Eastern reflector, 9 December 1910


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





A LEGAL DILEMMA
Tangle of Red Tape In an Eng-
Extradition Case.
GETTING AROUND THE LAW.
Only tho Quick Wit of the Canadian
Police Inspector Kept a Notorious
Criminal In Custody When In Realty
He Was as Free as the Air.
The manner in which a prisoner ex-
to England from a foreign
country is treated while on the voyage
home depends very much on the de-
who has him in charge and
also on whether or no there is any
suspicion that he may be
violence either to himself or to
others.
For instance, in the case of Jabez
Balfour, who was taken to England all
the way from Aires, there
was a strong ill
he contemplated com-
suicide. Consequently
tor who had him in charge, de-
to take no risks that he could
possibly avoid.
The regulations do not permit of an
prisoner being handcuffed
on board ship once the vessel has left
port, and he must be allowed one
hour's exercise on deck each day.
These indulgences, if indulgences they
may be called, were therefore not
withheld from Balfour.
But he got few others. For twenty-
three hours out of every twenty-four
he was Immured in a locked cabin. Be
was not permitted even to enter the
public dining room, his meals being
brought to him by Mr. himself
after the rest of the passengers had
fed. He was, besides, constantly
watched and was subjected, to a most
rigorous search immediately on com-
aboard.
His only relaxation was an
game of chess with some of the
passengers who kindly came to bis
cabin to play with him by permission
and In the presence of bis keeper.
This sea Imprisonment lasted exactly
one month and a day, and Balfour
afterward declared that it was the
most trying experience of a captivity
that was destined to continue for
nearly twelve years.
One of the longest and in its later
stages one of the pleasantest voyages
over undertaken by an
criminal was that which Charles
ten Davidson, the notorious forger,
some years back in the custody
of Chief Inspector Murray of the Ca-
department of justice.
Murray tracked the wanted man
Mexico and secured his extradition to
Canada. But then his difficulties be-
He could not bring his prisoner
to Canada by the direct route through
the United States, for immediately
Davidson set foot in that country he
could have demanded to be released.
There was therefore nothing for ft but
to convey him by way of Jamaica and
England and thence back across the
Atlantic to Quebec.
On the voyage Murray kept David-
son under close observation, although
allowing him considerably more free-
than allowed Balfour.
When, however, he had got safely as
far as London he was both mortified
and astonished at the likelihood of his
having had all his trouble for nothing.
The was, be was told, that a
extradited from a foreign
to British colony could not
kt i In custody In England for
twenty-four hours, nor
be taken as a prisoner on
British ship sailing from a
port.
iii-iv was a dilemma. Davidson was
free as he only known It.
equal to the occasion. I
he said,
sot you safe. There Is last
stage of the journey to complete. If
I allow you to travel saloon with mo
as an ordinary first class passenger
will you give me your word to play
me no
To this proposition Davidson, know-
nothing of the real state of affairs,
was naturally quite ready to agree.
And so it came to pass that one of the
notorious criminals Canada has
ever known came home In state; free,
yet not free, a voluntary prisoner, and
yet an involuntary
Weekly.
Tactful Truth.
appeal to Mr. Verity, whose truth-
nobody said the out-
raged hostess, with a glitter in her
eye. Verity, do you think I sup-
ply my boarders with bad
The others looked eager attention to
see how Mr. Verity would get out of
it.
he answered, with a bow,
truth on which you compliment
me forces me to declare that your but-
is one of your strong
Baltimore American.
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR
EXCHANGES TODAY
CONDENSED FOR OUR BUSY READERS
CONVENTION OF GOVERNORS.
Police After Blind Tigers In Wades-
Gallon Jug of White Light
Found
Negro Shoots Woman of Bis-
Own Knee in
dent of T. J. Buggy Co. Dead.
Bites.
The safest way to measure your
maximum bite longitudinally is to lay
it out on an ear of corn. To get the
depth of the bite, measure It in a slice
of Globe.
And the Best way to determine
it your bite Is to
eat Plain Dealer.
What has hap-
to your dolly doc-
tor says it's a nervous breakdown.
He prescribed
of
of v
The Number Nine.
There were nine earths, according to
cosmogony, nine heavens,
nine hell and nine orders of
angels. The number being perfection
since it represented divinity was of-
ten used to signify a great quantity,
as in the phrases, nine won-
cat has nine and
tailors make a In Scotland
distempered cow was cured by wash-
her in nine surfs. To see nine mag-
pies was considered extremely lucky.
Nine knots made in a black woolen
thread served as a charm in the case
of a sprain. It was also believed and
Is some that if a servant girl
finds nine green peas in one pod and
lays them on the window sill the first
man that enters will be her beau.
Nine grains of wheat laid on a four
leaved clover enables one, it is said, to
see the fairies.
A feed of com for a horse off two
stalks is good corn. That's
Mr. H. Browning, of Monroe, grew
this ears on each
large ears, to be sure,
good size ones. Mr.
has been growing prolific corn for a
number years and he has get
growing of corn to high standard
Monroe Enquirer.
Wadesboro, Nov.
arc getting busy these days. Police-
man Howell found a gallon of
key in bottles in a buggy in the
in the rear of l-I W. little Co's
store. He did not know to whom
vehicle belonged and left Dave
colored, to watch while he tried to
its owner. Dave however, as
soon as the cop turned his back
in the buggy and drove oft. a id
or he nor the booze has since been
seen.
Greensboro, Nov. morn-
nine o'clock, in the presence
of others, Fred dis-
reputable about town, enter-21
the home of Bertha Price, a re-
siding on East Washington
and deliberately shot her down, with
a Colt's revolver, the ball
going clear through her body, en
below the heart and.
through the left lung.
Carthage, Nov. W. I
Jones, president of the Tyson
Jones Buggy Company, of
died this morning after a gradual de-
for the past three years.
Twenty-roar States Represented In
Conference
By Wire to The Reflector.
Louisville. Ky. Nov. Gov -r-
of twenty-four states arrived
here today from Frankfort to con-
the conference which opened
that city yesterday. A delegation of
prominent Louisville people to
where they met the gov-
and escorted them here. Tn
first session of the conference her
was held at the Hotel,
where the governors were afterwards
entertained at luncheon. The
on bylaws and
has been appointed by Governor
rt. are Governors F rt,
Harmon, Weeks, Marshal and Ansel.
Governor Draper will preside at ll
sessions here.
DEATH OF MRS. E. J. BROOKS
of Trinity Professor Pies
Within Month of Her
Professor E. C. Brooks left yest r-
day morning early for his old home
in Grifton, Pitt county, where he
called by a telegram announcing .
death of his mother Mrs. E. J. Brooks
Mrs. Brooks died Sunday, the 27th,
exactly twenty-seven days after the
death of her husband. She had
an stroke and though
she Improved, there was seen to
no chance for her at any time.
Professor Brooks went to her hill-
side two weeks ago but found
somewhat improved and returned to
his work. She was about seventy
years of age and leaves four children.
Durham Herald
The Curse of
The somber, long haired, seedy look
man was speaking in a voice of
rolling thunder.
million times a million fateful
curses sit balefully athwart his hateful
head of tow Through the gloomy eons
may his black soul flit homeless for-
his balance, I ob-
served the stranger.
said Smith; Rimer,
the well known poet, swearing at the
editor who rejected his
No Practical Difference.
made a said young Mrs.
picked up my locket in-
stead of the little gold watch you gave
replied her husband.
only difference is that the
doesn't tell time and the locket doesn't
pretend Star.
Knew What They Were.
my good boy, can
you tell me what vowels are First
of course I can
me, then, what are
vowels First Boy at the
simplicity of the
ha
The Cotton Picker.
We had been wondering what had
become of the cotton picking ma-
chine. We had practically lost sight
of it since the demonstration i
Charlotte, some years ago, but The
Norfolk Landmark has resurrected u
That paper learns from an article y
Arthur Page, in The World's
for December, that Mr. Angus Camp-
boll, of Chicago, has perfected
picker after twenty-four years of ex-
Many of the machines
are said to be now in use. It Is claim-
ed that he machine will pick fr
to pounds of cotton a
In a good field and at an operating
cost of Of course, to this must
be added interest on the cost of the
machine and its depreciation in value
But to pick a like amount of cot on
by hand would cost anywhere be-
tween and It seems that tho
machine also may be used for other
Relieved of its cotton pick-
devices, a plow, planter,
or any other farm implement might
be hitched to the 29-horse power
tor. It is the machine
H. Price has been
since it was tried here.
would like to see more of it and read
less about Chronicle.
Sale of Personal Property.
At the home place of the late j
B. Kilpatrick, in Swift Creek
ship, on Tuesday, December 20th,
1910, the undersigned administrator
will sell at public auction, for cash,
the personal property belonging
the estate, consisting of one hors-.-,
two mules, six cattle, farm
wagons, carts, corn fodder,
hay, cotton, etc.
Sale will begin at 10.30
a. m. EDWARD KILPATRICK,
Administrator of J. B. Kilpatrick.
A BIG LINE OF NECK-
wear just received at Pulley
Bowen's.
JIG LINE OF AND
cloaks at Pulley Bow .-it's
JUST RECEIVED A NEW
of long black Pulley
Bowen.
A NEW LOT OF TAILOR-
made suits, just in a. Pulley
Bowen's.
SEE PULLEY BOWEN FOR
long black plush coats. 2-
Messrs. A. C. of Cumber-
land, Md., George D. J. An-
Ross and Phillip H. Johns
of Philadelphia who have been tr-o
guests of President R. H. Wright at
the Training school and enjoying a
few days hunting with him, left
morning for their homes.
Is the Mot Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, V. C FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1910.
Number
Sill HUNDRED
TO BE GIVEN THE PEOPLE OF
EASTERN CAROLINA
ENTER NOW AND BE A WINNER
The Reflector Inaugurates a
Voting of the
est Voting Enterprises Ever
In the South's Best Section.
The Reflector today announces a
Popularity Voting Contest In which
beyond a doubt the interest will be
more during the next
weeks than has ever attended
contest conducted by a Eastern North
Carolina newspaper. This will have
as Its prime cause the fact that the
prize list Is attractive,
and the knowledge of the Pitt aid ad-
Joining county people that con-
test will be carried out from start
to finish hi a perfectly
ward and fair manner to all parties
concerned.
We announced this contest some
few days ago, but afterwards decided
to alter the prize list and put the-
contest in charge of a manager.
The contest is inaugurated
with a view to bettor advertise
The Reflector in its field. We are
endeavoring to give our the
best at all times, and we feel sum
that every new subscriber added to
our list during this campaign
become a permanent one.
There is a heavy expense attached
to a contest of the character which
we are inaugurating. Besides the
heavy expense of the prize list there
is quite an item of expense attached
to properly advertising the contest.
order that each candidate who
enters the contest with a
to win may be rewarded, tilt
of the prize list has been so
arranged that the possibility
failure to win a prize is reduced I
a minimum. Besides the grand
prises there the district
and special prizes. Every article
Mi .
A Clean, Fair Contest
This fact, The Reflector desires
thoroughly to emphasize. From
ginning to end the contest will be
conducted with the one paramount
purpose of making it absolutely fair
The interests of every contestant who
enters the race will be safeguarded
at every point. Speculation of any
kind positively will not be permitted
The Reflector wants only bona
subscriptions, paid by the sub-
scriber, and It will not
accept any other kind.
It is desired that every person
enters the race feel that it is to be a
contest of merit, In which the
will go to who do the best work.
To this end. The Reflector has at a
high price, arranged for the most per-
and thorough contest system of
recording and tabulating to be had in
this country.
prizes in all are offered
The Reflector to those persons re-
the highest number of
And It offers to any white person of
good character, man woman, boy or
girl, residing anywhere in Its
the opportunity to compete for
win one of these prizes without a
of cost to or to her.
Every one of those valuable
costing in the aggregate 1600.00, Ml
to be given away in the strictest sense
of the word When it is considered
that a prize worth more than
may be won in a few time
wit out the lire of a single
cent, the contest becomes worthy of
consideration by almost any person
with a few hours of spare time
For tho magnificent prizes it is of-
The Reflector wants only a lit-
work among friends and neighbors
from those who a little
hustling and the will of the
It is offering to the people
within its territory what It believes to
be the opportunity of a generation, but
It hopes at the same time to benefit in
Increased circulation and new friends
made.
The Reflector subscribers and pub-
generally are invited to send to the
office the nomination of any
whom they would like to see win in
the contest
Ballots will be allowed on each
remittance made on subscript-
ion to The Reflector. The schedule
of votes thus allowed can be found
in the contest else-
where in this Issue. Fifty per cent
more votes are allowed on new
than on old ones
The contest will close February
1911, at which time the M
of tho excellent prizes will be de-
by disinterested judges
picked from the ranks of busings
and professional men of Pitt county.
How to the Reflector's Contest
Fill out the Nomination Ballot pub-
in this issue and Bend to the
Contest Manager of The Reflector.
Each contestant is entitled to one
Nomination Ballot, good for
votes. Contestants can nominate
themselves. They do not have to be
subscribers to The Reflector.
are no obligations upon entering the
contest and It costs nothing to try H,
Send In your name or that of a
friend today.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Nomination Coupon
The Reflector's Voting Contest
While it Is not absolutely that one of these blanks
be sent In for each candidate who desires to compete, It facilitates
matters to use them. The blanks need not be sent In but one time.
I HEREBY
Mr Mrs. or
of . Contest District No.
Street
as a Candidate In The Reflector Company Contest.
Nominated
My occupation or profession.
THE FIRST OF THESE COUPONS RECEIVED FOR A CANDI-
DATE COUNTS FOR VOTES.
Under no circumstances will the nominator's name be divulged,
Three Hundred and Fifty Seven in
One Year.
Register of Deeds Moore has is-
sued the following marriage licenses
since last
WHITE.
W. L. and Carrie Phillips.
Henry and Alice Johnson
L. P. Dudley and Willie
Greene and Esther Elli-
son
W. L. Johnson and Annie
Harris.
C. C. Candle
Thomas Dixon and Sarah Single-
tor.
Ernest Bullock and Flora
eon.
D. C. Blount and Mary
J E. Donaldson and Minnie Ste. h-
The total number of licenses Is-
sued tor the fiscal year Is
Another Visiting Minister.
There was much pleasure to th
in Memorial Baptist
church at having Rev. George J.
of occupy
pulpit Sunday morning and
He delivered Inspiring and
sermons at both services. He Is
known In Greenville and th.
people were to him. He
inc Mrs. Powell come over Saturday
evening and were the guests of Mr.
S, Everett.
home
-1
R PRINT





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
DOES CIVIC
ADVERTISING PAY
D. M. CLARK EXPRESSES
SOMETHING OF INTEREST
WAT WESTERN CITIES ARE DOING
and Have Op-
of Laying Their Art-
Before The
be Accomplished Ad-
It is an undisputed fact that
you find a successful merchant
r other business man, his success is
the result of an extensive sys-
em of advertising. The logical d-
from this dogma is that
n possession of resources that will
e beneficial to themselves if utilized
y others, It is a wise policy to adv-i-
these resources or advantage,
if a municipality is
d in the midst of a wealthy
with tobacco, cotton, and oil-
r staple commodities as its products
having two
and a boat line with which to
at a low rates both farm
products, should
outside weld advised in
of these advantageous
In support of this reasoning, we
ill recall that our prosperous west-
cities that have grown so rapidly
the last few years, have i 1-
some plan for advertising lira
advantages of their pa
locality. It is interesting to
what some of our more pro
cities are doing, either by
subscription or by taxation,
the way of publicity. Here are
few of the amounts that are being
for municipal advertising
Memphis,
Portland,
re., St. Paul,
Of many other smaller
do not outlay any like this
money on advertising
it almost all towns of any
in the west or middle
some form or system by l
cry asset is presented in Its
light to prospective invest-
or manufacturers seeking r;
of location, and at the earn-
engaging the services of an ex-
to follow up replies to the most
inquiries, with personal
dig.
The methods of obtaining this ad-
fund different in the
cities. We will take for in-
Des Moines, Iowa, a
small city, y-t after an
campaign waged the
eater Des Moines Committee a
organization 1-
to our chamber of commerce,
m of been privately
or municipal advertising
d just seven months later Des
was better by several n -w
Although this method of
contribution wag very s
in Des Moines, the
Times thinks the fairest
by a moderate tax levy, so that as
share the profits they should pro
a share the expense,
rho ad-
the citizens of that
. should profit the experience
their cities that have
ll i
GREENVILLE
L. President
J. A. ANDREWS.
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier H. D, Assistant Cashier
DO YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT
You 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.
k MONEY in Bank is a starter towards economy, always ready for use,
or to be added to.
The Greenville Banking Trust Co.
I 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.
C. S. CARR, Cashier
to say that not one of those cities comparing our own town and r i j
have been by to that class of
in the past years could offer who buy the most costly.
thing like the advantages for ma
that are possessed by
district.
I hope all who know me, know .
to a booster and not a knocker l
Snow Horning.
People here were surprised upon
goods for their top shelves and getting up Sunday morning to
let the public know they have j ground covered with about t v
inches of snow, as late e
that are attractive
D. M. CLARK
Subscribe The
night before nothing to
that snow was near. Most of U
The Carolina Hoe a Mi Enter
SALES FOB NOVEMBER
Pounds at an Average Price
of
Secretary C W. Harvey, of
board of trade, has furnished
, the following figures relative to
on the Greenville tobacco mar-
The sales for the month of
were 1,181.049 pounds at av-
price of per
the same month of 1909 the sales
re at an average
flee of showing that the mar
It averaged per hundred
Linda this November over
the reason from August
December 1st the market sold a
Ital of 6,812.79 pounds at an
age f f 11.07 per
the same date last year the sale;
at an average price
the average season price
year Wag above vast
The Greenville market sold
In November than either
or at Wilson
a million rounds and at
a little over six hundred
pounds.
Fatal to Bryan and
European travel, associated with
a study of monarchical
to a
g effect on modern American
Two ago Mr.
am J. Bryan came from
the popular man
But in less than hours
had lost his chance to be
His speech advocating th;
of government
of was a
ow to his Theodore
cane back from
his the popular and
idolized man in the
kept his tongue for a while, the
lost surprising event of his
at when he began to talk he com-
as fatal mistakes as
theme wag
too, had become enamored with
strong governments of Europe;
power and splendor of the gov-
and the weakness
He ridiculed our con-
and attacked the Supreme
tart for rendering decisions in
with the constitute
, goes many
w shots further towards monarchy
ad away from democracy than
government ownership of rail-
Enterprise.
Natural
In this day when intensive
is being preached line upon
and upon precept there is
some little danger that the term may
come to be as meaning
merely heavier and heavier
The use of
fertilizers is necessary and when
the are combined
scientifically yields large returns, b t
after all nature itself has furnished
an kind of
which should by no means be jct-
ed. A government expert offers some
Interesting legumes A farmer whose
corn acreage was averaging bush-
els put In a crop of and toe
next season his yield Jumped to P
bushels an acre. Another man found
that a similar experiment increased
his crop of Irish potatoes per acre
from bushels to Still more
striking Is the experience of a
planter. In 1902 this man used
pounds of fertilizer to the acre
picked an average of 1.6 bales. In
1905 he used pounds and
2.14 bales, and in 1908. with
same amount of fertilizer, he
ed 2.27 bales to acre. With a. f
the amount of fertilizer he reaped
twice the amount of cotton, simply
by lotting nature furnish the greater
part of the fertilization.
It is not logical, of course, to draw
too strong inferences from one or two
examples, but the figures
shows what leguminous crops can ac-
when used as fertilizers.
Intensive farming, to reach Its high-
est excellence, must be so carried o
as to be feasible at
for fertilizer bills run up rapidly Into
big money. It is not the gross re-
from a crop that makes
farmer's circumstances easier, but
his net profit. A thorough under-
standing of clover and its
crops as fertilizers will
go a great way towards increasing the
latter economic Ob-
server.
Wonderful
Governor
There is such a thing as filling a
community a little too full of poll-
tics In fact, it Is easily done. But
Is one thing that can easily
I be settled and now is a good time
I to do it. Let's name Hon. Locke
for governor and be quiet. He
one of the State's sons
and will make a good and great
a-id will ho and
i elected and there's no use fussing
about It. The Post would like W
see It done quickly, without noise,
Post.
A tax-payer is a queer
least some are. The effort to make
the city or county do work
for an Individual Is proverbial
The other day three men drove
teen miles to town to see the
officials to try to get a foot log
placed across a small stream. Ask-d
how long It would take to do
work, they said probably half
hour. didn't you men do
It yourselves, Instead of the three of
wasting a whole day In
to town to have the county do
asked One of the officials It
is the duty of the came
answer. As a matter of fact It is
nothing of the kind. The object of
the foot log is to save walking to
school by taking a near cut.
h- div before Incident
a man came In and for the tenth
time endeavored to get the county to
raise a bridge across a small
a few feet higher so that his cows
could pass under It from one field
to another. The effort to get so
for nothing W common.-
Greensboro Record.
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
store filled with goods and
cordially invite you to come to
see us.
J Possibly a War Relic.
A. J. Griffin has brought
Reflector an old bayonet that he found
tin the vicinity of where the breast
works were during the civil war.
old bayonet, now badly eaten
rust, was probably dropped
lost by some soldier stationed he
lb fr-
Had Mentioned It
was one man whose
was said the Sunday school
teacher. one of you can tell
me who he C
Little Mary Jane's hand went up
land the teacher nodded to her.
was mamma's first I
Greenville, N. C.
See That Your Ticket Reads
via
CHESAPEAKE LINE
to Baltimore
APPOINTED STEAM KS
ALL OUTSIDE STATEROOMS.
leave dally 6.15 p. m. from foot
of Jackson arrive Baltimore at 7.00 a. n. connection
made with rail lines for all points. For further particulars call
on or write
F. R. T. P. A., L, Norfolk, Va. I
Subscribe to the Reflector.
R PRINT





v,
Homo and Far aid Tie Fasten
DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX.
DOCTORS SAID INCURABLE-
RELIEVED BY
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
Winterville, N. C, Dec. V
B. Bryan went to Raleigh Wednesday
on business for the Pitt County Oil
Company.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
piny have just received a car load
of Wire fence. They can supply
you fence fence your farm
whether it be a large or small farm
Miss Nelson, of who
has been visiting Miss Annie
Lawhorn, returned home Thursday.
If you have green pork to sell, s-.-e
A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company.
Mrs. R. H. Hunsucker left
day morning for Raleigh and i
field to spend several days
friends. . ;
A. W. Ange Company are pa
the highest price for turkey
They want for Christmas din
Mr. R. L. Abbott attended the i
maids convention at
last night. He, too. wishes for
to exchange some of its
bachelors with Ayden for one of it-
old maids.
We will give a good reduction o
woolen dress goods from now
January 1st, 1911. Frisco
per mohair, goo
style at per yard; flannel,
quality, at per yard;
stripes at Come and see a
be W. Ange Com
Mrs. M. G. Bryan left Friday
Whichard to spend several days wit
friends.
Mr. L. Ange, of Jamesville.
has been spending several days
his soil, Mr. A. W. Ange, returns
home
Mr. O. W. Rollins, of Ayden,
town Thursday.
Rev., ill A. Adams, who has bee
away for several days, returned U-
night.
Mr. J. S. Ross, of Ayden, was ii
town Friday.
Winterville, N. C, Dec.
John Cooper left Saturday for
Rapids.
Mr. R. w. left Sunday morn-
for Wilmington, to spend sever-
days with his brother.
Harrington, Barber Company
have n car load of ground
dairy salt.
Mr. H Button, a student of
Winterville High School, left for Nor-
folk Sunday morning to visit his
brother.
Harrington, Barber Company are
unloading a car of building lime.
Mr. O. W. Rollins of Ayden, was
in town Sunday.
If you need a good pair of pants,
real cheap, see Harrington. Barber
Company.
Mr. T. E. Cannon made a trip In
the country Sunday evening in spite
of the cold.
D. R. Jackson offers for sale his
black smith and shop tools, wagon,
buggies, plows, cross-cut saws,
press, also two houses
and lots and concrete barber
Rev. Lloyd Tucker held services
at tho Baptist
and night, and delivered two gen
sermons.
Mr. Eugene made a ;
trip to Greenville Monday evening
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Con
have a trade on their
style harness. They have just
a big shipment.
Mr. J. A. of .
in town yesterday.
One hundred carts and wheels o
the best grade for sale by the A. o
Cox Manufacturing Company.
Mr. M. B. Bryan left for
Monday morning to accept a
W. L. Brogden Company a.
bookkeeper.
If you want to make a nice sell c
ion of furniture, go to A. W.
i Company's. They have Just
a nice lot.
Wants to Help Some One
For thirty years J. F. Boyer, of
Mo., needed help and
ind it. That's why he wants
one now. Suffering so lo;
he feels for all distress
Nervousness, Loss of A
Lassitude and Kidney
He shows that Electric Bit-
worked wonders for such
he writes
cured me and now I am
It's also
for Liver
Blood Disorders, Female Coif
and Malaria. Try them f-0-
it all druggists.
FARMING THAT PAYS.
Robust and Strong-Splendid Appetite.
Mrs. E. West, Main St., WIs.,
have used in our family for a number of years and when I
say that it is a fine medicine for catarrh and colds, I know what I am talking
about.
have taken it every Spring and Fall for years, and find that it
keeps me robust, strong, with splendid appetite, and free from any illness.
few years ago it cored mo of catarrh of the stomach, which the doctors
had pronounced incurable.
am very much pleased with
Isle of Cotton to I ere on
Hales on
Mr. J. T. of Farmville, ha,
harvested and marketed, we
to say, the largest cotton
to the amount of d
las ever been harvested in Pitt
y. The news has been given us
hat sixty acres of land be
sixty bales of cotton and
five acres ten bales. This is
he kind of farming that pays and
we believe every farmer in Eastern
Carolina can do as well if they
be careful in selection of seed, prep-
of soil and cultivation.
Mr. Thorne is one of the few farm-
who are taking advantage of the
farm work In
paring for this remarkable crop,
which was demonstration work, ho
first began by making a very care-
selection of seed, deep breaking
of the land, with two-horse plows,
and consistent
pounds of guano to the acre. A
disc harrow was also used, in
cultivation he plowed light.
The seed from Mr. cot-
ton was sold for per bushel and
they will be used for planting next
year.
The farm demonstration work
carried on by the government Is, am
will prove the greatest boon e
farmers of anything that has
set forth for their uplift.
Bowels and Stomach.
Miss Mary Jones, Reynolds Ave.,
Chicago,
can recommend as a good
medicine for chronic catarrh of the
bowels and stomach. I have been
led severely with it for over three years.
year ago I began to take
the wonderful tonic for and I
noticed a wonderful at
once. I took sir bottles i n succession and
J always have it on hand to take some
now and then when my is bad.
cannot express My praise for
your tonic. I weighed only ninety
pounds before taking now one
hundred nineteen
Catarrh of Internal Organs.
Mrs. H. Jackson, R. F. d. New-
man, Ga., have had catarrh
of tho Internal organs for more a
year. I tried other medicines without
any benefit.
was persuade J to give a
trial, and the first bottle proved a god-
send, and after ten bottles I liar
received a
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
NOTES FROM THE I.
METAL SHINGLES
repair
What other roofing will last as long and look as well
They're fireproof, and very easily laid.
C laid over wood U necessary, without ere-
dirt or inconvenience.
For prices and other detailed information apply to
to Tire Reflector.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
RABBITS.
Election of Team Captain Sid
Awarding
Chapel Hill N C, Dec. W
Winston Jr., has elected cu-
of the football team
the 1911 season. Winston has
ed on the varsity two session. II
work at end, although erratic
been brilliant at times. He will
graduate next year.
The wearers of the X. C. Tues-
day and awarded the
on Young
and Four of
these are The
ran was awarded to Thompson,
Garrett, Spainhour, Tillett, Viable.
Winston, Porter,
and Brown.
The faculty committee on
to establish bask. 1-
ball as a varsity sport in
Hi I Nat due
Id's champion runner over
yards will coach the team and
charge of the business affairs of Me
earn for the present. A
schedule will be arranged
different colleges of the state. The
will serve as a pleasant bridge
across the time between the of
the football season and the open
of the baseball and track season. The
teen backed by the
Athletic Association. It is i
probable that the varsity monogram
will be awarded to basket ball play
for the first year or two.
Professor M. C S Noble lectured
before the Davie County
Association N r 26th, on g
grammar and North
history. Professor Noble is in gnat
demand as a public speaker all over
the state.
The Thanksgiving dances were
in the college n on
Thursday and Friday nights. The
head on
night was led by Mr. R. M. Hanes.
Jr., of the German
club dance Friday Mr A. H.
Graham. Among the visitor to the
dance Thursday night were Hon. F.
Winston and Mr. Walter Murphy,
rho were in Chapel Hill in attend-
upon a meeting of a com
board n trustees of
University. About
young ladies were in
The fourth issue of the North Car-
High School Bulletin is off the
contains I-
articles on the teaching, of.
high school subjects by men
of the University faculty It
I also a list of the accredit d
schools of toe state. The
is issued quarterly by the
and Is sent to
school principals and teachers
it. Its purpose is the d-
and raising of the standard
the high schools of North Carolina
Shipping Business That Makes
City
The total amount of game shipped
from this place last week shows
still holds the
of rabbit In
A-
. made Detroit famous; the heel
the pro-
t lie
juice The News and
famous, so the rabbit industry
as made Chatham county and Sit
City famous Possibly it may seem
joke to some people and a r
f unbelief that rabbits were
shipped from this place alone
inter, but such is a fact and the
books of produce dealers here
witness to it. It would
pear that such a wholesome invasion
f the rabbit family deplete
to an that the crop
is season would be small, not
hey are here more numerous th m
The from the pi
last week amounted The
shipments of birds amounted to
These rabbits soil here at cents
co. and much easy money is thus
urned loose in the
Saved from Awful Death.
How an appalling calamity in his
family was prevented is told by A. V.
of Fayetteville, N. C. R.
F. D. No. sister had
he writes, was very thin
and pale, had no and seemed
to grow weaker every day, as all rem-
failed, till Dr. King's New Dis-
was tried, and so complete
cured her, that she has not be-n
troubled with a cough since. Its tho
best medicine I ever saw or heard
For coughs, colds, la grippe.,
croup, hemorrhage all
troubles, it has no equal,
Trial bottle free.
teed by all druggists.
W.
IN
North Carolina In the Lead
SAVINGS BANK
of
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of N. C.
Groceries
And Provisions
Cotton
Fresh kept
in stock.
Produce ht and
Stock mid Corn Growing,
the A. M
college in Raleigh will devote a
to course in live stock and com grow-
Lectures and Judging from
to be given on these. The aim- t
the is to create more interest
in live stock. Regular classes
be held, and tho attending, and it
all interested will do so
will be treated as all
and b- expected to do their pert of
work.
We do not think that we North Car-
really know what we have in
he Old North State or what
possibilities lie at our very
waiting for us to seize them.
For instance we know that we gr w
to some extent, that peanuts
ire in certain sections an import nit
crop, and that the state produces other
things of a
But at the same time we have
.-0 much of the great fertility of
especially the states of the
west, that most of us have come
o North Carolina as a very
good state in many respects, but de-
barred by Han from
competing with states in
upon
soil.
it that it
cot-3 not -i
a a distinct l f
the national
just, closed at Council Bluffs, Iowa,
North though in
every state in the union
not only more prizes than a
other state, but more prizes than any
other two states.
A thousand dollars in prizes is n
to be its own
but what means is worth
times that amount simply by way of
advertisement for state if for no
other i
Two championship ribbons,
prizes, second prizes and
was North Carolina's
lit this, greatest
show u the world. Truly a record
of which the state may well be
Greensboro News.
Five Quarterly
Three
Accounts
We a of Bank
in r b. mail
Write 1216
U. H. TAYLOR, Cashier.
or J. II Cashier.
I. C.
GREENVILLE N
or t h Ca i a
Until success is better understood
try to improve your failures.
SAM FLAKE
Harness Repair Shop
part of
OFFICE. I, C.
The fool and his money are soon
spotted.
BAKER HART
BAKER HART
Keeper.
The board of county
era Mr. J. L.
as standard keeper of weights
and in the county.
p In position
tho unwritten, law is
a lot it.
Deputy Sheriff.
S. I. Dudley has chosen
T. R. Moore us his office deputy. M-
has had much in
, work about the court house will
deputy
The Up-to-date Hardware
Store
IT is the place to buy y. u Paint, Varnish,
Stains, Material, Cook
Stoves, Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a full Line of Wall Pain s
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place
your orders now 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.
Baker Hart
N, C.
f,
i ,. .
. L.





Carolina and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
A few Reasons
Why It Is Best
Gives relief for all Nerve, Bone and Muscle
Aches and Pains more quickly than any
other remedy known.
to 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, Golds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, 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
LINIMENT
ran Him, and
AND HIM
MAN AND BEAST
NO. 1410.
fOOD AND
ACT,
THIS CENTS
U AND
NOAH REMEDY CO,
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 in
red ink on the original, both on the label and on
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 bottle and re-
fund money if not perfectly satisfied. Beware of
fraud; accept no substitute.
Proof Positive
of Bone Rheumatism.
been suffering with bone
for three years. I have been
Noah's Liniment, and can say
that it cured me completely. Can walk
bf tier than I have in two years. Noah's
Liniment will all you claim. Rev.
Cyrus, Donald, S.
In Side and
m years I suffered with
pain in side. Could not
sleep. I tried Noah's Liniment, and
the application made me feel
Mrs. Martha A. See, Richmond,
Couldn't Right Arm.
caught cold and had a severe at-
tack of rheumatism in my right
and could not raise my arm with-
out much pain. I tried Noah's
and In less than a week was en-
free from pain. A.
chester,
,.
Stiff Joints and
have used Noah's Liniment for
rheumatism, stiff Joints and backache,
and I can say it did me more good than
any pain remedy. Rev. George W.-
Smith, S.
Sprained Ankle.
have been benefited greatly by
Noah's Liniment, using It for a sprained
ankle. Mrs. W. D. Robertson, West
Somerville, f
In the Back.
suffered ten years with a dread-
fully sore pain In my back, and tried
different remedies. Less than half a
bottle of Noah's Liniment made a per-
cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D.
Point Eastern,
Neuralgia and
wife suffered for several years
with neuralgia and toothache. She used
about half a bottle of Noah's Liniment
and got Immediate relief. J. S. Fisher,
Policeman, Hodges, S.
Rheumatism la the Neck.
received the bottle of Noah's
and think it has helped me great-
I have rheumatism In my .
It relieved It right much. Mrs. r
A. Lambert, Beaver Dam,
For
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 93.00 Remedies.
cheerfully recommend all stable
men to give Noah's Liniment a trial
and be convinced of Its wonderful
properties. have obtained a,
good If not better results from its use j
than we did from remedies costing
per bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth
Transfer Co., Norfolk,
HER A CUES.
A Woman All Energy
Ambition Slipping Away.
Greenville women Know the
and paint that come the hi
fail n burden. Back-
ache, hip pains, headaches,
spells, distressing troubles, .;
tell of sick kidneys and warn you
the stealthy approach of
dropsy and Bright's disease.
Kidney Pills permanently cure nil
disorders. Here's proof of it
In a Greenville woman's
Susan N.
St., Greenville, N. C.
some time I suffered from dull, nag-
backaches and distressing pans
through my lions. My
were very weak and caused me groat
annoyance. My back pained
severely first arising in the
morning, I was so lame and sore
could scarcely get around. I at
length procured Kidney Pills
drug store and through
their use I was entirely relieved.
fact that my kidneys have given we
leads me to
recommend Kidney Pills very
For gale by all dealers.
cents. Co. Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the
Slates.
TO THE PUBLIC.
We Are Agents for Parisian Sage and
Guarantee A 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 soft 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.
Beautiful Display of Electric Device;.
One of the most artistically deco-
rated windows to be seen
is at the office of the Water and
Light Commission In the city hall
building. They show a lino of el-
devices suitable for Christmas
gifts, and the window Is beautifully
lighted. It Is well worth
and should offer practical
for acceptable holiday gifts
See their advertisement in this is-
sue.
Come on with your advertising
Mr. Business man. Christmas will
soon be hero.
other, .
of court begin
WEDDING AND OTHER GIFTS
Have within the past few days a saw lint sf test Cut-Glass,
Silver. Prices will interest yea. My Use Is tall of teed values far
PRESENTS. Guarantee every article a saving In price. Look the red sign
Bradley, The Jeweler
J. S. MOORING
b Start ea Point Men Urger stack Com to tee
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
C. T. MUN FORD'S
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
Roofing and Sheet Metal ;
For Slate
Tin
Flues
Shop Repair Work, and j I IT
is in Season, see J- I.
Number N. C.
to The Reflector.
rs
The Carolina Home Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
A GOOD SUGGESTION.
Representative-Elect Mooring Says
Convention.
Stoke. N C. Dec. 1910
Editor Reflector-
I believe that it is generally
that the next legislature
make Change in the road
and as the time is drawing near t.
the legislature to meet, like
to have the views of of
representative citizens along that
line.
I believe that one of the greatest
objections to a voting primary is t -at
it does away with assembling of
the people in county conventions, at
which time they could give
views on public makers.
I also believe that it would a
idea v. a convention now
and give the a chance to ex-
press themselves on such questions
as may come before the next
y are interested.
I would suggest that the chairman
of the committee, call a
convention at once, allowing each
township double number of
gates so as to make it a more rep-
body.
G. M. MOORING
of Good Roads Sentiment
President Finley of the Southern
Railway lately said in a
has long recognized the
need of good roads; everybody
been convinced that we ought to
have them. Legislatures have
large sums for the
of roadways, but there has
been considerable working at cross
purposes. Now have a chance,
for all to get together and
things with team
Upon this necessity for team
rests the work of county State
national associations. As
cannot work its own roads to
est public advantage except in c.
relation with the work of
ones, a county system is necessary.
And as a county to get the greatest
advantages should work in
with sister counties, State
is necessary. And to carry the
idea further, the should co-
operate with each other. Last week
there was organized at Washington
City the American Association for
Highway Improvement, the
of which will to unite and co-
ordinate into a nation-wide move-
the good roads work now being
prosecuted by individual states
communities. While each state and
action its peculiar prob-
and must employ its own
in the development of better
highway it is at tho same
true that the good roads question
in its most vital aspects,
the entire nation alike.
no state, county or township, eon
reap tho largest measure of benefits
from improved roads until its
boring organization has been aroused
to their
What Good Taste Will Do
A short time I chanced into a
country home which so
this point I wish to
describe the furnishings in detail. I
was a three-room log house; a if,
bed room, with the kitchen a d
dining room in one. When the pres mt
occupants found the house the old
walls were worm-eaten and
fall cracks, the floors were
wise old and broken. The
man brought flooring and
laid a beautiful selected pine floor
in the living room. The material
the floor cost the sum of one-
dollar and a quarter and the work
done at odd times cost no
able sum. The walls were covert-d
with a coarsely woven burlap, such
as is used in wrapping cotton
which cost In the neighborhood of
to The burlap was tightly
drawn into place and held fast by
small brass-head tacks. A number of
charming pictures, reproductions of
the world's best pictures, all in taste-
well-made, home-made frames
adorned the walls. Dainty muslin
curtains of an inexpensive
draped the quaint old-fashioned win-
A well-made library table of
well-selected oak, of
lines a quaint little tea table, a com-
arm chair, an inviting .-
seat, all the handiwork of
man of the house, supplied the
Hashing of the room. The color
harmony of this room was
soft brown of the floor, which h.
been treated to a coat of oil. w th
the addition of a few tasteful
rugs, the artistic wall covering, th-
delicate cream tint of the curtains,
with the furniture done in a good
wholesome brown, Hie result of a
coat of good wood stain, gave one a
sense of and fitness that
no amount of money could rend
more perfect. Just a word as to the
bed room. The floor hero had a
been renewed, but a good dark sail
such as I have Jed,
In these had quite
transformed the old shabby boards,
the cracks in the walls; had
been covered with strips of mus
and a dainty, inexpensive wall paper
covered the walls. The amount
money spent in the decorating an I
furnishing of this little log
was small. More y
b-en de tho
. -lie of limited means -i
a set of chairs for a living room or
for a cheap, factory-made table than
was expended upon this entire
room furnishing of this little cabin
Mrs. F. L. Stevens, in Raleigh
Progressive Farmer and Gazette.
THE THIRD FIRE.
Like The Other Two Was no
of
On Saturday e
in result have third lire h-
In a week, but like the two
It was not of much consequence
It occurred In a house by
colored people nearly opposite
Star warehouse on Ninth street,
was caused by taking a lighted lamp
without a chimney up stairs in the
from which some straw w
ignited. The was put out With
no damage to the building.
Those who had been g
with dread the third Are, now breath
easier that It came without doing a v
damage. Nevertheless v
should not fail to exercise care
against Arc
Professional Cards
W. F.
ATTORNEY VT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith
, next door to John
new
. ;
N. W. OUTLAW i
AT LAW .
office formerly occupied by. J. l.
Fleming.
W. C. D- M. Clark.
CLARK
Civil and Surveyors
Greenville, . . K.
Try This for Catarrh.
Get a it High-
outfit today.
Pour a few Jr from the
the Inhaler that comes with
and breathe it in four n
five times a day.
immediately will know that
soothes and heals- the in-
flamed and irritated membrane.
But does more than to
soothe and heal; it kills the gem s.
these g are at tie
loot of all conditions.
year I suffered terribly with
of
my catarrh was
Miss Helen Cal.
A outfit,
a bottle of a hard rub
pocket inhaler and simple n-
for use, costs only
If you now own a tonal ,
you get an extra bottle of
or only cents at Coward
and druggists everywhere.
Guaranteed to cure catarrh, croup,
and sore throat, or
back.
S. J. EVERETT
AT LAW
In Building. l
L. I. Moore. H Long
MOORE LONG
AT LAW
Greenville. . .
Gets a Fall.
On Tuesday while Mr.
Cobb was working about one of
new buildings going on
son avenue, he made a misstep
fell between the sleepers,
cm leg and quite
was laid up for a day or two
is out again.
Sale of Personal Property.
At the home place of the late
in Swift Creek
ship, on Tuesday, December 20th.
1910, the undersigned administrator
will sell at public auction, for cash,
the personal properly belonging t--
the estate, consisting of one hors-,
two mules, six cattle, farm
wagons, carts, com fodder
hay, cotton, etc.
Sale will begin at 10.30
a m. EDWARD
Administrator of J. B.
to
avoid, tic rich.
Hirers and Congress.
The Norfolk Southern railroad will
the National
and Harbors Congress, Wash-
D. C, Dec. 7th to 9th.
will be on Dale from 3rd W the
flints for
A Sure Way to Be Happy.
Herbert Spencer says that every
creature is happy when ho is fully
using his powers, says Mrs. Durum
Chance in The for N
To have something to do
in the doing broadens and
ons our powers, is the only way be
happy. Parents so often try
shield their children by doing every-
thing for them. What a mistake
is It is Just such children who
grow up indifferent, self-sufficient
and morally lazy.
By individual effort alone the chi-
actor grows and in the act of
only is it possible to know ti-
To on joy this growth it is
necessary to have some keen inter-
in your life, whatever they ma.
be. Try to see Into the
of nature, even if at first it lo hard
to overcome the sluggishness of
mind.
Resolve firmly that while you study
some one thing seriously you
continually be enlarging your Interval
obtaining a superficial knowledge
of many things. By a
knowledge I moan enough knowledge
to your interest stimulated -J
that you can be an Intelligent listener
on many outside
which you arc trying to perfect your-
It is usually m with
determined wish to avoid
energy, that combines
oft
CHARLES C. PIERCE
AT LAW
in all the courts. Office
building, next U
Dr. D. I James
DR. R. L, CARR
Harry H. W.
LAWYERS
Greenville. . gS
JULIUS BROWN
AT LAW
. ;
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office In building, on
street
Practices wherever his services a
desired.
. N.
OWEN H. . B. RODMAN
GUION GUION
Attorneys at Law
Practices where
vices required,
j ally in the counties
Craven, Carte
Pamlico, and State
Federal Courts.
Office Broad Street B
Phone NEW BERN, N. P
-j
to call
Correction in
Mr. C. W. Harvey, secretary of P
tobacco board of trade advises
that he made some errors in rope
the average price of sales of
m the Greenville market, K
published in Saturday's Reflect
The average price paid during t,
of November should
been and the average
for the-, Aug
November she
n e
Kw.





as
U-
as
Wm
BY THE REFLECTOR COMPANY
Any Resident of Eastern North Carolina May Compete. OPEN TO ALL--FREE TO ALL
A Year's Course in Fast Carolina Training School. or
I I Watch, Furniture, Harness, .
Prizes
CLOSES FEB. 1911. TEN WEEK-
FIRST GRAND PRIZE ONE PIANO
Quality of the highest character
was recognized when this beautiful
instrument was purchased as first
grand prize. The has been pro-
nothing short of an
Artistic triumph among pianist
and musicians who have known and
used all makes of pianos.
Purchased from and on display at the
store of FINE AN TE
SECOND GRAND PRIZE
A full course
in East Carolina
of the entire
session in this ex-
school.
Summary of Prizes
One Piano
One years course in
East Carolina
Teachers Train-
School
One set of Harness
One Suit of Clothes
One Buffet
One Overcoat
One Traveling Trunk,
One Lynx Muff
Nine Prizes Grand
20.0
20.00
25.00
20.00
17.50
20.00
Total
Division of Districts-Rules and Regulations-How
to Win Prizes of Your Choice.
Any white or woman, boy or girl, of good repute, in
North Carolina is eligible to enter this Great Popularity
Contest. Clip the Nomination Blank and fill it in with r
name or that of a friend and send it to The Reflector Contest De-
It costs you nothing to costs your Wen l
nothing to vote for you.
No votes will be issued for payment other than those scheduled.
No employee of The Reflector, or member of his family, will
permitted to participate in this contest as a candidate.
In case of a tie, the value of the prize will be divided.
Votes once Issued to one candidate cannot be changed to th.-
credit of another candidate.
Candidates and their friends are not confined to their district.
They may secure subscriptions anywhere.
A committee of unimpeachable public men will be chosen to
Judge the finish of this contest, and will assemble for that
pose immediately after the close of the contest.
By the filing of votes candidates accept and agree to
all conditions.
ABOUT VOTING.
Any question that may arise between contestants will be de-
by the Contest Management, and its decision will be ab-
solute and final.
Anyone who was taking The at the time this
started will be classed as an old subscriber. All others will b
classed as new subscribers.
A subscription will not be counted as new if it is simply trans-
from one member of a family or household to another
The right is reserved to reject the name of any candidate
cause, or to alter these rules and regulations should i
demand.
Until further notice no candidate will be permitted to cast mo
than certificate votes on each day of publication of
HOW VOTES WILL BE ISSUED.
Candidates are not restricted to getting subscriptions or votes
in their own particular districts, BUT MAY SECURE
IN ANY PART OF THE UNITED STATES and is cash ac-
companies order, votes will be issued. Candidates in one district
are not competing with candidates in other districts, except I
the grand prize. The division of districts, as shown herewith, so
equalizes competition, that every contestant has an equal chance
to win a first prize.
Ballots cannot be bought. They can only be obtained by sub-
scribing and prepaying a subscription to The Company
HOW TO ENTER THE
Pill out the Nomination Ballot published in this send
WAIN BUILDING, EAST TRAINING SCHOOL, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
to the CONTEST MANAGER of The Reflector. Each contestant
is to one Nomination Ballot, good for votes. Con-
can nominate themselves. They do not have to be sub-
to The Reflector. There are no obligations upon en-
the contest and it costs nothing to try it.
Send in your name or that of a friend today.
DIVISIONS OF DISTRICTS.
the purpose of the contest The Reflector's territory has
been divided as
District county of Pitt
District counties of Beaufort, Hyde, Tyrrell,
ton. Dare, Edgecombe and Martin.
District 8.-The counties of Halifax, Nash, Wilson, Greene,
Wayne, Johnson and Sampson.
District counties of Craven, Pamlico Carteret, Jones.
Onslow and Lenoir.
AWARDING OF PRIZES.
The judges of the finish of the contest will be guided by the
following
First Grand man, woman, boy or girl, having th
greatest number of votes at the close of the contest will be award-
ed the PIANO.
Grand man, woman, boy or girl, having th
second greatest number votes will be awarded one years
course in East Carolina Teachers Training School
Districts Nos. and After the grand prizes have been
awarded the next highest in either of the four districts
a. M.
o suit of clothes, choice to this scale.
at the store of C. T.
One at the furniture
store of Taft VanDyke.
Co. over-
coat at the store of C. S. Forbes.
One at the
furniture store of J. H. Boyd.
SPECIAL PRIZES.
One set of harness complete, at
the factory of the John Flanagan
Buggy Company.
One Black Lynx at the
store of Pulley Bowen.
One or gold
watch, bought of W. L. Best
SCALE OF VOTES.
On all prepaid subscriptions to the, scrip
Subscription of
Price . Votes
one year.
six months.
1.00 three months.
6.00 two years.
9.00 three years.
On ail paid subscriptions to the Car-
Home and Farm and the
Eastern Reflector.
Subscription
Price.
six months.
one year.
2.00 two years.
three .,
One-half of the above number f
votes will be given on ti old sub-
No. of
Votes.
CALL ON OR WRITE
CONTEST DEPARTMENT
The Reflector Company
will be awarded their choice of any of the valuable dis-
prizes. Then the second next highest their choice,
the third highest candidate their choice of the two remaining
district the fourth highest candidate the remaining
district prize.
A grand prize winner will not be permitted to win a district
prize.
RULES AND PLAN OF CONTEST.
Any white man, woman, boy or girl, either married or single,
may enter this contest by either sending the nomination coupon
to The Reflector office or by having a friend nominate them.
No employee or member of his family will be permitted to en-
the campaign.
The more rapid way to gain ground in the cam-
will be to start a canvass among friends for subscription a
to The Reflector. Positively no votes con be
After ballots are issued to one contestant they cannot be trans-
to another. This is enforced in order to prevent
In the vent of a tie for any of the prizes the prize will be the
joint property of the contestant tied.
Contestants are not confined to their respective districts in so-
voting coupons and subs but may solicit from
friends and acquaintances anywhere.
A subscription will not be considered now when the contestant
merely makes a transfer from one member of the family or
hold to another. A subscription which was not on the books when
the contest opened will be considered new, provided, it is not a
transfer as referred to above.
The Reflector's Contest Manager will render any assistance
to the contestant without being unfair to either
tan is. Candidates are invited to come often to The Reflector office
for on any detail of the contest.
Contest closes February 14th at o'clock p. m. Promptly up-
on the stroke of the hour the doors will be closed and
not inside the doors at that time will not be counted for
votes. The judges will be selected form among Greenville's
men. character and integrity will be beyond question.
They will be present during the closing hours of the contest to
see that that event closes in a fair and impartial manner.
Those contestants who are awarded the grand prizes will not
be eligible for district prizes, the district prizes going t.
in the district which received next highest.
The contest begins Dec, 7th, 1910 and closes Feb. 14th, 1911.
For further particulars call or address CONTEST
AGER, at the of The Reflector.
GRENVILLE, N. CAR.
TELEPHONE NUMBER





v.
Any Resident of Eastern North Carolina May Compete. OPEN TO TO ALL
One Piano, A Year's Course in Fast Carolina School. or Gentleman's Gold Q
I I Watch, Furniture, Harness, . . I
STARTS TODAY CLOSES FEB. 1911. TEN
FIRST GRAND PRIZE ONE S
PIANO
Quality of the highest character
was recognized when this beautiful
instrument was purchased as first
grand prize. The been pro-
nothing short of an
Artistic triumph among pianist
and musicians who have known and
used ail Stan eland makes of pianos.
Purchased from and on display at the
store of AN E
SECOND GRAND PRIZE
A full course
in East Carolina
of the entire
session in this ex-
school.
Summary of Prizes
One Piano CO
One years course in
East Carolina
Train-
School 150.00
yum
One set of Harness 20.00.
One Suit of Clothes 20.00
One Buffet .
One Overcoat 20.00
One Traveling Trunk 7.50
One Lynx Muff
Nine Prizes Grand
Division of Districts-Rules and Regulations-How
to Win Prizes of Your Choice.
Any white man or woman, boy or girl, of good repute, in
em North Carolina is eligible to enter this Great Popularity
Contest. Clip the Nomination Blank and fill ii in r
name or that of a friend and send it to The Contest De-
It costs you nothing to vote- it your i
nothing to for you.
No votes will be issued for payment other than those scheduled.
No employee of The Reflector, or member of his family, will
permitted to participate in this contest as a candidate.
In case of a tie, the value of the prize will be divided.
Votes once issued to one candidate cannot be changed lo
credit of another candidate.
Candidates and their friends are not confined to their districts.
They may secure subscriptions anywhere.
A committee of unimpeachable public men will be chosen to
judge the finish of this contest, and will assemble for that pa
pose immediately after the close of the contest.
By the tiling of votes candidates accept and agree
all conditions.
T VOTING.
Any question that may arise between contestants will be de-
by the Contest Management, and its decision will be ab-
solute and final.
Anyone who was taking The Reflector at the time this
started will be classed as an old subscriber. All others will
classed as new subscribers.
A subscription will not be counted as new if it is simply trans-
from one member of a family or household to another.
The right is reserved to reject the name of any candidate
cause, or to alter these rules and regulations should i
demand.
Until further notice no candidate will be permitted to cast mo
than certificate votes on each day of publication of names
BOW VOTES WILL BE ISSUE.
Candidates are not restricted to getting subscriptions or votes
in their own particular districts. BUT MAY SECURE
IN ANY PART OF THE UNITED STATES and is cash ac-
companies order, votes will be issued. Candidates in one district
are not competing with candidates in other districts, except i,
the grand prize. The division of districts, as shown herewith so
equalizes competition, that every contestant has an equal chance
to win a first prize.
Ballots cannot be bought. They can only he obtain,., by sub-
scribing and prepaying a subscription to The Reflector Company
HOW TO SOU'S
Kill out the Nomination Ballot published in this and
MB EAST TRAINING SCHOOL,
CAROLINA.
to the CONTEST MANAGER of The Reflector. Each contestant
is to one Nomination Ballot, good for 1.000 votes. Con-
can nominate themselves. They do not have to be sub-
set to The There are no obligations upon en-
the contest and it costs nothing to try it.
Send m your name or that of a friend today.
DIVISIONS OF DISTRICTS.
purpose of the contest The Reflector's territory has
been divided as
District county of Pitt.
District counties of Beaufort, Hyde, Tyrrell, Washing-
ton. Dare and Martin.
District counties of Halifax, Nash, Wilson, Greene
Wayne, Johnson and Sampson.
District counties of Craven, Pamlico Carteret,
Onslow and Lenoir.
AWARDING OF PRIZES.
The judges of the finish of the contest will be guided by the
following
First Grand man, woman, boy or girl, having th
greatest number of votes at the close of the contest will be award-
ed the PIANO.
Second Grand Prize-The man, woman, bey or girl, having th
second greatest number of votes will be awarded one years
course m East Carolina Teachers Training School.
Districts Nos. and Alter the grand prizes have been
awarded the next highest in either of the four districts
DISTRICT PRIZES. Daily Reflector, votes will be Issued
One of clothes, your choice according to this scale.
at the store of C. T.
One at the
store of Tuft Van Dyke.
One over-
at the store of S. Forbes.
One traveling trunk at the
furniture store of J. K. Boyd.
SPECIAL PRIZES.
One set of harness complete, at
the factory of the John
Baggy Company.
One Black Lynx at the
store of
One or gold
watch, of W. L. Best.
SCALE OF VOTES.
Subscription
Price .
one year.
six months.
On all prepay subscriptions to the
No. of
Votes.
. w
. MM
three months.
0.00 two years.
Ml three years.
On all paid subscriptions to the Car-
Home and Farm and the
Eastern Relict-tor.
Subscription of
Price. Totes.
six months.
one year.
2.00 two years. MM
3.0 three ears .
One-half of the above number
votes will lie given on ill old sub-
will be awarded their choice of any one of the valuable dis-
prizes. Then the second next highest their choice.
end the third highest candidate their choice of the two remaining
district the fourth highest candidate the remaining
district prize.
A grand prize winner will not be permitted to win a district
prize.
RULES AND PLAN OF CONTEST.
Any white man, woman, boy or girl, either married or single,
may enter this contest by either sending the nomination coupon
to The Reflector office or by having a friend nominate them.
No employee or member of his family will be permitted to en-
the campaign.
The more rapid way to gain ground in the cam-
will be to start a canvass among friends for subscriptions
to The Reflector. Positively no votes con be
After ballots are issued to one contestant they cannot be trans-
to another. This is enforced in order to prevent
In the vent of a tie for any of the prizes the prize will be the
joint property of the contestant thus tied.
Contestants are not confined to their respective districts in so-
voting coupons and subs but may solicit from
friends and acquaintances anywhere.
A subscription will not be considered now when the contestant
merely makes a transfer from one member of the family or
hold to another. A subscription which was not on the books whoa
the contest opened will be considered new, provided, it is not a
transfer as referred to above.
The Reflector's Contest Manager will render any assistance
to the contestant without being unfair to either
Candidates are invited to come often to The Reflector
for on any detail of the contest.
Contest closes February 14th at o'clock p. m. Promptly up-
on the stroke of the hour the doors will be closed and
not inside the doors at that time will not be counted for
votes. The judges will be selected form among Greenville's
men. character and integrity will be beyond question.
They will be present during the closing hours of the contest
see that that event closes in a fair and impartial manner.
Those contestants who are awarded the grand prizes will not
be eligible for district prizes, the district prizes going t those
in the district which received next highest.
The contest begins Dec. 7th. and closes Feb.
For further particular call or address CONTEST WAS-
at the office of The
II
CALL ON OR WRITE
CONTEST DEPARTMENT
Company
N. CAR
TELEPHONE NUMBER
imaM





FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY EN-
ROLLED FOR FALL SESSION
AVERAGE ATTENDANCE PER CENT
Debating Society Doing Good
Senior Class
teen to This Session-
Other of Interest About the
School.
The enrollment at the graded retool
this fall has been four hundred a d
fifty children. There has been but
little sickness among the pupils, an i
when the fall term closes the records
will show a daily attendance of
ninety-six cent., perhaps more.
The children have studied well,
a few exceptions, and they have
made progress.
The school will close for the ho.-
on Wednesday, the 21st. ii
will re-open Tuesday January
Supt H. B. Smith spent
day in Raleigh attending a g
of the executive committee of
North Carolina Assembly.
Misses Hampton, Irvin. Gray and
Knight, primary teachers in
school, have gone to Raleigh to at-
tend the meeting of the State Asa-
of Primary Teachers.
meeting will be a most ,
Henry Grady Debating
has a good and good
work in debates and declamation hi
been done this fall. The last debate
on the that
the United States should abandon
the policy It was
one of the best debates the have
ever had. meeting of the
society will be given over to
Some weeks ago the senior class,
met and the elect
ed were as President,
Lucy Dupree; vice president.
Miss Josephine Little; secretary,
David Moore.
The officers have ordered
and in a few days th
members will be wearing them
nil the pride seniors usually take to
their class insignia.
The graduating claps this year is
the largest the school has yet had
It numbers fourteen.
Misses Mary Lucy Dupree, Gladys
Fleming, Inez
Bottle Pearl Fleming, Eloise
Ellington. Nina Josephine
Little, Mary Brown, Maggie
Moore. Ben Taylor, Adrian
Brown Spruill Spain.
The management cf the school f
ft deep interest in the coming of I
next Friday night. His lee-
will timely, interesting a.
helpful, and it is hoped that, a
number will be out to hear
Parents of tho children especially
desired.
Warning From The State Insurance
Commissioner.
The State is now being flooded
with circulars from a d
They to fur-
insurance at cost and to then
circulars to the druggists, hard-
laundry and din emit
classes of business for support a
of our citizens are being taken
to. They do not give the security
desired and in case of an accident
have the assured at their mercy
The contract cannot be sued on c
by law.
There is no doubt but that in a
large number of cases the
of corporations in taking
for their companies in unlicensed
lay themselves liable
not only for the taxes
ed but for the performance of tut
contracts, and besides arc indictable,
as they are by law the agent of
unlicensed companies.
can our citizens afford to
rust to three who
are evading the payment of taxes to
their State If they are g
State, will they not rob you,
an opportunity presents itself In
case of misfortune you will be hen-
less. You cannot enforce y
claim, however just, by law.
JAMBS R. YOUNG
Insurance
Buggies,
and
In addition to our regular bush
the
on the market and doing all kind
repairing, we are carrying a com
double and single harness, in full
of any kind; Lap Robes, of all
Bridles and Blankets, Pad
Collars and Saddles, Horse Blank,
Halters, Etc. We can supply any
in these articles at lowest prices.
THE
BUGGY
I GREENVILLE,
What Changes.
If this com growing business is c
on much longer there will be a
cry go up to stop it is rob-
the price, like the cotton plant r
When the price got down low and re-
there the cotton planters
to meet and resolve to plant lees;
then every last one went home
planted more. But seriously, it
h shown i
has raised over bushels on a sin-
acre of ordinary ground,
the in this county ran up at
first trial to and it would
pear that corn to be
What a change there has been in
farming Years ago a man who
not have at least of land
was not. considered a farmer; la
these days a mm who knows Hit
business, makes a living from
or ton Record
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, re
Effective November 1st,
a. m.
m.
ft. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
Ar.
Ar.
Norfolk
Washington
Plymouth
Greenville
Kin stem
Last Chance for
For farm of acres;
about acres cleared. Two dwell-
houses pack house and
necessary buildings. Location or.
Kinston , miles from
and from Winterville.
with suitable terms. Adjoins
the lauds of E. E. and
E. D. Braxton, R. F.
D No. Winterville, N. C. It v
For further information, address
W. H. WARD. Ticket Agent,
N.
Reminder.
We do not like to be forced to r-
fer to matters of this kind often,
but those subscribers to whom c
have been sent showing J
they owe The Reflector, ought to
sending bringing in the money. Do
not keep us waiting, nor make it n c-
a-
Get Busy.
Cot with some public
spirit. Quit being a dead duck in i
stale puddle. Lend some of your
brain, interest and energy to the pub
lie welfare and the of
town When a meeting
consider matters of public Interest or
importance go to it and take a
hand. If got a-hump on us vi
will be liver and better citizens and
the town -will begin to look good to
us. have the appearance i-f
having its and
in the hands of men with putt-
lie spirit and earnest
Star.
How About You
Is it comfortably
would find it interesting to vis
look over our stock of
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Ev
from Parlor to Kitchen at
you sit up and take notice.
The Home and aid The Eastern Selector.
J. H. BOYD, M
Condensed Statement of
The National Bank of Greenville
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
at the close of business November 10th, 1910.
.
RESOURCES.
Loans and 973.46
3,344.15
U. S. Bonds.;.
and Fix.
Stocks and bonds.
Cash due from
Total
LIABILITIES.
50.000.00
Surplus .
Undivided profits . 1,084.34
Circulation . 21,000.00
Bonds borrowed. 21,000.00
25.600.0.-
Dividends unpaid . 244.81
Deposit . 190,003.84
AS TO REGISTERED MAIL.
HORSE RUNS AWAY.
Total
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations. Firms and
Individuals and will he pleased to meet or correspond with those
who contemplate making changes or opening new accounts
We your business.
F. J. FORBES, Cashier
Senders Mast Request
They Are Wanted
Sufficient notice of the change
been made, the Acting Third Ai-
Postmaster General gives n
that in the future when senders
of registered mail desire receipts
letters or packages, they must make
known their desire for such
at time of posting. Heretofore,
packages were receipted tor to t.-
and latterly t
clerks have asking the
U receipt is wanted, but
the receipt will have to be request i
the sender voluntarily, if a
is desired. Tale will be
news at this
of the year when so many d
packages are being Bent for the hull
days.
Two Young
f-
Now Open for
Business
We have located in the building formerly known as the
The Building and Lumber Company, on the 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. Wt
will also handle all kinds of Feed Stuffs. Grain, Cotton Seed
Meal and Hulls, Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Oats and
Wheat. Call on for any of theRe. Telephone No.
CAROLINA SEED AND FEED CO.
T B. E Mgr., C A. D. Ant Mgr. B. K.
WORKS
The Largest Assortment in Eastern
North Carolina.
;, . .
i Call at our store and see this display,
and place your order for
CRACKERS,
ROMAN CANDLES
SKY-ROCKETS
PIN-WHEELS
POP-CRACKERS
SPARKLERS, MINES, ETC
Worked Him la a Trap.
One
worked in section Mr
tune been
i rout As a
a mat section
valuable cow
Tuesday by tao
name of Mills, was sitting on his
ii out a well-d eased
up to A conversation was
and tao proposed a
A deal was alter
arranged
And to give
together with for the ho
hr
couldn't handle the live stock,
took along him
and to some of the neighbors sold
annuals, receiving an out for
upon the return to house
me stated that the
to a man in
he would like the use
next day to take
back Mills to accompany
and ride horse back home
wards arrangement seemed ail
and was agreed to readily by
and the stranger given ac-
for the night
Some time during the night the
stranger crept from his bed.
up team and drove away
while Mills slept. Since then he has
not been seen by the loser in th
Citizen.
Thrown Oat el
Baggy.
Misses Ward Moore and Mae
were out driving Thursday
afternoon, and when about a mile
from town their horse became fright-
at something and shied out of
the road striking the buggy
the end of a log. Miss
thrown some distance out of the bug-
and sustained bruises.
wheels and the shafts of
were badly broken. The break-
of the harness at the same same
freed the from the buggy,
and Miss Moore, who was driving.
was pulled over the front of the
and dragged some distance by
the reins, and was also
bruised. She turned the reins loose
and the horse ran on about a
yards, but she followed and
caught him. Mr. W. L. Hall,
whose home the accident occurred,
brought the young ladies home, it
is remarkable that they did not re-
worse injury.
Death of Mr. George
Elizabeth City Dec
and Mrs. T. J. was in the
city yesterday, returning to their
in Greenville from Currituck
county, where they had been to at-
tend the last sad rites over the re-
mains of Mr. George a broth-
of governor. Mr.
ill for several weeks and his
death was not unexpected.
his death was a great shock to
the citizens of Currituck
who valued him most highly. He
years old and was one of the most
and influential citizens of
county. He was a descendant of on
of the moat noted and highly hon-
families in the state, being a
son of the late Rev. Jams,
a of precious memory to many
of the older and a leader in
the Methodist church of pioneer
days.
The funeral services wore conduct
ed from tho home by the Rev. James
i. Old, of city, and the inter-
followed in the family bury-
ground.
Put BOWEN
Be Indifferent
holy indifference to the thous-
and things about which men fret
and worry, thou art half
of
I once found these pinned
over the desk of a young girl in
whose development I was much in-
says Mrs. Burton Chance in
for November.
took down the and replaced it
another, on which I wrote the
of Jean
have made of myself all that
could be made of the
Do you see what different lines of
action these two thoughts put out
the developing character
Indifference la not wisdom. More
often than not it is moral laziness
With a different name. By shutting
ourselves away from the things over
which men fret and agonize we shut
ourselves away from all
avenues of development. Develop-
comes by the courageous meet-
of Just difficulties as ca -e
in us mental and moral agitation
the very difficulties which
would no to
A Fine Idea.
Col. H. E. Fries, Mr. F. Collier,
Jr., Mr. W. H Johnson, Mr. E. A.
and Mr. H. B. Varner, are
working over a plan for
tie the Southbound
and all of farms and farm build-
in sight of the road between
and Wadesboro.
details have not been perfected, it
it almost certain that some novel I
contests will be started, offering
prises to the farmers who
paint their houses and barns and
prove the appearance of their
so as to make the best showing
Prizes will also be offered the I
that beautify the grounds around I
stations and in this work the
will lend a hand. , Handsome farm
houses and well kept farms will
the section through the road
runs a great deal of good and the
movement ought to be successful,
Lexington Dispatch.
LOOK, LADIES, THE SINGER STORE
on Main to you the same
courtesy the rest room. did. Ladies
the are especially in-
to stop and rest yourselves. O
J. B. Prop.
Better keep your temper It n
more to th ft anyone





mm
The Carolina Home and Fa. M The Eastern Reflector.
FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY EN-
ROLLED FOR FALL SESSION
AVERAGE ATTENDANCE PER CENT
Debating Society Doing Good Work-
Senior Class Elects
teen to Graduate This Session
Other Notes of Interest About the
School.
The enrollment at the graded
this fall has been four hundred a d
fifty children. There has been but
little sickness among the pupils, an
when the fall term closes the records
will Show a daily attendance of
ninety-six per cent., perhaps more.
The children have studied well,
ring a few exception, and they have
made coed progress.
The school will close for the
on Wednesday, the 21st i
will re-open Tuesday January
Supt. H. B. Smith spent
day in Raleigh attending a g
of the executive committee of the
North Carolina Assembly.
Misses Hampton, Irvin, Gray and
Knight, primary teachers in the
school, have gone to Raleigh to it-
tend the meeting of the State Ass-
of Primary Teachers. Tin
meeting will be a most i
The Henry Debating
has a good membership, and good
work In debates and declamation a-.
been done this fall. The last deb
was on the that
the United States should abandon
the policy It was
one of the best debates the boys have
ever had. meeting of the
society will given over to
weeks ago the senior class
met and organized the elect
were as President, Mia
Lucy Dupree; vice president.
Miss Josephine Little;
David Moore.
The officers have ordered
and In a tow days
members will be wearing them w l
nil the pride seniors usually take
their class insignia.
The graduating this year Is
the largest the school has yet had
it numbers fourteen, m follows-
Mary Lucy
Inez
Bottle Pearl Fleming,
Nina Josephine
little Mary Brown, Maggie
David Moore. Taylor, Adrian
Brown Spain.
The management cf the school ff- f
u deep interest in the coming of lit.
next Friday night His
will be timely. Interesting a.
and it is honed that a
number will be out to hear
Parents of the children especially
desired.
Warning From The State Insurance
The State is BOW flooded
with circulars from aid
They to fur-
Insurance at cost and in then-
circulars to the hard-
ware laundry and
classes of business for support, aid
some of our citizens are being taken
in They do not give the security
desired and in case of an accident
i hey have the assured at their mercy
The contract cannot be sued on c
even by law.
There is no doubt but that In a
large number of cases the offices
of corporations in taking
for their companies in unlicensed
lay themselves liable per-
not only for the taxes
ed, but for the performance of
contracts, and besides arc indictable,
as they arc by law the agent of
unlicensed companies.
How can our citizens afford to .-
rust to these who
are evading the payment cf taxes to
their State If they are g
your State, will they not rob you,
an opportunity presents itself In
case of misfortune you will be
less. You cannot enforce y
claim, however just, by law.
JAMES It.
Insurance
Buggies,
In addition to our regular busk
BU
on the market and doing all kind
repairing, we are carrying a com
double and single harness, in fill.
of any kind; Lap Robes, of all gr.
Riding Bridles and Blankets, Pad
Collars and Saddles, Horse Blank,
Halters, Etc. We can supply any
in these articles at lowest prices. j
THE
GREENVILLE,
What Changes.
If this corn growing business is c
on much longer there will be a
cry go up to stop it is rail-
the price, like the cotton plant r
When the price got down and re-
there the cotton planters
to meet and resolve to plant less;
then every last one went home a.
planted more. But seriously, when it
hi shown n youth and
has raised over bushels on a sin-
acre of ordinary ground, while
the boys in this county ran up at the
first trial to and it would
pear that corn to be cheaper.
What . change there has been in
farming Years ago a man who
not have at bast of laud
was not considered a in
these days a mm who knows lilt
business, makes a living from cir-ht
or ton Greensboro Record
Atlantic Cast Line R;
Between Norfolk
SCHEDULES
Washington, Plymouth,
Effective November 1st
a. in.
m.
a. m.
p. m.
p.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
Ar.
Ar.
Norfolk
Hobgood
Washington
Plymouth
Greenville
Kinston
Last Chance for
For farm of
about GO acres cleared. Two dwell-
houses pack house and l
necessary buildings. Location or.
Kinston road, miles from
and miles from Winterville.
with suitable terms. Adjoins
the lands of E. E. and
E. D. Braxton, R. F,
D. No Winterville, N. C. It
For further information,
W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent,
W. J. CRAIG, F T. M. T. C. W I
N.
Another Reminder,
We do not like to be forced to r-
far to matters of this kind so often.
but those subscribers to whom o-
meats have been sent showing
they owe The Reflector, ought to
ending bringing in the money. Do
not keep us waiting, nor it n c-
another statement.
Get Busy.
Cot with some public
spirit. Quit being a dead duck in i
stale puddle. Lend some of
brain, interest and energy to the pub-
welfare and the of
town When a meeting la to
consider matters of public interest or
vital importance go to it and take
hand. It we get a-hump on no
will be liver and better citizens and
the town will begin to look good to
US. It would have the appearance of
having its and potent-
in the hands of men with pub-
spirit and earnest
Star.
How About You
Is it comfortably
would find it interesting to vis
look over our stock of Fl
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Ev
from Parlor to Kitchen at
you sit up and take notice.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
ft
Condensed Statement of
The National Bank of Greenville
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
at the close of business November 10th, 1910.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts.
U. S. Bonds.
Fur. and Fix.
Stocks and bonds.
Cash due from
973.46
3.344.15
LIABILITIES.
Capital.
Surplus .
Undivided profits
Circulation.
Bonds rowed .
I Dividends unpaid
50,000.00
1,084.34
21,000.00
21,000.00
Total
Deposit . 190,003.81
Total
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations.
Individuals 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
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 W
will also handle all kinds of Feed Stuffs. Grain. Cotton See
Meal and Hulls, Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Oats
Wheat. Call on us for of these Telephone No.
CAROLINA SEED AND FEED CO.
B. E. Mgr., C. A. D. Ant Mgr. B. K.
WE.
FIRE
WORKS
The Largest Assortment in Eastern
North Carolina,
Call at our store and see this
and place your order for use
CANNON CRACKERS,
ROMAN CANDLES
SKY-ROCKETS
PIN-WHEELS
POP-CRACKERS
SPARKLERS, MINES, ETC
J. M. Company
J. H. BOYD, JR.
-r
Pulley bowen
of Women's G
AS TO REGISTERED MAIL.
Senders Must Request Receipts ii
They Are Mauled Now.
Sufficient notice of change
been made, the Acting Third
Postmaster General gives n
that the future when senders
of registered mail desire receipts
letters or packages, they make
known their desire for pt
at time posting. Heretofore, ml
packages were receipted to t.
nonce and latterly I
have been asking the
H receipt is wanted, but
receipt will have to be request i
sender voluntarily, a
is desired. This will be
at this
of the year when so many ti
packages are being seat for the
days.
Worked Him in a Trap.
Cue g
in section
time Just been
torn near As . or
mis, a mat
a valuable cow and tour
by
name Mills, was sitting on
ii oat a
Up to A was
A was alter so;, e
.
together with tor the ho s
auger. saying mat In-
the live
Aims aim,.; wan him
and to some of the neighbors
for
Upon the return to house
mo stranger stated that the
to a man in
and mat he would like the use
COO next day to take
back Mills to accompany
and ride me horse back home
wards Tuts arrangement seemed all
and was agreed to readily by
Mills and the stranger was given ac-
for the
borne time during the night the
stranger crept from his bed. hitched
up team and drove away
Mills slept. Since then he has
not been seen by the loser in
Citizen.
Be Indifferent
holy to the thous-
and things about which men fret
and worry, thou art half
hie s
I once found these pinned
over the desk of a young girl in
whose development I was much in-
says Mrs. Burton in
for November.
took down the paper and replaced it
another, on which I wrote the
words of
have made of myself all
could be made of the
Do you see what different lines of
action these two thoughts put out
the developing character
Indifference is not wisdom. More
often than not it is moral laziness
with a different name. By shutting
ourselves away from the things over
which men fret and agonize we shut
ourselves away from all
avenues of development. Develop-
comes by the courageous meet-
of just such difficulties as ca -e
in us mental and agitation
very which
We would to to
HOUSE KISS AWAY.
Two Young Thrown Out of
Misses Ward Moore and Mae
Schultz were out driving Thursday
afternoon, and when about a
from town their horse became fright-
at something and shied out of
the road striking the buggy
the end of a log. Miss Schultz was
thrown some distance out of the bug-
and sustained bruises.
now wheels and the shafts of
were badly broken. The
-jig of the harness at the same same
fit-ed from the buggy,
and Miss Moore, who was driving,
was pulled over the front of the
and dragged some distance by
reins, and was also
bruised. She turned reins loose
and the horse ran on about a
yards, but she followed and
caught him. Mr. W. L. Hall,
whose home the accident occurred,
brought the young ladies home. It
is remarkable that they did not re-
worse injury.
Death of Mr. George
Elizabeth City, Dec.
and Mrs. T. J. Jar vis was in th-j
city yesterday, returning to their
in Greenville from Currituck
county, where had been to at-
tend the last sad rites over the re-
mains of Mr. George Jar vis, a broth-
of the governor. Mr.
ill for several weeks and bis
was not unexpected.
his death was a great shock to
citizens of Currituck
valued him most highly. He was
years old and was one the
and citizens of
He was a descendant of one
of most noted and highly hon-
families in the state, being a
son of the late Rev. Jarvis,
a of precious memory to many
of the older citizens, and a leader in
the Methodist church of pioneer
days.
funeral services wore conduct
from the home by the Rev. James
t. Old, of this city, and the
followed In the family bury
ground.
A Fine Idea.
Col. H. E. Fries. Mr. S. P. Collier.
Jr., Mr. W. H. Johnson, Mr. E. A.
and Mr. H. B. Varner,
working over a plan for
the Southbound
and all of farms and farm build-
in of the mid between
and Wadesboro.
details have not been perfected, it
it s almost certain that some novel I
contests will be started, offering
prizes to the farmers who
their houses and barns and
prove the appearance of their
so as to make the best showing
Prizes will also be offered the towns
that beautify the grounds around
stations and in this work the road
will lend a hand. , Handsome farm
and well kept farms will d
section through rood.
runs a great deal of good and the
movement ought to be successful.-
Lexington Dispatch.
LOOK, LADIES, THE SINGER STORE
on Main St. extends to you the same
courtesy the rest room. did. Ladles I
the country are especially in-1
to stop and rat 81-
j. S. Prop.
Better keep temper It
more to than to anyone





The Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
IX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
Ayden. X. Dee. J. Miss Alice Baker left Monday night
Bullock of Grifton. was in town Kinston, where she will enter the-
and
Thursday.
Seed rye. rape,
R. Smith. Company.
Our cotton weigher Mr.
Tripp, tells us there was over
bales of cotton sold here during
besides what wan shipped and
net sold.
Iron roofing,
rubber rooting, paper roofing, and
press shingles for K. Smith
Company.
Mr. Henry Stokes, our Lee street
merchant, tells us that he is going ti
return to his farm next year
S iii the country, where he
enjoyed a good
trade.
Dr. D. L. James, cf Greenville, ad-
dressed the Red Men of Ayden Tues-
day night.
Dr. J. M of Kinston
here to see Harris a poor a
ll bey, Wednesday. Ho has
an Invalid tor about a year, and b
in a deplorable condition. He live
at Mr. W. L. Robinson's.
Mr. has sold
old how-stead In Mr.
l Ir
Mr. D. Webb lost
dwelling house and contents by
a few Ago. He only saved a
clothe.
Mr. Jesse T. Hart has purchased
farm of Richard Jackson
for his son. Hart
Stoves, stoves, any kind
want, cooking, or .,
and all grades of R.
Company
There was quite an amusing sham
trial at the Seminary Tuesday night.
The students had a sheriff,
solicitor, judge and counsel
The boys displayed good talent an
no doubt it instructive, as well
as amusing to the large crowd of
spectators. A young man was tried
for stealing potatoes
A full line of sweaters for
gentlemen and R. Smith
Ayden, N. C. Sam
fans moved his family from hero i
Greenville.
Mr. Goo. ha moved from his
residence on Lee street to the Early
house on West near the Coast
Lino and will take both
and transient borders.
Rev. infield arrived Sat-
night and preached Sunday
hospital and take a curse train-
ed nursing.
J. R. Company sells it
cheaper.
A little girl of Burnett was
severely scalded last Friday with hot
water while her mother was wash-
At the Odd Eel lows lodge Honda
night the- following officers
B. J. Skinner, X. G.
O. T. Cooper. V. G.
W. A. Ayers, Rec. sec.
H. G Burton, Fin sec.
J. R. Smith,
Let us gin your cotton, buy
seed, grind and buy your corn and
lo all kinds of repairing in
and R. Smith Company.
Mr. Wiley Brown, who for a long
time was a dry goods merchant it.
Greenville, is now on the road wit i
a of notions tor Einstein Bros,
Wilmington.
Mrs. J. E Hart and children, of
spent Sunday here with her
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Hart
Mr. Hamilton, of
was here Saturday arranging to
locate his family here and work for
l fraternal insurance company.
John David James and John t,
have purchased of J. R.
. Smith Company the old Pitch Kettle
seine beach on Neuse river.
I will improve the beach the
j season.
Stoves, stoves, stoves, and ware
, grim, or
Be sure to come to see
Smith Company.
Mr. Carl James spent Sunday
his ts near
Corn, peas, peanuts, eggs, chick-
ens, and all kinds of produce wanted
at J. R. Smith Company's.
Cotton sold here last Friday for
1-2.
red and white spot-
heifer calf, not marked, about
middle of September. Will pay any
one to give information as to where
she is. W. V.
Ayden, N. C.
Cox's Mill Items.
Cox's Mill. K. C, Dec. many
will be glad to know that Mr.
J. M. Cox, Jr., is able to be out
after a long spell of
his had
Fever for sometime, but we are glad
to say he is improving.
Mr. C. W. Haddock, one of th
wt men in the county, has sick
tor some time. He is a little bet-
now; hope he will soon be a
get up again. He is over ninety
years old
That much talked of snow has come
and gone, followed by a little
We have had lots of fine
much to be thankful for, crops w
fairly prices fine and all of
rood weather we could ask for t
them.
Cur schools are getting along fine
There will be a basket party th
school house Friday
9th, for the benefit c- the
All are be and
out in the good cause.
is nearly here and then
be many glad and sad heart-.
is about all sold
here. is all gone.
tr crop is to be thought about next.
Wise plans should be made
planting the next crop, and
t too tobacco and
a plenty to eat at home, a.-d
then we will be a prosperous
will save the dyspeptic from away
of misery, and enable him to eat
whatever he wishes. They prevent
The Carolina Hone and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
IS.
SICK HEADACHE,
cause the food to assimilate and
the body, give keen appetite.
DEVELOP FLESH
and solid muscle.
coated.
Elegantly sugar
rake No Substitute.
i. W. H. OF CHAR.
will be in Greenville, at Ho-
Bertha, on Friday, November 25th
day only. His practice is
d to diseases of the Eye, Ear Nose
Throat and Fitting Glasses
HEAT STOKE AT
Good location on Norfolk
railroad. J. S. Edwards,
P. D. No. Greenville. v
Dr. Hyatt Coming.
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be in Green-
ville at Hotel Bertha, December 5th
and Monday and Tuesday.
the purpose of treating diseases
the ear, nose and throat.
0.00 STRAIGHT
salary and expense, to men with
g, introduce our Poultry Rem-
Don't answer unless you
business. Eureka Poultry
Mfg. Co. East
ID-
of
Tor The Reflector
OR HARNESS, HORSE
lap robes, whips, separate parts
f harness, leather and show findings
promptly done. Agent for
Sam Flake nest door
express office.
KILL THE CHILLS THEY MAY
kill you. Take Hoods
Chill and Fever Tonic. No cure, ho
pay. Sold by druggists.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N.
In the Stale of North Carolina at the close of business. October
ORDER IN MEXICO.
Reports of Revolution
Wore
A from Mr, John Tripp,
morning and night, In the formerly of Pitt county and well re-
membered here, sent from
City under date of November
Church. While had not seen or
heard him in some time, he is like
eves are not dim. nor
power for preaching the
is not abated.
says reports in American newspapers
during the preceding two weeks, of
revolutionary disturbances in Mexico,
Rev, Mr. Caraway, c Tarboro. will have In the main been untrue or gross
preach the Methodist brethren exaggerations. card further rays
the coming year, and Mr. the disturbing elements w-n very
our preacher, will go to Bath. suppressed, perfect quiet
and Mrs. Bridget's have accomplished and safely restored, and the country
much good since they have been l will go forward with brighter pros.
here, only two years. During poets ever.
time they have built a nice church
end the church is doing fine. W j is that all hie mean
wish for them the co-operation of arc quickly brought up before a
God's in their new homo la drowning tho might-.- T , a . . .
m a Tripp, GO., N G,
Loans and stock O
625.0 j
Hanking house, profits, loss
and fixtures ex taxes
Due from banks and subject
Cash deposits
Gold coin checks
coin, including
minor currency
National bank notes
other U. S. notes. Total
Stale of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I. J. R. Smith, cashier the ab named bank, do solemnly
that the ah statement is true t the best of my and belief.
J. R. SMITH
Subscribed and sworn to before me,
the 17th day of November, 1910.
STANCIL HODGES,
Notary
J. R. Smith,
R. C. Cannon,
i.
wish to oil to our line of fall goods which
we now have. have taken great care buying this year and we
think we can wants in Shoes, Hats. No-
ions, Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in a
Goods Store.
Come let us show you
lit
.
THE PRINCE OF LIFE
Matthew December
for our hi
for our 13.5.
CHE trial of Jesus really took
place shortly after bis arrest,
but, on account of the Law re-
quiring a death sentence to be passed
in day Ugh t, u morning meeting of the
was which, in a
perfunctory manner, confirmed the
high priest's decision of night be-
fore, that Jesus had blasphemed the
Creator when he that he had
Come into the world in accord with the
Creator's long-promised plan that he
Should redeem Israel and the world
from the death sentence, that in God's
due time he might establish the Mes-
Kingdom for the blessing of Is-
and all the families of the earth.
The matter was rushed through lest
the gathered multitudes, who had
shouted, to the Son of
when Jesus rode upon the ass
fire days before, should undertake
again to proclaim him king. No
could take place during the
Passover week. And if Jesus were
held a prisoner they knew not what
might happen to him or to them. They
had, therefore, but a few hours in
which to carry out the plan which they
believed would rid their country of a
to Jesus
far Aim
man whom they considered a deceiver
and one likely to get them into
with the Government at Rome.
The bad authority to judge
the people along the lines of their
but eras prohibited from
the death penalty. Hence it was
necessary, after the condemnation of
the to take the case before
the Roman Governor.
that I Rate would not recognize
blasphemy as a cause for death, the
charge against Jesus, before Pilate,
was a totally different one,
that Jesus was a and raiser
f disturbance; that he claimed to
a king and that bis freedom was in-
to the interests of the Roman
Empire. The foolishness and the
of such u charge were too
transparent to need assertion.
perceived that for envy they were de-
livering be and his teach-
were having more Influence with
the common people than could be
by tho chief priests and scribes.
Pilate relieved himself of
by declaring that since the borne of
Jesus was in Galilee, King Herod, the
Governor of Galilee, should have
jurisdiction of case, which he was
glad r
Before King Herod
This was an unexpected difficulty.
Herod's was not far dis
He was glad of the opportunity
to see Jesus, of whose be had
heard much. As h looked at Mas-
noble features and beheld in him
parity and gentle dignity, it must have
seemed ridiculous such n person
should be arraigned as ft
a man dangerous to interests
of the peace of the After a
few and Jests, the pal-
ace guards took a hand with the one
whom their master treated flippantly.
They put him a purple robe
a crown of thorns and mocked at his
Then Herod do
dined to act in the case and sent the
prisoner back to Pilate, perhaps fool
that he had had a sufficiency
trouble In connection with the behead
of John the Baptist a year or
before. The matter was a joke be-
tween Herod and with
the case of s man claimed to be so
dangerous that ho must die thus, when
he manifestly was so pure and
cent that the weakest would be safe
with him
Perplexity Increased
was disappointed when Jesus
Was brought back to his court. The
case was an unpleasant cue to settle
The prisoner manifestly was
of any Time, yet his accusers wore
the most men In the nation
city over which he bad charge.
Their will must be preserved. If
possible, and they were evidently bent
on the murder of their Innocent cap-
under the form of legality. What
s pity It is that religion has been so
misrepresented by her
In every age of the world A lesson
which we nil should learn is to search
the motives and intentions of our own
hearts, that we be not led into
error the violating the
rights of others and thus fighting
God.
Pilate the realized
that there was no truth in them, and
then gave his find no fault
in Jesus, but, seeing that such u com-
motion has been created, consider it
necessary in Interests of peace to
the unrighteous demands of
the clamoring multitude. will there-
fore have prisoner whipped,
though acknowledge he is not de-
serving of punishment. The whip-
ping will be in his own interest, us
well as in the Interests of the peace
of the city, for by satisfying the clam-
or of multitude the life of Jesus
will be spared. As political decisions
go, this was u very fair decree.
recognize that absolute justice
is not always possible in dealing with
imperfect conditions.
Rut the would not be satisfied
with of den in.
The was exhorted to shout,
him Cruelly
impossible for l to appreciate
such u frenzy could be
so a person. So he
inquired, evil be
the was, Crucify
Alas, how passion van ignore
every principle of righteousness To
add to perplexity, bis
now him word. Have nothing to
do with just person, have
had u horrible which connects
itself With him.
As u last resort Pilate caused Jesus
to be brought to a place
where multitude could see him
and then he cried out to them,
the See the character of the
man you are willing to crucify. Note
that he has most kingly features, such
as none of your race
Would you crucify the very best
sample of your race Consider;
reasonable. Behold the It has
for years been a custom with you that
the Government at this release
a prisoner. So, then, consider that
Jesus has been condemned and that
your conception of justice has been
satisfied and that now I release him to
you. But the multitude cried out so
much tho Crucify
us robber
character.
Thou Art Not Caesar's Friend
The Jewish leaders were shrewd.
They that treason to Rome was
one of the most serious and
In the fact that Jesus had of
himself as a king they had lever
wherewith to compel bis
used it, Pilate that if he
let the prisoner go they would report
him to the Pilate
he would have difficulty in explaining
n case and that the Roman Gov-
would agree with the decision
of that one man should die
rather than have any in
their dominion. Thus compelled. Pi-
late finally acceded and wrote the pa-
of execution, but before doing so
he took a pitcher of water and in the
sight of the people washed bis hands,
saying. am guiltless of tho blood of
this just
The execution proceeded. The sol-
had two thieves to
and merely another cross
and the procession started for
a hillside where face
of the rock much resembles a skull-
Golgotha the place of a
It is Just to the north of the
city, outside the wall. New buildings
and a wall recently erected hinder vis-
at the present time from getting
skull effect as formerly. The crime
of each culprit was. by Law, inscribed
over his head. Above the Master's
head was his King of
the
Satan and his deluded dupes evident-
thought that they had finally dis-
posed of Jesus. priests and elders
mocked his declaration that he was
Son of God and demanded that,
if he were such, ho should demonstrate
it by leaving the cross. They
not the truth, that it was necessary
for him to die for man's in order
that, by and by. he might have right-
authority, in his glorious Kingdom,
WITH
THE ALDERMEN
REGULAR MEETING OF THE
BOARD THURSDAY NIGHT
to restore all mankind to full
and life under the terms of the
New Covenant of which he will be
the Mediator. At the
sixth hour. noon, darkness settled
down for three hours and then Jesus
; died, crying, God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken In order that
he might fully the weight
of Divine Justice which belonged to
the sinner, it was necessary that the
Father should hide himself from him,
as though he had been the sinner. This
temporary separation from the Father
was evidently the severest blow all
it the Master's experience.
STREET WORK STOPPED AT PRESENT
Resignation of Alderman Flanagan
Accepted to Take Effect in
Mailer
in Executive .
tine Business.
The board of aldermen met in reg-
monthly session, Thursday
with the mayor six
Of the
There was no reports of Interest
from any of the standing
It was ordered that all work on
improvement be suspended for
the present
and
appointed to fill vacancies or.
to look after
ground for additional cemetery.
The market was
In clean and sanitary condition
was made for holders
if who have gene
out of business for refund for pro-
part of the year. The
of this was taken up by the
in executive session.
The resignation of Alderman E
Flanagan, which was presented
last meeting, was accepted to take
effect at the regular meeting in
the board unanimously request
him to continue to serve until
then.
Reports of officers the past
mouth were read and approved, and
such bills as were approved by t;
finance committee were ordered paid
An error made in the tax levy
against Rev. J. H Snore was Ordered
corrected.
i A petition for street lights In West
Greenville was approved, and th
water and light commission in-
to install the lights as
as practicable.
Wiley was granted
to a pool room bis building on
Evans street.
William Lilly was granted dray
for part of the fiscal year.
COUNTY HISTORY.
Training School Pupil Wins A
Prise.
The publish at Concord,
as the organ of the Stonewall Jae
son Training School, been
prizes lo pupils of school-l
for the best essays giving the history
of the county in which the contestant
lived. The Uplift
the third of these prizes. was
won by Miss for B
sketch of her home county, Hertford.
Miss Wynne is a pupil of East Caro-
Teachers Training School.
Hr. Shore Returns.
t was expected that the
would return Rev. J H. Shore to the
pastoral charge of
Methodist church here, and our
generally are delighted that he is
fro t here for another year.
Ends Winter's Troubles.
To many, winter Is a season of
trouble. The frost toes Slid
fingers, chapped hands and lips,
cold sore, red and rough
proves this. But such troubles fly
before Salve. A
trial convinces. Greatest healer of
Burns, Boils, Piles, Cuts, Sores,
ma and Sprains. Only at all





The Howe and The Eastern
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
Hums i-1
DR. CARTER AND PROF. AUSTIN
BOTH SPEAK
DR. MISSED THE TRAIN
KILLED BY FOLDING BED.
Dr. Carter Speaks on Adenoids
Visual
Speaks of the Neglect of
Teeth and Should
Give More Attention to Health i
Their Children.
The chapel of the graded school
was filled Friday night with an at-
audience to hear Dr. Rankin
and Dr. Carter on adenoids, and their
effects on school children.
to the regret of all Dr. Rankin was
unable to be present. He
that he was misinformed the tick-
et agent at Raleigh as to the time of
the departure of the train, and that
he reached the five minutes
late.
Dr. Carter, of Washington, was In-
and he dealt in detail with
the subjects of adenoids and visual
While his address
was at times rather full technical
terms for the laymen, main
he was clear, and much good must
come from it to the many who
him.
At the conclusion of Dr. Carter's
address. Superintendent Smith in-
Prof. H. E. Austin, who
ways does well that he
undertakes, his was no
to his rule. Ho t id the
listeners in terms the
consequences of neglecting
children's threat, teeth and eyes. He
deck red that every child has a right
to grow up healthy and strong, so
that he may lead a happy and use-
life, and that no parent has any
sort of right to neglect those
matters. In addition to re-
in Impaired health, Pro
Austin showed the close relationship
between poor health and crime. Hi
said that unhealthy children are
troublesome in the school, and that
when they grow up there is an es-
between child and par-
and soon he goes away, too of-
ten into evil-doing and crime.
The management of the school feels
that a good start was made for bet-
care of the children. There are
many cases of illness among the p.
which is easily preventable. If
a better knowledge concerning health
and can be spread among
the people, and especially a
edge of those subjects about which
people know but little it is
that much good will result.
Thirteen Hours Before Han With
Broken Neck Dies.
Though his neck was broken
the folding bed in which he and
wife were sleeping closed early yes-
morning, Benjamin an
engineer of No. West Om Hun-
and Forty-fifth street,
thirteen hours in the Harlem Hos-
When life at 2.10
o'clock in the afternoon the surgeon
only a man of his
physique have lived so long
After the falling of the upright
part of the bed the smothered cries
of Mrs. Lott who was imprisoned r-
tween and mattress
John Redmond. He broke in
Lott's door and then called Patrol-
man of the West One Hun-
and Fifty-second street police
station. The two released Mrs. Lott
who was taken to the hospital with
Within two hours she
was able to go York
World.
The
You have endured so much of
slander no wonder that It stirs your
dander, sad-eyed mule of mine
No wonder that you're brooding
brooding, your scanty ears of co i
with yellow teeth that
shine Your tail. It isn't long aid
flowing; its shingled, and has
growing in on the end;
your neck is dished, and never arch-
like that of warhorse, proud V
marching, where strains of bugles
blend. Your ears are long and out
of drawing, and when you laugh your
loud haw-hawing breaks distant win
panes; and people Jeer at and
deride you, through all the ages
they've denied you a decent share of
brains. A thousand years ago or over
some mule, fed up too high on clever
reached out and kicked a gent;
ever since the superstition hangs on
double- dinged that
mules have fell Intent. And yet,
mule, you're true and trusty I eve
not for the legends musty, or
dices old; you did not stack up high
for beauty, but when the matter's i
of duty, you're worth your weight in
gold. Alas Full many a human
fer like you, mule, must live and
suffer the world's contempt and
because he Is not built for dancing
and for practicing and
ungainly
Received His
see you have your arm in a
said the inquisitive
Broken is
responded the other
with an
broke it while I was trying to
pat on the
Scott What
minding my own
tee. Never happen to
me, could
Accepted The Invitation.
A society woman wrote to an army
officer at Fort Sam
requests the pleasure of Cap-
Bunker's company at a reception;
July
Next day she received this note of
the exception of three men
who have the measles and one who Is
in the guardhouse, Captain i
company accepts Mrs. kind
invitation for the
body's
if it did happen, I
e.
Then there was silence in the c
Not One in Ten.
A teacher in a big elementary school
had given a lesson in an
class on the Ten Commandments. In
order to test their memories
any little child give me a
Commandment with only four ,
in
A hand was raised immediately
said the teacher.
off the was the re-
Make Home the Recipient,
Why Not
THEN you're sure to please the entire
and after all the family interest is each
one's interest.
The gifts sure to please, are here-many,
many of them and we truly want you to call
and learn how well we are prepared to fill your
every Christmas want.
Taft VanDyke
J. E. WINSLOW,
Dealer in Horses, Mules and Buggies
GREENVILLE and AYDEN, NORTH CAROLINA
Christmas
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
being a real Princess--
and invite you to come
see it and many other
things that will add to
your comfort and con-
during the
cold days.
SERVICE.
Church
dug.
at the Christian
and deacons who
elected to
ending October
impressively
C. C. Ware preach
Duties and
and Deacons.
prayer
The
by choir and
aspiring. Following
f the officers
A. Move, Sr., J.
De.-
all W. J.
E. L.
the
Legal Notices
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Weary
j and Shall it
E. V. M. .
, Messrs. Couch ant
its.
State of North County.
A. C C T. D.
Jerry Nichols and wife,
Mattie Nichols, Wm. Highsmith
and wife, Ella Highsmith, and
vs.
Grace
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-
big on the 16th day of November,
by D. C. clerk, the
commissioner. Will, on Sat-
the 19th day of December.
1910, at hall past two o'clock, p. in
expose to public sale before the court
house, door in to r
highest bidder, for cash, the folio
described tract or parcel of
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-
bout acres, more or less.
This sale is made for the
of making partition among the plain
tiffs and defendants in the above e i-
titled cause.
This the 16th day of ,
F. C. HARDING, Com.
OF REAL ESTATE.
By virtue of a power of sale con-
in a certain deed, ex-
and delivered by B.
ham and wife, Ora Parham. to F. M.
Hodges, dated 23rd day of May 1907,
and duly recoded in the office of
register of deeds of Pitt county, id
Book T-8, page the undersign W
mortgagee will, on Monday, the
d-y December, 1910, at o clock,
noon, expose to public sale before
the court house door in Greenville.
Pitt county, to the highest bidder, l i.-
cash, the following described parcel
or lot of land, and be-
in the town of Greenville, Nor. .
Carolina and beginning on the
Side of Dickinson avenue-at a poi it
formerly Mrs. Jane Brown's corn-r,
now Mrs. Martha E. Wilson's
and running thence with Mid Die
hi son avenue a north eastward
course 1-2 feet; thence a
course parallel with said
Dickinson avenue 1-2 feet to
thence the
containing 1-4 of an acre, mo C
or less, and house and M
known as the B. E. Parham home
place or residence.
This Bale is made to satisfy tho
terms of said mortgage deed.
This the day of November,
F. M. HODGES, Mortgages
F. C. Harding.
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
ceremony
hymn.
r .
Taft Boyd Furniture Company
Interesting Meeting Sunday
In the Church.
second meeting of the ,
League was held Sin-
afternoon with Mr. C. W. W
, presiding. There was a good
fully as many as on
Sunday, and much
taken In the exercises
subject for discussion V
from the text Matt.
e leaders, Messrs. E A.
and F. R. Stretch, male
talks. There was also good
talks by Messrs. H D.
Tin, B. W. Moseley, C. C. Ware
s. Mooring.
he meeting next Sunday after
o'clock will be held ill
r. church.
Thou Have Me to
part of Acts
H. D. Bateman, M. W.
and T. R. Moore
-The object of these meetings la to
Christian life and work in
men of the community. So f r
attendance has been about
It There ought to be fully a him
Jed men present at every meeting
motion was made Sunday ,
. President Wilson to appoint an
committee whoso duty shall
, to get more men to attend the
eatings This committee will b
soon.
Fresh Oysters.
Wharf I am selling
In my quantity. Boats
very week keeping ms
de-s can be filled promptly
J. Q. SMITH-
-5 h
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
North County.
Before D. C. Moore, clerk.
Jesse Wilson, L. H. Wilson, Jo-
Wilson, J. T. Edwards and
wife Louise Edwards,
and wife, Williams
Walter Wilson, Zeno Wilson,
lie Wilson, Asa I P.
William Dennis and
writs, Susan Dennis, Martha Ann
Lem. el Join
and wife Sarah Jones,
By virtue of a decree of the
f the Superior of Pitt
tho r will
the 21st day of
1910. at o'clock, noon e
to public before court
house door in Greenville, county
to the highest bidder, for cash, the
following tract or parcel
land, to-wit-
and being in the county
Pitt and in Swift Creek
adjoining the of Frank
Ollie Cox and Henry Williams.
and Others and containing acre;
more or less, and being the tract or
of land known as the Wilson
home place.
This sale is made for the
it making partition among the ten-
ants in common.
This the 21st day of November. 1910.
F. c. HARDING. Commissioner.
NOTICE.
State of North
In the Superior Court.
Tripp, by her next friend
and husband, C. E. Rosa
Everett, by her next friend and
husband John Everett,
vs.
Little, under years Of
age, without general guardian,
Retha little under
age, without general guardian.
virtue of authority contained In
a decree made by the clerk of
of Pitt county, In tie
entitled cause, I will expose
public sale tor cash at the court
house door in Greenville, N. C tin
following described tracts laud,
on the 26th day of December,
One tract of land known as that
part or the lands of W. C. Little r.
was assigned to the said W. S. Little
the lands of
on the north; on the west by Lynn
Manning; on the south by the
as the Jack Ann Crawford; n
by the lands of W. H. May.
containing acres, more or
one other tract of land p
by the late W. S. Little.
father of the and
from Jacky Ann Crawford, .-
joining the lands above on
the north. Funny Cannon and Jam y
Dall on the west; Jesse Braxton
tho John Tripp on the m.
containing acres more or less.
HARRY SKINNER.
virtue o a of sale con-
In a certain mortgage deed,
made and delivered by C. L. Bur-
roughs to N T. Cox, dated the sec-
day of February. 1906, and
recorded in the register's office to
county, in Book J-8 page
the undersigned tho
estate of N. T. v ill. on
the 31st day of December
at o'clock, noon, expose to
sale before the court house door lit
to the highest bidder, for
cash, the following described tract
parcel of laud,
and being in
county, North Carolina,
in O. C. Nobles line and runs to
a marked nine on the side of the road
a northwest course to a
wood knot, centered by a black
ad a stump; then a
course with an agreed line made
by C T. Cox and Smith to
-aid Smith's line; then with his line
to O C. Noble's line; then with O. C.
Noble's Hue to the beginning, con-
acres more or less.
This sale will be made to
the terms of said mortgage deed
The undersigned administrator of
the stale of N. T Cox will also on
said 31st day of December, 1910, e.
pose to public sale, before the court
house door in Greenville, to Die
highest bidder, for cash, four snares
of clock in the Pitt County Oil Co. .-
par value. per share.
This the 28th day of November.
SARAH A. COX.
Administrator of the estate of N. T
Cox. deceased.
F. C. HARDING, Attorney.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
North County.
Elizabeth Pitt
vs.
Lawrence Pitt .
The defendant above named Will
take notice that an action
-s above has been commenced in
Superior court of Pitt county, to ob-
B divorce from the bonds of mat
And the said defendant
will further notice that to
required to appear at the
of the Superior court of said
to be- held on the Monday after
the 1st Monday of September. 1910,
It being the 12th day of December.
1910 at the court house of Pitt
In Greenville, N. C. and answer
demur to the complaint in silo
Cotton, or the plaintiff will apply to
tho court for the relief demanded in
bald complaint
This the 22nd day of ,
1910, D. C. MOORE.
Clerk Superior Court of Pitt County.
Julius Brown. Atty. for
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
The undersigned having this day
qualified us administrator the
estate of Robert Jefferson, before D.
C Moore, clerk of the Superior court
of Pitt county, notice is hereby
en to all persons indebted to said es-
to make immediate set Heine c
with the undersigned and all per-
holding claims against Mid es-
are hereby notified that they
required to file their claims with tn
undersigned administrator on or .;
fore the 17th day of November
or this notice will be pleaded in b A
of any recovery on said claims.
This the 17th day of
1910, K. T. THIGPEN.
Administrator of tho estate of Rob-
Jefferson, deceased.
ESTABLISHED 1875
Wholesale and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrels,
Turkeys. Eggs, Oak Bedsteads. Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages.
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits. Tables.
Lounges Safes. P. and Gail
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco. Key
West Cheroots, Henry George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries. Peaches,
Syrup. Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee, Soap. Lye, Magic Food, Mat-
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and
Garden Oranges, Apples, Nuts.
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass,
and Cakes
and Crackers, Cheese,
best Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, and numerous other goods.
Duality and quantity for cash.
Come to see me.
Phone Number
S M
S. J. Nobles
MODERN BARBER SHOP
Nicely furnished, everything n
and attractive, working tho very
best barbers. Second to none.
Opp. J. R. J. G.
SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY.
The undersigned administrator will
sell at public auction at the residence
of the late J. L. Tucker, in Swift
Creek township, on Wednesday De-
14th. 1910, the personal prop-
belonging to said estate to--., t
mules, one horse, several
carts, plows, mowing machines,
rakes, stalk cutters, cultivate u,
smoothing harrows, disc plows and
various farming Implements
ft cultivate a thirty horse farm Also
about barrels or corn, a largo
quantity of fodder and hay and
Terms of sale,
This November 1910
G- J- TUCKER.
Barber Shop
HERBERT EDMONDS
Proprietor
Located in main business of town.
Four chairs in operation and each
one presided over by a skilled bar-
Li dies waited at their home.
Tell your wife how well her cook-
she
makes.





Id.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE COMPANY,
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year.
Six months.
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the post office at
Greenville, North Carolina, under
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1910.
And it Is once more.
And congress sit sill
enough to listen to It.
The State board of canvassers
tho Democratic to be
o--------
The esteemed Congressional Rec-
will soon be coming along
to help kindle the fires.
Some folks make
and every town has some of
that class.
--------o
, The man who tries to climb by
pulling down somebody else,
to fall.
o--------
A 11-year-old citizen of Lancaster,
Mass., occupies his leisure time With
sawing wood.
Congress will meet Monday,
the president will be heard from on
more In a message.
o--------
Possibly Dr. Stiles Is trying t;
make it appear to Mr. Rockefeller
that he is earning the money.
The man who offers to show
railroads how to save money in
Is not from Missouri, either.
A New York Judge is trying to
break up the rotten egg traffic. Five
tons of the bad were seized in forty-
hours.
citizens want a new mar-
but the officers don't. Thai
in the difference.
Mite Helen Taft has had her com-
out party. Her will have
his two years from next March-
Dispatch.
Of the ninety odd million people
in the United States, how many of
them will read the president's forty
thousand word message
Macon is trying to get the
away from Atlanta. Tit-
latter is always happy when it is
being advertised.
If adulteration and
gets much worse in food staple,
will have to confine themselves
to home raised potatoes to be
of getting something pure.
The Wilmington Dispatch puts us
down as the
That's the limit, Jim. We
play with you any you
apologize.
Mr. Roosevelt says that on the 13th
he will tell how it happened. Ca it
see why he should select such m
unlucky day on which to break his
silence.
Charlotte and Wilmington are
only places in th.- State that the
have thought enough of
to mention so far But it got
two best.
The thing Is coming nearer homo.
Both the Atlantic Coast Line a
Seaboard Air Line railroads ha e
for violation of the
Sherman law.
Because one minister out of th.
large membership of the North Ca-
conference went wrong,
everybody try to throw a brick at
him.
Another fiddler is happy. He hid
been earning a livelihood by fiddling
for country dances in r,
when news come from England that
a deceased uncle had left him a for-
tune of
The Charlotte is
light again This time the sheriff
Is after it for throe taxes. Tat
auditorium is one
folks ought to chip in for a d
free from
Senator Tilman, of South Carolina
Is showing his sticking qualities.
When asked by a reporter if he was
going to retire, he said not
retire until they bury me. I have
no idea of quitting the
--------o
We have heard of people's eyes
giving them away, but the tramp run
over and cut to pieces by a train, .
Florida, and was by
dismembered eyeballs is going sonic
In identification.
against the near-beer saloon a
against interstate shipment of
cants. These arc questions that
he agitated until laws
passed correcting them.
Cook, the dispatches say, has
written a statement in which he
presses doubt as to whether he dis-
covered the North Pole. It he d
not know himself, surely the rest of
us do not. It might now be in
for Perry to be equally as
in regard to his claims. We do
not believe anybody has found
the Pole, but were only near by.
Senator-elect R. R. Cotten
J. T. were
in town Monday, and both expressed
themselves as favoring the
of Representative-elect G. M.
Mooring that a mass meeting be held
at an early day to give the people
opportunity to discuss such
as they would like to have their
representatives take up in the next
legislature. It is now but one
month to the meeting of the
and if such a meeting is to
called it should be done quickly. It
Is a good idea for the people to
their representatives know what
they want.
TWO YOUNG OFFICERS
Mr. Leon W. Tucker, who on Mon-
day retired from the office
of the county, goes out with the hon-
ors of a faithful steward who has
left a faultless record. He has
ed three terms, being first elected in
1904, and had been deputy sheriff for
some years previous. He was only
years of age when first elected,
and among older officials was called
the Yet no county has had a
more faithful sheriff, nor who
conducted the business of his office
better.
Another officer who retired on Mon-
day after six years of faithful
vice, was Mr. S. T. White, county
treasurer. He, too is a young man,
tho youngest the county ever chose
for this responsible position. Bu.
his sterling business qualities were
rec and his splendid manage-
of the office has proven him
worthy of all the confidence placed
In him. In the office he was equally
as popular as ho was efficient.
Both of these officers retire with
the plaudit, done, good and
faithful
Their successors, Mr. I.
as sheriff and Mr. W. B. Wilson .
treasurer, are both men of the
est type, and will make good records
Farmer In The Saddle.
The word is being freely passed
about during these days of piping
peace and prosperity that the far-
Tier is griddle and for once
it seems to be most forcibly true;
for not only is he in the saddle bit
to receive ample demonstration
of fact. A visitor to the
of The Observer gave the information
that he was recently in the eastern
portion of Mecklenburg, not a gr-at
distance the town of Matthews
and there found farmers owning
tilling the land, with nice,
ed houses to live in, with
about them, with
their floors and pianos in their pa-
He found land that had offers
of an acre, land that
produced an average of two bales of
cotton an acre as a result of
conserving the fertility of the soil
and highly fertilizing and thoroughly
tilling it In fact he was Inform
that one progressive farmer plowed
his land deeply, spent an acre
for fertilizers, gave the crop proper
attention and achieved the results
that enabled him to harvest
of cotton an acre with enough
remaining to pay all expenses of
tillage and harvesting and
costs connected with the
of the crop except the for
in other words netting a
gain of an acre for the
Surely these are great times for our
agricultural and may w
be calculated to turn the drift of
immigration back
Charlotte Observer.
Hogs Still Run at Large.
The adoption of the stock law in
this country has utterly failed in one
important doesn't
vent the hogs from running at
large.
Go to and there will
find the end-seat hog. Get on v
railway train and you will find the
one-seat hog and often the two-seat
hog. He will occupy a whole seat
with his luggage and his coat to-
tally indifferent to the rights and
comfort of who have paid
same fare. Or, he may be
out on two to bed
and feeling sleepy, while,
a woman carrying a baby in her
arms is compelled to stand until
the conductor or porter comes and
pokes the hog in the ribs. Then he
a reluctant-
curls up on one seat, actually mad
because he is not allowed to have
two.
It Is natural for a pig to
a hog; but it is passing strange why
a man should persist in becoming
one.
But so it beasts
infest the land and would sooner
spit on the floor than in a cuspidor
and throw their cigar and cigarette
stumps and old quids of tobacco
where they are offensive to refine-
and respectability. They
ways leave unmistakable signs o.
their presence in bath and toilet
rooms, without so much as a thought
the that a
be to use
And all so unnecessary
is no earthly reason why a
should be a hog. He is created for
better things, better habits and hot.
living. A Is so
selfish that he is blind to the rights
of others.
We have the utmost respect for
tho four-footed hog who drinks nil
slops, eats his corn, and with a con-
tented grunt continues his fixed
the s and the
sausage mill; but hold contempt
In adopting the report of tho GOBI-
no the Car-
conference at Elizabeth C of the situation. a man
urged that legislative De person have to go Jar from
he has hold of tho reins, his
under control and he is verily the two-legged hog who should
I-
. M M M
Volume
IAIN ENTER
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, DECEMBER
Number
MORE ARE WANTED AND NOW
PRIZES VERY ATTRACTIVE
The Contest Bid Fair to be The
Host Successful In The History f
This Even The
Smallest Prise is of Great
Nominations continue to come in-
to the office of the Contest Depart-
of The Reflector from a large
number-of wide-awake people who
have been attracted by this paper's
announcement that it would give
in prizes its big voting con-
test.
From many sections comes reports
of general interest. Almost every
mail nominations and letters
from energetic people who are e-
not to let slip a chance to
be handsomely rewarded for the ox-
of a small amount of en-
. .
Mainly responsible for this large
number of nominations is the
of the prize list and the value of the
prizes offered. It is a conclusion
that with the large number of prizes
there must be a large
number of prize winners
Of those who have already
themselves, or been
a large percentage will drop out
the race, or fall to show an active
Interest, leaving the field open for
those who remain to the last. This
suggests that the large, number of
nominations will, in no way, effect
the chance of those who have enter-
ed with the determination to remain
to the end. It is a fact that in a
contest of this kind it is not
meteoric contestant who does a few
brilliant work and then sits
by, who wins. But it Is the
who moves along steadily, but
surely and sticks to the last.
Just a limited number of
will be expected to enter and any
person who will run a sure, steady
race is pretty certain to be awarded
a handsome prize in return.
More Nominations Wanted.
Many more nominations are de-
hundred more are
needed to make a success of the con-
test and The Reflector Invites from
all who feel inclined to compete for
the valuable prizes.
A few inquiries have been receive
in regard to the exact manner the
prizes will be awarded. There arc
nine prizes grand prizes,
four district prizes and three
special prizes.
The candidates receiving the high-
est number of votes, no matter in
what district he she may reside,
will be awarded the
first grand prise.
The next highest will be award-
ed one years full course in the East
Carolina Training School,
After the two grand prizes have been
awarded, the highest candidates In
either of the four districts will b-
awarded their choice of the
prizes and the remaining three dis
will be. handled accordingly
The special prizes will be awarded
at certain periods during the contest
to the candidate having the highest
number of votes at a certain period
of the contest.
Subscription books may be had
upon application to the Contest De-
either in person, by letter,
or by
A grand prize winner will not be
permitted to win a district prize.
Scale of Vote.
Votes will be issued on paid in
subscriptions to The Reflector
Co., as
One year,
Six mouths. votes.
Four months, V votes.
Two years.
Three years, votes.
All paid hi advance subscriptions
to The Home and Farm and Tb
Eastern Reflector one paper,
One year, votes.
Six months, votes.
Two years votes .
Three years votes.
Credit for one-half of the
number of votes will be given all old
for either The Daily
Reflector, or the Home and Farm and
The Eastern Reflector collected.
For further Information, write
Contest Manager, The Reflector Co,
Greenville, N. C.
The Reflector's prize contest
is the talk.
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR
EXCHANGES TODAY
Nomination Coupon
The Ref Voting Contest
While it Is not absolutely that one of these
be sent in for each candidate who to compete, It
matters to use them. The blank, need not be sent in but
I HEREBY NOMINATE
Mr Mrs. or Miss.
. Contest District No.
Street
as a Candidate in The Reflector Company
Nominated
My occupation or profession.
THE FIRST OF THESE COUPONS RECEIVED FOB A CANDI-
DATE COUNTS FOR VOTES.
Under circumstances the nominator's name be divulged.
CONDENSED FOR OUR BUSY READERS
Boy Kilted by Tree Near
Newton-Hr. X. L. Brown Elected
of Oxford Orphan-
Carolina Ahead of Mis-
in Tobacco Manufacture
Durham, Dec. Master R.
N. Hackett. of the Masonic order,
called a meeting of the
rectors here this afternoon, and elect-
ed Mr. R. L. Brown to the
tendency of the Oxford Orphan
to succeed W. J. Hicks, filling
put the term. Mr. Brown
succeeds Col. Hicks who has
retired from the work. He
been assistant the past year and has
done his work well.
December
announcement is made today that
North Carolina has finally forged a-
head of Missouri in the manufacture
of tobacco, the year's official
showing that the North State has
paid to the government a great v
amount than any State in the Union
on the manufactured weed. For
several years the Carolina
have been endangering Mis-
supremacy until at last, ac-
cording; to figures from the record of
internal the trick is turned
in favor of North Carolina.
Washington, December r
Sharp, of North Carolina, was today
appointed to be consul at Belfast.
Ireland. His first appointment
is marshal at Osaka and i
of vice consul and interpreter
Interpreter at Kobe, consul at Kobe,
at Osaka and vice consul and
consul general at Moscow and
at Lyons.
The boys have grown more
land are shooting some of the bi
crackers these nights.


Title
Eastern reflector, 9 December 1910
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
December 09, 1910
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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