Eastern reflector, 25 August 1911


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





HOOKS PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
NEGRO BOY KILLED.
Textbook Announces
List of Books.
The following books have
adopted for use in the elementary
public schools of the state for the
next five
Primary Speller
and Reed's Word Lessons, by Chas.
K. Merrill Co., and a spelling book
by Foust Griffin
Dictionary,
by American Company
Reading. Howell Primer, by
Hovel Co.; the Primer,
D, C. Heath Co.; the Howell First
Header, by Howell Co.; Graded
Classics, and B.
F. Johnson Company; the Baker-Car-
Language Headers and
Company.
Old North State
Copybook the Berry
Writing Hooks, B. D. Berry Co.,
Chicago. Only the Medial system of
writing was adopted.
Lessons in
Art Education, the Education-
Company.
series.
Primary Ge-
and Dodge's Comparative
Geography, Rand, Com-
Language and
Lessons in English, book D. C.
Heath Co. Grammar
and Composition, book by Bobbins
and Row, published by Row, Peterson
Company; Modern , Grammar, by
for use in grades
above the seventh in the public
schools, published by Com-
History of North
Young People's History of North
Carolina, D. D. Hill, publisher
; Connor's Makers of
North Carolina History, recommend-
ed for supplementary work for
grades.
History of the United
adoption. Referred to a committee
for report and recommendation on
or before January 1912. Histories
now on list to be used until that
time.
Physiology and
Caldwell Primer of Hygiene,
Primer of Sanitation; Culler's Phys-
book for use in grades
above the seventh grade
Civil government. Civil
Government of North Carolina and
the United States, B. F. Johnson
Publishing Company
for Be-
by Stevens and
Hill, Co. publishers
Supplementary
The Story of Cotton, by E. C.
Brooks, Rand, Co.; Jack-
son and industrial History of
the Negro Race
Negro Educational Association, of
Richmond.
The Heart of Oak Books, to
by C. E. Norton, published by D. C.
Heath Co.
Southern Prose and Poetry, by
Minis and Payne, Charles
Sons.
With Pen and
lessons for primary schools, by
rah Louise Arnold, Co.
Language Through Nature, Liter-
and Art, by Perdue and
wold, Rand Co.
Slain By Another Boy Same
Dr. C. Laughinghouse, county
coroner, was called out to the Wind-
ham farm, in township, to
hold an inquest Monday afternoon.
The facts as brought out at the in-
quest are about as
On Sunday, August 13th,
Harris, colored, aged was shot and
killed. Mack Harris, aged or
years, said that shot himself.
Alex Daniel, aged said he saw
the shooting, Mack was in the
house and when came up
Mack raised the gun and shot
then Mack ran across the cotton patch
and came back after a while with
his mother and father.
The coroner's Jury thought there
was sufficient cause for Mack to be
held for investigation by the grand
jury, hence their verdict was that
Harris came to his death from
a gun shot wound inflicted by Mack
Harris.
BLACK JACK ITEMS.
Another Bunch Of News Happenings
In
are having some dry weather now.
Messrs. C. G. and S. A.
attended church at Parker's chapel
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Clark, of
Grimesland, spent Sunday with rel-
and friends here.
BLACK JACK, N. C. Aug.
Mrs. Martha Mayo and grand-
daughter, Miss Nina, of Conetoe, are
visiting Mrs. W. L. Clark.
Mr. W. U. Clark spent Saturday and
Sunday at Beaufort.
Messrs. Adam and Gaskins
went to Greenville Thursday.
Mr. H. J. Smith went to Ayden
Saturday.
Miss Celia Mills spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Miss Mattie
Mills.
Mr. J. W. Harper, of Winterville,
spent Sunday here with his father.
Prof. G. C. Buck will leave Tues-
day to take charge of his work at
Win gate High School. His brother,
Mr. Marshall Buck, is going with
him.
You can't always depend upon
with your dispositions.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a decree made by his
honor G. S. Ferguson, Judge
at the May term, 1911, of Pitt
court, in the civil action en-
titled Tripp, Hart Co., et against
Miss Martha Smith, W. B. Smith et
the undersigned commissioner
will sell at public auction, before the
court house door, in Greenville, on
Monday, the 18th day of September,
1911, the following described tract of
land, situate in the county of Pitt and
in township, near the
town of Ayden and being the place
whereon W. B. Smith formally re-
Beginning at the Ayden road, Frank
Tripp's corner and runs with Frank
Tripp's line in a southern direction to
the middle branch; thence up said
branch to line; thence
with line a northern
to the Alfred Forbes line;
thence a straight course with said
Forbes land and the avenue to Mary
Ann Cannon's corner; thence around
with her line to the Ayden road;
thence with the said Ayden road to
the beginning, containing twenty
five acres, more or less.
Terms to be announced at sale.
This August 15th, 1911.
J. B. JAMES,
Commissioner.
An ordinary case can,
as a rule, be cured by a single done
of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Remedy, remedy has
no superior for bowel complaints. For
sale by all dealers.
Weber
King of all Farm Wagons.
The man who uses Weber wagons will use
no other. His judgment is good. Why not fol-
low his advice We have a Weber wagon
awaiting your inspection. If you want to
save yourself money, investigate. For sixty-
six years the Weber has been the pride of
all users. Use one and let it be your pride.
We have literature concerning this wagon
that we want you to call for. Call to-day.
Let us talk over the wagon proposition. If
you don't buy, you will know the merits of
the Weber wagon and will be in position to
know a good wagon when you see it. Get a
Web rand you will the est. We have
want. We will be glad to see you
any time
Hart Hadley
Greenville, N. C.
TOBACCO
YES
THOROUGH BRED
TOBACCO
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy.
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to-
taste. No spice to make your tongue
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco, with
all the up-to-date. CHEW
IT AND PROVE IT our expense, the
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail to
us with your name and address for attractive
FREE offer to chewers only.
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
Name
Head
Post Office.
Subscribe to The Reflector.
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
N. C DAY, AUGUST 1911.
Number
GREENVILLE WINS
COAST LINE LEAGUE PENNANT.
The Season Has Come To An
End.
The Coast Line League season has
closed with Greenville the proud
possessor of the This league
was composed of teams of Green-
ville, Ayden, Grifton and Kinston. It
started out to have only home boys
as players, but as the season went on
some of the best college stars in the
state were secured.
In the first part of the pennant
race Greenville so outdistanced the
others, that a call was made when
eleven games had been played, Green-
ville losing only one. There was a
start then for another series of
twelve games, each of the teams
having been materially strengthened.
This second series ended with a tie
between Greenville and Ayden,
which the latter refused to play off
and the pennant was awarded to
Greenville.
The two teams, however, arranged
for three post season games to be
played here this week on successive
days, and Greenville also came out
winner in these.
While all of the teams had hired
players it can be said to the credit
of Greenville that her team used
more home boys than any other In
the league. In no game played were
less than four home boys put up.
All of the teams did well and played
good ball. Some of the games were
as brilliant as any of the crack
leagues could produce. The out-of-
town players on the Greenville team
all proved to be clever gentlemen,
and they helped to make a wide rep-
for their team. They made
many friends here.
MAD DOGS ABOUND
Small Scrap.
Mr. J. F. King and a colored man,
Tom Brooks, who works for him in
his livery stables, had some words
Tuesday that resulted in a scrap.
Mr. King struck Tom over the eye,
and Tom, getting one of Mr. King's
fingers in his chewed down
on it. That the fracas.
Several Canines Bites a
Horse.
A few weeks ago there was some
excitement in and around Farmville
over the appearance of mad dogs.
The discussion grew pretty warm
over whether or not there should be
a slaughter of dogs, and when
dogs were found dead in a very short
time the fighting stage was almost
reached among the owners, about the
only thing that prevented fighting
sure enough being that nobody knew
who to hold responsible for the death
of his dog.
Now a squeal has come, some days
ago a dog belonging to Mr. Will
pen bit one of his horses on the nose,
only making a slight wound. Mr.
Thigpen doctored the horse's nose
and shut up the dog to await develop-
In a few days the dog went
mad when Mr. Thigpen killed it and
also another dog belonging to him.
Ag a safeguard against danger from
the horse, he has built a log pen in
the woods and confined the horse in
this pen until he can see if the horse
goes mad.
A SUGGESTION AS
ROADS
KEEP TRYING AND NOT GIVE UP
DAY
The Entire City Elaborately Deco-
rated In Honor of Celebration.
CHEYENNE, Wyoming, Aug.
Excursion trains from as far distant
as Omaha, Kansas City and Denver
arrived here today with crowds of
visitors to the Frontier Day carnival.
The carnival is the fiftieth annual
affair of its kind held in Cheyenne and
every indication points to the
est crowd ever entertained here. The
festivities will continue until the end
of the week. The pro-
for numerous parades, races,
pageants and competitions of various
sorta in which hundreds of cowboys
and Indians will participate. The en-
tire city is elaborately, decorated in
honor of the celebration and among
the residents and visitors the
carnival spirit reigns
Too many people waste their time
in condemning the work of others,
instead of spending it in trying to
improve their own.
Place A Good Man As Superintendent
Of All Work.
WINTERVILLE, N. C, Aug. 1911
Editor
I am in favor of good roads, and
have been reading some of the
about good roads, hoping that
some move might be made that would
open the way for the work to begin;
but bonds seem to keep the way
blocked, for we can't get bonds and
we can't get them out of the way to
try something else.
I read the article in your paper
where Mr. X. Y. Z., had discovered a
plan to build the roads by bonds and
to pay the interest on the bonds, and
a part of the bonds each year, by
using our present funds, that we col-
from the taxes.
Well, I expect he was about right,
but I had to wonder how he was
going to keep the roads repaired, for
I am sure that it will take more la-
to keep the good roads repaired
than we spend at this time on our
roads. So it occurs to me that we
might need all our present tax money
to keep the roads repaired.
I have also read the other articles
in your paper about what the
did and what others did, but
they seem to be of an explosive
and I expect threw more dirt
out of the road than in It Let's
keep trying and not give up, even if
we have to make the roads without
bonds. Let us amend our present
system and start to work. Perhaps
we can begin to plan in such a way
that results will soon follow. I would
suggest that we have the best
man we can get for county
of roads and let him
have control of all labor overseers
that are subject to road duties, and
let him have them work full time,
and as they work let them work to
the best Interest of the road by
the proper drainage and shape
to the road bed. Then, I would
that the county superintendent I
have control over the chain gang
force to work them where it is not
convenient for the overseer and his
force to work. We might also let
him have partial control of X. Y.
tax money, and instead of letting
it be used to pay bond Interest let
it be used to buy the best tools and
machines available, and let these be
used among the overseers or chain
gang, or any where else for the
of the road. Then if there
is tax money on hand, it might
be used to hire labor to be
used on the roads where it might
be used to the best advantage. We
might be very lengthly In suggesting
plans as to how this work might be
scheduled so the county superintend-
might be with the work all over
the county to see that the road bed
might be in proper shape, for the
machines, and how the labor might
be kept at duty. But this can be
looked after later.
If something like this could be done
we might call a mass meeting at an
early date to discuss plans, and also
to get some unity among the people.
a. b. a
As the writer of the above seems
to have overlooked where Y.
calculation pointed out that
would be available for
and improvement of roads each year,
we reproduce that part of the article
for information.
The property of Greenville town-
ship as valued for taxation this year
is in round numbers, The
road tax is cents on each
property valuation, and cents on
each poll. The income from this tax
is as
property at
cents per .
polls at cents each. 337.50
Total income .
Apply this amount under
the bond
at per cent, inter-
est per annum .
Amount set aside each year
and put on interest to pay
bonds at maturity as pro-
for in bill. 600.00
Amount then available for
maintenance and improve-
of roads each year. 2,487.50





mm
Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
SMUGGLED THROUGH
ELECTION WILL BE HELD OCT.
The Little Word Destroys
Clause
Last winter a large number of
of Greenville township who were
in good roads, held several
meetings that resulted in preparing
a bill lo be sent to the legislature
submitting to the voters of the town-
ship the proposition to issue bonds
not exceeding to build good
roads in the township. There were
others who were opposed to the
measure. These opponents likewise
held a meeting and also circulated
petitions for signatures to send to the
legislature against the passage of
the bill as sent up by the advocates
good roads. In other words they
wanted to deny the people the right
of expressing themselves at the
lot box on a matter of importance
to the township. The finance com-
of the legislature to whom the
bill and petitions were referred,
thought the people of the township
should have the privilege of express-
themselves by a vote if they de-
sired to do so, hence they reported
the bill favorably and it passed.
The next step of those leading the
opposition to the movement to build
roads by a bond issue, was to prepare
an amendment to the bill annulling
the clause providing for a new
of the voters of the township
for the election to be held on the
question. This amendment was in-
by Representative Mooring
and was likewise referred to the fin-
committee. The committee in
considering the mutter, brought out
the fact that it is customary for a
new registration of voters to be held
in elections of this character, so they
voted to report the amendment
favorably, and that was supposed to
be the end of it.
On the first Monday in this month
a committee of the township good
roads association went before the
board of county commissioners and
asked that an election be called in
accordance with the provisions of the
bill passed by the legislature, the
first Tuesday in October being named
as the date for holding the election.
The commissioners granted this re-
quest, based on the understanding
that a certified copy of the bill be
found in accordance with the
of the committee making
the request.
Later application was made to the
secretary of state for a certified copy
of the bill as passed by the
As the acts of the last leg-
had already been compiled
and published, the secretary sent a
bound volume of these. The bill pro-
for the election was found just
as represented by the committee, but
in addition thereto there was also the
amendment annulling the clause or-
a new registration of voters.
This disclosure was a great
prise and showed that rank perfidy
had been practiced somewhere in
getting this amendment on the statute
books, as it had been reported
. favorably by the legislative commit-
tee and regarded as killed. Steps
were started at once to investigate
the matter and If possible, locate the
author of this treachery. The records
of the legislature were first exam-
and the original copy of the
amendment was found. Instead of
being marked in ac-
with the action of the com-
it bore the stamp
and also bore the endorsement of
having been duly passed by both
branches of the legislature.
The next step was to communicate
with of the members of the
legislative finance committee to whom
the amendment was referred, to
persons who were known to be pres-
when the committee acted upon
it. and to the senator and
from Pitt county, to see if it
could be learned how the amendment,
after being voted upon unfavorably,
got upon the legislative calendar and
was passed. The letters published
herewith speak for themselves.
The Reflector was shown these let-
as soon as they were received,
but would not make any mention of
them until Representative Mooring,
who has been away, could be seen
and a statement obtained from him.
He was in Greenville Tuesday and
when interviewed expressed surprise
that the amendment was passed and
that this was the first knowledge he
had of it being passed. Speaking
further, he
was the amendment which
I offered in the house and was killed
by the finance committee. When the
committee was to act on it I went
before the committee to favor the
amendment, and Representative
went to oppose it. Both of us
stated our side of the question. There
was such opposition to the amend-
among the members of the com-
that I dropped the matter,
urging it no further, and retired be-
fore the committee voted on it, sup-
posing their vote would be
able. I regarded the amendment as
killed and knew nothing about it pass-
until my attention was called to
it today. I have no idea how the
bill got out of the committee room
on the calendar and was passed. It
may be possible that through an
of the clerk to the committee he
stamped it instead of
and in that way it went
through unobserved, being a local
Following are the letters from
on the subject. Representative
in his letter of the 11th inst,
reply to yours of the 9th inst.,
I will say, that I do remember about
the to the
Greenville Township Road Law bill.
distinctly remember going be-
fore the Finance Committee of the
house, when the
was considered, and I further distinct-
remember that it was reported
favorably by a unanimous vote of
said committee, and if the bill ever
went before the house it was by a
mistake of the committee's
Representative R. A. Nunn, of
Craven, who was a member of the
finance committee, says in his letter
of the 10th
favor of the 9th instant con-
the amendment introduced in
the General Assembly so as to make
it unnecessary to have a new
for the proposed bond election
in one of the townships of your
has been received.
reading your letter I have
some recollection of matter, but
I am unable to say exactly what hap-
when the amendment was con-
by the finance committee.
Whether or not the facts are as you
state them, I am unable to say, but
I think that you must have stated
them correctly, because if I were now
considering such an amendment, I
would be opposed to it, because I
believe that it is right to have a
YOU CANT BUY A THING
THE MONEY
you Spent J
IN THE
BANK
Bank DOLLAR A a only one year,
and leave it stay for SO years. At per cent- compound interest
will amount to at i per rent compound interest this
will amount to snug sum for old age.
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank.
WE PAY INTEREST ON TIME CERTIFICATES AT PER CENT
The Bank of Greenville, N. C.
new registration of voters when an
election is called for the purpose of
submitting the question of issuing
bonds. In other words, if it is
to have an election every
voter ought to have an opportunity
to himself to vote in the
election.
regret that I cannot recall all
the circumstances surrounding the
Mr. J. J. Laughinghouse, who was
present when the committee
the amendment, in a letter dated
10th inst.,
to your inquiry relative
to the amendment offered by Sheriff
Mooring to the Greenville Township
Road Bill, I beg to make the follow-
your request, I accompanied
you when you appeared before the
Finance Committee of the House of
Representatives relative to the
amendment offered by Sheriff Moor-
the purport of which was to
the ordering of a new
in the bond election. There were
only a few members of the committee
present, and after hearing the matter
discussed for a short time a motion
was made by the Hon. Romulus Nunn,
of New Bern, that the bill be re-
ported unfavorably. The motion was
carried unanimously and it was so
ordered.
have my permission to use
this letter in any way you may see
Mr. H. A. White, who appeared
fore the finance committee of the
legislature as the representative of
the good roads advocates to oppose
the Mooring amendment, when Inter-
viewed today,
received a letter from
Thorne advising that Rep-
Mooring had introduced
a bill in the legislature that would
be very detrimental to the Greenville
Township Road Bill which had
ready been passed, and informing me
that the bill had been referred to the
finance committee and would not be
reported until those who favored the
road had an opportunity to be
heard. I went to Raleigh the next
day and the committee agreed to give
those interested a hearing that after-
noon at o'clock. At the appointed
hour, Representative Thorne, Capt.
J. J. Laughinghouse and myself,
before the committee and stat-
ed that the advocates of this meas-
were only asking that the people
of the township be allowed the
of expressing their views on an
important question in the same man-
and way that other townships
and counties in North Carolina had
been granted, i. e., by voting at the
ballot box their convictions. We
called their attention to the fact that
the committee had heard Mr. W. F.
Evans and others on this same
of a new registration when the
original bill was under consideration,
and that the committee had then held
that the new registration, as provided
for in the bill, was right and proper
and had refused to strike it out.
After the matter had been discussed
for a few minutes Representative
Nunn, a member of the committee,
moved that the Mooring Amendment
be reported unfavorably. The motion
was unanimously carried, and it was
so ordered. Representative Mooring
did not appear before the committee
to defend his bill, but I met him a
short time afterwards in the capitol
and told him what action the com-
had taken. He stated to me
that the bill had been introduced by
him upon request and that he per-
had no interest In the mat-
and would have nothing further
to do with it.
returned home and reported to
the friends of the road bill that the
Mooring amendment had been killed
in the committee, and had no idea
to the contrary until a volume of the
printed laws was received in Green-
ville last week when it was
that the same bill that had been
killed was among the published laws.
I could not help but feel that the
The Carolina Hone and Farm and The Reflector.
measure had in some way gotten
there by mistake. I went to Raleigh
last Wednesday to make an
and found the original
on file with the
other bills that had been regularly
passed by the legislature of 1911.
bill had on it the following
Bill No. fa-
25th, 2nd
and 3rd readings in the House
27th., and was ordered sent to the
Senate where it took the title of
Senate Bill No. 1st
reading 2nd and
3rd readings March 2nd and was
ratified on March 3rd.
are the facts as I found them,
and they speak for
When asked what effect the
would have on the
election which had been called by
the county commissioners on
the 3rd, he will mean
a still larger majority for bonds for
good roads than the measure's best
friends had calculated. The citizens
of this township who stand for, and
believe they should have a right to
vote on this question in the same
manner and way as do other com-
will rise up in their might
and carry the election overwhelming-
I think we should ask that the
old registration books be purged, and
the names of all dead persons and
those that have moved out of the
township be stricken therefrom and
the election held on October the 3rd,
as originally called by the county
The matter will be looked into
further with the hope of finding who
is responsible for this sneak
The man who would stoop to
such is a dangerous man, and should
be rebuked by every fair-minded cit-
who loves honesty.
Of course, there is no way to
the matter to have any bearing
on the election in question, but the
election can now only be held under
the old registration. We understand
from leaders of the good roads move-
that the campaign be waged
in earnest and they are going into
the election on the 3rd of October
expecting to see a good majority of
the people of the township vote for
bonds for good roads. Sentiment in
that direction has greatly increased,
and there is hardly a doubt that the
sneaking through the legislature of
the amendment annulling the new
registration will cause a few citizens
heretofore disposed to be indifferent
to come out and ally themselves with
the progressive voters who want to
see their township have good roads.
NOTES FROM
LABOR
The Long Arm of the Law.
Three men wanted in Boston for a
burglary have just been arrested, one
in Russia and the others in Austria,
and all are now on their way back to
the scene of their crime for trial. The
arm of the law is long. A notable
of these extraditions is that the
treatment of Austrian and Russian
interests in our Courts has not
ways been calculated to strengthen
excellent relations between the
United States and the two other
tries. In the case of the
Pa., riot of a number of years ago,
Austria complained, while only a
short time since Russia vainly sought
the extradition of a revolutionist
charged with terrible crimes, which
he himself acknowledged committing.
Providence Journal.
88888888888888888
The cigar industry Cuba
females.
The cornerstone of the labor temple
in Utica, N. Y., will soon be laid.
Printers of San Juan, Rico,
have secured an increase of fifty per
cent.
The Plasterers of Richmond, Va.,
secured an eight-hour day without
a strike.
The laborers organized in
Ohio, have been granted an increase
1-2 cents per hour.
of Chicago have
cured an increase of 1-4 cents per
hour and a forty-four hour week.
Fifteen hundred of the
International harvester works at Mos-
cow, Russia, have gone on a strike.
The molders in Ann Arbor, Mich-
have won their strike for an
increase of cents a day and a re-
of one hour.
Women workers are now engaged
in all but two of tho gainful
of men in the United States
and Canada.
Brewery workers of Lancaster,
Pennsylvania, won their strike for an
increase of per week, and engineers
obtained a increase.
Union carpenters at Kingston, Ont.,
have obtained an advance from 1-4
cents to cents an hour for a day
of eight hours.
The age limit at which a man may
obtain employment in any depart-
of the Erie railroad is now
thirty-five years.
The organized men employed on the
North British railway at
and vicinity, have gone on a strike
for shorter hours and higher wages.
French agriculture pursuits account
for men and nearly 3,500.000
women. Nearly men and
more than women are
employed in the trades.
The Danish parliament has passed
a bill whereby seamen are entitled
to participate in the elections for
parliament by power of attorney, or
by sending in their votes.
The report of the
United Hebrew trades in New York
shows that ten new local unions
were formed and fifteen strikes as-
only three of which were
successful.
At Vt, the granite cut-
an increase of from
to cents per day, the and
drillers an increase of cents per
day, and carpenters, painters and
masons secured an eight-hour day.
Three thousand waiters in
France, have gone on strike for
per month and the right
to wear mustaches. The proprietors
have formed an association and in-
creased the price of drinks, on this
action has had the effect of lessening
the tips usually received by French
waiters, hence the demand for higher
wages.
ITEMS.
Is On Down In That
Section.
N. C, Aug.
a number of our young people at-
tended service at St. John's Sun-
day.
Misses Maggie and Carrie Brown, of
Greenville, spent last week with
a girl Beta to telling I friends and relatives here.
family he might as well go. Misses Kate and Clyde Chapman,
bull j Winterville, are spending this week
Condensed Statement of
THE NATIONAL BANK
GREENVILLE, V.
it of Business June
RESOURCES
and Discounts .
Overdrafts .
U. S. Bonds.
Stocks .
Furniture and Fixtures .
Exchanges for Clearing House .
Cash and Due from Banks.
per cent. Redemption fund .
LIABILITIES
Capital .
Undivided Profits
Circulation .
Bond Account .
.
Dividends Unpaid
Cashier's Checks .
Deposits .
2,925.78
21.000.00
2,500.00
10,929.31
37,007.70
1,050.00
. 10,000.00
. 2,366.95
. 21,000.00
. 21,000.00
. 24,325.00
91.42
723.33
. 140,385.74
ORGANIZED 1906- TOTAL DIVIDENDS
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms and In-
and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those
contemplating changes or opening new accounts, fl Vie want your
business. F. J. FORBES, Cashier
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green-
ville and Kinston. Effective May 16th, 1911.
Norfolk
Hobgood
Washington
Williamston
Plymouth
Greenville
Kinston
Ar.
Ar.
For further information, nearest ticket
agent or W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent Green-
ville, N. C.
W. J. CRAIG, P. T. M. T. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
with Miss Lela Roach.
Rev. M. A. Adams filled his
appointment here Saturday night.
Misses Louise and Eleanor
Worthington, of Grifton, last
week at Mr. L. B
Miss Daniel, of Greenville, is
spending this week with Mrs. W. S.
Roach.
Miss Lizzie Burney, who has been
spending sometime over Gum Swamp,
returned home last week, accompanied
by her little niece, Ruby Gray Bur-
Mr. L. B. Dudley and daughter, of
Vanceboro, spent Sunday at the home
of Mr. N. R. Corey.
Mr. Madison of Cox Mill,
spent Sunday afternoon here.
We are glad to hear that Mr.
Stokes is still improving.
Miss Carrie Chapman went to Kin-
Saturday.
Mr. George Moore made his
trip here Sunday. Somebody means
business.
Mr. J. L. Joyner spent Sunday in
Mrs. H. Chapman spent last
week with her daughter, Mrs. Levi
Stokes, in
Kill More Than Wild Beasts.
The number of people killed yearly
by wild beasts don't approach the
vast number killed by disease germs.
No life is safe from their attacks.
They're in air, water, dust, even food.
But grand protection is afforded by
Electric Bitters, which destroy and
expel these deadly disease germs
from the system. That's why chills,
fever and ague, all malarial and many
blood diseases yield promptly to this
wonderful blood purifier. Try them,
and enjoy the glorious health and
new strength they'll give you. Money
back, if not satisfied. Only at all
druggists.





The Home and Farm and The Reflector.
SEE
DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
WINTERVILLE, N. C, Aug.
Mrs. Lucy Hester and children are
spending several days in Greenville.
Lawns, organdies and all summer
dress goods are being sold at
ally low prices by Harrington, Barber
Company.
Miss Helen Smith, who spent
days here, returned to her home
near Farmville Wednesday. She was
accompanied by Miss Jeannette Cox,
who will spend, several days with
her.
Get your children and misses hose
at Harrington, Barber
Mr. J. S. Ross, of Ayden, was in
our town two days this week.
A. W. Ange Co. have just received
a shipment of hats and caps and they
are nice.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith and child,
of Ayden, were in town Wednesday,
Mr. Smith returning and Mrs. Smith
and child spending a day or two
here.
Mrs. G. Bland, of sister of
our clever railroad agent, was in
town Wednesday evening.
Don't forget the cheap summer sale
of dry goods, shoes and slippers at
A. W. Ange
Mr. J. B. Edmondson, a relief agent
for the A. C. L. R. R. Co., came in
Wednesday night to relieve Mr. J.
E. Greene, who left Thursday morn-
for a ten vacation, which
he greatly deserves.
Don't fail to see the Union
tile Company when in need of crock-
They have all kinds and
the right prices for all, and all kinds
of glassware, lamps, goblets, pitchers
and at a very low price.
Rev. C. J, Harris left Friday for
Stantonsburg and Saratoga.
While talking to a gentleman about
the famous cotton and
other implements
by the A. G. Cox Mfg. Co.,
something was said about buggies and
wagons. We told him that this same
firm built buggies and wagons. What
said he, didn't know Well,
I guess he opened his eyes and saw
some things as we proceeded to show
him through the buggy department.
There he saw some of the leading
styles in buggies, he saw the highest
class of workmanship, and the very
best material used in the
of buggies and wagons. Then
the smile on his face was the longest
as he beheld the finished product.
is a dandy said he. They
surely do make buggies and wagons.
Call on the A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. and
be convinced about buggies, wagons
and carts. ,
Mr. Ernest Manning, of Norfolk, is
spending a day or two with his
Mr. Sam Manning.
Harrington, Barber Co. are keep-
busy at their mill, where you can
get your corn and wheat ground any
day.
Miss Lena Dawson, of Ayden, is
spending a few days in town with
and relatives.
Harrington, Barber Co. are get-
ting out some very nice flooring and
ceiling at their milling plant now.
Prices low.
Mr. C. T. Cox will buy two or
three loads of good new fodder.
Money for the School Dis-
To any school who
are contemplating buying school
desks, we wish to say that unless you
have a whole lot of money to spend
on these high priced northern desks,
we can furnish school house
with as comfortable desk for the
children as can be had anywhere.
They are simple in construction, but
are and present an unusual
neat appearance. Write or phone us
where you wish them shopped, or, if
you wish to send to the factory after
them, let us know a day or two be-
fore you send and we will have them
ready and in good shape. For prices
and further information, address A.
G. Cox Manufacturing Company, Win-
N. C.
There will be services at St. Luke's
Episcopal church tomorrow evening
at o'clock, by Rev. W. J. Fulford,
of Ayden, who has charge of the work
here, Ayden and St. John's. A
dial invitation is extended to all.
One of our young painters wishes
to buy some green, white lead. Ha
Ha Guess him.
Mr. Ernest Manning returned this
morning to Norfolk, accompanied by
his father, Mr. Sam Manning, who
will spend a week or so with him.
Friday evening at five o'clock the
Sunbeams of the Missionary Baptist
church had a special meeting on the
W. H. S. campus. A program suit-
able for the occasion had been
ranged. After the meeting the Sun-
beams were entertained by the leader,
Miss There was much
merriment for awhile, then a delight-
luncheon was served, followed by
refreshing lemonade.
WINTERVILLE, N. C, Aug.
Mr. J. A. of Grifton, spent
Sunday with his people, near. town.
Rev. M. A. Adams filled his regular
appointment here Sunday morning
and at night. He delivered two able
sermons.
Harrington, Barber Company
have a nice line of stoneware and
glassware which they are selling
very low now, in order to make room
for their fall stock.
Mr. M. B. Bryan, of Raleigh, came
in Saturday night to spend his
cation at home.
Rev. W. J. Fulford, of Ayden, held
services at the Episcopal church
Sunday evening. He will hold services
there every first and third Sunday
evenings, until further notice.
Mr. Josephus Cox left Monday
morning for Baltimore, to have an
operation performed in one of the
hospitals there.
See Harrington, Barber
Company for your up-to-date line of
and solid black and navy
silk hose.
Rev. M. A. Adams left Monday
morning for Franklin
county, to hold a series of meetings.
Mr. J. F. Harrington left Monday
for the northern markets to buy a
full and complete fall line of goods
for his firm, Harrington, Barber
Co. Watch their ads.
A. W. Ange Company have just
received a nice lot of chairs. See
them.
Among the arrivals in town
is a son at Mr. E. M. Swain's.
Misses Kate and Clyde Chapman
who have been visiting friends around
returned home Monday.
Harrington, Barber Company
carry a nice line of gent's Negligee
shirts and linen collars.
Mr. J. W. Harper left Monday morn-
for Baltimore to buy a full stock
of goods for the Union Mercantile
Company.
Miss Lela Roach, of was in
town Monday evening.
Harrington, Barber Co. have
just received a bale of 8-ounce duck
for making cotton sheets. A good
lime to buy.
Mr. A. W. Ange left Monday for
the northern markets to buy goods
for his fall trade. Watch him for
bargains.
Mr. L. T. one of
base ball players, was in town Fri-
day night and Saturday evening. I
guess he wishes to organize a team
here.
When the death angel comes into
our midst we are always made to
feel more or less sad, at a time like
this, the most interested wish to pay
special respects to the body. To
these we wish to say, we stand ready
to help you. We can furnish you a
nice coffin or casket and excellent
hearse service. Call on the A. G. Cox
Manufacturing Company.
The- dormitories of Winterville
High School are being put in shape
for the school next Monday, August
Rev. Jno. R. Carroll conducted
services at Grifton Sunday night.
Miss Minnie Mae Whitehead spent
Sunday with Miss Leona Cox in the
country.
The series of meetings at the Free
Will Baptist church closed Friday
night with seven additions to the
church, who were in
mill pond Sunday evening.
See the Union Mercantile Company
for watch charms, lockets, rings,
bracelets and all kinds of first-class
jewelry sold on a guarantee.
Mrs. Susan Jackson and son, Mr.
D. R. Jackson, of Wake Forest, came
in last night to visit friends and rel-
Miss Carrie Brown, of Greenville, is
visiting Miss Pattie Sutton.
Miss Alma Cannon, of Grifton, is
spending a few days at Mr. J. H.
Corey's.
When in need of suit cases, see
the Union Mercantile Company. They
have them, the best there is made,
and sell them cheap.
Miss Lucy Belle Langston left yes-
for Robersonville, to visit her
many friends.
The correspondent for the Pitt
County News is doing some painting
in his leisure hours, while off of duty
as itemizer, and he wishes to buy
some white Can any-
one furnish him with it
Mr. C. J. Jackson, secretary of the
Y. M. C. A., at Nashville, Tenn., came
in last night to spend a day or two
with friends and relatives.
We will sell for the next few days
only, table oil cloth at 1-2 cents
per yard. A. W. Ange Co.
ITEMS.
Around That Neighbor-
hood.
N. C, Aug.
Mr. Levi Stokes went to Ayden Sat-
Mrs. Bessie Cannon and daughter,
Miss Carrie Lee, returned Saturday
from a visit to Raleigh.
We had a fine rain Sunday morn-
Mr. W. B. Harper went to Green-
ville Monday to serve as a juror this
week.
Mr. C. Moore and family spent Sun-
day afternoon here with relatives.
Mrs. Augusta Stokes accompanied
them home for a visit.
We are glad to note that Mr.
Stokes is progressing very well. His
many friends will be glad to see him
out again.
Mrs. L. B. Stokes and son, Herman,
spent Sunday afternoon near Shel-
with Mr. and Mrs. George
Venters.
Several of our people went to Shel-
Sunday to hear the
people They create a
lot of curiosity.
We had a large crowd at Sunday
school Sunday afternoon.
Our farmers are busy curing to-
and pulling fodder.
Misses Faye E. Corey and Ida
Burney were welcome visitors to our
village this week.
Mills
will save the dyspeptic from many
days of misery, and enable him to eat
whatever he wishes. They prevent
HEADACHE,
c the food to assimilate and
i -i the body, give keen appetite,
FlESH
solid muscle. Elegantly sugar
; Substitute.
HALF BUGGY.
This is a very popular style of the Hunsucker buggies. Quality is
our watch word, but don't they look good, too
Come to sea the A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company, manufacturers,
or J. E. Winslow, Greenville, or Ayden, agent.
and J. e
D. J. Whichard, Jr. Reporter
The Bachelor.
What is the King of all the Beasts
The Bachelor
Who on the cream of living thrives,
And lets his fellows take the wives
The Bachelor
Who goes and comes at his sweet
will,
Nor begs permit to rob the till
Who gaily climbs life's flowered hill
The Bachelor
Who stays down town till the brake
of dawn
Who lingers till the last have gone
Who rents a slave to mow his lawn,
And cannot sew a button on
The Bachelor
Who scoffs, ha, ha, the marriage plan
And glorifies the single man
Who holds a skillet and a pan,
And e'en a baking powder can
Sign manual of slavery's clan
The Bachelor
Who broadly laughs, ha ha ho ho
When tempted to a-wooing go
Who says that he'll be so-and-so
If he will ever play the beau
Who is inclined to brag and blow
That self-same personage, I trow
The Bachelor
And yet, when he is on the hook,
When some fine day he is brought to
book
By some fair little finger's crook,
Who is it, by his dazzled look
Leads you to think he's seen a spook
Who swaps his soul in some sweet
nook
And brags henceforth about his
The Bachelor
Mrs. H. W.
Entertains.
On Thursday evening, from nine
until twelve, Mrs. II. W. en-
a number of her younger
friends, at her home on Fourth
street, in honor of Miss
Wilkinson, of Raleigh.
When the guests arrived they were
received by the hostess, assisted by
Mr. Thomas Wilkinson, of Raleigh,
and Miss Nell render, and were
ed cherry smash by Mr. H. Sheppard
and Miss Wilkinson and Mr.
Francis Skinner and Miss Helen
Grimes.
The game of the evening was
the prize for which was
Avon by Mr. Ferrell Burch and the
booby prize by Mr. James Brown.
After the game was over delicious
refreshments were served.
Lawn
Party.
WHITEHURST, N. C, Aug. 1911
One of the most delightful and
unique events of the social season was
the beautiful lawn party given by Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. James, on Wednesday
evening, August in honor of their
Misses Emma and Magnolia
Roberson, and James.
The lawn was beautifully decorated
with Japanese and ferns,
the color scheme being red and green.
About eight-thirty the invited guests
began to arrive. They were met at
the door by Miss James with
Mr. William C. Josey. They then went
out in the lawn and enjoyed them-
selves, while Master Claude James
operated the phonograph to the de-
light of the music lovers of the
crowd.
At eleven o'clock a sumptuous feast
of cream, cake and water melons,
was served out on the lawn, upon
tallies prepared for the occasion. The
tables were beautifully decorated
with flowers.
Those present Misses Lina
James, Emma and Magnolia
On, Velma Blount, Long
Crimes, Lillie Bunting, Jennie and
Estelle Jones, Norma Ida
Bullock, Alice and Lila James, Mary
and Rosa Whitehurst, Carrie Man-
Bettie Roberson, Lizzie White-
Florence Blow, Forbes,
Mary Cotton Johnson, Mantle and
Maggie Whitehurst, Cora Carroll,
Lucile
and Lurline Thomas; Messrs.
land and Gordon James, William and
John Josey, Willis Jones, Tom An-
Marvin and Lyndon
Blount, Fred. Mayo, Marshall White-
Davis Bullock, Moore
Earl James, Allen Whitehurst, Dr.
Manning, Willie Whitehurst, Lewis
Manning, Jasper and An-
Vance Bunting, Walt Which-
ard, Lee House, Davis
Gurganus, Men. Manning and
Bullock.
After enjoying themselves to the
fullest, as the hour hand pointed to
the guests all departed for their
homes.
In of
Greenville Girl.
N. C, Aug.
Miss Gertrude Bass delightfully
entertained in honor of her guest,
Miss Deans, of Greenville, on
Wednesday evening, August at her
home in
A game of hearts was the feature
of the evening, Miss Louise
being the fortunate one in winning
the prize, a book of poems, which was
presented to the guest of honor.
Miss Bass was pronounced a charm-
hostess, and her many friends
spent a delightful evening with her
and her guest, Miss Deans, who is an
attractive young lady.
Horn.
To Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Au-
gust 17th, son.
Miss Helen
Entertains.
On Friday evening Miss Helen
Laughinghouse was from
to in honor of her cousin, Miss
Helen Grimes.
The guests were received at the
front door by the little hostess, her
mother Chas.
and the guest of honor, Misses No-
and Ernestine Forbes,
and Masters James and Chas.
Laughinghouse, Jr., presided over
the punch bowl.
Hearts was the game of the evening,
Miss Elizabeth being the
happy winner of the prize, a
fan; and Frank Perkins, the
prize, a stick pin. A gold pin was
presented to the guest of honor.
When You Want to Buy a
PIANO
See Sam White Piano Co.
Greenville, North Carolina.
They will sell you a first
class instrument cheap and
on easy terms. They are
home people and will treat
you right. Visit our store.
The Sam White Piano Co.
We have on sale at our factory the
Columbia, Rambler, Fay
Bicycles, for ladies and Gentlemen, boys
and girls. These bicycles are known the
world over for their easy running and
We guarantee them. If you are
thinking of buying, come to see us.
THE JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
Miss Grimes leaves Monday for
and in September will enter
school at Dame, of Maryland.
Her host of little friends regret to
see her leave, and wish her a happy
school year.
The out-of-town guests were Misses
Katharine Williams, of Raleigh;
of Washington; Eve-
Hodges, of La Grange; Ruth
Ricks, of Tarboro, and Ella Whichard,
of Atlanta, Ga.
Items.
N. C, Aug.
and Mis. C. L. Tyson, of
were here Wednesday.
Mrs. Berna Tyson, of Farmville,
spent last week with her daughter,
Mrs. Tyson.
Nannie Norman, of Green-
ville, was visiting Miss Agnes Smith
Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Beaman and lit-
daughter were visiting at the home
of Mr. Ivey Smith Sunday.
Miss Carrie Belle Smith is visiting
relatives near Farmville.
Mrs. Walter Gay, of Farmville, is
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F.
W. Smith.
Mrs. C. E. and Miss
Tyson went to Greenville Mon-
day.
Few men would trouble themselves
to look for work if they didn't need
the money.





r . . .
OUR WEEKLY LETTER
FROM WASHINGTON
SOME VITAL WASHINGTON NEWS.
How Try to Oust
Prospects Bright.
Clyde H.
WASHINGTON, Aug. Taft
administration will not dare to carry
out the plot to drive Dr. Harvey
Wiley from the government service.
This was the thought that suggested
itself time and again to the minds of
the men and women who crowded the
Moss investigation committee rooms
and heard Dr. Wiley lay hare the
story of the systematic fight which
has been waged against him because
he insisted the food manufacturers
keep their products pure. At times,
as Dr. Wiley told of the fierce
he had endured, his voice
most broke, and he could proceed
only with difficulty. At times also
the committee members, utterly dumb-
founded by the doctor's statements,
were at a loss as to what questions
to ask him next.
Not only was it shown that Dr.
Wiley's efforts to serve the public
and protect it from injurious and
poisonous substances in food prep-
had been absolutely blocked
by the conspirators in the
headed by Secretary of
culture Wilson and his controlling in-
Solicitor but that the
latest effort to force Dr. Wiley out of
office was based upon a letter which
he never received and knew nothing
about.
Not boastfully or eagerly, but in
response to questions by members of
the committee, Dr. Wiley recited the
universities at which he had studied,
the great scientific societies at home
and abroad which have honored him
in various ways, and the recital went
a long way in revealing to the com-
the great public spirit and
sympathy of this man who possessed
a courage in public duty which neither
threats from official sources nor op-
position by the powers of evil had
been able to break down.
While the whole hearing was a
succession of revelations that left
the and spectators thunder-
struck, the most astonishing
came when Dr. Wiley told of
his efforts to prevent the use of alum,
and when he recited the of how
three cabinet
and please the
Corn Products Company,
abrogated the application of the pure
food law to a product of that con-
used in said Dr.
Wiley, in baking powder,
is responsible for the large amount
of constipation that is prevalent
throughout the country. I considered
its use a serious danger to public
health, and wanted it stopped pend-
an investigation. But the other
two members of the reviewing board
-a
when I returned I wrote a letter to
Secretary Wilson asking for a hear-
But Secretary Wilson did not
even reply to my
Administration Stenographers.
Here is a story of two Taft
stenographers which shows
how hard it is to work for the gov-
these days and remain hon-
est.
F. M. Kerby, stenographer to the
late Secretary of Interior Ballinger,
exploded the whole Ballinger defense
by bringing to light the
Kirby wrote this
this memorandum and knew, therefore
that President Taft's letter
Ballinger was ante dated and a
frame-up to clear the secretary. And
because he revealed information
which came to him in his confidential
capacity as stenographer, Ballinger
called him and
ed him.
Now contrast this with the case of
Miss Carrie M. Davis, stenographer
to Dr. L. F. of the bureau of
chemistry. In his campaign to oust
Dr. Wiley, Solicitor locked
Miss Davis in a room and
her for three hours because she re-
fused to divulge confidential
which thought he could
use against Wiley. Kirby broke a
confidence, because he placed loyalty
to the people above loyalty to
and was discharged. Miss Davis
refused to break a confidence, and
for that she was cruelly chastised.
A Four-Ply Monopoly.
One of the first facts developed by
the Stanley steel investigating com-
was that the directors of the
steel trust actually dominated the
boards of directors of nearly all the
important railroads of the country.
Then it came to light that the same
ruling spirits of the steel trust co-
operated with and
Standard Oil. And now it de-
that four of the six directors
of the harvester trust are also direct-
ors of the steel trust. In other words,
the steel trust, the railroads, the
harvester trust, and Standard Oil,
contributors to Republican
campaign are dominated by
the same handful of men. And these
men in turn take orders from one
man, Mr. J. P. Morgan.
La A Beat Candidate Now.
and sure defeat, or La
with a chance to This cry has
been taken up anew by the genuine
Republican insurgents since La Fol-
co-operated with the Democrats
in an honest endeavor to revise the
tariff downward. The
indications are that if Mr. Taft ob-
the renomination the Roosevelt
and La hosts will not raise
a finger, much less their voices, to
help him.
Democratic Prospects Bright.
for the election of a
Democratic president have never
been declared Hon. James
T. Lloyd, chairman of the National
Democratic Congressional committee,
who had charge of the campaign which
resulted in the present heavy Dem-
me. as they invariably majority in the house.
and the use of alum is still permit-
case involved the use of
dioxide. Dunlap and
recommended that we
the rule requiring the presence
of this drug be indicated on the la-
As the rule had been adopted
after a most exhaustive investigation,
I was convinced that to do away
with it would be a grave mistake.
Dunlap and revoked the rule,
however, during my absence, and
Democratic party is popular from one
end of the country to the Mr.
Lloyd continued. party has car-
out promises
made a creditable showing in every
way. The many investigations con-
ducted by Democratic committees
have demonstrated to the satisfaction
of every intelligent man in the
try that the Republicans are guilty
of and should be
relieved of power for a term or two
at
MB
Get The Habit
The department store habit is growing
stronger and stronger all the time, and you
need not be surprised, when you realize the
many advantages to be derived from trading
at a store that can supply you with all the
necessities and most of the luxuries of life,
without the needless worry and fatigue of
shopping at one store for Dry Goods, another
store for Notions, and still another for
Groceries, etc.
To See Us
Our many departments are complete in
every respect, and we guarantee you
faction in both quality and price. Now is
the time to get the habit. Make our depart-
store your headquarters for every-
thing you need, and save both time and
Don't hesitate, but come or phone, No.
J. R. J. G.
Department Store
Greenville,
North Carolina
1859
TRINITY COLLEGE
1892
1910-1911 t;
Three memorable The Granting of the Charter for Trinity College; the Removal or
the College to the growing and prosperous City Durham; the Building of the New and Create
Trinity.
Magnificent new buildings with new equipment and enlarged facilities.
Comfortable hygienic dormitories and beautiful, pleasant surroundings.
Five Academic; Mechanical, Civil and Electrical Engineering; Law; Ed-
Graduate
For and other information, address
R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham, N. G
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL
Established 1898
Location ideal; Equipment unsurpassed.
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College.
given to health. A teacher in each looks after the living conditions of
attention
under his care.
Faculty of college graduates. Most modern methods of instruction.
Fall term opens September
For Illustrated address
W. W. PEELE, HEADMASTER. Durham, N. C.
. . i
The Reflector Want Ads for Results
THE MOORING
GOOD ROADS OPPONENT H'S SAY
And Criticizes Action of Promoters of
Bond Bill.
Editor
the Gods would destroy,
they first make In Friday's
Reflector you surely must have been
red hot, and the way you yelled
and was
almost enough to make one think
that this was your first connection
with the famous bond bill. Have you
so soon forgotten how that those who
wanted this bond issue held some-
what of a sneak meeting one Monday
night without warning the people in
time to be present, and how, when
your attention was called to it, and
a motion made to adjourn to another
time that all persons interested
might come, you and your crowd voted
it down by a vote of to And
do you remember how that next day
you published that a mass meeting
of the citizens of the township met
the night before in the town hall and
ratified the bond bill You knew at
the time that the meeting was held
under a snap call, and that it was
not a meeting of the citizens of the
township, still you seemed willing to
let it appear that it was. But, of
course, under your code, this was all
perfectly fair.
You state in your
that last winter a large number
of people of Greenville township held
several meetings, etc., etc. Would
you kindly give the time and dates
of these alleged meetings. The meet-
held that night in the town ball
only had about persons present,
and the famous Fourth of July meet-
thirteen. All the other meetings
were sneak meetings if they were
held, and advertised under the head
of Educational
and Industrial Agent of the
Norfolk or some such mis-
And so, why all this red-headed
over the Mooring amend-
Did not a majority of the
registered voters in the township
petition the legislature that the bill
itself be not passed, and has it come
to pass that somebody must be hung
because the legislature of North Car-
won't do all that Mr. White
wants done
The opponents of the bill with the
petition above referred to went be-
fore the legislative committee, and as
Mr. White, assisted by Mr. J. J.
Laughinghouse, who is himself a state
official and closely connected with
Bryan Grimes, our secretary of state,
and who has much of his Influence
thereby, had been lobbying the said
committee for several days prior to
the date of the hearing, they received
but scant recognition. And so we
appealed direct to Mr. Mooring, and
he promised us to table the bill when
it should come up in the house. But
one Saturday he came home with a
carbuncle on his neck and the bill
through the house. Then
it was that he introduced his amend-
and wrote me that it had got
tied up in a committee and on ac-
count of certain influences, could not
be got out.
It seems that those pushing the bill
kept better informed than its op-
for you say in your article
that Mr. White, Mr. and Capt.
Laughinghouse were given a hearing
on the amendment. Of course, under
your code, It was perfectly fair for
this to be done without letting the
other side know it, and for Mr. T
who was the representative of all of
us, or at least was elected that way,
and for Mr. Laughinghouse, one of
our state officials, and who no
property in Greenville township, to
use their influence to thwart the will
of a majority of those citizens
by the bill.
And after all, Mr. Editor, why
should a little two-by-four committee
legislate for a people Has not the
legislature passed the amendment and
did it not do so In compliance with
the expressed will of a majority of
the voters of the township Has it
come to a pass that you should get
rod-headed and say ugly things be-
cause Herbert White and two or
three others didn't have as much in-
with a Democratic legislature
as four hundred other citizens. Aren't
you satisfied with giving the majority
one small crumb
The friends of the bill never
to the legislature anything
other than the dictates of a
handful of men who met the com-
and why should they cry
about getting a small dose of their
own medicine
And, further, Mr. Editor, where
were the ever-watchful
and our very alert senator, who
played always so well into the hands
of the bond bill promoters Is it
that they slept while a little
word went rollicking up and
down the floor of the senate and
house, duly labeled and tagged as
the amendment was being read three
times in each house and ratified
Surely, Providence must have inter-
to carry out just this one
little favor to the masses of a Dem-
community
And further, why should there be a
new registration Aren't you really
mad because this little trap set to
embarrass the voters was thrown and
nobody gets caught Why, you raise
more fuss over it than if a murder
had been committed under your very
nose. Everybody knows that a new
registration is a trap to catch the
unwary. And now you say it is dirty,
and a whole mess of stuff, and your
methods seek to fool somebody Into
thinking that your watermelon is
stolen. It isn't dropped it
pulling wires around Raleigh.
W. F. EVANS.
PROFESSIONAL AND
BUSINESS CARDS.
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT
Office opposite R. L. Smith
Stables, and next door to John Flan-
Buggy new building
Greenville; . a,
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office occupied by J. L
Fleming.
Greenville, . . . Carolina
W. C D. U Clark
CLARK
Engineers and
R, Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
In Building
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
S. M. Schultz
Established 1875
and Retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hide, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar-
Turkeys, East Oak Bedstead
Mattresses, etc. o-u. Baby Car-
Go-Carts. Parlor Suits,
Tables, Lounges, P. Lori-
and Gail Ax Snuff, High Life
tobacco. Key West Cheroots, Hen-
George Cigars, Canned Cherries
Peaches, Syrup, Jelly,
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap,
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil,
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar-
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches. Prunes. Currants. Raisins
and Wooden-
ware, Cakes and Crackers,
best New
Royal Sewing machines and
numerous other goods. Quality and
quantity cheap for rash. Come to
L I. Moore, W. II. long
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Greenville. . . N. Carolina
DR. R. L. CARE
DENTIST
Greenville, . .
HARRY SKINNER
LAWYER
Hie,
H. W. CARTER, M. D.
Practice limited to of the
Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat
Washington, If. C. Greenville, if. C
Greenville office with Dr. D. L.
a. m. to p. m., Mondays.
ALBION DUNN
AT LAW
Office In building, Third St.
Practices wherever are
desired
Greenville, . If, Carolina
RED BANKS ITEMS.
Personal Notes Around That Section.
RED BANKS, N. C, Aug.
George and James Corbitt, of Tar-
preached at Red Banks church
last Sunday. A large crowd attend-
ed.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Savage and
children, from near Greenville, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
mons.
Mr. F. E. Brooks attended the Dud-
marriage near Greenville
Tuesday morning.
Messrs Robert and David Allen at-
tended the Rod Men meeting at
Greenville Friday night.
Messrs Charlie Taylor and
Savage, of Greenville, were in the
neighborhood several evenings lust
week.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. of
son, were visiting relatives in this
section Sunday.
Mr. H. L. Tucker went to Green-
ville Friday afternoon.
H. S. WARD. C. C. PIERCE.
Washington, N. C. Greenville,
WARD PIERCE
Greenville, N. C
Practice n all the Courts.
Office in Wooten on Third
street.
Spring Bedding Plants
for beautifying the yard. Ah
Decorative plants for the house
Choice Cut Flowers
for weddings all social events
Floral offerings arranged
most artistic style at notice.
Mail, telephone and telegraph or-
promptly executed by,
J. L. Company
Florists.
Ask for Price List
Phone Raleigh, N.
ion Rates
Wide Excellent
with and full
particular Mat Free
Write President
W. T.
Dignity is what some people stand
on when they are short.
Phone Number
S. M. Schultz
Greenville Cabinet
WORKS
Antique Furniture
ed. Cabinet, and Re-
pair Work a Specialty.
Charley Denser,
Third St, Greenville,
Schedule
ROUTE OF THE
NIGHT EXPRESS
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE lithe
N. following schedule fig-
as information ONLY
and are not guaranteed.
TRAINS LEAVE GREENVILLE
East Bound
a. in. Pull-
man, Sleeping Car for Norfolk.
a. m. Daily, for Plymouth, Eliza-
beth City and Norfolk. Broiler Car
service connects for all points
North and West.
p. m. Daily, except Sunday, for
Washington.
West Bound
a. m. Daily, for Wilson and
Pullman Sleeping Car
ice connects North, South and West
a. m. Daily, except Sunday, for
Wilson and connects for
all points.
p. m. Daily, for Wilson and
Broiler Car service.
Fur further information and res-
of Sleeping Car space apply
to J. L. Agent, Greenville,
N. C.
W. B. HUDSON, W. W.
General G. P. A.
Norfolk, Virginia.
Too much distance between husband
and wife may result in other enchant-





. .
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 office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
AH cards of thanks and resolutions
respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the poet office at
Greenville, North Carolina,
act of March 1879.
in the past without roads, and no
doubt they thought roads
Roads can be build without
bonds, but we have not been able to
And where they have been built
and satisfactorily without
bonds. Countries far in advance of
us have tried the building of roads
in other ways, but have abandoned
the other ways and adopted the bond
plan, and are so delighted with the
change that they say in substance,
is the way we long have sought
and mourned because we found it
WHIT BETTER IS OFFERED.
A WORD TO ADVERTISERS.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1911.
WHY WE FAVOR BONDS.
The Reflector is in favor of a bond
issue to build roads, because it be-
that is the feasible way to get
good roads. The county has gone
along years and years collecting road
tax and spending it on the roads
without permanent result or benefit,
and is no nearer a system of good
roads under that method than it was
years ago. While we would gladly
advocate a county bond issue to build
roads all over the county, we be-
the township plan will bring
results much quicker. Pitt county
will not get good roads in a hundred
years unless some of the leading
townships set the pace. Greenville
township being the richest township
in the county, as well as the county
seat, can well afford to lead in this
matter. Good roads are an
necessity for and
progress, and Greenville
owes it to herself and to the county
to take the lead. Good roads here
will be such an object lesson that
other townships will naturally want
to follow the lead. It is true that
to issue township bonds and build
roads in Greenville township would
indirectly benefit the whole county,
but that should inspire us to action
rather than deter us. There was once
a man who owned a piece of land
that needed only a ditch to make it
valuable, but the man let it go to
waste because he could not ditch it
without helping the land of his
neighbor. Was he wise No good
thing was ever done that did not help
things other than the special thing
for which it was planned. That, after
all, is the good in goodness.
There are some who say roads can
be built without bonds, therefore
bonds are unnecessary. Produce can
be hauled without rail-
roads unnecessary Men have lived
At the rate the subscription list of
The Daily Reflector is growing we
expect it to reach or more by
the of September. So
are we of reaching that number by
then, we are willing to guarantee an
average circulation of not less than
This is important to
as it means not for one day
only but for every day. It is an op-
also that business men
should take advantage of if they
want their advertisements to reach
the people. September is the month
in which they should put forth their
best efforts in advertising for fall
business. The tobacco market will
be open then, cotton will also be com-
to market, and the farmers who
raise tobacco and cotton constitute
a large majority of the readers of
The Reflector. On every nearby
route are a large number of Re-
subscribers, and the business
men can reach these farmers by
their advertisements in The Daily
Reflector. Right now is the time they
should be engaging space in this pa-
per. Our advertising rates are the
same for this large circulation that
they have been all the year.
WHO ABE FOOLING THE PEOPLE
There is very little in the com-
of Mr. James L. Evans re-
the Greenville township road
bill, published elsewhere in this paper,
that needs any reply. He says
advocates of this bill have worked
in secret behind closed No
one knows better than Mr. Evans
himself the lack of truth in this
statement, for it is well recalled that
he was present at many of the meet-
if not all of them, and took
part in the proceedings, hence he was
fully aware of what was being done.
As to the charge of attempt to dis-
franchise voters, that is too absurd
a statement to notice, as every one
with judgment well knows there is
no better place for people to express
themselves than at the ballot box, and
also that it is the prevailing custom
for elections providing for bond issues
to be held under new registrations,
which gives every one the right to
register and vote as he desires. The
attempt to fool the people is all on
the part of those opposing the bill
and championing sneak legislation.
We wonder those who profess
to be in favor of good roads, yet are
opposed to building them with a bond
issue, do not suggest some other
plan by which the roads can be built.
They make lots of noise in
but make no suggestion of a
better plan to build roads. If the
roads can be built in any better way
it ought to be known and let the
people adopt that way and build the
roads. The thing needed is good
roads, and there should not be years
and years delay in getting them built.
If there is a better plan than through
a bond issue we would like to know
what it is, but we do not believe that
Pitt county will have much better
roads than exist right now until they
are built with bends. While good
roads benefit the generation in which
they are built, they also benefit the
generations to come, therefore we
think it is right for future genera-
to pay their proportional part
for the benefit received.
SMALL ROASTS HITCHCOCK.
The Reflector told on Tuesday of
getting a telegram from Congressman
John H. Small, containing the
that the order previously
made by the post office department to
discontinue the post offices at Falk-
land and Bruce in this county had
been revoked. A special from Wash-
City to the Charlotte Observer
tells how Congressman Small went
about this matter, and it shows the
influence he has when he goes about
anything in the interest of the people
of his district. It says
A hot roast was dealt Postmaster
General Hitchcock by Representative
Small in an interview today apropos
of the attempt to abolish the offices
at Bruce and Falkland in Pitt county.
The recommendations of In-
Goldsboro that the offices be
discontinued was blocked by Mr.
Small.
He said the department
seemed to be seeking to make a rec-
for economy, even if it meant the
destruction of efficiency. What the
people wanted was better service, he
said, and they did not expect the
postal department to yield revenue.
He referred to the fact that money
given by congress for establishing
new rural routes had not been used.
---------o
The Reflector has criticized the
way in which the Mooring amend-
to the Greenville township road
bill was passed through the
because it was killed in the
committee room and not a
tor can explain how it came to life
again. Such methods of legislation
bear the marks of inexcusable neg-
on the part of all our
or political on the part
of one or more of them. Any man
that is a man, no matter whether be
favors a bond issue for roads or not,
can have nothing other than adverse
criticism for the way in which this
amendment was passed. The refer-
In this paper to it was written
in behalf of political efficiency and
political honesty, without regard to
good roads. Such political methods
do not meet the approbation of de-
cent men, and a paper that shuts its
eyes to such legislation is untrue to
old-time honesty and twentieth
intelligence.
The farmers of Pitt county should
prepare for planting more wheat this
fall than in former years. The Re-
is not authorized to speak for
a on the matter, but enough
has been said to us to lead to the be-
lief that Greenville will have a flour
mill before another wheat thrashing
time comes. Such a mill here will
make it convenient for farmers to
get their wheat ground into flour, and
more wheat should be raised.
The Pittsboro Record has entered
upon Its thirty-fourth year. The pa-
per was established in 1878 by Maj.
H. A. London, and all these years,
without Intermission, has been edited
and published by him. The Record
has the distinction of being the only
paper in the state that has been
edited and published by the same man
for so many years. Its career has
also been one of great usefulness to
its immediate section and to the
state.
---------o
Every citizen of Greenville town-
ship should read the article elsewhere
in this paper showing the in
connection with the legislation re-t
the bill giving the people of
the township the privilege of voting
on the question of issuing bonds for
good roads. And if there are any
wish to express themselves on the
subject the columns of The Reflector
are open to them.
o---------
Ayden is finding things to be ex-
at the Pitt county fair.
proposition of the man down there to
burn an old-fashioned tar kiln If
can be made for it, is
one that should be taken advantage of.
Tar kilns were things of so long ago
that one would be an object of in-
and curiosity to people of the
present day.
The Raleigh Times had an empty
can crusade for a week, and in that
time the boys picked up something
like old tin cans about the
city. It was a crusade in behalf of
health, tin cans being regarded as
breeding places for mosquitoes. We
would not be surprised if other towns
could not find comparatively as
many as Raleigh.
o---------
Are you getting anything ready for
exhibit at the Pitt county fair It
la now but little more than two
months 2nd and 3rd
being the it ought to bring
together an array of Pitt county's
very best products. If you have not
seen a premium list apply for one
and get something ready to ex-
A Winchester, Va mother spanked
her 5-year-old son on the street. The
boy raised such a howl as to alarm
the neighborhood and attracted a
policeman to the scene who arrested
the woman, and it cost her for dis-
the peace. Next time she
had better take her boy in the house
to spank August
A gentleman clipped the above from
his paper and sent it back with the
following
Served her right. Who ever
heard-of such a thing. Might as well
spank him on a full stomach, and
we all know that's wrong. I believe
in the good old approved style, take
the boy across your lap and spank
him in the usual
-o
Mr. Roosevelt says he would es-
teem it a genuine calamity if the
movement were undertaken to make
him the Republican presidential
The people are with you. Teddy,
in that assertion, and hope there will
be no such calamity.
the county commissioners to
put a clock in the court house tower
before the scaffolding comes
remarked a prominent farmer to The
Reflector Saturday. He argued that
the clock can be put in at less ex-
now than later.
The Charlotte Observer's editorial
paragrapher has gone to making it
rhyme. Just listen at this from that
songster
Just as many a shaft at random
sent finds mark the archer little
meant, so many a dart with purpose
shot hits everywhere except the spot.
If any of the township committees
have not yet raised their part of the
donations for premiums at the Pitt
county fair, they should do their so-
at once and be ready to re-
port at the meeting of the governing
board and committees Friday.
Friday's issue of The Daily Re-
in two colors was a good
men of the character of work that
can be done on the new press in-
stalled a few months ago. It does
newspaper work, book work and col-
or work to perfection.
Over twelve columns of a dirty
in the Raleigh News and Ob-
server, sent into the decent homes of
North Carolina, may be regarded by
that paper as up-to-date journalism,
but it strikes us as a stench to the
nostrils of refined people.
The Greensboro News says
way of the transgressor Is And
the other kind are also catching a
share of the hotness now, though
they have a better prospect of
it hereafter.
Republicans in congress are trying
to let President Taft's bungle in the
Controller Bay matter drop, but the
Democrats are determined that the
truth shall be known and will push
the investigation to the bottom.
When we have our early frost open-
we shall expect Patton, Cowan,
Whichard, any others
who may come and inspect
our fall stock of
News.
Thanks, Bob. Save us one that is
if it its cold, and
if its hot.
Admiral Togo got along pretty well
with everything in America but the
big eatings. He got what comes to
many from too much
severe attack of indigestion.
With all the scarcity of water in
Charlotte, an elbow in the water main
sprung a leak and lost gal-
before it could be stopped. That
was spilling some.
mm
Congress quit and the
are getting to their homes.
President Taft vetoed it. but he
ought not.
Count Togo has said goodbye and
gone.
Electric fans can rest when it is
like this.
with the push for good roads.
The president's veto shows that his
party claim of favoring tariff re-
form was all bosh. Reform is only
favored where it does not interfere
with the trusts.
When bad roads cost you as much
in direct taxation, and many fold
more in indirect taxation, as good
roads, it looks like a saving
to have good roads.
Put as much enthusiasm in the
movement for good roads as there has
been the last few weeks in base ball,
and you will sec the good roads com-
on.
This is the kind of change In the
weather that brings the seaside re-
sorts to a close, but there is going
to be more of the warm kind.
The next six weeks are going to be
made to tell on the proposition to have
good roads in Greenville town-
ship.
The new court house was not com-
in readiness for this term of
court, as was at one time anticipated,
but will likely be by the next term.
Good roads sentiment is one of the
things that is growing, not only In
Greenville township, but all over Pitt
county.
President Taft vetoed the wool bill
and the free list bill. Congress tried
to pass them over his veto but failed.
There is hardly a doubt that the
cotton crop of the country has been
estimated much too large.
The sneak in any sphere of life is
the man who should be rebuked and
condemned by public opinion.
At an aviation meeting in Chicago,
Tuesday, two more were added to the
long death list from this cause.
This will likely be the last week of
the extra session of congress.
The Old Spring and Its Memories.
went to the spring where I used
to get water when I was a little
said an old man to us a few days ago,
after he had paid a visit to the home
of his boyhood after, spending many
years in a distant State. That Is one
thing that any man who goes back to
his boyhood home, after a long ab-
does, goes to the old spring or
to the place where he got
his cool water when a there
is not in all the world water quite so
good as that from the old spring or
well We are fated to
forget many things, but there are
some things we can never forget, and
among them is the old spring or the
old well where before we knew there
was such a thing as microbes or
or any other abomination in the
watering place, we drank and drank
until we could drink no more. The
boy who goes to a faucet and gets his
rent-paid water from an iron pipe
misses a whole lot and we are sorry
for him. It doesn't matter if the state
chemist has certified that the
water is we are sorry for the
boy who gets his drinking water from
any such source, for he can never
know how good it feels to go to the
old spring, hot, tired out, with his
throat dry enough to get a
gourd and sit there under the shade
the trees and just drink until he
proves that the fellow who wrote In
the school physiology that the human
stomach will hold only three pints is a
then stretch his tired body
out on the grass and pillow his head
on the root of a tree and just naturally
rest. Every man who ever went back
to the home of his boyhood and there
was a spring there will tell
went to the old spring, where I used
to drink when I was a little boy.
Monroe Enquirer.
Good
One hundred million dollars for
good roads One hundred million
times as much money as the govern-
ever spent to make the country
roads a little easier for traffic That
is what a prominent United States
senator recently advocated. Think of
it. to till up the ruts and the
holes to make pulling a trifle easier
for a few tired
Why Because the people of the
United States has, at last, come to
see that there is but little else in
this country so fundamentally
to the welfare of each citizen
as are good roads. That is the
answer. It appears, on the face of
it, a perfectly simple answer, and one
that at first thought does not provoke
much interest and arouse no
and the gospel of good
roads has come to mean salvation for
the dying towns and the sick
as well as for that greater evil
the high cost of living.
Never before in the history of this
country has there been such an
awakening as that which has resulted
recently from the scientific study of
the economic conditions now in ex-
The physicians who
made the diagnosis have stated that
bad roads are yet at the bottom of
the existing high prices of
ties. Why There are several
answers. One of them is best illus-
by the story of the woman in
a small town who recently went in-
to a grocery store and asked the price
of eggs. The storekeeper quoted his
price.
she exclaimed.
la more than they ought to be at
this time of the cents more
than I ever paid
know replied the mer-
it helped. The
reads have been so bad lately that
the farmers won't bring in their
That is the whole story in a nut-
shell. There are many others like
it, some more important than others.
That same woman probably placed
her order with a mail order grocery
house, leaving the express company
to deliver the goods irrespective of
the condition of the roads. The mer-
chant in the story lost a customer,
the farmer lost a chance to market
his products, and the woman finally
found that she had paid a big price
for her goods after all of
this because the roads were bad.
Chronicle.
name will be much In
evidence for the next few days.
Meanders on The Farm.
A city girl is a fond
dream of mine to become a farmer's
wife and meander with him down
life's Ah, yes, that is a
nice thing But when your husband
meanders off and leaves you without
any wood and you have to meander
up and down the land pulling splint-
off the fence to cook dinner, and
when you meander along in the wet
grass in search of the rows till your
shoes are the color of rawhide and
your stockings soaked, and when you
meander out across acres of plow-
ed ground with a club to drive the
hogs out of the corn field and tear
your dress on the barb wire fence,
when you meander back home to the
house, and find that the billy goat
has hut led the out of your
child and find the old hen, with
chicks, in the parlor, you'll put your
hands on your hips and realize that
meandering is not what it is cracked
up to Ga., Nugget.
Shake It Off.
Don't nourish trouble. If you do it
will certainly grow. It is one of the
natural laws for things that are
to expand. So trouble will flour-
if you make your mind a fertile
field. Where trouble thrives it is
natural for gloom to chase out bright-
Weeds will kill the fairest flow-
era, and people will keep away from
your garden if it is filled with weeds.
Trouble flourishing in your mind will
kill happiness, and folks will keep
away from you. Of course, to some
extent people are compelled to worry,
but let it be only worriment of a de-
termination to solve the problem, with
an abiding, bright faith that the prob-
can be solved. And the knottiest
problem can be solved, but a distorted
mind can't reach the correct
The mind can't strain itself
trouble's heavy load and then
wonder why the burden is so heavy.
A proud father may be a lunatic for
a week after ii happens, but he's
cold-blooded sanity compared with
grandpa.





MORE ARGUMENT
FOR GOOD ROADS
THE BENEFIT OF A ISSUE.
Present Bond Tax Applied Will
Burden on Tax Payers.
Editor Reflector
The property of Greenville town-
ship as valued for taxation this year
U in round numbers, The
road tax is cents on each
property valuation, and cents on
each poll. The income from this tax
is as follows
property at
n, .
polls at cents each. 337.50
Total income .
Apply this amount under
the bond
at per cent, inter-
est per annum .
Amount set aside each year
and put on interest to pay
bonds at maturity as pro-
for in bill
Amount then available for
maintenance and improve-
of roads each year. 2,487.50
600.00
t ,
In addition to the road tax as
stated, each person between the ages
of and years of age is, under
the general law, subject to a road
duty of six days a year, or pay
Per day i emergency, a minimum
y of two days or The bond
bill dispenses with this road duty in
Greenville township and thereby de-
creases the road tax to the
The highest estimate yet made for
the maintenance of sand-clay roads
is per mile per year. Were we
to double that amount there would
be a goodly sum left with which to
reduce the road tax, or to further
prove work, or to lay aside for the
payment of bonds.
Under the present regime we pay
a tax and work the roads, and yet
we have no system and no roads.
Under a bond issue the road burden
will be reduced and we will have a
road system that has proven a
and a boon to every progressive
community that has taken this step
Bad Roads Tax The Heaviest.
iS not an
of good roads is an enemy to himself,
for the heaviest tax that he pays is
he bad road tax. A bad road means
loss of time in going to market, to
school, to church, to neighbors. It
means the more rapid wearing out
of vehicles and of stock. The preach-
who said it was hard to be a Chris-
and drive constantly over a bad
road was right, and hence bad roads
means a decrease in Christian life
Good roads mean better citizenship
mentally, morally and physically, so
lets have good and Ob-
server.
The
The of the press are
having lots of fun over the Boston
mother-in-law whom a New York
judge sent home, declaring that ten
days was the limit for a mother-in-
law visit.
In all the jests there is little new
wit. For countless ages the mother-
in-law has been the victim of de-
jests, until it has become one
the most melancholy subjects in
existence.
And yet many a good man has deep
affection and profound respect for his
mother-in-law, and is not ashamed
of it. Laugh at him, too, if you will.
He knows that the one girl whom
in the sweet freshness of youth he
chose from among all others to bless
his life owes her lovely qualities to
the woman who is now his mother-
in-law, but was first and is always her
mother.
He remembers how that mother
gave to him her most precious
treasure on earth, loved as only a
mother can love her girl, smiled
bravely through it, and then turned
away, with flooding tears and fainting
heart, to weep in heartache and lone-
Very
Well, there are men weak enough to
remember such things, and too blind
to humor as not to see at all that the
mother-in-law is nothing but a con-
farce.
Yes, yes, there are
wholesome-minded realize
that in sickness, misfortune, distress
the mother-in-law is the first to come
and the last to go, ever the readiest
to serve and to sacrifice, ever the
most loyal, the most untiring and the
most truly sympathetic. For she
brings her heart with her, and her
heart is love.
And, too, many a man has known
her to linger, white-faced, but calm-
eyed, to speak words of courage to
him, beside their and his;
and then hiding her heartbreak, take,
the mother's place with the mother-1
less children, and, forgetting that she
is a farce, become a ministering and
sustaining angel.
Those of us who can, let us laugh
at the mother-in-law; let us
bandy back and forth the stale
jokes and gibes in ridicule of her.
For there are some men who can't
laugh at the mother-in-law. in the
innermost secret place of their souls
there is a shrine sacred to her, where
love and gratitude give worship-
Memphis News-Scimitar.
LITTLE
Fine Crops Everywhere
W be haPpier more We wish to
f our two stores with well con-
t furniture for the home, and you will do yourself and us
to call upon us. Don't buy you look at our goods
Yours truly, s,
TAFT VANDYKE
Excursion to Niagara Falls August 24th.
BEST EXCURSION OF THE SEASON
Will be Operated, by the
THE STEAMSHIP COMPANY
i new of
Trip Bate Norfolk to Niagara Falls and
TICKETS GOOD FIFTEEN DAY'S.
Steamer leaves Norfolk at the foot of street p
S Ohio R. R and
Lehigh Valley, Falls p m
This will be a delightful trip to Baltimore by water thence
WM an to
f 29th via Pennsylvania Railroad
I or further information, call write
Norfolk,
East Carolina Teachers Training
School
tram for the Public of North
Z u this one Tuition
For T begins
For and other information, address
Robt. H. Wright, President
Greenville, N. C.
The one redeeming feature about a
pawnshop is the ticket.
THE BARBER SHOP I
S. J. NOBLES
clean
and attractive, working the very
best barbers. Second none.
OPPOSITE J. R. j. G.
Invention Against Fire.
A man from South Carolina hag pat-
a shingle made of metal, which
resembles the wooden ones in size
and shape. But the metal shingles
interlock by reason of a series of
ribs and channels. They are more
durable than the old kind, and being
absolutely fireproof, are especially
adapted for use on garages and
buildings, where the fire risk Is
great. It is claimed that, when once
properly installed, they will last as
long as the walls of any structure.
Louisville Courier-Journal.
The Home of Women's Fashions
Pulley Bowen
North Carolina
Greenville,
J. S. MOORING
Merchandise
FIVE POINTS and Prod-
GREENVILLE, N. G.
How About It, Josephus
Mr. Josephus Daniels attended a
barbecue on the farm of Dr. N. W.
at which there was and fix-
On his return he wrote glow-
of Dr. cotton and corn
and said the doctor will make three
bales of cotton to the acre. Where-
as, we are moved to in all
seriousness, was that elder spiked
Charlotte Chronicle.
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair
Rues in Season. See
Greenville. N. C. I
Read The Daily Reflector for All the News
Advertise in it for Best Results
To Spend Money on Water
and Inner Good Roads.
It Is a crime to waste public
and the congress of the United
States has been sinning against the I the use of their of the money
of the Farm Sore Than
Third of the Wealth.
The Winston Sentinel It is
certain that the farmers do not get
people that elected its individual
from time almost immemorial.
Millions have been wasted in public
buildings, in improving worthless
and waterways. Recently it came
light that funds had been
out of the treasury of the United
States and had been spent to erect
public buildings in western towns with
earned in the United States. There
are now over people in
this country, and nearly one-third are
farmers and their families.
The products of the farm are res-
for more than one-third of
the wealth and commerce of the
country. No one can say, however,
that one-third of this wealth is used
populations ranging from to by the farmer in the betterment of
One Iowa town with a population of country districts.
1,300, secured an appropriation of
for a public building. The
Farmers would accomplish more if
they were more active in the matter
In congress has come to look of co-operation. There is joy and
upon this sort of stealing as perfectly
legitimate in every respect and all
sorts of shady deals are made to
cure the much-coveted appropriations
to please the at These
same patriotic representatives who
will literally their to
secure a public building for Smith's
Corners, or Brown's Cross Roads, look
askance at any proposition that looks
to the improvement of the roads of
the country. It is millions for water-
ways and public buildings, but not one
cent for roads, the crying necessity
of the age. Their lack of interest in
this vital question may be due to the
fact that comparatively few of their
constituents are deeply interested in
securing good roads, but the fact re-
mains that they do lack interest and
that public funds continue to be
away in bolstering up the pride
of petty municipalities and in
unimportant harbors and water-
ways, to say nothing of the amount
sunk in floating fortresses.
Here is an example of the wasteful-
that all good men should con-
According to the estimate of
government engineers there has teen
spent upon the Mississippi river, In-
surveys, for the
purpose of putting that public water
highway in shape for the hauling of
the products of the forests, farms and
commerce tributary to it. The latest
available statistics, published in 1906,
show that there were transported on
the Mississippi in that year
tons less than in 1389. This
was spent between New Orleans
and St. Louis, with the states of Mis-
Tennessee and Illinois on the
eastern boundary and the states of
Louisiana, Arkansas and Missouri on
the western. It is evident that the
farmers, lumbermen and merchants
of these states that border directly on
the river, to say nothing of the in-
habitants of the other forty states,
have received no benefit whatever from
the expenditure of this vast sum. It
has been wastefully expended, almost
absolutely thrown away.
Tie same amount of money spent in
building good roads would have rev-
the country. Today the
farmers of the states named are pay-
just as much for broken harness,
broken wagons, losing as much time,
wearing out as many horses and haul-
as small a load, as before this
sum expended.
How much longer are we going to
stand for Good Roads.
health in the open air, but the farmer
is often woefully ignorant of
and drainage. Nor does he give
much attention to good highways,
which would add to the comfort and
the joy of living.
Country people, as a rule, are free
from tuberculosis, but they do suffer
from typhoid and pneumonia.
Bad roads prevent social enjoy-
they tend to paralyze industry.
The difference between good and bad
roads is often equivalent to the
between profit and loss. Money
wisely expended for this purpose is
sure to return ten-fold.
Strike
And Does Some Dimmer.
Elder J. If. Barfield, of Ayden, who
was here today, told us that quite a
severe electric storm visited Ayden
during the rain Sunday morning
Lightning struck the chimney at the
residence of Mr. W. B. Alexander,
and run down into a room, splinter-
a bureau and doing some damage
to the building.
Mr. William Dennis, who lives just
outside of town, was sitting on his
porch when lightning struck a tree
nearby and badly shocked him. At
first it was thought he had been kill-
ed, but he revived and is not serious-
hurt.
Out in Mr. Elias neighbor-
hood there was considerable hail and
enough rain to wash up several road
bridges.
ITEMS.
ITEMS.
Pick Pockets Relieve Mr. Proctor of
Fifty Dollars.
GRIMESLAND, N. C, Aug.
W. E. Proctor and daughter, Miss
Earl, and Master Knott Proctor, left
Tuesday for Norfolk.
Mr. D. Holliday and family, who
have been visiting relatives here, have
returned home.
Miss Blanche and Master Thomas
Proctor left Monday evening for Dunn
to visit relatives.
Mr. W. S. and daughter,
Miss Ethel, returned Thursday even-
from Norfolk.
Misses Estelle Thigpen and Anna
Fleming, of who have been
visiting Mrs. C. M. Jones, returned
home Friday.
Master Tucker, of
son, is spending the week with Master
Proctor Galloway.
Mr. Adrian Dudley left Thursday
for Ayden.
Many of the farmers around our
town have lost their tobacco barns
this season. Much sympathy is felt
for them.
A post card from Mr. W. E. Proctor
who is in Norfolk, states that the
pick-pockets relieved him of his pock-
et book soon after he arrived in that
city. The book contained about
The farmers in our section are still
very busy curing tobacco.
or doses will cure any
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,
Some women are miserable because
people talk about them, and some
others are miserable because they
don't.
Personal Notes and Happenings of In-
in That Neighborhood.
HOPEWELL, N. C, Aug.
Mabel Skinner returned home Sun-
day, after spending a few weeks with
Misses Mae and Cox.
Miss Annie Stokes and sister, Miss
Viola, spent Sunday with Miss Lela
Mr. J. C. Skinner, of Norfolk, spent
Friday and Saturday with Benjamin
Mr. Luther Smith and Miss Julia
Smith spent Sunday near Hanrahan.
Messrs. Melton Witherington and
Johnnie Peterson were visiting at the
home of Mr. Ben Sunday.
Mr. D. W. Williams and wife spent
Saturday and Sunday near Maple Cy-
press.
Mr. W. D. Williams went to Green-
ville today.
There will be preaching at Han-
cocks Saturday and Sunday. We hope
to see a large crowd.
Mr. Witherington was in our
neighborhood Sunday.
Mr. Bob Davis and Miss Julia Sum-
were the guests of Miss Fan-
Smith Sunday.
Mr. Walter Harrington, of Ayden,
was in our neighborhood Sunday.
New Fiction In The Library.
In the Townsend.
The Long Johnston.
The
Miller of Old Glasgow.
The Brevard
Molly Abbott.
What's His
Master and
The Guest of
ton.
Also the French Classical Romances
in twenty volumes, and the Works of
Washington Irving, in fifteen volumes.
Parson's Poem a Gem.
From Rev. H. Allison,
la., in praise of Dr. King's New Life
Pills.
such a health necessity,
In home these pills should be.
If kinds you've tried in vain.
USE DR. KING'S
And be well Only cents
at all druggists.
Mrs. Malinda Jenkins Dead.
Mrs. Malinda Jenkins, wife of Mr.
J. T. Jenkins, died Friday morning
at her home near Oakley. She was
a daughter of the late Mr. James
Whichard.
MOUNT AIRY, N. C, Aug. 1911.
Editor Reflector
A tired, feeble citizen of your town
left home last Tuesday seeking rec-
and rest, and not knowing
exactly where he was going or where
he would find either, his footsteps
in some way were guided this way
and Wednesday evening he found
himself at the
near Mount Airy, with
Gallaway Gwyn, as proprietors.
Mr. Galloway, as many of your
will recall, went to Greenville to
get his wife, marrying Miss Louise
Latham, the daughter of the late
Hon. L. C. Latham. This fact being
known to us, we felt pretty comfort-
able from the beginning, and began
to feel that we had made no mis-
take in coming here. This feeling
has grown upon us, and after not
quite a week's stay here we have
been thoroughly convinced that this
is one of the very best places among
the many good ones in the of
the for pleasure, rest and rec-
We have had opportunity
heretofore to visit many of these re-
sorts, but none of them have com-
pared with this in the wonderful
properties of the water, the delightful
and pleasing surroundings, which
gives a new lease on life to the over-
worked, tired traveler, looking for a
panacea for these conditions of life.
We have gained more than a pound
every day we have been here, appetite
and strength have come until we
feel like another man. The hotel is
large and commodious, the fare is the
best, the climate delightful, the
crowd large and of the very best
and highest type of our citizenship,
and everything corresponding to make
it an exceedingly pleasant place to be
as well as one to get the very best
results in the restoration of health.
Besides a large number of North
Carolinians we find people here from
Florida, Texas, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Virginia, New York,
Massachusetts, etc. Every person
here with whom we have talked bears
testimony to the wonderful properties
and effects of the water, and I am
writing this note to you not to ad-
business or any
summer or winter resort, but simply
because having gotten a great deal
here for myself in the way of
of strength and real life, I
ought to say just this little bit that
some one else needing just what they
can get here may this and know
where to go. In this way I shall be
adding to human happiness by ad-
ding to human health. A few days
here means much to any man or
woman who needs it and will come.
W. H. R.
A Peek Into His Pocket.
Would show the box of
Salve that E. S. Loper, a car
of N. Y., always car
have never had a cut, wound
or bruise, or sore it would not
he writes. Greatest healer or burns,
boils, scalds, chapped hands and lips,
fever-sores, skin-eruptions, eczema,
corns and piles. cents at all drug-
gists.
or doses will cure any
case of Chills and Fever. Price,
As Usual.
It will not be many weeks until
every town in the state will be buy-
cotton at prices a higher
than may be had anywhere else and
selling goods at a shorter profit. No
wonder the farmer is occasionally in-
Observer.
Fools try to convince a woman;
wise men persuade her.
STILL WITH
The Mutual Life Insurance
Company of N. Y.
Insurance In Force
Annual Income 83,981,241.98
Paid to to
date 56,751,062.28
H. Bentley Harriss
IV
me time the harp act.





OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN OF C. L. PARKER
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished M
AYDEN, X. C, Aug. J. R.
Smith and family spent Wednesday in
Winterville.
Master Frank Hart, Jr., is very
proud of the Banker pony his father
has brought for him from
ford's Banks. There will be another
pony penning on the 21st of August,
which will be the last one for this
season.
A pious old deacon tells us that
after a sermon, by the pastor one
day, he put in a few words of ex-
and requested all who had
ever heard their parents pray, to
stand up. To his surprise, only two
stood and he reversed his request to
all who had heard them profane, and
all stood but two; whither are we
drifting
Mr. has re-
turned from South Carolina on a
prospecting trip and has arranged to
locate bis mother and his family in
Rocky Mount.
There seems to be a surplus of
watermelons this season, the market
is glutted and prices low.
Some miscreant entered Mr. Mark
Taylor's cook room Saturday night
and took therefrom a of
nice bacon, while the family were on
the front porch.
Hardware, all sorts and kinds, mill
supplies, etc., at J. R. Smith
The contract will be let today to
bridge Hen Coop, near St. Abram
Springs, which will shorten the dis-
from Ridge Spring to Ayden,
something like one and a half miles.
The girl's dormitory and annex to
the Seminary is Hearing completion,
and will soon be ready for the paint
brush.
The county have
to throw up the
swamp between Mr. B. F.
horn's and Mr. Titus and in
a short time we hope to see a road
opened up from Mr. J. Sain
across the farm of Mr. J. S. Hines,
parallel with the road that comes in
Ayden via the graded school.
Clover, millet, rape, rutabaga, cab-
turnip and vetch seed, at J. R.
Smith
Let us know your wants, we will
air them in our special column of the
Ayden department.
Our people are pulling fodder this
week. We hear that Mr. Rowan
Cooper's cotton is open almost ready
for picking.
Miss Alice Baker, of Kinston hos-
is here nursing the baby of
Mr. C. G. Norris.
Mr. W. K. and son, of Fort
Barnwell, were here last Thursday.
They tell us crops are very good in
their section.
Mr. L. L. Kittrell is having his
gin overhauled and put in first class
shape ready for the fleecy staple.
The concert given here by the class
from Goldsboro I. F. home was
quite a success and well patronized
amid the storm that was raging at
that hour.
The infant of Mr. Richard Wingate
buried at the old Turk place,
near Tuesday.
We regret to learn of the illness
of Mr. Alfred Forbes, superintendent
of the county chain gang at the home
of his wife's mother, Mrs. Elizabeth
Revs. R. F. Pittman and L. L. Smith
two of the Seminary students, who
have been holding meetings during
vacation, have come in to rest a few
days before school opens, which is
September 14th. We can well ex-
better results the next session
as we have better buildings and more
experience.
Mr. Henry Bail and wife left Wed-
for Kinston to visit his sister
who is very sick.
Messrs. C. J. and Bur-
roll Heath both lost a barn filled
with tobacco last week.
If you want to either sell or buy,
there is no better way to let it be
known than through the Ayden de-
of The Daily Reflector.
Mrs. Ed. and son, of Kin-
are visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Davis, in Ghent.
Our town is full of visitors, but
haven't the time to appeal per-
and interview them to know
who they are, where they are from,
and who they are visiting, but if they
will tell us, we will do the rest.
If you want to advertise for a
band or wife, let write you up in
our column and if the directions are
followed we will guarantee to de-
liver the goods.
Mr. Bryant Tripp, one of Content-
ion's most energetic farmers and mill
men, tells us if he can secure a
suitable site that he will have the
light wood prepared and burn an old
time tar kiln during the two days
of the Pitt county fair. We are sure
this would be quite a curiosity to a
great many visitors to the fair this
fall.
Mr. Zack has a three-
legged hog which is quite a wonder-
freak of nature. He expects to
exhibit it at the Pitt county fair.
The orphans from the Odd Fellows
home at Goldsboro gave their concert
here Monday night, in the Christian
church. A rain came just in time to
keep a large number away, but a
fair audience was present to enjoy
the occasion. was realized for
Hie home.
Mrs. Barnett who has been
sick for several weeks, was taken to
Granville county this morning by her
father, this being her former home.
Ayden was satisfied at the result
of the game in Greenville Wednesday,
to in favor of Ayden. The Green-
ville team will play Ayden here to-
day which is supposed to be the last
game of the season for the Coast Line
League.
A letter from Mr. J. J. Hines states
that he is improving.
AYDEN, N. C, Aug. Ayden
has been smiling since the winning
game was played Thursday. Just
as we expected.
Sheriff S. I. Dudley is giving away
receipts for ridding your premises of
chicken-eating snakes. Soak tobacco
sticks in chicken blood and scatter
sticks and time does the rest.
the ball game Thursday,
a heavy bass No reward offered,
it went free. Geo. Cooper.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox Fri-
day evening in Ayden.
The latest and most up-to-date cot-
ton basket, made of wire at J. R.
Smith H Bro.
If the train had not been crowded
Thursday, we should have expected
Dr. and Mr. B. F. Patrick.
We don't think Mr. Patrick been
to Ayden since he was a candidate
for sheriff, way back when we were
in our teens.
Miss Fannie who has been
visiting friends in Ayden, left Sat-
morning for Elizabeth City.
Our milliners are getting their
ribbons, straws and feathers for mid-
summer and fall business.
this department.
Lime, cement and all building ma-
at J. R. Smith
We see from The Daily Reflector
that Dr. had an additional chair
at the table when he returned from
the Ayden ball game Thursday.
I am now ready for your business
grind, gin, saw, dress your timber,
mantles, carts,
and all kinds of repair work in wood
and iron. L. L. Kittrell.
To our business This de-
is for you, so let us have
your locals and advertisements.
go where they find the stuff.
We learn that Mr. Luke
horn left his real estate to his niece,
Mrs. Reddin subject to
the life estate of his widow.
, Rev. H. C. Brewer writes that he
cannot possibly accept the care of
Ayden Christian church, and move
his family here, owing to the
facilities. We have a ninth
grade graded school, besides the
Seminary, where students are
prepared for Trinity, the University
and Wake Forest. This goes to prove
conclusively that a town is usually
judged by the educational advantages
it can offer. We regret our trustees
could not dispose of the issue
of bonds and erect a suitable, up-to-
date building, and raise the
that would be adequate to the
demands.
The tobacco drummers are singing
to the tune am the right
It was our good pleasure a few
days ago to go through the canal
from the sound to Oriental which is
feet wide and sufficient in depth
to float large merchant boats. The
timber is killed on the banks of this
canal far as the eye can see, where
the salt water, sand and marl was
blown out. About midway from More-
head to Oriental there stands a cabin
A man lives there named
who reminds us of Geo. W. K.
favorite poem, build me a
house by the side of the road and be
a friend to weighed an-
for a few minutes and talked to
this man, who very much resembled
Roberson The man,
exiled, was cheerful and
We asked him who deserved
credit for opening up that water-
way improvements and he said it
might be Congressman Thomas, Small
or Dr. but he believed it was
all due to Governor W. W. Kitchin.
We asked him about the senatorial
contest and he said he was for
in for anything he wanted.
We regret to learn of the death of
Mr. John Moore, which occurred last
Friday morning at his home near
Timothy, in Swift Creek township.
the Christian church, and a Mason
He leaves a widow and several
Among them are Mr. J. Paul
Moore, and Rev. Moore. The
remains were with Masonic
honor Saturday.
Miss J. AM Harrington, R. H. Garris
and W. E. Patrick, made an
bile trip to Vanceboro, Friday.
AYDEN, N. C, August
Sunday morning at o'clock our town
visited by a severe electric storm
with wind and rain. Lightning
struck the two story residence of Mr.
W. B. Alexander, demolishing one
end and knocking off the chimney, up
stairs. It completely splintered
bureau and other things in the
near the fire place. Down
underneath, in the parlor, the mantle
frames and pictures were in a com
jumble. The bolt seemed to
pass between the
and plastering, coming out at the
front door. The family were sleep-
in the room down the hall and
escaped unhurt.
Messrs. W. B. Dennis and William
Jones were stunned by lightning; Mr.
W. H. tobacco barn struck; an
oak tree in the school park near Mr.
W. E. Patrick's was struck and many
telephone and telegraph poles were
torn into atoms.
Mr. Reddin E. Jackson, who was
bitten by a supposed rabid dog, was
afraid to trust any mistakes and left
last Thursday evening for Raleigh
He lingered for some weeks with in-
them around in places in-J digestion. The deceased was a model
to undergo a treatment for
hydrophobia, which will remove all
doubt in his mind.
Mr. Grover left Monday
morning for his new home in Rocky
Mount. We wish him much success.
For anything kept in a general
hardware store, we have it. J. R.
Smith Bro.
Mr. J. C. Jones and family worship-
at Airy Grove Sunday.
Miss May Smith returned Sunday
from an extended visit to friends and
relatives near Reedy Branch.
We are ready. Come on with your
corn, cotton and orders for turned and
scroll work, cabinet mantles,
either wood or iron. L. L. Kittrell.
Mrs. Jessie Wilson has made
plication to the Oxford orphan asylum
to send her two little girls, Katie and
there.
We at the Episcopal
church Sunday and listened to a
did sermon by Rev. J. W. Fulford, on
the parable of the Unjust Steward.
Only a few more weeks and it will
be time for the annual meeting of the
North Carolina Christian Missionary
Convention, which will meet here.
The date is not fixed as yet.
We hear that Rev. C. M. Morton has
resigned the care of the Wilmington
Christian church on account of his
health.
Now is the time to advertise. A
young man tells us he inserted an ad
in a paper for a wife, and had
the first week, and one not
more than twelve miles away. People
will read the Daily Reflector, so let
us write you up.
Mr. Stancil Hodges spent Sunday
in Washington.
Lime, cement, hair, a full supply
of windows, doors, glass,
mill supplies and tools.
J. R. Smith Bro.
Don't forget me when you need
rough or dressed lumber,
balusters, mantles, etc. We do all
kinds of repair work. L. L. Kittrell.
FOR BEST PRESS
brick by Cox Ayden, N. C.
22-e. o. w.
Gave Up Hope
suffered five years, with awful pains, due to woman-
writes Mrs. M. D. from Chad-
N. C. grew worse, till I would often faint
I could not walk at all, and I had an awful hurting m my
side; also a headache and a backache.
I gave up and thought I would die, but my husband
urged me to try so, I began, and the first bottle
helped me. By the time the third bottle was used, I could
do all my work. AH the people around here said I would
die, but relieved
TAKE The
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If you are a woman, begin taking today.
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for Special Instructions, and 64-page book, Treatment for sent free. J
News Not Fit To Print.
That a newspaper man often can
serve his community better by not
printing statements, coming
from responsible authorities, is
illustrated in the story of the
action of General Manager Stone of
the Associated Press during the
excitement of the panic of 1907.
George W. Perkins gave out a state-
to attending newspaper men
that the only spot was the
Trust Company of America. This
statement was sent to the Associated
Press. General Manager Stone saw
printing it meant a run upon the
organization.
Such a statement from Mr. Perkins
about the strongest financial
in the world, at that time, would
have made trouble for it. Mr. Stone
fortunately had been a banker and
also a working newspaper man. With
an intelligence brightened by
from both of these professions
he determined that this story ought
not to be printed.
It was news not fit to print. The
story was an opinion advanced by
Mr. Perkins. If the public had merely
received it as an opinion the danger
might not have been so great. Mr.
Stone knew that the public would re-
it as a statement of a man
closely in with J. P. Morgan
Co., and Morgan is the first and
last authority in Wall street.
The New York Times, however, did
print the statement, with the result
that there was a run the next day
on the trust company, and except for
extraordinary efforts that company
which today is a splendid institution,
would have been wrecked.
There are times when opinions of
men may have the greatest news
value. There arc other times when
they are worthless in essence and
hurtful if given publicity. And there
are times when opinions, no matter
how startling, coming from an
well balanced but temporarily
fevered mind, are mere hysterical
It is most fortunate for the
Press, the
organization on earth, that an
experienced veteran like Mr. Stone
at its head to do active duty as
an editor in a time of great excite-
Commercial-Appeal.
Money Spent By Conventions.
know that the chambers of
commerce in the big western cities
have a regular system of ratings on
organizations that hold
asked a Chicago man. hoard
of Well, they do. I have had
charge of a convention for a
number of years.
my card index I have a list of
every organization that has an an-
gathering. The list shows how
many members each has, how often
they and how much they spend.
They are desirable from any point of
view, only in accordance with the
amount of money they are likely to
New York Sun.
leave in the town. Therefore, I go
alter some of them hot foot and leave
the others alone. But I have to keep
track of all of for now and then
an organization changes in character,
and I he chances of their spending
money freely improve accordingly.
Mystic are up to-
ward the head of the lot. Each
will spend about a day while
he is at the grand On the
other hand, the delegates of a
convention will spend less than
a day. The biggest per capita
averages are in the meetings of the
railway and manufacturing
Some of thorn mean an aver-
age expenditure of nearly a day
a man for those who are
Not to Believe.
A certain lady called up her grocer
by telephone the other morning, and,
after she had sufficiently scolded the
man who responded,
what's more, the next order
you get from me will be the last I'll
ever give
will, said the
voice at the other end of the wire;
are talking to an
Bits.
A girl has an awful of faith to
believe in men, in of knowing
her own brothers.
888888888888888888
POLITICS AND
POLITICIANS. S
888888888888888888
Newport is the first Kentucky city
to try the commission form of gov-
The late Senator Frye served in
Congress continuously for over
years.
Congressman of
has accepted an invitation to
deliver the Kansas Day oration at
Topeka next January.
Edward Freeman, editor of the
Pine Bluff Commercial, is a
date for the congressional
in the Sixth Arkansas district.
Tacoma would like to have the
Democratic national convention meet
in her new stadium, which has a
seating capacity of thirty thousand.
United Sates Senators Gore of
and Marline of New Jersey
are to speak at the Democratic out-
at the Trenton Inter-State Fair
on August
The have begun their cam-
to have the question of local
option submitted to the voters of
this fall. The State is now
State-wide prohibition.
Adherents of Governor Woodrow
Wilson are now in Vermont and New
Hampshire laying to capture
the delegations to the Democratic
national convention for Wilson.
In the Maryland primaries next
week Philip Lee who
holds the position of International
Revenue collector, will receive the
Republican nomination for governor
without opposition.
Lieutenant Governor
Speaker Walker of the general as-
and Norman H. White, also
a member of the general assembly,
are engaged in a lively contest for
the Republican nomination for gov-
of
The Illinois Equal Suffrage
is planning an automobile
tour which will begin at Danville,
Sept. and terminate in Chicago a
week later. Members of the
will speak in the interest of
equal suffrage at all cities of import-
along the route.
The Prohibitionists will be the first
to arrange for the national campaign,
having decided to choose the date
and place of their convention the
sixth of next December. They will
probably be the only party to begin
the presidential activities of in
1911.
is in the midst of one of
the campaigns for United
States senator that it has experienced
in many years. It is a three-corn-
with Governor Y.
Sanders, Congressman Robert F.
of the third district and
Congressman P. of the
seventh district, as the contestants.
The passing of Senator Frye of
Maine means that Governor
will name a to till his
expired term, which will expire Mar.
U, It will be the first time in
half a century that the Pine Tree
State hag been represented by two
Democrats In the United States sen-
ate. The last time was in 1848-53,
when her senators were Hannibal
Hamlin and James Ware Bradbury,
both Democrats.
Southern Hospitality.
. Hospitality need not remain the
same in order to be as genuine and as
lavish. F. Smith, speak-
of the Southern
is reported to have
has become of the old-time chat over
a long-neck bottle Where has the
of our old-time hospitality
The esteemed Charlotte Ob-
server briefly has
gone and the other it putting
up at the
The Southern
Is dead, but his son, the new-time
Southern gentleman, is alive and
about in the world. The long-necked
bottle is not necessarily any more.
There is so much going on that he
does not find resort to the bottle a
necessity in order to keep up
Public school houses, such
as the old-time Southern gentleman
never dreamed of, are to be built and
maintained in every rural
public roads, graded and mac-
are to be constructed and
maintained such as our ancestors did
not even have a need for; farm lands
are to be improved and enriched in-
stead of being abandoned and left to
grow up in as in olden
In short, there is plenty to
stimulate conversation now without
recourse to the bottle.
has the spirit of our old-
time Southern hospitality It
hasn't gone anywhere. It is still here.
The war destroyed the means of In-
and lavish abundance; but
the-spirit of our erstwhile hospitality
yet abides. Let the son of a South-
in the become
able by industry and energy, to in-
his taste, follow his ideal and
he will build for you a home whoso
hospitality is as regal and lavish as
any that blessed our good land in the
days that are gone. The spirit of
hospitality is here. Its appurtenances
may sometimes be lacking without
the help of the long-necked bottle.
Christian Sun.
Punishing Drunkards.
Police regulations in regard to
drunkards are not effective. To put
a drunkard in jail and let out after
B few days to is anything
but a solution.
To fine a drunkard, taking away
the few dollars he may have, is not
a cure. We should treat the drunk-
ard not as a criminal, but as one who
la sick.
New York City makes the
that farms should be establish-
ed where drunkards could be restored
to health, furnished with good food
and kindly treated.
Chicago suggests that drunkards be
sent to hospitals and cured. Take
away, possible, the opportunity for
drinking and the craving for liquor.
In at least one civilized nation in
Europe they do things better than
do here. When a man is found
drunk on the streets, the policeman
out where he got his last drink.
He conducts the drunkard to that, in-
hires a cab and sends the
drunkard home, and makes the
loon keeper that sold the last, drink
pay for the Sentinel.
a man doesn't realize that he
married an angel until she begins to
do the harp act.





i n m i
Home and mod Toe tasters K. Hector.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector.
PLAYS AND
PLAYERS.
88888888888888888
MR. W. S. RAWLS HEAD.
Dies in
Depends on the is the
name of Clara new play.
The firm of Keith Proctor was
dissolved by the Supreme court of
Maine July
Alfred latest play,
Fire will be produced by
the this season.
Robert has been engaged
by David as leading man for
Francis Starr, one of his stars.
Harrison Grey Fiske has secured
Mitchell's latest
New for the use of Mrs.
William Collier and James Mont-
have almost completed the
new comedy, My in
which Mr. Collier will star.
Nellie a sister of Bessie
Coy, will have a dancing role in
in which Kitty Gordon
is to star.
David will produce
season a new play entitled Gov-
by a thus far unheard
of author. Miss Alice Bradley.
To support Julian in
Fascinating A. H. Woods
has exchanged Gilbert with
for Lionel Walsh.
Bryon co-author with Win-
Smith, of
has finished a new play,
which will be produced in the fall.
Katherine Grey, who has been star-
ring in Australia for eighteen months,
arrived in San Francisco recently and
will return to New York shortly.
For the part of Lake, the hero of
Deep Co.
have engaged Sydney Booth, who was
last season leading man for Gertrude
Elliott.
One of the early offerings
will be a new farce by
Johnson Young, in which Helen Low-
ell is to be featured the coming sea-
son.
Cyril Scott will have a new piny
this season, entitled Modern Mar-
which has been adapted from
the German by Harrison Rhodes for
the
Among the new plays to be pro-
by the in the fall will
be a new play by Edward
Sheldon, author of
and
May has been engaged to
create an important character role
in Quaker a new musical
play which will be the opening at-
traction of the Majestic New
York, on Nov.
Rumor says that Nat Goodwin is
going to embark in the moving
business. It is reported that
he is organizing his own
company and will superintend
the business and appear in some of
the plays.
Mine. Simons, of
former President of
France, will make her debut in Eng-
repertory in New York next
October. She will also present a
of which
Bernhardt will produce in Paris.
Former Greenville Citizen
Baltimore.
Telegrams were received by relatives
here this morning announcing the
death of Mr. W. S. Rawls. which
occurred at o'clock this morning
at his home in Baltimore.
Mr. Rawls was a native of Virginia
and about years of age. He and
an older brother, Mr. J. G. Rawls,
moved to Greenville in
and established a business
here that proved very successful. In
the year 1890, associated with his
brother-in-law, Mr. R. A. Tyson, he
established a private bank here, the
first bank the town had, which later
became the Bank of Greenville.
In the year 1894 Mr. health
failed, causing him to retire from
business, and two years later he moved
to Baltimore where he made his home.
While a citizen of Greenville in 1876
he married Miss Margaret of
this county, and the wife and three
children survive him, his two sons,
Messrs. Leslie and Lee Rawls being
residents of Baltimore, and his
daughter, Mrs. Smith, re-
siding in New York.
Mr. Rawls was a Mason and a
of the Methodist church. Dur-
his residence in Greenville he was
foremost in promoting the interest
and of the town, and was
held in high esteem by all our people.
The remains wilT be brought to
Greenville for interment, reaching
here Sunday afternoon on the Nor-
folk Southern train, the funeral
to take place immediately afterwards
in Cherry Hill cemetery.
LOOKING AHEAD.
FUNERAL OF MB. RAWLS.
Horse Race.
Horse owners down in the vicinity
of Cox Cross Roads are getting up
their racing blood, and we learn that
a trotting race will take place there
next Saturday, between horses
belonging to Messrs. Tom Evans and
Joe
Hurled Sunday Afternoon Ma-
sonic Honors.
The remains Mr. W. S. Rawls,
whose death occurred at his home in
Baltimore Saturday morning, reached
here by the Norfolk Southern
train, Sunday afternoon, accompanied
by his wife and two sons, Messrs.
Leslie and Lee Rawls. The remains
were met at the depot by a large
number of Masons and citizens and
escorted to Jarvis Memorial Methodist
church, where services were conduct-
ed by Rev. J. H. Shore. At the grave
in Cherry cemetery the Masonic
burial ceremony was conducted.
The pall bearers were as
R. Williams, C. T.
E. E. Griffin, F. C. Harding,
A. L. Blow, W. B. Wilson, J. A. An-
and James Brown. Honorary
Messrs. T. J. Jarvis, E. A.
Sr., G. Ernul, R. A. Tyson, J.
L. Little, J. T. Smith. J. S. Congleton
and F. G. James.
is the actual Protection you get when
you with
The Greenville Banking
Trust Co.
THIS IS MADE UP OF
Capital Stock .
Stockholders Liability 75,000.00
Total Protection to depositors
In addition to this, the Board of Directors is composed of
active business men who have made success in their own
different lines. They are not figure heads, but maintain
a constant supervision over the business.
We welcome small accounts as well as large ones
C. S. CARR, Cashier.
Prayer League Postponed.
Owing to the funeral of Mr. W. S.
Rawls, Sunday afternoon, the meeting
of the Men's Prayer League, that would
have been during the hour of the
funeral was postponed. The same
for that day will be car-
over to next Sunday, with the
same subject and leaders.
Meeting at Red Oak.
Rev. C. B. Marshburn, of Farmville,
will on next Sunday night begin a
meeting at Red Oak church, near Frog
Level.
Did v.-onion the
to death
The Patented Snore.
A young Raleigh lawyer, who
makes a few dollars by acting as ad-
recently had a case that
has given him quite a lot of trouble
to settle up. His experience might
possibly be of some benefit to other
aspiring young attorneys who are
anxious to rise in the world by aid-
their clients.
This young lawyer in question got
along fine with the case until it
came to making a final settlement,
and then his attention was called by
the court to an account of to
which the heirs objected. The ac-
count reads as one
snorer, This Item had been
placed in his expense account and,
of course, if the heirs had not
naughty heirs sometimes
would have gone through
without any trouble. The court was
much troubled over the item and
asked the attorney for an
suspecting that something was
wrong in the accounting department
of the administrator.
The brilliant young attorney was
equal to the occasion and explained
it in this He said that the de-
ceased husband was a chronic snorer
and his beloved wife had become so
accustomed to his snoring that she
could not sleep unless he was
and that after his death she had
been unable to sleep for weeks for
lack of this familiar noise. Finally,
he struck upon the idea of having a
machine made that would snore, and
when this was put in the room she
had no more trouble at night, but
slept soundly. The widow regain-
ed her lost health and when the bill
for the new machine was presented
to the attorney he naturally thought
it should go into the expense account
the administrator. The court,
some questions as to the
cal workings of this new invention,
allowed the claim as a just one.
Raleigh Times.
Here is another entrant for the
mendacity medal.
A man with his mouth full of lather
m well talk against his
S. A. L.
SCHEDULE
leave Raleigh effective Jan.
YEAR ROUND
a. Atlanta, Birmingham
Memphis and points West,
ville and Florida points,
at Hamlet for Charlotte
Wilmington.
THE SEABOARD MAIL No.
a.
with coaches and parlor car. Con-
with steamer for Washing-
ton. New York, Boston
and Providence.
THE FLORIDA FAST
a. Richmond, Wash-
and New York Pullman
era, day coaches car.
Connects at Richmond with C A
at Washington with Pennsylvania
railroad and B. fa.
and points west
THE
p. Atlanta, Charlotte,
Wilmington, Birmingham, Memphis,
and points West. Parlor to
Hamlet
p. m., No. for
Henderson, Oxford, and
Norlina.
p. m., No. for
for Cincinnati and points West,
Memphis, and points West,, Jack-
and all Florida points.
Pullman sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
a. m.
Arrives Richmond a. m.
Washington m., New York
p. Penn. station. Pullman
service to Washington and New
York.
C B. G. P. A., Portsmouth, Vs.
H. LEA D. P. A Raleigh, N. t.
as against his family any time.
Fire at Kinston.
The huge buggy manufacturing
plant of Mr. Mack Ellis, in Kinston,
was destroyed by fire early Sunday
with several ad-
cent warehouses.
All Things Working Together For
Good.
How can all things work together
for good By the guidance of infinite
chance Wheels within wheels, and
wheels playing into wheels, in the
vast system of human circumstances,
and all permitted to move according
to their own sweet will; is the way
in which all tilings work together for
good to God's saints We know it
cannot be so. There must be a Di-
vine Superintendent directing all,
and He can direct only as He knows
all things from the beginning to the
end. Here is a cause, and yonder,
twenty years hence, is an effect.
less God sees the relation of the two,
how can He touch the keyboard of
causes with His fingers today, so as
to affect our highest good a score of
years in the future And God works
at long range. He is no day laborer,
planning only from sunrise to sun-
set We believe that our pious grand-
mothers, praying and studying their
Bibles in the lonely cottage among
the hills, had much to do in shaping
our Christian characters. And when
now we pray for success upon our
labors we seem to hear the Lord say-
thou I answered
and before thou me, I gird-
ed
And we don't believe that God can
make all things work together for
good to His people unless He begins
very far back and looks very far
Legal Notices
CRAVEN COUNTY ITEMS.
News That is Transpiring in and
Around Our Section.
VANCEBORO, N. C, Aug.
farmers are busy curing tobacco and
it is ripening fast.
Cotton is opening in our section. If
it stays dry the farmers will have to
begin picking before they get through
curing tobacco.
It is dry In our part of the county,
and crops need rain, especially peas
and potatoes.
The farmers in our section will be
very busy for the next month,
is also ripening fast.
A large crowd of our farmers attend-
ed the picnic at New Bern Saturday
and some few at Ayden.
One of our most prominent young
men, Mr. Tom Campbell, left last
week for New Bern.
Some of our young people attend-
ed the ice cream supper Friday night
over at Bay Bush.
Mr. J. Clark went to Ayden Sat-
and brought home his little
daughter who has been visiting rel-
there.
Mr. J. Q. Adams returned home
Saturday night from New Bern, where
he had been to the
Last Monday evening a large wind
and hail storm struck through the
section about miles from Vanceboro
and almost ruined crops. It was the
severest that has been for years. We
heard it stripped the stalks of tobacco
leaving only two or three leaves to
the stalks on some of the crops where
it went, and also damaged corn and
cotton very bad.
North Carolina, Pitt County,
In the Superior Court
Abram Mills
vs.
By virtue of an execution directed
to the sheriff of Pitt county, from the
supreme court of Pitt county in the
above entitled action, I will on Mon-
day, the 28th day of August 1911,
it being the first Monday of the Aug-
civil term of the superior court
of Pitt county, at the hour of
o'clock noon, at the court house door
in said county, sell to the highest
bidder for cash, to satisfy said ex-
all the right title and
which the said the defend-
ant, on the 15th day of January 1903,
or at any time thereafter, had in the
following description of real estate to
One tract of land lying and
being in the county of Pitt and state
of North Carolina, and in
township, beginning at a small bridge
in the Joseph Jones line, and runs
with a ditch to the head nearly op-
the house, then S. W. several
small pines in the head of the
then N. 1-2 east poles to a
stake in the Joseph Jones line,, then
S. 1-2 east 2-3 poles to the be-
ginning, containing acres more or
less. Also one other tract of land
in said township, county, and state.
Beginning in the Franklin line on the
big ditch in the Fred Whitefield, then
running up the ditch to Henry Bed-
line, then with Henry Bed-
line to Lorenzo
line, then with Lorenzo
line to Biggs Stock's line then with
the Jones and Hue back to the
beginning, containing acres, more
or less.
Also one other tract of land In said
county and state, bounded on the north
by B. W. Tucker, on the east by the
Haddock land, on the south by B.
Tripp, on the west by the county
road, containing acres, more or
less.
This the day of July 1911.
S. I. DUDLEY,
Sheriff of Pitt county
Cuts and bruises may be healed In
septic and causes such injuries to
Chamberlain's Liniment. It is an anti-
about one-third the time required by
the usual treatment by applying
heal without maturation. This
also relieves soreness of the
muscles and rheumatic pains. For
sale by all dealers.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power of sale, con-
in a certain mortgage deed and
delivered by W. B. and wife,
Sidney F. to F. J. Forbes, on
the 2nd day of August, 1910, and duly
recorded in the office of the Register
of Deeds of Pitt county, In Book 0-9,
page the undersigned will expose
to public sale, before the court house
door, in Greenville, to the highest
bidder, for cash, on Friday,
8th, that property lying and be-
in the county of Pitt and state
of North Carolina, and in the town of
Greenville, described as follows, to-
One lot beginning at the northeast
corner of Fourteenth and Washington
streets and running north with Wash-
street feet; thence east par-
with Fourteenth street feet;
thence south parallel with Washing-
ton to Fourteenth street; thence with
Fourteenth street to the beginning,
containing 1-4 acre. Also lot adjoin-
the aforesaid lot on north and
fronting on Washington street
feet and running back parallel with
first described lot feet, contain-
1-4 acre. Also one other lot ad-
joining second lot above described,
and fronting on Washington street,
and running back feet, contain-
1-4 acre. Being same three lots
deeded to Sidney F. by Moses
King and wife.
Also that lot bounded by
street and Tar river, which was re-
conveyed to W. B. by
Reuben Clark and Emma Clark, by
deed, which appears of record in Pitt
county, in Book P-9, page and
all improvements, milling plant, ma-
and every article of every
description now on said property or
lots.
To satisfy said mortgage.
This August 8th, 1911.
F. J. FORBES, Mortgagee.
S. T. Hooker, Owner of debt
F. G. James Son,
Attorneys.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of an order of the
court of Pitt county, in Special
Proceeding 1684. entitled C. J. Tucker
at the undersigned
commissioner, will sell for cash, be-
fore the court house door, in Green-
ville, N. C, on Monday. September
1911, the following described real
One tract of land in Pitt county,
Swift Creek township, known as lot
No. in the division of the Pugh land,
being the same allotted to J. L.
Tucker, beginning at a stake in
line and runs south 1-2
west poles to Tucker's line; thence
with his line north west poles
to a stake; then N. 1-2 cast
poles to line; thence with his
line east poles to his corner; then
with his other line to the beginning,
containing acres, more or less.
For accurate description, see division
of lands, Book pages 209-10, in
the clerk's office of Pitt county, in
an action entitled Laura Pugh, et
Also two lots in the said county of
Pitt, and in the town of Grifton, and
described as follows, One
lot beginning at a stake, corner of
Queen street and Brook's alley, and
running north west with Queen
street a distance of feet; thence
north east feet; thence south
east feet to Brook's alley;
thence south west with Brook's
to the beginning on Queen
Second lot beginning on Queen street
at the corner of J. C. lot, on
which his bar stands and running
with his line back toward
street feet; thence a westerly
course parallel with Queen street
feet; thence parallel with the first
line feet to Queen street; thence
down and with Queen street to the
beginning.
Also one other lot in the said town
of Grifton and in Lenoir county, be-
ginning at a stake on the side of the
public road leading from Grifton to
Old Field and running with
said road north 1-2 west yards
to a stake; thence south 1-2 west
yards to a stake; thence south
1-2 east yards to a thence
north 1-2 east yards to the be-
ginning, containing one acre, more or
less, known as the gin house lot, and
all machinery and improvements on
said lot; the interest to be sold in
this lot machinery, etc., is an
one-fourth.
Also one other lot in the said town
of Grifton and in Lenoir county, be-
ginning at a stake on Lenoir street,
the corner of the Powell lot and runs
with the Powell line north west
to the creek bank; then with the
creek bank feet down the creek to
a stake, Noah corner; thence
with said line south east
to a stake, on Lenoir street; thence
with Lenoir street feet to the be-
ginning, containing 1-20 of an acre,
more or less.
Also one other piece in Pitt county,
Swift Creek township, beginning at
a stake, J. L. Tucker and Moseley
Spivey corner; and running with said
Tucker and Spivey line to
the center of the canal; then down
the various course of the canal to
said Tucker and Spivey other line;
thence with said line northerly to the
beginning, containing one acre, more
or less, being the same piece conveyed
to J. L. Tucker by Moseley Spivey
and wife, March 1909.
Said lands are being sold for par-
This August 1911.
J. B. JAMES,
Crying babies, like good suggestions
should be carried out.
church 3-4 feet to a stake In the
side of John Z. Brook's livery stable
lot; thence with said John Z. Brooks
livery stable lot line feet to a
stake, corner of John Z. Brook's
stable lot cu said street; thence
with said street 3-4 feet to the
beginning, containing 1-24 of an acre,
more or less.
Sale to satisfy said mortgage.
This the 17th day of August, 1911.
R. C. BRO.,
Mortgagee.
F. G. James Son,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk as
tor of the estate of Mrs. Margaret J.
Moore, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons having claims
against said deceased, to present
the same, duly authenticated, on or
before the 17th day of June, 1912, or
this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. All persons indebted
to said estate will make immediate
payment.
This June 17th, 1911.
C. G. LITTLE. Administrator,
of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.
LAND SALE.
By virtue a mortgage, executed
and delivered by Simeon Foster to
R. C. Bro., on the 23rd
day of November, 1905, which
gage was duly recorded in the office
of the Register of Deeds of Pitt
county, in Book J-8, page the
undersigned will sell, for cash, be-
fore the court house door, in Green-
ville, on Monday, September 1911,
the following described parcel or lot
of land, situate in the county of Pitt,
and in the town of Begin-
at the corner of Helen and
Brook's lot on the street running by
the M. E. church, and runs with said
Helen and Brook's line feet to a
stake; thence in a parallel line with
the street, running by the M. E.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk of Pitt county
as administratrix of the estate of W.
W. Perkins, deceased, notice is here-
by given to all persons Indebted to
the estate to make immediate pay-
to the undersigned; and all
persons having claims against said
estate are notified to present the
same to the undersigned for payment
on or before the 19th day of July,
1912, or this notice will be plead in
bar of recovery.
This 19th day of July, 1911.
VIRGINIA H. PERKINS,
of W. W. Perkins.
Escaped With His Life.
years ago I faced an
awful writes H. B. Martin,
Port Harrelson, S. C. said I
had consumption and the dreadful
cough I had looked like it, sure
enough. I tried everything I could
hear of for my cough, and was
the treatment of the best doctor
In Georgetown, S. C, for a year, but
could get no relief. A friend advised
me to try Dr. King's New Discovery.
I did so, and was completely cured.
I feel that I owe my life to this great
throat and lung Its positively
guaranteed for coughs, colds, and all
bronchial affections. and
Trial bottle free at all druggists-
Central Barber Shop
HERBERT
. Proprietor
Located in main business of town,
Four chairs In operation and each
one presided over by a skilled
barber Ladles waited at their
home.





,.,.,, . .,.
it;.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector.
BLACK JACK ITEMS.
Happenings In Tort ion of
BLACK JACK. X. C, Aug.
are having sonic showers occasionally
after so dry and hot weather.
The crowd was somewhat small at
Church Sunday. Elder our
pastor, did not come to till his
so Brother J. A. Hudson
tilled it.
Mr. J. H. Clark returned from
last Wednesday.
Misses Bertha Spain, Bessie
and Maggie Corbitt attended
church here
Among those who attended church
from Sunday were Mrs. J.
O. Proctor and daughter, Miss Susie,
Messrs. A. O. Clark, J. O. Johnson,
Mr. and Mr. Warren.
Mr. W. V. Clark went to Greenville
Saturday evening
Mrs. E. S. is very sick at
the present, also Mrs. W. L. Clark.
Mr. Henry Mills, of South Carolina,
came in last Wednesday to visit
friends and relatives.
Mr. Moseley Mills left a few days
ago for John Hopkins hospital for an
operation for appendicitis.
Messrs. Marshall Buck and Zeno
Mills left this morning for
High School.
Mr. Roy Venters passed through our
town today en route to
Several of our farmers will finish
curing tobacco this week.
The rattling of corn stalks will
soon be over, at the present it is in
full blast.
Old Time Hotel
It might be interesting to some of
our readers to know that at one time
hotel rates were fixed by the county
officials. In ransacking through some
old records in the clerk's office some
time ago, found the following order
in a record
Wednesday, Aug. 1812.
Ordered that the following rates be
fixed and observed by the ordinary
keepers in this county,
For horse to hay per night.
corn per gallon .
oats per gallon .
breakfast with coffee .
breakfast without coffee .
dinner.
supper .
wine per pint .
French brandy, per 1-2 pt.
brandy, per half
rum, per half pint .
whiskey, per half pint .
cider, per quart .
lodging, per night .
Joshua Hanks,
Samuel
Jno. A.
Wm. Ballard,
Justices.
Grayson, Va., Gazette.
New Advertisements.
Win. E. Haywood, the new grocer,
calls attention to his nice line of
heavy and fancy groceries. He makes
a specialty of fruit and produce.
The Sam White Piano Company
want to talk to you about a first-
class Instrument. They are home
folks and will treat you right.
It Was Dead, Too.
Not only is Whichard imparting
of his fine knowledge to The
Greenville Reflector, also some of
the rich coloring of his hair. Did you
notice the red headline. The
tor forth brethren
NOTICE
To The Tobacco Farmers of Flit And
Adjoining Counties.
Having been raised on a tobacco
farm near the town of
the largest tobacco market in
the state and for the past few years
connected with Ayden tobacco market,
I feel that I am in position to assert,
with a reasonable degree of accuracy,
that the Greenville tobacco market
is one of the best in the state. From
my experience on a small market, I
became convinced that I could not
protect the interest of tobacco farm-
selling on my floor, and therefore
decided to establish myself with a
larger market. I shall this year have
charge of the Gum warehouse for the
Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Com-
I want to say to every tobacco
farmer, and especially to those who
have sold with me in the past, that,
as manager of the Gum warehouse,
for the above company, I am
in position to thoroughly pro-
your interest in the sale of your
tobacco, and every pound that is sold
on this floor shall have my personal
supervision and personal interest.
I want to thank all of my old
whoso patronage deeply
and to say to those who
have never sold with me, that if you
will give me a trial, I will endeavor
to make you a customer and make
you feel at home at THE
GUM.
J. J.
Mgr., Gum Warehouse.
ITEMS.
What Happened There The Fast
Week.
N. C, Aug. and
Mrs. J. G. Stokes spent Sunday near
Greenville.
Miss Clyde Chapman, of Winter-
ville, who has been visiting her aunt,
Mrs. W. S. returned home
Monday.
Miss Lula of Greenville,
is spending this week with Miss
Sallie Corey.
Miss Gertie Barrow, of
is spending this week with Miss Lela
Roach.
Messrs. C. L. Stokes and J. B.
finished putting in tobacco
Monday.
Mr. L. C. Burney spent Wednesday
Vanceboro.
Quite a number of our people at-
tended service at Hancock Sunday.
Messrs. Roy Kittrell and W. A.
Tucker, of Greenville, spent Sunday
here.
Misses Ida Burney and Faye E.
Corey spent last week with Mrs.
Levi Stokes, in
Miss Bertha Holloway, of Grifton,
is visiting Misses Sallie and Lyda
Chapman.
If you are unfortunate enough to
stick a nail in your foot, our
new doctor for good
Buy it now. Now is the time to buy
a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
era and Remedy. It is
most certain to be needed before the
summer is over. This remedy has no
superior. For sale by all dealers.
An ordinary case can,
as a rule, be cured by a single dose
of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Remedy, remedy has
no superior for bowel complaints. For
sale by all dealers.
A woman thinks her husband the
man on earth the day he leads
King of all Farm Wagons.
The man who uses Weber wagons will use
His judgment is good. Why not fol-
low his advice We have a Weber wagon
awaiting your inspection. If you want to
save yourself money, investigate. For sixty-
six years the Weber has been the pride of
all users. Use one and let it be your pride.
We have literature concerning this wagon
that we want you to call for. Call to-day.
Let us talk over the wagon proposition. If
you don't buy, you will know the merits of
the Weber wagon and will be in position to
know a good wagon when you see it. Get a
Web r and you will the est. We have
want. We will be glad to see you
any time.
Hart Hadley
Greenville, N. C.
Royster stock and Powders
by
L. P. ROYSTER, OXFORD, N. C.
Is the best Stock and Poultry Powder used. Always gives
results. Guaranteed cholera cure for hogs. Sold by
J. W. Bryan, Greenville, and other dealers
LICENSES.
Four For While and Four For Colored
Couples.
Register of Deeds Moore issued the
following marriage licenses during
last
While.
n. M. Johnson and Emily Mew-
born.
S. I. Dudley and Alma Tucker.
M. T. Tripp Andrews.
Sutton and Lucy Pollard.
Colored.
Samuel Moore and Martha
ton.
John Harris and Susan Dixon.
Henry Brock and Hattie Hill.
jerry and
Dr. Hyatt
Dr. H. Hyatt will be at Hotel
Bertha, September 4th and 5th, Mon-
day and Tuesday, to treat diseases of
the eye, ear, nose and throat.
Seemed Give Him n new Stomach.
Buffered intensely after eating
and no medicine or treatment I tried
seemed to do any writes H. M.
Editor of the Sun, Lake
View, Ohio. first few doses of
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets gave me surprising relief and
the second bottle seemed to give me a
new stomach and perfectly good
null by oil
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, lite Most Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1911.
Number
WILL OPEN FRIDAY
Everything in Readiness for the
Season
STAR WAREHOUSE HAS FIRST SALE
The Market Will Have A Strong
Corps of Forces
of the Will
Lead The Eastern Markets.
The tobacco warehouse row in
Greenville is a busy place just now
with the final preparations for the
opening market which takes
place on Friday, September first.
The opening of the tobacco market
season is always hailed with delight,
for it means employment to more
people, more money in circulation
among the farmers and more trade
for the business people. Following
as it does the dull summer months,
everything takes on new life and
everybody gets busy when the
co market opens.
The of Greenville
were never in better shape to handle
a crop than they are for the com-
season, and they are determined
to make Greenville hold its place as
the leader of the Eastern markets.
The market this season being some
weeks later in opening than formerly
has given the farmers more time to
get their crops cured and ready for
market, hence it is expected that
sales will be brisk almost from the
outset. The crop this year Is a very
short one, and that may mean a
short season. If prices are good at
the opening they ought to be
good for the entire the farm-
will no doubt sell freely early in
the season, but if prices are not sat-
there will likely be a hold-
back until they get better. Sure-
the buyers should appreciate the
shortness of the crop and pay for it
all that it is
One warehouse here, the Peoples,
having been destroyed by fire since
last season, only four warehouses
will be operated on the Greenville
market this season, but they have
ample room to handle all the tobacco
that can come here. The four houses
are Star, Brick, Gum and Lib-
all well known to the planters
who sell on this market. The open-
sale will take place Friday at
the Star, and then proceed at the
other houses in the order named
above. Manager Foxhall, of the Star,
says that as it is up to him to make
the opening prices with the first sale,
he is going to set a high pace that
the others must hustle to approach.
While we are not yet able to give
a list of the buyers on the Green-
ville market for this season, as all
of them have not come, it is safe to
say no market will have a stronger
corps and they will be here for
with ample facilities for taking
care of all their purchases.
The working forces of the several
warehouses will be as
Star Warehouse.
Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Com-
proprietors.
F. D. Foxhall. manager.
N. D. Young, assistant manager.
G. H. Baker, auctioneer.
E. A. Brown, floor manager.
H. S. bookkeeper.
G R Lanier, assistant bookkeeper.
Brick Warehouse.
Brinkley, Rice Spain, proprietors.
W. L. Rice, auctioneer.
D. S. Spain, bookkeeper.
G. E. Harris, assistant bookkeeper.
John Hutchings, floor manager.
Miss Jessie Stilley, stenographer.
Mrs. W. L. Rice, cashier.
Gum Warehouse.
Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Com-
proprietors.
J. J. Gentry, manager.
J. II. assistant to man-
ager.
B. T. Cannon, auctioneer.
J. L. Gibson, floor manager.
L. H. Bowling, bookkeeper.
H. N. Beasley, assistant book-
keeper.
Liberty Warehouse.
Hooker, Lovelace Lipscomb, pro-
F. S. auctioneer.
R. A. Tyson, Jr., bookkeeper.
J. T. Timberlake, assistant book-
i keeper.
Now, farmers of Pitt and
rounding counties, the warehouse-
men and buyers of the Greenville
market are ready for you. and when
you want the best prices to be had
anywhere for your tobacco, you only
have to bring it to the Greenville
market. Not only the warehouse-
men and buyers will make it agree-
able for you, but the business
generally of the town will give
you a cordial welcome. The banks
have ample money to cash your
checks, and the merchants are ready
to extend you every courtesy. In the
meantime keep your eye on the The
Reflector, for this paper is going to
visit hundreds of you every day, and
it will keep you posted on what the
Greenville market is doing.
FORMER BETHEL PHYSICIAN.
SUSAN SPARKS BEAD.
End Came Suddenly Monday After-
noon.
A little past o'clock, Monday
afternoon, Mrs. Susan Sparks died;
very suddenly at the home of Mr.
Everett on Pitt street.
Mrs. Sparks, who had been spend-
her time alternately with her
three children, was here visiting her
son. Mr. J. M. Sparks, and intended
going to Ayden Monday evening to
spend a while with her daughter
there. With Mrs. she was on
the way to the Atlantis Coast Line
depot, and when near the Christian
church Mrs. Sparks complained of
feeling sick and wanting some
cine and they went to the home of
Mrs. near by. When they
reached the home Mrs. Sparks was
much worse and passed away in a
few minutes after lying down.
Mrs. Sparks was years of age
and leaves three children, Mr. J. M.
Sparks, of Greenville; Mr. J. W.
Sparks, of Conway, S. C; and Mrs.
J. A. Forrest, of Ayden.
The remains were taken to Kin-
this afternoon for burial there.
Death of Doctor G. A.
peat
BETHEL, N. C, Aug.
of this community were deeply
grieved to learn on Sunday evening,
of the death of Dr. G. F. Thigpen,
formerly of this city.
A graduate of the medical school
the University of Maryland, Dr.
Thigpen came to Bethel as a young
man soon after receiving his degree,
and located here for the practice of
his profession. His bright and sun-
disposition, his thoughtfulness and
consideration for others, no less than
his exceptional ability as a
of medicine, soon won for him
a host of friends and admirers.
Until February, when failing health
necessitated his retirement, it was
his pleasure to bring cheer and com-
fort to the sick and distressed,
himself, as was the measure
of the man, to relieve the burdens of
his fellows. A thorough Christian
gentleman, a humanitarian in the
strictest sense, and a physician of
the old school, his untimely death is
indeed a great loss to the
and the heartfelt sympathy of
his many friends go out to the
members of the family in
their hour of trial.
The funeral services were held this
afternoon at the home of his father,
Mr. Lafayette Thigpen, near Mildred,
in Edgecombe county, after which the
remains were interred in the family
plot with the rites of the Woodmen
of America.
Dr. Thigpen is survived by his wife,
formerly Miss Beulah Sparks, of
one son. Guy T., Jr.; his
father, Mr. Lafayette Thigpen, and a
large family of brothers and sisters.
An Afflicted Family.
The family of Mr. Eli Powell, of
Carolina, is afflicted with
He has lost two daughters,
Misses May and Crissie, in the last
ten days and two others are seriously
ill with the fever.
he Recent Hail.
Mr. F. F. Carr, of Green,
in Greene county, spent today here.
He said the severe hail in his section
Sunday before last did not do
together as much damage as was
first feared. Some of his neighbors,
however, were heavy sufferers.
It doesn't take a woman long to
come to the she is try-
to sharpen a pencil.
v .


Title
Eastern reflector, 25 August 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 25, 1911
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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