating
that the newspaper should be above
all things optimistic in its
and a along safe
and conservative lines. Again, some
one will say that it is the duty of a
newspaper man to wherever
the necessity requires. We can't see
it that way.
Does the carpenter a
plank by knocking it in shape. Not
much. If he hammers on one end and
there is much spring to the board the
chances are the other end will spring
up and hit him in the eye. But he
docs try to the board by
planing and dressing and putting it
into a vise until he gets it
Of course now and then he finds a
board so warped he cannot straighten
and so, under these circumstances, the
only course to pursue is to throw the
board aside. And so it is with some
other proposition in life. If after pa-
handling can do nothing, you
simply have to quit the job; and yet
after all how of us let up be-
fore we have done the best we could
But think of the spirit of optimism
the editor of a paper must be able
to maintain to keep the affairs of the
community in good shape. Since ex-
ample is better than precept he must
above all things set a good example.
He must not be selfish in order to
encourage liberally in others. He
must always be an optimist in order
to encourage in others a spirit of op-
No matter how many clouds
hover above his own horizon, or how
much difficulty he finds in keeping
himself or his own affairs in a proper
state of he must at all
times be hopeful and faithful in order
to encourage a spirit of hope and
trust in Times.
About the Weather
The Norfolk Southern Railroad
las issued and is sending broadcast
through the north and west a little
circular entitled, about the
It ought to prove a tell
argument to those people who
are now snow and ice-bound. It
shows them plainly that all the
world is not that way and that they,
don't have to freeze for half the
if they don't want to. They can
come to Eastern North Carolina,
where the weather never to ex
where it is never very cold
or very hot, and where soil Joins
climate in being everything that
could be desired and where
are plentiful and remunerative. The
Norfolk Southern is doing good work
in trying to interest the people of
other sections in the eastern part
of this State and results are sure to
Times.
W.
Enthusiasm takes such a lot of
other money to Wop up
The Greenville Reflector celebrated
its sixteenth birthday Saturday of
last week. During this time it has
been a recognized power for good
in its community and has at all times
kept in touch with up-to-date mat-
Bro. Whichard is to be con-
and we wish him
success and
bur
. t
MM





K.
The Carolina Home ml Farm Tho Eastern Reflector.
WILSON
Km Wets
Hill
Snow Hill. X. C, Doc.
D. Wilson, of the 17th S. In-
fantry and Miss Olive Morrill were
united in marriage in the Snow
Episcopal chapel a six o'clock Tues-
day afternoon, the ceremony being
by Ho.-, j. H. rec-
tor of the Episcopal chorea at Kin-
The wedding was largely a family
affair. The bride's maids were
Misses Myrtle of Snow Hill;
Ed of Snow Hill; Susie
Warren, of Greenville; Lee Brown,
of Greenville; Settle Russ, of
and Willie Grimsley, of Snow
Hill, the last four being cousins of
the bride.
The ushers ware Messrs. C. .
Wilson, L. Wilson and W. R.
son, Greenville, brothers of the
groom, and S. P. Morrill. B.
rill and L. V. Morrill, Jr., of Snow
Hill, brothers of the
Lieut Wilson's best man was his
brother, Mr. P. W. Wilson, of Green-
The maid honor was Miss Jen-
Brown Morrill, sister of the bride.
and the flower girl was little Miss
Basin Best Morrill, the youngest sis-
of the bride. The bride's father,
Mr, L V. gave her away.
The oven was a six look
marriage. Lieut. Wilson wore his
full dress uniform of the In-
fantry. Miss Morrill white
ivory satin and overdress chiffon
embroidered with pearls. She carried
bouquet of bride roses and
of tho valley, and wore a veil. The
bride's maids while net and
The
maid of honor wore blue satin mes-
Throughout the Whole color scheme
the blue of the infantry was no-
The blue shoes of
the bride's maids, the light blue silk
dross of the maid of honor, the blue
In the dress of tho flower girl were
all reflective of the infantry blue
around the collar of Lieut. Wilson's
uniform.
During the ceremony tho organ-
Mary played
the song of West Point grad-
After the ceremony a reception was
tendered the members of the bridal
party and invited guests at the home
of the bride's parents,. The three
rooms which were thrown open to
the party wars decorated with Christ-
mas evergreen and bunting of the
national colors in the various at-
tractive combinations. Punch was
and the wedding cake was
cut. a wish bone, a thimble, a
button and a ring, all of
silver, were cut by Messrs. L. Amos
Brown and L. V. Morrill, Jr., and
Miss Settle Darden and Susie Ed-
Wards, respectively.
Lieut, and Mrs. Wilson went to
in an automobile just before
midnight. During Lieut. Wilson's
furlough, which lasts fifteen days.
the couple will visit Palm Beach, St.
Augustine and Havana. At present
Lieut, Wilson is stationed at Fort
Atlanta, Ga.
items.
X. C, Dec.
a Belle and Jessie Smith, of
Pi i came Thursday to spend
Ion with relatives.
Misses Nannie and Carrie Belle
Smith went Mr. C. L. Tyson's, near
Thursday evening and re-
turned Friday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Mi n went
Mr. J. K. near
den Friday.
Miss a tie day to
I a days with i .
Messrs. David and Mark Smith
went to Friday morning,
Mr. Joe Smith, who is .
school in Richmond, c me horn
to spend the b his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. I . Smith.
The Sunday at ; . it's
school house had a tree
at and an
by the school.
Mr, T. Little, who bid
d week at Wilson, returned home
Sunday morning.
Miss Mattie Little, of Wilson,
down with fa i r Sunday morn-
to visit and friend ,
returned Monday evening.
As tho e an the I as I I I
write from have
substitute take my ; i ill
tell you some of what i and
; id in Wilson Saturday night
nine to ten o'clock. They co i-
about nine i it . i.
I stood on the corner
Tarboro streets. The small Dr
crackers reminded me the small
arms in the battle . I
r -j a . the field
y, and ca a and
of go is on
be is E and the
man . d I i . i
balloons going all together re-
minded me more of war than any-
thing I've seen or beard since the
civil war closed.
Now, as am going to leave the
county and retire as the
correspondent, will subscribe my-
self in full.
THOMAS EASON LITTLE.
is
going to leave the with the
new year. He has made The Re-,
fleeter a correspondent, and
we hope his em will do as well
wish him much success and hap-
in the home to which he
will
Capital Surplus
We Pay cent, en time Deposits
The New Year is at hand. It's about time to
turn over a new make some good
Why not resolve to start out January with a
bank account This bank will welcome you as a
appreciate your
We are serving others to their complete sat-
We can serve you likewise.
Only National Bank in Pitt County
Merry Christmas
Prosperous New Year
r. u. JAMES,
J.
ideal
r. J. FORBES,
Cashier.
------u
New
Year
Why not select your New Year presents with that same
yon use in business matters There is
no Rift more appreciated or useful than something that will
the home. We have everything in our store need
t tho home comfortably and cozily. But we
wish to call special attention to our line of RUGS and
TURK'S, they are the gifts your friends would
We are making a reduction on lings and Pictures,
this week. Call in and Jet us show you our line.
ft Boyd Furniture Company
.--.-.-.
Tho annual meeting of the stock-
holders of The National Hank
will be held on Tuesday,
January 10th at o'clock
their now backing quarters corner
of Fifth streets, S
Value o Good Literature.
To the man who baa learned to
road, who developed for
literature, who reads thought-
fully and carefully, for instruction
and Inspiration as well as tor enter-
all thoughts and
dreams and achievements of the
est and best of the ages are of-
for enjoyment and for posses-
He may make them his at his
own will. The person who not
learned to many who arc
tar being Illiterate have never
v. hat read or how to read
misses inure than he can imagine,
loses a wonderfully large par of
the sweetness and beauty that should
belong to Progressive
Farmer and Gazette.
No Freight Trains Monday.
On next Monday, January 2nd.
neither the Atlantic t Line
the Norfolk Southern rail v. will
op any local trains.
should make of this
not take freight to the
expecting It to he forwarded that
day.
ow About Your Home
Is it comfortably If not you
would It interesting to visit our store and
look over our stock of FURNITURE and
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Everything needed
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make
you sit up and take notice.
mg and Sheet Metal Work
. . Tin
Tin Shop Repair Work, and
in Repair iron., and ; b
Flues S J J. J C If
S. H. C.
T.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
The Carolina Home and aid Eastern Reflector.
MEN'S PRAYER LEAGUE.
Makes a Good for The New
Year.
The men's prayer league made a
good start for the new year, having
an attendance some larger in the
Christian church, Sunday afternoon,
than has been at any previous meet-
President Wilson expressed
gratification at this, also at the in-
taken in the league, and hoped
the attendance would increase every
Sunday until the church where the
meeting is held shall be filled.
The subject discussed Sunday
was the Year With
The leaders. Messrs. J. W.
Bryan B. W. Moseley and J. L. Little,
all made helpful talks, as did also
some others when the subject was
opened for general discussion. Out
of the discussions grew a movement
to begin the year with greater
vice for God, by doing more for
humanity, and a committee consisting
of Messrs. D. J. Whichard, J. L. Lit-
B. W. Moseley, W. E. Hooker
and W. A. Bowen was appointed to
device a plan for systematic charity
work by the league and report next
Sunday.
The meeting next Sunday afternoon
will be held in the Baptist church
and the subject for that day is,
do the Boys Think of Text,
Phil. and Leaders,
E. Warren, W. E. Hooker and W. H.
If any who have not attended the
meetings of the league think the men
are merely gathering to pass away
an hour Sunday afternoons, they will
find out better by going out and hear-
the practical talks. We do not
believe there has been a meeting yet
but what every one present was help-
ed and made better.
SUNDAY SCHOOL OFFICERS.
Memorial Baptist School Elects for
the Year.
On Sunday morning Memorial
Sunday school elected the fol-
lowing officers for the new
D.
W. Wilson.
Assistant S.
Warren.
J. Cherry.
Assistant B. Thomas.
C. Tyson.
Assistant T. Lips-
comb, Jr.
Mattie Lawrence.
Higgs.
Assistant Pattie
Wooten.
What Parisian Sage Will Do.
Stop falling hair in two weeks.
Cure In two weeks.
Stop splitting hair.
Stop itching scalp immediately.
Grow more hair.
Make harsh hair silky and
luxuriant.
Brightens up the hair and the
eyebrows.
As a hair dressing it is without n
contains nothing that can
possibly harm the hair, it is not sticky
oily or is used by thou-
sands to keep the hair
prevents as well as cures scalp dis
ease.
For women and children Parisian
Sage is the most delightful hair dress
lug and should be in every home.
Coward C soils It for
cents a large bottle. Ask for
ARE DEAF
Catarrh is the Cause.
Rid of the Cause.
if you have catarrh and have con-
ringing noises in your ears
look into the matter at once.
It's a pretty sure sign that catarrh
is spreading and is making its way
through the Eustachian tubes that
lead from the nose to the ears.
When catarrh gets to the ears par-
deafness follows. If you have
ringing noises in your ears go and
get a outfit and drive out
catarrh.
To cure catarrh should
be breathed through a pocket inhaler
for a few minutes, four or five times
a day. Just pour a few drops into
the hard rubber inhaler and breathe
it.
It kills the germs; sooths the
heals the stops
hawking, spitting and snuffling.
keeps the throat free from
mucus and prevents crusts in nose.
The complete outfit which
includes the little indestructible hard
rubber inhaler, a bottle of
and instructions for use. cost
Separate bottle of
costs cents at druggists every-
where, or at Coward Wooten's,
on the money back plan .
To Our Customers
and Friends
Paper From Corn Stalks.
Says the Raleigh The
department of agriculture says the
making of paper from corn stalks
is a success. The department has
been experimenting for some time
in an effort to find a way to make
corn stalks paper a commercial
The department has had such
success that it is now utilizing some
of the corn stalk paper its own
correspondence and operates a mill
which turns out a high grade of the
new taper. The experts of Uncle
Sam say that a small commercial
mill can be kept busy through the
entire year by the stalks from the
corn fields within a radius of eight to
ten miles. It seems now that this
is another by-product, formerly going
to waste, that is to bring the farmer
many thousand of dollars. Some
new paper-making material will he
absolutely necessary within the next
few years and if a good grade of
paper can be made from corn stalks
we may be sure that tho mills for
making it will multiply until corn
stalks are in as much demand almost
as cotton seed. A magazine writer,
speaking of this new process,
it will not be many years
before the farmer will look upon his
stalks as the most valuable part of
his corn crop. he can realize but
half a cent a pound he will get more
for them than for his corn at
cents a bushel. The problem of
cheaper paper to compete with
the wood pulp article used for print-
newspapers has not been solved
yet, though the investigators are
hopeful. What this will mean can
readily be realized when it is stated
that about worth of raw
material, wood pulp, is used annually
in the paper-making business in this
country. That means a great many
trees cut down. The stalks are
pressed until the juice, a very rich
stock food, is extracted, then shred-
and dried. In this they will
keep sweet a year, insuring a steady
operation of the paper mill. Only
two-thirds of the is utilized for
print paper, the remainder making
a sort of parchment, watertight for
while, but not absorbing the
We want to thank you for your kind pat-
during the old year of 1910 and wish
you a happy and prosperous new year.
Respectfully,
Taft VanDyke
FREE
Who Was There That You Knew
tho shadowy ranks of those who to defeat or death or victory fifty
years ago in the mighty conflict that convulsed this great nation, is
father or grandfather or uncle of yours Would you like to see a photograph
cf bin that long clay of his youth--a photograph that he never knew was
taken Perhaps can show you enc; and in any case, can tell you a
story, stranger than any detective fiction cf priceless photographs that
lo-t and are found again.
Buried Photographs
cf the Civil War
by b
i I cf that they were bought the
f or they were buried
b Wat era there
d st by the photographer-who
died broken knocked
p liar J years, until it was
a collector. J. to
Cm and General
V Butler said it was worth with
Reviews, the entire collection
la
Gathered to U within
-co. these photograph thousands of
cf the wan the-; to places and
Qt to
Our supply of Free
i a quint
this coupon today.
You prompt to
Portfolios is limited
secure
Tor tho Cost of
In lo you Idea
the of this work
will send you superb
of the photograph free of
in a handsome portfolio.
photographs very ex-
pensive valuable, but you
rend only cents to tho
cost of mailing. They are not only
interesting from a historic stand-
point, but. framed, make a
did addition to your library walls.
At th will t
tho
this of
photographs at tho
States Govern-
pictures. Review
Send the coupon
Company,
Astor Place,
f New York,
Bonn- me. tree of charge.
the reproductions or
War
fir nut In a
portfolio Also lend mil
the story these pictures inn ten
me bow, far what the
Mid for halt a prints. I ran
mats the whole own.
I enclose to cow She c
Address.
once.
Subscribe to the Reflector.
MR





Carolina Mid Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
The and Farm ad Eastern
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF P. W. SMITH
tn Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The fl
Eastern Reflector for and vicinity.
ft Advertising rates furnished
IS
A. den, N. C, Dec.
. ,, purse, either tn Ayden
or between there and Fort Barnwell,
containing about in currency,
. a notes, one for and one
for . d to me, also some
insurance receipts on the life of
Craven A liberal reward
will be their return. W. E.
Move.
Mr. Alexander Campbell Nobles
has moved bis family from here to
Zebulon.
Mr. J. Carl Jones and wife, re-
Wednesday and have made
Ayden their home. They reside on I
W -i
I Hardy is visiting
Mi es Cora Lee, and Annie
We have two stores conveniently
your I . hi i d extra
added.
We sail gin, d, buy I, ex-
change for meal, make carts,
shoe horse i and burs the J.
R. Smith Company.
Mr. a d Mrs. P. T. Anthony were
in oar town Tuesday. Mr. Anthony
was selling goods., Mrs. Anthony vis-
Mrs. Martha Smith, of Greenville,
who has been spending
here with friends Thursday I i
her home in Buck k, n t i
Tell the news and lets mi k
the Department the special
. . in The Daily Reflector next
year. Lets co-operate. You tell us
the news, we will do the
Mr. W. E. will move next
situated between the R. C. Cannon week to Perfection, Craven county.
and the post office for rent.
Size, Write or phone J. It.
Smith Company.
Miss Jean Morrison, of Portsmouth
Va., is Visiting Mrs. R. W. Smith.
Mr, Waller who has been
away taking a business course, is at
home again.
Mr. S. A. Carr was the guest, of
Miss Lee Nichols Tuesday.
Miss Nannie Ruth Pollard and Mrs
B. A. Joyner, of spent
Christmas at Mrs. C. A. in
Ghent.
Rev. C. Manly Morton, pastor of
the First Christian church in sermons, of the section, has
is visiting in Ghent this farm to Mr g and
week.
Mr. H. C. Ormond moved his
today to where he
will manage the mercantile company
gin, etc. We wish him much success.
Rev. Mr. Caraway, of the M. E.
church, arrived and we feel that
though small in statue, he is about
his Father's business. Ho occupies
a residence on Northwest avenue.
Mr. Samuel W. Tyson to
Greenville today.
Masters Larry and Smith
arc visiting relatives in
Ayden, N. C, Jan. Henry
big his full time in the Civil v and
laid down the musket with the sat-
ion of well done. He was
member of the old
Lodge, when that
I he moved his membership
to Grimesland, and it
his death. lie was faithful to
his God and fraternal to his fellow-
men. We have never heard ought
against his good and spot-
less career. His life is an
.-. el of purity, like Nathaniel
. Old in whom there was no guile.
our heartfelt sympathy
to the bereaved ones.
bear I Mr. J. R.
is very sick at his home near town.
Hardware, hardware, hardware. Be
sure to see J. R. Smith Company.
Both schools, graded and Seminary
resume their duties this morning,
r a pleasant vacation.
Dr. Harvey Dixon, of Edward,
Sunday and will make this
, his home for the practice of
cine. Hi.-, family will Join him
U days. They will occupy the
C. Ormond residence on Main
A few more reliable Turner
; at J. R. Smith
Capt. Joe who for,;
several years has been superintend-
of the road force, has resigned
and will engage in cultivation the
soil.
Let us shoe that mule or horse
for you. We have a first-class
black smith. J. R. Smith Company.
Mr. H. C. Ormond has moved his
family to Greene county near his
old home.
Belling and mill fittings at J. R.
Smith Company's.
Life may be worth living because of
the tilings beyond our reach.
HEALTH
INSURANCE
The man who Insures his life Is
wise for his family.
The man who insures hi.- health
is wise both for his family and
himself.
You may Insure health by guard-
it. It is worth guarding.
At the first attack of disease,
which generally approaches
through the LIVER and
itself in innumerable ways
TAKE.
And save your health.
Stray Taken Up.
I have taken up two hogs, both
one weighing about
unmarked; the other weigh-
about CO pounds, marked
ow fork in each ear. Owner can
same by proving ownership and
paying charges.
ABRAM ANDERSON,
R. F. D. No. G, Greenville, N. C.
ltd
For a Uniform Road Law.
At the risk of being termed a self-
appointed adviser of the legislature
to convene in Raleigh, we would like
to suggest that it would save lots of
time and money if a uniform road
law for the entire State could be put
upon the statue books. Then our
roads could be built with some idea of
continuity, instead of erratically, as
now. Herald.
Mr. David Bland, of Rocky Mount,
Spent Christmas with his parents,
Rev. C. C. Bland and wife.
Mrs. T. R. Lee and daughter, of
visiting her sister, Miss
Rosa Bland.
The Misses and Norms Ruth
Hart entertained Wednesday night,
in honor of their cousin, Miss Velma
Harrington, of who is here
on a visit.
About ore o'clock Wednesday night
the fire alarm was given and it was
purchased a large farm near Fort
Barnwell and moved his family there
last Saturday.
Mr. Lonnie Evans has purchased
a farm near Dover, and will move
his family there this week.
Mr. Ralph has purchased a
farm near Biddies landing and ex-
to move there at an early
date.
Mr. W. E. expects to move his
found that the barn of Mr. J. F. Davis family to Perfection this week.
near the graded school, was on fire. Mr. James E. Cannon, of
He lost his corn, peas, wheat, tools, moved his family here Monday and
and two stacks of fodder, besides hay. occupies the M. F. residence
The origin of the fire is unknown, on Blount Street. Mr. Cannon has
This is a heavy less. purchased the stock of J. Moore
Mr. Solomon Dixon, of Willow on the Patrick corner, and to
Green, shot a ball through his foot do business.
Thursday morning while examining P. S. Cannon, the colored merchant
a revolver, inflicting a painful, though of has purchased the stock
not serious wound. of W. Jesse Coward on East avenue
Mr. J. B. Skinner and children and moved from Gaskins corner
spent Thursday in Ayden and were thereto. We hear Mr. Coward will
the guests of Mr, W. F. Hart. move his family to New Bern, where
Mr. John Humble and family, of he has accepted a position with the
Pole Cat, have moved to Ayden. Mr. Norfolk Southern Railway.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N.
In the State of Carolina at the dose of business, October
RESOURCES.
LIABILITIES.
Loans and discounts. Capital stock
Overdrafts. 75.51 Surplus fund. 628.00
Banking house, furniture Undivided profits, less cur-
aid fixtures . 610.57 rent taxes pd.
Due from banks and j subject
Cash items.
Gold coin .
coin, Including all
minor currency .
National bank notes and
other U. S, notes.
Total
Savings deposits .
Cashier's checks
22.980.33
Total
Humble and Mr. David Jones will
operate the famous Pitch Kettle seine
beach the coming season.
On Saturday morning at five o'clock
at his home in the soul of
Mr. W. S. Roach took its flight to
Where docs the fault rest, When Cod, who gave it. Mr. Roach had
people shoot out the electric light been in feeble health for some time
globes on the streets the globes and l-is death was no surprise to
from the arc So long as this his friends. He war; burled Sunday
is tolerated we ere bound to have with Masonic honors at St.
complaint of dark corners. A word Episcopal church, where he has long
should be sufficient. held his membership. He was a
The tax collector Id making his farmer and merchant and was one
It shown a spirit of the most upright and pious
and good citizenship to pay your men of cur acquaintance. He was
taxes cheerfully and not wait to have a loyal soldier,
of
I, J. P.
that the
this the
North Carolina, of Flit,
. Smith, cashier, of the ab named bank, solemnly
above statement is true the test of my and belief.
. J. R. SMITH
and sworn to before me, J. R. Smith,
17th day of November, 1910. R. C. Cannon,
STANCIL HODGES, V tors
Notary
. v,
We wish to call attention to our line of fall which
now have. We taken cave In buying this year and we
think we can supply wants in Shoes, Gingham, No-
tier., Laces and and in fact anything that is carried in a
Dry Store.
Come let us show you
NATIONAL REFORM OF OLD
II Chronicles January
strong, therefore, and kt not
be for yum U
CHIS Study shows n yo Icing
whose environ cents in h l
beer unfavorable. In h
was far from being a goo man. and
his early years were under
of a grandmother who was Id I or-
shipper. In the midst of Is
setting Asa quickly developed a .
to God and soundness of at I en-
to kingdom.
We have nil had experience with char-
of this kind. We have
seen children of evil parentage who seem-
ed to see the evil of the parental co
and to be nauseated therewith, and by
this led Into right paths It has n times
appeared as though Divine Providence
occasionally Interposed In prenatal
which made the child very different
In bent of mini
from either
parents.
Asa did much to
abolish idolatry in
his kingdom, and
to the minds
of people to
of Almighty
God. In
he had
peace for ten years,
during which time
he encouraged his
people and spurred
himself on to ac-
In the train-
of an army,
and in the com-
of fortified
cities on the ex-
of his
kingdom, for pro-
against at-
tacks of enemies.
Following the ten
years of p e a c e
came an
Ethiopian prince,
The God of Battle
Benevolent people interested In
congresses, etc. sometimes how
we should understand the fact that the
God of the Old Testament i vis
a God of commanding
war the utter d a ruction of many
The answer to this question can be
only when the situation is view-
ed from i roper t,
The whole world was m sin and
was condemnation to death as
worthy of life, unworthy of Divine favor.
Whether, therefore, God, permitted them
by famine, . or by
we sometimes natural death,
mattered sentence must
or Inter executed against em
at any mu I to the tomb.
We thank God, however, his
plan I--- provided a redemption of
Adam and all of his from the tomb
and from death, and n full opportunity
eventually, by resurrection, to c to a
true knowledge of God and ;.
and. if obedient thereto, to
to Divine r. and to more than
was lost In . Mils very ac-
through Calvary.
The nation -r as no exception
to this reign of sin and it I but God
chose a nail n to i f
types, shadows. Illustrative hi
All of dealings with that nation
d greater blessings tor Ute future.
We to understand
then, or any other nation
has occupied
same lo
toward d. nor
that I
i. ii and pi
in
with
In each nation.
Spiritual Israel,
St. Peter tells us.
Is a Priest-
hood, an holy
a people for
a purpose, that
they should show
forth the praises
of him who has
called them out of
darkness into
marvelous
This Spirit-Begot-
ten l la not
an earthly nation.
OF
Sorts Carolina
Principals,
Mm
Destruction of
under Asa.
an nation,
earthly
and an army of a million and three
of war, to attack the king-
of Judah. After the custom of the
they foraged en the country through
which they passed, appropriating,
etc.
Renewed to God
This was the very occasion for which
Asa had made preparation during his ten
years of peace. He went forth with his
army to beat the Invader. Nevertheless,
his looked up to God for the
realizing that With him was the
power to give or to withhold victory. In
the battle which followed, Asa and his
army were successful.
Returning from the victory With hearts
grateful to God they were met the way
by a in the name
Of the Lord the king and his j
pie that they had all done well and faith-
fully, and that, therefore, God's blessing
was with them, and that the continuance
of Divine blessing would depend upon
their faithfulness to God and to the re-
of his Law.
The Divine warning helped the King
and his people to appreciate the situation
and to n firmer stand than ever
righteousness. A second and more I
reformation was thus Inaugurated f
no Idolatry was thenceforth permitted in
the kingdom under penalty of death, end
the Lord's with W;
of Ethiopian
prince x
Asa.
This Holy Na-
has no prom-
, . v p, e
and i
r of
to God, but. Is . l
that in the world she shall have
hatred, opposition, g an that
reward will he
We
Nearly every page In may tench
lessons to those ere
them. i Kin a
may. for In lance. n lesson
In the years of r y w mid i
put away money, of
fame, cf honor of n i Id i
to know and to do the will of the I r I
from the heart.
In the early cf should
erect the fortresses of which
will serve us a at-
tacks of the world, the flesh and the
Devil in our later years, and when the
battle comes, thus prep-, red. we are still
to look to the Lord for victory, realizing
the force of the Apostle's words,
I am weak in myself then I am strong in
the
twenty-sixth annual session of
North Carolina association of
City Public
and Pi will In
For a of a c a
hi to
e d tiny of N h ;
inns and y ii Is one of the i
, . ; . . in a pro-
I.
I urns by as
i. C. S. Noble, Alexander Graham,
aid E. P. Moses, and the two
lamed are still members of the as-
These with many others who are
now leaders In t a Li u
. . i ; meetings
I .; i to plan more i
to -1 ate th Ir work more
. i in ; of
. . , ti d school
. . The of I as
. . ,. pi the
i ed ti n
re is no class of t In the
. ho j work their pi ob-
. re wisely or i I
led school
The am of th a i
. BU-
. . . of study in fact,
. . g led . -o
, i . . .- i tend i
j . . ,, f of association ha
vital . u g the i
yes i is become in-
i rat deal city i e
ugh look forward to meetings
i. , ; anticipation and await
lot t i n of
.; . Only e
n o are
;. detail ed will miss these meet-
in
For Fan .
During I .
a d ;. so Ion
, are mufti con-
. The prim; Incentive was
good roads, opening the way to mar-
the it for better
churl bi ad the i l l-
, new
; d the n n
g to have clubs.
county, Kans , have
i one.
; v i In doing so they
Sim ken a from the
life and customs i I the i bu Li b
man. U well rs id I m-
conceded one of the great
charms of the city for the average
i, its t for club life. He
finds there from tie-
of business. If he In a r lie
In it a substitute for home life;
and If he is a married man It pro-
him with a place where he can
unbend from the rigid standards of
domesticity. In the club sanctuary
seek congenial minds and
topics an discussed.
Why shouldn't have a
. ha en om the w a I ear
E the The members of the
club organized in Kansas will met
once a month, enjoy a i met, a
I I
y . ,. . i i
. a rm ii, i-
with the i .; -K ; of
average city club, but the serious
side of the new organization will
serve its purpose and doubt drop
more and more Into the background
as it grows older. We i favor
of the
News.
banners Fully Awake.
We no j with satisfaction that the
. . ion of a state dog tax has been
f a man trades off a worthless
horse he- isn't satisfied till he ; a
again and gets a worse one.
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C.
METAL SHINGLES
Laid years ago are as good as new to-day and have never needed
repairs. Think of it
What other roofing will last as and look as well
They're fireproof, and very easily laid.
They can be laid right over wood shingles, if necessary, without
dirt inconvenience.
For prices and other detailed information apply to Q
. . In the North Caro-
U lion and is now
official advisement. In reply no
has so much to gain from the
of worthless and super-
i d ;,.; as the farmer. He gains
in becoming enabled to raise
as well as through the
funds for educational
thereby provided. Heretofore
Dur legislators have shied away from
this matter because of a fear that the
were not sufficiently
regarding it. Once convinced
that there Is resentment in store
they would come Into line quickly
enough.
There are evidences that the
farmers have begun considering
along with the Torrens system
hi all their organs of opinion
heartily question whether
State's large homestead and per-
property exemptions might not
with advantage be r d i At pres-
these excessively la so
bring ii. about that nobody trusts
the average man for any lump debt
without a mortgage or its equivalent,
Inasmuch as the law has invited him
repudiate all his unsecured
This, With much the same
result in the end as if there were
moderate exemptions or none, pro-
a great deal of needless
and expense. K is among
the many good signs of the times that
the farmers considering such
Fall Care i- Calves,
With the approach of fall, every
year, numerous complaints come
us of calves that not doing veil.
They cease to grow, get thin and
finally take scours and many them
die. Those that do not die go into
the winter in bad condition and
with the hard usage and scanty food
common in winter, fail lo
factory growth. A little attention I
fore they get in bad condition, would
be profitable. As the grasses, e-
Bermuda, gel dry they ere
less digestible. They should be given
a little extra care and feed at this
time.
There are two or more species of
small worms that infect the
or lodge in the coats cf the
tines that are responsible for a
of these troubles. Good feed and
will largely enable the calves
to withstand the troubles coming at
this season of the year.
If scours occur, take the up
and feed lightly on hay and
just a little grain of some sort, and
give a dose of turpentine and oil
every second day until about three
doses have been given. For a calf
six months old to of
turpentine In a quarter to a half-pint
of raw linseed oil will be about the
right dose. As a tonic give about
grains each Of dry sulphate of iron
and powdered twice a
day for ten days or two weeks.
Progressive Farmer.
SAM FLAKE
Harness Repair Shop
and dealer in odd of harness, leather and
shoe findings.
NEXT TO OFFICE. C.
L .





Carolina Home Farm Mi T, Eastern Reflector.
College for Western
Carolina.
The movement looking to the
establishment of a training
college for Western North Carolina Is
one that cannot fall to gain
tum as It goes two very essential
tors In and reason, on
Its side. Feeling In hearty sympathy
with the movement, The Citizen takes
great pleasure In publishing the fol-
lowing which was written by one of
the state's best known educators, but
who asks that his name be withheld
for the present.
greatest educational need of
Western North Carolina Is a high-
grade college. Indeed, to
one who carefully surveys the con-
existing In the whole state,
it might the duty of North Car-
to establish the first
college, not in the nor In the
east, but in the west. Cut off by
mountains, and without railroads or
steamboats, isolated from the world
for nearly two centuries, the west
suffered for lack of schools and
trained teachers far more than the
center or the east. Already the state
has supplied the east and center with
high-grade colleges, while
the west has none.
North Carolina intend to
keep the west forever without a
college If not, let the
college be authorized will
never be worse will never
do more good. Now is the
period with our schools. Now,
ever, we need teachers of the very
best talent skill and training.
state colleges at Greensboro
and Greenville are too remote to
train the western teachers nor have
they adequate accommodations, even
were our teachers able to attend
them. North Carolina is a large
state and needs more training schools
for teachers. Massachusetts has
twelve normal New York
seventeen; Pennsylvania seventeen
Wisconsin twelve; even New Jersey
has five; surely North Carolina can
support three. The at
and Boone are doing good
work and merit the small support
they get from the state. Let them
continue on their present lines. The
state might well establish even more
schools of the same elementary grade
and local character. But neither of
these schools does now, or can here-
after, fill the bill of a high-grade
college for Western North
Carolina. Such college must be lo-
in the most favorable place,
after competitive bids by all Western
North Carolina and careful
by the state board of
cation, or by some equally competent
and disinterested authority.
last legislature appropriated
for normal training in the eastern
college at Greenville annual-
besides for buildings and
equipments; also for the state normal
college at Greensboro an-
besides for buildings
and equipment. The west is helping
to pay these sums. How long shall
It bear these burdens and at the
same time be deprived of a similar
college for the training of western
The half million dollars
or more invested at Greensboro, and
u million dollars invested
at L e well repay the state
in better trained teachers. A similar
Investment of a quarter or half mil-
lion dollars In the west will bring
fully as large, if not larger,
Citizen.
CHRISTMAS DANCE.
Given by Young Men Complimentary
to Ladies.
From to 12.30 o'clock in
hall, Thursday night, the young men
of the town gave a Christmas dance
in honor of the visiting young ladies
that proved a most enjoyable
The dance was led by Mr.
John W. with Miss Ethel
Skinner, assisted by Mr. Alex. Blow
with Miss Agnes Lacy. Music was
furnished by the Washington
The following couples participated
in the
Miss Ethel Skinner with Mr. John
Miss Margaret Blow with Mr.
linger, Wilson.
Miss Mary with W. L.
Hill, Wilson.
Miss Agnes Lacy, Raleigh, with
Mr. Alex. Blow.
Miss Jamie Bryan with Mr. Chas.
Miss Kathleen Long with Mr. Burt
James.
Miss Lucille Cobb with Mr. Chas
Home
Miss Mary Smith with Mr. Cecil
Cobb.
Miss Lila Mae Willis, New Bern,
with Mr. W. L.
Miss Smith with Mr. C.
R. Townsend.
Miss Lillian Burch with Mr. Don.
Gilliam.
Miss Arlene Joyner with Mr.
Patrick .
Miss Howell, Tarboro, with
Mr. D. M. Clark.
Miss Bessie Stephens, D with
Mr. Dow Pender, Tarboro.
Miss Mae Ayers, Washington, with
Mr. Sam. Williams, Washington.
Miss Nettie Pugh, Baltimore, with
Dr. Paul Jones, Farmville.
Miss Helen Forbes with Mr. W.
Hill Home.
Miss Estelle Greene with Mr. M.
L. Turnage.
Miss Coward with Prof.
Brewer.
Miss Deans with Mr. Oscar
Greene.
Mr. Moseley, Virginia, Col. C. T.
Lipscomb, Columbia, Mr. and Mrs.
W. T. Lipscomb, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. N.
W. Outlaw.
Summer-
ell, Wilson; Howard, Tarboro; P. S.
Cotton, Norfolk.
and Mrs. W. H.
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Cobb, Mrs.
H. W. Whedbee, Mrs. T. B.
son, Mrs. J. G. Mr. and Mrs.
F. J. Forbes.
After the dance several young
ladies served late lunches at their
homes.
At
Promptly at o'clock Thursday
afternoon, 29th, the prizes as
were drawn at the store of Mr.
C. T. The winners were
Mr. S. W. Irwin, Miss Bettie Dunn,
and Mrs. Everett respectively
The first prize is a beautiful China
closet, 2nd an automatic trunk and
the third a combination writing desk
and book case. There was a
crowd present at the draw-
several thousands of the
coupons having been issued to
his customers.
The man who uses all the
edge he has all the Knowledge he
can use,
m m
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Greenville, and Kinston
Effective November 1st,
.,
k For further information, nearest ticket agent, ff
W. H. WARD. Ticket Agent, Greenville,
W. J. P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. O.
TO TELEPHONE
A Telegram To The Western
Say
If you wish to transmit a
to the Western Union office by Home
Telephone simply say,,
The operator will connect you with
the proper Western Union telephone.
Thus you may dictate your telegram
and save yourself the inconvenience
of waiting a messenger.
For the convenience of the pub-
this new method is now in effect
in all cities in which the Home Tel-
phone Company operates.
Are you a telephone subscriber
HOME TEL. TELEGRAPH CO.
J. S. MOORING
New in Sub White Store on Five More aid larger stack. Come to Me m.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Home of Women's Fashions, Greenville N C.
Subscribe to
The Better Christmas.
Giving a little thought to the mat-
no one can have failed to observe
the difference in the celebration of
Christmas in the recent past. The
elimination of noise and hilarity and
reckless abandon has been marked
The Christmas observance in the
South is sane. The first
step In the direction was the
passing by city fathers of
against crackers and fire-
works. Then came the official boy
of pop-sticks. It is to be hoped
that this be followed up by a
taboo on horns and cow bells. While
this is no sport for the older people,
they remember how they enjoyed it
in their youth. The younger people
ought to be weaned from the ways of
their fathers am. times
have changed. We are all coming to
learn that Christmas is no time for
hilarity and carousal, but for quiet
joy and happiness among and
Chronicle.
Hie Carolina Home and
IS.
Legal Notices
FARMS FOR SALE.
farm acres clear-
d. on river miles below
A-1 miles water front, c i
alt water. place
rooms, tenant houses.
aid rich land; iii
lake bale to the acre; also good to
land. Price. half cash
On
One farm acres OH Sound
acres cleared; plenty
oysters; delightful climate. Get
dwellings on place, good water, fine
cotton and corn land. Land
this is, is in big demand. Price
acres land near Newport, about
r miles from R. R.; no cleared land
can be easily put into cultivation
and wood en the land
ore pay for it. This laud is
foundation mid fine for cotton;
a acres in next year would
for the land. Price.
One farm acres land clear-
not a bad acre on the place; parry
d acres in tobacco, sold it for
year sold his at the
for All necessary
rs and wire fencing with light
post. Fine cotton land,
a bale to the Owner Is
, wishes to retire, about miles
m Newport and N. R. R. Price
including farming
cattle and sheep on the
ice.
One farm acres Adams
New Bern, acres cleared,
i salt water, plenty of
fine land, and made bales cotton
acres this is all good
Good dwelling, barn stables
d shelters; grape vine and orchard.
ice,
One farm on Newport River
acres, CO Cleared, balance in Urn-
, right on the river, estimated
million fast; good land for
i corn or tobacco. Price
n-farm about acres, most
fine for early sweet potatoes,
cotton and corn, only about
mile from N. S. R. R. and from
town of Newport; adjoins the fruit
of Messrs. G. N Ives Son.
e,
and is cheaper in this section of
i state than anywhere else and
w is the time to buy. If Interest-
write me and I will arrange U
-e the land inspected by you
Terms can be made to suit you. if
i have some cash.
J. M. HOWARD,
Now Bern, N
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
testamentary having this
i been issued to me by the clerk
the superior court of Pitt county,
executrix of the last will and
of J. T. Worthington and
duly qualified such
;, notice is hereby given to all
is holding claims against the estate
the said J. T. Worthington to
t them to me for payment on o-
ore the 17th day of December 1911
this notice will be plead in bar
recovery. All persons Indebted
said estate are urged to make
payment.
the 16th day of December 1910
MARY L. WORTHINGTON
of J. T. Worthington
vis Blow, Attorneys. ltd
NOTICE TO CREDITORS,
laving duly qualified before the
court clerk of Pitt county
administrator of the estates of i
Brooks and E. J. Brooks, deceased,
Ice is hereby given to persons
to these estates to make
payment to the undersigned
his ; and all persons
claims against said estate will
e notice that they must
same to th undersigned
tor or his attorney on before
5th day of December, 1911, or
tins notice will be plead in bar of
recovery
the 5th day of December.
1910.
E C. BROOKS, Administrator.
. m V
S. J. Everett, Atty., Greenville, N. C
LAND BALE.
By virtue of the power contain
in a of trust, executed by
William Host to O.- James Son,
tees, on the
which deed of trust was
recorded la i- office
IS Of I t
; . . . .
tees will sell cash, re the
I. door in on
Monday, J 23rd, 1911, fol
. .
land, situate i PI .
and in
follows, to
in the road at the North-
corner of-Warren line;
thence with Warren line to
the Northeast corner of Pettigrew
lot; thence with said
back lino to the southeast
corner of his lot; nearly east
a Straight line to a ditch; thence With
the ditch to the Bethel and Tarboro
public rand; with said road to
the beginning, Containing one half
acre, and being the lot deeded to said
William Best by J. Grimes and
others.
This Dec. 1910.
K G. JAMES A SON,
Trustees.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power gale COD
in a certain mortgage deed,
executed and delivered by Mai ha
Smith to E. Turnage Sons Comp
the 24th day of May, 1909 and
recorded in the Register of Di la
i of Pitt county, North Carolina
in Book D-8, page the
signed will to public sale, b
the court door
ville, to the highest bidder,
cash, on Thursday, January
1911, a certain tract or parcel l
land, lying in the county of and
State North Carolina, described as
follows,
That piece or parcel of land In
township, bounded on the
south and cast by the lands of Frank
on the west and north by Dr.
T. Cox, and on north and east
Mary Ann Cannon's land contain-
2-3 acres more or less. To
satisfy raid mortgage.
This the 12th day of Dec, 1910.
E. TURNAGE SONS CO.,
G. James Son, Mortgages
Attorneys.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
and delivered by. Berry James and
wife, Caroline James, to Cromwell
Bullock, on the 23rd day of April.
1908, which mortgage was duly re-
corded in the office of the r
of Deeds of Pitt county. In Book 8-7,
page the undersigned l sell
for cash, the lions door
in Greenville, Saturday, the
of January, 1911, the following ti-
scribed parcel or lot land, el
in the county of Pitt, and in Falk-
land adjoining the lands
of J. C. Forbes, Hay wood Applewhite
and others. Bounded on the north by
Haywood Applewhite, on the south by
C. Forbes, on the Cromwell
Bullock and on the west by the East
Carolina railroad, containing five
acres, said land is sold to s;
said mortgage, which, was for
the purchase of said hind.
This December
CROMWELL BULLOCK,
F. G. James Son, Mortgagee.
Attorneys. ltd
NOTICE TO
Alex. this day quail-
last will and
j Sutton,
D. C. of the
court of Pitt county notice is
. i.;. all as Indebted
make Immediate pay
the
and all against
r i
bey are fl to file their claims
l on or
day of 1911,
I , will he pit ad In bar
. aid claims.
day of December,
1910. ALEX. SUTTON,
or the frill end
,. J. W. Sutton, deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
faring duly qualified before the
clerk of Pitt county
executor of the last will and
of Amos E. deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons
I to the estate to make
mediate payment to the undersigned;
and all persons having claims against
said estate are notified lo present tho
same to the undersigned tor payment
on or before the 9th day of
1911, this notice will be plead
the bar of recovery.
This tho 9th day of December,
J. P.
of Amos E. Brown.
MORTGAGE SALE.
By virtue of the powers contained
certain mortgage executed to
O. L. Joyner, by Harvey Stancill,
17th day of December,
and led In Look M-9 page 65-
Register of office, Pitt
I will expose for tale, before the
court house door the town of
Greenville, N. C, on Monday, January
30th, 1911, for cash, the following
parcel or tract of land, to-
certain tract or parcel of
land, lying and in the county
of Pitt, and S North Carolina,
in township, at Cross
Roads, adjoining the lands of the
late S. Atkinson, et and upon
; rev. situated a store house;
be land deeded to O.
L. Joyner and It. II. Cogging, by Jo-
Williams and others by deed,
dated October which deed
Is recorded in the Register of Deeds
office of Pitt county, in Book Q-7,
page also being the same
land this day conveyed by O. L.
Joyner and wife to Harvey
O. L. JOYNER, Mortgagee.
Evidences continue to multiply that
the reign of in North Caro-
is fast g its end. its
doing to be at the forth-
g session of tin sen Ai i
in January. The Legislature can
ill afford to totally disregard the re-
commendations of the three great re-
bodies have spoken in
r annual gatherings this yea in
no uncertain manner, and now c
Attorney who is by
no manner of means a so-called
and declares in his report to
the Legislature that is an
unmitigated nuisance and should
torn out and Tho
Presbyterians at their Synod In
Rocky Mount earlier in the year de-
most unequivocally for some
relief from the Legislature; both tho
Western and North Carolina confer-
of tho Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, did not handle the
question With gloves on and the
of the Slate at their great con-
at a few
weeks ago did not mince words in
their enunciation upon the subject.
The people themselves arc quite will-
to concur with the Attorney Gen-
that the so-called near-beer
is an nuisance
and it is a gratifying sign of the
times that not only the great
denominations but public officials
arc speaking out a question that
is taught with so much importance
to the peace and prosperity of tho
elate. Even the most pronounced of
the so-called have
recognized in near-beer a nuisance,
the abatement of which cannot
too Star.
NOTICE OP
Under and by virtue of an order
of the Superior Court of Pitt county
made In a special proceeding entitled
Nashville Jr. Administrator
vs G. W. and J. II. made on
of December, 1910, the
signed will, on 23rd day of Jan-
1911, at o'clock noon, before
the court house door of said county
offer for public Bale, to the e
bidder, for cash, a certain house and
lot in the town of Winterville, N. C.
on the west side of the A. C. L. Rail-
road near Lewis mill, being
a lot purchased of J. T. Smith, by
Nashville Sr., the deed for
which is recorded in book page
In Register of Deeds office Of
county, to which reference is directed.
December 1910.
NASHVILLE JR.,
Administrator of Nashville
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION.
T e B m of
I In .; S in Pitt
wag dissolved by mutual con-
bent on De semi 1910, W. it.
purchasing the interest of
A. G. In the business. W.
H. will settle the
of tie firm, and all accounts
due the Arm are payable to him.
This December 31st, 1910.
A. G. WHICHARD,
Passing n Historic Character.
Mr. Charlie cue of the
est poisons living In this county, died
Friday afternoon at his home two
miles west from this place. He had
been very feeble for the past four or
months, during which time he
lost his eyesight and his mind.
Mr. would have been
years old if he had lived until
1st. He was too old for regular
in the Civil war, being there-
fore over fifty at that lime. Instead
of serving as a soldier he was made
a government hauler of provisions to
the soldiers and their families, and
did this kind of work throughout the
war. Mr. was a Juror at the
first term Union county court.
which was in
Enterprise.
To Be Dedicated.
The Christian church, of this city,
has stood for several years without
being dedicated. However, it is
ranged for the congregation to have
hat pleasure en January 191.1,
that being the time also when the
Christian church of Hookerton union,
embracing several counties hold their
first quarterly meeting of 1911 with
the local church. The
i lo-i will preached at a.
Dr. J. C. Caldwell, of
the Atlantic Christian College, at
Wilson. The college from
Wilson will sing, which will be an
attractive feature. The congregation
of the Christian church invites the
fellowship of those of other faiths
upon this auspicious occasion, as
well as those of its own faith.
I Children are very indulgent to be-
In Santa Clans so as to honor
their parents .
College Refuses Bequest.
The authorities of Washington and
Jefferson College have just done an
unusual and very laudable thing,
refused a bequest because its
acceptance would so diminish tho
donor's estate as to leave his widow
and six children in a needy condition.
The maker of the bequest, a
ate the institution, either
the value of his property, or
the latter had declined after his will
was made. President J. D. Moffat
the board of trustees upon dis-
covering these facts, promptly
ed to take the money.
This extra-legal generosity is in
pleasant contrast with the greedy at-
often manifested by public In-
regarding endowment
York Globe.
The pen may be mightier than the
sword, but both are capable of put-
up a pointed argument.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
PLEA FOR ANIMALS AND BIRDS.
Barbarous Methods Used in Securing
Etc.
We are all cranks nowadays. The
man who is not a vegetarian or a
Seventh Day Adventist is probably a
or at least convinced
that Bacon wrote Shakespeare. Ev-
en the humanitarian has come to
stay, and the of
Ward the moral wax
would be respectful to the
modern
Frankly I am a humanitarian of
the most objectionable type. I even
preach. Worse still, I am accustom-
ed to taking young people in hand,
even before they have absorbed
fashions. I try to suggest
ideals to them. Then they grow
up with a prejudice against the things
I hate. The logical ones find
facts and figures wherewith
to support their preconceived
nations. The stupid ones, the easy-
going ones and the dreamy ones
ply do the things I love, and tell
they that's all.
The artistic folk have never
really liked their person-
attire. Probably the colors,
blood, presented no
objection to the mere artist
who loves rich hues. The skins of
slaughtered animals, which are not
lacking in qualities
when representing the sole cover-
of the noble savage, are
lacking in artistic merit when
regarded as the finish of a civilized
lady's toilet. One looks almost In-
for the tale of scalps to
accompany the skin.
So long as this instinctive dislike
rested on art taste alone, the public
effect of the artist's disgust was
small. Humanitarian ob-
weigh precious little in the
scale of unaccompanied by
substitutes. The new fact Is that
dry goods firms are beginning to
advertise silk seals, imitation furs
and artificial skins, in order con-
to cater for those who
would rather be fashionable than
otherwise, but cannot overcome an
artistic aversion towards apparel
which speaks too audibly of the
slaughter house or the dissecting
chamber.
still looms
largely in hats and the
usual The principal
birds slaughtered in myriads to
make women's hats hideous are
ospreys, birds of paradise, hum-
ming birds, pigeons
ants, jays kingfishers, owls,
and parrots. To particularize only
The or egret
which bird comes what are commonly
osprey is a kind
of heron. The easiest and the
nary way of obtaining egret plumes
is to go to the nests when they are
full of young birds unable to fly.
At such a time the egret murderers
have no difficulty, for attack from
defenseless birds is impossible, and
the flight by parents from their help
less fledgling is unthinkable. They
are shot down while they brood over
the young they refuse to desert. Who
cares that millions of chicks are left
to die of starvation Who heeds the
woodland dripping with blood Who
of the extermination of herons
in and elsewhere Who
troubles about the brutal
of bird parenthood, when the result
the fifteen-dollar hat .
human wife and mother
Bear skins, when obtained by log
REGISTERED.
p Origin of Fertilizers.
Mr. Royster believed that success awaited the
Manufacturer of Fertilizers who would place quality
above other considerations. This was Mr.
idea Twenty-seven years ago and this is his idea
to-day; the result has been that it requires Eight
Factories to supply the demand for Royster Fertilizers-
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY,
FACTORIES AND SALES OFFICES.
NORFOLK, VA. TARBORO, N. C. COLUMBIA. S. C. C.
MACON, GA. COLUMBUS. GA. MONTGOMERY. ALA. BALTIMORE. MD.
and steel are revolting en-
with their horrid details of
bears tearing away from the traps
Items.
N. C, Jan.
Martha Belle and Bessie Smith re-
and leaving a paw, or leg behind, to home near
crawling away to die from the slow , Wednesday.
poison of the decoy meat planted Miss entertained
beside the trap. The skunk
caught by human skunks in cow-
fashion. The tiny ten- inch
ermine skin will be in evidence at
King George's coronation. Four
hundred animals is a common re-
for a simple aristocratic
robe. Other furs include beaver
badger, lynx, muskrat, fox and otter.
Drowning by the weight of the chain
trap is common enough with water
animals. In the case of the fox,
amusement has to be combined with
murder; dogs get their out of
the chase.
is a gory product but
the rarer skins, such as a Persian
lamb, are vile in
their origin. is a product
of embryonic skins, and as such
could hardly be worn without a
shudder by the most commonplace
human Raine Helen in
New York American.
Solves a Deep Mystery.
want to thank you from the bot-
tom of my wrote C. B. Rader,
of W. Va., the won-
double benefit I got from
Bitters, in curing me of both
a severe case of stomach trouble and
pt rheumatism, from which I had
been an almost helpless sufferer for
ten years. It suited my case as
though made just for For
indigestion, jaundice and to
rid the of kidney poisons that
cause rheumatism. Electric Bitters
has no equal. Try them. Every bot-
is guaranteed to satisfy. Only
cents. At all druggists.
j of her friends last Tuesday night.
Mrs. Anna Willoughby visited her
daughter, Mrs. C. T. Tyson, near
and returned Friday.
Mr. Ellis of Winter-
ville, spent Wednesday with his broth-
Mr. C. E.
Mrs. Ivey Smith spent several days
last week with her sister in Snow
Hill.
Miss Rosa Smith went to Farmville
Saturday and returned Monday.
Mr. W. F. Walters, of Ayden, filled
his regular appointments at May's
chapel Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. Walter Sheppard, or Trinity
College, delivered an address at
Smiths school house Sunday after-
noon.
Miss Agnes Smith left Monday
morning to resume her at
East Carolina Training
school.
Mr. Joe Smith left Monday for
Richmond after spending the holidays
with his parents.
It's a joke when some people take
themselves seriously.
Value of a Man.
When a State board of health
makes an of the
value of a human life it is apt
to be rather as to the mere
sentiment of the subject in furnish-
the figures. Yet even from the
showing made in this way, the cost of
a human life from its beginning to
maturity averages quite high. At
twenty years of age the individual
has acquired a value of ac-
cording to the California State Board
of Health, while his commercial value
is about the same sum. Capitalizing
the man at the age of thirty at per
cent, this circular finds that he is
worth to society about while
his cost for growth maintenance has
been but a clear gain
in thirty years.
This tabulation shows that man
makes very much more than his keep-
his returns to society. Consider-
the from consider-
in the there are
many persons who are non-producers
such as clergymen, schoolteachers and
the like, the average is a fine one.
Yet in a sense no one outside the de-
pendent and defective class is a non-
producer, as the contribution of the
Mrs. L. W. Smith returned Monday i factors of capability to others is as
night from Henderson. much a wealth factor as the
Mr. T. E. Little is visiting relatives of American,
near Bruce.
generate.
Rainfall.
Observer R. M. Hearne says the
was to satisfy your rainfall for hours, ending at
cried the desperate man, o'clock this morning, was 1.46 inches,
I committed the forgery. The makes nearly 2.50 Inches for
crime is upon your days of the new year.
The woman started and gazed at
him wonderingly, my crime on There are factories fa
she Mag- the United States and the number is
What promises to be a valuable
coal field has been discovered in the
state of
growing all the time.
A woman never forgets her birth-
day, but she is seldom able to re-
member how many she's had.
ft
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Mot Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, If, C, FRIDAY, 1911.
Number
BOARD nun
SELL COUNTY BONDS AT A
GOOD PREMIUM
A CHICAGO FIRM THE PURCHASER
Business Transacted at Last Monthly
Meeting of the
Drawn on
rows Williams Appoint-
ed County Auditor
The board of county commissioners
meet in regular session on the first
Monday with all the members present,
and continued in session three
The following orders in the
gate were drawn on the
For paupers superintendent
health county home jail
court house court
expense bridges and ferries
conveying prisoners and in-
elections smallpox
printing and.
coroner juries sheriff
register of deeds com-
missioners, miscellaneous
officers salaries premium on
bonds general roads
general stock law
stock law Carolina
roads roads
roads
The board passed upon some
bonds deferred from December
meeting.
R. Williams was appointed auditor
at a salary of per year.
Flood, Hagar Flood,
Tyson and Louisa
were added to the pauper list to
receive per month.
The general county fund being
nearly deplete, the board authorized
borrowing for sixty days from
W. E. Proctor.
The opening of bids for the bonds
to be sold for the purpose of building
a and jail, coming before
the board, was decided by unanimous
vote to open and consider the bids. UP-
on examination it was found that
eleven bids had been submitted, and
after due consideration by all the
members of the board assisted by the
committed
agreed and decided that it
would be to the best interest of the
county tax payers to sell the
worth of bonds to run years
at per cent interest, to bear date
Feb. 1st, 1911, and of the several bids
submitted the board held the
opinion that the hid. submitted
by Moore, of
the highest and best, it was
accepted. This bid was and
accrued interest to the date of de-
livery, the buyer to furnish necessary
blanks free to the county.
THE ONLY SCHOOL OF ITS KIND
IN THE STATE
PROPOSED RATE SUSPENDED.
Railroads Charged With Concealing
Their Profits.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, Jan. is
assured that the proposed ad-
in freight rates, now under
investigation by the Inter State Com-
Commission, will be suspend-
ed to some date beyond February
The possible suspension of the
proposed rate has been under con-
for several weeks. In
the hearing today charges were made
affecting the truthfulness of state-
made to the commission by
Attorney Francis B. Jones, represent-
the railroads, as to the financial
condition of the railroads, in effect
that the railroads concealed their
profits and their statements did not
tell the whole truth.
FORMER SOUTH CAROLINIAN.
Falls Dead Sitting by Telegraph In-
Roanoke, Va., Jan. sit-
ting at his telegraph instrument in
the office of the Roanoke Times early
today, C. C- Boyd was stricken with
neuralgia of the heart and died in
a few minutes. He fell from his
chair with an exclamation and was
not conscious afterwards. He was
from N. C, but had been a
resident of Roanoke for years.
GREAT WORK DONE TO DIE PRESENT
Marvelous Enrollment of in Less
Than Two a Long
Felt Need In North
to he a Powerful Factor in
Educational Uplift.
Believing that the people of North
Carolina will be interested in know-
what their
ons are accomplishing, The Reflector
will give facts regarding East
Carolina Training school,
which have been gathered from the
records of that institution.
This State school, located in the
town of Greenville, is the only school
of its kind, public or private, in the
State. The school has the one purpose
to better prepare young men and
men for the profession of teaching.
It was established by an act of the
general assembly, ratified the
day of March,
object in establishing and
maintaining said school shall be to
give to young white men and women
such education and training as shall
fit and qualify them for teaching in
the public schools of North Caro-
The school first opened its doors
for the reception of students Oct. 5th,
1909. Since that time to the last of
December, 1910, it has enrolled
students, as
Oct. 1909 to May 1910.
May 1910 to July 1910.
Sept. 1910 to Dec. 1910.
Total
Of this number between and
are now teaching In the public
schools. Such a record as this has
never before bean made by any other
school in North Carolina.
These facts two First,
that is a demand for
trained teachers in the State. Second,
that the school in Greenville is meet-
this demand.
The work that is being done here is
certainly by far the greatest for the
cost to the State of any which we
have ever known. At the close of this
one-and-a-half years of work we find
the A school plant which
we believe, at a low worth
In this school the town of
Greenville and county of Pitt have
put The State of North Caro-
has la it, It will thus be
seen that up to this time State
lacks of having Invested as
much as the town and county, and yet
the plant is owned in foe b
the State.
With the character of work being
done here the State will get results,
will get. hem where they are most
the rural schools of the
State. In Eastern North Carolina.
In fact in all the State, there are
of people now teaching public
schools who have never had any
training for the work. These teach-
ens are to do the work largely for the
next eight or ten years. The graduates
of all the colleges In North Carolina
if they were to enter the teaching-pro
could not more than supply
the increase of the teachers every
year.
As we see it, the work of the State
at present is to give opportunity to
the teachers now in the school room
so that they may become more
This is just what this school is
doing, its work is already being felt
in a number of schools, and we be-
that in the near future it will
be a power in the educational uplift
of the State.
At present those seeking admission
cannot be sum-
mer many students, at least one
were forced to find boarding
places in the town at additional cost.
This should not be, especially when
we think of the salary paid these
faithful servants of the State.
The State owed it to itself to make
a sufficient appropriation for this
school to meet more fully the demands
made upon it, if the teacher of the
school is to be given an opportunity
to prepare for more efficient service.
A wore. the wise Is seldom


Title
Eastern reflector, 6 January 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 06, 1911
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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