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Carolina Home Farm and The Eastern
PRIZES
-i
To be Given Away by
The Reflector in Popularity Contest
FIRST GRAND PRIZE
A year's full course in East Carolina Teach-
Training School, all expenses of he entire
session in this excellent school, including one
round trip railroad fare from the home of the
winner to Greenville and return to be paid by
The Reflector.
SECOND GRAND PRIZE
An 8-day trip over the Atlantic Coast Line
to Tampa, Fla., including railroad fare, pull-
man car fare and hotel bills, all to be paid by
The Reflector.
THIRD GRAND PRIZE
Same as the second prize. Two of these
trips are offered so the winners may take it to-
and avoid traveling without a
ion.
These Grand Prizes are Open to Everybody Without Regard to Location
In Addition to these there will be six district PRIZES to be given to contestants residing in
the district hereinafter named
DISTRICT PRIZES
One set of harness
complete, at the factory
of The John Flanagan
Buggy Company.
Next Prize
One suit of clothes
your choice, at the store
of T.
Next Prize
One at the
furniture store of Taft
VanDyke
Nomination Coupon
TO THE CONTEST
Ad d r
as a candidate in your Popularity Contest
This nomination counts for votes, but
will not be duplicated if someone else
the same person.
Win
DISTRICT PRIZES
One
Overcoat, at the store
of
Next Prize
One Traveling
trunk, at the furniture
store of J, H. Boyd
Next Prize
One Black
Muffle, at the store of
Pulley Bowen
Votes Will Count as
To The Daily Reflector.
month subscription, votes
months subscription, votes
months subscription, votes
months subscription, votes
year subscription votes
years subscription, votes.
years subscription, votes.
years subscription votes.
years subscription, votes.
To The Carolina Home and Farm
The Eastern Reflector.
months subscription. votes
months votes
year subscription votes
year subscription, votes
year subscription. votes
year subscription, 1,500 votes
year subscription. votes
Any collections on back
already due will count at the
rate of votes for each col-
The Districts.
If you will visit the places of
of the well known firms named
above in this ad. where the
district prizes are on display, and
see that hey are worth the money.
The winners of these prizes must
in the bounds of one of the follow-
districts, the choice of prizes to
be determined by whether the win-
n r is a gentleman or a lady.
District No. All of Greenville
township including the town of
Greenville.
District No. All Falkland and
townships, including the
towns
District No. All of Dam
and townships,
the towns therein.
District No. or and
Creek townships, including the
therein.
District No. All of and
Bethel townships, including the towns
therein.
No. All of Carolina and
Townships, including
therein.
-H-
t,
J f
t. w
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY,
Number
THE WORLD'S
jaw pot
AMERICA AND IMMIGRATION
PROBLEM
WHERE WE SHOULD DRAW THE LINE
Charles S. Barrett of the
National Union Calls C-
on the Officers and Members of
the Organization to Assist in
the of Undesirable
Immigration to This Country.
President Charles S. Barrett of the
National Farmers Union has address-
ed himself to the problem if
in his latest open letter to th-
officers and members of the
as
To the Officers and Members of
Our country has just been
the pot of the W.
receive into our borders the best and
he worst elements of every nation
under the and from the
flux we are pouring into the molds
of character and custom the citizen
ship that is to determine the destiny
of our we shall at-
the development foreshadow
by our gifts and inheritances or fall
short of that development.
I am not one of those a
Americans who would erect Chinese
walls this country, and
our shores hermetically seal-,
against foreigners of every class and
grade.
Many of the most consecrated
in our history, many of tin-
men of great heart who have come
to the rescue of the nation in th
time of stress and trial, many who
have risen to eminence in the fields
of commerce and industry and
culture and art and statesmanship
and caw the light of
day in the foreign lands.
I realize also that this country of
unending diversity of climate and re-
sources and habits of thought and
conviction, has a wonderful power
of assimilation.
Powers Has Limitations.
But I realize, first of all, that that
power has its limitations and that
they are now being strained and
taxed and threatened to
date some of the rankest human pro-
ducts of European and Asiatic
such as may enter our body
politic to fester and spread
to infect our people with de-
and anarchistic tendencies,
to undermine our political sanity and
to reach a slimy trail of decay a-id
disruption over the entire fabric i
our ideals and our aspirations.
We are told that we need men to
us develop America. But if we
need men at all we need those only
who approach our own economic
standards, who can stand the test of
moral and mental cleanliness, of
physical soundness and freedom from
seeds of violence and disintegration
that are making poverty, vice and
crime, an -enlarging spectacle
throughout the old world.
We have our own problems of
lawlessness. vice, unemployment
professional Let us. the
organized farmers of America ex-
our influence to the end that
these problems be not complicated
by a horde of sickly Importations
dribbling inward from Ellis island
and other ports of entry.
I will be asked where we would
draw the the line should
we draw. The answer is easy.
I object to the class if s
that are responsible for an increase
in one year of per cent, of th
criminal arraignments of New Yo k
City. If the influence of New York
City and its people were confined
ts own limits, I would raise no ob-
Neither of them are thus
confined.
I object to that class of immigrants
that, in many American States, com-
prise from to per cent, of the
inmates of
for the insane.
at the public ex-
I object to that class of immigrants
that make the so-called cultured
of Boston one of the most
municipalities in America. V.
of floating voters
a call from the city to the leg's-
of the State for aid in clean-
the Augean stables.
object to that class of
grants who come here solely to
a and who then return with
to their mother
I object to that class of immigrants
who. at the first signal of panic
drain our banks of savings and other
deposits, and sail away home in the
as they came.
I object to that class of Immigrant
who cause the police authorities of
several large American cities to a;
dare themselves powerless
organized blackmail, bloodshed, and
pillage.
I object to that class of immigrants
with neither of, respect
for, or allegiance to our laws, or
rations and our institutions, who
bring with them an inherited hatred
tor courts and justice which they Will
visit upon our own well-being.
I object to that class of immigrants
who are willing to transplant
to the hurt of the American farmers
. workingmen, the proper
of living and wages of which
the returned European traveler
is sickening tales.
Behalf of Farmers.
On behalf of the American
I insist that congress and the national
government raise a protective tariff
wall against human beings with run.-
in their train, as well as a tariff will
against the necessities and luxuries of
life.
On behalf of the American farm i
I argue also that the time to consider
this problem is now, not later, when
our sane American strains shall
have been so weakened as to
our difficulties by a staggering
numeral.
Every member of our organization
can hasten consideration of
issue by bringing these facts
before his congressman and sen-
CHARLES S. BARRETT
mm
GOES TO THE GALLOWS COOL
AND CALM
HANGS AT O'CLOCK THIS MORNING
Only Prison Officials
Witness no
Statement, but One Newspaper
Publishes Alleged Confession
Officials Discredit.
Cable to The Reflector
London, Nov. H. H.
pen was hanged at o'clock this
morning. He was cool and
the last, his nerve never g
He dressed with care,
allowed to wear his own clothes, and
a light breakfast. Only
officials and priests were allowed at
he hanging, though there was a
big crowd of curious outside the s
on walls. The condemned man
to death without making
statement so prison officials say,
one paper is publishing an alleged
confession said to have been by
to a friend. This alleged
confession is discredited by
OUR
Our life is like the life of a tree
again and again stripped of every
sign of fife that it has put forth and
yet which still has gathered all those
apparent failures into the success
of one long, continuous growth.
Phillips Brooks.
Visitor Addresses Students.
At the opening exercises of
Training school this morning,
A C. of Mary-
land, spoke to the students. He gave
a brief account of the public
law of his state, and gave In
the In the select on
and pay of teachers, as it is operated
In county of which he Is
the superintendent. No man
probably had more to do with t-
the school law of his
than Mr. and bis county
lends in the state for education
progress. It is a pleasure to h iv
a gentleman so imbued with
spirit of educational uplift among us.
Ho was a business man entering e
work and has carried
methods into the latter.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
ANNUAL MEETING IN RALEIGH
DEC. 1ST, 2ND, AND 3RD
ASSOCIATION
Large Attendance
Strong Speakers of National Rep-
to Discuss
Asked.
The Primary
Will bold its sixth annual meeting In
Raleigh, December 1st, 2nd, and 3rd.
As so many strong speakers have
been secured it is hoped that the Hi-
will be the largest that this
association has yet had.
Miss Naomi Ph. CS.
Columbia University, has beer,
cured to make two, and
three addresses. Dr. is
professor or Psychology in Teachers
College Columbia University. Her
research work in psychology an
child study have made her a
authority in this department
is also a woman of delight
personality and a magnetic
Miss Laura a graduate
of the Boston School of Gymnastics,
will speak on factor in the
school-room. Miss was
formerly connected with the city
schools of Rochester, New York, as
physical director. She is
director of the State Normal and
Industrial College.
Prominent primary teachers of the
State will also give talks.
Rankin and Tucker, of
have consented to give talks
on subjects relating to the health
school children. These gentlemen
are well known throughout th
State to need any introduction.
The teachers of
are every effort to
the royally.
Any one who expects to attend is
to notify Miss Mary Arlington.
Person street, Raleigh, N. C, a weak
i i advance. Superintendents
the benefit their I re
have often given a
the days that they are absent,
Any superintendent is gladly
at the meetings.
Cotton Report.
Washington, Nov.
bureau today issued its report on
col on ginning showing
bales ginned from the growth of c
to November 14th, compared with
for 1909. The total amount
ginned shows a per of last
three crops 80.5 for 1909, 73.3
1908 and for 1907.
mi
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
The Bank of Greenville
At the close of business, Nov. 1910
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts
Overdrafts
Banking House
Furniture and Fixtures
Cash Items
v i Due from Banks
Wm Cash in Vaults
2.32
1.09
60,507.96
18,518.69
-wIt
Total
SB.
LIABILITIES
1.06
Red
Bills Payable
Total
3,024.5
1,500.00
5,000.00
224,586.55
1.06
GREENVILLE
It. L. DAVIS, President
J. A. Vice-president
L. LITTLE, Cashier H. D. Assistant Cashier
GREENVILLE,
NOR. CAR.
YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT
Should For the
MONEY in Bank is safe from fire and burglars; in your home It is not.
MONEY in Bank is safe from careless handling; in your pocket it is not.
MONEY paid by check guarantees to you a permanent receipt; cash
handed out does not.
MONEY in Bank is a starter towards economy, always ready for use,
or to be to.
all
Trust Co.
is provided with every safeguard for the protection of its depositors,
and endeavors to give its customers the best service.
We will be glad to have your business.
Marriage Licenses.
Register of Deeds Moore
sued the following licenses since las
WHITE.
W. J. and
W. L. Beat and Glenn Forbes.
COLORED.
John Williams and Alice Green.
C. S. CARR, Cashier
Any one can make himself
limes keeping out of other
way.
Is of the Morally Stunted. i joying the best of health, woK the contrary and he takes a drink
V, to eats better. His digestion Is as or com
An interesting i. he . May he live to pan
ton last week was Mr. Phillip good as it was when he was my
eighty-seven years old and as spry His eye-sight is better than that of Dispatch.
a cricket. He owns acres of I many men of forty and he does
good land lying In Davidson and
Rowan counties and he was in the
city on business connected with hi.-.
county estate. He is
have to wear glasses. He chews to-
and has been chewing the weed
since the day whereof memory
the majority of men not to
Foolishness is that which leads you
to trust a man you know will not do
to trust.
SMART COLOR COMBINATION
We are Receiving Our
NEW STYLE
Dress Goods
Coat Suits and
JACKETS,
and Children's SWEATERS;
large variety of styles SHOES
in all leathers for men, boys,
ladies and children.
Our shoes are sold on their
merit and if you want
and your money's worth
come to see us.
Our stock embraces nearly
every article you will need in
you home, Farm, or personal
requirements. We have our j
store filled with goods and
cordially invite you to come to
see us.
Dark Costumes Most be Relieved by
Vivid Electric Blues.
The absolute need of relieving
black with some other color has hid
two very Interesting effects on tin
color scheme of the year. In
the first place, it has put to rout
the old monotone idea that held
sway for so many seasons, and has.
brought into prominence the
nation of two and three colors in a
single dress.
In the second place, It would be
quite impossible to unite black
any dull or lifeless shade of
color, so the vivid electric blues, em-
greens and carmine reds, have
replaced the jaded pastel tones, the
dead-leaf colors and the ashes o
violets and roses of last season.
The new colors are very
and they are a welcome relief after
the dull of the ones
preceded but they present many
pitfalls to the unwary. A woman
has to know not only what colors
new, but also what color
nations are considered smart. S it
has to consider not merely what one
color is becoming to her, but
she can wear all the different
shades that will appear In her new
and once those prints i
settled, she has to know how
colors are used, and they a;
Style Leaders
How About Your Home
Is it comfortably If not you
would find it interesting to visit our store and
look over our stock of FURNITURE and
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Everything needed
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make
you sit up and take notice.
J. H. BOYD, JR.
An Omnipresent God
Father to is the title of
an article by Mabel Potter
in the forthcoming In
it she tells how Dr. John H. Kellogg
of Battle Creek, Mich., has adopted
forty and more children and how he
cared for and educated them.
Some time ago, she writes, the doc-
tor gathered his children together on
a Sabbath in spring. He points out
the buds on the trees. he
said will be leaves tomorrow.
is it makes the
God answered the
children promptly.
where Does he make them
from the inside and stick them
said the children.
them through the sap inside
the tree.
said the doctor, God
must be inside the
agreed the children.
Then their father laid tis hand on
Jack's bright head. makes
hair
said the children,
how Docs he stick it on
from the
no, he makes it grow from the
inside of Jack's
God is within Jack. Is it
not
The children looked in wonderment
as they never looked at Jack before.
must be
within
God is within all of us, and
God is concluded the
doctor.
The Currency Question
That few business men I
the currency problem is no reflection
upon their intelligence or general
astuteness. The question is so ii
so confused with intricate de-
tails, so befuddled with a mass
side issues, that not one man in ten
thousand even knows our t
banking system. As for the plans a l-
during the past few years
cure our currency method of its
doubted evils, only those
connected with the subject have any
thorough knowledge of the
The efforts of the monetary
appointed at Senator
suggestion have not been entirely
successful in educating our business
men. There is still considerable
doubt as to the actual functions
proposed central bank or
the Reserve Hank of ll
United as it is
Mr. Paul M. and
equal ignorance of the
claimed by Mr. D. A. for
the asset currency plan. The cur-
problem is of vast importance
to every citizen of the country,
especially so to the
and general business man. Portlier
delay in improving our currency
tern means further exposure to
perils of a possible panic. The pres-
method of handling the currency
must be changed
the December number, American In-
will publish a series of con-
explanatory, popularly written
articles on the various plans
for improving the currency sys-
These articles, will in
serve as primers, and not as .-
ed text-books, and are intended
educational literature for the busy
Industries.
The Moon Eclipse.
The total eclipse of the moon came
on Wednesday evening according to
the schedule, and was an interesting
spectacle. The full moon rose
and about C o'clock the shadow
of the earth began going over it. This
continued until about o'clock when
the eclipse was total, only the pale
red disc of the moon could be seen.
The shadow all passed off in another
hour and the moon shone out again
glorious a
Election of A. L. Directors.
At the annual meeting of the stock
holders of the Atlantic Coast Line
Railway, held in Richmond
day the following officers wen
President, T. M ;
first vice-president, Alexander mil-
ton; second vice-president, C. S. Gad
den; third J. R.
y; counsel, Alexander Hamilton; sec
and assistant treasurer, ii.
Borden; assistant secretaries, K
D. Conly, W. R. Sullivan, G. B. Elliott
treasurers, J. J. J. B KM
W. R. Thomas, J. Moultrie Lee; gen-
manager, W. N. Roy all. freight
manager, it. A. pas-
traffic manager, w. T.
comptroller, H. C Price; board Of
H. Walters, chairman; Mi-
Jenkins, Waldo Newcomer M.
F. Plant. Warren Delano, F. W. Scot.
Alexander Hamilton, E. R
Donald J. R. Kenly, Maj.
J. Lucas and W. W.
Observer.
Something of a Farmer.
Mr. Fisher Helms, an old
who went through the whole and
carries five wounds, lives in
township, and this year made with his
own hands three bales of cotton an
two-horse loads of corn. He In
years old and the mule he
is According to the way the pen-
don sharks are robbing the people of
the country to the so-called norm-
cm soldiers, many of whom r
fired a gun, the amount of n;
that old confederates like Mr. Holm ;
did would be worth about
Monroe Journal.
Better to deserve a friend and have
him not than to have a friend and
serve him not.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
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
Rev. If. A. Adams and Prof F. C
Nye left Monday evening to alt-Mid
the Baptist association at
and returned Wednesday.
Harrington, Barber Company
a full line of and gen-
underwear for winter and
prices low.
Mr. M. B. Bryan went to
Sunday.
you are wanting a cart or wag-
on, just ask your neighbor hew he
likes the I
by the A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Company. This famous wagon or
cart always speaks through its users
and they will recommend it.
Mr. C. T. Cox is attending court
in Greenville this week as a
and is
it off,
Come to Harrington, Barber Co;,
for your hat Any style i
black colors, cheap, too.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox left Wed-
evening for City
and the association. While in More-
head they will be the guests of Mr
and Mrs. W. J. Wyatt.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
can furnish you a coffin or u
nice casket and also hearse
vice.
Mr. J. S. Ross and wife, of
spent Sunday in town visiting
Now as for shoes, Harrington,
Company has for babies
boys and girls and papa and man-
Come and see.
Mr. Ernest Cox went to
today.
Mr. W. A. Shivers is a juror Hilt
week.
Mr. J. V. Stokes of Greenville,
in town talking insurance
day afternoon.
Mr. B. F. Manning, our clever cot-
ton buyer, went to
Wednesday hunting cotton.
Mr. A. M. Barker came in Sunday
night from Charleston to resume his
work with the A. G. Cox
Company.
Winterville, N. C, Nov.
Laura Salisbury, of came in
Saturday night and spent Sunday
with friends here.
Now is the time to get your disc
barrows and stalk cutters. See
Barber Company.
Mr. T. K. Cannon, bookkeeper f r
A. G. Cox Manufacturing
spent Sunday in the country.
If you need a good buggy harness,
now is the time to buy of the A.
Cox Manufacturing Company.
have a lot of new harness that is of
the best quality.
Mr. J. B- of Ayden. was
in yesterday.
Harrington, Barber Company
now In position to furnish you in
colling and flooring at any time.
Mrs. M. A. Adams was called away
to attend the burial of her mother,
which took place near Raleigh Sun-
day.
The A. G. Manufacturing Com-
wishes to buy ten head of
to fatten for beef.
Mr. Royall Adams, who has been
at the hospital in Raleigh for
returned home yesterday.
A new lot of Just .
at A. W. Company's.
Mr. M B Bryan spent Sunday In
Ayden.
When you think of -g
your land, go to A. W. Ange . L
and see that Oliver plow t
will your problem.
Mrs Dora Parker, of
visiting Mrs. Fox.
You will find a nice line ties ;
A. W. Ange Company's.
Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Taylor of
den. spent Sunday with Mr. and
L. L. Kittrell.
Mr. B. F. Manning, our clever
buyer, went to ye
Mr. J. B. Kittrell, of Greenville,
in town yesterday.
Mr. Eugene Cannon left this
r for Norfolk and Richmond.
SPLENDID BUCKEYE WOMEN
Married and Unmarried, Praise the Buckeye
Remedy,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
The undersigned having this day
as administrator of the
of Robert Jefferson, before D.
J. Moore, clerk of the Superior court
f Pitt county, notice is hereby
n to persons indebted to said es-
ate to make immediate .
lib the undersigned and all
holding claims against said es-
are hereby notified that they Br-J
to file their claims with
administrator on or
ore the 17th day of November,
this notice will be pleaded
f any recovery on said claims.
This the 17th day of No c-nib .
K. T.
of the estate of Rob-
Jefferson, deceased.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
County.
Elizabeth Pitt
vs.
Lawrence Pitt
The defendant above
take notice that an action
above has been
Superior court of Pitt county to
a divorce from the f ,
And the
further take notice
to appear at the no I
t the Superior court of said
o be held on the
e Monday of
t being the 12th of Dec
at the court house of Pi.; sou
in Greenville, N. C, and
or demur to the complaint In
or the plaintiff will t
the court for the relief demanded
said complaint
This the 22nd day of ,
1910.
D. C. MOORE,
Superior Court of Pitt County.
Brown, Atty. for
Internal Catarrh.
Miss Nora Kelley, R. R. Box
London, Ohio,
write to thank you for the wonder-
good your has done for me.
was a sufferer from kidney and
other internal trouble for twenty-two
years. Two years ago I began to take
and I only took about three hot
ties and to-day I can say I am a well
Could Not Eat Without Suffering.
Mrs. H. A. Weaver, Somerset, Ohio,
can safely and truly say that Peru-
has been a blessing to me.
had catarrh so badly that had lost
the sense of smell and taste.
had stomach trouble so bad that I
could not eat anything without suffer-
afterwards.
friends advised me to try Peru-
I bought one bottle and was greatly
benefited by It, and so I bought one-half
dozen bottles, and will say that I am
completely of stomach trouble
and catarrh.
cannot Bay enough for
Brought
Mrs. Tanner, A tin .-. i, O., writes
relieved her of stomach
Now Has Best of Health.
Mrs. E. Mound
St., Columbus, Ohio,
have been using for catarrh,
having had a very aggravated case, so
bad that it clogged the nasal organs.
When I did get the nasal organs opened,
the mucus would drop into my throat
and make me very sick.
friend advised mo to take
and after using four bottles I was cured.
have no trouble now, and am happy
to say that I am enjoying the best of
health and attending to my lodge
ties, being a member of the
Lodge of Odd Fellows.
would recommend to
suffering with the same obnoxious
Catarrh for Several Years.
Mrs. Alice Bogle, Clinton St.,
Ohio,
want to inform you what
has done for mo.
have been with catarrh for
several years. I have tried different
medicines and none seemed to do
any good until I used I have
taken six bottles and can praise it very
highly for the good it has done me.
also find it of great benefit, to my
trouble and brought her a good appetite
An Honest Family Medicine
Thanks.
of
r.
The Greenville Reflector, one
the and best papers in
State, is always something
Greenville, Greenville, yours if
you and Pitt county. Now It
is talking of a county exhibit and v
quote what he has to say Edit
Whichard may be red-headed, as J;
Cowan avers, if not
but he Is at any rate level head
We hope he can bring the county
farm product exhibition to V
will afford pleasure and profit and do
Times.
METAL SHINGLES
Laid years ago arc as cod as new to-day and have never needed
repairs. Think of HI
What other roofing will last as long and look as well
They're very easily laid.
They can laid right over wood if necessary, without
dirt or inconvenience.
For prices and other detailed information apply to
YORK COBB,
C. T.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
The Carolina Home and Far and The Eastern Reflector.
PROVED A BLESSING TO MANY
SOULS
THE FINAL SERVICE TODAY NIGHT
In Number the Meeting Shows Wan
I Breach
Closer la
Mm Thank All for What
Done and Fames U -s-
Appeal to
The meeting which Dr.
Black, State evangelist of the
church, has been holding
here for ten days in Jarvis Memorial
Methodist church, came to a close
Tuesday night. Just before the
sermon was preached, Rev. J. H
Shore, pastor of the church as chair-
man of the executive committee,
having In charge the t
the expressed
to all the members of the
committees, for their earnest
. o-operation. He also spoke of e
spirit of unity that had prevailed
among the different churches of
town and the great blessing that had
come from the meeting.
beginning this meeting D
Black said one result he wanted to
see come from this meeting was th-;.
organization of an active
men's league; and with th .
end in view he had, after a brief
i with fl few taken
the liberty of presenting the
of the first officers of such a
appointing the first meeting III
the church next Sunday
at o'clock, subsequent
to In the d
churches as desired by the leaders.
He then read the list as
C W. president.
F. M. Wooten, vice-president.
James treasurer.
C. W. Harvey secretary.
H. E. Austin, choir leader.
T. J. Jarvis, H. D. Bateman, E.
and D. J. Whichard,
committee to select texts and
appoint leaders a week ahead.
G. E. Harris. H. B. Smith and J.
G. Latham, leaders for the first meet-
W. A. Bowen, W. E. Hooker, W. .
and F. R. Stretch ushers
Subject for November 27th,
text Exodus He
be hoped this work would be taken
up earnestly and great good to the
churches and the community result
from it.
Dr. Black then read a portion l
the 10th chapter of Luke and
for a the
Son of Man is to seek and to
save that which was It
a sweet, sermon showing the
great love of Christ for sinners
how hi various ways He teaks them.
Time and again there were many
eyes in the
for it was-a that
to their heart.
After the
the Invitation for any to make pro-
Dr. Black spoke with feeling
of his clay here during the
It was the third meeting H held
in Greenville, and he could not
having great love for this people lie
iv
many kindness shown to and
the two singers with him,
Burr and
He then made an earnest appeal to
church members to stand by
pastors and uphold them in
work, then urged those who had
made profession during the
to unite with the church of their
choice as early as possible, for
taking this step will their
lives and characters develop.
One other thing he said he hoped
n result from this meeting was
more family altars in the homes,
tor the religion of the church is
no stronger the religion in
home. He then asked all in
congregation who would promise to
hold family prayer la their homes
to up and a number res-
ponded. That manifestation, he
aid, was worth his coming here to
hold the meeting, even if
else had resulted
The Presbyterian church being
present without a pastor, Dr. Black
held a service Tuesday after-
noon and received five persons
membership The other churches
will open their doors to receive me n-
Sunday morning.
Dr. Black left this morning for
home in Charlotte and from time
will go to Roanoke, Va., to a
meeting next Sunday. The prayers
of a host of Greenville people go
with him.
AVERAGES GO HIGHER.
Figure-
Keeps on Sending
Higher.
On Monday F. D. at th
Star Warehouse branch of the Faro-
Consolidated Tobacco
an average of for his en-
tin sale, Including everything on th
floor. Some individual sales were
as
For J. A. at 1-4.
at at at at
at Average
For Seth at at
at at at at
at at Average
D. W.
DEALER IN
Groceries
And Provisions
Cotton and
ANOTHER LARGE YIELD.
SAVINGS BANK
Department of
FIRST NATIONAL
of N. C.
Five Compounded Quarterly
Three Compounds Semi An.
on Checking Accounts
We make a Specialty of Bank
ins by mail
and
Write 1216
If. H. TAYLOR,
or J. E Cashier.
N. C.
H Fresh Good kept con-
H in stock.
Produce Bought and Sold Kg
fife
I D. W. Harden
GREENVILLE S
North Carolin a j
County Farmers Are Good Corn
Growers.
Mr. E. F. of
township, who is one of those e.
gaged in farm demonstration
work in this county, writes that he
gathered his test acre of corn on
17th. The corn was measured care-
fully and the yield of the acre found
to be and bushels or a i-
more than barrels.
Mr. Williams says that his
were feet wide and the corn hi
inches apart. He used on
acre one sack of one sack of
acid one sack of 8-3-5
guano, sacks of 8-3-3 o,
pounds of nitrate, till
the total cost of fertilizers
In addition the b
of corn worth at market price
he gathered from same acre
F bushels of peas worth and
pounds of fodder worth Tl e
and con are worth more
than the fertilizers used which
to the value of the corn makes
profit on one acre not count-
the cost of cultivation. It
be safely said that he raised this
at a cost of than cents
per bushel.
This is another striking example
of what Pitt county corn raisers ran
do they farm right.
SAM FLAKE
Harness Repair Shop
and dealer in odd of and
EXT TO OFFICE. C
Until success is better understood
try to improve your failures.
A man with a shrinking
ion is not necessarily small in statue
BAKER HART
BAKER HART
Public School.
This certifies an average of ninety
five and perfect
Thomas Proctor.
Ethel Phelps.
Janie Butts.
Carrie
Blanche Proctor.
Ethel
Dr. Hyatt Costing.
Dr. H. Hyatt will be in Green-
ville at Hotel Bertha, December 5th
and Monday and Tuesday,
the purpose of treating diseases
the eye, ear, note and throat.
The Up-to-date Hardware
Store
T is the place to buy y, a Paint. Varnish,
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves, Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a full Line of Will Pain s-
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place
your orders with them and you will be
pleased.
Special attention to our line of
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders,
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail to see us before buying, they
can supply your wants. Give them a call.
i r
Evans Street,
. N, C.
the Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
SCHOOL NOTES.
President Black
and Visit School.
President R H. re-
turned visit to several State
normal schools in Virginia and
Ho visited seine of the
oldest normals in the South, his trip
Farmville and
burg, Va., and West
Chester, Pa Before going on this
trip Mr. Wright attended the
ration of President Few at Trinity
College In Durham.
The Training school was delighted
to have Dr. Black, Jarvis and
Messrs. and with them
at the chapel exercise
morning. Dr. Black made at apt
and interesting talk after which he
end Messrs. Burr and sang
Hew Year's Resolutions.
As New Year resolutions will soon
be in order, pardon us for perhaps a
little premature Among
other good resolves which you
will doubtless make for the i
rear, determine to save .
from your year's earnings, even if it
isn't anything more than your empty
pay envelopes. They would at least
be a reminder at the end of the
of the amount of money you had re-
during the year, and might lie
a to cause you to do some
real saving the next year.
This is a serious matter, not
we wont to offer our adv-1
o a long-suffering and patient
public, but because it is a sacred
July of every man to consider the
in the present.
Do you want higher authority than
ours for advice Then we refer you
to our friend King whoa
wisdom we have never heard
Proverbs
It is of our business
you save anything or not vet
going to keep on reminding you
this important matter from now
the new year is ushered in,
then some, if think that we can
wake you up.
The dog that hides his bone for
future is showing better a .-I
more sensible judgment than the per-
son who thoughtlessly spends all th
earn.
Think it Bern Sun.
WHAT WOMEN ARE READING.
Pitt County Publishing To. Organized.
The stockholders of the Pitt
Publishing Company held their first
meeting in the private office of The
National Bank of Greenville, on
evening of Friday, Nov. 1910.
The meeting was presided over v
J. F. Stokes with James L. Evans
secretary. The following were . l
S. T. Hooker, F. .
Forbes, J. F. Stokes. Julius Brown
and James L. Evans, who in turn .-
the following as officers of the
S. T. Hooker, president;
Julius Brown, vice-president; J. F
Stoke i, general manager and
L. Evans, secretary and treasurer.
In the Last Forty Years One Magazine
Has Made Discoveries.
Charles Hanson review
Contributors to The
in the anniversary issue of the
magazine, proves in what a
field of thought the modern woman
roams. The list of writers who
nave made The
forty years, includes men and
women that have held foremost
places in the last half century.
the seventies the literary pages
of the famous fashion magazine con-
special articles on
tens, employments for girls, and i-
subjects; but following the
interests of women the
in later years has touched all
lines of progress. Up to 1905, i;
magazine outside of its practical
fashion end, had been one of enter-
It had always been in-
tended that it be so, but its
publishers and directors began to
nave visions of greater usefulness
a magazine, no less, which should
as practical and as forceful
inspiring on its literary as on its
fashion side. In fact a literary
leadership in great practical useful-
for the home, the state and
nation was conceived and a cautious
careful to appropriate this
ideal begun.
Among the earliest things under-
taken under the new theory was a
general discussion of marriage and
divorce which was looming large at
this time. The most noted
were approached, and in a
of papers distinguished for
sanity and wisdom, different phases
of the problem were presented
Cardinal Gibbous, Rabbi Emil
Hirsch, Francis L. Potter, LL
Bishop William P of
Charles A. Ellwood and Ida
Harper.
The publication of this series of
papers on this big and timely
demonstrated conclusively that there
was room in the field of intellectual
and social endeavor for a
like the Other topics
undertaken. and with
growth of this real interest on the
part of our readers, tho magazine
finally felt justified in seizing a v -y
large and vital
Child-Rescue
In the spring of 1908
began the publication of a series of
articles entitled is the
with the Public
It was the shifting of public in-
temporarily from the schools
to the churches that brought about
tho next discussion and in prep
the data for tho latter
What's the Matter with
some of the greatest religious thought
of our time was introduced into i
pages of the magazine.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF GRIFTON
the State of at the of business, Not. 10th, 1910.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
Overdrafts.
banking house, furniture
and fixtures .
Due from and i.
Cash items.
Silver coin, including all
minor currency .
National bank notes and
others U. S. notes. 4,322.0-.
Total
45,269.7.
LIABILITIES.
paid
surplus fund . 500.00
undivided profits, less cur-
rent ex. and taxes pd 405.71
of 1,120.00
-op. sub. to check. 31,615.55
checks 1,628.49
Total
S 45,269.75
State of Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, G. T. Gardner cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true to the my knowledge and belief.
G. T. GARDNER, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me. C. J. TUCKER,
this day of Nov. 1910. W. W. DAWSON,
R. F. JENKINS, Notary Public. JOHN Z. BROOKS,
My commission expires Dec. 4th, 1910. Directors.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE GREENVILLE BANKING
and TRUST CO.
AT GREENVILLE,
in the State of Carolina, at of business, 1910.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
Overdrafts.
Fur. and Fixtures.
Demand loans.
Due from and
Cash items . IS
Silver coin, all
minor currency . 428.0
National bank notes and
other U. S. notes. 7,804.00
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock 25,000.00
Surplus fund.
Undivided profits, less cur-
rent expenses.
Notes and bills 2,000.00
Bills payable. 21,600.00
Time of 39,581.45
sub. check 127,793.67
Duo 7.95
checks
outstanding. . 1,101.74 168,484.81
Total
239,405.17
Total
239,405.17
lame back come; on suddenly and
is extremely painful. It is caused by
rheumatism of the muscles. Quick
relief is offered by applying Chamber-
Liniment. Sold by all drug-
gists.
THE SINGED STORE
on Main St. extends you the same
tho rest room did. ladies
the country are especially
U stop
j.
Fancy Sale.
The ladies of the Christian curd-
will conduct a fancy sale Monday
afternoon. November 21st, from to
o'clock, in the store next door i
the register of deed's office. Beside
the many beautiful fancy articles,
they will servo Norfolk cream
oysters. Benefit of the Christ; m
church. Everybody invited.
Delegate to Drainage Convention.
Among the delegates appointed by
Governor Kitchin to the drainage
com- Wilmington, are Dr. C.
and Mr. O.
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, C. S. Carr, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
C. S. CARR, Cashier.
Chas.
A. M. Moseley,
R. C. Flanagan.
. Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before 17th day of November, 1310. I
ANDREW J. MOORE, Notary Public.
My commission expires April 1911.
For Slate
in
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work.
Tin Shop Repair Work, and l
Flues in Season, see J
Number C.
J. S. MOORING
Now In Whits Store on Five Points. More room and larger stock. Come to see me.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
C. T.
STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
The Carolina Home and and The Reflector.
SON OF Pin
t. w.
DR. L AVID R. WALLACE CELE-
85TH BIRTHDAY
HAS AWAY FIFTY-SEVEN YEARS
ESTABLISHED
Venerable Pitt
Three Score Years and
Others of Our Dispersed Song, He
Rises to Prominence in His Adopt-
ed State.
It gives The Reflector pleasure to
print the following extract from the
Waco, Texas, Tribune, about a for-
mer Pitt
Tribune is glad to join
his friends and neighbors tender-
congratulations to Dr. David R.
Wallace, venerable and honored
of Waco. For on Thursday,
November Dr. Wallace completed
eighty-five years of Hie and has en-
on his eighty-sixth year. The
anniversary found him in what may-
be called good physical health, his
advanced considered, and as
bright and robust as to mentality
In any year of his there
are few men in Texas who rank with
. Dr. Wallace in Intellectual attain-
in learning and in the full,
rich experience and judgment of a
busy and useful life. Ho spent the
day quietly at his home on Austin
avenue, with his estimable wife and
other members of his family and
from many friends here and else-
where he received congratulations
and esteem. Dr.
lace, a North Carolinian by
has resided sixty years in Texas and
a half century of that time in Waco.
May he be with us as long as
is pleasant to
There are now very few people
living in this section who remember
Dr. Wallace, as ho left Pitt county
in 1853. We have heard some of
Older people speak of him man
times, and we know those of bis
companions yet living will join m
congratulations upon his
long and useful career His robust
more remarkable from tin
fact that he left Pitt county on ac-
count of lung trouble, as we we.
advised by one of his old pupils and
admirers, Mr. R. H.
New York. Dr Wallace taught
school in Greenville before the war.
at Rest Today in Cherry
Hill Cemetery.
Owing to some members of
family on the way to
Greenville being unable to
here until morning. funeral
Mr. T. W. Skinner, who died IV-
night, was deferred to o'clock
today. The service was conducted
the grave in Cherry Hill Cemetery
by Rev. J. H. Shore. The pall bear-
were Messrs. H. I,. Coward. B.
T. A. Person, C. E.
J. L. Wooten, T. M. Meade, W. P.
Edwards and M. H.
Mr. James W. Skinner, of Dan-
ville Va., father of the deceased,
rived Saturday evening, and BIS
brothers and on.- sister came Sun-
lay evening and this morning. They
were Mr. James W. Skinner, of
St. Louis; Mr. S. R. Skinner, of Lex-
Ky; Mr. C. R. Skinner, of
Roxboro. N. C ; Messrs P. C, R. R.
and E. G. Skinner and Miss
Skinner, of Danville. The aged
mother was so prostrated at the death
of her son that could not co
Danville to the funeral. Those
relatives who came found among n
people many sympathetic hearts in
their sorrow.
Professional Cards
and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrels,
Turkeys, Eggs, Bedsteads, Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages.
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, Tables,
Lounges Safes, P. and
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Cheroots, George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries. Peaches,
Syrup, Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee. Soap, Lye, Food, Mat-
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds Oranges, Apples, Nuts.
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Currants, Raisins, Glass,
and Cakes
and Crackers, Cheese,
beat Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, and numerous other goods
Duality quantity for cash
Come to Bee me.
Phone Number .
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith
and next door to John
Buggy new building.
Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
office formerly occupied by. J. L
Fleming.
. . . Carolina
W. C. D. M. Clark.
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
. . i.
COTTON CONTRACTS VALID.
ft
Decided That Carries Much In
A case was tried in the term of
court just closed that is of es-
interest to growers and buyers
of cotton, as it establishes the
of contracts to sell cotton for
future delivery. The custom prevails
more or less In the cotton belt for
farmers to make contracts in the
spring to sell their cotton in the fall
at a specified price. It is remember-
ed that last year much cotton was
sold in this way, and the price ad-
several cents between the
time of making the contract and the
time of delivery. There were many
farmers who refused to make
of the cotton as contracted. In
some instances suits were entered
against the sellers for the difference
in the price of the cotton at the time
of making the and the lime
it should have been It
one of these cases that was tried, en-
titled H. A. Gray vs. Carson,
and the verdict of the jury was lit
favor of the plaintiff, judgment be-
rendered against the defendant
for the difference in the price of the
cotton.
Young Lady Run Over.
crossing the street near tin;
Atlantic Coast Line depot, Friday
Miss Lucy was
knocked down and run over by a
buggy. Fortunately a bruise on
face was the only injury she re-
Fresh Oysters.
At I selling
fresh In quantity. Boat
up every keeping m sip-
lied. Orders can be filled pro aptly
any time. I. 1- SMITH.
Dangerous.
Soma boys arc making
where the new court house is being
built a favorite place for playing, es-
on Sunday. They climb tho
walls and and piles of ma-
without seeming to realize th-1
danger of death or injury that might
result from a fall. They had better
take warning.
The Number was
Through a typographical error In
Saturday's paper the number of nail
in the keg at Frank
as
it should
Football Games.
Both the Atlantic Coast Line am
Norfolk railroads will U
round trip tickets to Norfolk ail
Richmond for the Thanksgiving foot-
ball games at reduced rates.
fare to Norfolk and to Rich-
-o your
arc paid,
CHOICE.-
FRENCH AND HOLLAND BULBS j
Hyacinth, Narcissus, Tulips, Easter
Calls
Plant ea for best results j
All Seasonable Cut Flowers
Furnished at Short Notice
Palms. Ferns and all Hot
i Plaits For
. L CO., ,
I Phone No.
S. J. EVERETT
at law
Dr. Office
. . Carolina
U I. Moore. W. H. Long.
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
. . K. Carolina
CHARLES C. PIERCE
AT LAW
in all the courts. Office up
in Phoenix building, neat to
Or. D. L. James
Greenville, . . I. Carolina
J C. LANIER
IN
Tomb
Iron Fencing
urn
DEL. R. L. CARR
. . . Carolina
Harry H. W.
SKINNER WHEDBEE
LAWYERS
X.
JULIUS BROWN
AT LAW
A. Carolina
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office in building, on Third
street
Practices wherever his services are
desired.
Greenville, R. Carolina
S. J. Nobles
MODERN
furnished, everything n
and e, the very
best barbers. Second to none.
Opp. J. R. J. G.
Barber Shop
HERBERT EDMONDS
Proprietor
Located in m business ff town.
Four in operation ard
one id d by a bar-
L dies mat their home.
Special Males to
North Carolina Conference
will meet In Elizabeth City on Wed-
The Southern
railroad will sell tickets at special
good to go on any train,
Ticket giro lull In-
H. W. B.
GUION GUiON
Attorneys at Lew
Practices where
vices required,
ally in the counties of
Craven, Carteret, Jones
Pamlico, and State and
Federal Courts.
Office Broad Street
Phone NEW BERN, N. C.
WITH THE
Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance
Policies, b Divide
J. II Kill,
the Carolina Home and farm and The Eastern Reflector.
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE COMPACT, Inc.
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year.
Six months, .
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Bull ling, corner Evans
and Third streets.
AH cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Every time see any mention
about union depots in other
it us of something
Greenville has not but ought to
The Mexicans are offering to vol-
to fight Uncle Sam. They
not have heard what he did
for Spain.
The next legislature ought to fl-
W. C. of Mecklenburg, as
speaker. And we believe it will do
it
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
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1910.
The world may owe you a g
all right, but you have got to work it
out
Every day a business man fails to
advertise means business lost that hi
might have had.
We cannot see that Kentucky
should feel any over sending
an ex-convict to congress.
If Mexico don't behave Uncle Sam
will step over and make him
down.
With the colonel is it a
a or will a storm come
after the calm
--------o
The colonel is crawling out of his
after election shell, but has not fit
done any talking.
Don't expect much praise and
i not be disappointed if you fill
o got it
Are there any oysters at Oyster
Bay, or they all way to
the clam
They will spend a pile over foot-
ball on Thanksgiving day. But I.
has to go somehow.
After a long delay in the courts
the Standard Oil Company got out
of it.
To some of us the trouble is gain
to be the wherewith to do Christmas
shopping either early or late.
--------o
The News and Observer has ex-
its supply of poke berry
resumed normal appearance again
The outcome at Raleigh shows that
it is dangerous to go oven as a spec-
to an Aviation or auto
Commence counting over
blessings and see how many
you have cause to be thankful for .-r.
Thursday.
There is enough swamp lands in
Pitt county that If properly drained
and cultivated would raise sufficient
corn to feed the State.
Loafers are street signs that an
town could afford to get along with-
out. They point the way to
and backwardness.
That drainage convention to be
held In Wilmington next week ought
to be of interest to many people of
Eastern North Carolina.
--------o
Greenville is a town of
yet opportunities that are
taken advantage of avail nothing.
So many things could be done hero
that are not done,
Santa Claus Is waking up and rub-
bing eyes readiness to read
the papers to see where to buy
Christmas things. The wise
ought to take the hint.
Count Leo the noted
novelist and reformer, died Sun-
day morning at the advanced age of
years. A great man has gone
his passing away.
o--------
The Charlotte News may have to
do some explaining for using the
words in head-
on item about a funeral that had
taken place
--------o
If every county able to have good
roads would go ahead and
them, you would soon see very
highways from those
traveled over in many counties.
Some one has suggested that the
name of Oyster Bay be changed to
blue News.
Would not clam reserve be
Uncle Sam goes on doing his
of holding down the census by blow-
up something and killing ;
bunch of his soldiers now and then.
It has been suggested that the col-
come to North Carolina for a
tiger hunt. He could find some of
the blind kind.
o--------
If you see some flying machines
over don't mistake them, for a
rock of wild geese, even though the
temptation be strong to put the
t. rs in that class.
o--------
The Farmers Union has a
membership in Pitt county, and if
they will take up the discussion of
farmers making an exhibit of their
products It would awaken much In-
in that direction.
In Washington a few nights ago
the home of Mr. R. D. Walls was
robbed of which he kept in a
trunk. If the money half been de-
posited in the bank it would be there
now.
Ex-Congressman W. A. B.
died Friday night at his home
Beaufort county. He was years f
age, and was the representative of
this district congress for
years,
Twenty years is the record the
Greensboro Record has made.
are all to the good, too, the
have been filled with useful work by
a useful paper. The Record Las
the right to be proud of its record,
Andrew Carnegie celebrates hie
75th birthday by giving away
to schools. Most of us do not
expect to have that much to give
away, even should we live to be
and Make admonishes a
contemporary. Most girls have to
to be kissed .
Handle that subject carefully, boy,
or you will be giving yourself away,
o--------
The Reflector Is working for the
of its town, county and
section. Every subscriber who pays
his subscription promptly helps
carry on this work. But the man who
borrows his neighbor's paper is no
help to anybody.
o-
The promoters of an aviation me
in Baltimore lost on the
We hope the Charlotte News
and Raleigh News and Observer did
not meet with that kind of luck
their respective aerial stunts.
If you just must kick, go get you
a football and try on that. But
you are thinking about kicking your
town, hire yourself out for a football
and git the kicking you deserve.
There is Just no use for the town
kicker, and he is absolutely no
at all.
If the farmers of Pitt county are
to make an exhibit of products of this
year's crops, it is time there was
activity in that direction. Even if
a small scale, it would be a
to a larger next year.
--------o
A man cannot always t-11 who
his real friends and enemies. The
supposed friend of nay be
your secret enemy tomorrow. And
one thought to be enemy may
lave softened his h-art you
and become a friend you
knowing it.
It will be unusual for Greenville
if the business houses, in keeping
with their usual custom, do not
close up on Thanksgiving day.
believe it will be so next Thursday
and make the announcement to that
effect now, so that if any body
to correct it there may be an
Ten carloads of
headed by Governor Stewart, of that
State, came to Salisbury Wednesday
and unveiled a memorial to the
union soldiers of Pennsylvania who
died in the prison at Salisbury and
were buried in the national
tery there. Governor and
Senator took part In
coming the visitors. These occasions
show that sectional lines are being
wiped out, and that in reality
are becoming a reunited people.
Notwithstanding a large number of
arrests were recently made, there
some people around Greenville w
seem to think they can go right
violating the law against selling
But they had just as well
take cognizance of the fact that they
are going to be caught sooner or
later, for the officers and the law
abiding citizens of the town have de-
that these violations shall
be stopped.
The Reflector wants to see the
living eastward from Greenville
get interested in good roads build-
like those westward from town.
There is a good road from Greenville
to Farmville, and work is now in
progress on the road to Falkland.
Next we would like to see good roads
to Grimesland and to Black Jack.
They are good sections, but have
about the sandiest roads in the
between them and Greenville.
--------o
A great deal is being said about
the boys who win prizes in the Corn
Clubs and in other work; but it must
be remembered that the boy who does
not win a prize has not failed if he
has made an earnest effort. a
boy may get more real good out of
a hard struggle against circumstances
than some fortunate boy who beats
him all to pieces in the results L,
obtains. To make a good corn crop
is a great thing; to make a
effort to improve one's
on is greater. Raleigh,
Progressive Farmer and Gazette.
If a man has a big heart the sis j
a this time ft mt nil is not ft
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
I.
ALL TOWNS HAVE EASY MARKS.
And here comes The j
Chronicle telling of the folks of t
Queen being duped by a
and a woman at that. The woman
in question set up a fortune telling
apartment and found victims easy.
She got diamond rings and other
on and all of
e disappeared with won x
that were not paid for. The
tor has been disposed to twit th
of the larger towns like Char-
and Greensboro for being
but the thing has come
close home that we have got .
quit guying them. Why Because
even staid old Greenville has been
caught napping. It has leaked out
that several business men here were
taken in by a who walked
oft with some of their good money
The fellow was soliciting advertise-
to go on a big school
He got the orders, and HUM
also sharp enough to collect the
in advance. It was not until tho
time passed for the promised
to come and they failed show
up, that the victims found out th ;
had been fleeced. Best to let
people you know nothing about.
parcel post will be a losing
from the government's view-
point, the present deficit will be in-
creased greatly; from the viewpoint of
the entire country we think and ex-
of others will make it clear
that the same injury will follow.
When socialism has secured control,
when the country has disowned its
constitution and proclaimed a king;
when the government owns the rail-
roads and the people become sub-
rather than free-born men, the
parcels post will be a logical law for
adoption in the United
chants Journal.
to ever annually.
To this gain we can safely add
better health and at least per cut
greater efficiency in the work re-
quired of our work
Progressive Farmer and Gazette.
THANKSGIVING.
The Parcels Post.
A parcel post will not damage tin.
city nor the large retailers of
city to any appreciable degree, but
we are confident that it will damage
the small merchants of the country
towns and villages. This,
standing the statement that the par-
post proposed is for the
fit and not for their injury. We have
discussed the various plans d
by the postmaster general and
congressmen, and we have failed t
find one which stops up all the
through which the large mall
houses might percolate. Some
them are better than others, but none
of them is of benefit to the country
merchant, save in a doubtful degree
the best of the lot tending to make
him an agent for the big stores of
the centers of commerce.
The claim is made that these are
bills, and, after they
have been tried out, the country
be able to decide whether or not it
wants them and finds them
This is a dangerous
although it sounds good and
fair. Suppose one of these
should be tried and
prove disastrous. Would the sup-
porters of the parcels post be willing
to have a return to the old ways
doing things Not by any manner of
means.
Also, there is no test which can be
devised which would give a fair
for such a system. The best, th
fairest and the most honorable
is to consider the matter with
light we have. First, we consider
other countries which have a parcel
They them without
any great losses because their hails
are short How has it worked rut
for the merchants. Don't think the
merchant of the United States ii
far better shape than tho
of European countries. Have
countries under their parcel
post measures We think they have
not, from a point of real
th
Where Are Your Cotton Seed
Where are your cotton seed What
are you doing with them this
As long as the price is forty-five to
fifty cents per bushel at the
it pays to sell them there and
not move them at all. Every time
they are handled there is some waste,
and if kept they lose some of their
weight. No farmer can afford to
bury seed for manure when they sell
at the prices they have brought
fall. They may bring higher
the coming winter, but we are
looking for much higher prices. If
cotton seed are heaped together a
large quantities early in the season
are liable to get hot and dam-
age unless moved about so as to
air them. is little
from this source at this time of
year unless we have wet weather and
get the cotton wet before It is
Some farmers have the habit
of hauling their seed into piles
the fields. Not so much of this is
done as formerly. Most of them
nave learned better. They have
learned that a large pile of
will damage enough when exposed to
the weather to more than pay for a
shelter to build over them. If
nave made this mistake this fa
then the next step to take is J
either build a shelter over the seed
or haul them to a barn or
Cotton seed are too valuable now to
let them get damaged. Be sure
protect them even if it does c
something to do Her-
Gave Life for His Money.
While attempting to secure a sum
of money which he had in a trunk a
the second story of his home which
was destroyed by fire at an
yesterday morning, Will Brock,
colored, was overcome by smoke and
as no one knew he was in the build-
his body was fearfully burned be-
lore the blaze was extinguished. Fr m
the few particulars that could
learned in regard to the tragedy It
seems that Brock was the first per-
son to discover the fire and at
gave the alarm. After he had
this he secured a bucket and
to throw water the roof. Upon
the arrival of the firemen he evident-
remembered that he had forgotten
to get his money and it is supposed
rushed back into the building to
cure it. This was the last seen it
him until his charred body was fount
after the blaze had been
The trunk which contained the
money was found standing on
end and was but slightly damaged.
New Bern Journal.
Should Feed More Cotton Seed Meal.
Corn is a good horse feed when
used with certain other feeds
will supply the nutrient, in
which corn is deficient To supply
this deficiency we have the rich t
and cheapest feed known today, a
yet through prejudice, habit,,
or carelessness, we
refuse to use this Southern feeding
in the feeding of our
and mules. We refer to cotton seed
meal. Every horse and mule
receiving pounds of corn a
have that reduced at
least pounds, and pounds of cot-
meal, or probably what Is
better, cottonseed cake, substituted.
It is established beyond doubt, both
through scientific considerations and
by actual practice, that pounds
corn and pounds of cottonseed
meal will give better results than
pounds of corn, especially when th-
long forage Is corn fodder or
of the grass hays. The extra
of feeding the cottonseed meal,
which Is probably the true reason
for our failure to use It, would be
well paid for In the increased value
of the manure; and the saving which
the and mules of the South,
would result In the cost of feeding
with corn at cents a
ton TOO mt
my says Rot
J. have to
Whether you handle a pick or pen,
a wheelbarrow or set of books,
ditches or editing a paper,
ringing an auction bell or
funny things, you must work. If
you look around you, you will see
the men who are most able to
the rest of their lives without work
are tho who work the hardest
Don't be afraid of killing
with overwork. It is beyond your
to that, on the sun
side of thirty. They die
but it is because quit work
p. m., and don't get home till
a. m. It is the interval that kills,
my son. The work gives you an
appetite for your meals, it lends
solidity to your it
you a perfect and grateful
of a holiday.
are young men who do
not work, but the work is not proud
of them. It does not even know
their names; it simply speaks -t
them as No
body likes them. The great, b
world does not know that they .
there. So find out what you want
to be and do, and take off your cot
and do it. The busier you are the
less harm you will be apt to get into,
tho sweeter be your sleep,
and happier your s.
and the better satisfied will all the
world be with
And we may add, the greater hon-
or will you be o God
made you, redeemed and u
you, if you will apply the above
o not only to your earthly 1-
Tomorrow is Thanksgiving
The day is not selected because on
that, more than any other, men should
be grateful to God for His
blessings, but It Is In keeping
the long established custom of the
nation to set apart one day in
year to publicly recognize God as
Ruler and to make
to His
of our nation, His blessings up-
on the people in giving us peace and
prosperity. Is there one among all
the people of this great land who has
not cause to be thankful to God o.
this day for His mercies Not one.
Even the poorest and the humblest
has something to be grateful for
Then give God the praise that is
Him. remember that your
can be no more fittingly
pressed than in contributing
thing to those less fortunate than
yourself. Especially make glad the
hearts of the orphans by a
donation to them. As God has pros-
you, so give unto these. ,
The Wilmington Dispatch and Tho
Greenville Reflector are engaged in
interesting discussion of the modus
operand of the art of
Neither seems to be aware that this
subject is heavily
Observer.
Loaded, eh But there is some-
thing in knowing when and when.
Time you were getting wise, boy.
but also to the work of lb I
church.
Be something for
We might as well let it out that
the reason why some men
is because these gar-
always stay on the job, no
matter what the wind or weather.
Charlotte Observer.
Who would have looked for that
such a source Shame
you
Take Care of the Child's Health.
The child with decayed teeth, even
with unclean teeth, is open to In-
of lungs, tonsils, stomach
ears, nose. Every time food is taken
and at every act of
food must pass over these germ in-
bodies into the stomach, carry-
disease and decay with it.
Mouth with teeth in Vila
condition cannot get one breath of
air that; is not contaminated air, hi
every breath becomes poisoned in
passing over those germ and
laden teeth. Bad teeth are frequent-
the cause of defective
headache, dyspepsia and ear troubles.
All decay of human teeth t
from the outside. A perfectly clean
tooth will not decay unless particles
of food remain between the teeth
long enough to decompose. Decay,
therefore, always means uncleanness
The child's teeth should be cleans-
ed at least twice daily, and no
family investment will pay better
than the price of regular, prompt
dental care. If the cost of
earaches, sore throats, dyspepsia and
a number of other ills directly trace-
able to bad teeth could be measured
against tho cost of tooth brushes, bi-
carbonate of soda, pulverized chalk
or tooth powder and early dental at-
upon which side would the
Another doctor declares that
are fine for curing the whiskey
nab it. Green are also
good, if every time a fellow feels
that he wants a he will sink
his teeth in Dis-
patch.
A bitter way is not to have I F. L. Stevens, in
whiskery to
Home and Farm and The Reflector
THE MARRIAGE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
TWO HAPPY HEARTS ARE UNITED
Ceremony Performed Amid a
Follows
Home of Mrs. Forbes,
Hie De-
part for a Wedding Tour of
Wednesday evening Memo
rial Methodist was the scene
of a marriage to which Greenville
has pleasantly looked for
several weeks,, v. that popular
young couple, Mr. William L. Best
and Miss tin be Glenn
upon themselves vows that matte
then one for life, the ceremony
performed by the pastor,
J. u. Shore,
The appropriate green and white
decorations in the church made a
beautiful for such scene.
As the family and out of town
gut iris were being escorted to
Seats, Miss Olive Gaston played
prelude which was followed
v. charmingly by
Mrs. W. L. Hall.
Ai as Mies i
the Wedding march, the bridal party
to their respective position
altar,
First came the ushers, Messrs, A
J. Moore, J. Y. Monk, P. J. Forbes,
S. T. White, Waiter Wilson and Care
Wan en.
Following these were the bride's
maids, Misses Nancy Coward,
Sadler, Lillian and Whit-
field. These were each attired In
white satin with crystal trimmings
and carried huge bouquets of pink
Then came tie dames of honor.
Mesdames M. H. and F. J
Forbes, each carrying a bouquet of
pink Mrs.
wore while chiffon trimmed
with and ermine, and Mrs
Forbes white chiffon over silk.
The maid of honor, Miss Helen
Forbes, sister of the bride, came
next. Her dress was pink
media with gold and pink Persian
trimming.
The two little flower girls were
Misses Clara Louise Move and Rose
Hadley, dressed in lace over pink.
Then came up the opposite aisles
the couple whose hearts were to be
united. bride with her brother,
Mr. C. S. Forbes, and the groom with
his best man, Mr. W. E. Hooker. The
of satin
trimmed with Duchess lace and she
curried a shower bouquet of
roses end of th valley.
at
Immediately after the ceremony
public reception was held at the
home of Mrs. C. J. Forbes, mother
of the bride
The guests were met at the front
door by Dr. and Mrs. IS. A.
and Mr. and Mrs. Hadley.
In the receiving line with the
bride and groom In the parlor were
lie entire bridal party and Mis. C.
J Forbes, and Mrs. Dan
and Mrs. Denmark of
mid Mrs. F. J. Forbes received at
the library door. Here were sees
the wedding presents, wore
very numerous and beautiful.
At the dining room were re-
Ly Mr. and Mrs. J.
and ices were served by Mat-
tie King, Alice Blow,
and Mary Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G.
punch in the rear hall.
The out of town guests lire -t
the wedding were Mr. Mrs
George Hadley and Miss
field, of Mr. Mrs. L.
J. Chapman and Mr. Hinton Best, of .
Grifton; Mrs. Dan and Mrs.
Denmark of
of Baltimore; Mr. J.
Y Monk, of Mr, D.
Chapman, of Washington; and Mr.
Paul Webb, of Ayden.
The bride is a most popular
and B favorite with a great
circle of friends. Mr. Best is a
prominent jeweler and hold in
esteem. They left on
Norfolk Southern train New
and oilier northern cities.
an;
Harness
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, Horse Blankets, Tie Reins,
Halters, Etc. We can supply any of your needs
i n these articles at lowest prices.
The Carolina Hone and Farm and The Eastern Deflector.
mm
It
One Home Both
The Observer cordially
with the proposal that need
and infirm women of the Confederacy
be eared for at a Slate home. Dim
we are not so sure that to
a separate home in the best way, In
Mississippi there is one establishment
for both men and women. Thus
band and wife art; not kept apart
and expenses of administration are
economized. Why not simply
women to the existing hem i
at Raleigh, providing such addition-1
building, accommodations and fund
as may appear necessary This
would be primarily the
concern, but it would not
Sifts from individuals, either to i-
or to foundation at the
We think that all Southern Stales
should provide a home for their Con-
federate women and that
plan has decisive advantages
any other formulated thus far
Chariot Observer.
THE JOHN FLANAGAN
COMPANY
GREENVILLE,
Nor. Car.
1-28
i 62-L
Telephone
Central Car. Company
W H Jr.
Clark. Oilier
Everett, S. J.
Harvey, E.
Lee, Mrs. I F. Co.
257-L-2 Little, J.
Outlaw, N.
Outlaw, n.
Smith, J. Q. . House
Smith, J.
w.
Warren,
Changes.
Austin, Prof. H. E.
Rev W. Residence
Hall,
248-P
257-P
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.
SCHEDULES
Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Greenville, and
Effective 1st,
a. m.
a. m,
a. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. in.
p. m.
Ar.
Ar.
For further address nearest ticket agent,
W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent, Greenville,
J. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N.
A Tie Guess.
In guessing contest at the
number of nails In the keg at Frail.
Wilson's store. Messrs. A.
and c. Tyson both guessed
the same number. 7.000, which
nearest guesses to the actual
number,
Mr and Mrs. C. S, Forbes Mr. duo It.
Another Hint.
The dollars that are in your pock-
Which ought lo be in The
pocket for subscription due, valid
help the cause very much the
transfer was Why not
tend to this at once The pap
needs and ought to have
See That Your Ticket Reads
via
CHESAPEAKE LINE
to Baltimore
APPOINTED
ALL OUTSIDE
leave Norfolk daily 6.15 p. m. from foot
of Jackson street, arrive at 7.00 a. m. Direct connection
made with lines for all points. For further particulars call
on or write
F. R. T. P. A., it, Norfolk, Va
HAS THREE CASES.
Sent to Roads and one Held for
Liquor.
In his court this morning Mayor
F. M. Wooten sent E. R. Patillo, col-
to the roads for thirty days
disorderly conduct and cursing.
George Hagan was also given
days for firing a pistol on the
street, and was bound over to Sup
court for concealed
weapon.
Nelson Hopkins was for
court for selling liquor. H i
was caught making the sale
day night by Policemen Clark a i I
and they have conclusive
evidence against him. In default
bond Hopkins was committed to
son.
NIGHTS OF
The Old Beliefs.
Dr. Woods Hutchinson has just res
a questionable service to
through his refutation of the
once popular belief that cats will kill
babies by their
Any man of or ever, or any woman
for that matter, if will admit the
age, who was with pious par-
and the companionship of the
hired help on the farm, must certain-
remember how. when a child,
or she listened with terror to tales
of this sort, and how afterward th
Formally quiescent eyes of poor tab-
by seemed to shine with a strange
ferocity.
But cats don't suck breaths. Neither
we suppose, do toads cause warts,
handle them. Anyhow, If they
did, one had only to rub the
with a piece of fat meat, and then
bury the piece in a secluded place.
This always caused the warts to go
away, as every boy knows. Perhaps,
too, the cow wouldn't give bloody
milk if you killed a toad And what
If the cow lost her cud Are these
doctors going to say that it isn't in
order to make her a new cud or
salt mackerel or herring Maybe
bluebirds don't go down to the
regions in winter, and if om
only dared to drink milk, we
wouldn't able to see the wind n
that its color isn't red, if one chose
to find out And, to return to cows,
that no way of locating them
that to catch a big granddaddy-long
legs, lay him down on a fence rail
and repeat several times,
daddy-long-legs, which way has my
cow Doesn't he always crimp
up at first and then slowly
and reluctantly put forth one of his
feelers, and wave it in the prop-
direction Ask any boy that
tried this unfailing method
These are a few of the old-time
beliefs that must stand or fall
the cat story. If one goes, all go And
how few these are that have taker
loot In the childish minds of this
country may be realized by reading
the long list of similar superstitions
still held In veneration in rural
England as preserved in
Gould's ,.
The doctors are great
They have robbed us of the
Of our young faith. Next
thing they will be saying that
key it not good for snake bite. Surely
the march of progress is a
Post.
No Sleep, No Rest, Peace for the
Sufferer From Kidney Troubles.
No peace for the kidney sufferer
Pain and distress from morn to
night.
Get up with a lame back.
Twinges of backache bother y j
all day
Dull aching breaks your rest
night,
disorders add to your pair.
try.
Get at the the kidney-.
Kidney Pills will work
cure.
They're Ia th only
Have made great cures In this lo-
Mrs. J. W. Wallace,
St. N. C
Kidney benefited me
Mid I am therefore pleased to
them. I suffered
dull, backache and is-
pains across my lions. I w
restless at night and arose in
tired and languid. I h
little strength or energy and
could hardly attend to my housework
If I stopped or attempted to
sharp, pains caught me in
back My kidneys wore weak
caused me annoyance. I
read about
Pills and procuring a box, I began
heir use. They removed my back-
ache and corrected the trouble with
kidney secretions. I now foe
better in every
For sale by all dealers. Price
Co., Buffalo.
York,, sole agents for the
States.
Remember the
no other.
Condensed Statement of
The National Bank of Greenville
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
at the close of business November 10th, 1910.
RESOURCES.
Loans and 973.46
Overdrafts. 3,344.15
U. S. Bonds.
Fur. and Fix. 5.607.75
Stocks and bonds.
Cash and due from
Total
LIABILITIES.
Capital. 50.000.00
Surplus .
Undivided profits
Circulation .
Bonds borrowed
Dividends unpaid
1,084.34
21,000.00
21,000.00
25,600.0-J
244.81
Deposits
Total
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms and
Individuals and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those
who contemplate making changes or opening new accounts
We want your business.
F. J. FORBES, Cashier
A Country Still.
If the presidential election had
been held last Tuesday week, and
if the voters had voted as they
the Democratic candidate would
received electoral votes, or
more than are necessary to elect
The electoral vote of four states,
eighteen, would have
divided, with the Democrats
receiving the major part. We freely
concede that the Democratic party
might not done quite so Well
with a presidency at stake; it has
strongest in the s
called off years. At the same time,
Democratic majorities in big
States New York and Ohio
so decisive and the popular
to counter upon the Republican ad-
ministration was so manifest that
Democratic success would have n
named probable.
Republican spokesman are now
seeking consolation in the professed
belief that this year's defeat will
unite their own and give the
Democrats an appreciated
to break each other's heads.
this as it may, the continued exist-
of two fairly
parties evident enough. The Dem-
party's ability to take punish
and survive has been more
since 1892
Ow ever
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 been remodeled, and have just installed a
complete COTTON GINNING SYSTEM, AND A GRIST
MILL, and can gin your cotton and grind your corn. We
will also all kinds of Feed Stuffs, Grain, Cotton-Seed
Meal and 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.
Moseley Bros., insurance
and cotton buyers, have hung i.
handsome calendar for 1911 In The
Reflector business office.
Subscribe to The Reflector;
The Old Woman's Home.
The Raleigh Evening Times takes
occasion to endorse the proposition
tor a home for the old women of the
Confederacy, thing the
should says The Times,
Sufficient unto day Is the lo make for the wives cf j
om rt m W
Home. Room should be provided for
women at the homo and
and and wife should be taken care
at together. These old
be separated now. TUe
airily can't be much of a home to ti.
man who has to leave the
a in order to
us doors. legislature should
and make provision tor
old soldier and his wife, as i
done in Mississippi and maybe
But coming to the
proposition, The Times
mat is done the work will not
be completed. There will still
many more. And after all the
ans their wives are gone
will still be many noble women
will it impossible to provide
in old age. A home to
women for all time would be i
proper memorial to these other worn
n who rendered their share of
vice in the great conflict between
This gives The Chronicle
o say that the legislature will
for an appropriation to aid ii
the home that was
by Mr. The Daughters of
Confederacy already have the
in hand and have raised about
is their purpose to solicit
from the people of
and with that and the aid to be v
from legislature
Home and will be depended
i pen to a considerable
home that will be a credit to
Carolina and that will be a Joy to tin
declining days of a band of
M Is set generally known
m two women of the
tn w
an institution commonly known
the poor house, and there
Countless others in other poor
in the Chronicle
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
court clerk of Pitt county,
executor of the last will and
of Mrs. Martha P. Latham, de-
notice is hereby given to all
arsons indebted to the estate to make
payment to the
J; and all persons having claims
said estate are notified to
the same to the undersigned for
on or before the 31st day of
October, 1911, or this notice will be
load in recovery.
This Oct. 1910.
J. P.
of Mrs. M. F. Latham.
Industrial
Institute.
For Training and Betterment
of the Colored Race
Second Session Begins Oct
12th. Courses in music,
culture and Domestic Science.
Competent teachers; an excel-
lent opportunity for those who
desire to improve their condition
Splendid railroad facilities;
healthy locality. Rates very
reasonable.
For further information ad-
dress.
Principal W. C. CHANCE,
N. C.
Pay for. lost and then ash the
to It
The Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
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
Ayden, N. C, Nov. a
weak of muscular rheumatism pains
and being burned with various kinds
of oils, greases, liniments, positives
and the like, we are glad to be back
to our sanctum with the boys.
F. for ladies and gen-
gets fresh select oysters
Rev. W. O. Win field, of Bath, has
accepted the pastoral care of the
first Christian church in Ayden, and j
will hold his first service the
Sunday in December. He is a fine
preacher, to say the least of
end now let us hope and pray for.
better times.
A colored man named Hix
After eating, persons of a bilious habit
will derive benefit by taking one
of these pills. If yon have been
DRINKING TOO MUCH,
they will promptly relieve the nausea,
SICK
and nervousness which follows,
the appetite and remove gloomy feel-
Elegantly sugar coated.
No Substitute.
DR. W. H. OF
was accidentally killed in the woods, e In Greenville at Ho-
the Ayden Lumber Company last November Mb.
Thursday morning, the rope m iS
him h.-w- to diseases of the Eye, Ear Nose
Good Times.
Good times are coming for travel-
who the money. Sleeping
car berths are most uncomfortable
When a man gets even a lower sec
he is put to it to get in or out.
Between Boston and New York,
apartment cars have been put on
They contain no berths, but have
chairs, drop tables
and toilet annexes, with washstand,
mirror and dresses. The night
can sleep In a bed-room. It is
believed that this plan will be fol-
lowed as rapidly as practicable on all
large lines throughout the country,
if it shall be done, night travel will
be tremendously increased, much
friction and complaint avoided,
secured for the
News.
OF MACCABEES.
80.00 PER MONTH STRAIGHT
salary and expenses, to men with
to introduce our Poultry Rem-
Don't answer unless you
mean business. Eureka Poultry
Food Mfg. Co. East
St. Louis
and Throat
and Fitting Glasses
Striking him and breaking hi
The lumber company
ed the body and shipped it to his
former home, in Williamston. Thurs-
day evening, j FOR STORE AT
We will gin your cotton any day .-o son. Good location on Norfolk
bring it. and give you bagging and Southern railroad. J. S. Edwards,
SB
ties and the top cash price for you-1 R. F
seed.-J. R. Smith Company.
We hear much complaint of sweet
potatoes rotting quite early.
The price turkeys is so high
no except editors and aviators
can eat them. editors, oh,
The clock was opened at J. f
Smith Company's store Thursday. Mr.
Alfred Manning, of Grifton, won
40-piece set of dishes; Mr. Lewis
Cox, of Black Jack, the silk
la; Tom Manning, of Hanrahan, a
can of Wesson cooking oil. You get
a ticket with each dollars purchase
J. R. Smith and Bro. have
ed the interest of Mr. H. C. Ormond
n the J. R. Smith Company, Ire,
Mr. Ormond will move to
and go In business with his
brother, Mr. W. W. We re-
exceedingly to give him up, as
his stay in Ayden has won him many
warm and strong friends, who wish
for him even greater success In his
now venture, near his old homestead
hi Greene county.
Yes, the election passed off f
very quiet, had it not been for
merry laugh of Messrs. Jake M.
flatter, J. R. Spier, and Lorenzo M-
you would have taken It
been Sunday.
Our stock of underwear and cloaks
are complete for Infants, misses, beys
girls and ladies, and shoes.
J. R. Smith Company.
The ladies of our town will re-
produce the old maids convention at
-d priori building Thurs-
day night, Nov. 24th, for the
of the Methodist church. This piny
has proven a cure for the blues,
appointed lovers and gout, if you
cant laugh, better stay away Ev-
is invited.
Messrs. J. J. May and son were, ii.
town Thursday, they tell us thy
have purchased a gasoline en-
to gm their individual cotton
crops. These gentlemen are z
Pitt county's most prosperous farm-
raising plenty of everything
the home, and then a large
crop.
D. No. Greenville.
Strays Taken Up.
I have taken up two heifers, one
red color, the other light brown,
both unmarked. Owner can got
them by proving ownership
paying charges.
JACOB
Grifton, N. C.
A Lodge Organized Here Monday
Night.
An order of the Maccabees of
World was organized at Greenville
night, November by M.
A. K. Miller, deputy state 1-
and the following officers were
elected and
Past
Laughinghouse.
Dupree.
Lieut. S. Warren.
Keeper of O. Warren.
Finance O. Warren.
F. M.
L C. Skinner.
Master at Williams.
Master of Barn-
hill.
Second Master of B.
Moore.
E. Tucker.
After the Institution of the new
lent and the installation of new of.
Beers, a social session was held and
several good talks were made for
good of the order.
Every member invites you to watch
the Maccabees grow.
Boat the sheriff
lug.
to the
OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N.
At the Close of Business September 1910.
Liabilities
21.76 Undivided profits, less
cur. exp. and taxes pd. 680.07
Deposits sub. to check 34,776.37
Resources
Loans and discounts j stock 25,000.00
Overdrafts secured and j Surplus fund 15,625.00
unsecured.
Furniture and fixtures
Demand loans
Due from batiks and
Bankers
Cash items
Gold coin
Silver coin, including all
minor coin cur. 1,456.80
National bank and other
U. S. Notes 4,330.00
610.59
6,400.00
7,736.88
10.75
Total
Savings Deposits
Cashier's
outstanding
Certified Checks
34,359.08
8.49
42.07
Total
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA.
COUNTY OF PITT.
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of the above named solemnly swear that
the above statement is to the best o; my knowledge and belief.
J. R. SMITH, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn
before this 10th day of Sept.
1910,
Notary Public
J. R. SMITH.
ELIAS TURNAGE,
JOSEPH DIXON,
Directors.
NOTICE
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fall goods which
we now have. We have taken great care in baring this year and we
think can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Gingham, No-
Laces and ii . . .
Dry Goods Store.
Come let us show you,
in fact anything that is carried in a
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N, C,
Where Under-Draining Is Needed
Practically all level lands would
be Improved by under-draining, and
much of the rolling lands would .
benefited almost as much by under-
that would help to carry
water, thereby reducing the quality
which now goes off over the
Moderate rainfalls may be absorbed
by a soil well filled with humus, and
if it be tiled or under-drained, it will
take in, and properly dispose of. a
much greater quantity, but both th
are needed, as also is probably
every additional aid obtainable, lo
take care of the torrential and co .
rains which we sometimes
have. The handling of the water
which falls on our soils is a much
more important problem than South-
farmers have yet realized. Too
much of these heavy rainfalls n
goes off over the surface,
with it the finest and best soil par-
while still further destruction
to soil fertility results from too great
quantities remaining in the ;
soil for long periods.
The foregoing observations polar
unmistakably to conclusion an
that Is, that the of
larger part of our soils is a
to the highest soil fertility.
drainage Is merely a makeshift, and
is in any case an evil, which mm
under ideal conditions be reduced to
a minimum. In most cases It is
than none, and being cheaper, is
sometimes the only sort of
possible and, therefore, a
but the best results will never be ob-
on practically all our lands u
they are tile drained. Our
rainfall at certain seasons makes
this under-draining doubly important
with us, and causes it to be needed
an a much proportion of
lands than whore the rainfall dots
not exceed inches, annually. There
is another reason why tile draining
must Increase, and that Is the
of doing with short rows
and the obstructions offered to
use of implements by open and
hillside Progressive
Farmer and Gazette.
Get The Tickets.
is now issuing sale
tickets, to purchasers for the
some prizes that will be given away
it store
ARRAIGNED A
Matthew November
he ten reviled, reviled not
I Peter
B cannot do bettor at the open-
lug of this study than quote
the Words of Mr. Chandler.
He remarkable trials
have characterized the judicial history
of mankind. The trial of Socrates,
before the of
ed with corrupting the Athenian
youth, with blaspheming the Olympic
gods and seeking to destroy the
of the Athenian Republic. Is
still a sublime and thrilling chapter
In the history of a wonderful people.
trial of Alfred Dreyfus Is still
fresh In the memories of men. The.
French Republic Is still rent by con-
tending factions. His friends say that
Dreyfus was a Prometheus who was
chained to an ocean-girt rock while
the vulture of exile preyed upon his
heart His -enemies still assert that
he was a Judas who betrayed, not
God nor Christ, but France and the
Fatherland. But these trials, one and
all, were tame and commonplace com-
pared with the trial and crucifixion of
the Galilean peasant, Jesus of
In Defense of the Jews
It Is not for us to say that the Jews
were wholly excusable In their course
of Injuries toward Jesus In causing his
crucifixion by the Romans. On the
other hand, it Is proper for us to con-
sider everything that could be thought
of calculated to mitigate the severity
of our Judgment regarding the
there And it is proper
also that we should consider what,
from their standpoint, would seem to
be extenuating circumstances. This
Is everywhere recognized as just treat-
The attorney, defending a
who has plead guilty to the
charges against him. Is considered to
do only his duty by his criminal client
when he presents whatever in the cir-
of the case would tend to
prove that the culprit had cause, or
thought that he had a reason for his
misdemeanor.
Viewing the Jewish people of nearly
nineteen centuries ago from this stand-
point we get a more reasonable view
of the situation than is otherwise
We hearken first to St Peter's
words respecting the transaction. He
said, wot that through ignorance
ye did it as did also your Had
they known, they would not have kill-
ed the Prince of life
The Jews did not for one moment
suppose that the great Messiah, fore-
told to be their Prophet. Priest and
unto Moses, but greater;
like unto David and but
greater; like unto but
appear as man of
sorrows and acquainted with
Although those very words were writ-
ten of him by the Prophet they were
hidden from their eyes of understand-
by the glorious of
him in other prophecies. They saw
the glories. They saw not, under-
standing, the sufferings. To this day
they interpret the sufferings of their
nation as being those which will
inure to their advantage. The
prophetic descriptions are not
nor collected, but scattered,
a little and there a so
written that they could not be under-
stood at the time; nor were they
even by the Lord's disciples
until after resurrection from the
dead, when he explained them, and,
subsequently, by the holy Spirit, cu-
Man to surfer entering Into
his beginning the work
of blessing Israel and the world. Yea.
today many Christians are as deeply
confused on this matter as are the
Jews. Many have rejected entirely the
thought of Messiah's glorious King-
reign for the general blessing
and uplifting of Israel and all human-
From their standpoint, If
sufferings of were Intended to
prepare the way and in his
Kingdom of glory, then the program
must have failed, or else his Kingdom
of glory Is to be a heavenly one and
not. as they believe. In accord with
the prayer taught by our Lord.
Kingdom come; thy will be done on
The trouble Is that they will
not realize that where the sufferings
of Christ, the Head, ended, the suffer-
H M
DEFENDS HIS MASTER,.
THE
JO HIS HUMILIATION. HIS TR
CUT UNJUSTLY.
of the of began
the sufferings of Church, which Is
his up the measure of
afflictions of Christ, which are be-
I, As soon as the
the Body of shall
have finished the bearing of the cross,
after him. following In his steps to the
end of the journey, then the Kingdom
glories will be ushered In. Israel's
blindness will be turned away and the
blessing of the Lord will begin to fill
the whole earth.
The Jews, who the
of Jesus, certainly did so in
much the same spirit which led St.
Saul of cause
stoning of St. Stephen. As Saul
was forgiven, so Israel is to be for-
given; as the Scriptures declare.
Lord will pour upon them the spirit of
prayer and and then
they will see, with the eyes of their
understanding, whom they
pierced and they will all mourn for
and their
mourning will be turned into joy; for,
N THE COURT OF WHEN
WAS NOT
AGAIN
SAID. I AM THE SON OF
as Joseph forgave his brethren, so
will this great Joseph, of
the throne of earth freely
who caused his crucifixion.
Politics and Selfishness as Religion
The Jews are not so different from I
other people now. nor were they then.
History indicates that some of their
highest offices were held by
for their political influence; thus
the at the first advent of
our Lord, was a who wholly
disbelieved in the promises of God to
Israel. Including a disbelief In the res-
of Hie dead. Similarly today
there are both amongst
Jews and Christians, who disbelieve,
and yet hold high positions. Amongst
Christians there are D. who are
unbelievers and many of the most no-
table rabbis amongst the Jews also de-
themselves thorough unbelievers.
We are not claiming that such
Christians and Jewish minis-
would lightly espouse and support
an unjust procedure against an
cent man. We do not know about this.
It yet to be tested, perhaps. We
do know, however, that when faith
in n Divine Revelation and in a Divine
supervision of human affairs Is lost the
natural effect Is that the losers of the
faith become more and more policy-
men and consider policy the extreme
of human wisdom, particularly in the
guidance of affairs of Church and
history for It. that the lead-
of Judaism at the lime of our Lord
were Higher Critical unbelievers
we can readily see that their
policy was to curry favor with the
Roman Emperor and to seek to hold
the common people In subjection to
themselves. To these, then, it must
have seemed almost a calamity that a
poor man. of noble birth, of
the family of David and the Tribe of
should gather about him a
handful of nondescript fishermen, tax-
gatherers, etc.; that he should pro-
himself a king and declare the
setting up of his Kingdom to be near,
and that by the exercise of some
power for the healing of
their diseases he should attract the
-common to his standard, but
not the learned. We can well imagine
their reasoning that, if this thing, the
popularity of Jesus, continued to in-
crease, it would shortly reach the ears
of the Roman Emperor and then all
their claims for imperial favors would
be discounted and they would be rated
a nation of rebels.
The rising of Jesus into Jerusalem,
lost before the Passover, on an ass,
after the manner of the kings of Is-
and surrounded by a multitude
shouting. to the Son of
who cometh in the name of the
capped the climax, so to speak,
and convinced these unbelieving Jews,
politicians, occupying religious offices,
that It would be far better that one
innocent man should die than that the
whole nation should be turned into
moil and wrecked by the Romans in
consequence. How many American
preachers. Judges, officials, etc. would
In this enlightened day be inclined
to decide a matter And
Is not tills the policy which always
In monarchies Fancy such a
commotion in the capital of Germany,
Italy. France. Austria. Russia. Great
Britain, the United States. Fancy
that after such a parade, mimic though
it might appear, the adored one should
go to the temple and execute a long-
neglected law and. in thus exercising
his religious rights, suppose that he
should drive out the money-changers
and merchants from the outer
of their chief religious Cathe-
What would be done to such a
person today Do we not know that
in the most civilized lands he would
tie arrested and imprisoned, and in the
more savage lands lie would be beat-
en or we
view the situation from this standpoint
lose any spirit of antagonism which
might have been ours; it turns to
a religious should
allow Itself to get into the hands of
politicians to such an extent.
Brought Before
It sen courageous on the Dart
of Si. Veter that, after having
ten off the ear of the nigh Priest's
servant the wound was healed
by be followed his Master into
the Court of that high-priest to see
what would be done. The arraign-
was although It was
contrary to Jewish Law to try a
oner at night for any serious offense.
But there was an excuse. This was a
special case; haste was necessary, be-
cause whatever would be done must
be done quickly; the very next day the
unbelieving officials perceived that
had great influence with the
common people. They believed him.
to be a brilliant but harmless
He had committed no crime, but he
was n disturber of the peace, and they,
felt fully justified in taking his
The Feast of Passover was at
and would last a week and it
be contrary to their Law that any ex-
should take place during
week. Besides, they feared the amount
of influence which Jesus might
else during the week, when there
would be from one to two millions of
people in around Jerusalem
all over Palestine. They had
determined that their action must be
short, sharp and decisive. This was
decided before the arrest was
They were ready and waiting at that
midnight hour to carry out their
designs, for good of their
they thought.
The examination was merely a
one to get together such
at the morning Tribunal
could be rushed through rapidly at a
prearranged session. ,
He Was Charged With Blasphemy
had in finding a
charge. For what had Jesus ever done
except acts of kindness and the utter-
of words of wisdom and correction
and hope Blasphemy was a serious
charge under the Jewish code. They
would charge him with that being
the easiest to prove. He had said,
when near the Temple, this
Temple, and will rear it up in three
he spake of the temple
of bis Some of those who;
heard him understood him to speak of
the literal temple. This they charged
was blasphemy, because it took years
to build the temple, and for Jesus
to rebuild it in three days would;
mean a claim on his part of Divine
power. But the charge Old
sufficiently strong, even for those who
had premeditated bis murder. They,
wanted something to give a color of
justice, at least, to their findings. So
the chief-priest thought to get Jesus to
commit himself in their presence and,
said. I thee by the Living God
to tell us whether thou be the Christ,
the Son of God. Jesus replied that
this was true and that they would yet
see him in heavenly glory and power
at the right hand of favor.
This, the High Priest declared, was
proof of blasphemy.
hold, now ye have heard his
my. What reply And the
answered that he was worthy of
death. The rabble In the Court, hear-
big the commotion, felt at liberty to
abuse this prisoner, as they had KM
others. They showed their contempt
of him by spitting upon him.
derided him by smiting him and
Prophesy, tell who smote
was reviled, yet reviled
Is prevalent during th-
dry cold weather of the early winter
months. Parents of young children
for it. All that is
is a bottle of Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. Many mothers are
never without It In their homes and it
never disappointed them. Sold by
druggists.
FOR HARNESS, HORSE BLANKETS
lap robes, whips, separate
of harness, leather and show findings
repairing promptly done. Agent for
roofing. Sam Flake next door
express office.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
We offer you
ii
Stoves and Ranges Because we know
they are the Best
It is always our policy when choosing stock
for this store, to choose the very best goods
that the best factories in the land produce, and
that's just why we have chosen for
you.
We know, after a comparison, we
have by a careful comparison and ax-
that they are best.
Best because better better ma-
and the best
to give the best satisfaction and assure you
this satisfaction with the smallest consumption
of fuel.
Taft VanDyke
J. E. WINSLOW,
Dealer in Horses, Mules and Buggies
GREENVILLE and AYDEN, NORTH CAROLINA
Thanksgiving
You cannot cook that
Turkey right unless you
have a first class range.
We have the best line of
STOVES and RANGES
in especially
we can recommend as
real Princess
and invite you to come
lea it and many other
that will add to
your comfort and con-
during the
cold days.
MR. THEO. DEAD.
Prominent Young Business Man Dies
Suddenly.
The announcement this morning
of the death of Mr. Theo. W. Skinner
as a shock and filled
hearts with sadness. While
his duties on the tobacco sales, Fri-
day morning, Mr. Skinner was taken
with a fainting spell caused by an
attack of acute Indigestion, and fell
to the floor. He was carried to his
home on College street and
attention given, and he was thought
to be getting along well through the
day until about o'clock In h s
afternoon, when he grew worse and
continued to sink until the end came
about o'clock.
Mr. Skinner was years of age.
and came to Greenville from
about ten years ago to engage
in the tobacco business here as a
buyer and became prominent on the
market, quickly winning Ms way In
to confidence and esteem of
with whom he In At
the time of his death he was in
employment of the
In May, 1904, be married Miss
Emily and the wife and three,
small children, all boys, survive .
These have the heartfelt sympathy f
in their sorrow.
If relatives who are expected
rive this evening, the funeral
vice will be held at the grave in
Cherry Hill cemetery at at
Sunday afternoon, the body leaving
the residence at 1.40.
The
Taft Boyd Furniture Company
Wilmington Aviator.
This is awful. Here was
trying to fly by means of an
air ship last week and failed, when
yesterday Raleigh did fly some by the
same means when Just the other
Wilmington had a in a
invented and made in Wilmington
and the man who flew was a W i
man. What is more, th
machine flew at the very first
and sailed away finely. This is a
fearful slam on Charlotte and the
other cosmopolitan cities of the
State. Wilmington Is waking up. It
would be Just like her to put makers
of other machines out of business.
We do hope her machine will no
turn to and get wrecked and kill the
aviator for Wilmington, like Greens-
has no population to spare.
Greensboro Record.
Fatten the Fowls Vow.
be fattened quickly
to be tender and Juicy. If the fowl
are kept in good condition during.
the summer and early fall, ten days,
or two weeks of liberal feeding
should put them In excellent
for marketing. After they
commenced to fatten give them all
they can eat four times a day.
ought not to be confined fort
THE DAIRY COW.
Good To Hare One Around
House.
The dairy cow does more than
bring financial success to the dairy
farmer. She makes him a better
citizen than he would otherwise be.
Her influence upon home conditions
s a most pleasing contribution to
those factors which are responsible
for the changed conditions which
in the farm homos of today.
Thousands of these homes are now
characterized by comfort and hap-
where formerly they were
blighted by drudgery and
Petter financial conditions have
contributed to this change, and the
dairy cow has in no small
measure responsible. She has con
in still another way. The
dairy cow teaches kindness.
owner soon learns that only by treat-
her kindly can he secure the
highest possible returns from n i
she responds quickly to kind
words and proper care Her
is one the family
might well emulate. She Is patient
and long suffering, acquiescing mute-
in the arrangements made by
owner for carrying on the dairy
business, striving at all times to j-e-
pay him for every effort made for
her care and comfort.
The members of the family,
they come In contact with her and
her kindly disposition, are
for good. As they appreciate
benefit to come from car-
for her well they take a deeper
interest in her. In doing so they
unconsciously cultivate those
ties which make them better
The dairy prototype
man's best a
greater influence than she is gen or-
ally credited with. She has
been found in the front ranks in tin
march of civilization and no
cultural country can long prosper
without her. She is a potent fact
in the of such a country,
financially, and socially, and a wise
people will appreciate her and en-
courage the industry of which she is
foundation.
of year when the flock should
culled closely. The undesirable,
fowls will bring better prices
than ever, and if kept throughout
the winter will only be an
and a detriment to the rest of
Jo, In Raleigh Progress
Farmer and Gazette.
The school of experience has no
vacation.
Largest In The World.
Oar readers have
ed the advertising of the
Metal Roofing Co., N. 23rd
has been
k a The Reflector for some
months past and we hope those
have had reason to be interested In
roofing material have profited there-
by. The Company Is by
far the largest maker of metal ah
in the world, and product
well and favorably known over
the entire United States. They are
always glad to give prompt
to inquiries and to either send
any length of time. If fed h, ,
while they have a free run they W
be put in condition for roofing, or i
within ten days. There is the tin
Guessing Contest Closed.
contest at Frank
closed Friday at
we're nails in the
HA Tyson, of
were the lucky ones, they
guessed each, making a e
which will have to be drawn off by
them.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
Legal Notices
SALE OF LAND.
By virtue of the power of sale con-
in a executed and
delivered by R. Hyman and wife, to
F. J. Forbes, on the 1st day
of June, 1909, and recorded In Book
K-9, page the undersigned will
cell at public action for cash, to the
highest bidder, before the court house
door in Greenville, on Monday,
her B. tho following described
That lot or parcel of land
lying and in the county of Pitt,
and in the town of Greenville, lying
on the west side of Evans street in
that part of Greenville called
town, bounded on the south by
home of T. R. Moore; on the
east by street and on the north
and west by the home place of
said R. Hyman and wife, where they
now reside.
This the day of November, 1910.
F. J. FORBES, Trustee.
NOTICE.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
State of North County.
A. O. C C. T. D.
Jerry and wife,
Nichols, Win.
and wife, Ella and
vs.
Lela Grace Meek,
en and Ethel all
of said defendants being minors
under the age of sixteen.
By virtue of a decree of the
court of Pitt county, made In
the above entitled special proceed-
on the 10th day of November,
1910, by D. C. Moore clerk, the
commissioner, will, on Sat-
the 19th day of December.
1910, at half past two o'clock, p. W
expose to public sale before the court
house door in Greenville, to the
highest bidder, for cash, the folio
lug described tract or parcel of land
Lying and being in Carolina town
ship. Pitt county, adjoining the lands
of W. G. Dr. J. E. Nobles, D.
N. Nobles and others, and contain-
about acres, more or less.
This sale Is made for the purpose
of making partition among the plain
tiffs and defendants in the above en-
titled cause.
This the 16th day of
F. C. HARDING, Cora.
By virtue of the power of sale con-
a certain deed,
executed delivered by Amanda
Bason to P. A. Tyson, on the 6th
day of 1909, and duly re-
corded in the Register of Deeds office
of Pitt county, North Carolina, in
Book k-9, pages tho
will expose to public sale,
Wore house door In Green
to tho highest Udder, on the
3rd day of December, 1910, a certain
tract or parcel Of land, lying and be-
in the county u Pitt, and
of North Carolina, and described as
follows,
Beginning at Caleb Edward's north
east comer, thence with
the western boundary of Greene St ,
feet to a stake at corner; thence
with said Daniel King's W.
Wilson Jr's, southern line westward
about feet to a stake at corner;
southward parallel with
Greene street SB feet to Caleb
Edward's corner; thence eastward
with said Edward's northern line
About feet to a Stake at corner,
tho property
ed by L. C. Arthur and wife,
and -T L. Little trustee to
Eason, as will appear on
record in Hook m-8, page of the
Register of Deeds of Pitt county, to
satisfy said mortgage deed. Terms
of sale, cash.
Tins lot day of November. 1910.
P. A. TYSON, Mortgagee.
FORECLOSURE SALE.
Under and by virtue of decree of
the Superior court of Pitt county,
made at March term, 1910. of
court, in an action therein pending.
entitled R. W. King against
and wife, Mary, and Michael
Wilson and wife, the under-
signed will, on Monday, December
1910, before court house door in
Greenville sell at public sale to the
highest bidder, for cash, a certain
tract or parcel of land situate in
Swift Creek township, Pitt county, ad-
joining the lands of Cicero Smith on
the south, Cams on the west.
Robert Wilson and wife on the north
and east, containing acres, more
or e I, and being the land deeded to
L. H. Smith by Harry Skinner.
This 2nd day of November DUO.
ALEX. L. BLOW, Commissioner
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
North County.
Before D. C. Moore, clerk.
Jesse Wilson, L. H. Wilson,
Wilson, J. T. Edwards and
wife Louise Edwards,
and wife, Williams
Walter Wilson, Zeno Wilson.
lie Asa Carries. J. P.
William Dennis and
wife, Susan Dennis, Martha Ann
el Jo n
Jones and wife Sarah Jones, ,
By virtue of a decree of the
pf the Superior court Tilt county,
tho nod r will
on the 21st of De-
1910. at o'clock, noon ex-
pose to public before tie court
door in Pitt county
to the highest bidder, cash, the
following tract or parcel
of land,
and being in the county of
Pitt and In Swift Creak
adjoining the of Frank Bar-
Ollie Cox and Henry Williams,
and others and containing acres
more or less, and being the tract or
parcel of land known the Wilson
homo place.
This sale Is made for the purpose
of making partition among the ten-
ants in common.
This the 21st day of November.
F. C. HARDING, Commissioner.
S VI E OF LAND.
North County.
In Superior Court.
A. Savage Company
vs.
L.
By virtue an execution directed Manufacturing
to tho undersigned sheriff of
county From the Superior court Cf
raid county hi the above entitled ac-
I will, on Monday, 6th day
of December, it being the first
in December, at
O'clock, noon, at the court he-use door
In said sell, to the higher
bidder, cash, to satisfy said
all the right, title and f
which D. L. had on or
the 22nd of April, 1905, in the
following described tract or
land, A certain tract or par-
of land In township, Pitt
county beginning at a Sweet gum In
new road, the corner of L. C
line; thence
a on a ditch; thence down
said ditch to a stake at a
n. straight line w-
in m E
thence with her to the be-
ginning, containing
or less. . .
Alto the undivided Interest i
D. L. owned prior to tho
day of January, in and t
that certain tract or parcel of land.
In township, Pit count.,
adjoining the lands of Willis
on the east, also adjoining tho
lands of N. W. Sermons. Eon
and Mason, containing
more or
A.-150 other parcel of land In
, township, Pitt county,
lands of M. E.
Ross and containing i
more or less, described in deed
from i. L. to E.
dated January
In the Register's
in Pitt county, in .-, page
lino in from D. L and
wife to O. F. and R. L.
dated November 17th, 1908, recorded
In Boole 8-8, page
tho 29th day of October,
L. W. TUCK Eli, Sheriff.
NOTICE
in the County
of and Warrant of
At
C. T.
against
Manufacturing Co.,
and the Bank of
The
Company will take notice-
that a summons in the above entitled
action was Issued against it by the
clerk of the Superior court of Pitt
county, on the 8th day of
returnable to the
term, 1910, of the Superior court
of Pitt county, commencing on the
12th day of December, 1910, which
summons was returned by the
of Pitt county on day
November, 1910, with the endorse-
Company not be found In
my And it appearing by the
of the plaintiff that the said
o foreign with i; place
of business of tho State
North Carolina, the of
said action, alleged by the plain-
tiff, is to recover of the
Company
the sum of duo to bun for
breach of contract la tho sale of a
peanut picker.
The said Manufacturing
Company will also take that
a warrant of attachment was Issued
by said clerk, on the said 8th day
November, 1910, against the property
of said company, which warrant
returnable the said December term
of the Superior court of
county, it being the time place
when and where tho summons re-
turnable.
And the defendant Man-
; Company will also take
that It is required to appear
t said term and answer or demur
lo the complaint of the plaintiff, or
the relief therein demanded will
granted.
This the 8th day of Nov. 1910.
C. Clerk.
Jarvis Blow, for plaintiff.
Ltd
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
delivered by Dr. J. N. Moore to
Mrs Mercer which appears -f
record In the office of the Register
A of Pitt county in Rook J-S,
page and bears date Sept 25th,
the undersigned will sell, for
cash, before the court house door in
Greenville, on Wednesday, December
17th, 1910, the following described lot
in said county and State and in the
i own of Fountain, situate on fie
of Wilson and Jefferson streets,
beginning at the corner of Jefferson
and Wilson streets and running with
Jefferson street feet; thence w t
1-3 feet; thence north feet to
thence east with
son street 1-3 feet to the begin-
being the same lot the
aid Dr. J. N. Moore by B. P. Mew-
born and wife.
Said lot being sold to satisfy said
mortgage.
This November 5th. 1910
JANE MERCER,
F. G. James Son,
Attorneys.
SALE OF LAND.
virtue of a power of Bale con-
in a certain mortgage deed,
executed and red by Purnell
to L. C. Arthur, on the 18th
day of December, the under-
signed will, on Monday, the 5th day
of December, 1910, at
noon, expose to public sale. Before
Hie court, house door in
lo highest bidder, for cash, the
following described tract or I
f land, Lying and being
town of Greenville North Car-
being let No. In Block .
and fronting feet on Hood street
is feet deep and of uniform
width an of is shown by
by and Clark, c ll
In December, 1908. for
L. C. Arthur, said map arc register. J
m Register's office in Pitt
In Boole B-9. page and
This will be mads to satisfy
forms of said mortgage .
This the 4th day of November
L. C. ARTHUR, Mortgage.
E. c Harding, atty.
for The
NOTICE TO CREDITORS;
Having duly Qualified before tho
court clerk of Pitt county
of estate of
deceased; notice is hereby
given to persona indebted to the
estate to make Immediate payment t
and all persona
claims against said estate are
to present the to tr.-j, an
for on or before as
SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
By virtue of a power of sale con-
In a certain deed,
delivered by B.
.- and wife, Ora Parham, to F. M.
Hodges, dated 23rd day of May 1807,
and duly recoded In tho office of
register of deeds of Pitt county,
Book T-8, page the undersign U
mortgagee will, on Monday, the 18th
day of December, at o'clock,
noon, expose to public sale before
the court house door in
Pit county, to the highest bidder, f
cash, following described parcel
or lot of land, and be-
In tho town of Greenville, Nor
Carolina and beginning on the south
aide of i at i u
formerly Mrs. me Brown h corn r,
j.- Mrs. Martha E
., thence with
a north i
course 1-8 thence a
r course parallel with
Dickinson 1-2 feet to a
thence to
r-;, 1- Of an acre, nice
id being the house and Jot
LAND SALE.
virtue of a power of sale con-
in a certain mortgage deed ex-
and delivered by Purnell Tripp
wife, Anna Tripp, to C. S. Can,
on the 27th day of January, i
which is duly recorded in the office
of the Register of Deeds of Pitt
in Book B-9, page the under-
will, on Monday, the 5th
of December, 1810, at clock.
noon, expose to public sale before
the court, house door In
to the highest bidder, for cash,
described tract or parcel
of land, Lying and being m
town of Greenville, North Caro-
beginning at a stake on the e
side or street between
and 12th streets, thence running Mo
feet in an direction to
S. line and parallel with
then In a southerly
parallel with street
lo B. W. line; then wit a
Bald Moseley's lino a westerly
and parallel with 12th street
feet to street; thence
street in a northerly
ion feet to the beginning and
part of the land purchased by -i.
W. form I. C. Arthur and
wife, and being the identical tract, of
land conveyed by said and
wife to Purnell Tripp by deed, date-l
March 12th. 1903.
This sale will lie made to satisfy
the of said mortgage deed.
This the 4th dry of November,
C. S. CARR, Mortgagee,
S. T. WHITE, Assignee.
P. Harding, Attorney. v
. payment on or h
day of October, or this
notice will be plead of recovery.
This of October. 1910.
HENRY T. KING,
Administrator of Herbert
u as the B. E. Parham homo
place or residence.
This sale is made to satisfy tho
terms of mortgage deed.
This the 17th day of November, 1910.
F. M. HODGES, Mortgagee.
F. C. Harding, .
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before tho
Superior court of Pin county,
s of the estate of C.
N. deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons indebted to the
estate make Immediate payment, id
the and all persons
claims against said estate to
sent the same to the undersigned for
payment on or before the 31st day of
October, 1911, or this notice will
plead In bar the recovery.
Thin 31st of October. 1910.
HANNAH M.
ltd Administratrix O. X.
Carolina and The Barter
A Few Reasons
Why It Is Best
dives 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
stores in the country, and
the bottle, and money back if not sat-
Isn't this fair
Left
LINIMENT
ton bone NO
AND IN
MAN AND BEAST
SERIAL NO.
GUARANTIED THE
ACT,
PRICE, THIS SIZE, CENTS
NOAH REMEDY CO.
V. MM.
important Notice
The genuine Noah's Liniment looks 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 la
red Ink on the original, both on the label and on out-
side container. Accept nothing but Noah's Liniment.
It Is the only Pain Remedy sold under a positive
If your dealer will not supply you, send
in stamps and we will mail you a and re-
fund money if not perfectly satisfied. Beware of
fraud; accept no substitute.
Proof Positive
Cured Bo
had been suffering with bone
for three years. I have been
using Noah's Liniment, and can say
that it cured me completely. Can want
better than I have In two years.
Liniment will do all you claim. Rev,
S. E. Cyrus, Donald, a
In Side and Neuralgia.
five years I suffered with
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 Raise 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 tried
and In less than a week was en-
free from pain. A.
chester,
Stiff Joints and Backache.
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.
have been benefited greatly by
Noah's Liniment, using it for a sprained
ankle. Mrs. W. D. Robertson, West
Somerville,
I,,
. Pains In the Back.
suffered ten years with a
fully sore pain In my back, and tried
different remedies. Lesa 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.
Rheumatism In the Neck.
received the bottle of Noah's
and think It has helped me
I have rheumatism in my and
It relieved it right much. Mrs. Martha
A. Lambert, Beaver Dam,
For Horses.
have never used a liniment we
consider the equal to Noah's Liniment
for bruises, sprains, strained tendons
and to use on throat, sides and chest
for distemper, colds, etc. Richmond
Transfer Co., Richmond,
Better Than 95.00 Remedies.
cheerfully recommend all stable
men to give Noah's Liniment a trial
and be convinced of its wonderful
properties. We have obtained as
good if not better results from its use
than v did from remedies costing
per bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth
Transfer Co.,
County Corn Shows.
South Carolina is giving us some-
thing new in the way of corn
and they are not only in-
tensely interesting at home, but art
giving the State world-wide publicity
That is all on account of the
the boys of South Carolina
Corn have beaten the
world on the number of bushels
corn raised per acre. At Manning
S. C, Thursday the biggest and
successful corn show so far this fa J
in any county, occupied the
of a large crowd. The exhibit
so marvelous and the exercises were
so interesting it was late in the
before the affair came to a
close.
About of the corn club boys
in Clarendon county made exhibits
and all of them evinced deep interest
in the progress of the great work Id
which they are engaged. The great-
est yield of corn on one acre in
Clarendon was bushels, while
there were five boys whose
were more than bushels per
There were exhibits, including
by Miss Hannah a 15-year-
old girl, who won the third prize in
the contest for having raised
on one acre. Broad-
war. boy, got first prize for
The second greatest yield
was by Jake Williams, whose crop
amounted to bushels. The first
prize was the second and the
third The went to the girl
com raiser but everybody will be sat-
that she should have gotten o
dollar a bushel for her bush .-Is.
The members of the Boys Com
Club averaged a production of
bushels per acre, or bushels on
their aces.
These corn contests in North and
South Carolina demonstrate that c-
ton, tobacco and peanuts are not the
only big money crops that can be
raised in this part
country. Let us have some
Hay Clubs for next
Star.
The only thing of which the i
is certain is that it isn't safe to
e certain about anything.
Sympathy has no place in business
business has no place for it.
TO THE PUBLIC.
We Are Agents for Parisian Sage and
Guarantee k Wooten.
Parisian Sage, the quick-acting
hair Is guaranteed.
To stop falling hair,
To cure dandruff,
To cure itching of the scalp,
To put life into faded hair,
To make harsh hair and
To make hair grow, or money
back.
It is the most delightful hair dress
made, and is a great favorite
with ladies who desire beautiful and
luxuriant hair.
Price a large bottle.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
North County.
Before D. C. Moore, clerk.
Henry Harding, administrator
of the estate of Walter Corbett,
vs.
J. J. Corbett, Mary Satterfield,
and husband, G. W. Satterfield,
Allie Jones and husband, Calvin
Jones, James Corbett, Lillie
Lawhorn John A. Harris,
Satterfield, Ira Satterfield Robt.
Satterfield, Eula Satterfield, Lil-
lie Satterfield, Arthur Satterfield
Sallie Satterfield and
Satterfield, the last eight minors,
heirs-at-law of the said Walter
Corbett.
By virtue of a decree of the
court of Pitt county, made by
D. C. Moore, clerk, in the above en-
titled special proceeding, the under-
signed commissioner, will, on
day, the 17th day of December, 1910,
at o'clock, m. expose to public
sale before the court house door in
Greenville, to the highest bidder, for
cash, the following described tract
or parcel of land, Lying and
being in the county of Pitt and State
of North Carolina, and described as
Situate in Falkland town-
ship, adjoining the lands of R. A.
Cotten, Ivey Smith and others, and
being known as the Walter Corbett
home place, containing acres, more
or less. The said F. C. Harding,
commissioner, will first sell the
standing timber of and above the
of in. in diameter across the
stump when cut, with term of five
years with which to cut and remove
the same, and said commission.-
secondly will sell the land and
taken together as a whole and re-
serves the right to accept or reject
This the 17th day of November, 1310
F, C. HARDING Com.
Good Thing to Know.
If you own a hard rubber
Coward Wooten wants
to know that they will sell you a Hot
vie of for only cents.
Remember this, all who suffer with
bottle of
it is put up In
package and sold for to
. to accommodate the vast am y
of people who already own a
inhaler.
Coward Wooten will sell it t
you at that price and- give you the
opportunity to begin at once to
yourself of vile catarrh and snuffing
and spitting that go
It
Many people through years of neg-
have let catarrh get a strong
hold upon them. Some of these
unreasonably think that one bot-
of ought to cure them.
No matter how chronic your ca-
troubles. is
teed by Coward Wooten to cure
them if you give it half a chance.
It all, and deal-
soothing, antiseptic properties
will make yon feel better in a day
If you own an inhaler get a
bottle of at Coward ft
today. If you do not o
a inhaler, ask for a out-
fit, which includes inhaler.
Poverty may be borne with fortitude
by some people but never by the worn
whose face is her fortune.
Christmas comes next after
giving.
ISSUE
MISSING
to
y, .