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DEPARTMENT
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON I
Agent of The Eastern Reflector tor Winterville and Vicinity-Advertising Rates on Application
N. C, July A new lot of Lamps Just
The Pit County School Barber Co.
Toe A. U. Cox Mn- Mrs. Albion and Miss Dora
ore com- Haddock, who has been the guests of
durable. Terms i Mrs. A. W. left yesterday to visit
are liberal.
TOO MUCH RAIN THROUGH-
OUT THE COTTON BELT.
BAB CAUSER GENERAL
DETERIORATION.
.; II
red any-
. the market.
come to us. we have Hie desk for
you.
A. W. Ange, Alton
Kid Misc Dora Haddock, pent Wed-
visiting LaFayette Cox.
an- nice f
cud caskets. Prices are and
can famish nice hearse
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co.
Mica Hargett, of Richmond.
is Visiting Misses Ethel and
Carr
Spring Dress Goods.
Embroidery and Laces Ci.- Sea
lot Barber i Co
Mies Lucy Hell Langston, and her
Miss Lessie King, of Durham.
were in town yesterday.
For nice, freak Fish, v. nail,
on I
days.
H. Jackson and family, of
Cary, came in Thursday to
and
For cold of call
L. ;. e until
Mr. J. L. Jackson. of Greenville, was
in . y.
Just in A i. e if La
u. Call In i Hat
Barber Co.
Ai.-. W F, C la i. the
week In town i . ; . tin l.
r PI Is the kind you
lie.- i. Si . A. . i
Mr. He i ox to
today.
call your i I o new
line Gs iV.
Mi ; Kittrell u Tues-
day re she has
been the c. T. s.
For h. i K in l Hen
A. C
X. C.
C. . Smith r I
trip in Craven
of C i . Mfg. C i.
w are g . . . i n .
don be . A. . Co.
Cos
day from a visit to and
Washington.
. .
ion's bi .
Where In to .
. c. July
Mr. C. T. Cox left . i
. ,. .,; , ft
I.
Matting Oil for the
Buy some,
Barber Co.
OS .- . ; c , ;, ,
I I . I . ;, I
Smith . a. i;
.- i ., i ; i ,;.
Before bi . ; .
Cards. .
Mr. M. B. ; ,,
Norfolk.
Pea in I Pea .;. by
W. .
n-o v for a II ed
die-; fl r I . ;.
Calico d . .; i
to
g to tic;
Wall G .,.
. Pi
Pie
Shin . ;
Co.
Cos .
Ice I ,
business.
Kb c ,,
Q . ,
I. Danville, Va.,
vi i Or in I Sunday.
H regret when yon
a Buggy,
by A. Cox Manufacturing
OH Winterville, c
g. sud Mrs. l. l. Kittrell attended
Hanks
Sam age, Fish,
PP R. W. Ball, at Johnson stand
oh railroad
Mr. Allen Cannon Miss Lee
Nichols, of Ayden, Sunday vis-
lung Muses and Kittrell.
The A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. are in
to give you Che best
Trucks Flues for your money.
They made extensive
their manufacture this
near Haddock X Roads.
Fresh Herrings at
ton, Barber Co.
Mr. A. G. Cox left today to attend
tie State at Charlotte.
We have Needles. Bobbins, and
Shuttles, for any Sewing Machine in
the country. Also needle threaders,
the very thing for affected eyes or
dark days Harrington, Barber Co.
Mrs. F. Tucker returned
day from Henderson, where she has
been relatives.
We have put In an assortment of
for all
Barber Co.
Mr. K. A. wife, left to-
day for
is your soul Let us
Show you our new lot of Shoes.
Harrington, Barber
Miss of
who been spending time with
here, left Saturday for
People who have not kept In touch
with the progress of developments in
most of the southern states will be
surprised to find how much is really
being accomplished, even at this lime
when business is supposed to be
along at a rather slow rate. The
only feature of southern enterprise
which appears to be at all below
normal is cotton manufacturing. The
railroads are generally gaining
ground. is active building in
the traction field to connect cities
Prospect for Very Short
County Poorest on
Small Plant Bad Stand.
its issue of July 11th. the New
Orleans Times-Democrat gives a re-
port of the condition of the cotton
crop, based upon correspondence
throughout the belt, from
which the following summary is taken
reports favorable
the States of Oklahoma
and
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A torpid liver deranges the wool
system, sod produces
SICK
Costiveness,
Sallow Skin and Piles.
There Is no better remedy for these
common diseases than DR.
LIVER PILLS, as trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.
Haste Paper.
With the gradual but ever
price of all qualities of paper, the
nation is confronted with a problem
THE CAKE BAKING
Troves
Texas and distinct deterioration a
the remainder of the
by electrical lines. A single project
of suburban extended
from Anderson. S. C. to Durham, X.
C, involves an expenditure of
000.000.
Probably the most
in the whole Held of southern
industry Is the extent to which local
capital labor is its way
into the smaller enterprises. These
have arisen to meet the needs of
markets in a much larger
demand been created by the in-
crease In the buying capacity of farm-
throughout the remainder of the belt
the west, the Held, as a rule, are
clean and well worked. A general
rain would prove
A nice six key Soda Fountain for and the of the mill
Among these are wood-working es-
foundries, Implement
factories, plants,
and repairing; construction o
sale -R. U.
Mr. a blind man. will give
picture show in the school
i. Thursday night. Ho prom-
. . good show we hope
. of people will attend.
have purchased the
as the Milling
and Mfg. will be ready soon
. do general repair work
i timber. Harrington, Bar-
bi
v came in
. n Greenville.
A Matting just in.- A
W Co.
Rev. A, Adams, of will
vices the Baptist church
in .
now in in
. II every day and general repair
work Barber
. Co,
Li and Chapman
rd
I Goods and
. is in. Bi Her buy while
A v. Co.
Eu and little
Bell, of Wilson, came in yes-
. vis Miss man.
. I ti for sail.- Harrington
I'd. Winterville, x C.
Mr. went to Ayden
Sunday,
Rev. F. of Greenville,
yesterday and assisted in the
a la ll night.
Miss Jones to Ayden
yesterday.
Mr A. w to
yesterday.
i A HOTEL.
In Beat Season hi iii-
Sunday.
famous Atlantic Hotel it ire-
now In the n hi of i
th bi most
y. The
ell known i
In th very number
a an k
I ; .
son and can fill your orders prompt-
of our people went to More-
l City Sunday.
Bar load of Top Drafting for Cot-
ton Just W. Ange Co
N. C.
vehicles and the of Hour am
feed mills. TO might be ad-
vegetable canning establish-
many of which take up an
Increasing pan of fruits and veg-
Brown in south.
Growth in such as
has helped to transform the entire
range of southern O;.
of the changes is teen in the tendency
to concentrate the employment of la-
and capital upon a. smaller acreage
Parallel with bas come
policy providing for
of a which
thing
A third change is the gradual
i farm produce to the
of the and cities, with
regard to the current demands if
mill population tor food
This given a Impulse t.
dairying. I n Men of live stock
for meat II . and the growth
i n d . conveniently i lark
able fr point of lion.
The . g ailed for banks,
. i tr . a
s and for various
forms of utilization of surplus
resources, which with depart.
from a purely agricultural to a
growing coin-
organization of the
With have coma the
of ;. i . talent among
the . in the capacity
with which .-. enterprises and
have in the main been con-
ed. Held of opportunity tor
business talent In tho South be-
coin one the nu . g i
; d by n i a
a tun I ties. I
of the Mississippi river, and
in the Slates of Louisiana and
continuous rainfall has multiplied
the farmer's difficulties, resulting in
deterioration over large areas, and
greatly increasing the Importance of
seasonable weather henceforth and of
a late
has been some abandonment
of cotton acreage, but insect activity
appears to have been largely confined
lo previously infested
The Greenville correspondent in the
Times-Democrat made the following
report for Pitt
X. C, July the
June report there has a
ration of about per cent, in the cot-
ton crop in Pitt county. The
r of the season so far has been ex-
bed, the weather and
rains causing small plants, poor stand
ail low condition generally.
have appeared in this section
then is a small insect, supposed
lo be the root louse, that has cause
many plants to die.
The condition of the crop Is the
poorest this sect ion has ever had for
the time of year, with the plants
smaller than ever known for the
week in
paper Is collected and used to
age. There is no more needless ex-
than that involved in scat-
waste paper. This paper If
gathered together may be used in
making more paper or may be used
to commercial advantage Many
ties are beginning to realize this great
waste which may be avoided and
ed to the advantage of the city. The
gathering of waste and bailing the
same has been profitable to a number
of cities and would be worth a trial In
The country is being
flooded with pamphlets go
straight to the waste basket. Save
this waste paper and you will help the
groat conservation
Salem Journal.
Success of
The Prize
The cake baking contest, Friday
conducted by Mr. John Stan-
berry, was a success in every way.
Quite a number of ladies entered the
contest, and the display of was
much admired by the many
The prize winners were as fol-
First J. L. Little.
Second J. B. Cherry.
Third
Fourth B. Williams.
Fifth E, G. Couch.
Sixth L. C. Arthur.
Seventh J. A. Ricks.
After the prizes were awarded the
cakes were removed to the
Theater and sold at auction for the
benefit of the public library. Those
who saw the display of cakes,
will not have any doubt in
future as to the superior quality of
Gilt Edge and Royal flour and
Mr. left on the night
train for Washington to conduct a
similar contest in that place.
Accident In
to Jail.
Robert Hanrahan, charged with as-
sault with a deadly weapon. Bryant
and Arch Wiggins, charged
with housebreaking, all colored, were
brought from Pitt county Saturday and
lodged Jail here to await trial at
Greenville court in
Free
By Wire to The Reflector.
Detroit, Mich. July party of Shelters Fire Works Plant
persons were hurt, six fatally, when By Wire to The
a construction ear on the Everett, Mass., July terrific
railway .-. special carrying which occurred today shut-
large number of people a the plant of the East Everett
Works Co. The loss
A TO
tor
i .- all
. .
I I ilia
.
i to be
I ea of
on all tin .
. In the hotel
;. i .
i. id Sui in din
ed one a
i tat
., c.
h Mb . ,
and i ill one
i couples pan
and Miss I tobacco
ii g, . . . . i proves at least
i.
Tobacco i.-. one of our sup .
but . .,,,. ,; i;.,. poor nun
chi a, . Pi p
lure i i. la from -1
per int. great
r than It I
N. i; , cot u .
mo demand-
Tl .
it now
i, or two for a
ti . that the
ti t elf-
and to
. . i . I b lo ii s
. .
II I, l I
. . acquired more
late it hive
r i
ii g lb dancers. A ti the
there wore moonlight Ball-
parties, ova of them taking along
elaborate lunches.
Col, Prank Morton, the
i of the Atlantic Hotel, h-.
nothing undone tor the pleasure
and comfort of guests.
A number of Greenville
spent Saturday Sunday
there.
The Popular Han,
The man wins
popularity by being all things to all
mi n. wins bin popularity very
often by shut when
IS ought out, and by
doing things when he ought to do
them. The man who nays things and
does OS be
in ti. in ca ;
widely In this and Eu-
rope, if the a-, quality of the
cigar baa raised, II la .
that there ins been some movement
in suppose ad-
even although ii ad-
that large combinations
can turn out abettor article than
the small manufacturer with a larger
margin of t o
There i a peculation worth
the In here, and
very little in London. The students of
economics would inclined to watch
such tor the
Indications pt a contraction hi business,
sufficiently d a curtail-
of Hie on s.
Wall
have the work and the Re-
has facilities for doing
work. Let's get together.
He Hope V ill Heed
Lighten Our Work.
The Reflector has quite a number of
correspondents In various parts of the
county, efforts in helping to
make their county paper more Inter-
are wry much appreciated.
we want to give them a few
which If they will heed will
greatly lighten our work this end
of the line.
Look carefully for news that is news
and do not put in items of people in
the same neighborhood calling on each
other for the afternoon or night. Only
give person items when people
from a distance come to your neigh-
or of people of your section
who really go away for a visit, storms,
tires, deaths, marriages,
Improvements of consequence and
TOp conditions are always Interesting
and should be noted.
Write only on one side of the paper
and in a large, clear band. Do not
jumble words spell every
word out in full, be careful to have
names correct, and plenty of space
between the lines. Baa writing close
together is a trial to the printers and
sometimes copy to git in the
it
The Up-to-date Hardware
r is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish,
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves, Enamelware, Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We a Ml Line of Wall Paints
easy to put hard to come off. Place
now with them and you will be
pleased.
Special is called to our line of
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders,
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail to see us before buying, they
can supply your wants, them a call.
c. ii.
Awarded to Central
On the board of com
o warded the contract for
building the new court house and now
Jail for i i t county to the Ci Car-
n Ca . i i., of Greensboro,
far i. Th re hid-
d in for the i . i from
i. bid of the company,
i the up to
At the i- can i e seen
county have
public buildings i will meet
the of the county for
years to come. Work will begin
the an early date and they I
will be pushed to completion as rapid-
as i consistent with good work.
The commissioners and building com-
have in getting the
contracts lot this early, and they will
look well alter the details of the work
as ii progress i.
Street,
.;
Will Locate Greenville,
The Reflector is glad to
Mr. Albion Dunn, of Scotland
Neck, Is to locate in Greenville
Ural of August, and will engage
In the practice of law here. He will
an Office In the new
will gain a good citizen in his Coming.
USED UNIVERSALLY
If
Si,
. M
Little and Stella
went out In Mr. Joseph
this afternoon to attend the I
birthday party or little Miss
Metal Shingles were r; years
V, c . tor being s
Hilt II
If arc it can only be you i. M know the
fact in the case.
They arc used today front the Atlantic to Pacific if all kinds
under all conditions,
never leak and la t a long a the
Itself without needing
For further detailed information to
O v
MERIDITH COLLEGE
Among the foremost fir Women in the South.
Arts covering nine departments, and including elective
courses in n and Bible, count for the A. decree. School
Organ, Violin and Voice Culture. School of An.
on Third Street. This town including Decoration, Designing and of F locution A. ad. my
prepares at t under a trained
director, full literary per ii eluding Uteri tuition, . m,
light. Mat, nurse, ordinary medicine all fees,
in the Club, to less. Next Sept. 1910. Address,
Prayer meeting In the churches to-
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Ned
I and child, went to New today.
R T. VANN, President,
Raleigh, North Carolina.
EASTERN
D. J. Editor
Truth In Preference to Fiction.
One Dollar Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JULY 1910.
No.
ON WORK
FOR GOOD ROADS.
I f F COM
I t
What of Bethel Say About
Good Section, Will be
Heard From.
The Bethel people are also talking
good roads, and here are expressions
from some of them.
Mr. M. O. Blount, want good
roads; I favor the township
Mr. S. It, Jones, thing that is
needed ail right enough; I have been
a good roads man a long time. Each
township should levy Its own tax.
Dr. V. A. Ward. certainly favor
good roads; mighty good
Dr. P. Manning, is la
favor of good roads. Think we should
have the township
Mr. W. J. Smith, is something
that is very Important. ought to
have better
Mr. J. E. Drown, to have good
roads; believe iii them myself. Don't
know what is the
Mr. G. It. need the
good roads
Mr. C. D. get
roads good enough lo suit
Mr. G. L. Moore, want good
roads. I approve of the best plan,
but we can't work fast enough. All
of the roads should be worked by
Mr. W. T. ought to
have better roads by all
Mr. M. G. Ford, want to see good
Mr. B. R. am in fa-
of bettor roads, on the township
A few more expressions of Ayden
that Show the sentiment of
the people in regard to good
Mr. J S. favor -fool
road, by best
Mr. R. L. Knot. advocate
Mr. J. T. Keel. am in
good
Mr. J. S. thing for
Mr. It. C. Cannon,
to haw goad
Mr A. K cannon. need good
roads
Mr. II. Coward, favor
Mr. like good road
an. hi favor of
Mr. S. Hodges, favor good
Dr. M. M. Sauls. heartily favor
anything for good
Mr. J. am for more roads
and
Mr. C. Smith, favor good roads
Mr. C. Coward. up good
Mr. W. K. Move. us have good
roads; bonds if necessary and lei our
children help pay It, they will enjoy
Mr. any man in the
world wants good roads. It's
D. Mark roads it,
what we
Mr. W. Blount, in favor of
good roads and have always
Mr. G. W. favor good
Mr. J. IS, Jones. favor the good
Mr. John Dennis, favor good,
roads by best
Mr. Guy Taylor, favor good roads
all
Mr. A. L. favor Let-
Mr. J. J. Edwards, always have
favored good roads; the question Is
what is the best
Mr. J. A. Willis. favor good roads
belief
Ir, J. T. Smith, Jr., want hard
roads, well
Mr. U. favor the town-
ship
Mr. J. H. Pierce, think we ought
to have good
Mr. J. J- can say
anything against good
Mr. C. L. Tyson, would like lo
see good
We will give full expression of the
people on all sides, if short
arc us.
APPLICATION TOR PARDON .
Application will be made to the Gov-
of North Carolina for the par-
don of John Adams and Lam Adams,
convicted at the January term of
Superior Court Pin county, of the
crime burning unoccupied how
and to the State prison for
a term two all persona
who approve the grant lug of
pardon are Invited to forward their
protests to the Governor without
iv
This July
THE
The List as by the Demo-
State Contention.
The State convention by a
vote confirmed the nomination
of judges made In the various dis-
and in advance ratified the
nomination to be in the
district In August In
district there was a deadlock between
E. B. of Ed-
Jones of Caldwell, and T. B.
el Wilkes. and the
in The
in the other districts to elect
this year
Second B. Peebles, of
North Hampton.
d W. Whedbee. of
Pi-
Fourth M. Cooke,
Of Franklin
Sixth district- Frank A. Daniels, of
Wayne,
Tenth district mill F. Long
of Iredell.
Eleventh district-H P. Lane, of
Rockingham.
Thirteenth
ion in August
Fourteenth H Justice,
of Rutherford.
S. Ad-
ams, of Buncombe.
Sixteenth S. Fer-
Haywood.
in the districts not
there are no elections this year.
High Point Enterprise
MUSICAL IN TRAINING SCHOOL
AUDITORIUM MONDAY NIGHT.
Cantaloupes have come to help out
the breakfast proposition.
IT IS ALREADY JUDGE
W. WHEDBEE
JUDGE WARD, FOR
Governor kitchen Appointed Mr.
who nun by
the t urn cut ion.
A noon Sat u lay an Inter-
occasion In the office of
or Court Clerk. Moore, it be-
administering the official t.
lion. Harry W. the new
judge the third judicial district of
North Carolina a number of
gathered to witness the
as soon as the oath had
solemnly administered and Judge
Whedbee had his signature
thereto, they showered congratulations
upon wishing him every honor
and success ill judicial career.
Judge Whedbee will hold his
court at Jacksonville, in
beginning Monday. 18th. He was
nominated judicial convention
just a week ago. the subsequent
resignation of Judge . L. Ward, fol-
lowed by Governor appointing
I he nominee of the people, causes him
at once to enter upon his career as
judge.
His elevation to tho Superior court
bench mode it necessary for Judge
Whedbee to tender his resignation as
mayor of Greenville, office he
held for sometime, and that
nation has been sent to the board of
aldermen. It reads as
To Hoard of Aldermen of the Town
of
hereby lender my resignation as
mayor of the town of Greenville,
C. to take effect at July
HI.
I regret the necessity of having to
take this course Just at this time.
I ho; ed be able assist you
fully organizing board
business for the year, but my
straightening out and mapping out tax
for appointment serum
following iii of
lion. L. Ward, has made it a
that make my
once
Permit me to each Individual
member of the for their uniform
kindness and me
my continuance in office is mayor of
Greenville. My -as both of-
and I to say that
, c Dean meal
town i had a
more of aldermen, and
hope that your every ail will
to the public welfare and growth
our city.
Allow me lib a from the may-
lo suggest that you continue
the y of making
; . i when you make them at all.
has always taught me that
Wisest course to pursue
public matters.
Very respectfully,
Hurry W. Whedbee.
I THE OF MISS
Al OF BALTIMORE.
The Program a Delightful Our Thai
Credit I All
Part Therein.
Every occasion that gives an in-
sight to the character of work being
done at East Carolina
Training school, is enough to arouse
increased pride in that splendid
Since the regular term of the
school closed a summer school has
been In progress that has been at-
tended by more than three hundred
public school teachers, a more
earnest and enthusiastic body of
teachers has never been brought to-
In one place. To begin with,
the very best Instructors were
to do teacher training, and
their work has been of
as to inspire the lo en-
and arouse in them an am-
and determination to put forth
their best efforts.
Cue of the special instructors for
this summer course is May
of one of the super-
visors of music in Baltimore city
schools and director of music in
High school. Her work here has
been Instructing the teachers
music for public schools, and how
well she Is accomplishing was
shown in the musical given Monday
night, program of which was as
follows;
Lord Is My
Vocal
Chapman.
Vocal Hut Smith.
Lillian Walters.
Chorus
There were forty or fifty voices in
the choruses, these taken random
from school and when ii was
ed that Miss had been
only four weeks, and
only a part of each day being de-
voted to music in its regular order
among others studies, the excellence
of the program was marvelous. The
voices blended with such harmony
and perfectness Of time and
as would have been creditable
of practice, instead of
only a few weeks.
At the conclusion of the program
the audience was asked lo join in
singing and the
um fairly rang With this grand slate
song.
The musical was planned and
en complimentary to the people of
Greenville, only a of them
took the advantage the
lo enjoy and bill fur
the presence of those attend-
tin- summer school the
would have been small. Every seal
in the auditorium should have been
for those who tailed lo go
certainly missed a feast good
music.
SHOT DOWN IN HIS SUMMER
HOME AT WINNETKA,
OF RAILROAD
ASSASSINATED.
Murderer Escapes Without Leaving
Clue to Reign of Crime
Driven Residents
By Wire The Reflector.
Chicago. July C.
president of the
Railway, was shot through the heart
and instantly killed in his summer
home in early this morn-
by a robber. Tho burglar es-
caped left no clue to his
Servants and women of the house
were aroused by the pistol shot, and
when went down to investigate
found Mr. lying on his face
in the hallway. The front was open
and an investigation showed that it
had be n prized open with a
assassination is the climax to
a reign of crime that has driven
dents of the fashionable Shore
suburbs almost to a of frenzy.
Mrs. that her husband
heard a noise on the lower Boor,
and Mi. went down to learn
the cause, was shot as soon as
he reached the lower door. She was
the only person awake in the house
time, but the shot aroused
Mr. was years old, and be-
his career us a telegraph op-
age of rising through
various promotions until he reached
of lines.
v. n JACK
What g
Going on Down
Township.
A FALKLAND
u Record v Wheat and
Hurt Ill Beat.
Data
Black N. C. July 1810,
W. of
tilled his appointment here
Saturday and Sunday.
Miss Mills, who is attending
the E. . T. T. S. at Greenville, spent
Saturday and Sunday at home. She
was accompanied by her friend. Miss
Maggie Who is also attending
the training school. They returned
Mr. w. l. Clark left this morning
for Baltimore, to see ills son. J, H.
Clark, who has been there for more
than weeks.
The Union Fri-
We hope to see a large crowd
out to the meeting.
We had quite a large crowd
lo our Sunday school Sunday. We
invite you to come
Sunday.
We had one of the largest rains
of the season Sunday night.
Crops are better, corn and
cotton especially. Tobacco has com-
the growth. Some of
Hi are not putting in any
Week.
BREAK DOWN.
W. U. King in to till
that one of his neighbors, Mr. w. s.
K. Smith, of Falkland township, calm-
in lo see him Monday, and while here
Ml. Smith told what lie had done in
raising wheat and outs this year. His
record is a good one. and worth Other
Hying to reach.
Mr. Smith harvested 7- bushels of
wheat from acres, one of these
acres be used pounds of CI
and the yield that acre was
bushels, the other two acres
be used pounds each
With a yield of bushels per acre.
acres in he threshed
bushels.
Thicken.
We have heard of chick
ens. three-legged chickens,
even mi occasional one adorned
with four legs, but not until now
so far as is do we
lo have noted existence Of
one that had a single leg Mr.
I, J. Elks, of township, tills
us that one of his hens
with a hatching of recently,
.- -i lie- inn was
bad but one I Others this par-
chicken was as well funned as
any I ho blood
A Lady Vina in The
Party,
Mr. John family and
guests, motoring in lost evening from
Ocean View, had a rather trying ex-
The; struck tho storm and
running lain a small on
car flooded cud Stopped
about miles from Suffolk. A
phone message from a ti farm
brought Dr. D. L. to the res-
cue in his touring car. When the
rescued reached ho Dr.
car found the run swollen
over the bridge and They
back got in U
four a- over another road.
Mr. the
were so big and so had to
dip a handkerchief oil of tho
lamps null rub their faces
hands to keep from being almost de-
Suffolk Herald.
Miss Manning, Of Greenville,
was one pf the referred to
above. She says it was a thrilling
experience the party had. but afford-
ed then much amusement after they
had reached their in
CANADIAN RAILROAD
I Completely Tied up Had u
Freight Train l Moving
Wire to The Reflector.
Montreal, July 10.000 em-
idle and freight completely
tied up throughout the entire system
as a result of the strike the Grand
Railroad, the actual combat
of opposing forces began today, with
efforts of the company operate
traffic. Employees of freight trains
were provided with arms and
to protect prop-
of the railroad. Tl. strikers.
however, are not Interfering and
there has been no disposition lo
Many strike breakers are being
rushed in, but as yet there are few
capable train crews and not a freight
train is running, While passenger and
mail greatly behind time. The
chief effort of the strikers is to get
the engineers lo join them. The rail-
road has already lost thousands of
In perishable
Taken Melt a Train,
Mr. James on ex-
to Ci .
and suffered a painful be-
fore gelling b in after
eating dinner he lo the surf
remained in , . quit
white. On the return i Rom on
the train was.
attack of cramp colic ca. near
dying In fore I. ill i
is much Improved la lay.
NEGRO GIRL HAKES
HIGH DIVE WELL.
DOWN HEAD I
Timely Assistance Witt oM
Her U.
Mr. Fleming, who lives a
few miles from town tells US an
accident, or what came near
an accident, occurred at In
home a few days i The Incident
looked Serious, tut
after was
Mrs. Fleming out In the yard
looking alter laundering
and had a colored girl helping
Tue went to the well, the old
fashioned o; en hind. i draw some
water, and losing he balance tum-
bled head Orel i . curb and
down sue I. Mrs I
called for help i ml
Oil the I as Mr.
Fleming looked a . the
the girl i lie arc
head Up from I valor. He
lowered tho p an i I lie girl
of tile Well
I for l
. a lint n
.- ii., she
sot.
CONGRESSMAN SMALL
HELPING THE WORK.
SECURES K OF
road
for Farmers in Con-
i With Roads Meeting
His Letter Explains.
There is every indication that
good roads convention to be held In
Greenville on first Monday in Au-
gust is to be a great occasion for
Pitt county. In this connection the
following letter from Congressman
John H. Small, makes some timely
suggestions and shows his interest
this good
Washington, X, C, July is,
Mr, H. A. White.
Greenville, K.
Dear Mr.
Referring to good roads meet-
for Monday, Au-
gust 1st, I j i for a road
engineer from r .-;. Dept of Ag-
Mr. Lester to be
that and
lake a talk, I If de-
e mi; do I can at range for
Mm to over . . oilier day and ad-
ii.-e with your and people re-
is. i hi definitely
decided v, bold our
g on that day. If it
vi . o we
vii devote the forenoon to
topics exclusively, and the
the n i i ting,
do think of I Will also be
present. Very sincerely,
JOHN SMALL.
Lump
Early Saturday a swinging
hall lamp in the home of Miss Kit i
Hi went wrong and look lire all
Inside of the oil fount, With sum i
difficulty the lamp was taken down
out the street where
it continued to burn until fount
exploded.
If
II
I ILL,
Race iii
July
The management of
cell i Now I
for a I- line I
race, la, . I; a
o'clock, i I u in
e inn excel . with I
prizes in ti. .
i i. on
i . .-l road pi the grand
id and that
there to I no tic i chart
good i id I-
ii la c that a l
a i i u et b iii in- en-
from all the nearby counties.
All farmers are urged to enter theft
favorites and ; tor
and everybody la invited lo witness
this Interesting event.
NOTICE
To
County.
The toad c On
. red
v. In .-;. , of i
Oil S i i
gust, at I . i i.
and to ; with r
in t a i
in i i
II. HARDING,
Secretary. man.
WAR DIVIDED,
i -.- Of or
in of n F. c.
there was a meeting
of i Di .-
i of the o. . Bleating being
call J for the purpose of
whether a vote primary
i convention should be held to
i nominees for offices.
Four members the committee were
so e fl full
one.
There m i iii. at of the
test Ion before the committee,
made on both
v as la.-. it I
Iii i iii g for i pr i
on, doomed it boat
ii. Hie vote on i r aide,
i a- In ting of the
.- decide the mat-
i, so . was taken until
Wednesday, 27th.
II .
I Has I
up i i
ti in i Th lie
s go,. a
I . . I . iii,.
. i Labor an I the
. I i;.
labor have i on i Tl a
I . , . is
In i a in Samuel
i .
i . , of . e. n a
. . will
put on a u lion the fed-
Ion will remove I I . o of the
Tit
lo push of I e
the I lion.
Hie i ant case now I
i ire i. c i
is. Mil ell and n i
. labor war. I of a
. by . e p
me Lodge Current
Year,
iv, Lodge, No. it. i. ti O.
installed the following new
for the current fiscal
W. H. Johnson N. G.
C. Bradley, V. Q.
D. D. s.
It. It. s. X.
ti. C. Moore, K. s. v. u.
u Brown, U s. Q.
C II . V. O.
u. Holmes, W
I., Ponder, Con.
J. l; Corey, o. G.
ll. B Harris. I. G.
i. j Chap.
v.
mm
w-w
J. R. C.
J- R
How seldom it is that one can purchase for a
small figures, fabric that will give entire
faction, both in looks and wear. Brilliant in
colorings and will not fade, though in contact
with either sunshine or shower, in fact a beau-
SILK that will wash like white linen, re-
its beauty of color and quality.
BUSY
Business Re-
Bargain Column.
All advertisement coming
Ida bead will charged for at the
rate of cents per line, average six
to the Hue. All advertisers
ho an account with
lead money ail.
Norfolk cotton and wire-
by J. W. Perry Co. Cotton
Cotton Today
us
THE AT
Low
Low
Strictly
tops at S. U.
AMI
see like or
Pharmacy.
will call
W. J. Turnage.
Trunks.
WE SELL
Tall
is the only Si
seen this
k that will do this. Have you
Many will try to imitate this new creation of
the art. hew will succeed.
Sen Future
Wired by
and Brokers, Norfolk.
August
October
December
Market
Co.
May Wheat
VELVET HE
from City every day.
Pharmacy.
HAVE A LOT OF
on hand, people warning will call
me up. Phone W. J. Turnage.
LASS Foil
presents.
Corn
July Ribs
July Lard
-s n-
II
Why Not
Prepare your vacation
i buying an Accident Tick-
et in United States
Co., of New York.
Pays for death,
per week if
Zests only per week.
will coat only
week, pays for
and per week
indemnity if injured.
reward will be
mid to any company
issue a better policy
than that of the United
States Casualty Co.
L. WILKINSON, Agent,
Greenville, N. C.
lit
WEST
lots tor sale on easy
loons. See
SICK BEEF
i No.
ALONE SELLS IT IN GREENVILLE. THEY
ALSO IT TO WEAR, and
IT TO WASH.
I NOTICE TO will
run my from J. R. and J.
corner to carnival
and carry rs at
Turnage.
v -1
Style U
Greenville, C.
The Velvet
kind.
ICE
TO THE PUBLIC
that have opened U in the liver;
bit; at Id stand, Just vi
c tied K. I, .
Id. Savage
. THOM.
No. can supply your needs.
IT PAYS TRADE WITH US
j H A
building,
f T
I,, c.
BO. I
for
i all I
Ear.
.
HAVE AT
wharf a loud of nice corned
v. i nun. i,
How
Is It comfortably If not you
would fin interesting to visit our store and
look over our stock of FURNITURE and
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Everything needed
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make
you sit and take notice.
. THAT
i lo I gallons.
II
JR
I PECK, . CENTS,
one-ball peel; cents. D. Has-
kilt.
Building, situated on Dickinson
Bros.
AM FALL
hi ton's IS
WELL
oxen milch vs.
W. Dull,
, ; .
Kl ST OF CONDITION OF
.--.
Ni
Bank of
i f eta,
RE
.
. and .
US
G. U
Stock
Sui p in and profits
C,
Km .
I end I
Bill r .
I . i .-
J.
USE FEET AS HANDS.
A Custom Somewhat Common Among
th Races.
a French savant, M. in
a to tho Paris
of Sciences maintain that among
the yellow the the
lies and the Malays, the foot Is used
us an organ of like the
band, to u far greater extent than Is
supposed. He says that while
In Tokyo he saw u man Sitting
In it theater box grasping the rail with
feet lust us they were hands,
ever noon using Ills right foot to
his left The fact that;
the usually sit on their heels
at meals and in the house develops
extreme suppleness and mobility In
tile feet and toes, I lie
function Is still further by
the fact that the Japanese who adhere
to the indent customs wear forked
Stockings with the Index-
and European
Chinese navigate their boats
lying down. with their
and rowing with their feet. The oar
Is held between the toe the
The natives frequently us
their feet to collect and to pick
small objects lying on the ground, and.
sometimes even mice with
toes. M. holds that the
yellow races, who lire able to use
feet somewhat as the elephant
trunk or the monkey his toll, enjoy
H very considerable in the
everlasting struggle for existence over
the less fortunate Caucasians, who are
able to employ their feet only for
motion purposes Ledger
ting on with his
tow is Johnny
Pro
learning my tables, and I do n
sums.
If I were to give.
you n dozen apples and yon
three, how many would you have j
You'd
nine left. i
should
inside and nine I
London Scraps.
COMING.
State He-used specialist,
Eyes examined free and glasses fit-
at reasonable price. Have the de-
corrected, see teller and be
relieved of many headaches. See him
as follows for
Snow Hill, Jill
at Hotel Potter,
July at
Hold
July
at Hotel Norton.
Greenville, Saturday, of-
at Hold Bertha.
DR. OF OPT.
Home Office, Kinston, N. C
Cobb Bros. Co.
NORFOLK, VA.
Cotton Buyers, Brokers in
Stock, Cotton, Grain and
Provisions.
PRIVATE WIRE
to New York, Chicago and
New Orleans.
Our Yours if You Come.
THE BEST IN
and
gs
Is not too good When you want the
best, and prices that are in reach of your
book we can supply your wants.
If you trade with us we both make money
pi
Ore Make Business For tho
Old
i here are people in every largo
city who a business of
up old used plates,
cleaning reselling Ilium. They
gel their supply mostly from the
photographers who make a
of or
one knows how many
then asked. , r gag,
are salt every but tho
Rebuked.
the physicist,
rived In Glasgow late one Saturday
and on Monday morning went
rail on Lord Kelvin. The doorbell was
answered by a woman servant, whom
Hoffman Mated sir William was
home
The servant he most
Is
We where I
she answered, will
at here you to
iii the
MODERN BARBER SHOP
I .
6.1 .;
P. H
ii
la i
Nicely furnished, every-
thing a tractive,
working the best bar-
Second to none in
the state
Cosmetics a specialty.
Opposite J R. J. G Move
He Hid Reformed.
A young man who was
lover of nature to the sea-
side for a holiday and. approaching a
typical fisherman,
my friend, how well you must
know the fate of nature know It
in Its many moods Have you ever
the sou sinking in such a glare of
glory that It swallows up the horizon
with fire Have you not seen tho mist
gilding down the shrinking hillside
like a
And. very excited throwing out
his arms, he
you never sen. man. the
in. to shake off the
ragged storm
The replied. sir; I
have not since i sinned the pinto of ordinary size is n
Pearson's Weekly.
. your with this bask, let thin
I con i one of our
Th- Rank in tho County.
You Are Probably Planning
a Vacation Trip
Line Steamers
Leave NORFOLK daily P. M. for
BALTIMORE with direct rail com for Eastern Cities and
resort points.
Elegantly Appointed Steamers. Unsurpassed Service.
Summer Excursion Rate.
For further information and stateroom reservations, write
C. L- G- A. F. R. T. P. A.
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA.
it.
Getting a Life
The person danger
drowning usually to lift u
over Ills bead, the n till
that be la Immediately plunged
into the water. A r
do this with a sodden Jerk, Inn
the it Is almost
Impossible feat. What be should tin
when he has the buoy is in
place both bands, palms downward, us
the buoy on the part nearest the body,
pressing it downward and
away, when the farther part of the
buoy will rise out of the water
actually fall over the head. The
can then ho put through easily,
there you
Cut Both Ways.
A in Scotland was
with attempting to steal an
article from n dour. Iii plead-
I Ilia ease ho suit ho didn't steal
the only
I judge in-
formed him that it going
to do it were all the same and that
he would have to pay a line of
shillings or go to jail for ten days.
The boy, not having money, was
allowed to go and gel it from a
friend. In a little ho was seen,
standing in the court, and propagated under glass. A few
if he had got tho money protective
pay his line he
Hit
shouldn't have proposed to
she said Beatty, might have
known I'd refine
did he said savagely,
I have proposed
American
The essence of knowledge Is. having
It to apply It; not having It. to confess
While it is the custom for
to preserve carefully all
plates that they think may he of
i lure value, discard a great
many more than they keep. A
i of newspaper photographers, for in-
stance, v. ill send out men to
got pictures of snow scenes or of
spring in the suburbs or of summer
at the seaside, Each will bring bock
half a dozen views. Only three or
four will selected its being worts
preserving. The other twenty or
thirty plates will he dumped into a
big box with the other discards to
await tho coming of the glass man.
Tho average selling price for the
thou-
originally about cents
a Hy means of an acid hath
tho dark covering is quickly
ed, and the glass becomes as clear
though it had never been used.
Some of these plates arc sold to
manufacturers to with
the sensitive film and to he used
once more in photography. A far
greater number, however, are dis-
posed of to who soil them
to people who fond of making
picture-. Still more
their way to greenhouse men
and gardeners have acres
of where vegetables
but was tao it.
and ye said that it
due it were tho same. I'm
thinking you and
clear
H Countered.
position Is yours, sir. If you
will deposit as
accept yow offer, sir. If you will
deposit as u security for my
To Liva Long.
If yon wish he Methuselah
will have to doing nil the thin-
that make It worth while not to be
-St Louis
features beds in sub-
urban Weekly.
Th Child
The child actress is born, not
drilled. From tho time she sits up
and babbles baby phrases she lives
in a mimic world. From the time
she loams to walk she dances,
pirouettes minces her
THE CLIMBERS.
What Social Eminence Costs the Cora-
In
My father was a laborer, I am
; a lord
was reserved for
u do not -in in have availed
themselves greatly file advantage,
for man., of I he Important
; lea, Invention and
owe lo suns r Mi,, poor, and few
writers, musicians or
were sons of the rich.
I received at the pub-
expense me to obtain em-
which afforded opportunities
for advancement, mid eventually I
amassed a vast fortune
has Its scouts. They are
the connecting links between the
rich and the Impecunious
The wife of n fashionable artist
sought our acquaintance, My
trait, which her husband painted, cost
guineas, bat house we
met the peeress to whose not disinter-
negotiations owe my knight-
Kl,
That step up the social ladder cost
some
A philanthropic came for-
ward nest to welcome us on tho way.
Her public benefactions and
hills relieved me of a further
large amount, but to compensate for
this we were Introduced to
was elected to several clubs, and
vouchers fur Hie were
accorded to us.
An Impecunious hot Important
later procured, for me a baron-
a consideration, part of
which was for the purposed of the gov-
and part he retained for him-
self, is an Inveterate opponent
corruption In municipal corporations.
There to be no Indication
to Interfere with free In titles.
for subsequently I was offered, and I
accepted, a peerage In for a
substantial contribution to the funds
of the party.
Ability, Industry and enterprise made
me rich. Bribery has made me re-
Without fees to the fashionable
should be still but a local celebrity. e
Ignored by the neighboring mag-
Directly and Indirectly It has
cost me some to attain social
Truth.
Nina Points In Law.
a three-year-old was being made
ready for a bath, much o her
fort, disliked soon and
way water in my
my
along. Her world soap la
is full of thrilling happenings, and.
to quiet her. her mother
mind. Dorothy; it's my
so when her talent finds an outlet
on the stage acting is no effort,
she learns as the average
baby girl absorbs and memorizes
Mother Goose jingles. Francis
Wilson in Collier's.
nose,
I replied Dorothy,
with feeling; that's using
THE GREENVILLE BANKING
and TRUST CO.
AT GREENVILLE,
THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
At the close of business June 30th, O
Loans and discounts stock
Overdrafts secured 1,874.21 j Surplus fund
Banking house, furniture and i Undivided profits, less current
expenses paid 8.484.56
Demand loans 10.000.01 Notes and bills
Due from banks and bankers 16,281.03 j Dills payable 45,000.00
Cash items of 30,010.74
Silver coin Including Den. sub to check,
coin currency 4311.40
National bank notes and other
U. S. notes
Total
Cash, checks
Total
952.62
Stale of North County l Pitts
I, C. S. Carr, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above Statement if, true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
S. CARR, Cashier.
H. A. WHITES,
E. G. FLANAGAN,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before me, this day of July, 1910.
g ANDREW J. MOORE, Notary Public.
ATLANTIC HOTEL
CITY, N. C.
Completely Renovated and Many New Features.
Opens June 1st.
Delightful Finest in America, Dan
Tennis, Riling;. Extremely low
Rates. Perfect.
to WEEKLY
Through Sleeping Ctr Service, via Golds-
N. G.
Write Frank P. Morton. Mgr. City. N. C.
for ran s handsome illustrated
That Show a
Glow In the Dark.
We are some
a species of owl that a
phosphorescent glow in the dart
that it is a rare bird.
There may be such a bird, but a
careful investigation on of
a number of who made
such things a careful study has re-
vealed the fact that certain owls
even bats and other creatures
that are known to roost in old
low trees that arc in a certain static
of decay, producing that
phosphorescent condition so often
witnessed, and coming in
with the matter that makes tin
glow, the feathers or outer
of the creatures become saturate,
with the luminous matter and
damp nights give forth a
glow, such as is often on
stumps, decaying logs and in sonic
on ledges of limestone
that from the hillside.
On a number of occasions the
writer has known persons to be bad-
frightened by coming suddenly
upon a mass of what is known to
many as fire. It is more
seen during tho
months, during or shortly after a
shower. The brilliancy of glow
will depend much on the location,
the and sometimes
much is due to the person's
nation.
This same glow is often seen on
small animals a number of in-
sects. Tho glowworms are quite
common in various sections of the
world, and in some localities insects
have a glow coming from
beneath their wings. The
or lightning bugs are the most com-
in the United States.
In some countries certain
growths arc known to give forth
such a glow, and it has been hinted
that some of the crops harvested
and stored in hums have the same
properties under certain
produce not only tho glow.
but actual flame, resulting in what
is known as spontaneous
destroying the hams and con-
Record-Herald.
fort and foot the
never be without a box
of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders
for use throughout the
They break up colds, cure
teething
orders and stomach troubles
These powders; never fail. Sold
all drug stores. cents. Don't ac-
any substitute. A trial pack
free to any mother who will
Allen S. Olmsted, I. Y.
A HINDU LEGEND.
II
EAST CAROLINA TRAINING SCHOOL
A school organized and maintained for one de-
finite men and women
The regular session opens Tues-
day. September 1910.
For and information, address
ROBT. H. WRIGHT. President,
Greenville, North Carolina.
man At the
I Big Store
is where mothers teach their children to go for
Big Bargains In Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Dry Goods,
Dress Goods, Notions and Millinery. That is
where everybody goes.
He ii Try Him
A Welsh Legend.
In Wales there is it legend
smugglers who arrived at
many year ago in a
boat without rudder or oars,
were looked upon, according to tilt
Irish custom of sending
tors to a sea doom in this plight, a--
outlaws. However, they bad beer
allowed to land, a spring
water bursting forth in the sand
the place was taken as a sign
their right to a refuge. But
ill repaid the Welsh. The met
j lived smuggling, the women bl
witchcraft, it was not possible to
I overcome the smugglers in a fray,
j for each carried about with him
black fly tied in a knot of his
chief, and the moment the
j was undone tho By flew at the eyes
of the opponents and blinded them
If the witches attended
i a market bid for anything
one ventured to bid against them.
J S. to
New in Sam White Store Fit More room larger stock. to see
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
and
Roofing, Tin Shop Repair Work, and
Flues to Season, sea
For Slats
or Tin
II. C.
ESTABLISHED is;
. M
Wholesale and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, oil Barrels,
Turkeys, Oak Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Carriages,
Parlor Suits, Tables,
Lounges Sales, P. and Gail
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Cheroots, Henry George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries, Peaches,
Syrup, Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Food,
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds Oranges, Apples. Nuts.
Candles, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass,
and
Crackers, Cheese,
best Batter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, and numerous other goods.
Duality and quantity for
Conic to see me.
Tho of
When flowering plant usually
make seed, that is generally the last
effort for plant life. Tho seed is
the beginning of the life of the new
Ferns, however, only pro-
duce spores for reproductive put-
poses. These spores and
go through the same process ;
that flowers go through in j
the production of seeds. Tho
spores expand when the
time comes and form a Hat,
green membrane. What
really the flowers appear on this
membrane. As a general rule alter
these fern flowers matured the
I membrane dries up and disappears.
I In one family of ferns, however, nu-
lives of New Holland, named platy-
cerium, this green blink- is
continues to enlarge, be-
coming really a portion of the
plant. Every year a new blade is
formed spreads over tho old
The large is of. a to-
different having the
fronds of ordinary ferns.
A Love Story.
A teacher to her class a
the best short love story.
Here is one of the poor
man foil in love with a lady whom
mother was a rich toy dealer. Tin.
poor man could not marry the rich
because he no money. A
villain then offered him no if
would become a drunkard, Tin
poor man needed the money
get married with, so he agreed,
When he got to the beer saloon h.
said, will not become
drunkard, even for great riches.
On the way home he found a hag o
gold. young lady married
him. it was a splendid wedding
is its own
London Mail.
Two Standards.
One of the strangest illustrations
of the up downs of
comes Paris. A rich
banker became reduced
unlucky investments to the sum
That was
lo him, and,
Ilia loss and the hopeless-
the situation, he committed
The then fell t
brother, who had been for years a
pauper, from his family
But to him such a sum represents
incredible riches, and his
was overthrown. In u moment
delirium he jumped into the
and was drowned.
Windmills.
Holland is known to all
world as tho land of windmills,
few people know that
windmill did not belong to
in the first place, but originated
among the Saracens. There is. it is
believed, no Instance of n windmill
being used in Europe until tin
time of crusades. In n typical
wind driven flour mill in Asia Mi-
nor the planes of the wind
are made a fabric and the
wind as do the of u sailing
ship.
How tho First and the First
man Lost Garden of
Brahma made up hi-
make the world and a man and
man, lie made the world, and lie
made tie man and then the
man and put them on the island of
Ceylon. According to the account
it the most beautiful island
which man can
birds, such songs, such flowers
such verdure And the branches of
trees were so arranged that when
the wind swept through them every
tree was a thousand harps.
Brahma when he put them there
said. them have a period of
courtship, for it is my desire
will that true love should forever
precede
Then they bud their courtship,
with the nightingale singing and
the stars shining and the flowers
blooming, and they fell in love.
Imagine that pro-
fathers or mothers in law,
no prying and gossiping of neigh-
nobody to say. man,
how do you to support
, Nothing of that kind. They were
married by the supreme Brahma,
and he said to here.
You must never leave this
Well, after a little while the man
said. believe I'll look about a lit-
He went to northern
of tho island, where there was a
little narrow neck of hind connect-
it with the mainland, and the
devil, who is always playing pranks
with us, produced a mirage, and
when he looked over to the main-
land such hills vales, such dells
and dales, such mountains crowned
i with snow, such cataracts clad in
I hows of glory, did he see there that
i he went back and told his
country over there is n thou-
sand times better than this. Let us
She. like every other
woman that ever lived,
well enough alone. We have all we
want. Let us stay
Hut he said, let us So
i she followed him. and when they
came to this narrow neck of land be
took her on bis buck like a gentle-
man and curried her over, the
moment they got over they heard a
crash and, looking buck, discovered
that this narrow neck of land had
fallen into the sea. The mirage
i had disappeared, and there was
naught but rocks and sand, and
then tho supreme Brahma cursed
them to the lowest hell.
Then it was that the man spoke.
me, but curse not her. It
was not her fault. It was
The supreme Brahma said,
will save her, but not And
then she spoke out of her fullness
of love, out of a heart in which
there was love enough to make all
of her daughters rich in holy
thou wilt not
spare him, spare neither me. do
not wish to live without him. I
love Then the supreme
said, will spare you both
and watch over you and your
O. Inger-
a Hard Jab.
A writer in the Philadelphia Rec-
telling of working one's
to Europe on a cattle ship,
The food is the worst part of the
trip. It nauseating, but few
can stand it. The bulk of it is
ed in the which is carried
to the galley, the mainstay is
a sort beef stew.
This is varied with corn beef and
cabbage, beans, potatoes and a few
other staple articles, all of poor
quality. Tea and coffee arc drawn
from huge directly to the
kettles, with milk sugar added
in the galley.
The first duties of men were
to tie the cuttle up. is no
matter to secure and control a
pound
steer, but we moved down the
Delaware all became more quiet,
and o'clock all were securely
fastened, and we went to our first
meal.
Sunday the real work began,
which was to the routine until
the end of the voyage. morn-
we were awakened at o'clock.
From to engaged in the
wet and back breaking work of
the cattle. steer drank
from three to seven and
as we had only eight pails the prob-
became how to keep them filled
and yet not overflow without shut-
ting off tile hose. It was made
harder by the fact that the steers
fought for the water.
From t o'clock to S we hauled up
from the lower decks by means of
block and tackle thirty-two bundles
of hay and twenty hags of corn,
each weighing pounds. Under
the hatches it was stilling work;
above the hands grew blistered from
A Lady of Tells of
Awful That Card.
suffered for seven
A.
. tear-
to Wine I. when I found in-
I can
; recommend to women
think there is no
down r so described
book.
doctors oilier
end found relief, i v.-.-. Induced
lo Wine I, I found in-
In instances, gives
I In others. may take a lime.
j lint in all cases tousle . C
can be depended on to be cf benefit, as
is a specific remedy and
acts in a curative way womanly
organs.
As a general
your strength, improve your
lite, bring back rosy cheeks ; i m
you lock and. feel young anti harpy,
nothing you can find will do so much
you as
Your druggist has it
N. to.-
Medicine Co. T can. J
instructions,
sent in plain wrapper,
Profession Cards
W. F. EVANS
AT LAW
Office it. I- Smith
stables, next door to John Flan-
Buggy new building,
. . Carolina
the ropes. Then a third of tho hay
was fed out. Breakfast followed.
After a short rest the troughs were
cleared, corn fed and the aisles
swept. Inspection began at
and the captain, purser and doctor
passed en tour of the vessel, look-
into every nook and cranny.
Work finished at noon, after which
there was a respite until when
more hay was given, and again at
We were usually ready for bed
although a few times we remained
up until
The cattlemen had tho entire run
of the great broad open steerage
deck aft the portion of the bow
forward assigned to the crew. Here
we met many of the cabin
and had jolly good times and
Talks with them. On the quiet
of the higher officers had pleas-
ant words for us. To our amuse-
the menials took delight in
making things as as
when opportunity offered.
K. W. OUTLAW
AT LAW
nice occupied by. J. L
Fleming.
. . N. Carolina
s. C. u. ii, Clark.
St CLARK
Civil
Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
AT LAW
Dr.
. S.
. ; Moore. W H. Long.
MOORS LONG
AT
. .
CHARLES C. PIERCE
AT LAM
Practice in all the courts. Office up
stalls in Phoenix building, next to
Dr. U. L. James
Greenville, . . . Carolina
Antiquity of Loci.
The origin of the gold leaf, dike
the first use of gold itself, is lost in
the mists of antiquity. It is found,
for example, in connection with the
most ancient known mummies,
been used for covering teeth,
tongue, skin, etc. Sometimes it is
also found on the Gold leaf
was also used on tho tombs and
monuments ancient Egypt. The
process of making gold leaf has
thus been known since the eighth
century B. C. In the eleventh
it seems to have attained
high a degree of perfection as
today. The gold leaf on some an-
Grecian pottery indeed is as
thin as that now
of Commerce.
A South Arabian Food Plant.
a tell, slender plant re-
com and headed with a
grain something like millet, is the
chief crop, lie feeds the
Stalks to his camels and cats the
grain himself. Three crops a year
are produced, requires lit-
cultivation except weeding,
which the s by hand, and
when ripe he cuts it off close to the
ground with his hunting knife.
New shoots spring up from the
roots to become the next crop. For
a camel load of about pounds
he receives at Aden an average of
rupees, or A fair yearly
yield is twenty camel loads acre.
I Consular and Trade
Th Ostrich.
That ostriches hide their
in the think that their
bodies arc thereby hidden seems to
be pure myth, says the London
Times. birds on the nest and
young birds when seeking to evade
squat close to the ground and
stretch their necks out flat on the
sand. In the case of the young
which harmonizes as perfectly
their sandy surroundings us young
ringed plover do with the stones on
a beach, the ruse is said to render
them almost invisible, and on the
wide expanses of the desert It is
evident that the upright neck a
sitting bird would render it
to a marauding
enemy. Hut there is no more
p-round for accusing the ostrich
-self than there is
bringing me same charge against
the partridge chick, which mere
y sitting still among the grass
from
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
. Carolina
Harry Skinner. H. W.
SKINNER
LAWYERS
Greenville, .
JULIUS BE OWN
LAW
Greenville, . .
ALBION
IT LAW
Office
street
Practices v.
rent, . . Carolina
B.
Classified.
Custom house stories are always
hero of ibis
n Swiss u-n.
to Basic from ;
with
covered in
places. At frontier the
insisted mi inspecting h
trunk. They the nils i
of
duty at the a penny a
The missionary protested, ii
was presently agreed that us
skulls were for
they must be allowed to enter with-
out payment.
The only question was how to
classify the purposes of
tho Swiss statistical bureau.
problem was debated
length, but ultimately the
went through us
York Sun.
Attorneys law
Practices where
vices required,
ally in the counties of
i Craven, Carte Jones
; Pamlico, and State and
Federal Courts.
Office Street
I KM N, C.
ARNOLD'S BALSAM
to
Cholera by
J. L. WOOTEN,
H.
Work for Greenville with us.
J. C. LANIER
If
TombStones
Iron
for The r.
Subscribe for Tho Reflector.
---------IN,.
Published by
TH Inc.
D. J.
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one n
Six months.
rates may be had upon
at business office in
.- i tor Building, Evans
and Third streets.
congressional district
will do when It meets again on the
We are doing our share of talking,
but remember, it is going to take
some acting M IO get good
roads.
all card resolutions
respect for at I
per or
advertising
b tor
per line, up line.
Entered at office
villa. N. C. as
matter.
They all can't but
there are some who ought to go back
and sit down. The kickers for In-
stance.
We fall to see wherein the
cans have any cause for rejoicing
over the deadlocks in Democrat con-
FRIDAY.
It Is ho; to write rig t.
If you get
out and i.
folks wish the bill
was like Jeffries, hack
It out the Allen manager
was much the claiming.
with the roads talk. Keep
it up everyday.
it is time to let the prise light
talk and pictures drop completely.
If The Reflector persuade
you to build factories in Greenville.
is not because It don't try.
Prize rights must go. now. for
Ex-President Roosevelt has spoken
on the subject, and says drive them
out
to the recent Charlton case. An Am-
who with his sol
in that city, murdered and
shipped back to this country.
The cast could build roads for one-
of what they are costing up this
way. and yet few of the eastern
ties are not doing anything at all in
the way of road
Herald.
o---------
The Republicans throughout Mil
state ate getting ready to put up
tickets to tee them knocked
Hut they hive lo
thing to make the government bosses
think they are earning their Jobs.
cheaper and more conducive to hap-
There are thousands, how-
ever, who seem to prefer living on
half rations and staying with the
crowd.
Whedbee may foil that it is
but all the same, he
must gel a move on and have his
to a Jury in
for Onslow court next Monday.
slang expression in
with Judicial mailers, but It
cm be safely said the Harry will b-
n hand the
In a recent case in Wake count
Superior court where man charged
with celling liquor set up the defense
Pitt county has placed herself at he merely loaned it to a friend
the head in educational progress b
establishing good roads. Will she
let tho I schools fall of their
pose by not building good highways
o-
Those who do not run for office
have the best feeling about it.
They used to see snakes. Now
they see air ships passing.
Possibly It has been this warm be-
fore, it is too not now to think
about them
conventions ; iv
before-hand appointments did
not slick.
-------o
They do not die from beat down
this but the folks get warm just
the same.
---------o
The politician who loses and
grouchy over It, should bare kepi
out of tile race.
Wilmington found three cases of
small pox right among the city lire
department. Ought to have turned
the hose on them.
Sand clay are our road mate-
rials. We have them all over the
county and it is only a question of
mixing them in the right way.
If the people do not can a lot of
the surplus fruit this year they will
miss an opportunity. Enough
ought to be put up for winter use.
We have not seen a Raleigh
State Democrat since the Wake
primary in which the
heat the Wonder if the shock
killed It.
Banters throughout the
attributing much of the tightness
of money and hardness of times to
craze. When people will
even mortgage their homos just to
jet in the automobile fad, they
expect times hard.
The Wilmington Dispatch wants to
know if some One can't get u; North
Pole discussion to relieve the
The kind discussion we
had before would make It hot-
as lb re was no frigidity
it.
Now the county candidates can
lave It all their way. No more dis-
or State conventions to attract
from them.
If Pitt county does not get
roads we are going be
fooled.
Mr. Roosevelt is going to visit
in October and the State
will be happy. Just watch for Atlanta
to a date with him,
The Daily Reflector, published a
Greenville, has come with a new
dress, which greatly i Its
Bro. can always
be relied upon to up with the
times. Louisburg
Dr. C. W. who as head of the
Rock c is waging
on hookworm, declared in a recent
.-; on that Lie United
is the great nation in the
world.
and expected to be paid back In kind.
Judge CookS charged Jury to re-
turn a verdict of on the ground
that the mere loaning of whiskey is
a sale. The case was appealed to the
Superior court, and if the ruling of
Judge is sustained, you can't
lend at y more booze to your neighbor
The Reflector is in receipt of a beau-
program and souvenir of the
New Horn celebration
the State tournament,
takes place In that city during
week of July 25-30. Both the
and the tournament have
many interesting events on the pro-
gram. The souvenir Is a beautiful
booklet of -New
Bern.
Whatsoever a man that is
what to make up ills record.
What he in juggling words and
yet cometh net across with actions
his words the same .
snare for the unwary, the
and the tucker. Fair prom-
unperformed am delusions and
lie final analysis of is hot air.
Wilmington star
In Wilmington one man Is In the
hospital and another in jail
a fight the two had over a
The stuff comes
Constant dripping will wear ,
, . high, any way you look at it, re-
. stone, and they kept exploding ,, , ,
I price
in the old Masonic temple
COST.
wails ill they were knocked down, i
the least part of the
i; . re are any candidates i-i Pitt
We bet you Greenville has a
park some of these days, is oar
near to
Government officials hare tabooed
the ice cream . me
Hence beware of the cream cone,
Some merchants are missing a
good op ion be B
they are not i
We are the announce-
Mr. j. a. Robinson has
, ping mighty about It. They the Our-
rime out in the open and
go talking good roads.
Then is ,. thing i all others
i i an do as a whole to
i . f our social,
I and industrial, that is
Sun, having sold all his Interest
edited Sun twenty-two
and is too .-rood a newspaper
in to long on; of the harness.
is costing The Reflector
t to make a paper like we are
It was not much turning d
the governor's . ms as u
was the n
the.
A wheel Passing mg land ;, in
hill i, . .,.,
II p,
Is after i--
He wants to hang on
Uncle Sam Is g . ,, ,,. .
he mix. up ;., ,.
ruble. Si If be
o---------
convicts worked on
roads of Georgia and
of were built and
permanently
. and
i to be .
for postal saving
banks to be i by the gm-
m i
Thai Democratic State
a platform made no reference what-
to , in. Indicate that ii
looked upon as a finished
ion in North Carolina,
if you do what you you ;
will come i ids
co in I on the Hi
M la August . . ; bring
you,
and you folks who
ii could help the cause greatly
coming along with you owe
no i I i e
asked it. You ought
. i appreciation for the kind of
;. you get lug.
Charlotte who
be i in the years and
mi do i lose ob come for-
ward with statement tho
moon affects They say
there m and more
it n the moon
IS I till I . oilier time.
The nomination the
convention of Hon. W. R. Allen
j candidate for Supreme court Judge
fives general satisfaction down this
way. At the same time it can be said
of Judge J. S. Manning, who Is hold-
g the position at present by appoint-
of the governor, that he makes
an excellent Judge. There Is nothing
against Judge Manning, but the re-
of the convention shows that
mote of the State favor Judge
Allen.
An
fort in of everyone In this
ally important matter being put
by the county's leaders.
The question of roads Is an
int one. Good roads are essential to
he county's development. They not
make transportation of farm
products easier and cheaper, they
so enhance property values to such
an extent that a good road for that
purpose Is a good Investment.
o---------
Greenville people some time do
some very queer things. For in-
stance, Monday night in the
of Carolina
Training School the teachers attend-
the summer school gave a
cal, it was planned primarily as a
compliment to the people of Green-
ville who showed their appreciation
by something like twenty-five being
present. This was anything but en-
school and faculty
and is not calculated lo inspire them
to do things for people who show
such lack of appreciation. At the
the same time a ten cent vaudeville
show that pitched Its tent within
sound of the training school had a
audience. If this contrast is
an expression of the tastes of the
people of Greenville. It is time the;,
were cultivating a different taste.
One truest of many pool
things credited to ex President
is
warn my countrymen that the
-t ;.
not a full measure or our
for our civilization at the
torn on
and the completeness, as well
as the prosperity in life. in
country. The men and women on
farms stand for what is
ally and most our i
life. on the development of tie
country life rest ult our
by methods of requiting
the highest e, to
to feed and clothe
i supply tho with
blood, clean bodies d clear
can endure the terrific
modern life. We need the develop-
of men in lie op n country who
will be in In the ; it.
stay and of tho
in the time of war ; Its guide-
and cot-oiling spirit in the time
John II. Small, Dr.
too radios s It would
seem that the two-thirds or three-
fourths verdict is sensible
and sane. But the primary trouble
with the Jury system is the manner
of selection in capital cases. This Is
the first point that m eds to be
HELP
teas
Today's news today. Is what The
Reflector Is giving its readers by the
addition of its telegraphic service.
Several times before this service was
added, a number of subscribers
us with the request for
press telegrams, saying they would
be willing to pay an increased sub-
price for the paper to get
the service. It Is not always an
easy matter to increase the
price of a paper, and though The
Reflector is an unusually cheap pa-
per at the price, we prefer not to in-
crease it unless forced to do so in
order to meet expenses. At the
same time adding the telegraphic
vice, together with the other
recently made, has large-
Increased the expense of getting
out the paper, and the present sub-
list at the price is not en-
to really justify this. But our
subscribers can help us overcome
this If they will do their part, and
we have faith in them to believe that
they will. We have never yet made
a forward step with the paper in
which the people not by us.
and they will do so this
You can help by paying your own
subscription promptly, and by get-
as many of your neighbors as
possible to become subscribers. This
will be necessary if the subscription
price of the paper remains what It
now is. The Reflector must have
more subscribers, and they should,
pay promptly for it lakes much
every week to meet expense.
The business men can help by
The Reflector their advertising
and job printing orders. Every one
lend a helping baud, and we will
give you a paper that you will be
proud of.
Joseph Hyde Pratt and Mr. H. D. Var-
r. editor of Good Roads, have
ten that they will be in Greenville at
tile good roads convention on the Oral
Some of the big who bold
Ii la a time to cite Hie
They are still making excuses for
Judge Manning. Not necessary,
body knows how it was done and
who did ii. Like he will have
the distinction of being Drat man positions long enough to
killed in Point the turn out to be the
I Worst crooks. James N. Huston, a
Oh. you are away off in your treasurer of the United States
Judge went down rover-1 .,,,. ,,, , ,,,, n,
U day ahead of him, j Washington City what is known as the
National Trust Company, a concern
A man who has a farm very close supposed to guarantee and to
to Greenville, says make them And a ready sale. Now
a number of seen all. Indictments Huston
walking about the streets of the town of on Hie
not one of them can be hired to go charge using mails inn scheme
out and work on farm. When to defraud, -and petitions an filed to
asked if any reason could be charter of the company.
for this, the suggestion was o
en so many of them are running Tn, ,. I,
and making big money who is a lawyer, thinks the Jury sys-
out of it that they cannot be ii , ., ;. remedied in many 1.-
go and do any work. In which opinion It would seem
operators will r.,; all observant people would co-
good road hands they can only be lie
many perilous advocate a
hare majority verdict, on
Some or our readers complain of unanimous verdict as now prevails.
n the smaller type now used on The ,, better than either of these
Reflector, as they had been so long I be a two-thirds or three-fourths ma
accustomed to looking at large print. verdict This might be applied
There is one g bout a man. and
in keeping a Indisputable
; of that fact is furnished by a
man got a nils
We thought Mr. Roosevelt know it
all before, tut he says he Is going to
spend several days working on ex-
study of New York politics.
Says the Wilmington
chap who asks it warm
enough for ought to be
A roasting would be better.
Democratic papers to the story of , the trial of civil cases at first, and
, J J heading W are get- , to work
Oh, they don't want to crowd to his advantage Is that the then he applied to the trial of
fellows off the perch. criminal cases also. The grand
. You an Indictment and returns
Pitt h-u, h r J
lit count, has placed herself a, era, Improvement of the Countryside will then I, all the The of ,, ,, . IS Then
the head in educational progress by The farmer who In t., , . I menu. is. mm again
good schools. Will over a t Z T
let those schools fill of their f , law all people
tho., school i fall of their eared for road will unconsciously and that should nuke you prouder f the United States have been
pose by not budding good highways come , effect corresponding of It
Mr. Roosevelt may not find New
York politics altogether as Slotting
to them
who knows of her Times.
says. county Is biggest
and best county In eastern Mr. Rockefeller says tie people
We must our position, leaving the Cities because
a majority of lo or the Supreme
in the and ,,
,. B Court of the United States If the
We with pleasure and most judges are not required
that our people have turned their . i. unanimous in their opinion of
the law, why should average
to road Improvement A
movement In which the chamber of
of has taken
but we can not do without good of ,, ,,. , ;,
they were waking up to the fact
lens be required to be unanimous in
their opinion in ill the
c from t unanimous
port of every spirited of a verdict might be
Fly.
Mrs, F. S. Stevens, of
Mo., furnishes the current issue of
Raleigh Progressive Farmer some
reading matter Which, as she admits,
is very
A number of counts of disease germs
upon s large number of flies ex-
showed a range from
to germs, representing
consumption, not
to speak of the presence of filth upon
their bodies, collected from their
visits to every sort of haunt. Not
only do Hies transit diseases through
their capacity to carry disease germs
upon their feet, wings and bodies,
but in feeding they take germs
Into their bodies, many of which in
passing through the digestive tract,
not only remain alive, but increase
In numbers so that fly have
u found to contain a large
r of disease-producing germs.
It Is disgusting to read of these
things, Is not Hut it Is not more
disgusting than to see these same
flies after their repast of tilth, drown
in the milk pitcher, drop I heir specks
on a frosted cake, or clean their
feel on the bread. Is it pleasant to
see may have been feast-
ii.-.; on the from a
or upon the from a
crawl over the lips of
a ping baby or gather on the
nipple of a nursing are
dally occurrences in homes
from
This is the sort of reading
which Is necessary to pub-
and necessary for the people to
read, it Is better the eye should
be consigned to earth, As a
are not nearly
In about the danger of the
fly.
Says the Norfolk
door In North Carolina they have
Into I lie fixed habit of re-electing
Representative John Ii. is
a good thing for them and a bit
worse for us. We feel he is ours
It is a fact that In his rivers
harbors, canal and general water-
ways work in North Carolina. Con-
Small has done a great
work more possibly than any of
Congressmen have done for
City, Hut then, Norfolk Is a
North Carolina and we are some
day going to have It
Chronicle.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
The Eastern Reflect fur Ayden and vicinity. furnished
.
Call as. Phone U as rent yam
houses for you. sell
your Property, Land. Stocks,
or lend money on
Loan Insurance
Ayden, N. U , July 1310.
Oats and Hay at J R. Smith
Mr. R. C. Cannon us that be
You can find almost anything you us he is preaching and works
a-------
want In Shoes. Has. Dry Goods. No-- ranee as a side line, and will this year
lions Trunks School Hooks, write worth life insurance
Mr. R. C. Cannon s us th. be Crockery, . That the way with cur
set some mouse traps nigh. Cook Stoves boys, always at the head of class.
caught mice In them, and one Cement. W Car .
In his flour barrel, making Can-
non for for Ash.
Milk Churns. Preserve Jars, Milk
Coolers, and Mason's Fruit Jars at
J. R. Smith
Mr. E. K. Dall. who was overcome
by heat last is able to be
out again.
J. F. Paints. Varnish, Ker- j
fee Cites and at I. R. Smith
Mr. Grover L. architect
and builder, has the contract for Mr.
Stand Hodge's house
Car Cement. Lime, Nails, and Hay,
at J. R. Smith
Messrs, W. J. Hardy, and S. J.
Everett, of Greenville, were in town
Thursday talking good roads.
I hereby myself a
date for township constable, subject
to the primary town- day
Screen Windows and Groceries at J.
R. Smith
Rev. Mr. Griffith was In town Thurs-
day evening, settling up the business
of the late John A. L. Templeton.
Cook Stoves and repairs for sum.- at
J. R. Smith
The heaviest rain of the season fell
In swap or Fellows old chapel
Friday s.
Car K Elite and other Fertilizers
top dressing at J. R Smith
There seems to be somewhat an
among the cattle known as
and spinal disease. A
surgeon do a thriving
business here.
Install your fans, irons and stoves
We will saw your wood, pump your
water and keep you cool, so says the
electric light plant. Give us some-
thing to do and we will give you a
Ca.
Lime Lime barrels Just
R. Smith Co.
MISS C.
Graduate Nurse
Ayden, North Carolina.
T. Keel.
Lime I Lime Lime barrels
just R. Smith Co.
Protect your food from the filthy
flies and mosquitoes, by using the
Improved screen R.
Smith Co.
t buy-
sell, or rent houses or laud, or want a
Job for yourself, wife, daughter, moth
or sister, or want lo employ
help, or sell what you
there is no better medium than Tie
W. Smith.
We hear such talk as we will soon
have a day current, but there is no
run and nothing to do. so
if our people want it, get busy
Chicken Powders kills
hawks, crows, owls, and minks; best
remedy for cholera, gapes, In-
digestion and leg weakness, keeps
them free from vermin, thereby
them to produce an abundance
of eggs. cents a package at J. R.
Mr. W. B. Wilson was in town Wed-
taking orders for groceries,
etc Mr. V, bus up a large
business by honest application and
assiduous toll, coupled with
integrity and dealing
all mankind.
J. J, Harris Co. have Installed a
large iron safe. They have hope In
the future.
Cox have sold out
market equipment, will and In-
Dall Bro.
Wanted-To buy a good second
hand Jointer and P. Smith
A Co.
Now is a good time to advertise in
the Ayden department. Bee R. W.
Smith
A nice line of Coffins and Caskets
always on hand with a nice at
your service at J. R. Smith Mill.
If you need a good open or top Bug-
Wagon or Cart, call on J. R. Smith
Co.
hereby announce myself a
date for Township subject to
the Democratic primary of Content-
township. W. Ollie Cox.
On or about the 20th of June my
female rat terrier
dog, strayed from Hotel Has
a black spot on his back, is very
smart, and answers to the name of
Information leading to
his recovery will rewarded, W
S. Blount.
A blind man J magic lantern
show at graded school building
Thursday night.
We are representing the olden and
strongest Life and Fire Insurance Co,
Car Nails, Barbed Wire. Lime and
Cement at J. It. Smith
Ayden. N. C. July 1910.
Our town commissioners are beau-
the city park In the way of
walks and driveways.
Protect your house against the filthy
Hies and mosquitoes, by putting in a
set of the Improved Screen Windows
and Doors made by J. R. Smith
Co.
Mrs. A. L. Harrington and children.
are visiting relatives in
Ayden.
Patterns and at
J. R. Smith Co.
Mr. W. Rollins went to More-
head
Gaudy and Rubber Belting. Black
and Pipe and other mill
fittings at J. R. Smith Co.
Mr. J. T. Keel has purchased the
interest of Mr. W. E. Tingle in the
market business.
See our and cent bargain
R. Smith Co.
There was an entertainment given
in the tobacco warehouse last Friday
night by the Ayden Amusement and
Comedy Co., composed of home talent
it was given for the white people,
who spoke of it in very
terms.
Miss Helen Cox arrived from
Greensboro Monday night to Join her
mother here.
Lime, Cement, and
building material at J. R. Smith
Mr. Allen Cannon and sister. Miss
Blanche, and Miss Hattie
are spending this week at Morehead
City.
Do your trading at J. R. Smith
gel a at the valuable
given away.
We had one or our heaviest rains
Sunday night.
Lime, Cement, Trowels and
Mason R. Smith Co.
Mr. Canada Moore had a lot of
Lily's Oyster
Fresh Oysters
Coming Every Day
Can Serve You Any Way. Try Me
rill
i ANT.
ASSIGNED IS
US A DAY.
The busies, little tilings ever made are
Dr. King's New Life rills. Every pill
a sugar coated globule health,
that changes weakness into strength,
languor into energy, brain-fag tow
menial power; curing Constipation,
Headache, Malaria.
cents at all druggists.
it
in-
ITEMS.
. .------
In the world Call us and let us con- cotton on our market yesterday,
suit With Loan Trust Sale-Several thoroughbred
Co. Phone
Our people are both and
pessimist One said tho weed war
o small it could not bare the
other said he was afraid he would
have too much weed no fruit.
Rev. Reddin Corl of South
Carolina Is spending this week In
town. Our people can Justly feel
proud of him. He was ill
the F. W. B. Seminary, where lie made
many friends, and has since been
called to the Palmetto State. He
OF CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N.
At the Close of Business June
Berkshire male pigs. Apply at once
J. R. Smith Co.
Dr. C. R. our dentist, is
spending S few weeks at
county, his former home.
Poultry Food and Hawk
Killer t J. It. Smith
We regret to learn that Mr. A.
Branch is sick.
Mr. Hermon Smith has a fine son.
A little child of Mr. W. B. Broad-
way died yesterday.
Call, on us for Flooring Ceiling.
and Scant-
We ,
it. Smith Mill.
Resources
Loans and discounts 186,084.62
Furniture and 610.69
Cash items 17,466.82
Gold coin
Silver coin, including all
minor coin cur. 1,311.80
National hank and other
2,181.00
U. S. Notes
Total
Liabilities
stock 88,000.00
Surplus fund 16,626.00
Undivided profits, less
esp. and taxes pd.
Deposits to check 88,304.44
Savings Deposits 86,806.64
Cashier's checKs
outstanding SO
Checks 75.00
Total
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF PITT.
I, J. R. Cashier of above named bank, do solemnly swear
the above statement is to the best my belief.
Subscribed end sworn to Correct-
this day July, j
C HODGE. JOSEPH DIXON.
Notary rs.
Notice i
We wish to call your attention our new line of fall goods which
we now have. We have taken great care buying this and
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Ginghams No-
Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in a
Dry Goods Store.
Come let us show you.
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C.
We are prepared to furnish you with
and Kitchen Furniture
at the very Cash or Installment.
Con to us and we will convince you
AYDEN FURNITURE CO.
NEXT DOOR TO
I hereby announce myself a can-
for township constable, sub-
to the action of the Democratic
primary of township,
A. L,
of Aaron
Misses Johnson and Eva
art are in home from training
school.
sir. Walter who I as
icon sick with fever, la convalescent.
Screen Doors made to order or re-
paired on short notice at J. it. Smith
Mill.
William loft
lay for hospital to be treated
for rheumatism,
Coal Roof Paint, at J, It.
Smith
We will repair Tobacco Trucks,
Wagons, Carts and other faun
on short notice at J. it- Smith
Mill.
Mr. J. J. Gentry, or
arrived Friday and will have charge
of ii e Imperial Tobacco warehouse
this season.
Grain and Cultivator
at J. It. Smith
For hereby
myself s candidate for township con-
stable Subject the Democratic iii-
Smith. it; if
strayed, or stolen One black
and white spotted fox terrier puppy,
four months old, has short
tail. Disappeared about one week
ago. Howard for Information leading
to recovery. Raymond Turnage,
Ayden, N. C.
The columns of Ayden Depart-
are open for any legitimate ads,
even campaign. Business solicited,
now is he time subscribe for the
daily iii Pitt W.
Smith,
Tells A hunt Weather, A to Her-
and Other I
N. C, seems
that whenever the editor that
we get h ft Oat of your weekly edition.
Well, we know that one man cannot
look after everything and
too.
It coma time since we
mentions the weather, so w thought
we would say In passing that for the
past two weeks it has been ideal for
the growth and of all crops,
and especially cotton. Sunday
there came a ditch Idler and branch
raiser which we fear was damaging
to crops, in this section at least.
A delegation of our representative
men. Messrs. Jack Smith. Jake Mum-
lord and W. weal to
your city and while
lo go before the board
and plead with them hi behalf
of an up to date building. Our
people arc much In need Of a school
house and we hope that ere another
begin. we will have a building
that will be a credit to this l art
the county. There is no reason
we should not.
Those wore low rates the A. C. I.
gave to Jacksonville and Ti nips last
week, with cheapness there
many of our bus
with tobacco and growing cotton to
take the trip. Hut we ever lookout
tor those try. and
finds a way for those who honest
try. So to any and all who have not
lo Florida, we would say
if you appoint some day and
come to we can i
a man who did go and who saw
more and can come near telling all
that be as any man,
Now any time
Plucky sidetrack
his scissors mid gel to till you
about his trip. W. U
weal, but ho Is III i- when it
comes about it.
Link the tin- Two
Together, but i
Later Denied.
Baltimore, Md., July
more than ten rears spent in the
United Stales Army, daring which
time he has risen from the grade of
corporal to lieutenant,
a native of Wilson, N. has
notified the War Department of bis
Intention to resign commission.
U Cotton has been paying at-
to Mrs. Jesse Tyson, young
widow, and a society leader of
for some time pa I and it Is
believed his reason for leaving the
Army Is to wed Mrs. Tyson.
Lieut. Cotton will outer upon a two
months leave of absence on Friday,
and at the expiration this leave,
will sever all connection with the
service.
Mrs. Tyson sailed for Europe
Saturday and it is Intention -i
Lieut. Cotten to follow her to th-
other side In about a i it . Lieut.
Cotton is the son of Mr. Ran-
Cotten, a well known business
man of Wilson. N. Dispatch.
Persons Injured Bad a
or Cut Braised
Damaged.
Cable to The Re
b, ,
The fa
works
. o it the
i b
lowing Count
again
his Bl
was ti I .
x. is of the bull
g and .
s and h
. r i
. iv i I
Ired feel, i
i d ii. .
com try i
people docked t- .-
sides the seven g ; .
lured, a score or more we
at and bruised.
KILLED
The in the above Is the state-
that the bridegroom
is a of Wilson and that his
rather is a wall known is mi ii of
that young man
right hero in Pitt county, and his
father is proud of his being a citizen
and business man of l lit county
The Denied.
Following the made
above press dispatch, lac
more Sun
In view of the fact Licit.
Bruce Cotton, of the Artillery
Corps, stationed at
in resignation from the army
and has asked for leave absence
go beyond the seas, much
baa been given the rumors of his
to Mrs. Jesse Tyson, of
Lieutenant Cotton will leave Fort
in a few days Join
mother, Mrs. Randolph Gotten, at
Virginia Beach. After a visit
here, he to return to
He says he may go abroad
next month. The
take effect only in Sept-
ember.
While their friends here know
definite In regard to an engage
between Mrs. Tyson and Lieut
Cotton, it is well known that j
they are devoted friends and such an
announcement would owe as a
surprise to anyone. Ills, m spite of
the tact that oven on Saturday, when
Mrs. Tyson sailed for Europe with a
party of friends, both sin and Lieut-
Gotten denied being engaged,
and even when icon .
yesterday, the Lieutenant reiterated
denial.
Mrs. Tyson is of Baltimore's
most beautiful swan and la noted
as a charming and hostess
.-. AMen Run
Near
Mr. John Allen Corbet . ran
over and Instantly killed, Tuesday
moon, by o'clock z
train
Mr. was laying
. track, d seen by the
ml the train i .-
lo be I. the
lied.
A bottle of whiskey
found beside the
was user Wall B
She is a musician of and a pa-
Mr. wife and children, of
Coast. Fla., are spending some
time with ids brother, Sir. H. of art.
.-.;. Mr. tho malls for Lieutenant Cotton has be
thirty miles up the Indian river and
can tell something about the trials
navigation.
ill MS.
Personal Sew NoUs Pram
C, July
We having some
ill i Ci.
.;.,. ;,. ion, re-
turned to her homo near Ayden
Mrs. Henry in
say Is
Remember v i i
, i, I i no n .
Mr. i.
.- v m
day i . U. no,
Messrs.
; . . SUI .
iii the
army since when he enlisted
as ;. corporal In Bl tail A,
Infantry, He served through
tho war, and upon
return the res army.
lie belongs to one i- oldest
distinguished of North
Carolina, a number in are
ii the army and III
of Col. R. it. ii
County, N. C.
All Ii winter, gossip frequently
tin officer
Mrs. Tyson, and
as to they
or not. Both being and pro-
the sudden of
me leave of
Immediately by the announcement
had sent in his
from tho service has revived the
n Is once more
ion President Taft
accepted
on i
ii In orders issued by Acting
of War Oliver. The reasons
Pays lo Ti.- .
While Boas a other will
gel nitrogen fur us from
vii furnish main tor
the humus In i , draw
Heavily on tho material manors
coil, and
and hence must be supplied .
if are do their pan i.
the soil.
l ears ago in Alabama wrote
to me i bad Ix an
about improving I was
a humbug, for had i i
crops in succession off a piece of land
tho soil got so poor lat it would
grow peas. There is no mt
grown can be . annually
land and nothing
mi the and
legume craps are no exception.
pi and
; Lie, get
air, and ii they are sup-
. la the pea, or any
r ; . supply
of -i the soil.
Um in
most sections, some potash, are
I Iii ;. liberal manner, the legumes
will enable us to dispense with
purchase of nitrogen, or ammonia,
any In Raleigh
Ci Progressive and
There v be .,
on i
i .
. . of tho
, Arthur
. Si id, for tin
o o
B v
V I j Mi application
Several at- s ,.,, . .,.,,.,,, .
tended church Stokes school house
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Si s
Sunday with near Shel-
iii.
Mr. and Mrs. K. I. Smith Sun-
day near Ayden with their parents.
Messrs. C. L. Stokes B. Stokes,
it. I. Smith and N. ii. Corey, finished
iii t v
We are very glad to see Miss Lydia
Chapman out again.
If you have news Item, tell this
scribe and help us to make this col-
um i Ci one, Don't treat
like you do book agent, and then
wonder II e h i--
We are not all like
. . . i y tut co-o
-It. W. Smith.
The eagerness with which
re. M The Hector II good
for the i man I i talk
. goods,
The rs Id
. o to speak, In I'm ids
of the before ma
ins,
was several days ago,
nothing to be
. ii lated matrimony. Marriage
i. i.- any officer what-
vi r grade In army or navy.
C and
ill Annapolis and at are
lowed to
Of BOYHOOD
delicious were the ides of boy-
hood. No plea now ever taste so good.
What's changed No. you
You've lost a strong, healthy stomach
th vigorous liver, the active kidney,.
the regular bowels boyhood. Your
in poor and you blame the
. what's A ton-
up by Electric Bitters of organ
Liver, Kidneys,
Try them, They'll restore
. .; boyhood appetite and 11-
m of I and fairly your
body health, strength and
all druggists.
SB
A Wt
Km.
n m Warn The
of Summer.
Darin
shied o. UM tad
American home
e by malaria or intestinal
, .,., or by Yet. iii nearly
case. mi peril may be reduced
. ., vanishing point by a
expend wire-netting.
, . . amount of
ca pert of the keeper of the
tame.
be too I
and for the closing of the
Inlet by which he has the
house It la true, that malaria Is de-
creasing both- In Its prevalence and
in its virulence, but there are yet
many of deaths from it in
Announcements
SHERIFF.
hereby announce myself a
.,., c . . . g u .
the OHM every year. for sheriff of Pitt county, tub-
over, for every case of serious Illness
from malaria, there are dozens of
cases where the diseases unfits work
without producing the symptoms of a
fever. The important thing to
is that scientific medicine knows
only one way in which malaria
parasite can get into the human
the bite of the mos-
The ease with which malaria may
Joel to the action of the Democratic
primary. J. MARSHAL. COX.
i;
Out American housewife that be acquired in a region where the
be
laden with the germs of
w B , . ., . other
examined,
ranks as of the most
M of ail vultures not ex-
It by prefer-
are so scarce as to pro-
duce no discomfort is shown by the
following
Au American and his mosquito-bar
lauded on west coast of Africa, a
which has been known for a
century as White
Legal Notices
MELTS
FOB
I hereby announce myself a can-
for sheriff of Pitt county, sub-
to the action of the Democratic
primary. S. I. DUDLEY.
FOB
I beg to submit myself to the dis-
of the Democratic voters of
Pitt county at the coming primaries
for County Surveyor.
C.
once, and It effect are so formed that He knew that is
i through which it a pernicious form of malaria; and
away to be distributed he had been taught that without the
tie B may
the milk Its
in of disease are
shown by the tact that
v.-v found adhering o one
that examined in New York City.
Too many people are with
the partial exclusion of UM from the
house. Small openings are over-
looked because a few stay flies do not
c. use B treat deal of discomfort. The
extraordinarily rapid rate at which
ties multiply is us
suppose that one law her In
an unoccupied house that contain
and that no
with
generations. It has been estimated
that the number of In that b use
at the end of live weeks would be
about ten And the house
wife who pays no attention to half a
dozen files scattered through her
house wonders from day to day
so many flies come
If these carriers of disease be rig-
idly excluded from contact with the
food eaten Ly any animal this sum-
mer, the danger of diseases
may be disregarded. Of course the
of these, typhoid fever, unless one
case or disease is within the
range of their but they are
the hosts many other parasites.
Here is a definite and well
Instance of how they quickly
spread typhoid
A regiment of healthy young men,
most of them from one city, was mus-
into service for the Spanish-
war. For several weeks
the; were encamped within their own
It was not a Joyous outing;
the fool was scant and cooked by man
who did not know even how to boil
KM chance to tent Ufa
produced many varieties of colds; the
of the camp-followers upset
the digestion of two men out of every
three; on the whole, vitality was at
a low ebb the first month.
But no body was really sick. A
Correspondent would send to his pa-
per daily the names of men who had
fainted during the hot afternoon drills
but the victims wire back In Una by
the time the newspaper was published.
The surgeons end the hospital
stewards were occupied
. social
Then the regiment was bundled off
to Park, glorying In its
record for health and fitness. Its new
camp was laid out in an isolated grove,
high and well drained. Its company
streets ran the , raise of the division
staff. Its drinking water came from
a deep well and from first to loot woe
pronounced ink row free from
Infection. The food was nutritious;
every man In the regiment had become
a fair rank file were
zed and as
Within n few weeks, however, the
surgeons were daily losing
fever; the hospital was
crowded with patients; and now and
then the word came that this man and
that man had died In the general hos-
The perplexed colonel walked
the surgeons from one end of the
camp to the other every morning, but
there was none wise enough to point
his finger at the cause. all
guessed, and guessed wrong.
it is dear daylight now. The
woods were full of
when the regiment with the
health record had set up its tents.
Within three days the new camp was
full of flies, which hart come from
other regiments. If I
mosquito malaria is impossible. He
determined to protect himself against
but he also began to
aka five grains of quinine daily as
an extra precaution.
To his surprise, mosquitoes were
not one of the white man's burdens
on that coast. None of the Europe-
an were secured; the familiar
hum was never heard on the porch
after twilight; and most of the
were unoccupied. Presently the
SHERIFF.
I hereby announce myself a can-
the office of sheriff of Pitt
county, to the Democratic
JOSEPH
FOB
I hereby announce myself a can-
county treasurer of Pitt
county, subject to the action of the
Democratic primary. U. WILSON
FOB
hereby announce myself a can-
for the office of Treasurer of
Pitt county, subject to the action of
forgot his mosquito-net, but the Democratic primary.
. . . . . n j r. n
SALE FOR PARTITION.
North Carolina. Pitt the
Superior Court, before D. C. Moore.
Clerk.
J. Rasberry,
vs.
R. C.
By virtue of decree of the
Court of Pitt County, made by
D C. Moore, clerk, in the above
entitled cause on the 8th day
of June the undersigned com-
missioner. F. C. Harding, will, on Mon-
the day of July. 1919. at
o'clock noon, expose to public sale,
before the court house door In
ville, to the highest bidder, for cash,
the following described lot or par-
of land, situated in the town of
Grifton N. C, situate on the
side of street, adjoining the
lot of A. L. Jackson on one side and
the lot of and Gardner on
the other, and beginning at A. L.
Jackson en the south side
street adjoining the lot of A. L. Jack-
son on one side and the lot of
and Gardner on the other, and begin-
at A. L. Jackson's corner on
Queen street and runs with his line
to the canal thence up the canal to
Dawson and Gardner's line, thence
with Dawson and Gardner's line to
Queen street, thence with Queen
street feet to the beginning, and
being the brick store and lot owned
by J. C. Rasberry and R. C.
This sale is to be made for the
pose of making partition between J.
C. Rasberry and R. C. ten-
in common.
This the 8th day of June.
F. C. HARDING.
Commissioner.
kept up his quinine. on
u the morning, he would
a small red spot on hand or fore-
d w
C. T.
but it seemed to protect i hereby announce B
mosquitoes so few as to at- for Constable Of Greenville
tract no notice. subject to the action of the
first of the mouth had primary of the t
FOB
I hereby announce myself a
date Constable of town-
ship, subject to the action of the Dem-
primal y. G. A. JACKSON
expired, however, the American was
tossing in bed with the fever that has
Its heavy toll on that coast.
And thereafter, on an average of
two weeks for six months he bad
the African fever. He steadily lost
and strength, his complexion
turned yellow, and there was a look
bis eyes that caused more than
one European to take him aside and
say, get away for a
Then an army surgeon happened
man with a reputation as
expert on tropical diseases. He
was gathering data for a report on
West African diseases. When he met
the American he saw material for bis
He punctured an ear-lobe, col-
a drop of blood on a glass
slide, and went off to his microscope.
malaria l are eating
up your rod blood he
said the day. as calmly as if he
had announced that the pigs were in
the garden. have two varieties.
One of them can be killed with
nine; the other can't. Better
borne build up your
said the American.
when I come again the mos-
that bites me must first saw his
way through the Worlds
Work.
ALBERT M. ALLEN.
FOB
hereby announce . . self a
rate for Constable of C town-
subject to the action of Dem-
primary, v.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Having day qualified before D.
C. Moore, clerk of the superior court
Of Pitt county, us administrator of the
estate of D. Gardner, deceased. All
are Indebted to raid arc
hereby notified they are required
to make Immediate settlement with
the undersigned administrator, and all
persons holding claims against said
estate are notified to file their
claims with said administrator within
one year from the date hereof, or this
notice will be plead In bar of recovery
in said claims.
This the day of July, 1910.
F. C. HARDING,
of D. Gardner.
YOU
A LITTLE
IF YEARS AGO one of your ancestors had
banked only dollars at per cent, com-
pound interest, and you had that and the
interest, and each dollar bill were a link in a
chain, that chain would reach from New York
to San Francisco.
Money grows in our bank if you will let it.
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank.
We pay interest at 4- per cent, on time
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE
GREENVILLE,
OLD
ITEMS.
NOR. CAR.
Choice Cut flowers
Roses, Carnations, Violets,
Our Specialties
Wedding in ell of the attest styles.
designs ard bouquets the
artistic t shirt
Stile Trees, Climbing noses,
sod Plants
in great varieties.
telegraph and orders promptly
executed t
J. L CO.,
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF FOUNTAIN
AT FOUNTAIN
IN THE NORTH CAROLINA
At the close of business, June O
United Sit to is booming along
way to n of
at
y that
had Inhabitants.
population In
The taken will, in
the opinion or show a total
than
The country is growing at rate
of a year. The arc
. .
not to marked in th rural population
it is tact which moving
some of the the situation
to anticipate a time when the world
is likely go to
at present, however, a large ma-
of Americans refuse to become
, i about such dismal prophecies.
There is progress all along the line,
It may alarming to person
that the country i.-. growing so feat.
would b i decidedly mote alarm-
if it ware no at all. II
a of vital and fer-
-.-oil and nobody is seriously over
THE NORTH CAROLINA
COLLEGE AGRICULTURE
and MECHANIC ARTS
The college for training In-
workers. Courses In
culture, Horticulture, Animal Hus-
and Dairying In
and Mechanical Engineering;
in Cotton Milling and Dyeing; in
Industrial and In
culture teaching.
examination at each
county seat on the July.
I. HIM,
s.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
The undersigned having duly
before the Superior Court Clerk
Pitt county as executors of the
will and testament of John King, de-
ceased, notice is hereby given to all
persons indebted to the estate to
make immediate payment to the
and all persons having any
claims against the estate are notified
that they must present the same to
the undersigned payment on or
before the 11th day of July. 1911, or
this notice will be plead In bar of
recovery.
This 11th day of July, 1910.
EATON C. KING.
, JOHN E.
Executors of John King,
HI
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts secured and
unsecured
Banking house, furniture
and fixtures
Due from banks and
Cash Items
Gold coin
Silver coin, including all
minor currency
National bank notes and
other II. S. note
Total
211.35
300.00
0.136.49
41.60
10.00
Capital stock paid In
Undivided profits, less cur.
ex. and taxes paid
Time of deposit
Deposits subject to check
Cashier's
881.00
11.20
16.63
Total
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified administrator
of Elizabeth deceased, late of
Pitt county. North Carolina, this Is
to notify all persons having claims
against the estate of said deceased to
exhibit them to the undersigned on,
or before July 1911, or this notice
be plead Iii bar of their recovery.
All persons indebted to said estate
will please make immediate payment.
W. Ewell. Administrator.
This 12th day of July. 1910.
G. Jams ii Son, Attorneys.
Stale Carolina, county of
I, W. E. Cobb. cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
W. E. COBB Cashier.
R. A. FOUNTAIN.
R. L. JEFFERSON,
G. W. JEFFERSON,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to 8th day of July. 1910.
D. F. LANG, Notary Public.
My commission expires July
Babbling RaB by a
I was about fourteen. At the close
of a long, hot summer day on my way
from the fields to Bat barns with my
team. stopped to get a nice, cool
drink at the spring-house. Wherever
hear the slogan to the farm
I think of some of those days, and
shake my head. To this day I can
not imagine horseback riding for pleas-
at break of day; a fire-alarm
toilet; to the pasture for the horses;
then to work; dinner at
eleven; more work; supper at five;
more work; at sunset back to the
barns to take care of the horses;
then remove both there
were two-and, as Kipling writes of
his Kim, ten thousand miles in-
to Oh. It was a merry
think not.
Well. stopped at the spring-house.
You know the kind, built into the
hillside, of good, big field stone and
logs. The water bubbles out of the
hillside Into the stone-lined spring,
and runs over Into a trough under a
log partition to the water-tight trough
inside the real spring-house where the
crocks of milk, and jars of butter,
and and the other good
things are kept cool. There Is a
tout door to this treasure-room of
spring-house, and sometimes mothers
have had to put locks on the doors.
for not only stolen water Is sweet.
I dipped the hollow gourd dipper
deep down In the cool waters, played
It back and forth awhile Idly, to cool it
too, and with the fresh water pearls
dripping from it, poured the satisfy-
stream down my hot throat.
wiggle ray toes as think of it, as
bate wiggled my bare toes then.
Another of water over head
and writs, splashing over the clean
stone floor, and I came up out of the
spring-house refreshed and clear-eyed
to the vision that I prettiest
woman I ever saw.
I have met women since who seemed
prettiest at the time, but somehow
always go back to the vision of the
spring, it the contrast of her
beauty with the hard, dally
Was It the environment; the twilight;
the time of year; a mood of the mo-
I had never thought of women
as pretty or not pretty, before; but
as she came down the path to the
spring, a new world seemed opened
that instant. Was it the budding
of an side hitherto unrealized
or was It the wide chasm between boy
and man bridged on the instant. M
often happens or was she real
You shall J.
the for August.
But Time The Hems Are
Hanrahan. N. C, July 13.1910.
Once upon a time, a for
about six years in a cottage located
in a quaint old town. In the eastern
portion of this State. The town is
built on n peninsular of sand that
must reach to China or some other
lower region. It was there that an
event happened that entirely
our life, and in so doing,
opened our eyes to the necessity of
good roads.
Mr. Will you indulge us for
this once and let us tell of this event
in our own simple way Well risk
lessons In the great need of up-to-date
roads. Day after day. In our wand-
To of Welcome lo State Den-
Association.
We take the following from The
Wilmington Star In reference to the
State Dental Association in session at
The response was made by Dr. D.
L. James, of one of the
leading members of the profession in
North Carolina, whose splendid ad-
Cress was listened to with great inter-
est. In the beginning he said that he
was proud to be the spokesman tot
such a body of men as the dentists
appreciation of the society for the
dial welcome. Dr. James was familiar
with the that Wrightsville Beach
has been the scene this year of many
notable gatherings, mentioning each
S OM we and expressing regret that he was not
ii . . ,, Minn as
THIS FOB
Get a High-o-
outfit . .
Pour a few drops from the bottle
into Lie Inhaler that with each
and breathe It in or times
Immediately you will know that Hy-
and the inflamed
and irritated
does more than soothe
and heal. It the germs, per-
severing pest-, that are at the root
all conditions.
year I suffered terribly with
catarrh used one bottle of
and my catarrh was
Helen Cal.
A complete including
a bottle of a hard rubber
pocket inhaler and simple directions
for use, costs only If you now
own a inhaler, you can get
an bottle of for only
cents at Coward Wooten's.
Guaranteed to cure catarrh, croup,
sore throat, or mousy
back.
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.,
AT N.
At the close of
TRAFFIC,
Visit
Water
Mr. M. K. King, president, and Mr.
J. T. of the Lake Drum-
Canal and Water Company,
with headquarters at Norfolk, arrived
in the City yesterday afternoon. These
n are now making a tour of
the water towns in Eastern Caroline,
with a view of stimulating the water
in this section. Their object
congestion in spots, but there are to the water trade
rural territories Where the Of a eastern towns and Norfolk and
the ax scarcely Has been heard. Baltimore. They hope to get the
conservation movement has been fair-1 Pie of this section Interested In water
launched and the whole country Is transportation. If they do
learning how to produce more on a steamboat line la established It will
mean a great saving In the way
freight rates, etc. Mr. King, It will be
remembered by the Daily read-
Its Standard Is a Simplicity Rap
Power and
Women are wont to say that they
dress for the men. I believe they do;
also for themselves; also for other
women, says J. in
The August. don't
believe one man In a thousand can
appreciate an elaborate gown. Most
men. I think, like simpler effects
would push that carriage with the
precious little one, that she might
get sunshine and fresh air, God's best
gifts to man, even for
Through that sand; oh. how it
did drench our clothes, not with the
spray from the sea but with the con-
oozing from the pores of our
skin, and then we wondered why that
town had stood there for years
and those people had never thought
to build a shell road and pave their
streets with the shells right at their
bands. On looking about and upon
further investigation, we found that
we were the only people U that town
that had even rolled a baby carriage
And tho poor horses, they never
thought about their comfort, forsaken
and gave out. they only had to go to
their work. Then we thought. Is
there nothing that we can do that
will open their eyes to this great need
So we watched to see what paper had
tho largest circulation In that town
and we saw that at that lime It was
Raleigh Post. So we wrote that
paper an article advocating a shell
road and paved streets, and it opened
its columns to us. Then they called
us the sea side correspondent to the
Post.
In than twelve months after
this, those people of that town had
built a shell road and there was one
road leading out of town. In three
they had paved their important
streets with shells, and now you can
look on almost any of the streets
that town at early mom or late In
the afternoon and see then dotted
with baby carriages and, too, the
will be pushing the carriage with
his wife walking beside him. Yes,
they could push ten babies now with
more ease than we pushed one then.
People of Pitt county and of North
Carolina, in the name of humanity,
build good roads. Are like the old
going through the streets of
Goldsboro. with a heavy load of wood
and beating his ox for every Step,
when a kind old lady said to
-Have you got any he said
no ma'am, I got but
Loans and Discount.
sec. an i
and
Due from Banks
Silver coin, including ll ,
minor currency .
National I
r U. S. notes
Total
I LIABILITIES.
Surplus fund,
Undivided profits,
I ard aid
or, Noter an-1 r discounted
Time of Deposit
i to Chit.
611.95
Total
able to deliver a response as eloquent
as those heard at the other
held during the season, but de-
that none could accept an ad-
dress of welcome more heartily than
he in behalf of the fine men that
at the seashore. After paying a
tribute to the members of the
he referred to the fact that re-
there was unveiled in Paris a
monument of Horace Wells,
can dentist, who discovered
which, he declared, had done pro-1
more than anything else for the
happiness of mankind. Diseases of
many kinds, such as consumption,
fever, etc. have their origin in
the mouth. whom the
speaker said was the greatest living
man. said that the prosperity of tr
country depended upon the health
its people, and the speaker declared
it of utmost Importance that one-
should properly care tor his teeth and
use the brush and
gently, thereby greatly decreasing the
death rate. He referred to the cam-
of Instruction of school children
started last March by the National
Dentist Society and declared that it
was destined to accomplish much good
for the general health of the people.
In conclusion, Dr. James
the mouth clean, for out of it are the
issues of life.
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt,
I W. H. Cashier of above-name, bank, do sol-
swear that the is
Mecklenburg Leads In Automobiles.
There are Just 1.580 automobiles In
North Carolina, with the exception of
the machines in New Hanover county
which are not registered with the
secretary of State owing to a special
act exempting New Hanover. The
county registering the most machines
is Mecklenburg with Others
or more
i-us has Rowan Stanly
There are counties that have no
automobiles In their borders yet.
They
wick, Carteret, Caswell, Clay, Dare,
Davie, Gates, Graham, Greene, Hay-
wood, Hyde, Madison, Macon, Mitch-
ell, Montgomery. Onslow,
Stokes. Swain,
knowledge and belief.
Subscribed and sworn to be-1
ma this 7th day of July,
S. T. Carson,
Notary Public.
M. O. Blount,
Staton,
Directors.
Atlantic Coast tins
Soreness of the whether
Induced by violent exercise or injury,
is quickly relieved by tho
cation of Chamberlain's Liniment.
This liniment Is valuable for
muscular rheumatism, and always
quick relief Sold by all drug-
gists.
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Greenville,
and Kinston, April 1st,
of train, automobile or buggy may
cause cuts, bruises abrasions, sprains,
or that demand s Ar-
Salve-earth's greatest healer,
quick relief and prompt results.
POT burns, boils. of all
eczema, chapped hands and lips, sore
eyes or corns, Its supreme, snares
pile cure. At all druggists.
AH
m.
m.
in.
at.
m.
m.
m.
m.
It r.
Ar.
Norfolk
good
Washington
Plymouth
Greenville
At.
Ar.
-M
P-
a.
n.
a.
a.
a,
a.
a.
in-
in
m.
in.
For further
m ticket agent, or
THE
Where
World's
Greatest
and External
Pain
Remedy
For Sciatica, Lame
ti i ,
Cult. Colic. Tool.
ache and all Nerve, and A hi i
The a Ark m
by mat ,
Hr Co., Va.
Norfolk Southern R. R.
NIGHT EXPRESS
Pullman Sleeping Car Service
between N. C, and Norfolk, Va.,
beginning June
The only local car line between Raleigh and Norfolk, via Wilson
Farmville, Greenville and Washington, without change.
Read Down SCHEDULE Up
HAVE ESCAPE.
He. I
He II
M. II
lain
lesser
Nell
piece of ground than formerly
. Had occurred Wan prod iced on a large acreage.-
to of the staff surgeons to examine Louisville Courier-Journal,
the fuzzy feet of a flies, he would
have found the germs which
he vainly Bought In the his
reputation would have been made.
These flies walked all over the food In
every company kitchen and the proud
record of the regiment was quickly
shattered
The mosquito, as well the fly,
Invariably be looked upon as
s red flag of danger. It not worth
while to wait until he alights to see
whether his body rests In a horizontal
position or at an other
to determine whether he be an
anopheles mos-
or one of a number of other
The fact that he la a mos-
should be a signal for his speedy
THE NORTH CAROLINA
State Normal and
College
N. C, July
C. D. Smith, J. R. Smith, Mark and
David Smith, went to Greenville Thurs
day to see the Bloomer girls play the
Greenville boys a game of base ball.
Misses Nannie and Carrie Belle
Smith, and others of our section at-
tended the picnic at Allen's school
Friday, and report an enjoy-
able time and a plenty of good dinner.
We bad very nice Sunday schools
at Arthur and at Smith's school house
Sunday.
We have been having It very dry
for several days, but we had a very
era. at one the
dent and general manager of the
Norfolk Southern They
left this afternoon for New Born and
other News.
la
no
II to
A Smart Dog.
Mr. Milton Johnston, The Reflector
pressman, has a dog that Is as smart
as dog. As a trainer, Mr.
Johnston Is bard to beat, and has
taught his dog to do many
tricks. In his yard he has
by the for the
men North Carolina. Four
leading to Degrees. Special
Courses for Teachers. Fail
begins September Those
ring to apply as
For and other In-
address
I. Pres., Greensboro, H. C
-X
r. in
u in
no
in
Southern Railway Ar
Hen S. A. L. Ar
U. and P.
Ar
Raleigh, Union Station
vi Wilson
New Bern, via Goldsboro
Kinston, via
via Wilson
Washington
NORFOLK, Park Avenue
Ar
Ar
Ar
Ar
Ar
Ar
Ar
p.
it
a. m.
too
made at Norfolk with all lines digging- B
trains operated between Norfolk and New
and except Sunday, Raleigh and New a
Washington.
Nos. carry Pullman sleeping;
and Norfolk. Make, close connection . son
to from Wilmington, Rocky Mount New Bern, Kinston
direct i I. n st Raleigh with R. S. P. Ky., to
e; with Sou. Ry. to from Henderson.
a high stand to which the
climbs by menus of a ladder, and taker
.,. high dive as skillfully a. did the
nice rain Monday evening, which was high diving dog that was here with
a pleasure to the farmers. I carnival some weeks ago.
J. W. Perry CO.
NORFOLK, VA.
Cotton Factors and handlers of
Tim and Bags.
and shipment so-
Bennett, New Bern, N. C,
H. C. W. W.
Norfolk, Virginia.
Subscribe to The Reflector.
A gaudily overdressed woman makes
her escort painfully self-conscious.
If he be a gentleman. But all men
can and do the ensemble
face and a beautiful beautifully
gowned. And the simpler tho gown
the greater the appreciation. The
best dressers this. heard
of one recently whoso parting
to her tailor wan, no ex-
to make it
Why is It that nurses are so
never saw an unattractive one,
and some of them are Joy
la It health study has taught
them how to take care of themselves.
Is It their immaculate
Why Shouldn't everybody be
clean Is It their mission which
appeals to sentiment Why should-
everybody have a mission After
all, Isn't that our real measure of
beauty
How too often have I seen a beau-
face, glowing with health, and had
the surface beauty sadly marred for
me by discovering an Insipid brain
It Is the same with men.
Some splendid specimens whom I
have eagerly gone to meet soon show-
ed brainless heads or licentious souls,
and have turned away with disgust.
A weak man must always a
sight, however tho outside.
Men this quickly In oilier men;
women In other women; but men do
not get the measure of a shallow or
bad woman so nor women
the measure of a handsome rake.
Overtake by Severe Storm on Road
and Horses Hun Away.
Mr. C. Rountree, who has Just
returned from Seven Springs, tells us
of the narrow escape from a serious
accident to his party. They left the
afternoon to drive
to the railroad Station at
Dine miles distant. Mr. Rountree and
a gentleman from Wilson were In one
carriage In front, and Misses
and Susie Moore and a gentleman
from were In a carriage a
short distance behind
When about half way to
the party was caught In a storm, with
a torrent of rain and light-
A Hash of lightning struck
near the carriage occupied by the
ladles, causing the to run away.
Fortunately for the occupants, the
not gone far at. their break-
speed they broke the
single tree of the carriage and be-
came unhitched from the vehicle,
It standing In the road. Tho
ran on for some distance when
plunged Into a tree, killing one
of them Instantly and so badly In-
the other that It will die.
You con Kind The
With the other changes that have
come along recently In making the
new Reflector, some changes have
so come In the arrangements Tor car-
tying on the and editorial
departments.
Mr. C. B. has been trans-
from the printing room to the
business office, and has charge
things there.
The office Is In the room
just In the rear of business office,
with entrance on Third street, where
he can be found when not elsewhere.
Mr. C. W. la foreman and
of the printing de-
up stairs.
If you have business with either of
these departments, you will know
Where to go. There will always be
somebody to wait on you. The
office telephone is No. and the
printing room
Has Been on Some Farm for Forty.
Four Years.
On January 1st, Dr.
of township, hired
Laney, colored, lo work on hie
farm. From that good day to this
Jack has been working on Dr.
farm, never leaving tho place
to for another employer. Or.
says that he has never tried
to Influence Jack In a political way.
Jack has never voted against
except time, end that was
in a law election way back
yonder years ago Dr. want-
ed no fences around the and
Jack could not see It that way and
voted his employer. Dr.
lo says that he and Jack will
landlord and tenant or employer and
employee until one of them dies
Monroe Enquirer.
M. T. C, WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N.
.-v
Taft A Van Dyke
When the stomach fails to perform
its functions, the bowels become de-
ranged, the liver and the kidneys con-
causing numerous diseases.
The Stomach and liver be re-
lo a healthy condition,
Stomach and Liver Tablets
be depended upon to do It Easy
to take and most effective. Sold by
all druggists.
., Ill
BEST MEDIUM
J-i-ii
Taft Van Dyke
Every about
to hone, and
to
furniture 2nd
House Fishings
acquaintance of
store is like
Mead. Try it, ad you
will i true.
Honest honest store.
methods and
m artful service.
f I be same you
the same body.
get
p belt
Your truly,
All Others la
Says Advertiser.
HOME FURNISHINGS.
The world's most successful
for bowel complaints Is
Colic, Cholera
Remedy. It has relieved more
and and saved more lives
than any oilier medicine In use. In-
valuable for children and adults.
by all druggists.
AN
TAKES TWO
New Telephone Subscribers.
For the benefit of those subscribers
who failed lo Insert on the supple-
of the directory the new
as published, we are again re-
Frank, residence.
Mrs. M. K. residence.
W. E. residence
W. M. residence.
O. A. residence.
A. H. residence.
Brown, Z. W. residence.
R. W. residence.
Work tor Greenville with us.
But The Reflector Is Trying to Serve
the People.
Since the Norfolk Southern railroad
took off the day trains on this division
of their road. It has given very poor
mall facilities between Greenville and
local points both east and west. This
gave The Reflector quite a hard knock,
for previous to that change papers
could be sent In every direction
the county the same day of
publication, but after change no
point could be reached on the Norfolk
Southern until day.
To some extent are now trying
lo this disadvantage, and
have about succeeded in doing so with
the malls going west, by getting out
an early edition In time to send
the o'clock This was don.
Friday, and w hope t
be aide to do every day. This will
put the In the hands of the
of Farmville quick as th
pie of Greenville get them.
Owed
II.
About years ago, Ellen Jordan,
now known Ellen con-
a debt with William Bonner,
both colored of this city. The
transaction had long ago been for-
gotten by Bonner. A few weeks ago
the woman paid a visit to
Bonner and paid the debt, the amount
Of which was As she paid over
the money she stated that tho fact of
owing tho amount had caused
her many a sleepless night. She Is one
person in a thousand. Her honesty
cannot be
That newspaper advertising
all others in was the
declaration made by Thomas
dale, president of the Poor Richard
club of Philadelphia, and himself an
extensive advertiser. In an address
made by him before tho Lebanon
board of trade.
The occasion of Mr.
address was a reception given in his
honor by the Lebanon board of trade,
at the close of which he addressed the
members, who include the leading
business men of that city. Mr. Mar-
advised the merchants present
to advertise regularly In their home
newspapers. your advertise-
truthful and said Mr.
Get a reputation for hon-
est advertising.
Don't expect patrons to rush into
your store In a mob following one ad-
Patrons must
to your methods of advertising.
The tendency of the times Is to have
one price and do honest business. You
are behind the age if you do not
I don't see how any merchant
can do a profitable business If he
doesn't
POST
Local Scenes, School, Etc
TALCUM POW Variety of Brands
TOILET SOAPS--A Stock and Big Assort-
COWARD
o. w. mm,
IN
Groceries
And Provisions
Teething have more or less
which can be
giving Chamberlain's Colic,
and Remedy All that U
necessary to give the
utter each operation of
els more than natural and then
oil to cleanse the system. It is sate
and sure. Sold by all druggists.
Cotton and
Stomach and Liver
Tablets gently tho liver mid
expel poisonous matter,
, Hie system, cure constipation
Sold by all drug-
I and sick headache.
gists-
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
as administrator
of J. L. Keene, deceased, late of
ton. N. Oh this Is to notify all persons
having claims against the estate of the
said deceased, to exhibit them to the
undersigned, within twelve months
from this dale, or this notice will be
pleaded In bar of their recovery.
All persons Indebted to said estate
will please make Immediate payment.
This 23rd day of June, 1910.
J. R. HARVEY.
Administrator.
F. G. James Sou.
Fresh kept con-
in stock. Country
Produce Bought and Sold
Not Quite f
m W
often you can a .
thing
nail or screw driver or
M lacking. a good
V tool box and be prepared for
ii emergencies. Our line
is a you could desire, and Ag
we will see that your tool
box does not lack a single
useful article.
Of Course
You get
Horse Goods i. c
of
D. W.
GREENVILLE N S
North Carolina
DEPARTMENT
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON
j Authored Agent of The Eastern Reflector tor Winterville and Vicinity-Advertising Rates on Application j
K. C July 1910. Mr. J. s. Roes, of was In our
Post master U C. Bryan, to town yesterday.
Norfolk Thursday. Land Plaster tor
Ti- Count School Co- N C.
A. Q. Co Mu-
Company cheap;
Boat durable. Terms
arc liberal. When in market,
come to see us. have the for
you.
Mr. R. L. the book-
for lie Pia County Oil Com-
Wednesday his borne,
G ton, lo spend a days and
afterwards come the summer re-
to spend vacation.
We arc a Dice in-- of
fins caskets. Prices arc right and
can furnish nice hearse service.
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co.
Mr. Mrs. S. Byrd went to
Thursday. Airs. Byrd went
down to have her eyes examined and
treated.
For Spring Goods.
Embroidery and Laces see
lot Barber Co
Mr. A. Cox returned from Char-
yesterday .
For nice, fresh Fish, see R. Dall.
on Tuesdays, Thursdays and
days.
Her. M. A. Adams, of came
In yesterday in conduct services in
the Baptist church St
Mr. J. It. Smith, a prominent mer-
chant Ayden. was town Tues-
day.
For cold drinks all
at II. Johnson's Fountain.
Kits Chapman left today for
Point, where ; teach this
year.
lot of
and Children's
Barber i- Co.
Mr. ; ii Joyner, of was
in town yesterday.
The Is the kind you
nod. See us. A. W. Ange Co.
Mr. John Coward and Mi-s Blanche
Cannon, of Ayden, were in town yes-
call your attention cur
line Groceries. V. Dall.
Hiss Cos of Bl Jack, came
in yesterday to .;., Clyde Chap-
man.
For nice, fresh, corned Herrings,
see W. Ange ii Co.
H. C.
Misses Savage and Louise
Tucker, of came In
to visit Miss Pearl Hester.
Straw Hats g . g feat, buy one,
don't Ange Co.
Mr. C. T. Cos returned yesterday
from a visit to and Ashe-
Ville.
Leave your r for Ice at H. L.
Johnson's. Win be delivered any.
where t. .
X. c. July 1910.
have thoroughly
renovated em i. Ill and have ad-
new and
netting and are in position to make I
and d ;.
Ki . an left
or D Id Pol t, win re she
will b gin i .- hi Monday.
i ii I Oil tor the floor
Boy some, . ii .
Barber ,
to
; a, Co.,
A, Ed left
Mr. M. G. Bryan returned
day from Norfolk, where he
has been to see his sou. Mr. M. B.
Bryan,
A new lot of Dry Goods and Notions
just in. Better buy while cheap.
A. W. Ange ft Co.
Mrs. Maggie Butt went to Green-
ville yesterday and will be at the E.
C. T. T. S., for a week or two.
We are now In position to do
grinding every day and general repair
work Barber
Co.
Rev. Mr. Adams held services at
the Baptist church Sunday and de-
livered an excellent sermon.
A nice lot of Matting Just InA.
W. Ange Co.
Mr. Ed. has sent us a
Jorge turnip, weighing eight pounds.
A six key Soda for
D. Dall.
Mrs. A. W. Ange and Mrs.
and daughter, went to Ayden last
night.
How is your soul Let us
you our new lot of Shoes.
Harrington, Barber
Misses Louise Tucker and
Savage, of Greenville, who have been
visiting Miss, Pearl Hester, returned
to Greenville today.
have put in an assortment of
Patterns for all
Barber Co.
Miss Crawford is spending
a few days at this neck.
Miss Delia of E, C. T. T.
S. came In last night.
We have Needles. Bobbins, and
Shuttles, for any Sewing Machine In
ii.- country. Also needle threaders,
the very thing for affected eyes or
dark Barber Co.
Fresh Corn Herrings at
ton, Barber Co.
A new lot of Lamps just
Barber Co.
Prof. F. C. Nye left Tuesday morn-
for Walt and Stanton-
tug. the Interest of
High School. The new
have come and are being mailed out.
Prof. Nye report that the prospects
for next season, which opens Sept-
5th, are bright. The
dormitories have been moved together
and will be renovated for
the opening.
Sausage, and Fish, going
W. at Johnson stand
The A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. are In
to give you the best Tobacco
Trucks and Flues for your money.
They have made extensive
STATE DEMOCRATIC
I POLITICAL PLATFORM
ADOPTED AT THE CONVENTION
IS CHARLOTTE.
Hap- Tariff and
Policy of G. for
Public I in i rim
We. the representatives of the
Democratic party in North Carolina.
In convention assembled, rejoice in
the call occasioned coming
election and the opportunity thus of-
to lift up again In the midst of
the people of North Carolina the ban-
of the Democratic party us a sure
standard of their rights and the
failing guide of their progress, and
we reaffirm our to the
cardinal principals Of Democratic
government and congratulate the
people of North Carolina upon the
wise, progressive and economical ad-
ministration of the affairs of govern-
since the return of the Demo-
party to power in this State.
We recommend to the people of
North Carolina the consideration of
the With which the affairs
have been administered the Demo-
officials the clean, efficient
and economical conduct of the State
government from the day of the re-
turn to power of the Democratic par-
rates against the towns and cities of
North Carolina and In favor of the
cities of other
We pledge to the
and encouragement of all legitimate
enterprises and developments that
may be located within the borders of
this State, and In the administration
of the laws no legitimate enterprise
shall be injured.
We condemn and denounce the
tariff policy of the Republican party
as enacted In the
bill, and declare the same to be
the most tariff burden ever
placed upon the United States, form-
in behalf of sectional inter-
and fostering the trusts and com-
of the country at the ex-
of the great mass of the
and in spite of the promises of
the Republican party that prosperity
would follow its adoption, we call at-
to the present commercial
condition of the country, its idle
industries and unemployed op-
We the extravagant and
like national government
by the Republican party, whereby
has been a useless expenditure of
over annually of the
people's money.
We call attention to the failure of
the party to revise the
tariff In accordance with the pledges
of Its platform and Its promises.
We demand the enactment of a
tariff for revenue only to meet the
expenses of a government
administered.
ONE
WORD that
It refers to Dr. Liver Pill and
MEANS HEALTH.
Are you constipated
Troubled with
Sick headache
Bilious
Insomnia
ANY of these symptoms and many others
Indicate Inaction of the LIVER.
Need
Take No Substitute.
HOW
SHE TEACHES CORRECT SPEECH.
ITEMS.
N. C. July
Mr. C. L. Tyson of and Mr.
Robert of were
.- visiting at C. Sat-
we reaffirm lie and
of our party upon the questions of
the extension and Improvement and
of Internal affairs
the State and the institutions pro-
the Stale for the care of our
both durable and
and pledge ourselves to the
continuation, up-building and
thereof.
We pledge ourselves to the con-
development of the internal
affairs of the to the continua-
of the policy of education which
has been carried forward with such
success under the Democratic ad-
to the further
of local improvements; to the
maintenance of the institutions for
the insane, deal, dumb and
and to the extension these
to meet the demands upon the
Suite the needs the
require the care and main-
of the govern
We pledge ourselves to the
aid and assistance of the
soldier demand that
shall ample
lions for comfort Mid care.
commend and approve ad.
sea- w W.
ton lieu nil your orders 11-,. ,., . .
y prompt- and the other officials.
land commend and approve our Sen-
Car of Top Dressing for Cot- and of Congress
ton just W. Ange Co. j for their activity in behalf of the
N. C. people North Carolina.
Internal development and
OS
Prepared Carolina
Station.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis were
visiting his brother. Mr. C. E.
Lawhorn, Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Manning ware
stopping at C. E. Sun-
lay night.
We are well helped up with Sun-
lay schools Just now. We attend the
Chapel Sunday school at Arthur
a. in., and at Smith's school house
p. in., and they are flourishing
Mr. Smith was a very
proud man last week Just because
t. young gentleman came and took
his abode there. It is expected for
Mm to remain there for twenty-one
years.
Miss Emma Joyner. of
came up yesterday evening and is
Stopping with her sister. Mrs. Mills
Smith She expects to spend a
week here with relatives.
We have been having very nice
rains the last few days and It has
turned much cooler.
Legal Notices
One Woman Supplies a Need
Hates a timid Living
Woman of culture and travel made
a glorious success of teaching
speech. It Is surprising how-
much incorrect speech there is among
educated people. They cling to pro-
Incorrect pronunciations,
wrong use of words, and unmusical
Intonations. The Southerner holds to
the Mesa utterance of his
days; the
flattens all his vowels; the
throws his r's completely out
This woman undertook to correct
such errors and tench a pure, perfect
English speech to a few young
men. She became so successful that
Post Office Ml I lie
Last
It has been said times before,
that the post office, of a town is one
of the best Indications the growth
of the business of that town. Post-
master R. c. Flanagan, has given us
some figures that show what Green-
ville la doing In this particular, and
they are interesting Ly the way of
comparison as well.
For the mouth of June 1909. the
post office receipts were and
for the cam. month of 1910. they were
a gain of 1174.10. For the
quarter ending June 1909 the
receipts were for
corresponding quarter this
376.90. a gain of
For the fiscal year ending
1910, the receipts were
enough to put Greenville well over
the limit that entitles her to free
mail delivery In the city. We hope
will make note of this
and hurry up the free
N. C. SI
The Old North Slate Continues the
March of Progress
For the week ending July 13th, the
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the
following new industries for North
concrete works-
500.000 mines
mill.
drug company.
Siler telephone corn-
drug corn-
she was compelled to start a school
Of correct English which has grown Wake Forest-50.000
to his promising
Held Is In every town i plant.
-a.-The for colon on mill.
The Up-to-date Hardware
NOTICE.
North County.
In Court.
Lula
Gorham
The defendant above named will
take notice that an action entitled
above has been commenced in the
. to
Be;. t .,;. ,. B.
Cards, ii. L J
g p
Minnie Bell
a , who have been
, Miss Chapman, return-
ed b
To reduce our stock before
we will offer for a limited time,
r ginghams,
Dress Goods,
to Sc; Suiting. Percales.
to Motor Cloth,
Waist Goods, Lawn,
Mohair n,
P aches.
Pie Peaches, Shirts,
Shirts, Shirts,
Call and Bee what we
W. Ange Ai Co.
left Monday
for a visit to Ayden and
ville. We wish her a pleasant trip.
Field and for sale by
A. W. Ange Co. N. C.
Miss Lizzie Cox. who has been visit-
Miss Clyde Chapman, returned
home Monday.
The A. O. Cox Manufacturing Co.
arc rendering good service In the
business. Collins and
cheap with excellent hoarse
vice.
Several of our young men went to
Sunday for their annual
bath.
Lot us frame that for you.
Any size W. Ange Co.
You will never regret when you
, a Buggy,
by A. O Cox Manufacturing
Co., N. C.
A very timely bulletin of Pig
has been prepared pub-
o the work
was behalf by the Good Roads As-
re; Information with hi North Carolina.
to growth and Wt recognize the great growth end
or the for at this time J Improvements of the along ma-
i ma in culture
by fan and other fruit
of the upper South.
tends to the up-building of any
Citizenship and we take pride in tho
progress that has been made under
Democratic government in the build-
of toads and tun extension ,,
means of at
i, , Superior Court Pitt county to bell
he w . Monday before the I
first Monday September, 1910. It
being the 29th day of August, 1810,
the court house of county In
Superior Court of Pitt county, lo
a divorce from the bonds of Bat-1
Bald defendant
notice he is
The bulletin deals with tho climate
i of the us well as
the sections of the Slate suited Tar
the growth of this fruit. It dis-
cusses the and
the state he other sec-
subj soils tor pro-
planting, cultivation,
mi ;. and
pruning, winter protection.
ting, marketing, uses and
are fully discussed. The
subject of the premature
dropping green or Immature lip
is fully treated and remedies for the
same am given.
A copy of this bulletin be
Secured free by addressing director
C. B. Williams. West Raleigh, N. C.
policy of the Democratic party In the
support and maintenance of the com-
school system of North Carolina,
nil the pledge of the hereto-
fore made of a free
school In district of the State
has been fully met, and we promise
the continued support and Improve-
the public school system of
the State . i Ion of the
same to i . Institutions of the State
for higher education, to the end that
these Institution may placed upon
n permanent of extension and
mi Ii ii consistent with the
growth of the system of the
State end tho population
and demands of her citizenship, and
we the schools of the State
a more liberal instruction in
training aid the
and development of the agricultural
Interests In such schools.
The supervision and control o
public service corporations Is a Wei
recognized right and we pledge our
selves to the enforcement of this
right In the Interest of the people of
the Stale consistent with fair and just
privilege to any person or corpora-
Private inconsistent
with the growth and development of
Internal affairs or the State and the
liberties of the people should not
be allowed. lo Illegal
combinations In restraint of trade,
trusts and monopolies, and favor the
enactment of law as will
credit to Greenville and Pitt county, their existence Impossible.
I know What It Butts n We condemn the unjust and
Greenville, N. C and answer or c.-
to the complaint of the plaintiff,
in said plaintiff
apply to the court for the relief de-
iii the complaint.
This the 16th day of
D. C. Moore, Clerk S. C.
Julius Drown, Attorney for plaintiff.
From One Who Knows Whereof He
Speaks
Mr. Z. T. who is him-
all the routine of a printing office
self an been through
ant knows it form A
to z., stopped ti is morning
to say. want, to you
on the get-Up and i of I'll-
You have improved it
only a hundred per but fife
It Is finer pat it, and great
IT is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish,
Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves. Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a fill Line of Wall Paints-
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place
your orders now with them and you will be
pleased.
Special attention is called to cur line of
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders,
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail to see us before buying, they
can supply your wants. Give them a call.
is.
N. C
discriminations In freight
SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION,
North Carolina- Pitt County,
in the Superior Court, D. C
Moore. Clerk,
Willis Johnston. P. V. Johnston,
J. II. Johnston and Addie Johnston.
TO l he Court
By virtue of a decree of the
Court of county on the 16th
day of July. in above
cause by U. C. clerk, the
undersigned commissioner will on
Tuesday, the 18th day of August,
o'clock in., before the court
house door in Orel expose to
public sale, lo the highest bidder for
cash the following parcel of land, to
lying and being in the county of
Pitt, state of North Carolina, begin-
on the edge the northern
bank of Tar rive.- at a point where
three hollow trees formerly stood,
nearly opposite the lower edge of the
big rock and runs thence nearly at
right angles with the river to the big
slough, old Parker's and Perkins
line, thence down said slough to Par-
or Red Dunks creek, thence
down said creek to the river, thence
up the river to the beginning; con-
one hundred and five acres,
more less, and being the saint-
tract or parcel of land purchased by
Edward C. from the
of Thomas A. Braswell, de-
ceased, and being the second tract of
laud described In a deed from E. C.
to O. Johnston, dated
December and recorded In
Register's Office of Pitt county III
book V-3, Page
This sale will be had for tin-
pose of a partition among
the tenants in common v.-ho are par-
ties In this cause.
This the 16th day of July, 1910.
C. Commissioner.
OVER WOOD SHINGLES
be laid without fun bother tho old wood tho
top of your act A ROOF that
but as
For etc. to
YORK COBB,
MERIDITH COLLEGE.
the foremost colleges for Women in the South.
Course In Liberal Arts covering nine departments, and including elective
in and Bible, which count for the A. H. degree. School
of Art
trained
. i, rm ii. iv
light, heat, physician, nurse, ordinary medicine and all minor fees,
in the Club, to less. Next session begins Sept. 1910. Address,
R T. VANN, Prudent,
Raleigh, North Carolina.
EASTERN
D. J. Editor
Truth In Preference to Fiction.
One Dollar Pr Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JULY 1910.
No.
THE PROPOSED MEMORIAL
TO BELOVED BILL NYE
TO BE Kill DING AT
WALL JACKSON SCHOOL.
Committee Appointed North Caro-
Press
teethe
THEY KEEP TALKING
The committee appointed it the re-
cent meeting of the North Carolina
Press Association to take in the mat-
of a State memorial to Bill
met In Salisbury. Wednesday. July
In formal session, an alter hearing
all the propositions it
That the memorial to the la-
humorist shall take the form
of a memorial building, to be one of
the group and a part of the Stone-
wall Jackson Training School, gen-
known as the State
in Cabarrus county, near Con-
cord.
That the building, furnished and
as the of the
may direct, to the
for the rescue errant boys,
hall cost not less than and
ball be known as Nye Memo-
rial
That the following newspapers
i designated to receive and
to the fund
r this building, funds to be
transmitted promptly to the treasurer
M Julian, the
The Observer, Charlotte.
The Post. Salisbury,
The Citizen, Asheville.
Tim News and Observer, Raleigh.
The News, Greensboro,
The Star I,
The
That while committee De-
this memorial should be
Carolina's tribute
the lamented man of letters, it
ms It wise, in order to ensure the
Of movement, and
to permit the friends of
e outside the state an opportunity
contribute to this movement, that
from outside the state
be gratefully received and ac-
while not solicited.
he committee believes further that
made a wise and nappy selection
the form of this memorial; that
thing it might have conceived would
re brought greater Joy to the heart,
the gifted, kindly man. whose
y It is designed to perpetuate, than
e great work of making useful
of wayward boys, and that were
resented with us in the flesh to-
would have the stamp of his
Furthermore the
bespeakS the hearty co-operation
the brethren of the press
, mid all good citizens general
this undertaking, it is a labor of
that baa already been too
g neglected, to the shame of North
Lei us put our shoulders
the wheel and Show the world
at North Carolina do for the
n it delight to honor.
James M. Chairman.
John M. Julian. Treasurer.
R. W. Vincent.
Robert M. Phillips.
Archibald H. Hoyden.
Committee,
one in Greenville or vicinity
to make a contribution to
object, can hand It In at The
office, and the same will be
In these columns mid
to the nearest paper named
above list.
Other Send In Expressions
They are All Coming.
Mr. J. L. Warren,
my opinion, a complete organization
of the citizens of Pitt county will be
the best means of securing good roads
be present on appointed
Mr. C. M. Smith, Fountain, re-
very much that I can not be with
you at the convention In person, but
will be with you In sentiment, and
hearty approval and sincerely wish
you much success in you laudable
Brother, Fountain.
can expect us to be at the good roads
meting on August first
Mr. R. A. Fountain, Fountain.
have been wanting to see good roads
for a long time, and will be at the
meeting on August the 1st., if
Mr. H. C. Turnage,
to good roads meeting, let me
say that Is has my hearty approval.
am a citizen of county;
am getting old and seldom go far
from home without compulsion.
wish you good luck and much success
In you laudable
Mr. Eason. Fountain. will
be with you if possible on August the
first. think the best way to get
good roads is to levy a special tax.
have the roads worked and then we
will be sure to get good
Mr. W. M. Pugh, Greenville, am
heartily in favor of good roads at
most any cost, but the bond Issue is
the most practical way to get results.
will try and be on hand the Drat
A SLICK NEGRO HAS BEEN
CAPTURED AT LAST.
HAD BEEN DOING SYSTEMATIC
STEALING TWO MONTHS.
Mr. II. A. White the Victim he
lost About Catching
the Thief.
ONSLOW BAR COMMENDS
JUDGE WHEDBEE.
PLEASED WITH HIS METHOD
comer.
Dispatches Rapidly and
Passes Judicial In
a Happy Judge.
YOUNG z KNOCKED OCT.
Ills Training Did Sot
fur
Some of our boys around town
have developed a for box-
Young Chandler was
particularly enthusiastic on the sub-
and seemed to have an air of
a on his shoulder to
see who could knock it oil or take
him up on a light weight challenge.
He been taking on some training
and wanted to show his skill. The
challenge became so pronounced and
galling to the other boys that Sher-
wood decided to him
themselves with a pair of
gloves each, the boys got off on a
private lot, Monday with a
bunch of on each side, and
went at it, with referees and umpire.
There were six rounds,
the honors in the two, a tic
In the third, In the fourth,
and in the next two,
up the the
sixth.
Now that the challenge has been
met and Vanquished, we would
the boys to drop that kind of
sport.
EIRE
AT
Thai Rapidly Going Ahead in
Progress.
The editor made a trip up to
Thursday afternoon, and was
both surprised and gratified to see
that town making such rapid strides
along all lines of progress. There
at this time going up In that
town six brick stores, a new bank
building, a tobacco warehouse, a large
cotton seed oil mill, and several
handsome dwelling houses. The new
bank, which makes the second one
there, expects to begin business the
first of August. A large volume
business is done in that town.
About two months ago Mr. H. A.
While began missing money from his
office, the losses varying from
cents to Mr. White became
at the frequency of these loss-
es and set to work to find out the
cause. He engineered o nice bit of
detective work, and while his plans
were a little slow he kept his patience
and was finally rewarded by land-
lug the thief.
A young colored man, Wiley Clark,
has for sonic time been cleaning up
Mr. White's office, going every morn-
to do this work. Being a slick
and observant Wiley had
learned to manipulate the day lock
on office safe . Mr. White began
to suspect this as the one who
was getting the money and went to
work to catch him.
At first It puzzled Mr. White to get
run of the losses, but finally he
mads the discovery that they were
occurring during the dinner hour
when BO one was in the office. There-
upon he engaged one to watch
the office door while he was at din-
and to telephone him Wiley
was seen lo enter the office. In the
meantime some coins were carefully
marked, a record made of them,
the coins placed In a convenient place
in the safe.
And this Is the plan that did work.
Wiley as seen to enter the office
Several different times, and lust Wed-
he was landed. On that day
while White was at dinner, lie
got a call, and upon answer-
It heard the words in
The signal was readily understood,
and Mr. White hurried down in his
automobile. The walked out
of the office before Mr. While reached
there, but the watcher kept him spot-
so that he could not get away
nor dispose of the money he
en. Mr. White took ii hurried in-
of his marked coin, miss d
some of it, had the arrested
and searched, and the marked coins
wore found In his pocket.
The was given a bearing be-
fore Justice H. Harding and In de-
fault of bond was placed in jail.
On Saturday by mortgaging their
home, the parents of Wiley secured
a bondsman for him and he was re-
leased from prison. As soon as re-
leased he was again arrested under
a warrant for stealing a pistol from
Mr. White. Wiley was again taken
before Justice Harding on this charge
and was held under an additional
loud of which he failed to give
and went hack to prison.
Mr. White says that his total loss-
es up about before lie
succeeded In capturing tho thief.
While at times there was an
lo gel a considerable sum, tho
tried to throw ofT suspicion by
only taking u few dollars a lime.
GOOD ROADS
The Reflector has received the fol-
lowing from the members of the bar
practicing at Onslow Superior Court,
which we take great pleasure in pub-
We, the undersigned members of
the bar, practicing at Onslow
court, hereby desire to express
lo Judge H. W. Whedbee and the
people of the State, our Impressions
upon the manner and ability with
which Judge Whedbee has held this,
his first term of court.
He was Appointed, unexpectedly to
himself, and therefore. In order lo
serve the best interest or the public,
to term without regard to
his private interests. He has held
the term and dispatched quite
a lot of business, and has Impressed
everybody Interested In or observant
or his court his splendid ability
and eminent fairness. His readiness
and equipment supply experience, and
he is already so eminent
judge.
However Indefinable the
known as judicial
may be, lie has it In a happy
degree.
We are to say these things
upon the beginning of his promising
judicial career.
M. KOONCE,
H. EL SHAW.
L. R.
FRANK THOMPSON,
RUDOLPH
T. C.
J. FRANK WOOTEN.
W.
unit on Mr. H. II. Cot-
en's Destroyed.
o'clock Saturday night.
Mr. R. R.
rm on the river, near Bruce, tho
and destroyed by
re.
The fire was discovered In barn,
some cause unknown, and k-
to the stables, both build-
being entirely consumed. In the
buildings were a lot a corn and tor-
and farm all of which
destroyed. Fortunately all the
were gotten out of the stables
I and saved.
The loss Is about
covered by Insurance.
One dollar looks small when Its the
wrapper of a bank roll, but It looks
mighty big when Us the roll.
Now in Greenville.
Mr. Albion Dunn, formerly
Scotland Neck, who It was recently
announced would move to Green-
Is now here and Is opening his
law In the new build-
Greenville extends him a
dial welcome, and Is always glad to
gain such citizens.
INTERESTING DOUBLE OCCASION.
Educational Meeting
Good Roads Association.
Congressman John Small, with
consent of the chamber of com-
good roads committee, has
ranged for a educational
meeting in connection with the good
roads convention Greenville on
next Monday, August 1st. The morn-
session, which opens at o'clock,
will be devoted to the meet-
and the afternoon to good roads.
Both these meetings arc Intended to
impart practical Information to
cal men. They are for your benefit,
you should make It a point lo
come.
New Hanover Superior
Pine
Judge Harry W. Whedbee Is this
week and next holding court in
From the Wilmington Dis-
patch we take the following
of him and the impression ht ii
Harry W. Whedbee,
Greenville, who on the bench
about a week ago taking Judge Ward's
place, is presiding and has already
made a Impression. Judge
bee is a line looking man. In fact,
his appearance is what might be
termed masterly one. His face is
Strong, though kindly, and his eye
la firm and steady. He is stalwart of
build an easy, quiet talker.
charge was clear
and forcible. There was nothing
about it. Neither was there
frills, . .-. II was a plain.
logical, and It be stated with
strong of a grand
Jury's duties and the laws they
to upon. He discussed and de-
scribed the higher crimes, such es
arson and felonious assault,
and laid particular stress upon
jury, Which, he said, is one of the
most all crimes, endanger-
life and property. He told the
grand Jury there is no safety for
any one in the enforce-
or the law, and to all
A Farmer Gives Ills Views Macs
He Thinks Gist
Editor
obedience to your request. will
be with In the good roads meet-
August 1st.
While I do not favor issuing bonds
to build good roads. I favor better
roads, and to change the ancient
road law that has outlived its useful-
My method is as
That every able bodied male citizen
work the roads three days in each
and every year, or pay three dollars.
That every horse and mule be taxed
fifty cents each, every cart twenty-
five cents, every buggy, carriage and
bicycle fifty cents each. That the tax
now levied on automobiles be a
to the road fund. That short
convicts be kept to work on roads
now. That each township shall have
its amount of road tax spent
territory. That there be a board
five road directors in each township,
and that the roads and bridges
placed in hands of director-.
That ten cents be levied on every one
hundred dollars worth of real estate,
the value may be fixed for county
and State taxes. That the rate of
tax Le only by of
That the lax be col-
by the tax collector as now,
and same paid over CO the
as now. That fund ac-
counts be kept in separate books and
shall only be drawn out by order of
said township board of
That no part of the road shall
be let by contract, but paid for at
market pi ice for labor, per hour.
That the teams and machinery and
camp outfit be kept and used by all
of the townships to get their
pan convict labor. That
the oversell- of convicts keep item-
account of all repairs to
property used by said overseer, and
If any new is purchased cost ti
be borne by each township, their pro-
rate part.
This plan, we believe, brother Edi-
tor, Will give the best results, rs well
as the best satisfaction.
G. T. TYSON.
Pin COUNTY WILL HAVE
A VOTING PRIMARY.
c committee
I DECIDES QUESTION.
Add Your to The
The feels that It is
a good enough paper, with to-
day's news today, for all readers to
become subscribers and stop borrow-
the paper from their neighbor.
Tin borrowing reader none In
making the paper hatter and help-
work Greenville and PHI
Come on and gel you on
our growing subscription list.
Just Idle Rumor.
How easy It Is lo get rumors start-
ed. Monday It was all over town that
a boat crossing the sound between
and the beach had capsized
and people were drowned. The He-
phone was kept Jingling for
particulars of the disaster, the In-
learning that there was not
n word of truth in the rumor. The
sea serpent story Is due to come
along next.
DO YOU SEE I
People Will Talk-Especially
Good
Mr am
favor of each township keeping
up Its own
Mr. Matthew James,
In favor of good roads the town-
ship
Mr. W. H. cashier, Bethel
Banking and Trust Company. Bethel,
wish to say that in my opinion
that nothing adds i c a town
than good streets, nothing
helps the country an much as good
I favor them, and be-
that they should be kepi in good
condition by
Mr. want
better roads, and I
holes and wider roads, Bud worked
more, that we may rid
Mr. W. J. Little, Parmele, favor
the good roods movement, and hope
there can be some n, ins by which
we may soon have good
Mr. I. H. lo,
favor the good movement
September 10th, Named as
Day Tolls to lie Open
a. to u p. m.
The Democratic executive com-
of Pitt county held an ad-
meeting here today. In the
office of Chairman F. C. Harding, to
further discuss determine the
matter us to whether the county shall
have a delegated convention or a
voting primary to select candidates
Tor various county offices and
the There was a at-
the
township being i . d.
The first of meeting,
statements by Chairman
Hauling. lo giro a . opportunity
to any person present, not members
of the committee, t to beard first.
Several s Short
speeches, toe st tho wing that
there was near i o equal
t bi m on tho
lion, the feeling nil wanting
i , i was tie b I
the party.
The roll of to ships was called
r r. the the committal
from each to express his views, and
these almost the same equal
of sentiment was shown, the
Idea of doing what is being up-
with every member.
The roll o; townships again
-ailed for the taking or a vole on the
question, and the result was seven
votes for a voting primary, five for a
convention, as near
en. l sentiment as could
have been made without c tie vote.
townships roted For
voting primary, Bethel, Chi-
a Falkland,
Greenville. For delegated
Swift
Carolina, No.
Immediately following the an-
; i, vote there i s
B for the voting
to be made unanimous, and this
was carried without a dis-
vole, showing that every one.
regardless of what his individual
t be, was ready to yield to
the will of the majority.
The selection of the date for the
primary was then taken up and
some Saturday, Sept-
ember was selected as the date,
he primary be open from in.
lo p. m.
The entire meeting was marked
utmost harmony, the
. s to which till assented to the will
of the majority Indicated that the in-
of the party was at and
one wished to do Just what
best.
OHIO REPUBLICANS.
I hope that I will live
old county of Pitt with
from cast to and
to
in tee this
good n
from north
SIGHT TO STALK.
rump Meeting.
A camp meeting at Grove
camp ground, near will
begin July 28th and continue to Au-
gust 7th.
Capture Platform Con
miller
Wire The
Columbus, July
captured the Ohio Republican
platform Committee, and the platform
adopted by the State convention
is n endorsement of the
Tuft administration, Including
tariff law. The Gar-
forces did not oppose the plat-
form mi Moor of the
but would allow his name
to be presented as a candidate for
governor OB the platform adopted.
Duly two were presented, W.
C. who has the support or
Hie forces, and O. Brown
Who is favored by the men. The
ballot, however, Indicated a dead-
lock. Harding getting Brown
IO choice Ml.
Columbus. t Harding was
for governor on the third
Com Averaging six Ears lo the stalk
Within n Kile City.
A beautiful sight to the
loving people wan u stalk
corn containing eight ears which was
raised on the of Hamilton and
Jones. prosperous the
city. They have leased acres
the old city farm, bordering chiefly
on Walnut creek, two and a
acres of which are in corn which con-
to eight ears to the stalk
and the one brought to The Times
this morning was just a sample
of many more.
Ten acres of their farm are plant-
ed in cotton, from which cue, it not
the Wake county cotton bloom
was produced.
THE
Delegates to the State, Con-
By direction of the Republican Ex-
C n for Pitt county,
notice Is hereby given that the
voters of the several voting pr-
cf Pitt county, directed to
able at their respective
i 8.00 p. tn Saturday, July 80th
the purpose of selecting
and alternates to the county
which by direction of
committee is hereby called to
meet In the town hall, In Greenville.
X. C. on Saturday, August
12.00 in.
The various are entitled
to the following vote in the county
Beaver
V;
Swift
No one is more suspicious of
tics than the average politician.
Often a man Is disappointed the
salary he gels for money.
B, FLANAGAN, Chairman
FERNANDO WARD, Secretary.
Republican Executive Committee.
Greenville, N. C, June 1310.
Mule Stolen.
From my stable s In Craven county.
Bear Pitt county line, a mule
buggy Was stolen. is gray col-
or, huge size, blind In right eye. Hug-
. made by John Flanagan Buggy
Co., With red running gear, scar on
back or seal. Mule and buggy were
tracked as tar as Black Jack, in Pitt
county. Any informal ion leading to
recovery will be an ti
runs, .
It. F. U. No. . II, N. C.
We Advocate Roads, Do You Come to the Convention Next Monday, August 1st, and Hear Them Discussed.
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