Eastern reflector, 23 September 1910


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Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
. The
FARMERS CONSOLIDATE
Tobacco Company
offers to the tobacco growers of Eastern Carolina superior
inducements and facilities in the sale of their tobacco.
This is a Farmers Organization
Over ninety-nine per cent, of the stockholders are farmers,
living on an operating their farms
This organization is doing a warehouse business for the
sale of FARMERS TOBACCO, and our past record proves that
we know our business. We are proud of our business and
proud of our record, and if you will join with us a
still greater success, you will be proud of the part you take in
Warehouses at Greenville, Kinston,
Wilson and
Washington
Farmers Consolidated
O. L. JOYNER, President
Co.
m m
Agriculture is the ft the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1910.
Number
THE TRAINING SCHOOL.
SOME FACTS ABOUT RALEIGH.
Now Down to Regular Work of the
Second Session.
Everything Is now moving smooth-
on the second of East
Carolina Training School
that opened last week. Tho
of registrations and class
incident upon the
few days of a session have all been
completed, and the students have en-
eagerly and earnestly upon the
work of the school year.
It is certainly an Inspiration to see
the school, especially when all gather-
ed in one body for chapel exercise.
It was our pleasure to see them
this morning, and the two hundred
young ladies and twenty young men
there made a picture not soon for-
gotten. After the formal exercises
conducted by President Wright and
some explanation of classes, he in-
ex-Governor T. J.
who f school. In
Gov. Jarvis, President
truly said loves you and your
interest better any man in North
Governor Jarvis spoke on
a Good and
emphasizing the necessity of laying
here in school a good foundation upon
which to build their life work. He
urged them to strict attention to
duty, using several forceful Illus-
in his remarks students
listened eagerly to the good words
of advice from this noble man. and ex-
pressed their appreciation of all he
said.
GRAND STAND COLLAPSES.
CONSERVATION
Delegates Appointed to the
Congress.
Governor Kitchin has
the following list of to at-
tend the Southern Conservation On-
gross, which meets In Atlanta 0.1 Ce-
and
W. N. Raleigh; D. C. Parks,
Hillsboro; E. L. Marley, Lumber
J. Q. Gant, Burlington; W.
E. Moore, Webster; W. C. Dowd,
Charlotte; S. T. White,
Raleigh
Her Chamber of Commerce Pushing
the State Capital Forward.
A very attractive leaflet is issued
by the Raleigh chamber of commerce
-ad industry concerning the Capital
City of North Carolina, containing
information of interest to the
entire state. Raleigh, like Washing-
ton. Is publicly owned; that is the
and parks are the property of
the state. This is the state
through a commission, selected the
site and bought the land, laid out the
streets and parks and sold building
lots; in two or three cases the same
family having held the property since
original sale, years ago.
in this respect is the most unique
of all the state capitals. The value
of the state buildings and their con-
tents is exclusive of land,
which is worth more than half mil-
lion. The leaflet shows the capital
is growing rapidly, the value of build-
and street improvements in
The value
of city properly has In three
increased per cent., and
amounts to The
municipal building and auditorium
the latter to seat persons, will
he done January 1st. The street rail-
way and power company is expend-
in doubling the capacity
its plant. The Country Club, with
hundreds of acres of land and very
attractive buildings, is a notable feat-
Raleigh Is the educational
of the state, having
a larger school population In pro-
portion to tho entire population than
any other place in country. It
has two and, a third one,
tor the is being built. Here
la the largest school for blind
and deaf-mutes in the world, and the
largest and Episcopalian
for The Raleigh
post office pays the R. F. D. car-
in the state which is
more than four years ago.
The money order division hauled
this year.
Hundreds of People Arc Hurled In The
Wreck.
TROUBLE IN VIRGINIA.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Madrid, Spain, Sept. a
bull at today the grand
stand collapsed, hurrying hundreds
of occupants, and is feared scores
more have been killed. Rending of
the gave a warning and
the mighty structure sagged men,
women and children arose from their
seats and attempted to fight their
way to the exit. Many were badly
injured by being trampled on before
the building completely toppled.
Soldiers were rushed to the rescue.
TO JAIL.
Threatened War Between
and The Authorities.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Portsmouth, Va. Sept. a
of soldiers, detachment of
light artillery with heavy guns, three
armored cruisers held in readiness to-
day to quell violence, war between
the along James river and
the Virginia fish commission over re-
imposed on fishermen by
authorities, is imminent this after-
noon. The commission hopes a truce
may be effected but the
are ready to defend what they term
their rights with bloodshed, if
Word was brought here this
afternoon that are
arming.
Will
be Tried
Life.
For His
By Cable to The Reflector.
London, Sept. the
police court hearing of Dr.
and Ethel charged with the
murder of Belle today the
doctor was committed to jail to await
for his life before the central
criminal court. was
so remanded. will be form-
illy charged with murder when
and the with being an
after pact.
MOB AFTER MURDERER.
POLICEMAN STALLINGS DEAD.
A pious fraud is sin's best friend.
His Murderer Taken to Raleigh for
Safety.
Wire to The Reflector.
Raleigh, Sept. 21.-Chief of Police
of Spring Hope, died early
this morning at Richmond hospital,
The Norman Lewis, who shot
aim, was brought here last night for
safe keeping. Feeling Is to be
against him in Nash county and
lynching was feared.
Say He Will Never be Brought to
Court House Alive.
Wire to The Reflector.
Louisville, Miss., Sept. band
of men armed with Winchester rifles
thronged the streets here today await-
leaders to discover and storm the
jail where a young man named Per-
minter, a member of a prominent
is detained on the charge of at-
tacking and brutally murdering Miss
Janie Sharp, a pretty 18-year-old girl.
Threats were made so freely that
was hidden by the
ties. Friends of the girl say he will
never be brought to the court house
alive.
GRAFT PROBING.
It takes well into the afternoon
day to finish the sales on the
tobacco market. And double sales
are on, too.
New Brokerage Firm.
The Carolina Brokerage Co., com-
posed of J. D. Smith and W. J. Turn-
is a new firm that has Just start-
ed business here, or the present
they will have temporary quarters in
the law office of Mr. C. C. Pierce.
New York Committee Has Sensation-
Evidence.
By Wire to The Reflector.
New York, Sept. the prom-
of the most important and
evidence yet discover id, tho
legislative committee which is graft
in New York state
its session here today with several
new and untried issues before it. The
committee is to go into the
books of J. S. Co., will a
they had so much trouble h getting.





t.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
Am
RESIGNS GREENVILLE ALSO.
Rev. R. Deal Will go to Western
Part of tin State.
it was expected, the
of pastorate here which Rev.
R. C. Deal announced in the
church on Sunday, was re-
with regret by the church and
people of the community. Mr. Deal
resigned the church at Kinston a
week ago, and serving the church
here jointly with dividing his
Sundays between the two towns it
was looked for that, he would resign
here also. He has accepted a call to
Montreal, to the Western part of the
State, and will go there the first of
He will fill his appoint-
in Greenville the first and third
Sundays In October before going to
his new field.
A Domestic Tragedy.
There was published in Sunday's
Journal the old. old of the trust-
husband, the weak wife and the
unfaithful friend. The husband was
compelled in order to earn meat and
bread for a wife and two little girls,
to spend the week away from home.
He took the other man as a boarder
so that his board money might help
keep the wolf from the door. He left
him at his home so that he might
protect his wife and little ones.
The rest of the story is so familiar
that there's no need of telling it.
The husband came home on Saturday
night to find even the furniture gone.
Four lives have been ruined. The
band, the wife and the two little girls
will never live to forget the evil day.
The other man will go his way at
Journal.
An Epoch in
When Mr. K. Haag of
the Mighty Haag Shows which ex-
at Greenville, October 7th, de-
to inaugurate his sixteenth sea-
son as a successful purveyor of
that is good in to the pub-
he decided to create a new de-
his idea being to combine a
first-class circus and wild west per-
under one mouth
stretch of water-proof and
canvass, and for one price of
something never attempted be-
fore by any showman; both circus
and Wild West will be complete ex-
in itself in every
the best exhibition ever offered
to the public. While giving two dis-
exhibitions the price will be the
same as charged for either circus or
Wild West by other managers .
Truth Is Stronger Than Friction
A number of papers in this State
have recently published articles in re-
to people who, although,
had lived the cities, had not been
in town for years. New Bern has
any of these beat a mile. There is a
lady who lives within half a mile of
the court house who has never seen
the Federal building the
and many place in the
of the city. She is in
good health and is not incapacitated
in any way that would hinder her
from g down town if she so de-
fired, for seven years, this she
Las not done. Whenever an article
is needed from any the stores some
other member of the family is the
This state of affairs sounds
rather improbable, but it is absolute-
and can be verified at any
Bern Journal.
CAROLINA CLUB COMMITTEE.
Will Hive an Entertainment Sometime
In October.
At a recent meeting of the newly
board of governors of Caro
Una Club the following standing
committees were
B. Smith T. M.
and W. S. Atkins.
On J. Whichard,
J. B. and D. M. Clark.
i S. Atkins.
It is the purpose of the club to
give an entertainment in October,
late of will be announced
later.
T. e membership of the club is
log and its sphere of usefulness
to community is constantly in-
Too Stingy to Take a Paper.
Tl picture given below may be
but it points a
upon a time a farmer
too economical to take a news-
paper sent his little boy to borrow
the taken by his neighbor. In
J the boy ran over a beehive
and in ten minutes he looked like a
watery summer squash. His cries
his father who ran to his
and, failing to see a bar-
wire fence, ran into it breaking
it down and cutting a handful of
from his anatomy and ruin-
a pair of trousers. The old
took advantage of the gap in
the fence, got into the corn field and
killed herself eating green corn.
the racket, his wife ran,
a four-gallon churn of
rich cream into a basket of kittens,
drowning the whole flock. In her
hurry, she dropped and broke a
of false teeth. The baby left
alone, crawled through
cream into the parlor and ruined a
carpet. During the excitement
oldest daughter ran away
the hired man, the calves got out
and the dog broke up ten setting
And the moral of it all that you
should not try to practice an
my that Is not practical. And it h
not practical to sponge on the bar-
and the restaurant keeper for
his newspapers.
No man can keep posted by de-
pending on a chance glance at a
newspaper that to some one
else.
Get your name on the mailing list
or the newsdealer. Other
folks will like it better, you'll
think of Dally
News.
Rack to the School Room.
For the past two weeks back to
the school room has been the
thought of thousands of th
North Carolina children.
Hack to the pursuance of routine
and the Instructions of
bookish processors will be their
for the many months that are
yet to come and truly a richly
it They have cast their
summer vacation in the back-
and for the next seven or
months will spend their
time la an entirely
field of endeavor. A field
that opens up the avenues of op-
in many directions and bids
them travel while they may.
seemingly they are to
hi average youth they soon speed
y, and you must face
tough old world And
EDUCATIONS-
IS
IF YOU
BANK- .
Not only give your boy a education,
but also teach him to know the value of a
BANK BOOK,
Teach him to work and save while young. He
will help make his own way through college
and be a better man when he comes out.
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank.
We pay interest at per cent, on time
OF GREENVILLE
GREENVILLE, NOR. CAR.
BOWL
Horn of Women's Fashions
it issue of how well you have
played your part in the school-room
will omen depend as to how adroit-
can ward off the knocks that
await you when once you step into
the of the business world of
20th century.
It therefore Incumbent upon
every school boy to hew the mark of
the old adage, hay while the
sun by taking advantage of
every opportunity that the school-
room then some
not of the
mathematical problems or the dry-
of poetry or prose serve as a
Stumbling block in cheating you
out of a thorough school training
but meet the many apparently per-
g problems squarely and ferret
out to solution in detail. By so do-
i g j are preparing, a safe road to
travel when once you are called upon
to life's battles in earnest, and
in late years you'll fully realize the
harvest that such a course
Courier.
He Careful.
This is the time of year to warn
people to be careful about starting
flies stoves and fire places that
teen out of use during the sum-
mer. Be careful that they are In
condition before building fires
Precaution along this line
may save loss.
Some One Knew.
Eugene carpet-maker, ac-
of attempting to smuggle, can-
not relieve himself by swearing at the
tariff. He owes it too much.
By the new carpet tariff a Jute rug
worth abroad cents a yard pays
cents a yard and per cent, addition-
cents a yard in all, or 1-3
per cent. A two-ply ingrain worth
abroad cents a yard pays cents
a yard and per all
cents a yard, or per
it can cover the floor of a poor man's
home.
And it works The exclusion of
cheap carpets is In
only worth of jute, hemp or flax
rugs and carpets worth than
cents a yard was imported. These
goods paid 2.28 in duties, an aver-
age of 69.89 per cent. Of
carpets, treble, three-ply
two-ply ingrain combined only
worth got into the country,
paying duties of from 60.48 to 72.47
per cent. Practically all our carpet
importations are high-priced goods.
Mr. Higgins pleads ignorance of the
tariff law affecting returning travel-
So far as the tariff laws affect
carpets some adviser of Mr. Aldrich
seems to have known a great deal.
York World.
y Greenville people went out
to the yearly meeting at Tyson's
Sunday.
p is
V-
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
DON'T DRINK.
Good Advice From Man High up in
the World.
Andrew Carnegie is not a pro-
but he is a believer
in temperance, as all successful men
are. He has delivered himself of this
most interesting and effective homily
on the subject of
. first and most seductive peril,
. and the destroyer of most young
, is drinking I am no
lecturer in disguise but a man
who knows and tells you what ob-
has proved to him; and I
say to you that you are more likely
to fail in your career from acquiring
the habit of drinking liquor than from
any or all other temptations likely to
assail you. You may to almost
any other temptation and may reform
may brace up, and. If not
lost ground at least remain in the
race, and. secure and maintain a res-
position But from failure
caused by the drink habit recovery
is almost impossible. I have known
but few exceptions to this
Andrew Carnegie was a young man
himself once; he was very poor; he
had no friends; but he great
courage of conduct and found out
early in his career that the
man who drinks liquor for the pass-
pleasure it gives. Is the young
man who will not succeed in the
affairs of this life. Business men
whatever their own personal habits
may be, are not inclined to give re
employment to the young-
who are fond of drink. The
young fellow who starts out with his
appetite uncontrolled is undone before
he begins. Substantial people do rot
trust him; the great industrial
will not employ him, in
the vast majority of cases the young
man who drinks is the young man
who fails to make any mark in the
world.
Carnegie is a wise man;
he is worth millions of dollars; he has
given away millions of dollars for
many charitable purposes, but he
made a dollar that he owns by
drinking Times
Dispatch.
FIRE IN BEATER DAM.
A Iron Nerve.
Indomitable will and tremendous en-
arc never found where Stomach,
liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of
older. If yon want these qualities and
t success they bring, use Dr. King's
Now Life Pills, the matchless
tors, for ken brain and strong body.
at all druggists.
Watch The Gum Warehouse.
. W. A. Nobles sold at
at at at
average
Ernest Williams sold at
CO at at at at
average 131.45.
P. A. Elks sold at
at at at
at at average
Tyson Tripp sold at
at at at at
at Me,, average
Entire averaged yesterday
Come to the Gum
if you want the highest market price
for all grades.
J. P. LOVELACE,
Mrs. Joyner Loses Her
House and Contents.
About one o'clock on Wednesday
morning Mrs. Allie Joyner, of Beaver
Dam township, lost her dwelling
and kitchen, and practically all
the contents of both, by Are. Her con
was first to discover the fire, and he
barely had time to awoken his aged
mother and get her out in safety. By
the time the neighbors could be
with the ringing of the farm
bell and reach the scene, the fire had
so far advanced that practically
could be saved from the building.
The fire started somewhere about the
kitchen, but the cause is unknown.
Mrs. Joyner's loss is about
on which she only had insurance
Notwithstanding her advanced age,
she being over she takes the loss
of her home with remarkable
nation. She was heard to
the Lord saw fit to take away her
home in her old age, it was all right,
as he would soon take her and
will be nothing for her to trouble
GOES TO THE FOREIGN FIELD.
Miss Laura V. Cox Loaves Saturday
For Mexico.
Miss Laura V. Cox, of Winterville,
who has been called to the foreign
work as a teacher, leaves
Saturday for Mexico, in
which field she will labor under the
direction of the Southern Baptist
Convention.
Miss Cox was left an orphan, with-
out means, in her early girlhood and
spent the years from that time until
maturity with relatives, working part
of the time and attending school as
opportunity afforded. In this way
she fitted herself for teaching in the
public schools and taught a few years.
She joined the Baptist at an
early age and very soon thereafter re-
to give her life to missionary
work. She was ambitious to obtain
a thorough education, to equip her-
self for this work, and her relatives
recognizing her true worth assisted
her in going to college. She first at-
tended the State Normal in Greens-
for two years, then attended
College in. Raleigh for three
years and graduated there with the
B. A. degree. Last year she took a
course in the mission teacher training
department of the Theological Semi-
nary in Louisville, Ky. In addition
to her English studies Miss Cox mas-
several of the languages,
a specialty of Spanish and goes to
her work in the foreign field as well
prepared as any woman the Southern
Baptist Convention has sent out in
mission work. Pitt county is proud
of her, and the prayers and good
wishes of many people will follow her
in her labors for the Master.
The Reflector is glad to state that
Miss Cox will let her many friends at
home hear from her occasionally
through the columns of the paper.
Coward Wooten's Drug Store
THE PLACE FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
MEDICINES, ETC.
Complete Line of Writing Material
POST SCENES AND COMIC.
be depended is an ex-
we all like hear, and
it is used in connection with
Remedy it means
that it never fails to cure
dysentery or bowel complaints. It is
pleasant to take and equally valuable
for children adults. Sold by all
druggists.
Colic. Cholera and Di-
Remedy is best-
known medicine in use for the relief
cure of bowel complaints. It
cures griping,
and should be taken at fie first
natural of the it.
is equally valuable for children and
adults. It cures. Sold by all
druggists.
MR. CONSUMER
We are opening up a car load of
Buck's Cook Stoves, and the Hot
Blast Heaters, and when you buy of
course you want the best, so we have
your Interest at heart and can serve
you well. Our methods are
and honesty, and prices are right.
Come to see us and we will do our
best and serve you in house furnish-
Yours truly,
TAFT
THE BEST IN
Furniture
and House Furnishings
is not good for you. When you want the
best, and prices that are in reach of your pocket
book we can supply your wants.
Taft Boyd Furniture Co.
If you trade with us we both make money
There are abundance of
and James grapes.
STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF
The National Bank of Greenville
At Cone of Sept
Loans .
Overdraft . . .
United States Bonds
Stock i Bonds . .
Furniture an I Fixtures .
a. d from banks
Total
liabilities
Capital Stock
Surplus and
Circulation
Bond
Dividend unpaid
Hill-
s ,
Total
48.01
If you do not transact your business with s kt
be an ion to b cone one of our
The Only Nation Bank in the





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern, Reflector.
WINTERVILLE
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX.
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
N. C. Sept. 1910.
Ward Moore and Lillian
Stokes drove over from Greenville
Wednesday evening and spent a short
while with friends here.
a. W. ft Co. are pulling In a
p.; cents counter in their store
and cue going to oner some unheard-
of bargains on it.
Per Lite next SO days Harrington,
Barker Company will sell some
diets goods at actual half price.
Me. J. E. Greene, our clever R R.
agent, returned Thursday morning
Jays vacation.
Come at our line of parlor
lamps, hand lamps and those large
center draft they are
and will catch your B.
Carroll Company.
Come on gentlemen and get you i
hat, we have them for young am
both great and
ton, Company.
When you say it is gen-
considered to mean something
that will stick to you through life
Those wagons and carts manufacture
by The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Co
arc the
Several of our people went to th
picnic at Simpson Thursday.
If you want a nice suit of clothe
for your boy go to see A Ange
Company, they can fit them.
Annie Belle Kittrell, of
ton, is spending several days with
Miss Bessie Kittrell.
Those wagons
by the A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Company must be what the farmer.-
want, judging from the way they are
being rolled out.
We note that a good number of to-
farmers are selling their to-
for good prices, and then buy
a buggy; this shows
and economy.
Trunks and suit cases at A. W.
Ange ft Company's cheap.
The Pkt County Oil Co. have be-
gun ginning for the season, and will
buy reed at the highest prices.
We took a look through the A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Company's plant,
and it looked like they had a cart for
the one-horse farmers and a wagon
for the two-horse ones.
Miss Laura Cox left this morning
for Mexico, where she as a mis-
We all regret to see her
leave.
We have the most complete line of
furnishings ever before offered
here. Barber ft Co.
Misses Hattie C, and Laura Jane
Kittrell spent Thursday night and
Friday In Ayden.
Goods, goods A. W. Ange
lb Company have all kinds a -riving
day and they will go at bargains.
The Literary Society
of High SChOOl organized
Friday night with the following
Mi. s Nancy president, Miss
Rosa Jones, vice president, Miss
en Adam, secretary Miss Allie Pierce
treasurer, Miss Lillian Baker, super-
visor, Vivian Roberson, chap-
Miss Elizabeth Boushall,
critic There was a large number of
and we predict a good
year for them.
If m ft Co. have some
valuable articles in their and
sections. Come and see.
T e following will be the officers
of fie Y. M A. for the Miss
Louise Satterthwaite, president, Miss
Lillian Baker, vice president, and Miss
Brewer, secretary,
j J- B. Carroll Company
have just a complete Hue of
nice shirts, both for men and boys.
j Several students entered the
Winer High school last Monday
and more are expected next
I Monday. The faculty is well pleased
wife the manner In which the students
taking up their work. The de-
is excellent.
Winterville, N C, Sept. 1910
Ii you wish to sell cattle that is not
n good beef order, see A. G. Cox
Company.
Mr. Allen Cannon and Miss Jimmie
Davis, of Ayden, were in town Sun-
day.
Before you buy dishes for the table,
J. B. Carroll Co. They are a
decoration for the table.
Don't forget the furniture and nice
felt mattresses at A. W. Ange Com-
Misses Helen and Elizabeth Adams
the Training school at Green-
Monday evening.
We have kinds of new goods
arriving day. Come and look
it W. Ange Co.
Plenty of lime, cement and paint at
W. Ange ft Company's at the right
Miss Lillian Barker, a student at
H. S., was called to her home at
Monday evening. We
hope there is nothing serious.
A. W. Ange Co. have plenty of
sheets for cotton pickers.
Nice heavy hosiery work
at Car-
roll ft Cd
A word to the wise is said to be
sufficient, but one look in A. W. Ange
a Company's store convince you
that they have a nice line of dress
goods at the right price.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
has some fine hogs they will s-ill
they weigh from one hundred to one
hundred and fifty pounds.
We have the most complete line of
ants we ever carried, and are
the Barber ft Co.
Mr. A. D. Johnson, of Kinston, spent
Tuesday in town.
Our men's pants are the best for
the money we ever had. Come and
get a pair or Bar-
tier ft. Company.
Subscribe to The Reflector, through
the Winterville agent.
We have hats for boys, young men
and old men. Come and
Barber Co.
If you have corn to house get
A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company's
with a large box body.
a. w t
with their i counters,
come him
have just received a nice lot of
and clothing Bad
the Give us o
Barber Company.
I Miss Magdalene Cox went to Cone-
toe Tuesday to visit Miss Lula Cobb.
Mr. Jackson came in Monday
night from Tennessee to spend a few
days with his mother.
We know you don't want it and
you won't need it, but if you
have to get one, Bee A. G. Cox
Company, they have plenty
of coffins and caskets on hand,
can give hearse service.
If you wish to keep your horse fat,
drive him to one of A. G. Cox
Company's Hunsucker bug-
A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company
were all smiles Monday. Four new
rolled out into the streets
and took their departure.
Mr. A. has purchased
block of merchandise of G. T.
Pucker and will be pleased to have
his friends give him a call.
Messrs. Harrington, Barber ft Com-
are still adding new to
and sections, and no
better can be had than some
they offer.
Mr. J. L. Rollins spent Sunday
at Hotel Ayden, N. C.
Remember we carry mattings, floor
oil cloth, and are agents for
patents and
ft Company.
Be sure you see that wide ham-
burg for yard, at A. W. Ange
Company's, its cheap.
Our is in good condition
and we are giving each and every pa-
perfect
Oil Company.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
are making quite a number Of
large box cart bodies, if you need a
of this kind to haul cotton or
corn, them, price
Mr. J. L. Jackson, of Greenville,
spent Monday night in town.
A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company
has a horse and mule for sale or
Made.
When In need of nice china and
enamel ware, something that is beau-
and lasting, see J. W. Carroll
Company.
Come and give those par-
n buying else-
they are cheap and will please
W. Carroll Company.
Mr. F. A. ex-cashier,
was in town Saturday.
Our selection of dress goods and
line in Jar better year
than aver before, and we surely can
give you some bargains. This
peals to Barber
Company,
Messrs. M. B. Bryan and A.
Lawhorn went to Greenville Tues-
day night.
Messrs. A. W. Ange Company are
busy opening up a large stock of
goods they Just bought on the
Northern markets and their store will
be crowded with fresh bargains.
A. W. Ange Co. will for one week
only sell cologne on their
counter.
i Mr. R. L. Abbott spent Saturday
and Sunday in Grifton and re-
ed Monday morning.
added a and cents
counter to our stock; and for cash
we will give greater values than ever
ottered ii. our town. Come
Barber Com-
Messrs. W. B. Bryan and A. D.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Belle
FROM
La went to Ayden Sunday
S for wet weather at I B. Car-
Company's. They tho
be Hunt Club shoes at to
Ill, and Mrs. Haber of
was In town Sunday.
are having rain and a lot of it,
it advisable to come and get
a of shoes from us to keep your
fee. off the damp
ton, Barber Co.
Miss Pear Nelson who has
visiting Misses and Evelyn
Button, Saturday to her
home in Grifton.
We are now asking every farmer
within hauling distance of our plant
to up and take notice that we
are tinning, cotton for cents per
hundred. If the price U right,
come talk with us about it, or phone
County Oil Company
If assortment of birds,
and flowers running at large
the name of millinery
to spread over the side-
walks, it will be necessary to slice
off a piece of the roadway in most of
our cities and use it for walking
Observer.
Good Way to for Catarrh.
Besides breathing through the in-
a few times a day, many catarrh
sufferers write that they find inhaling
it
from a bowl of steaming each
night before g a g eat aid in
curing stubborn
Try it; it's very simple; gives quick
relief and makes you breathe easier.
Fill a bowl half full of boiling
pour into the water a
of cover bead and bowl with
a towel, and through nose and
mouth the pleasant, medicated,
I septic and healing vapor that
method relieves that stiffness
once, and makes your head feel
You can a bottle of at
druggists everywhere or at Coward
for only cents. Ask
extra bottle
But bear in mind that a
outfit which Includes inhaler and Dot-
of costs 11.00.
But, as stated before, if you already
own an inhaler, a bottle of
costs but cents.
is guaranteed by Coward
Wooten and druggists everywhere
to cure catarrh, sore throat, coughs,
cold, asthma croup, or money
back. Try It on that generous basis.
RIGHT OVER WOOD SHINGLES
METAL
SHINGLES
can be laid without or bother right wood the
top of your building Instantly from a fire r to A FIREPROOF ROOF that
will last long the needs repair
t For r rices, etc., apply
Good Work of the Young Men's Ch h-
Association.
Chapel Hill, N. C, Sept. The
University of North Carolina is now
well started on it's years work
the students and faculty of the in-
are once again of
their debt to the Young Men's Chris-
Association has taken
such a prominent part In getting
things to running. Freshmen more
than any other people, perhaps have
a tender feeling for association
tor it was the information
which was run by Y. If. C. A.
which enabled them to see some
semblance of order in the of
red tape which seemed to confront
them their arrival here.
Tao association had sent each pros-
new student a hand-book
the summer, which contained all
the information that could be com-
posed into the small space. In regard
to the new country into which the
men seemed to themselves to be
The association engineered
night, when a macs meeting
in hall brought together for
the first time all the new students,
old and for an intro-
to the custom and unwritten
laws of the life of the University com-
the old men for a noisy cheer
lug, gathering with everybody clap-
ping everybody else on the shoulder,
glad at the realization that he Is
back. At this meeting talks were
made by Mr. C. L. Williams on the
Educational Value of the Literary So-
Mr. Archie the Hon-
or System, by which the student body
govern itself; The Function of
in a Symmetrical Education by
Mr. E. Mr. W.
ton, the president of the Y. M. C. A.,
for the coming year spoke of the
and Alms of the
who is also the
first scholar of his class and who
won the medal in debate
at the last commencement, told of
what the Bible study groups conducted
by the association had meant last
year. The groups had
men or half of the entire student
body. A startling attainment of the
Bible study enthusiasts in the eyes
of many, was organization and
year's work of a class which
consisted of members of tho football
team only. He told of the various
ways the association had made itself
part of the life the college.
According to its time honored
tom the association held its welcome
meeting on the first Sunday of the
session. Dr. Edwin Professor
P. H. Winston, Rev. R. W.
made short talks. Dr. told of
what the association had meant to
him In his at Vander-
and dining tHo. many years he
bad been a teacher at Trinity College.
Professor Winston warned the new
men against five evils which the man
Who lives the life of the college
must drunk-
gambling, Immorality and
profanity. Mr. the pastor of
Episcopal church here pointed
Vary, forcibly the necessity for
among spiritual
which he considered more
than any Other aid one
which he feared college men
prone to neglect. The one thought
ran trough ill of those
talks was that tho work of the
should appeal docs appeal
to the men of the
body.
Mr. Id. P. Ha, the newly elected
general secretary cf the association,
lad an active part In the engineering
of there various meetings of the as-
Mr. Hall graduated at the
of Georgia last spring,
here he was a member of the
board and president of the Y. If. C.
A. He has already made -a very
pleasant impression on the large
of students who have become ac-
with him.
A SHREWD SAME.
Politicians Know How to Other
Besides Politics.
Messrs. E. J. Justice, Andrew Joy-
W. R. Land and one or two
Journeyed to Madison Saturday in
an automobile, where Mr. Justice
made a speech that woke up the Dem-
of that county. It was a great
day. The party arrived in good time,
but coming back they did nor. have
such good luck. Some miles beyond
Stokesdale a tire of the machine
with a report like a rifle.
The man in charge knew his business,
however, and soon repaired it, but it
would not stick and down it went
again. Then he solemnly announced
that they would have to foot it to a
telegraph office or some phone and
have another machine sent after
them. Feathers fell and grew
solemn, but Just at this Juncture a
freight train was heard coming up a
grade, puffing and snorting.
A wink Is generally as good as a
nod to a blind horse, but in this case
Mr. Joyner said to the others
lame; I'll Hag that
Freight trains are not permitted to
carry passengers. Out on the track
he ran and with the aid of two hand-
kerchiefs he brought the train to a
stop.
my friend to stop you, but
our automobile was wrecked Just back
there, and some of the occupants are
hurt, can't you take us on to Greens-
Full of sympathy, the conductor
told him to come ahead and he would
at least take them to Stokesdale and
wire for orders. The others were
called and came limping up, badly
hurt, of course, and boarded the train
At Stokesdale permission was obtain-
ed from Greensboro to bring them on
to town, where they arrived at seven
o'clock.
Not a man was hurt Mr. Joyner,
however, said the expert who was
driving the machine came near spoil-
everything, but when yelled at to
come on, he started on a run; but
the others were ever so
Record.
Take the Afternoon I per.
Take a careful look at copy of
The Daily Reflector and you will find
items of news in the press dispatch-
es that will come to you in other pa-
tomorrow. This shows that
when you get today's news today you
must look for it in the afternoon pa-
per. The telegraph service of The Re-
is right up to the time of going
to press, and it gives you the news
far ahead of any other paper. Strong
argument it is that everybody in
ought to be a subscriber to The Re-
Staggers
That a clean, nice, fragrant com-
pound like
will instantly relieve a bad burn, cut,
scald, wound or piles, staggers
tics. But great cures prove it's a won-
healer of the worst sores,
boils, felons, eczema, skin
as also chapped hands, sprains
and corns. Try it at all Drug-
gists.
MADE
pattern hats, they are rot
mad. Monday, September is
the day. C. T.
Wood's Trade Mark
Farm Seeds
are best qualities
obtainable.
Our NEW FALL CAT-
LOG gives the fullest in-
formation about all seeds
for FALL SOWING.
Grasses and Clovers.
Vetches. Alfalfa.
Crimson Clover.
Seed Wheat, Oats.
Rye, Barley, etc.
mailed free on re-
quest. Write for it and prices of
any seeds required.
T. W. SONS,
Richmond, Va.
D. W.
IN
And Provisions
Cotton
on
Fresh Goods kept --on-
in stock. Country
Produce Bought Sold
D. W. Harden
GREENVILLE N S
BAKER HART
BO
BAKER HART
Unprejudiced Juror.
In a southern county of Missouri
years ago, when the form of
was slightly different from
now, much, trouble was experienced
in getting a jury in a murder trial.
Finally an old fellow answered
every Question satisfactorily; he had
no prejudices, was not opposed to
capital and was
ally considered a And. Then
the prosecutor said
look upon the prisoner,
prisoner, look upon the
Tho old adjusted his spec-
peered at the prisoner for
full halt minute. Then, turning
to tho court, ho
h I don't believe
fee's guilty I City Star.
WE HAVE A
tie line of millinery the
to to T.
The Up-to-date Hardware
Store
IT is place to buy you Paint, Varnish,
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves, Fins Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a fail tins of Wall Paints
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place
your orders with them and you will be
pleased.
Special attention to our cf
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail us buying, they
can supply your wants. Give them a call.
r.
-v , ROM
Evans Street,
, C
A J-
H. .





The Carolina Home Farm and The Eastern
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
Cellar Polities.
All this racket
about the Hamilton club banquet at
Chicago looks mighty and child-
is the proverbial
It's such a foolish little fuss for big
man to engage In.
gave a as the school children
say, and invited Col. Roosevelt to be
of honor, but Teddy, with whom
politics was stronger than politeness,
pouted and sent word that he didn't
ire to play in that back yard or slide
down that particular cellar door
less that horrid boy was tap-
on the wrist and bounced over
the fence. Some nerve, considering
it was Senator own
I yard, for ho was a member of
the Hamilton club. But the other lit-
boys were afraid of Teddy with
big stick, so they wrote and told
he mustn't come and play
With them that day. z
And now conn- Senator
with their thumbs to their
noses, goody, goody,
we're going to give a party, too, and
going to be bigger than your party
and we want to play in old
yard And we're going to in-
President to sit at head
,; the because we want
him particularly, but just to spite
Oh Journal.
MAIL BY MOTORCYCLE. SB
Pill County Has Ahead on This,
Too.
Carrier Make Host, of Route has
bought a motorcycle, and when the
state of roads and the weather per-
of his using same on route,
he will be able to serve all his patrons
by noon each day, and also will get
back in time to get off mail on the
southbound C. N. W. The machine
is a 1-2 horse power, one
cylinder, and it sells for something
above County News.
Pitt county I way ahead on this,
and some of her rural mail carriers
have strictly up to date methods of
carrying their routes Some
ago Carrier Roberson on one of the
routes, got a motor buggy for
carrying his route. He used this for
some time and then changed to a
motorcycle, finding that it was cheap-
to operate the latter. And Carrier
Anderson, on one of the Greenville
routes, is even ahead of this. He has
an automobile and frequently carries
his route in his car. So you Pitt
county mail carriers are right on the
dot in their work
This is good weather for hauling
tobacco, and Greenville is the mar-
t to which the farmers should
it.
I AM CARRYING A FULL LIN E OF
Hunsucker Buggies
at my Greenville and Ayden stables. If you
figure on buying anything in that line, come
to see me.
J. E- WINSLOW
Horses and Mules. Greenville and Ayden, N. C.
Don't forget my new location at Greenville,
on Fifth street, -2 block west of five points.
J S. MOORING
Now in Sam Store Fire Points More and larger Com to tee no.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Wrenched his Foot
Chief of Police Smith is walking
lame and having to use a cane to
help along his navigation. He took
a kick at a dog, and swung his foot
so hard that he wrenched it out of
place, hence the lameness.
For Slate
or Tin
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work.
J. J. JENKINS,
Tin Shop Repair Work, and
Flues in Season, see
Number GREENVILLE, N. C.
Reasons
It Is Best
Gives relief for all Nerve, Bone and Muscle
Aches and Pains more quickly than any
other remedy known.
Its peculiar penetrating properties are
most LINIMENT.
May be used with absolute confidence in its
purity for Internal and External Uses.
It is Triple Strength. A powerful, speedy
and sure Pain Remedy, therefore most
effective in producing results.
Not only contains the old-fashioned
but also the latest and up-to-
date LINIMENT.
Recommended and sold under a guarantee
for the Rheumatism in all
forms, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints
and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Outs, Burns, Bruises, Cramps,
Colic, Toothache, and all Nerve, Bone
and Muscle Aches and Pains.
Drug stores in cities and towns, general
scores in the country, and
the bottle, and money back if not sat-
Isn't this fair
LINIMENT
FOR AND MUSCLE
ACME AND PAINS IN
MAN AND BEAST
NO.
UNDER rOOD
DROSS ACT,
PRICE, THIS CENTS
AND
NOAH REMEDY O
V., ft U, J
V.
important Notice
The genuine Noah's Liniment locks exactly like the
above. Look for Noah's Ark on every package, our
trade mark, registered in the U. S. Patent Office, for
your protection. Noah's Liniment always appears in
red ink on the original, both on the label and on out-
side container. Accept nothing but Liniment.
It Is the only Pain Kennedy sold under a positive
guarantee. If your dealer will not supply you, send
In stamps and we will mall you a bottle and re-
fund money if not perfectly satisfied. Beware of
fraud; accept no substitute.
Proof Positive
Cured of Done
had been suffering with bone
for three years. I been
using Noah's Liniment, and can say
that it cured me completely. Can walk
better than I have in two years. Noah's
Liniment will do all you claim.
S. E. Cyrus, Donald, S.
Pain In Side and Neuralgia.
five years I suffered with
and pain in side. Could not
sleep. I tried Noah's Liniment, and
the first application made me feel bet-
Mrs. Martha A. See, Richmond,
Couldn't Right Arm.
caught cold and had a severe at-
tack of rheumatism in my right
and could not raise my arm with-
out much pain. I Noah's
and in less than a week was en-
free from pain. A.
chester,
Stiff Joints and
have used Noah's Liniment for
rheumatism, stiff Joints and backache,
and I can say it did me more good than
any pain remedy. Rev. George W.
Smith, S. .
Sprained Ankle. m
have been benefited greatly by
Noah's Liniment, using it for a sprained
ankle. Mrs. W. D. Robertson, West
t.
In the Back.
suffered ten years with a dread-
fully sore pain in my back, and tried
different remedies. Less than half a
bottle of Noah's Liniment made a per-
cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D.
Point Eastern,
Neuralgia and
wife suffered for several years
with neuralgia and toothache. She used
about half a bottle of Noah's Liniment
and got Immediate relief. J. S. Fisher,
Policeman, Hodges, S.
In the Neck.
received the bottle of Noah's
and think it has helped me great-
I rheumatism in my
it relieved it right much. Mrs. Martha
A. Lambert, Beaver Dam, Va.
For
never used a liniment we
consider the equal to Noah's Liniment
for bruises, sprains, strained tendons
and to use on throat, Bides and chest
for colds, etc. Richmond
Transfer Co., Richmond, Va.
Better Than
cheerfully recommend all stable
men to Noah's Liniment a trial
and be convinced of its wonderful
properties. We obtained as
good if not hotter results from its use
than we did from remedies costing 15.00
per bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth
Transfer Co., Norfolk,
BACK TO
THE
Some Men
Succeeded on the Farm.
1910, by American Press
THERE are many millionaire
farmers, but most of
have made their millions else-
where and are I hem
on rural estates merely to gratify a
fancy. There are a number of
however, who have made millions
farm. It Is not such easy thing
lo do, but the success of these men
shows some of the possibilities Hint
farm holds for the man who de-
sires to make money in large amounts.
Probably the most notable of the
Rim who made fortunes on the
farm Is David When David
was married he handed
preacher his last live dollar bill with
remark that now ho could start
square with the world. He bought
laud time and borrowed money to
buy cattle. first purchases were
In Illinois. Later he removed to Mis-
attracted by the cheap prairie
land that needed only n little drainage
to make It yield abundantly. Today
David owns nearly acres
of this same Missouri land, and It
TWO OF THE HARES THAT HELPED TO
FOB A
would all sell for an acre. Add
to this his cattle and horses and ma-
few Incidentals, such as
bank and the like, and he has
a fortune approximating
This has all made In farming.
Corn has his specialty, and It has
always been marketed In the form of
cattle. He has always used the most
modern machinery and the best equip-
that money buy. It has been
the same with help. His foremen
men who can get results. He furnishes
them with automobiles to take them
from farm to farm because he
found that It pays In the time saved.
He attributes his success to close per-
attention and the application of
business methods to farming.
Another man who made millions
In farming Is Colonel James M. Smith
of Georgia. Colonel started
raising corn and on a rundown
quarter section In county
soon the war. The first year ho
lost Last year his net
were In the meantime his
has Increased to acres.
Smith wan one of the
to build cottonseed oil mills and make
a profit from what formerly bad been
a waste product. His farm was
miles from the neatest railroad,
but he solved the problem by building
. railroad of bis own. lie has always
been personal friend of all his men.
white and black He pro-
well equipped schools for both
and the white children of bis
employees. Unlike David who
never bud a school
cation. W ft college grad-
learned lo handle men in
the army, and be applied the same or-
to his farm work with
great results.
Colonel Smith's success has demon-
what can be done on farm
laud of the south. One of his
acre farms a year ago yielded 4.800
bushels of wheat and bales of cot-
The wheat sold for bushel
and the cotton for a bale, making
n total Income from farm of
After taking out expenses
there was a net profit of acre.
This might well make even a
valley farmer envious.
The west has been heralded as the
land of opportunity. In the early days.
when land could be had almost for the
asking and the cattle business was at
Its best, a young of the name of
Henry Miller started out to make a
fortune In the ranch business. Today-
he Is worth He once an-
that he hoped some day to
own the whole state of California. In
this be did not succeed, although his
holdings in California amount to
acres. He also has large tracts
of land In Nevada and Oregon.
The ranch business is the decline
In west, and what was once one
man's cattle ranch is now being cut
up to make farms for the hundreds
of of land hungry
who are pouring Into what is still
land of About
twenty years ago an Iowa farmer sold
a half section of land, paid his
and, with seven or eight thousand
dollars In cash, a wife and four
started for Arizona, no located
in the Salt river valley, bought as
much of the cheap land as bis money
would pay for and set out to
Irrigation farming. lie learned It
made money. surplus went
to buy more hind. He Joined the
Water Users association and was In-
In getting congress to start
the Salt river irrigation project. Gov-
Irrigation Insured permanent
prosperity for the Salt river valley,
and today this pioneer farmer who
set out to make a fortune In
great American is worth more
than
Success in the Irrigated districts Is
not necessarily measured in extensive
farms and large bank accounts. A
few years ago a locomotive engineer,
sixty years old and broken health.
moved from Minneapolis to the state
of Washington, bought an acre
of irrigated land, paying for It.
It contained apple orchard In poor
condition, n house and a few
outbuildings. The purchase of
the land took nearly all the old en-
savings. He pruned the old
apple trees set out thirty new
ones. He sold off a few mongrel
chickens that were on the place and
bought a pure bred rooster and three
hens. After the first year's
were paid he had enough money left
to put on many improvements. The
next year he put money In the bank,
and the year after. So well did the
acre produce that at the Lewis and
Clark exposition at Portland in
It was awarded the prize for the sec-
most productive and best man-
aged farm in the west.
It is instances like this that really
show the possibilities of the farm for
the average man. Few men can be-
come great cattle kings, and not many
call repeal the success of David Ran-
or Colonel Smith. Rut the success
of the old engineer on his one acre of
irrigated term land ought to be so
hard to duplicate.
There are who say land Is so
there Is lit lie chalice for the
man capital lo gel H start.
Notwithstanding this young man
are farm every year. A
dozen yearn or so a tier unto
who had been working day In
northern decided to get married.
After ceremony his chief posses-
In addition In a wife.
were- a
cash lie rented U
a rue prices
he received for his first few colts open-
ed his eyes to the of the horse
business. He bought some more
mares, pure this time. He made
money from the start has nearly
enough laid by to buy and pay
for the farm he has been working.
Another young farmer in northern
Iowa went into dairy business
six or seven years ago. Dairying was
a new thing in his part of the
Most -farmers preferred
to raise corn, where they could do
most of the work by machinery. Much
of the land at that time was badly in
need of drainage was better suited
to pasture than to com growing. A
few wet seasons reduced the profits
of the corn growers almost to the van-
point. young fellow who
had put his faith in dairy cows
milk pails and put money in the
bank. After a few years of milking
he bought the farm he was working
paid half cash. The mortgage
cannot last long In the face of a pros-
dairy business.
The average farmer of the middle
west doesn't like to think of farming
anything less than a quarter section.
Au eighty or a forty he considers
rather Nevertheless
there are many advantage in the
smaller farms. The hired help prob-
is solved, for the owner can do
nil the work himself. It Is much
easier for a man with limited capital
to buy a small farm, and the cost of
stocking and equipping is less.
C. K. Beadle of Nebraska is one of
the corn belt farmers who Is making a
Professional Cards
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith
stables, and next door to John Flan-
Buggy new building.
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
formerly occupied by. J. L
Fleming.
Greenville, . . K. Carolina
W. C. D. M. Clark.
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
Greenville, . . K. Caroline
OF WHO HAS
MADE MILLION'S
living on forty acres of land. Ills
average not Income a year. He
has a very comfortable house. To rent
such a In the city and live as
well there as he and bis
farm would cost hi pi a
year. Considered In that light, his lit-
farm Is really paying him a salary
a year.
In the east the greatest opportunities
are truck fanning. Only a few
required, and
large. certain truck farmer in the
of Boston U making a null
fortune acres of ground,
Intensive cultivation down to r
science. No Is one plant
i be soil man another Is ready t .
take its place. has part of Ida
track farm under glass, so that he.
can grow crops in trailer well as is
net profit
were per
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Dr. Office;
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
Don't waste your buying
liar yen can
L. I. Moore.
W. II. Long.
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
. . S. Carolina
CHARLES C. PIERCE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
in all the courts. Office up
in building, next to
Dr. D. L. James
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
. . N. Carolina
Harry Skinner. H. W
SKINNER ft WHEDBEE
LAWYERS
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
JULIUS BROWN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
in building, on Third
street
Practices wherever bis services arc
desired.
Carolina
DR. PAUL JONES
DENTIST.
Office up stairs in Masonic Building.
Farm title, X. C.
OWN H.
W B. RODMAN
GUiON
it
Practices where
vices required,
ally in the counties of
Craven, Carte Jones
and State and
Federal Courts.
Office Bread Street
A piece
liniment
pains i-; side t,
much Sold by
is far mi
and c- L no
. .





m.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE COMPANY, Inc.
D. CHARD, Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year,
Six months.
rates may be bad upon
application at the business office in
The Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
their g this year before
the November election. No need of
that at all. They will have it at the
usual time and with plenty to rejoice
over, not only in this State but else-
where
PITT HAS NOMINATED GOOD MEN
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the post office at
Greenville, North Carolina, under
of March 1879.
FRIDAY, 1910.
THE PAY BOLL COUNTS.
The Reflector has long been
the establishment of such
manufacturing enterprises as have
good weekly rolls. They are
what count most in the business of
a town. capitalist may have his
investments in stocks and bonds from
which he can draw his dividends, yet
but little of his income finds its way
into the channels of business. He
spends enough for the necessities of
his family and for occasional pleas-
trips, any residue he may have
goes into other investments. It is not
so with the wage earners. They
draw their weekly wages and it at
once finds its way into the money
drawers of the merchants. The mer-
chants may have stores well filled
with goods, but unless there are
wage earners with some money to
spend there is not much business for
them. Hence several manufacturing
enterprises with good weekly pay
lolls are worth more to the business
a town than many times the number
of
Take The Reflector establishment,
for instance. While not given to much
boasting, do take pride in the
that it is worth something to the
business of Greenville. docs not
Login to have the largest pay roll
here, but the employees of this one
plant and those dependent upon them
spend an average of a hundred
a week with the merchants of
Greenville. being so, it is the
duty of the merchants in town to give
their business to the establishments
them. What they pay
to g goes back to them is
trade.
This la mentioned for illustration.
The same thing is true other
enterprise whose employees receive
spend their weekly. They
The News suggest that
Carolina Democrats better have
When any party puts out good, hon-
est, capable men for the various
to be filled, that party has the right to
expect every man who pretends to be
its adherent to support the ticket.
Now we believe that when a party
does not consider efficiency and nor-
but just simply nominates
men because they happen to have a
pull with certain class of people, and
nominates inefficient men, there is
some excuse for a strict party man to
Courier.
There is good In the
foregoing. In the case of Pitt county,
a ticket composed of good, capable
men has been nominated, hence it is
the duty of every Democrat in the
county to support the ticket. Some
of the men on this ticket have been
tried in office for several years and
have fully met every requirement.
The new men nominated are equally
good and worthy of all confidence.
Of course the entire ticket in this
county is going to be elected, but
Democrat should vote and make
the majority as large as possible.
A New York lawyer who is attorney
for holders of those old bonds against
North Carolina about which there has
been so much stir, is long cir-
to people in North Carolina
trying to convince that it is
holding the state back in progress
and reputation not pay the bonds.
How easy it to think Marion But-
is behind that circular scheme.
Wouldn't it cost North Carolina a
fine sum if his crowd could get con-
of the state once more
What is this coming to light now
Is Dr. Cook really going to make
A dispatch states
that he is there from
with proof of his claims to the dis-
of the North Pole. From this
it may be inferred, if the dispatch is
not a fake, that the time was
been lost to the world and supposed
to be in an asylum in some secluded
place, he has been back in the Arctic
regions gathering together the proof
which he claims to have left be-
hind .
A book that should be in the hands
of every voter in the stale is the Dem-
Hand-Book that is now being
sent out by the stale executive com-
and a copy of which can be
had by addressing Chairman A. H. El-
at Raleigh. The book contains
pages of campaign matter bear-
upon both state and national
and a comparison of the records
of the the two parties. Those who
want to be informed on these things
should read the book.
North Carolina suffers a great loss
in the recent death of Editor John M.
Julian, of the Salisbury Post. Not
only was he held in high esteem by
the newspaper fraternity, but he was
a useful man to his town and to his
State. Several times he represented
Rowan county in the legislature and
he took high rank in that body,
ways being a hard working member
John Julian will be sadly missed.
From the coast towns come the re-
ports that the fishermen are catching
more mullets than have been landed
in years. That particular branch of
eating ought to be cheaper then. We
are glad something gives prospect of
checking the beef trust, for nobody
who could get good corned mullets
would eat beef.
The report is going around that the
North Carolina Republicans have a
barrel of money to spend in this cam-
It may help somebody for the
money to get in circulation, but none
of them will be helped by getting
offices they to buy with the
money.
Those fellows who started the
rumor that President Taft was going
to stand aside for Roosevelt to have
the In 1912, were merely
guessing, The rumor is denied, the
president is sticking to former de-
to take it again if it
his way.
If Marlon and his gang could
ct hold of North Carolina once more,
would bankrupt the State pay-
those fraudulent bonds. And But-
would get a rake off in
of millions. That is
what be is working for
The mayor of Durham has
the police to put a stop to rubberneck-
when a company of show girls
come to town and go to for
their meals Now, boys, go home to
your mothers.
Did you ever The Orange, Va.,
Observer has already blurted in with
is the time do your Christ-
mas And this before the
ice man lets go. Always somebody
to be suggesting trouble.
-0
are helping the business of the town
and are entitled to the patronage of
those with whom this money is spent.
It is the way to make business. Ev-
enterprise with a pay roll should
be supported, and additional ones
should be. encouraged. Greenville
needs. in particular
as the not as many
enterprises as it to have.
Give employment to wage earners,
encourage the enterprises that employ
them, and you will an
ed number of people with money to
spend.
The Wilmington Dispatch, the
bright afternoon paper of the by
the had so outgrown former
quarters that it erected and recently
move into a largo and handsome new
building. Immediately following the
change also came a change in the size
of the paper, and The Dispatch is
now eight pages of seven columns,
Instead of six pages of six columns
before. The Increase in size car-
further the good quality that has
all along; marked The Dispatch.
The Wilmington Dispatch went dry,
speaking, yesterday. May
we inquire whether Cowan was mere-
fishing, or did he journey forth to
Greenville to settle the red-headed
controversy with Whichard. Greens-
News.
Must have been the former, his
bright head has bobbed up
this way.
Things do look good for
Pitt county. It is already one of tho
best farming counties in the
and the interest is awakening
good roads and the movement for
reclaiming swamp lands means
for the near future.
We wonder what has become
real good apples. Some that, are fine
enough looking are shipped to the
merchants, but they do not seem to
have that fine flavor that they used
to have. .
The decision of Taft to
make no further distinction between
insurgents and regulars in the dis-
of offices, has given
of the North Carolina pie hunters
shake.
Dispatch Cowan intimates that
News Patton and Reflector Whichard
are color blind. Thinks we don't
know a pumpkin when we see it, eh
That's the limit. Sic Patton.
The Greensboro News says
may have gone Democratic, but one
swallow does not make a
Just wait, there are some more
lows coming lo you in November.
The man who has been elected
governor of Maine is the first Demo-
governor State has had
1872. And what is more remark
able, he is SOU cf the former Demo-
governor. This looks like there
is something in a name.
0--
Mr. Roosevelt has not given an ex-
why it went like it did
in Maine.
A Geneva doctor claims to
discovered the science of reading .
character by looking over
their old shoes. Guess he finds some
of them badly run down.
The Republicans trying to keep
their courage up by bragging about
What they are going to do in North
Carolina. It is a regular going by the
graveyard whistle.
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
South Carolina newspapers must be
weak in influence In the primary in
won out for
nor with every paper but one against
him. They must feel sore
James C. who claimed to
be the oldest in the
United States, died Sunday at his
home in West Virginia. He was
years of age.
When tho day comes that all
men of Greenville unite in an
fort to draw trade to the town, you
will see more trade coming this way.
And here comes Robeson county
with a and fight
They must have forgotten the slogan,
Robeson and save the
The sixth congressional district
muddle has come to an end. We hope
no dissension was created that will
give comfort to the Republicans.
While Mr. Bryan can get paid for
making speeches there are many
others who are glad of an
to make them for nothing.
If there is a person who does not
get. his money's worth out of The Re-
at the subscription price that
person Is hard to please.
After three efforts the Republicans
Wake county brought out a ticket.
It will take but one effort of the Dem-
beat them.
Dixon and the Devil.
Rev. A. C. Dixon, of Shel-
by, but now pastor of the Moody
church in Chicago, has recently
preached a sermon that is being pass-
ed around. According to this recent
deliverance, the horns, barbed tail,
cloven hoofs and general terrifying
make-up which used to form the de-
of Father of
have gone out of fashion. Instead of
these, according to Dr. Dixon, he Las
put on a frock coat, a silk hat, a
white tie, a high collar and patent
leather and may be seen
cavorting around pink teas and la-
looking benevolent and
trying to appear intellectual. Ac-
cording to the report-in The Record
Herald, Dr. said a lot of
men are falling victims to his wiles.
He is the same in spite
of his efforts to appear
He is trying to adopt himself to mod-
conditions and, as evidence of
the of his operations, Dr.
Dixon pointed to the large followings
obtained by the
SOphist and Annie
which, he declared, founded by
women at the direct instigation of
Satan The doctors think
that any knowledge forbidden by God
was satanic and the seeking
it was sinful. To back this up
he quoted from that portion of
Scripture which adjures to converse
not with those who have
and who in the
Then the doctor went into a
severe arraignment of women.
he is quoted, a good
woman more than I and no man is
good who doesn't owe much of
is best in him to some good woman,
but it is a fact that cannot be denied
women have responsible
for a great deal of what is wickedest
in the Dr. Dixon is evidently a
preacher with a
Chronicle.
Becoming Rich.
Too often the fact that a man is
growing rich is first announced to
his neighbor by a wider spread and
a finer show in his style of living.
His wife and daughters begin to re-
the They neither
toil nor spin but Solomon in all his
glory was not arrayed like one of
them. Next come a coach and span.
Then, of course, a new house. The
old one was ample. There is no in-
crease of family but without a grand-
mansion, how is the world to
know that the man has made a for-
tune So architects and painters
and decorators in due time install
the household in a palace fit for a
duke and they take their rank
among upper All the
humble walks of life are abandoned,
old friends are dropped, the hearts
once often cheered, and the poor
helped, looked no longer for their
coming. The cloak of selfishness is
tightly drawn and the heart closed
to the appeals for charity. How
true, when blessings come in the
way prosperity, they are
wholly appropriated for self, and
the good they were intended to do
never speed on missions of mercy,
but are tightly held, and
thwarted altogether and they are
not known to have become rich by
the many blessings bestowed or
good done, but only by an outward
dazzling show that a few years will
Times.
Dying Hard.
An instance of the ruling passion
strong in death has just come to light
in Mecklenburg Republican circles.
The key note of North Carolina Re-
has been and is
It has no higher aim than that in
the procurement and control of
jobs and it is this very
that has retarded the growth
of the party in this state How hope-
less is the obsession for office in the
Republican breast is shown in the
recent action of machine com-
in practically commanding
in the event of his election
to congress, to take instructions from
them and to make no appointments
to office that are not endorsed by the
county machine. Of course this ac-
is audacious, and it goes to show
why a Republican is a Republican
in this State. The reply of Candidate
was to the effect that in the
matter of making appointments he
would not be dominated by the ma-
chine, but that be would follow the
of Chairman The old
pie counter crowd seems to be unable
to understand the new order of
things. It is a hard death. We are
a little bit surprised that the Char-
machine hands should have made
a public spectacle of
Chronicle.
Chairman secretary, Mr
let the cat out of the bag as
to the meaning of that self-gov-
plank in the Republican
platform. He says the defeat of the ,, L,.
party in Maine was because of a de- require fire insurance to
sire of the people to get a whack at their interests. This new
. l . t lit. 4-n
Insuring B. L. Members.
What seems to us to be a new de-
with all the elements of mer-
it in it is being made by some of the
more enterprising life insurance com-
chief among them the
able. These companies are using a
life policy for building and loan
The building and loan
The fellows who saying
is the most beautiful woman in
the world, need to come to Greenville
and take a look.
We want to see Greenville the best
town of its size in the State. It could
easily be that with effort In the right
direction.
In addition to the Democratic con-
elected in Maine, the
will also elect a Democratic
senator.
The Republicans may try to make
any it they please, but the
carried Maine all the
same.
Greensboro is working to get a
commission form of government. Hope
it will win out so the rest of us can
see how it works.
How State Fairs Help the People.
From several score of young farmers
of the Northwest have been obtained
statements as to what State fairs do
for the people and as to what they
should do. What these young farmers
say the fairs do for people may be
summarized
They give------
Vacations for many farmers with
pleasure and profit combined.
Contact with men in every
department of agricultural work, and
the stimulus which such contact can
not fail to offer.
Elevation in standards of work and
in quality of product; first, by the off-
of premiums, ind, second by ob-
Increase of interest in farm work
as dignified and wholly worthy of re-
Opportunity for study of newly de-
vised farm machinery at work.
Encouragement toward the improve-
of crops and stock through the
rotation of crops, select seed and wise-
cattle, sheep, hogs, etc.
Development of tho State pride and
broadened views as to
the constitutional prohibition, which
means that bis party in this State de-
sire to knock the law in this State.
The In Maine had very little
to do with prohibition. The national
committee sent its best speakers to
the State and the entire campaign
was made on national issues. The
Democrats in Maine have long favor-
ed giving the people a chance to vote
on this constitutional amendment and
now that they will control the
it may be If the
party in North Carolina wants
to make a clear-cut issue on State pro-
why does it not do so. A
committee was appointed some days
ago to interpret the meaning of this
plank. Mr. Thomas Settle, who is the
daddy of the plank, said it meant
booze; but the other members had an
attack of cold feet and said it did l
Then Tom wanted to know if it did
not mean liquor did it mean.
And the others have not yet answer-
Record.
move is to furnish life insurance to
protect the widow and family in case
of death. It will be but another ad-
to the features of
the building and loan associations.
The principal feature of this new pol-
icy is that the premiums may be
paid in monthly installments, thus
making the policy easy to carry.
Charlotte Observer.
There are some other Republican
states that might follow the example
of Maine, if they want to get decent.
The size of the majority in the
sixth district primary shows that
they wanted Godwin.
Back From Millinery Centers.
Mrs. I. F. Lee and Mrs. W. B.
Greene their return from
Northern having
goods for Mrs. I. F. Lee Co.
visited the hat parlors of a mil-
liner direct from Pa-is. At our open-
be announced we will
show the newest and most up to date
styles in all the latest shapes and
Says the Wilmington
summer the Greenville Reflector
bricks at us, on account of the
bathing girl, and by fall the Char-
Observer is hurling lemons at
us about our alleged love of the hob-
skirt, so indeed like a breath of
fresh air breaking through the foul
atmosphere and like a straw
before the eyes of the drowning man,
at least our optics behold something
we can show better half without
fear or trembling. We return most
grateful thanks to the Greenville
News for the
Greenville Reflector and
Dispatch are again quarrel-
about red the hair
doesn't belong to woman, either.
The Republican party in North Car-
has long been a close corpora-
It has been for a
billion dollars, and but two dollars
and thirty cents have been paid in. It
has been playing a large bluff on a
small capital, and it played its policies
like one might play a slot machine
per Duncan is just now
overboard. He has not fallen from
the ship, he has simply been lowered,
and the deck hands are. over
their new captain. Next year John
Morehead will be the subject of the
gaff and the harpoon. The captain of
today becomes the deck hand of to-
pie is the one thing
in sight in the Republican politics in
North
This cool spell don't make a win-
U,. a, U rs w to, J.
want to shed later.
A new rule has just been put into
effect by the United States post office
department, whereby a receipt for a
registered package will not be return-
ed, by the addressee unless
specially requested by the sender.
If such receipt is wanted, the package
or letter must bear the words,
The doors to heaven are in retired
places Of helpfulness.
Booker T. Washington is now also
on the staff of The Outlook. Se he
and Roosevelt can discuss matters
over their cigars and coffee. apter
their meals
Dispatch
.





mm
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
MY MAID HORSE.
Meandered to Smithy and Made Him
Understand His
Joe has hauled a Hickerson ex
i wagon to and fro between the
International Mercantile Marine dock
the express transfer station
Eighteenth street, between Seventh
arid Eighth avenues, for years
He is blind in one eye and weak in tin
or-, but he sense of the
horse variety. His only side trips
Li re been occasional visits to Mr.
Carroll, the horseshoer in Christopher
between Washington and West.
Well, this morning Joe was left in
the stable because his right forefoot
shoe needed fixing, and Dan Barry,
Joe's driver, had no time to take him
around to Carroll's before business
hours. But that didn't make any
once to Jog. Barry started for the
dock with Joe's relief hitched to the
wagon when he happened to look
back. Old Joe was quietly walking
out the stable and trotting away
southward. Before the driver could
fairly take in the situation Joe was
out of sigh.
Half an hour later stopped in
front of the Carroll blacksmith shop.
that Barry's asked
roll of Ills assistant. sure is. Must
run away, said Carroll
horse never runs
Joe raised his right fore hoof as if
it hurt him. Carroll looked if over
hoof's all right. Only needs a
now was the mental note of
Carroll. The new shoe was fitted.
thing Carroll knew Joe was trot-
tic g away, but net in the direction of
stable. He was covering the dis-
to the . . Marine dock
fast as he without exciting
He got all right and just
Waited for Dan Barry to turn up. Bar-
found Joe pawing, as nervous
are wont to do, with his new
shod right The driver did
not miss the glitter of the new shoe.
what you think of
Barry, as if some one were
near at hand to hear him.
and got himself a shod, and I'll bet he
told Carroll in good horse talk to have
it York Globe.
THE
Your complexion as well as your
temper is rendered miserable by a dis-
ordered By taking Chamber-
and Liver Tablets you
can it. both. Sold by all drug-
gists.
THE HAAG SHOWS
Be in Greenville on Friday,
7th.
Mr. Dan Hoffman, contracting agent
of the mighty Haag Shows, was here
today arranging for the coming of
big attraction to Greenville on
October 7th, for two perform-
This show has cars,
horses, and gives a street
parade a mile in length. It also has
the only that is carried by
any circus and gives a free demon-
with this machine. All cir-
lovers can prepare for a big time
on October 7th.
The Haag Shows is owned by
Southern people and is not in the
circus trust.
and the Wind Mill Fixer
A Little Story With a Moral.
Speaking about paying com-
mission, for manage the
affairs of Greensboro, as is being done
in a great number of cities, there is
almost to be opposition The
idea of paying men to do something
that the people have had dona for
is not very popular, but the
trouble has been, by reason of the.
fact that the aldermen have their own
business to attend to and are not in a
position to do things for want of ad-
equate knowledge, that they have not
No one will dispute
the assertion that the man who
is worth ten limes more than
the man who does not know. Both
may be honest and square, but the
difference is still there. The late Dr.
a very man, used a
Windmill to pump water for his ho-
tel. It would feet oat of order some-
times refuses to work, on which
he secured the services of the
late an honest
and most capable old soul, but the
doctor got tired of paying him and
one day when it was out of whack,
concluded to fix it himself. Ho tried
It for three days and finally had to
rend for He came fixed it
in ten minutes and charged therefor
.-2.50. Dr. saying
that not over a worth of work
had been done on it. said
for the work, a dollar
and a half for the know-how; I am
going to furnish my brains to you
for The paid the bill
and said it was all right. See the
point Get men who know how, but
they will know how unless they
are kept on the job every day in the
We have had most competent
but they have never had-the
time to thoroughly inform themselves
and Record
a minute should be lost a
child chows symptoms of croup.
Remedy given
as coon as the child becomes hoarse,
or after the croupy cough
pears, will prevent the Sold
by all druggists.
Stray fatal Up.
I Lave taken up one female hog,
with yellow spots, weight about
pounds, marked Top in light ear.
Owner can get same by pro-, own-
and paying charges.
HENRY COX,
It F. D. N. C.
Items.
N. C, September 1910.
Mrs. E. M. Cheek and little
Francis, came in from
ton Sunday night to visit the family of
Mr. John H. Cheek.
Miss Annie and niece,
Blanche Allen, went to Kinston Wed-
afternoon.
Miss Rosa Corey, of
spent Saturday and Sunday with Mien
Eva
Quite a number from hero attended
the speaking at Ayden September the
Kiss Nora who has been
very sick, is improving, to the delight
her many friends.
The formers are picking cotter,
grading tobacco through this section.
September is giving US some real
days. Sterns like fall sure en-
Harness
and Sundries
IT WAS A SALE.
In addition to our regular business of man-
BUGGIES
on the market and doing all kinds of vehicles
repairing, we are carrying a complete line of
double and single harness. In full sets or pieces
of any kind; Lap Robes, of all grades; Whips,
Riding Bridles and Blankets, Pads for Breast
Collars and Saddles, Blankets, Tie Reins,
Halters, Etc. We can supply any of your needs
in these articles at lowest prices.
III IT
BUGGY COMPANY
GREENVILLE,
Eros. Co. j
NO FOLK, VA.
Cotton Brokers in
Grain and
Provisions
PRIVATE WIRE
; S to New Chicago and
New Orleans.
Nor. Car. i
FLAKE
Harness Repair Shop
and in odd parts of harness, leather and
shoe findings.
TO OFFICE. Greenville, N. C.
it Saved Leg,
I'd lope my
I. A. 8-v of Wis.
o doctors
not cure, at last laid me Up.
Then Salve cured it.
sound and Infallible for Skin
Salt Rheum.
Barn, Cuts
druggists.
J. W. Perry
NORFOLK, VA,
Factors and handlers of
Ties and Bags.
so-
CHOICE CUT FLOWERS
Write, phone or wire,
J. L. CO.,
Your Wants
as they are
for everything
in the Florist's
Line.
Phone No.
CENTRAL
Barber Si
t Prop.
in main sec-
of the town Five
in operation and one pr
sided a skilled
Our place inviting, razor
sharp. Our Lowell
Modern machine t
La-
dies waited on at their
J C.
DEALER IN
Monuments
Tomb Stones
Iron Fencing
S. J. Nobles
MODERN BARBER SHOP
Nicety furnished, every
thing- and a tractive,
the very best bar-
Second to none in
the state
Cosmetics a specialty.
Opposite J R, J. G
And Farmers Were Well Pleased With
Prices.
On Friday, the 16th, I had my
at the Peoples warehouse,
loads of tobacco, the most of which
came from territory that has been
selling elsewhere. I took extra
cautions to ascertain if my
were satisfied with their sale
and I have only heard of three men
who were not well pleased. This is
the most satisfactory sale ever made
for that much tobacco on one floor. I
good over it. The buyers stood
up all day from 10.30 till minutes
to o'clock and the last piles sold
just as well as the first. We have the
best buyers in North Carolina and if
there are any farmers who have not
sold with me and will try me with
their next load, I will prove it to them.
I wish to thank my customers and
friends for their liberal and
treatment. I am working hard
for trade and expect to keep at it.
C. R. TOWNSEND,
Manager, Peoples Warehouse.
AYDEN MEETING IN
INTEREST OF DRAINAGE.
SMALL MAKES A
EXCELLENT SPEECH.
The Lash of a Fiend.
would have been about as welcome to
A. Cooper, of N. Y., as a mer-
lung-racking cough that defied
all remedies for years, was most
troublesome at he writes;
helped me till I used
King's New Discovery, which cured
me completely. I never Cough at
night Millions know its match-
less merit for stubborn colds,
coughs, sore lungs,
asthma, hemorrhage, croup, whooping
cough, or It relieves quick-
and never fails to satisfy. A trial
convinces. Trial bottle
free. It's positively guaranteed by all
druggists.
RESOLUTIONS.
In Regard to The Prevention of Tn-
tuberculosis is known to
be communicable, curable, and
and,
Whereas, at present, the loss to so-
in and money justifies
a concerted effort on the part of the
Resolved, That the attendance at
the North Carolina Association for the
prevention of tuberculosis calls to the
attention of all religious bodies and
business
and employers, the great need of
the popular enlightenment of the
of the State and for the
for the cure of unfortunate
and recommends that the rep-
from
ties of North Carolina be instructed
to pay special to the enact-
of such legislation as will aid
to provide for an adequate
to provide for the establish-
and maintenance of such
and that every legitimate or-
of the State lends its co-
operation to wage a campaign for the
results commensurate with our needs.
Be it further resolved, That a copy
of these resolutions be forwarded to
the religious bodies, trade mid
organizations, leading pa-
of State, and that-every
board of trade and chamber of com-
be requested to adopt
the desire of their
various communities, and publicly re-
quest the representatives of their res-
communities, when elected, to
vote for an adequate appropriation
to aid in preventing and curing
patient through tout the
State, when the next
convenes la Raleigh in 1911.
Large Crawl Present and Much In-
Shewn In Movement to Drain
Swift Creek and Clay Root Swamps.
A meeting that means much for
the southern of the county
was held at Ayden Wednesday after-
noon. It was in the interest of the
movement to drain Swift creek
Clay Root swamps, along which are
large bodies of land that would be of
groat value if reclaimed. This was
first started at a meeting held in
a few weeks ago. a com-
being appointed then and an-
other meeting called for Ayden. In-
was shown in the large number
of people who attended this meet-
After an introduction by Mr. Paul
Webb, Congressman John H. Small
addressed the large audience for about
an hour, in addition to pointing out
the great benefit that would come
from drainage of these lands, he ex-
plained fully the drainage laws and
the steps that should be taken to es-
a drainage district and get the
lands drained
At the conclusion of the speech a
large number of land owners along
Swift creek and Clay Root swamps
signed a petition to be sent to the
government asking that a drainage
engineer be sent to make a
nary survey of these lands, designate
the proper boundaries of the district
and estimate the cost of draining.
When this is done further steps will
be taken to have the draining done
and these lands reclaimed. It will
add thousands of dollars to the
of that section.
Snakes.
Mr. M. P. Page, of Carolina town-
ship, killed a very large rattlesnake
near his home a few days ago. While
the snake was a large one. it had only-
nine rattles.
And speaking about snakes, re-
minds us that it is said that with the
possible exception of the poplar leaf,
which seems to be increasing in
rapidly, all others are on the de-
crease. A number of large poplar
leafs have been killed this season
several being right in Greenville.
Just a Word.
Our bookkeeper has finished mail-
statements to subscribers of The
Daily Reflector who are in arrears
Quite likely some mistakes have been
made, as it would be remarkable to
handle a thousand account. without
making an occasional error.
ever an error has been made it will
cheerfully corrected by attention
being called to it. Since the mailing of
the statements began, many
have responded with remittances,
and we will be glad if all the others
will do so promptly. Do not wait for
a statement to be sent you.
Work has now been started send-
out statements to subscribers of
the weekly edition.
Remember that one way to help us
give you a good paper is to pay your
subscription promptly.
The days and nights will be of
equal length this week, and then on
until the latter part of December the
nights will increase in length.
How seldom it is that one can purchase for a
small figure a 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.
is the only Silk that will do this. Have you
seen this
New Fabric
Many will try to imitate this new creation of
the manufacturer's art. Few will succeed.
J. R. J. G.
ALONE SELLS IT IN GREENVILLE. THEY
ALSO RECOMMEND IT TO WEAR, and
IT TO WASH.
. J. G.
Style Leaders N. C.
IT PAYS TO TRADE WITH US
How About Your Home
Is it comfortably If not you
would find it interesting to visit our store and
took over our stock of FURNITURE and
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Everything needed
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make
you sit up and take notice.
J. H. BOYD, JR.
Subscribe to The Reflector.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT I
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
School lunch baskets, tab- Ho-. Joan H. Small will speak in
lets and stationery at J. it. Smith Ayden on Wednesday, 14th, on the
drainage of the low lands in Pit
Protect your house against the filthy county. Swift Creek, and Clay Root
files and mosquitoes by putting in a swamp especially. Let everybody
set of the Improved Screen Windows come to hear him. No politics in this
and Doors made by J. It. Smith Mfg. speech,
Co. Your hay will need bailing this fall.
On or about the 20th of June ray Don't delay buying a press till it will
white female bobtailed rat terrier be too late. See us at
dog, strayed from Hotel Sons Co.
a black spot on his back, is very Mrs and children, who have
smart, and answers to the name of been visiting here, left for Greenville
Information leading to Friday.
his recovery will be rewarded. W. A vertical lift mower
S. Mount. . a dump rake are practical
Corn, Oats and Hay at J R. Smith labor savers. We can supply you
Lost, strayed, or black Mr. George Hart, of Hookerton, is
and white spotted fox terrier puppy, visiting his sister, Mrs. W. T. Tart in
about four mouths old, has short
tail. Disappeared about one week
ago. Reward for information leading
For mill supplies, belting, piping,
and a full line of things needed to run
a mill or gin, go to J. R. Smith
Another shipment of and cent
goods for the bargain counters at
J. R. Smith
Advertising surely pays, from the
fact Mr. Joe Ross, manager of the
Ayden Loan Insurance Co., tells
us since he has been running his ad.
In the Daily Reflector his business
has more than doubled. His office
a busy place With insurance and
estate.
Poultry Food and Hawk
t J. R. Smith
See our and children's hats
prices down. Styles same
as Now York and Baltimore.
ed by expert R. Smith
Company.
Milk Churns, Preserve Jars, Milk
Coolers, and Mason's Fruit Jars at
J. R. Smith
J. F. Paints, Varnish, Ker-
fee and at J. It. Smith
With Sons Co.
Daily arrivals of new goods at J.
to recovery. J. Raymond Turnage, It. Smith
Ayden, N. C.
There are daily arrivals of new
A large shipment of and cents at the Seminary. Saw-
goods at J. R. Smith Their and his able corps of assistants
store reminds us of Christmas with are doing and will do a noble work
the large crowds there trading tic people, and especially the Free
For and lot in town of Baptists, will do their duty by it
Ayden, situated on west side of Lee patronage and
street, within one, block of business need of dormitories has been supplied
section. Apply at to E. Turn- for girls, and there are plenty of good
age Sons Co. for boys and young men.
If you want a cutter, hay See our and cent bargain
or gasoline read E. It. Smith Co.
Turnage Son's locals in the Ayden J Miss Mollie King, of Washington, is
department of the weekly. visiting her uncle, Mr. Joseph
If you want belting, mill fittings, Lou, on Lee street,
or any kind of hardware, see us, we I We have just received a car of cook
have just received a full line of furniture, carpenter tools,
cutlery and j material, lime hardware, etc.
guns.-J. R. Smith Co. -J- a- Smith Co-
-I t to buy. We are glad to sea Mr. Lorenzo
sell, or rent houses or laud, or want a out again, after being kick-
job for yourself, wife, daughter, h a mule.
or sister, or want to employ j Every farmer should have
help, or what you on his pack barn and tobacco
there is no bettor medium than The land probably save a year's work at a
W. Smith. email C. Noble, at
Bring on your cotton. Our gin Is Ayden, about it.
in first lass shape. We will gin it Mr. J. R. and family left
for twentieth and furnish free Friday for a visit, in
the b., and R. Smith Co. j Are you selling out at cost No I
buy bushels of I mighty low, come and see. J. It
good country corn for milling Smith Co. has everything you need
Cash Forfeited
United States Commissioner Ki; g
failed to have a court today. Some-
time ago ho issued a Warrant for Ed.
Mills, colored, of for
retailing Deputy marshal served toe
warrant yesterday and Mills put up
cash for his appearance today here.
But he did not appear and a phone
message from said he
the last night.
When a man's religion is on his
sleeve it is usually part of his cloak.
The Farmer.
We are inclined to agree with The
Monroe Enquirer in its estimate of
the brain power of the farmer.
talk and this writing so much of it,
about now the farmer is coming up
the ladder socially and intellectually
about how the farmer is climbing
into those says The
one a pain. The time never
when fanning was not as re-
as honorable as any
business or profession on the
earth and the time never was when
tiers was not just as much brain-
; driving farming operations as
as engaged in pushing any other
business along. The time was when
little egg-shaped headed fools
that farming was away down
ladder and they looked on the
as a clod the
Little thoughts bubbling up in their
tanks did not make it so.
It is not that farmer is changing
a fool to a business man of en-
orgy and sense, but the little fools,
. of arc realizing that they
have been fools in sizing up the farm-
when put him down below the
very top in the business world and in
department of life where good
and manhood We
hardly the time when
farmers were not able, when
ling, to lend money to town people,
or when town people looking about
somebody to go on their bonds,
would check off first of all, their
list of farmer friends. The farmer
I always has been and always will be,
a mar. to look up
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N. O.
At the Business September 1910.
R. Smith Co
Lime Lime barrels just
R. Smith Co.
Lime, Cement, Hair, Trowels and
Mason R. Smith Co.
Miss May Smith returned from Mid-
Thursday.
Lime, Cement, and
building material at J. R. Smith
Gaudy and Rubber Belting, Black j Dr. Harvey of Edward, spent
and Pipe other mill Friday tight In Ayden. While here ho
at J. R. Smith Co. purchased the medical of Dr.
Rye, rape, turnip and rutabaga seed Joseph Dixon, on East avenue, end
at J. R. Smith Co's. hero about January at
Call, on us for Flooring Ceiling, , which time Dr. Joseph Dixon will
and Scant- to Virginia. It would not seem
ling. We guarantee j like Ayden not to have a Dr.
R. Smith Mill. i Wood's turnip and rutabaga seed
See E. Turnage Sons Co. advertise- J. R. Smith
of a house for sale. This is i j A Dice line of Coffins and Caskets
firm and know The always on hand with a nice at
tor Jo a Rood medium to soil and buy your service at J. R. Smith Mill,
through. Car Lime, and Hay,
You can find almost anything you at J. R, Smith
want In Shoes, Has, Dry Goods, No- i buy a good second
lions, Trunks, School Books, hand jointer and It. Smith
Hardware, Crockery, Lime, Co.
Cement, Windows, Hooks Cook Stoves j are agents for the
Screen Windows and Groceries at J. and Mowers and Rakes.
R. Smith Sons Co.
Patterns and at I Coal Tar, Roof Faint, at J. R.
Resources
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts
unsecured.
Furniture and fixtures
Demand
Due from bunks and
Bankers
Cash items
Gold coin
Silver coin, including all
minor coin cur. 1,456.80 j
National bank and oilier
Notes
Total 1110,481.081
j Liabilities
stock
i Surplus fund
profits, less
cur. exp. and taxes pd.
Deposits sub. to cheek
Savings Deposits
Cashier's
outstanding
Certified Checks
25,000.00
15,625.00
84,776.87
42.07
Total
OF NORTH CAROLINA,
OF PITT.
I, J. it. Smith, Cashier of the above named b ink, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true Lo the best my knowledge and belief.
J. R. SMITH,
Subscribed sworn to j
J. R. Smith Co.
Smith
before me, this of Sept.
Notary Public.
J. R SMITH,
KNACK,
JOSEPH DIXON.
Direct s.
NO
NOTICE
We wish to your Attention t line which
now have. taken great care h buying this year and we
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats. No
Laces and in anything that is carried in a
Dry Goods Store.
Come let us w you
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C.
KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL.
Health Is Worth Sating, and Some
Greenville People Know How
to Ian it.
Many people take their
lives in their hands by neglecting the
kidneys when they know or-
need help. Sick kidneys are re-
for a vast amount of
and ill health, but there is no
need to suffer nor to remain in
when all diseases and aches and
pains due to weak kidneys can be
and permanently cured by the
use of Kidney Pills. The
lowing statement leaves no ground
doubt. .
Mrs S. A. Simmons Heritage
St., n.
Kidney Fills to be an effective
remedy for kidney trouble and head-
ache. My back pained me for a long
time and my kidneys were much dis-
ordered. I Happened read about
Kidney Pills, and procuring a
box, began using They bone-
me In way and am now
free from backache and am able to
rest well; in fact, I feel better in
way. I am glad to give
Kidney Pills my
For sole by till dealers. Price GO
Cents. Co., Buffalo. N.
Y., sole for the United States.
Remember the
take other.
The long, dull summer has
passed. Nearly everybody has re-
turned from their vacations With a
or loss grim determination to get
down as they can
adjust themselves to the traces again
The warehouse bells are again ringing
for daily sales on all the markets, and
the voice of the tobacco auctioneer Is
again abroad in the land Just
how much energy each man can
into his business, depends on the bu-
and the man, and it plainly
conjectural, but with pull-
towards the same end and all to-
business is bound to be better
than it has for several months past.
The point is for every man to do his
own level best, and hope and believe
that every other man is doing the same
thing. During the three or four
months there have been too many
business people worrying about other
people's business of
other people Is sometimes one thing
and sometimes another. What really
happens to man's own business is
mainly and generally what he makes
happen to it. The time is now at hand
to make everything good happen to
business that can possibly be made
to happen.
The outlook is not without
The best thing about it is
that even before the summer months
have passed, and while still there was
uncertainty about some of the crops,
and while still the vacation
was on, there came a distinct improve
in business, nothing to become
very much elated over, but enough
make things fairly good for the fall
trade.
We are convinced so far at least
as the tobacco business is concerned
that the situation warrants healthy
optimism, man doing his
best in own particular line without
worrying may happen to the
other man Journal.
PUMPKIN.
A Painting That Drove Parisian Artists
Into
It -Is a part of the duty of the of-
picture hanger of the
Artistes to distribute the
canvases which are offered for
Paris Salon throughout the rooms of
the Arts. The jurors
then summoned to examine these
and com mend or condemn they see
fit. The artists at liberty to
peal to the jurors, and an Influential
artist can make trouble for the
In this connection a
is of painter of still
life.
Some years bad painted
what he deemed his masterpiece. B
luxurious pumpkin, orange in color
and heroic- hi size, such as one sees Hi
an agricultural show. The jurors
not approve the official picture haul-
choice of a place for it. A second
choice also was found for it and con
damned.
By this time the pumpkin had be-
come the principal topic of
in all the studios of Paris, and the
I loading artists began to look in at the
Salon-to make sure that their exhibit
were not being injured by an
contrast
nearly fainted with horror on seeing
the pumpkin not far from his pictures.
Take that thing he shouted;
kills my white and pink
So the pumpkin was removed. But
here objected. He declared
that it should not stay in the same
room with his
to my lions and bears and ti-
said he. look like
tame
was the next artist to
protest. place it near my
be exclaimed angrily.
becomes of the martial of my
end what is use of ex-
Starring with a big
pumpkin
So the pumpkin was shifted about
till it had passed through fifteen
rooms, and not a member of the so
would tolerate its presence.
the picture hanger placed the
pumpkin in the entrance ball, official-
Iv called but pop-
dubbed the of
Naturally became the
mortal enemy of the unhappy picture
Weekly.
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Greenville,
and Kinston, Effective April 1st,
a. m.
a. m. Ar.
a.
in.
m.
m.
William
stimulate the LIVER,
strengthen the digestive
regulate the bowels, and we
equaled as an
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE,
In malarial districts virtues
ere widely recognized,
peculiar properties in freeing
the system from EM
sugar coated.
Take No Substitute.
OYSTERS ARE LAZY.
Dr. Hyatt
Dr. K. O. Hyatt will be
ville at Hotel Bertha, October 3rd.
arid Monday and Tuesday, for
the purpose of treating diseases of
the eye and fitting glasses.
PATTERN HATS WERE MADE
In the leading millinery parlors of
northern markets. Opening Mon-
day, September 1910. C. T. Mun-
ford.
Practically the Whole of
Their Lives In Beds.
Just like confirmed invalids, oysters
spend their lives In beds. The
parts of an oyster are salt water
and a handsome stomach.
Every oyster has a
lined overcoat with the moss on the
outside. Put a
gathers no moss.
Oysters, us a rule, keep their mouths
shut, but when they have been in so
defy too long they begin to gape.
They fond of playing games, one
of their favorites being
a-rosy. In this game they join shells
in a circle on a plate. They live in the
ocean In summer and during the win
months frequent the principal ho-
tels and restaurants, where they have
reserved seats on cakes of Ice
prepared for them. They are
rarely met with at or church
fairs.
An oyster is a by
a bivalve by profession and an
appetizer because he cannot help him-
self. There are girl oysters as well as
men oysters; but, so far as is known,
one is not superior to the other.
Oysters vary In according to
their circumstances and their bringing
up. Some are harder to swallow than
others. There Is no particular rule
about this. But If at first you don't
succeed, try. try again.
In June the oysters ought to be n
rare as the L.
In Judge's Library.
p. m.
p. m
p. m.
Fur further information, address nearest ticket agent, or
W. H WARD, Ticket t Greenville, N. C.
W. J. F T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. A.
WILMINGTON, N. O.
Schedule
The following is the
Norfolk Southern
effective Monday,
August 1910.
EAST BOUND.
daily, pull-
man sleeping cars. Leave Green-
ville 12.41 a. m., Washington 1.50
a. m., arrive Edenton 3.55 a. m.,
Elizabeth City 5.10 a. in., Norfolk
7.00 a. m.
No. dally except Sunday. Leave
Greenville 9.40 a. m. arrive Wash-
10.40 a. m., New Bern
a. m., Norfolk 4.05 p. m.
No. daily except Sunday. Leave
Greenville 6.30 p. m arrive Wash-
7.25 p. m.
WEST
No. r, daily, Express,
sleeping cars. Leave
3.53 a. m., arrive Wilson 5.20 a. m.,
Raleigh 7.30 a. m. Connect at
eon with A. C. L. R R., north and
south, at Raleigh with South-;
Railway for all
No. daily except Sunday.
Greenville 7.51 a. m., arrive
9.16 a. m., Raleigh 11.20 a. m.
No. daily except Sunday.
Greenville 4.14 p. m, arrive
5.31 p. m., Raleigh 7.20 p. m. Co-
with Southern Railway
Durham and Greensboro.
N. schedule figures pub-
as information only and not
guaranteed.
For further particulars, to
SCHEDULE
Trains leave Raleigh effective Maj
YEAR ROUND
a Atlanta, Birmingham,
points West, Jackson-
ville and Florida points,
Hamlet for Charlotte and
Wilmington.
THE
11.35 a.
with coaches and parlor car. Con-
with steamer for Washing-
ton, Baltimore, New
Providence.
THE FLORIDA FAST MAIL No.
a. Richmond, Wash-
and New York Pullman
day coaches and dining car.
Connect at Richmond with C. U
O. for Cincinnati and points West,
at Washington with Pennsylvania
railroad and B. O. for
and points west
THE SEABOARD
p. Atlanta, Charlotte.
Hamlet. M f Agent, Greenville. N. C.
6.00 p. m., No.
Louisburg, Henderson Oxford,
Norlina. . , .
G p. m For Atlanta,
Memphis and points West, Jack
and all Florida
Pullman sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
u. m.
W. G. P. A.,
G. P. A. A. O. V A.,
Norfolk. Virginia.
Stray Taken En.
Taken up with my stock, one main
ROUND LIMITED-No. the exception of a
12.45 p. Richmond 4.20 a. white face and
m., Washington 7.40 a. m m owner can get by
ling for feeding and advertising.
RYAN. U. P. A. . . l.
. Portsmouth, Va. i
H D P A. i My love of God is wrong unless it
N. C. him more
MM
.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
SEES DEMOCRATIC VICTORY.
GODWIN GETS
Democratic of Party's
in November Elections.
While there is nothing certain in
this world except death and taxes,
while there is many a slip be-
twixt cup lip, the signs of the
limes indicate a Democratic Moose.
The Republicans have had such an
amusing run of luck that some folks
have a settle conviction that they are
conclusion which, in
the light of history is preposterous
The American people love public
men who the who say
what they and mean what
say. A failure on the part of Stand-
pat leaders to keep the faith is
what the row is about. They
promised to revise the tariff
down. That was when then wanted
to get in. Being in, they to
revise it up. with the result that mil-
lions of honest Republicans are in
open revolt against the machine, and
propose to punish the leaders who
deceived and betrayed them.
Take two bits of evidence on this
head, which are merely samples of
volumes that could be produced. In
my last debate with Mr. Chairman
Payne on the tariff, last May, he in-
vehemently but erroneous that
this bill is a revision down and that
therefore he and his coadjutors had
the As a keeper of the
faith Brother Payne is in St. Paul's
class. But the
did not promise to revise the tar-
down, why does Mr. Chairman
Payne keep on declaring that they
have revised it down, and that there-
fore they deserve well of the country
The Economist jumped on him for
for saying that, and asserted that he
makes a mistake, as does the
dent, in trying to defend the bill by
claiming that it Is a revision down-
ward.
The knows
that he was promised a lowering of
the tariff, and he knows that he didn't
get it. consequently he is in bad
Last year the New England
in Senator Henry
Cabot Lodge, in fine scorn of both
the fasts and the people,
the be a myth
six months later, the
in the Old Bay
State pulled the Republican majority
from sixty thousand down to five
Less than twelve months
later the in Mas-
Congressional district con-
a majority of four-
teen thousand into a Democratic ma-
of six thousand, and sent Eu-
gene N. Foss triumphantly to con-
thereby making him a vice-
presidential probability. Since these
events, put in this
Latin because I am writing about the
in Lodge
has fallen into such fear of the
mate that he has appeal-
ed to Roosevelt to take the
him. I submit that there
is somewhat of poetic justice in that
Clark in Munsey.
Sixth
District Congressional Muddle
Settled in Primary.
Dunn, September o'clock
tonight Mr. J. C. Clifford, manager of
Mr. Godwin's campaign, claimed that
Mr. Godwin had carried the entire
district by a majority of not less than
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE GREENVILLE BANKING
and TRUST CO.
AT GREENVILLE,
IN THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
At the close of business Sept.
Brunswick county gives Mr.
Godwin a majority of while
den is claimed for Mr. Clark by
majority.
September
returns from seventeen of the
twenty-three townships in Robeson
give H. L. Godwin a majority of 1.340
over O. L. Clark in the primary
here today, Godwin receiving
votes and Clark
Whiteville, Sept.
precincts out of seventeen give
Hon. H. L. Godwin a majority of six
hundred and ninety-four over L.
Clark, candidate for congress from
the sixth congressional district.
Godwin's majority is conservative-
estimated at from seven hundred to
seven hundred and fifty in Columbus
county. Godwin's majority in White-
ville township only eleven votes.
Lillington, Sept. car-
Harnett by a large majority, the
incomplete returns give Godwin seven
hundred and seven Clark one
and five. Several precincts are
unheard from. It is predicted that
Godwin will have one thousand and
Clark one hundred and People
turned out better than expected.
Fayetteville, Sept. the sixth
district congressional primary
today, the returns from four-
teen precincts indicate without doubt
that H. L has carried Cum-
county by at three
majority.
Clarkton, Sept. Marsh
township, Clark's home, gave Clark
Godwin nothing. Three other
townships, Godwin
Wilmington, Sept.
L. Godwin, of Harnett county, was
nominated for congress in the sixth
district today in the special primary,
over Oscar L. Clark, of
by a majority of about four thou-
sand. Every county in the
having gone for Godwin, except
which probably went for
Clark by a majority of about two
hundred and fifty, but complete re-
turns could not be obtained tonight.
The victory of Congressman Godwin
Is overwhelming, and is far greater
than expected by his most earnest
supporters.
2,487.36
4,025.75
10,000.00
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts secured and
unsecured
Furniture and Fixtures
Demand loans
Due from banks and bankers 20,177.93
Cash items
Silver coin, including all minor
coin currency 222.60
National bank notes
other U. S. notes 5,050.00
Total
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid in
Surplus fund 19,500.00
Undivided profits, less current
ex. and taxes paid 2,295.90
Notes and bills 5,000.00
Bills payable 66,500.00
Time of
sub check 82,397.98 120,745.02
Cash's 132.77
Due to banks bankers 299.22
Total
1239,341.14
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, C. S. Carr, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
C. S. CARR, Cashier.
A. M. MOSELEY
CHAS. COBB,
R. O. JEFFRIES,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before 8th day of Sept., 1910.
ANDREW J. MOORE, Notary Public.
My commission expires April 1911.
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. V. RIGHT. President,
Greenville, North Carolina.
HOG OFF MY
farm a stock hog, spotted color,
marked smooth crop in right ear,
for .; loft. Will pay suitable re-
d any information leading
l-i very. J. A. Phillips. Winter-
c. R. F. d. No. i.
I'VE, CLOVER,
and rape seed at F. V. John-
Even vaccination
some people.
won't take to
Don't Down.
Severe strains on the vita organs,
like strains on machinery, cause
break down. You can't over-tax
kidneys, bowels or
nerves without serious danger to
yourself. If you are weak or run-
down, or under strain of any kind,
take Electric the matchless
tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de
Sande, of Kirkland,
I did not break down, while enduring
a most severe strain, for three
months, is due wholly to Electric Bit-
Use enjoy health and
strength. Satisfaction positively
at all druggists
Now Open for
Business
We have located in the building formerly known as the
The Building and Lumber Company, on the A C. L rail-
road, which has remodeled, and have installed a
complete COTTON GINNING SYSTEM, AND A GRIST
MILL, and can gin your cotton and grind your corn. We
will also handle all kinds of Feed Stuffs, Grain, Cotton Seed
Meal Hulls, Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Oats and
Wheat. Call on us for any of these. Telephone No.
CAROLINA SEED AND FEED CO.
B. E. Mgr., C. A. D. Asst. Mgr. B. K.
C.-T.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY .
To Parents Guardians.
We are prepared to furnish the
books for the graded school. If the
children will bring their grade cards,
will know what books to give then
and thus the usual opening day
rush.
Do not forget that no books will be
charged, we only get a small com-
mission for selling, therefore
Insist that you bring or send the cash
before the books are delivered.
A. B. ELLINGTON CO.
WITH PATRICK STATON
I have a position
PATRICK end
would appreciate my friends to
come and see me at their store
NEAR FIVE POINTS.
FOR THE BEST
Gasoline Lighting System
sec me, sold under guarantee.
I make a specialty of repairing.
E. D. D
W. B. GREENE
A needle nay not be able to see out
When it comes to slowness some J of its eye, but it can give a person a,
folks loom up like lame snails. pointer just the same.
The Carolina Home Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
a,
THE FARMER.
Why Some
of Them
Work.
Fall In Their
Maude Warren.
the methods and prospects of the
woman in the of
science, has this to
of women fall in farming be-
cause they have taken it up either too
hastily or with too little capital, or
because they have already worn them-
selves out at some other vocation and
have not strength the hard
work of the
work of the farm is hard, and
perhaps the hardest part of it falls to
the lot of the uncomplaining woman
who in the kitchen, looks
the poultry, cleans house,
mends the clothing, coddles the
and in some localities, the
milking.
If in addition to all this, the
man should find time and In-
to plow two acres a day and
weed tie corn field after she has pick-
ed the beans and strawberries she can
manage to retain a scintilla of gentle-
she is a marvel of womanhood.
The wife of a pioneer farmer is
female martyr. Yet she has given the
world some of its noblest, sturdiest
sons. She is not aware of the dull
monotony of her life. All the
verse is centered the farm.
she is its brilliant sun. Her task,
however, as a farmer's wife, is a
large one, and it is no wonder
If she often fails when she endeavors
be a
Press.
Extravagance.
roads, how and when are we
to have them In the last forty-five
years nearly have been
on the in Buckingham. Are they
any better now than then Suppose
we had borrowed that much money
lien and ; two roads in order from
east to vast and north to south. With
the levy made time to time we
could have paid the interest, created a
sinking fund and had to keep
the other cross roads in good repair
Some will be living forty-five years
from now and will need roads; so
start the ball at once. We make many
and some serious mistakes in this life,
roads there can be no
mistake as to the
This is the view of It
When a sum is mentioned as the
amount necessary for a
stretch of good road in a county, there
re many who cry aloud that is
too much; it's Many
people do not take a second thought
and reflect upon consideration which
the man from Buckingham has stated
annual waste of money on
bad roads. The present system is
simply a case of sinking money into
something that can give no
return.
In the long run it is the good road
that is the cheapest. It stays in good
condition longer; repairs on it, when
necessary, last a long time; it is an
investment that
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF LAND BALE.
By virtue of power vested In me by
section of the Revise of 1905.
laws of North Carolina, as
of John H. Andrews, deceased,
mortgagee in that mortgage executed
Mary . and her husband.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
and by Joseph Haddock and
wife. Annie Haddock, to F. G. James
on the 2nd day of December,
which mortgage was duly recorded
in the office of the Register of Deeds,
of Tin county, In Book page
the undersigned will sell for cash,
before the court In Greenville,
o'clock, in., at public auction.
Hydrophobia Incurable.
Hydrophobia is a reality and not. a
dream, incurable, and not
preventable and is a of no
particular nor species of
says a public health service re-
port issued from Washington. A. M.
Stimson, the author, repudiates
mad dog and his report
admits rabies may not be uniformly
fatal, though it is almost so. Pas-
generally prevents
Mad dogs are not always
and frothing at the mouth and de-
upon attacking every person
they meet. rabid says
the report, sick; he is not
running wild and furious; he
is frequently obedient up to a late
stage, and often seems to have a
bone In his throat to have sustain-
ed Injury to the
Another is the general be-
lief that rabies is much more easily
transmitted in summer than in other
months; the explanation is that more
people are moving about and become
subject to attack. Nor is the malady
confined to any climate or It
is liable to occur in the Arctic or the
equatorial wolves.
coyotes and skunks seem to be
susceptible.
Patterson, of Tennessee, would
undoubtedly have been defeated at
the polls in November. By withdraw-
from the race after having been
by the faction
of the Democracy ho manages es-
cape Judgment on his course as Gov-
He still has the effrontery
to say in his statement of withdrawal
have never performed a public act
of which I am a shamed, and every
one was for the good of the
Whether Patterson is ashamed of his
pardoning record or not, the main
thing is that he is out of the cam-
York World.
As Regards Red Hair.
red hair is considered a
badge of glory, at least by the owner,
thereof and often by the owner's ad-
For instance, through years
past George Bailey has been
basking in the radiance emanating
form the puffs of Houston's
In this state, however, there is
at least one red-headed individual
not a apologizes for the
anting of his tresses. Every one
knows that the foxy editor of the
Dispatch has hair resembling
an autumn sunset, and yet we under-
stand that the editor sought
to have the census takers class it
another color department.
Now the Greenville Reflector has
a red-headed editor in more senses
than one and no sense is he
ed of his In the latest
issue of the-Reflector, Cowan, of the
Dispatch, is cornered and reprimand-
ed in strenuous fashion. Cowan lad
threatened to send a specimen of
color photography by way of
The News that while his hair was
curly it was not red. The Reflector
we have done and seen Cowan,
face to face, the picture he wants to
tend would not be any more
Since he has denied it so em-
we will admit that his hair
is just near-red. But who would have
thought he would be thick headed
enough not to see the honor of being
classed in such company. About to
lose your opportunity,
News.
G B. on the day
of December, 1906, to secure their
bond of two hundred and fifty dollars,
of even date therewith, and duly
the office of the Register
Deeds of Pitt county, in Look J-8 at
page and by virtue of the pro-
visions of said mortgage. shall sell
for cash, to the highest bidder, at pub-
auction, in the town of Greenville
on the court house square on the 6th
day of October, 1910, at o'clock,
noon, following described parcel
of land, lying, being, situate in
the county of Pitt, and State of North
Carolina, to
That lot of land in the town of
Bethel, known as the Melissa Bryan
lot, on east side Of street,
on which is situate a one-story build-
This September 5th, 1910.
RICHARD G.
Administrator of Jno. H. Andrews,
Mortgagee.
Albion Dunn, Attorney.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
and delivered by J. A. Gardner to J.
F. Bar wick, on the 16th day of Feb-
1906, which mortgage was duly
recorded in the office of the Register
of Deeds of Pitt county, in Book H-8
page and also in the office of the
Register of Deeds of Craven county,
in Book No. page the under-
signed will sell for cash before the
court house door in Greenville, on
Monday, October 3rd, 1910. the follow-
described tract of land, lying
partly In Pitt county and partly in
Beginning at Gardner's bridge and
running with the run of
to J. F. Galloway's line;
bounded on the south by Ed. Jones
line; on the west by the main road
leading from bridge to
Maple Cypress; thence
with said road to the beginning, con-
forty acres, more or less. For
more accurate description, reference
is made to said
This August 30th, 1910.
J. F. Mortgagee.
F. G. James Son,
on Monday. October 3rd. 1910. the
following described lands, situate in
the county of Pitt and in
Beginning at a point on
the main road where the ditch
gins and running a westerly e
with said ditch and a Straight
to James line; thence with
James Haddock's line S north-
westerly course to Jesse Haddock's
line; thence with Jesse
line to Annie Haddock's corner;
thence with Annie Haddock's line
easterly to Mack Smith's thence
with Mack Smith's line to the main
road; thence with said road to the
beginning, containing twenty-five
acres more or less.
Also a piece of wood land, begin-
at a tar bed. James Haddock
corner; thence running north with
Dennie Smith's line to the Elk's
thence with J. T. Adams and
J. J. Oakley's line to White Pine
branch; thence with said branch to
James Haddock's line; thence with
said Haddock's line to the begin-
containing twenty-five
more or less. Both of the above
s of land being estimated to be
half of the James Elk's tract of land.
This August 13th. 1910.
F. G. JAMES, Mortgagee.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
and delivered by W. J. Kilpatrick and
wife, A. H. Kilpatrick. to J.
on the 20th day of January. 1891.
which mortgage was duly recorded in
the office of the Register of Deeds of
Pitt county, In Book Q-5 page the
undersigned will sell for cash, before
the court house door in Greenville, on
Monday, October 1910, the following
described tract or parcel of land,
and being in the county if Pitt,
and in Swift creek township.
Adjoining the lands of Alfred Smith,
Edward Powell, Joseph E. May and
others, containing seventy acres, more
or less, being that part of the Jno.
Kilpatrick property Inherited by the
said W. J. Kilpatrick, on which he
now resides, and that part of said
tract purchased by W. J. Kilpatrick
from Edgar E. House. Sold to
said mortgage.
j. P.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified as administrator
of the estate of Nashville
deceased, late of Pitt county. State of
North this is to notify all
persons having claims against the es-
of said Nashville to
present them to me within twelve
months from date of this notice, or
this will be pleaded in bar of their re-
All persons owing the said estate
will please make immediate settle-
This 31st day of August. 1910.
NASHVILLE JR.
Administrator of Nashville
deceased.
W. F. Evans, Attorney.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified as administratrix
of the estate of Roy T. Evans, do-
ceased, late of Pitt county, North
Carolina, this is to notify all is
having claims against the estate of
said Roy T. Evans to present them to
me within twelve months from date
of this notice, or this will be pleaded
in bar of their recovery. All persons
owing the said estate will please make
immediate settlement.
This the 30th day of August, 1910.
SALLIE J. EVANS,
Administratrix of Roy T. Evans, de-
ceased.
W. F. Evans, Attorney.
Under Management.
Mr. of Rocky Mount,
purchased the
from Mr. Mitchell and will add a great
many Improvements, such as a new
make of Alms and vaudeville. The
will be week
In vaudeville. They, are two pretty
little girls and the patrons of this
show will, no doubt find them very
entertaining. Mr Smith, formerly of
Rocky Mount, is manager.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
delivered by W. H. Kilpatrick and
J. Kilpatrick to F. J. Forbes, on
the 14th day of January, 1909, and
duly in the office of the
Register of Deeds of Pitt county, in
Book N-9 page the undersigned
will sell for cash, before the court
house door in Greenville, on Monday,
October 3rd, 1910, the following de-
scribed tract or parcel of land, lying
and being in the county of Pitt, and
In Swift creek township, adjoining
the lands of Alfred Smith and others
on the north; on the cast by E. E.
Powell and C. T. Moore; on the south
by J. B. May; on the west by-F. M.
containing one hundred
acres, more and known as
the IV. J. Kilpatrick home place. Sold
to satisfy said mortgage.
F. J. FORBES, Mortgagee
F. G. James Son.
ESTABLISHED
S M
Wholesale and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrels,
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby- Carriages,
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, Tables,
Lounges Safes, P. and Gail
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Cheroots, Henry George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries,
Syrup, Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Food, Mat-
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds. Oranges, Apples, Nuts.
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass,
and Cakes
and Crackers. Cheese,
Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, and numerous other goods
Duality and quantity for
Come to see me.
P T ,





Gathered From Our Exchange To-
day of Events Just Happened.
Norman Lewis, the who fired
upon Chief of Police on
Sunday night at Spring Hope and
gave him a wound in his chest that
will prove fatal so physicians be-
was taken in Henderson this
morning after having been hunted by
posse of a hundred men for two
nights and a day. Blood were
used on the trail and the up-
per end of Nash county and a good-
part of Franklin was gone over
in an effort to find the The
was taken shortly after eight
o'clock this morning as he was at-
tempting to board an outgoing freight
from Henderson. The had
about forty-five dollars in money on
his person at the time of his cap-
A telephone message received
shortly after the noon hour states
the has confessed that he is
the person wanted, but now claims
that it was his wife that fired
the officer. His wife is in Spring
Hope and will no doubt be detained
Rocky Mount Record.
Washington, Sept.
uneasiness has been occasioned both
in this city and in the town of Ply-
mouth, N. C, over the probable fate
of the gas boat which left
here last Monday night, September
at twelve o'clock, bound for Plymouth
and since that time no tidings have
been received either here or in Ply-
mouth concerning tar whereabouts.
Statesville, N. C., Sept.
Sheriff Wm. of
and Mr. John Webb, of
township, had an exciting experience
with a bad and his dog Sunday
afternoon. Mr. has for
some time had a warrant for Will
Crawford, a whose home is near
the warrant charging him
with disposing of mortgaged property,
but the had always managed -to
evade the officer. Sunday afternoon
it learned that the was at
his home and Mr.
by Mr. Webb, went to the
house to make the Mr. Webb
remained in the while Mr.
called the to tho
door. When Mr. told the
that he had a warrant for him
the latter turned and rushed back
into the house with the officer at his
heels. The attempted to knock
the officer down by the door
in his face but failed, and when the
officer got inside the house the
who is a powerful man, seized him
and tried to choke him, at the same
lime reaching for a gun which he
kept on a rack the door. Hearing
the commotion in the house Mr. Webb
left the horse and rushed to Mr.
assistance. Mr. Webb is
also a powerful man and it took him
but an instant to pull the from
the officer, no sooner than this
had been done, Mr. drew
his pistol and covered the
threatening to kill him if he moved.
The finally cooled down and
being kept
he was brought o Statesville
lodged In jail.
Sept. Joe Smith
left one day last week for Richmond
to attend a medical college.
Miss Trilby Smith returned home
from Snow Hill last week.
Several of our people went to Farm-
vile to attend the show Thursday
night. .
Mrs. F. Smith, who had been
visiting her daughter, Mrs. A. J. Flan-
for a few weeks, returned- home
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. C. L. Tyson and three children,
of who have spent a week
visiting relatives in our community,
returned home Sunday evening.
Miss Gertie Smith spent last week
visiting Mrs. A. J. Flanagan and re-
turned home Sunday.
Greenville was well represented at
the yearly meeting at Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ned
spent a portion of last week at Cobb-
dale.
Not knowing all their names we
will just say that a good many of his
friends and relatives of Greenville
were visiting B. P. Cobb, at
Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. Robert Jones returned to the
E. C. T. T. School at Greenville last
week.
We told you something about some
large pepper last week, and now we
will tell you about a long gourd vine.
The same lady, Mrs. C. E.
hon, has a gourd vine that had to run
about eight feet to reach a pear tree
and then it ran up to the top of the
tree, which is about twenty feet high
and run back down the tree about
fifteen feet. It has several large
gourds on it. So you see the tree is
bearing gourds.
Mr. R. of Johnston
county, is holding a protracted meet-
in the Free Will Baptist church
at Arthur this week. There have
been two additions up to date.
Mr. J. P. Woodard, one the E C.
T. T. S. students, came up Saturday
evening and preached a very good
sermon at Arthur Saturday night
He returned to Greenville Monday
morning.
Mr. W. F. Walters, of Ayden,
came Monday evening and attended
the meeting at Arthur. He returned
this morning.
GRIFTON AND AYDEN TIE.
some-
-h
They Played an Interesting Game
Wednesday.
Grifton, N.
ton and Ayden teams played a tie
game on the latter's diamond today.
4-4. Ayden had the services of pitch-
Lane, of the Wilson Eastern Caro-
league team, who was hit hard,
but not timely. Bland, the pride of
Grifton, pitched a wonderful game,
out men, but was given very poor
support. He clearly out pitched Lane
in every inning. The game was play-
ed before the largest and most
crowd of the season, but, with
the exception of pitching, it
was a poorly played game.
Score R H E
Ayden .
Grifton .
Lane and Stall-
Bland and
Mr. J. C. Carpenter, well known
citizen of township, has a
bull dog he prizes very highly
not only because he Is a good watch
dog but because he is developing ex-
sagacity as a fish
canine. Last Sunday a number
of Mr. Carpenter's sons went bathing
Lane's creek, near his home. They
were having a good tome in the water
splashing and when
suddenly a large trout,
scared out of his wits, rose to the
face of the water and Jumped into a
small that was In the lake in
which they were bathing. No boo
had the fish landed in the boat than
the family bull dog, which was sitting
on the bank looking on, made for it.
The fish, the instant the dog jumped
in the boat made for the water. The
dog did not hesitate a second, but div-
ed from the boat into the water at the
where the trout disappeared and
In a second or two reappeared on the
surface the fish In his mouth.
The dog swam to the bank with the
trout and triumphantly car-
it home and had it cooked for
breakfast Monday morning. The fish
was so big it made a good meal for the
entire Messenger
-Intelligencer.
The True Home.
This is true nature of home
it is the place of peace; the shelter,
not only from all injury, but from
all terror, doubt, and division. In
far as it is not this, it is not home;
so far as the anxieties of the
life penetrate into It, and the
minded, unknown, unloved,
or hostile society of the outer world
Is allowed by either husband or wife
to cross the threshold, it ceases to be
home; it is then only a part of that
outer world which have roofed
over, and lighted fire in. But so far
as it is a sacred place, a vestal
a temple of the hearth watched
over by gods, before whose
may come, but those
they can receive with far as
it is this, and roof and fire are types
only a nobler shade and
as of the rock in a weary land, and
light as of the in the
far it vindicates the name
and the praise, of home.
And wherever a true wife
this home is always round The
stars only may be head; the
glow-worm in the night-COld grass
may be the only fire at her feet; but
home is yet wherever she is; and for
a noble woman it stretches far
her, better than with cedar, or
painted with vermilion, shedding its
quiet light far for those who else
were
OPENING MON-
C T.
OUR LADIES COAT SUITS WERE
made by the leading tailors of the
northern markets. Opening Monday.
September 1910. C. T.
The Greenville graded schools open-
ed this morning an enrollment
of four hundred and fifteen children.
enrollment last year was
four hundred and fifty; from this it
would seem that the total for 1910-11
will exceed by quite a good
the enrollment of any previous year.
Some of the grades are overflowing
and steps will have to be taken to
provide for their accommodation.
The teachers are as First
grades, Misses Irvine
second grade, Miss Hampton; third
grade, Miss Knight; fourth grade,
fifth grade Miss Turner;
sixth grade. Miss seventh
grade, Miss High school,
Mr. F. C. Brewer and Miss Cox, draw-
Miss Lewis; music. Miss Gaston;
The superintendent tells us that he
has the school organized better than
he has yet been able to organize for
the opening, and everything points
to a good year.
THE TOWN WON.
Property Owners Appeal to Supreme
Court
The contention over widening Fifth
street west of Pitt, that was up be-
fore Judge Ward in the Superior court
Tuesday, on the question of
right to remove shade trees where
to widen streets, was de-
In favor of the town. The prop-
owners who are contesting the
matter took an appeal to the Supreme
court. As that -court will not reach .
the case before next February, the
improvements on that portion of Fifth
street will stop for the time being.
Principal of Graded School.
Prof. F. Brewer, of Arcadia, La.,
arrived Tuesday evening to take the
of male principal In Green- .
ville graded, school. Brewer
graduated from the college at Lebanon .
Ohio, and later from Yale. He was
a classmate at Yale with Prof.
Meadows, one of the teachers in East
Carolina Tabling school.
He comes to Greenville with the high-
est of and we are sure
that his work here will be of great
help to the school.
Killed In Runaway.
Mr. S. W. Rouse was killed Tues-
day night near Huge, Lenoir county,
In a runaway. He had been to Kin-
and was returning home. About
a mile from his home his mule be-
came frightened and ran away. Mr.
Rouse was thrown cit of Mb cart and
sustained injuries that resulted in his
death.
Mr. Rouse was a farmer, about
years of age, and leaves a widow and
several children.
Good Breaks Everyday.
It is the daily occurrence now for
the tobacco warehouses to have large
Farmers are bringing in
much of the weed and the market is
very active. Prices continue good
and it is seldom that any
is heard.
Price, an old colored nun,
died here a few nights ago of
Boy Arm.
Willie Gray Lang, son of Mr. J. A.
Lang, broke his left arm Monday
He was driving a mule to a
wagon when the animal run away and
threw him out of the wagon.- In the
fall his arm and two or three fingers
were broken.
WE HAVE A
tier line of coat suits than the one
to be shown- September C. T.
Agriculture is the Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE N. C FRIDAY, 1910.
Number
ROYAL ARCH MASONS.
GOOD ROADS DELEGATES.
Greenville Chapter Growing in
In no secret order is the work more
beautiful and the teachings more sub-
lime than It is the mot
ancient of fraternities and it
blessed mankind through all the ages
and centuries since the time of King
Solomon. The further its votaries
are inducted into its mysteries and
it- beauties unfolded to them, the
more impressed they are with its
teachings. No man can be true to the
teachings of the order unless he is
a good and upright man.
Greenville has some bright Masons,
and they enthusiastic in the work
of the order. The Royal Arch Chapter
is especially active, and since furnish-
its handsome quarters the
Winslow building the membership has
increased rapidly. Interest in the
chapter had started before the de-
of temple in
and since new more elegantly
equipped have been
ed renewed impetus has been giver,
its growth. This week several classes
ere being carried through its
and meetings are being held
night to confer the degrees. Dr.
V. M. of who Is State
lecturer and among the best Informed
men In North Carolina In the
laws of Masonry, is here assist-
ii conferring the degrees and de-
livering the lectures to impress them.
WHAT ADVERTISING DOES.
List Appointed to Represent North
Carolina, at Oklahoma City.
Governor Kitchin has appointed the
following delegates from North Caro-
to the 11th National Good Roads
Convention at City. Oct. 4th
to 6th,
J. P. Sawyer, C. W. Mitch-
ell, Aulander; S. E. Eure, Taylor; M.
Floyd, Lumberton; Shaw,
Lumber Bridge; J. T. Wyatt,
bury; C. J. Harris, Hillsboro; Collier
Cobb, Chapel Hill; W. J. Mercer,
Ferry; W. M. Long, Char-
R F. Rives, Statesville; T. S.
Collie, P. H. Haynes,
H. T. Davenport.
L. H. Ross. Washington; J. A.
Harrington, Ayden; F. Brock, Trenton
Dr. T. T. Ross, Nashville; G. H.
sell, Frank Powell. Tar-
B. A. Parks, Goldsboro; A. J.
Connor, C. J.
Shelby; H. W. Horton, N. Wilkesboro.
ASSOCIATION.
TACT WITH THE
at Store Gives
Ample Evidence.
There is not a more liberal
merchant in Greenville than
C. T. and the good effects
of it is shown in the crowds that visit
his store. Take Monday, for instance,
the occasion of his fall opening dis-
play of millinery, coat suits, wraps.
etc. The Reflector had told in ad-
of this event, and all through
the day his store was thronged with
visitors. Of course it cannot be told
accurately Just how many people vis-
the store, but an Idea can be had
from the fact that he gave away sou-
cake of toilet soap to each
when night came of
these souvenirs had been given away.
His sixteen day special sale starting
the has been heralded all through
the country, and if you
watch his store during this sale
you will see more of tho effects of lib-
advertising.
Says He Is Going to sec Thai Got
a Deal.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, Sept. cab-
session, the last to be held
President house party, was
delayed owing to a rush of visitors.
The first of the White House callers
was T. J. representing the
brotherhood of end dreg-
men. He called in the interest of the
railroads urging that the Increase in
freight rates be allowed to stand. He
said President Taft assured him he
be depended to give the
railroads a square deal, regardless of
clamor and political influence; and
furthermore, he was going to sec that
they got it.
GERMAN OFFICER ARRESTED.
Charged With Making Sketches of
English
By Cable to The Reflector.
London, Sept. Helm, of
Germany, who was arrested charged
with being a spy and with making
Sketches of the English coast
es at Portsmouth was held today for
trial. The specific charge against.
the officer is unlawfully sketching
fortifications Portsmouth harbor.
Helm to discuss the case .
Atlantic Coast Line Will Run Extra
Trains.
The Association, Primitive
Baptist will meet with the church at
Swamp in Carolina township,
Saturday, Sunday and Monday
next. Swamp church is near
station, on the Atlantic
Coast Line, and the people from n
distance attending the association
have get off at that station
To accommodate these the railroad
will run extra trains from
to on both Saturday and
Monday mornings, reaching
ard at 9.30 o'clock, the same hour
that he regular train reaches on
Sunday. This Will be a great con-
avoid the necessity of
laying over hours at Parmele
to the association.
TAMMANY GOES TO ROCHESTER.
Four Trains of Them to State
Convention.
By Cable to The Reflector.
New York, Sept. be-
moving to Rochester today
It took four special trains
with thirty seven parlor cars to get
the bunch started. The first train
got arranged at 8.48 carrying Murphy
Sullivan and other leaders.
UNCLE SAM AND CANADA.
About to Got Together on a
Treaty.
Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, Sept. the
direction of President the State
Department is prepared to act as soon
as word is received from that
the Canadian government is to
consider question of a
treaty with the United States. Com-
is expected from
In a few days which will Indicate the
intention of the dominion government.
Possibly a reciprocity treaty will be
negotiated also between tho United
Slates and New
Attention is called to the advertise-
in this issue of H. B. Mayo
Co. of Washington, who buy all kind-
of country produce and sell grain
peanut sacks.
Will No Yield to Strikes.
Cable to The Reflector.
Manchester, England. Sept.
mill employers committee to-
day resolved to make no further con-
cession to the workers This means
that threatened walkout will proceed.
HOLDING FOR CENTS.
Cotton Planters of Three States Form
Pool.
By Wire to The Reflector.
New Orleans, Sept.
planters of Louisiana, Texas and
are planning to hold up cot-
ton delivery for cents price. It is
stated today that per cent, of the
crop owners have the pool.
WAR ON GRAFT.
Not ail gushing litters arc written
With fountain pens.
Words are the malting of wise men
and the unmaking of fools.
Declarations of Now York
can Convention.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Saratoga, N. Y., Sept. on
graft is made the keynote of the Re-
publican State platforms as adopted
by committee on resolutions declaring
warfare on official and
legislative wrong doing. Primary el-
reform is advocated and the ad-
ministration enthusiastically
ed. These about cover the platform
declarations as It from the
committee by a vote of to
He


Title
Eastern reflector, 23 September 1910
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 23, 1910
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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