Eastern reflector, 20 January 1911


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





V-
is.
Horn and Farm Eastern Reflector.
TRADE MARK
REGISTERED.
r The Origin of Fertilizers.
Mr. Royster believed that success awaited the
Manufacturer of Fertilizers who would place quality
above other considerations. This was Mr.
idea Twenty-seven years ago and this is his idea
to-day; the result has been that it requires Eight
Factories to supply the demand for Royster Fertilizers.
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY,
FACTORIES AND SALES OFFICES.
NORFOLK, VA. TARBORO, N. C. COLUMBIA, C. O,
MACON, GA. COLUMBUS, GA. MONTGOMERY, ALA. BALTIMORE, MO.
NATIONAL HANK STOCKHOLDERS.
Be-Elect Board of Directors and
Officers.
The of the National
Bank of Greenville held their annual
meeting Tuesday in the office of the
bank. The stockholders unanimously
re-elected the former directors, as
F. G. James, J. P.
E. A. Jr., H. W. Whedbee, G.
E. Harris, L. W Tucker, J. E. Nobles,
J. E. Winslow and J. L. Perkins.
Immediately after the adjournment
of the stockholders, the board of
rectors met and re-elected the fol-
lowing
P. G. James, president.
J. P. vice-president.
P. J. Forbes, cashier.
M. L. assistant cashier.
Charles James, bookkeeper.
The of both
directors and officers shows the sat-
of all concerned with the
management of the bank.
TARIFF ASSOCIATION.
To Place Tariff on A
Basis.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, Jan. National
Tariff Commission began
its annual convention today with an
attendance of delegates from all sec-
of the country. President John
Cobb the
to order and addresses were made b
s of tariff reform, including
Senator of Indiana; Rep-
of
setts,; and Henry C. Emory,
of the government tariff board. Th
object of the association is to
the tariff on scientific
all revisions cf
committee of expert.
Wisconsin Senator
By Wire to The Reflector.
Madison, Wis., Jan. com-
of the state senate appointed
by the legislature years ago to
alleged corruption in
election of Isaac Stephens, multi-
millionaire lumber man, to the
States senate today filed its re-
port charging Stephenson with viola-
of the corrupt practices act and
many specific irregularities.
Schenck Was Poisoned.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Wheeling, W. Va., Jan. Dr.
who attended Schenck after
the family physician gave up the
case, was on the witness stand
morning. He said
oms were unmistakably those of
poison. He said Schenck continued
to grow worse until he was removed
to the hospital, and then immediately
started to get better.
Enormous Express Business.
Hf Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, Jan.
companies operating in the United
States did of
for the year ending June 30th,
1909, of which over twelve millions
was profit, according to a report pub-
by. the Inter State Commerce
Commission.
Cotton Weevil Field.
Mr. James B. Allen, a farmer of
Port Gibson, Miss., has been
with the cultivation of cotton
in the boll weevil belt. Through in-
cultivation, fertilization and
the use of powdered arsenate of lead,
he claims to have put the weevil out
of business. Mr. Allen furnishes The
New Orleans Picayune with a detail-
ed report of his experiment, which
was made on land where previously
the weevil had made all cotton
unprofitable. The Picayune
says that the cotton in which
teen varieties entered into the
was planted under ordinary
conditions, in well cultivated and
highly fertilized soil, and after the
squares commenced to form the
plants were treated with the powder-
ed arsenate of lead, after as many
of the as possible were pick-
ed off by hand. The good results
which these experiments show in
pounds of lint and seed per acre and
I the excellent money returns, hold out
; high hopes that if other farmers in
the boll weevil districts adopt the
same measures they will achieve
success. It shows that some ad-
has been made in the
of growing cotton and wee-
at the same
Chronicle.
Why Not Turn This Tide.
During the year Just ended one
hundred and fifty thousand people of
the United Slates, many of whom are
farmers and nearly all of whom come
from hardy Teutonic stock, moved
across the northwestern border and
settled In Canada. They will become
citizens of that country, developing
its wilderness, enriching its
and adding to its national
strength.
One hundred and fifty thousand
producers of wealth have left us
within a single twelve months. The
number is considerably greater than
it was in 1909 and , according to the
forecast of the Canadian immigration
department, it will be greater still
at the end of 1911.
Such a record is of vital concern
to every quarter of the Union and
particularly so to the South. For it
is in this section that these thous-
ands of land seekers should logically
settle. It would be a conservative
estimate to say that the emigration to
Canada last year meant a loss of
one hundred million dollars to our
own country. A nation has no asset
more valuable than the man who
works. Labor is of itself a source
of community wealth and social
fare. Every farmer that moves from
a country, not overcrowded, is a loss
to that country.
And he is likewise a gain to land
whither he goes. Had the tide of
emigration from the northwest been
southward instead of toward Canada
our whole union would be richer to-
day and our own section would be
incalculably so.
The South neither desires nor needs
that sort of immigration which flows
in from the muck piles of the Old
World, but she should welcome the
men whose veins hold the blood of
her own forbears and whose hon-
est industry would add to the wealth
of her
The Immigration department of
Canada is carrying on a vigorous
systematic campaign to secure set-
from our northwestern states.
Herein lies a truly, golden suggestion
for the Journal.
Night Riders Again.
y Wire to The Reflector.
Mt. Sterling, Ky., Jan.
partially wrecked the tobacco
of A. R. early
with dynamite. The explosion
hook buildings all over the town
ad aroused citizens, but tho
escaped.
Shad May be Plentiful.
According to the sayings of old
fishermen, that a freshet in the river
between new and old Christmas,
foretells a good run of shad, that
very desirable fish ought to be
this spring.
Nearly every good talker overdoes
Local Banks Better.
A man is very foolish to deposit
his money in the postal savings banks
and get two per cent interest when
he can deposit in perfectly safe
banks and get four per cent
News and Observer.
Government Finances Shew Some
Improvement
The coming of a new year finds the
finances of the United States Treas-
far improved over tho condition
which the business of 1910 was begun,
having spent in that year
more than it had taken in. That sum
took no account of the
expenditures for the Panama can-
The beginning of 1911 finds the de-
reduced to and the tot-
deficit, including Panama
reduced to almost on
all half of what
it was a year ago.
The year closes with about
in the general fund and a working
balance of in the Treasury
offices, both considerably lower than
a year ago. This is considered by
Treasury officials a remarkable show-
in the face of the fact that more
than has been for the canal
construction.
Train in Creek.
Morehead, Ky., Jan.
coach on the Morehead and
railroad jumped the track
and plunged into a creek
passengers aboard. wore in-
Everybody can instantly con-
in everybody but himself,
Agriculture Is the Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Man. George
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JAN 1911.
Number
WHAT LAW
PROCEEDINGS OF THE N. C.
GENERAL
VERY QUIET DAY IN BOTH
BIL's to Appoint State Building Com-
i . it tee and Erect Administration
building Mutters of
Before the
an Reports and
Bills But Few Ones
Southern railway
. eel to put an additional
train between Greensboro and
Senator asked par-
m to withdraw his bill
T. e u
bills at importance
-e-
In reference
to habeas us. .
Reinhard. of i g
false
it, to credit.
, i I
No. ii ; . fl-
of Pitt; Relating tax
-Sat ii day.
SENATORIAL CONTESTS
IN THREE STATES
States Elect New York Con-
film's
T p
Lodge
. , Jan. Henry
today re-elected senator
Massachusetts on joint ballot.
In
i R. I., Jan.
was elected today to
Senator Aldrich.
New York Deadlock.
Jan. was no
in today.
i. are standing firm
last one
receiving ninety today
bills on third g, practically
calendar, and a large
number reported on by com-
All of the new bills intro-
were of minor importance.
The senate held only a brief
the time being devoted mainly
to considering bills sent over from
the house. . A joint resolution was
adopted inviting Logan W. Page to
address the general assembly an Jan-
26th. When adjournment was
taken It was in respect to the
of the late W. J. Hicks.
The only new bills of general
introduced
providing
for making false
to obtain credit.
of To facilitate
i of wills by r
i certain cases.
Monday.
The held a longer session
, work, again
ii calendar,
r general
v. e e
tho erection of a . .
t building at the Soldier's
I'd v. omen front
i a.-L of i es or
o an
i j i i. -u sheep
, protect game,
To for
To amend the law of 1909,
relative to the law clerk of the at-
general.
To absolute
for insanity of either party for
ten years.
Consideration of the income tax
amendment to the Federal
bill was made a special order
Thursday, January 26th.
Notice was also given that Wed-
i a joint meeting of the
and house committees on ed-
would e held, and that ex-
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR
EXCHANGES TODAY
CONDENSED FOR OUR READERS
Needle Taken From Sid Kin stun
Where ft bad Worked
Through From
I of Raleigh District
Dead- Man Loss Arm
in Cotton
en; o d to l e cries of
a William the
J of Mr. and Mil.
, ad Lad child
k e i He
. . . j of .
o Lie Se
ago the child had com-
id of side and the
-a.- taken Hie body,
on is from
i a . i-p i ; i com I i e
i . . r o. h I
II . ii it
in learn of I I Y.
W I Cm of the
l; ii;
; i I . ii
i y
. c i. . . n e
g day In
x y he g
Until his death
which came almost suddenly. He
was ill just one week ago to-
News and Observer.
Louisburg. Jan. T. P. Al-
about CO of age, while
operating Griffin cotton
gin, in this place yesterday, became
entangled in the machinery, and had
ins left arm and that side of his
terribly mangled, the left arm being
amputated above the elbow by Dr. J.
K, His condition not en-
it is said. He has
n wife and a
BILL NYE DAY IN THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF
Pa; Tribute to Dead
. .
J. . Feb-
appointed by Hon.
V. state Superintendent of
lie as Nye
public schools of Caro-
a. A will be
i. to read
the pupils a biography of Nye.
i a brief of his
e carried om.
,; . . i; e.- ill
o; Hill mt-
the North
a. Association for some time,
i . at .; . e cum-
a with
. J. i. Cook, of fig
The use in i
oar.; g the is
the Stale to
a ti and i e
., e by t-
in Incidentally lie
u. .-me voluntary
lit
th Wye i fir d,
Inch is to be applied to the erection
. g i s one
Training
at Co child In
; will
,. ; e j e ii
i i g e day,
; ii j tills
r Bl a i
. ., . i . e;.
o of
.-. i . , i i i r. as
the who are
deeply In the
Shunts
to The Reflector.
Suffolk, Va., Jan. It. Hunt,
chief accountant of the Montgomery
Lumber Co., in the bead
today and is dying. A
meeting is scheduled for tomorrow,
nut officials of the com, any say that
Hunt was of exemplary
POOR PRINT





Ts Carolina Home and The Reflector.
MEN OF THE HOUR
THE PRAYER LEAGUE IS SHOW-
WHO THEY ARE
A LARGER ATTENDANCE SUNDAY
in League and
Hie Subjects are Help-
ed to all Preset Ii Man ho
far as Leader ha Failed
Tho men of Greenville are growing
enthused over the prayer lea-
air held each Sunday after-
noon, alternating at the different
churches, and the attendance In the
Methodist church past Sunday
was the best of any meeting
The l.-ague that was an outgrowth
of the meeting held by Dr.
Black has now been
and ii i.-.
no one ,.; ii;,.
leaders for ;
Sit so faded to r
With those loaders
Bret effort to a tare in
public, but the manner in which they
have met the occasion has
and j ,.
the
and In trying to uplift others,
c. w.
ideal presiding officer of the league,
adds with his help-
remarks between the talks of the
leaders and in directing the meeting.
The subject for Sunday afternoon
was Man of the with
Messrs. W. E. Hooker, D. M. Clark
and K. II. Thomas leaders. It would
have any man good to hear
their talks, and also those of ex-
and Mr. G. E. Harris
that followed. They were all full
of inspiration as to meeting the needs
of the hour, and how men should live-
to do
Tho meeting next Sunday will be
held In the Presbyterian church.
Subject, In Text,
Luke and John Leaders
Messrs. J. A. Wand, J. L. and
Wiley Brown.
All men who want to spend n
and profitable Sunday
should attend these meet-
In addition to tho excellent
talks, there is also good singing,
Report of Condition of
The Bank of Greenville
At Greenville, N. C.
At Close of Business January 7th. T
mm
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts
Overdrafts
Banking House
Building and Fixtures
Cash Items
Due from Banks
Cash in Vault
Total
1.60
4,200.00
4.3 12.32
0,428.61
146,786.14
18,563.60
1.36
s-b
.,
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock
Profits
Deposits
Total
4,277.53
314,243.83
1.36
R. L. DAVIS, Pres.
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier
Black Jack
Jack, N. C, Jan. are
having warm weather for
January.
We are glad to hear of Mrs. R. M.
Williams getting better.
Mr. C. Puck left for Wake For-
est last week.
Mott of the farmers are getting
ready tO sow tobacco beds through
this section.
Mr. and J. S. Dixon went to
Washington last week.
Mr. W. V. Clark, after spending a
days at his home, left for Whit-
Institute last week.
Miss spent hist
Saturday night and Sunday in Green-
Black Jack Is a hustling town
LOW.
Money may not
but It n lot of
DO YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT
You Should For the
S and burglars; in your home it is not.
u careless handling; in your pocket it is not.
receipt;
MONEY towards economy, always ready for use,
The Greenville Banking Trust Co.
We will be o have your business.
C. S. CARR, Cashier
At Presbyterian Church.
Summer Courses for Teachers.
The Presbyterian congregation ,
B B for teachers at East Carolina Teach-
to have Rev. N.
if preach for them Sun-
lay morning and His
were excellent and largo con-
heard him at both
vices,
Training School will be held
March 14th to May 20th, ten weeks,
and from June 6th, to July 29th,
eight weeks. Attention Is to
the advertisement elsewhere in this
paper. The advantages offered, at
this school
TAX NOTICE.
All persons owing taxes for the
year 1910 are notified that they must
come forward and settle. must
collect these taxes, as I cannot
ford to extend The State
requires me to settle with the treas-
by the first of January, which
time has already passed, and I must
Insist on prompt settlement from
those who are yet delinquent.
L. W. TUCKER,
Tax Collector.
Carolina Home and The Festers Deflector.
Ill HIT
JUDGE GARLAND S. FERGUSON
PRESIDING
THERE ARE MANY CASES FOR TRIAL
Grand Drawn and Notes on
Ferguson's
Makes Strong on Personal
and Property Bights and Laws
Society.
The January term of Pitt Superior
court for the trial of criminal cases
convened this morning Judge
Garland S. Ferguson and
Mr. F. G. James representing the
State for Solicitor who
was unable to get here the first day
of court.
The following were drawn as
grand M. T. Spear, foreman; H.
M. Stokes. E. S. Norman, George
Williams, R. L. Johnson, J. R. Tug-
well, Gray Moore, Warren, Jr.,
J. A. Teel, F. V. Johnston, Wm.
Arthur, S. J. Parker, R. J. Little.
J. E. King, E. B. Garris, I. J.
W. S. Williams, R. L.
Judge Ferguson said in his charge
that for the last eight years he had
traveled over the State of North Car-
and is convinced that there is
much to be learned about the State.
We have a great State in wealth, pop-
and material progress. We
have a law abiding citizenship as a
whole, but still there are those who
want to have their own way with-
out respect to the rights of others.
Therefore it is necessary for us to
have courts to suppress the evil dis-
positions of some men.
term of court should be looked
forward to with a feeling of
by all law abiding citizens, as
a time when offenders shall be dealt
with according to their misdoings.
Our forefathers deemed it wise to
place the executions of the law in
the hands of the citizens. No person
can be be brought to trial except
through the citizenship of bis State,
a jury of whom is selected to hear
the sworn evidence against the of-
fenders and these must pass upon
his guilt or innocence. It depends
therefore, upon the citizens whether
a community shall have law and or-
Judge Ferguson then went into the
crimes against personal rights and
property, society, and such
as affect the general welfare of the
people. As to character he said the
chief glory of the State is the honor
of its men and virtue of its women.
Character comes from years of right
living and right thinking. The man
who accumulates such character con-
tributes more to his State than can
be measured in money, and he has
the right of protection to his char-
The is true as. to the
virtue of our women and the
says this must not be assailed.
We get our first principles of gov-
In the home. Every man
has the right to make regulations
for the government of his own home,
and when he has proper rules for
the government of himself and his
family, there is less need for law
and reformatories.
We are not a people who live each
op Fifth
STIMULUS TO COBS
Southern Boys U HaTe Exhibit at
Columbus Corn Exposition.
Washington, Jan.
boys in the Southern States who
have raised the best corn crop
the past year will be given an
opportunity to exhibit ten ears at
the National Corn Exposition, to be
held at Columbus, Ohio, January
to said Br. Clarence
J. Owens, commissioner of
and immigration of the South-
Commercial Congress in a re-
cent interview.
are boys belonging to
the in the Southern
States, and the Southern Commercial
Congress, co-operating with the
States department of
will pay for the transportation
of exhibits of the most success-
boy to the
grounds. The selection of the
exhibits will be done by the county
and state agents of the farm
work of department
of agriculture, We hope to bring
together exhibits from acres
whose total output was bush-
els.
corn clubs throughout
the South had wonderful success
last year, and Dr. S. A. Knapp, of
the department of agriculture who
is directly in charge of farm demon-
work, anticipates even bet-
results next year.
in the tremendous and
wonderful resource of the South,
the Southern Commercial Congress Is
actively co-operating with the
States department of
in disseminating correct
and is watching very care-
fully the publication of bulletins
which may be of value to the South-
farmer, so that they may be
to his attention immediately
upon publication. The department
has recently issued two valuable
No. and Corn
and No.
which may be had upon application
to our Washington office.
Dr. Owens is now making a trip
through the Southern States, visit-
each governor, regarding state
committees of fifteen business men
to represent the state at the great
meeting of the Southern Commercial
to be held in Atlanta, March
and Governor Mann, of
and Governor of
West Virginia and Governor Wilson,
of Kentucky, are each heading such
committees.
TWAIN'S
Home Enterprises.
When you buy goods in some dis-
city that could be had as well at
home, you miss the chance to make
a business ally in your own town
who sooner or later may be very
useful.
If the mistress of a home on a
swell street goes to the metropolis
for her fine feathers, soon the wife
of the clerk and the laborer will be
sending their dollars to build up some
congested center.
In college a passion of loyalty
creates enthusiasm for athletic
leads to fervent backing of all com-
enterprises and binds men to-
in after life.
Could we but get that feeling of
loyalty to our home town, based
on the personal advantages of
reciprocity between individual
citizens and on real affection for the
institutions and enterprises of the
place we call our city would
advance with the vim of college life.
Concord Tribune.
His at The Hotel Limited by His
Supply of Linen.
that knew Mark Twain
recognized that in a matter of
he was the veriest said
the clerk of a hotel where Mr.
Clemens used to put up.
remember that one day after
bis wife's death, when her estate
was being settled up, he came down
stairs one morning to receive an of-
looking letter from one of the
administrators. He opened it slow-
and stood for a long time study-
the figures on an
he finally exclaim-
ed. I owe them or do
they owe me He passed
the paper over to me. and when
told him the balance was in his fa-
he seemed greatly relieved.
he was unintentionally in-
In getting our cashier
fired. Mr. Clemens was In the
it of getting of a day from
the office. Sometimes he would get
it without a draft and sometimes
his secretary would come down stairs
with him and cash a check. After
he had gone home on one of his vis-
its we sent him a bill. We got an
answer saying the bill was too
small, for he had drawn more
than he had been debited with.
This made the proprietor angry and
he fired the cashier on the spot. It
afterwards turned out that on the
morning hat Mr. Clemens had drawn
this particular his secretary
immediately afterward had given
the cashier a check for so that
there was no entry on the book.
day when Mr. walk-
ed in and signed his I asked
him how long he expected to stay.
tell you, he replied, leaning
over the counter. depends on
the weather and my shirts. I've one
shirt on and two In my grip. As
soon as they all get dirty I am go-
back York Sun.
THE ASSOCIATION.
The January Meeting Largely At-
tended and Interesting.
At 10.30 the Pitt County
Association assembled in the
of the graded school building
The devotional were con-
ducted by Prof. H. B. Smith,
dent of the association.
Prof. H. H. superintend-
of the Farmville graded school,
made announcement in regard to the
reading course.
The was then taken
up. Prof. Ray super-
, of Grifton graded
school, made a very Interesting talk
on the first half of the Sanitary
prescribed in the State reading
course for teachers for this year.
Prof. H. L. Koonce, superintendent
of the Ayden graded school also
made a strong talk on the second part
of the Sanitary Primer. These two
addresses were exceedingly interest-
and practical.
The next was tho lecture of Prof.
H. E. Austin of the Training School.
He was at his best and showed him-
self master of his theme.
The weather was fine and a large
number of teachers were present.
On account of sickness, Prof. Rags-
dale was not able to be present
We missed him so much and truly
hope that he will be fully recovered
in a few days.
REPORTER.
Wood's Seeds
For The
Farm Garden
have an established reputation
extending over thirty years, be-
planted and used extensively
by the best Farmers and Garden-
throughout the Middle and
Southern States.
Wood's New for 1911 will
Seed Catalog M to
determine as
to what crops and seeds to plant
for success and Our pub-
have long been noted
for the full and complete
which they give.
Catalog mailed free on
request. Write for it
T. W. WOOD SONS,
Richmond, Va.
ESTABLISHED
Wholesale and retail and
Furniture dealer. Cash for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrels,
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits. Baby Carriages
Go-Carts. Parlor Tables
Lounges Safes. P. sud Bail
Ax Snuff. High Life Tobacco.
West Cheroots, Ci-
gars. Canned Cherries, Peaches,
Syrup, Jelly. Meal. Sugar
Coffee, Soap, Lye. Magic Food Mat-
Ches, Oil Cotton Seed Meal and
Garden Oranges Mute
Candies, Dried Apples.
Currants. Glass,
Cakes
and Crackers. Cheese,
best Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, numerous other goods
and quantity for cash.
Come to see me.
Phone Number
S M SCHULTZ
CHOICE.
AND HOLLAND BULBS
Hyacinths, Tulip, Easter
Plant for best
All Seasonable Cot Flower
Furnished at Short Notice
Paint, Fern and all Hat
Plants For Decoration
J. L CO., sleigh.
Phone No.
SAM MASON
Master
H. C.
Shop in R. L. Smith's Stables
All Work
Speaking of sad- examples, a school
boy says his arithmetic is full of em
Some men look upon a high ball as
an for low spirits.
POOR PRINT





mm
The Carolina Horn and Fan sad The Reflector.
The Carolina Home and Far and The Eastern Rejector.
. .
who has been
James
i day.
I F C. Miss Elizabeth
shall Miss Dora Cox,
this to attend
are sorry
to I- M b. U. E. ii
hospital Raleigh.
v. C. Harris who
moving to
Vance society of
hie High School, met Friday
. d elected the following
Co lice n
. i , ; r. N.
F. C. Nye, critic; C. i
supervisor; J, H. Stalling
shall,
Pearl Hester entertained
I ;. oral
I I.
. . . to half past
present had
i- . ice
and plant bed
till j a at A. W.
need o good sewing
. i A. d a good variety at A. V.
go . Company's.
The term of
High began January wit
the old students back an
.- e new ones. The
row is considerably beyond the
several others yet to con
X e is arranging for sever;
o lectures during the
. j w Bailey, of Raleigh,
address May
is one the strongest
i . I e and we consider on
exceedingly fortunate in
e g him.
N. C, Jan.
y Starkey, of spent
d v our town with his
Services were in the
c ; c Sunday morning and Sun
. I, Lev M. A. Adams.
; . . A. an old student v
. High School, was in tow
evening.
of, ii. P. tilled Rev. ft
at
day night.
ii i oil organized a
at Hopewell Sunday
The prospects arc bright
good Sunday school.
went to Green
yesterday.
Exercises will be given in the
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF PAUL N. HER.
Authorized Agent of The Carolina J and Farm and he j
Eastern Reflector for
Advert sing Rates on Application
. . Jan. Mr. U. PASTOR
was in
Declares For Amendment to Sabbath
Law.
Preceding his sermon Sunday
Rev. A. J. pastor of the
Baptist church, spoke
forcibly regarding needed amend-
to the Sabbath law, and the
bar proposition.
Mr.
announced this morning that I
to say a this evening
my sermon, to the members
f the general assembly about two
rugs that hod.- ought to do during
he present session. I am glad to
so many lure, and extend to you
i most hearty to all of
You are as the rep
of tie
districts of State,
a grave responsibility to the
hole commonwealth. To you are
affairs of the state,
the interacts of all tie
in i come
item g tali st-
I'd an interest, be-
; e or their signifies
i-y are matters deserving c e
dad ca legislation.
Pile ill St of these is an amend-
to our Sabbath law. The law
i now stands would be very good
i v. any penalty attached,
without this it is a farce. One
i has not the proper for
Sabbath, nor for other people
j have, was to
late the law for profit or pleas-
would not be deterrent by the
pi ally of one dollar,
has bee. by experience
, it here in It and elsewhere
ante be added to
I fixing a penalty that would
the law w Those
will not his groat
Itself to he
i of reproach
borne enough of disgust the
SO of city and State have in
it Is a
. . . ;. ,,,
Observer.
s Lives.
i d
. for
writes
N.
So. S, we both had
that no other rem-
could help. We were told my
She was
weak and had night sweats but
your wonderful medicine completely
cured us It's the best I ever
used or heard For sore lungs. jug of liquor and not it,
coughs, colds, hemorrhage, there would be no need of Jails and
fever, croup, whooping if people would be-
bronchial have and i control themselves.
Sober A Mas.
The Good us
-u ii e
.; , . .
h . --O t. j i.
. Jo . c fa
o . i H. r trains a and
o o . , .,;.
; i . .
in a i en
. I. . . i
I ;
ard a ii v,
and m ii g ,,
;., j h
you thinK
tilings You have, why do you
drink to excess
There would be no need of pro-
law if men could pass by a
i i cine. Trial bottle free. and
DO, Guaranteed by all druggists
we for Confederate Women.
r bill by Representative
i c e of a
Break of temptations being
in their way and their
That's
nil
A ; . ,. . ii, ii
i I ti i
i mi i-
to do . . . i
in the house yesterday, la if would stop to think when
a the approval turn the of up to
i tat body. Sac; action, we think their mouths and an inclination
iii.- commended j e. of .
bill pro- j the. will feel ii; the Bold
lie of a I dawn the mo; n
I of the mo e
e . ;. e.
e . and
state
an law for its
High School auditorium
On the nineteenth, Lee's birthday,
Miss Dora Cox's room.
Special Reduction Sale.
H. G. J. R. will on
Friday 20th, begin a special
tic ; on all fall and Win tor
i i their prices being market
down to per cent, to avoid car-
the goods over. Their
advertisement in, column
are reduced.
to by
ether thing which ought by
be done is strengthen
l Improve our prohibit ion law,
has been so g-eat a g
la morally and materially to the
it possible for law
be so as to make legal
of that
it ought
. all means be so Improved as
lake impossible forever
my such interpretation. W die
quite confident that the v eight
if legal authority, and the of
the vast majority of the the ;
people of the State, are again. I
in interpretation, and heartily
prove the dissenting opinion banded
in the case, yet it
to be possible for any such con-
to be placed upon the law,
or if such institutions as that
can do business
under the law we might as well
i license system. If the can't
that sort of v
not to call it a prohibition
bill has already been
ed to prohibit of
and it ought to puss without
If aver a,
its in Tin
i . much n
ii privilege ease for these women
does tare for the
. r should provide a
; . e for The
; to the old soldiers
i give on home if you'll desert
. . to e as
est site may. by This post
ti
they have i a
or ii were
h i e
In e
e e
I, i
to Io red
their own
mall n of people
l he .
effects of a that probably
their into eternity ad
own souls and
and into
misery want, ii about
ion is worthy a great state. She ask yourselves question why
Of both the soldier
Hit s ell us the
ed we are re
ed an effort at a beginning
de Raleigh
Tortured.
i suffered unspeakable
lure from indigestion, constipation
liver wrote A. K. Smith
i at Erie, Pa., Dr.
New I Pills all
g Try
to any or kid-
cents at any
d the stuff, never
me unless I bother it
It is so about all oilier temptations
o. ;. The is with
. i is.
l ma.
n ii
Death ii Hearing Fire.
May not the work of
. o out often bums are
that make a need for
Salve, the quickest,
for bums, wounds, boils,
u . Hams .. it kills
. i .; skin
s or piles. Only
at all druggists.
METAL SHINGLES
Laid years ago are as as new to-day and have never needed
repairs. Think of it I
What other reefing will last as long and look as well
They're and very easily laid.
They can be laid right over wood shingles, if necessary, without
dirt inconvenience.
For prices and other information apply to
troll ii
Record of the Year from
January to December.
HISTORY DAY BY DAY.
Notable Occurrences Throughout
the World.
A REMARKABLE DEATH ROLL
Wonders of of Mis-
Interest, Accidents,
Wrecks and Floods A
logical Review.
of the T. M. C. A of North
opened In Toronto.
Aviation; Claude Grahame-White
the speed race at park;
for 62.1 miles Cl minutes U seconds.
J. B. won the race
from Belmont park to the statue of
Liberty covering miles
21.84 seconds
Ralph ascended
feet at worlds
j j
John Morley of
best known as a man of
resigned In he Brit-
cabinet as secretary of state for
In Philadelphia loss of over
In the business district.
William St. John Harper,
noted artist and Illustrator. In New
York;
demonstrations
the City of Mexico and elsewhere.
miners killed by ex-
In the Lawson mine at Black
Wash.
Elections. Democratic landslide In
state elections and a Democratic
of representatives returned to
Massachusetts. Connecticut,
York and New Jersey elected
governors to succeed Re-
publican governors, and Ohio re-elect-
a Democratic governor.
Mine Explosion In mine No.
the Victor American Fuel company,
entombed miners.
President sailed on the
Tennessee from Charleston on
An official visit to the republic of Pan-
and the canal zone.
Harvard beat Dartmouth.
to In the annual football game
at Cambridge. defeated
to at Princeton. Michigan
Pennsylvania played a tie game
at Franklin field; score to
United States Senator Alex-
Stephens Clay of Georgia, at At-
Prince Victor Napoleon
Bonaparte, pretender to the throne of
France, married Princess Clementine
of Belgium at Italy.
Count Tolstoy, who mysteriously
In October, discovered In n rail-
way station about miles from his
home In an enfeebled condition.
John La Fargo, distinguished
mural painter and stained glass art-
in Providence, R. I.; aged
Eugene B. Ely In the
biplane Hudson Filer flew from the
deck of the United States scout cruiser
Birmingham In Hampton Roads to
Willoughby beach, miles distant.
President Taft reached Pan-
and had a conference with Col.
and other members of the
canal commission.
President Taft the
at a state banquet and de-
that there would be no
of the republic of Panama to the
United States.
Ralph the
killed by the fall of his biplane
at Denver; aged
Yale and Harvard's football
match at New Haven resulted In a no
score game.
Count Tolstoy, the fa-
Russian novelist, at
Russia; aged Si
President reached Fort
on his return from Panama.
J. Armstrong Drexel ascend-
ed feet In a monoplane at
The Navy defeated Army
at football on Franklin field,
to
Fire; kilted and
. . .
ht s r . n
N. J
Mexico. defeated
in
Political; parliament dis-
solved by proclamation
The government asked the
dissolution the sugar trust a
combination In restraint of
The conference of governors met at
Frankfort, Ky.
Mace. English
prize-fighter In the sixties, in England;
aged
DECEMBER.
L Poll Gen. was In-
president of Mexico for the
eighth time.
Gen. E. A. Carr, U. A.,
d. ed In border
before the war as well as In
that conflict, died in Washington; aged
Mary Baker Glover Eddy,
of the Christian Science church.
In Boston; aged
Gen. Wesley U. S. A., retired,
noted In the civil and
can wars, at Natural Bridge, Va.;
aged
The last session of the 61st
congress opened.
Heavy snow or rain In the
northern and eastern states.
The Duke of Chartres, one of
the Orleans princes served In
America In In Paris; aged
Fire- At Evansville. Ind.; loss of
The American Red Cross
society met In Washington.
President Taft's message rec-
the fortifying of the Pan-
canal, a ship subsidy, a halt In
legislating on corporations and a par-
post.
famous genre
In Berlin; aged
George Moore made a world's
record run of at cushion
billiards In New York.
French aviator,
established a new world's record for
altitude at Pan by soaring feet.
Mutiny of Brazilian marines
at Rio de Janeiro resulted In a battle
causing
Root and Moran, the Irish
American team, won the C day bicycle
race In New York; score miles
laps.
13th Official figures published;
population, exclusive of Alaska,
Including all possessions, 101.100.-
gain since 1900,
French army
aviator, made a new world's speed
record- by flying miles, from
to in minutes,
an average of miles an hour. The
previous record of about Cl miles an
hour was held by
Dr. Reich, author and
lecturer, noted for his criticisms on
American women, In London; aged
German steamer Palermo
wrecked on the lives
lost.
Personal; Associate Justice Edward
Douglass White of the United States
supreme court appointed chief Justice
as successor to the M, W. Fuller.
Judge Willis Van of Wyo-
ming and Judge J. It. of
nominated associate justices.
Andrew Carnegie gave
000.000 to cause of peace.
Conference on
disputes met In Washington.
Melville D. Landon. humor-
writer and lecturer, known as Ell
Perkins, at Yonkers, N. Y.; aged
Explosion In a powerhouse
at Grand Central station, New York,
caused extensive damage In the
and the loss of ninny lives.
Meet at Angeles.
American Historical as-
, at Indianapolis. Association
For the Advancement of Science at
Minneapolis.
American Association For
Labor Legislation at St. Louis.
Term Court.
tO From Third
o no. family to
but are lit
of each other and what one
does more or less effect upon
others.
In referring to the of of-
he said it would be great
if every county would
a competent accountant once a year
to go over the records and see that
all the taxes are properly accounted
for and applied.
Judge Ferguson's charge was i
good one, and touched upon many
other points that space does not per-
mentioning.
Immediately after the charge which
consumed about an hour, the docket
called in readiness to taking up
the cases for trial. The docket is a
largo one.
Marcellus Cotten, carrying conceal-
weapons, pleads guilty; fined
and cost.
John Cox, removing crop, pleads
guilty; Judgment suspended on pay-
of cost.
Claude Smith, assault with deadly
weapon, pleads guilty; Judgment
pended on payment of cost.
Johnson Mills and Alice Ellison,
affray, guilty; fined and
each.
Marble, larceny, guilty of
receiving stolen goods knowing they
stolen.
Lewis carrying con-
weapons, pleads guilty.
Louis and Will
Iii, affray, guilty; fined and
costs.
John Henry Clark, temporary
mistrial.
Frank Wiggins, larceny, guilty.
John Mitchell, larceny, guilty,
three years on roads.
Mitchell, larceny, guilty,
Owen Wooten, perjury,
Louis assault with
deadly weapon, plead., guilty of
assault; judgment suspended up-
on payment of costs.
TWO MASONIC
GRAND LODGE PETITIONED
SECOND LODGE CHARTER
NEW LODGE TAKES AN OLD NAME
Stray Taken Up.
I have taken up two hogs, both
black color, one weighing about
pounds, unmarked; the other weigh-
about CO pounds,
low fork each ear. Owner can
get same by proving ownership and
paying charges.
ABRAM ANDERSON,
R. F. D. No. C, Greenville, N. C.
ltd
SAM FLAKE
Harness Repair Shop
dealer odd parts of
EXT OFFICE. c
ROTES.
The Graded School Competing for
Prizes.
The graded school has several
who have entered the contest
the prize offered by the North
Carolina Committee of the American
and Arbitration League. The
prizes offered are three four-year
one at the University,
one at Bingham's at and
one at Bingham's at
There also a county prize equal to
250.00 cash value. The school is
hopeful of winning more than one
prize. The school has a library of
over volumes, has had a lyceum
course all winter, and has an enroll-
now larger than last year, and
more are expected. Professor
Lean is using a loose leaf record,
copyrighted by himself, that is very
complete, simple and meets school
requirements far better than the old
ordinary blanks so commonly used.
is not troubling about
what its census will show, but is
going ahead, building and doing, The
oil mill been at work weeks
Other enterprises are contemplated
for the future. Many line residences
adorn its streets.
is something
other folks to get our
Some Masonic History In Pitt
Sharon Was Name of First
Lodge Under Carolina
diction, But frown Point Existed
Under Jurisdiction of M;.
sat It ti setts.
Masonry has had such growth in
Greenville, the lodge here reaching
a membership of and upwards,
that it has been deemed advisable
to institute another lodge of that
order here. To this end a petition
been prepared to forward to the
grand lodge of the State for
a charter for the new lodge, this
petition being recommended by the
present lodge.
Those who will take their demit
from the old lodge to institute the
new one held a preliminary meeting,
Monday afternoon, to recommend u
name and the first officers of th
new lodge to embody in the petition
to the grand lodge for a charter.
The name chosen was Sharon Lodge,
and the officers recommended are
as
Henry Harding, worshipful master.
F. D. Foxhall, senior warden.
W. L. Brown, junior warden.
R E. Griffin, secretary.
J. N. Hail, treasurer.
The reason that the name Sharon
was selected for the new lodge is
because there is some tradition about
the name, it having been the name of
the first lodge instituted in Pitt
county under the jurisdiction of
North Carolina. Old Sharon lodge,
like some others existing in tho
South at the time, went down during
the civil war, and when Masonry
was revived in Greenville after
war, the lodge then took the name
of Greenville Lodge, No. has
since continued by that name.
While old Sharon lodge was the
first instituted in Pitt county under
the grand jurisdiction of North Car-
it is a matter of history that
a lodge existed in county many
years earlier, in fact prior to the
evolutionary period. A lodge, said
to be even the first that existed in
North Carolina, was at Crown Point,
county, which was instituted
under the jurisdiction of
setts, and while records of that lodge
were lost during the revolutionary
war, the present grand lodge of
North Carolina has show-
that Crown Point Lodge paid its
dues to grand lodge of
setts for the years
Mrs. Manila, E. Manning
invites you to be present
at marriage of her daughter
Lucy
to
Mr. John Robert Jenkins
on Tuesday afternoon, January fie
thirty-first
nineteen hundred and eleven
at half after four
At home
POOR PRINT





.
resumption Hoe
Meat
health of the
was. a months ago
a well known physician of this place
is little
;, no
will something do-
Do you
, large per
disorders of the human
are caused by eating meat
among children.
small boys eat enough
two grown people and
because they didn't have
and it wasn't Ion before
again. time because
hoy had too much. It is a fact that
bog meat is the most unhealthful
that we use daily. might not
deal so badly with our system if we
would eat the proper amount and
but it seems to be the tend-
ency too many people, when they
to eating hog meat to carry the
nature of the hog itself, i is
cl we Into
nature the qualities of animals
whose flesh We feed
be true, then is it any wonder that
we often overate ourselves when
we sit down to a dinner of
These are things for us to think about
Certainly parents should to it
that children are properly fed
whether their food consists of hog
or of something else.-Marsh-
ville Home.
The Home and and The
CATARRH
Quickly Cured by a Pleasant Germ-
Killing Antiseptic.
The little it
inhaler is made of hard
rubber, and can easily be carried in
pocket or purse. It will last a life-
time.
Into this inhaler you pour a few
drops of magical
This is absorbed by the antiseptic
gauze within, and now you are ready
to breathe it in over the germ-infest-
ed membrane, where it will speedily
begin its work of killing catarrh
germs. is made of Austral-
eucalyptus combined with other
antiseptics, and is very pleasant to
breathe.
It Is guaranteed to cure catarrh
bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs
and colds, or money back. It cleans
out a stuffed-up head in two minutes
Sold by druggists everywhere.
Complete outfit, including
pocket inhaler and one bottle
And remember, if
you need a second bottle of
druggists will sell it to you for only
cents. Free trial bottle of
OF THE CONDITION OF
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.
AT BETHEL, N. O.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business. January mi.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
Overdrafts . ,
.
Banking house, furniture
and fixtures.
Due from banks bankers
Silver coin, including
all minor coin currency.
1,276.00
42,298.71
Total,
3,548.10
82,501.36
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid
Surplus fund.
Undivided profits, less cur-
rent expenses and tax-
es paid.
Time certificates of de-
posit.
deposits subject to check.
7.500.00
9.000.00
986.72
10,065.45
54,949.19
Total,
82,501.36
State of Nor,,, Carolina, County ,
that k, do
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge
W. H. Cashier
Subscribed and sworn to before me, f M
S. T. CARSON, Notary Public n.
commission expires December Erector
CHILD BURNED.
Drawbacks.
The greatest drawback to progress
that the people of the world have had
to contend with through all ages has
been the inability of men to perceive
he great opportunities for advance-
that are in plain view all
around them. Only the most per-
verse state of blindness can
account for the fact that so few real-
the vastness of the field which
opens the way to success to all who
are willing to labor therein. It is
this same that
causes our boys to leave the farm
and crowd the cities to overflowing
It is responsible for the fascination
of the great West for the Eastern
bred lad and it causes the cowboy to
lay his lariat aside, turn his bronco
on the plains and drift to the
cultured and- effete East. It fills the
Dark benches of the cities with the
unemployed, and forms the breadline
that New York City feeds each day
For there is plenty of work in the
world for all, and it seldom becomes
really necessary for us to leave the
Mace of our birth to find it, provided
we will only keep our eyes open and
not close our ears to the knocks of
opportunity on our doors. This afore-
said lack of clearness of
causes the land owner to ignore the
great natural resources of his prop-
and allows the stranger to ac-
quire possession, for a few
and a million out of the coal or
oil it yield,.
the citizens of Bethlehem to lose
their chance for everlasting
when they failed to discern the
divinity of their Learn to
observe; teach your children to see
things aright; let them know that
this is a land of opportunity as much
as the fruit orchards of Florida or
the gold mountains of Alaska.
Greensboro Record.
Its Life Sated by Prompt Action of
Mother.
Helen Verne, the two-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Er-
win, of Beaver Dam, was seriously
though not fatally, burn-
ed at their home last Friday. Mrs.
had just gone out leaving the
little girl in the house, when the
latter ran out screaming and covered
in flames. Mrs. Erwin threw a
bucket of water on her and then
rolled her on the ground, extinguish-
the flames, but not before the
child had been burned from foot to
head on her left side, the flesh be-
burned to a crisp in some places.
The is Bead.
When a business man advertises he
wants to know, and has the right to
know, that his advertisement is read.
He can rest assured on this point
when he places his advertisement in
The Reflector. This paper has a
circulation to be proud of, and any
advertiser can know at any time
how many people his advertisement
goes to. For the quantity and
of this circulation the
rate is very low, and the
always gets more than the
worth of his money.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad,
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, H Greenville, and
November 1st,
a. m.
a. m.
a. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p, m.
2.15 p. m.
Ar.
Ar.
it
Norfolk
Washington
Williamston
Plymouth
Greenville
Kinston
Ar.
Ar.
ii
ii
ii
p. m
a. m
a. m-
a. m-
a. m
a. m.
a. m.
a. m,
For further information, address nearest ticket agent,
WARD, Ticket
W. J. P, T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. O.
in want ran money
we care your
Chill and Fever Tonic
m do It. Sold by all
w i w
Unable to Guess.
The Reflector received a letter from
Snow Hill asking that a subscriber's
paper be changed to that office, R. F.
D. As no name was signed to the
letter of course we do not know who
it is that wants his paper changed
Asking that the address be changed
a person should give both the old and
new post offices, and sign his
Sew Grocery Business.
Mr. J. l. Carper, who
moved back to Greenville from
where he lived last year
has purchased the Tunstall stock
and will carry on business at the
same stand on Dickinson avenue. He
s Putting in a nice groceries
and will cater to the best trade
New Year Suggestions
Why not select your Year presents with that same
you use in everyday business matters There
DO gift more appreciated or than something that will
beautify the home. We have everything in our store need
ed to furnish the home comfortably and cozily. But we
our line of HUGS and
the W
We are making a reduction on and Picture
this week. Call in and let us show you our line.
Taft Boyd Furniture Company
So mail is so that he can
ford to man.
Pulley bowen
Home of Fashion,. Greenville
Subscribe to the Reflector,
Woodland Items.
Woodland. N. C, Jan. 13.- We
are having a struggle with the
in our neighborhood pres-
Mrs. L. Nobles, of Ayden. spent
a part of wee with her par-
Mr. Baker, of
Training Future
Discussion first, its practical
cation later. We have been talking
for some little time in North Carolina
about necessity of taking more
pains to the education of our
country boys and girls t the
requirements of farm life. The
gist of this discussion is admirably
In a paragraph from the
spent Sunday at Mr. A. W. Barber's, recent report of
Mrs. Pups Barber is spending B
while with her son, Mr. A. W. Bar-
Mr. J. P. Woodard, of Greenville.
E. C. T. T. S., came out Saturday
to fill his appointment at Piney Grove
Sunday.
Hog killings are about over
around here for this season.
Mr. Roy Button, who had measles
sometime ago, took cold it which
developed into typhoid pneumonia.
He is very low. We hope he will
recover.
We are having fine weather for
working folks like myself, but yet
it don't make us work.
Miss Mary Smith, of Ayden, spent
the latter part of last week with
They All Want Good Roads.
No more important meeting has
been held in the county in years than
that which will assemble in Went-
worth next Saturday to consider the
question of improving our public
roads. It is a problem lying at the
foundation of social, educational,
moral and material betterment. The
roads are the avenues of neighborly
intercourse, commerce, school attend-
religious gatherings, etc. Rich
and poor, white and black, are help-
ed or hindered by them. The mud
tax is a tax not only on our horses
and wagons, but on our social well-
being. There is only one way out of the
difficulty and that is to good
roads. They will cost us something;
they Would not be worth having if
they didn't cost something. But the
benefits will far outweigh the bur-
dens. Rockingham is one of the
greatest counties in North Carolina
and only needs good roads to
pare the way for greater achieve-
in the future. Let the meet-
at adopt a
and business like policy and
peal to the good sense of the voters
to put it Week-
Mr. J. R.
A telephone message from Ayden
this morning announces the death of
Mr. J. R. which
ed Thursday night about o'clock.
He had been in bad health for some
time with what was supposed to
have been pellagra. He was a
of the Christian church at
tree's, and also a Mason. The fun-
will take place tomorrow with
Masonic honors. Mr.
was a good citizen and neighbor, and
well though of by all.
C. W. of the Durham
county . The education of the
farmer, says Mr. Massey,
be as broad in its scope and as
In every sense as that of the
business man in the city but his
and work are different.
His education should fit him to
and enjoy the one and
to carry on the other. To
this end agriculture and
science should be taught in a
cal way in all of our country schools.
Teach our young people that there
is something worth while on the farm
Teach them how and where to lo-
their home and how to take care
of a home properly. Teach the boys
how to take the hillsides
fill up the gullies and render them
fertile and productive once more.
Teach them how to select and
pare the soil for the various crops
raised on the farms, how to select
seeds, how and when to plant, how
to cultivate, how to harvest and how
to market the various farm
Precisely in line with this excel-
lent outline is the step which has
just been taken by the Guilford
commissioners in arranging for
the installation of a superintendent
of domestic science, a commissioner
of agriculture and a superintendent
of sanitation to devote their entire
time to Guilford county. of-
says a dispatch, teach
their respective branches in the high
schools during the session and in the
summer will hold institutes in parts
of the county not touched by the
high schools. The tuition and
will be free of cost to the
Thus Guilford is getting ready to
put into practice the
made to the Durham teachers
by their superintendent. In the
natural course of events the latter
county will not long delay in follow-
example in respect to
placing these matters
the direct control of teachers who
will be enabled to give their entire
time to looking after them. Guilford
and Durham have set an excellent
pace for the other ninety-six. Who
will be the next to follow their
Observer.
SCHEDULE
Raleigh ;.
YEAR ROUND Si
a. Atlanta, Birmingham.
points West, Jackson-
ville and Florida
Hamlet for Charlotte
Wilmington.
Professional Card
THE MAIL--No.
ii a.
with coaches parlor car. Con-
with steamer
ton, Baltimore, New
Providence.
THE FLORIDA FAST
a. Richmond,
and New
day coaches dining car.
Connects at Richmond C.
O. Cincinnati points West,
at Washington With Pennsylvania
railroad and Ii. O.
west.
THE SEABOARD .
p. Atlanta. Charlotte.
Birmingham, Memphis
and points West. Parlor cars to
Hamlet,
6.00 p. m., No. tor
Louisburg, Henderson Oxford, an-
p. Atlanta,
Memphis and points West, Jack
and all Florida points.
Pullman sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
a. a
12.45 p. Richmond 4.20 a.
ox., Washington 7.40 a.
York p. m.
Washington and
York.
C. B RYAN, P. A.
Portsmouth, Va
H. D. P. A.
Raleigh. N. C.
W. F.
Al If LAW
i opposite ii. L a Co a
next u John
Co. S new
a. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
AT LAW
formerly occupied by. J. 1-
. . Carolina
M. Clark.
W C.
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
. .
S. J. EVERETT
AT LAW
In Building.
. . g.
i,. I. Moore. W. H. Long.
MOORE LONG
AT LAW
. . . Carolina
CHARLES C. PIERCE
AT LAW
in all the courts. Office up
Phoenix building, next to
Dr. D. L. James
. . N- Carolina
New K. of P. Officers.
The following officers of Tar River
Lodge, No. were installed by D.
G. C, E. B.
G. J. C. C.
M. L. V. C.
B. B. Sugg,
D. M. Clark, M. of W.
A. B. Ellington, K. R. S.
F. G; Smith, M. of F.
C. S. Carr, M. of E.
H. D. G.
W. L. Hall, G
Young Men Wanted
Nearly every business man in Rich
Square in most every other
has been watching the boys
and young men of their acquaintance
for several months with a view to
employing one or more at good wages
for this year. The young men who
keep bad company, smoke cigarettes
and get drunk are shunned, not want
ed to serve in responsible places. We
happen to know that several good
business men have been puzzled about
whom to employ. They want Steady
g men, and these are In demand.
Rich Square Times.
DR. R. L, CARR
DENTIST
. . Carolina
Harry Skinner. H. W. Whedbee.
Lawyer.
. . N.
Many teachers wore here today at-
tending the meeting of the
This pretty weather good op-
for out work.
ROUTE OF
NIGHT EXPRESS
Schedule in effect December 18th.
N. following schedule fig-
published as information ONLY
are not guaranteed.
TRAINS LEAVE
a. m., daily, Night Express Pull-
man Sleeping Car for Norfolk.
a. m., daily, for Norfolk New
Parlor car service between
New Bern and Norfolk, connects for
all points north and west.
0.30 p. m., daily except Sunday, for
Washington.
Westbound.
3.25 a. m., dally for Wilson and
connects north, south and
west.
7.51 a. m., daily except Sunday for
Wilson and Raleigh, connects
all points.
p. m., daily, for and
For further information and
of sleeping car space, apply to
J. L. HASSELL, Agent, Greenville,
N. C.
LOOK, LADIES, THE SINGER STORE
on Main St. extend you the same
courtesy the rest room did. Ladies
the country ire especially in-
to stop and rest yourselves,
J. S. Prop.
JULIUS BROWN
ATTORNEY AX LAW
. . Carolina
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office in building, on Third
street
Practices wherever his services arc,
desired.
N. Carolina
J C. LANIER
DEALER IN
Monuments
Tomb Stones
Iron Fencing
S. J. Nobles
MODERN BARBER SHOP
furnished, everything n
working the very
best Second to none.
Opp. J. R. J. G.
right to
it. to do
with a
POOR PRINT





Carolina . Eastern
f j d .-
REFLECTOR
Dy
TO let
J. WHICHARD. Editor.
NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, year,
Six months.
Perhaps Commander Sims felt that
Joining tic navy did not surrender
if right of free speech.
Perhaps senator Lodge's tears
making a speech was through
for hearers.
might devote Its time to
a much better purpose than wasting
U on Peary.
rates may be had upon
application at the business it.
The Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
per word.
Communications advertising
be charged for at three
per line, up to lines.
Some of them are taking
by saying the census figures
are wrong.
Entered an
August at the post office
Greenville. North Carolina,
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 1911
Ni-beer is a
in every section of the state good
toads is talk.
Congress is not doing enough to
attract attention.
January is not giving us as much
cold as did December.
A booster is one thing and a kick-
is are you
The dollar you send away does not
your home town to grow
Ground is not waiting for tho
it is already here
Counties, like individuals, should
and not live
or
a dab
Una see no we thaw out.
Talk about poultry shows, most
any town can have one when the
oats come out in force.
Good for Senator Cotten He has
introduced a bill to tax dogs, and it
ought to pass.
This weather is calculated to push
fruit trees enough for the
crop to get caught in a late freeze.
A man named Oyster has been el-
of the Washington
chamber of commerce, and it is said
is nothing of a clam about him
do not believe Greenville will
ever get the factories the town needs
until the home folks first make the
move to get them .
A who was put in jail in
Charlotte, prayed that the jail door
Height swing But it
open until the jailer went to go in.
If you can't work for your town
you might do some good to shut your-
self up and keep out of the way of
those who want to work.
Some people have the nerve to keep
trying to corns
it is not those who promise to
They try not to come.
Here's hoping for the dissolution
f the dissolute Standard Oil.
Dispatch.
you
as soon see it
The way the congressional com-
is probing be
around to do like Cook, con-
fess that he did not reach the North
Pole.
oil trust may be enough
to slip out of it, but that is no reason
he tobacco trust will get smoked out
A is a
new way the trusts have of referring
to their combinations to control
trade.
Wonder if the year 1911 will give
an opera house. We
not yet heard any noise that
like it.
Before establishing any new
ties, the legislature might ascertain
if they will be able to take care of
themselves without being a burden
to the state.
will soon come
to help consumers hit the
meat u
Today brings a combination that
satisfy the most superstitious.
13th, and full moon. May-
tho moon will keep off bad luck.
New York wants to lay a fine of
on every woman who lets a hat
yin stick out more two inches
. om the crown of her hat
taking a whack at the
i see if there is not some-
yourself that would make
target for a brick.
Would a man object to having good
loads it they would not
aim a cent more taxes than he is
Roads can be built
in Pitt on that basis.
Greenville is not worrying over
census going
say come, we have
people here to mane the best town
sue in the State.
a bill been introduced in
legislature to require tho Southern
to operate passenger train
and
and the Southern objected.
course.
a letter that had been the way
years turned up in New
day. It is not stated
it it lo to
to party
-o-----
What is the matter with
six robberies in one night is
going some.
Peary has proven as good a right
as Cook to membership in the
Club.
When a good thing heads
ville way, don't put up any obstacles
to slop it.
Don't a dreamer only. Wake
up and get to count
for
of the Siler City
-at does not get mendacity
next time, it will not be be-
cause he fails to tell some whop-
hope the farmers start and
cultivate with the view of making
a larger com crop this year than
they did last year.
Because November and December
both gave steady cold weather, some
arc claiming that back bone of win-
is broken. You had better not
pin your faith to that.
Goldsboro and Washing-
ton all profess to much disappoint-
t over what the gave
u-
We to see the
eastern Norm Carolina.
an people can inane u so it
will, but to do so must snow
some interest in steps taKen for that
purpose.
Tho legislature was not ready to
change legal rate of interest from
six to eight per cent. The com-
acted wisely in an
able report the boll.
There arc some people who take
all progress out in talking. The
kind that do a town the most good are
toe ones who put their shoulders to
the wheel and push for progress or
get in the traces and pull. Talk
sometimes good, but for there
h dud pulling.
A virtue is made all the sweeter
when embraced by a
News.
Sure. The embrace of a woman
makes anything sweeter.
We do not believe what the Lon-
don tailor says about the trousers of
being the trousers of a
thousand years hence. Ours
already have a feeling that they will
to be sat on half that long,
The Reflector will take- pleasure
in receiving and forwarding any con-
to the Bill Nye memorial
fund to erect a building to his
at the Stonewall Jackson
school.
If the good things a man does
about while he is living, life
would be more enjoyable for him.
But it is human nature to point out
die bad deeds while he is living, and
never see the good ones until after
is dead.
idea of a
is a good it along
News.
must want to sneeze at one
end of the line and take a dip at the
Rev. George Cates, who was put off
-i Southern railroad train near Ashe-
because he failed to procure a
has entered suit for
feelings must have been wound-
awfully bad to want so much.
The newspaper men of North Car-
are moving to erect a build-
at the Stonewall Jackson
mg school at Concord as a memorial
Bill Nye. It is a laudable step
and should have the co-operation of
people all over the state.
Charlotte is going right down after
Up there they are talking
about a million dollar bond issue for
city improvements, and the
talks like it will be a go.
You can put your finger on some
justness men who lose by not
Good roads that can be traveled in
ad weather as well as in good
are worth a mint of money to
people of any country. The
the damage and the loss on
account, of bad roads is a big tax
he farmers. tax is
than a
Yet are people so afraid,
The Carolina Home and and Eastern Reflector.
of bonds that they had rather go o
paying the heavy tax bad roads
pose on them than to pay a
interest and have good roads.
o---------
It begins to look something
we had been hoping for these twenty-
five years is about to come to pass
a legislature that is not afraid to
put a tax on dogs. It gives us faith
to believe that the repeal of the
homestead law will yet come. And
then some of these days there ma;.
be a law that will prevent a man
to or taking property in
his wife's name Just to keep from
paying his debts.
A special meeting the
of commerce of Greenville is .
In the city hall on Thursday night,
19th, sat o'clock. While toe
of this meeting primarily is to dis-
cuss good roads for Greenville town-
ship, there are other important mat-
that will be presented for con-
Every man in the com-
should lay his
for and attend the
meeting. It may mean a great
to the future business of the com-
say about him
c be gos to held court.
week he held the criminal court
Wake county, and the Raleigh
rimes Saturday
Judge Whedbee In undoubtedly the-
In the superior court. His
of procedure marks him as
me of the best judges who ever sat
a county court. Always
fair to the defendant, and the law-
but strictly business. When
case is called it must have a mighty
excuse to get by him.
THE SYSTEM.
There is a prospect that the South
Carolina legislature will provide that
state with the Torrens system of reg-
deeds. Somebody a
chance to make himself famous in
North Carolina legislature by
and passing that meas-
for this
suns, many of which are unspeakably
bigger than the earth's sky king and
same of which doubtless have their
own system of planets dancing around
them. Such a tun is Sirius, the deg
star, Which at this season of the year
glows brightest over in the south-
east Thousands of astronomers are
Studying it tonight and the crowds
on their ft ii me from the theater
will find it worth while to look up
for a moment to this great show of
the
The beams that strike their eyes
have been eight years in reaching
this world, Sirius is such a long
long way off In the blue. If it were
nearer it would blur our own sun as
the sun would blur a candle at noon-
tide.
Astronomy is an old-fashioned and
as is sometimes rather a
visionary study. Busy men and
en are content lo leave the stars, or
die suns, to the poets. Yet. it is
that determines our clocks and
calendars. The old sages were right
after all when they imagined that the
ruled over human lives, for
You are a little behind, brother.
The present legislature has a -hey direct the going of
of the Torrens system Id Sen-
There is now no question before
the people of North Carolina that
is demanding more attention than
good roads. Every section of the
State is interested in it and the move-
is general for improvement of
the highways. In this matter Pitt
county can not afford to lag behind.
Those counties that have the best
roads will be the to attract
most attention and make most
Roads can be built in Pitt
county cheaper than in almost any-
other section, and it be done
without levying any higher tax than
the people already pay for poor
roads.
who starts out to help
himself is most likely to get help
along the way from others. If he
pits down and waits for things to
come his way, they do not bother
about coming. The same it true of
a town. If a town is composed of
active, hustling citizens who are not
afraid to invest their own money, it
is likely to attract others to come in
and invest with them. But the town
that sits still and waits for outsiders
come in and build it up, will not
get built. Capital does not go
around looking for a dead town.
It Is rare that the colonel gets
In the head lines these
days.
JUDGE WHEDBEE.
R. R. Cotten, of Pitt county.
He was a member of the house two
ago, and worked so arduously
for the measure then as to secure
the appointment of a legislature com-
to investigate its operations.
That committee will report daring
this session in Senator Cotten will
be heard from.
-o-
they are the measure of the
hours, the guide of commerce through
time; they regulate the affairs of
people who forget they are in the
heavens.
January is a great month watch
the stars. Many of them that are
dim in other seasons or that betake
themselves to some hidden paths of
the universe are now in the center
of our earthly
single mile of road has been
by the convict force. Thus,
under the present system,
Cumberland is spending a sum equal
to per cent, interest on a bond is-
sue of without receiving an
adequate return. The Index's
respondent estimates that an of
would put a modern high-
way through every township in Cum-
A simple calculation
to show the enormous benefit
which the addition of only a few
thousand dollars over the present ex-
would bring about.
A single swallow does not
a summer nor does the
example in county arithmetic
to demonstrate the necessity of bonds
in Cumberland. It of prime import-
that the good roads organization
take pains to inform themselves
thoroughly In order that not a
piece of evidence like the above, but
dozens may be; brought to bear on tho
electorate. It is only by such mis-
work, based on accurate
facts, that the people at large are
to be thoroughly aroused to their
interest in this important of
Observer.
WEARING OUT.
Mr.
I.
a genie .
he
up for
a a
wear hi .
I-other
expresses
jut of
good paper
Good Roads Issue
remarks Tho
Greenville has not turned out a
young mat for whom The Reflector
has more admiration than Judge
Harry W. Whedbee. Just as
dieted when he was made judge last
. Manning In the last
the
a pathetic editorial
engaged in the active
i his paper for twenty
id he has worked so
that he is now
use his own words
i hospital. Preferring
elf out by hard work
out as he again
has labored in and
to give his people a
In putting his life into
paper he has given his life to it,
and now retires broken In health
and in all probability will never be
able to take up the pen again. He
has done a fine work for his town
and section, and retires with the
love and confidence of his people and
newspaper who will
hope that his malady may prove less
than is now supposed, and
that he may once again take his
place in great work he now re-
With the retirement of Mr. Man-
we can recall only three editors
in the state who have been connected
continuously with the same paper
for twenty-nine years. They
Maj. H. A. London, of the Pittsboro
Record; Mr. D. J. Whichard, of The
Greenville Reflector, and the editor
of The Times.
Mr. speaks truly, and it
reminds us that the quarter century
ago circle b is grown very small.
Twenty years of such service Is
enough to lay one up for repairs.
The Sunshine.
These January evenings recall the
pithy observation that by day the
year, he is making his mark on the but that at night the
Chronicle, a serious
matter. It becomes a question as to
whether tho resulting good
the inevitable attendant evils.
Bond issues always beget a spirit of
extravagance, often breed graft and
always entail a burden of taxation
upon unborn generations. But often
a bond issue is attended with more
good than evil and in such cases it is
wise to issue bonds. It is simply a
question of wisdom for the people to
It is possible that The
Chronicle's apprehension of
and graft may be somewhat
too Intense It is certainly fair
that be
pledged in advance to bear their
reasonable share of the burden of
improvements which will be of
permanence to be of lasting
benefit. None the less, our
line of reasoning is quite
sound and contains a timely
to advocates of bond issues for
highway purposes. If bond issues
are to be carried everywhere they
are needed their advocates must get
down down to hard-pan and show
the voters just wherein consists the
advisability pf the step. The
brought with this end in view
will naturally vary from county to
county.
An of this
is to found in a communication
to The Fayetteville Index, dealing at
length with many phases of the
good roads problem. The
of The Index cites the fact
that Cumberland county is paying
approximately the sum of a
year towards road building in the
shape of convict support and equip-
For this outlay it is
something than fair
and as regards some town-
ships nothing at all. A taxpayer is
whose road tax amounted to
Dandruff Easily Cured.
In fact Coward Wooten tho drug-
gist, has a certain hair restorer call-
ed Parisian Sage which costs only
a large bottle that is guaranteed
to cure dandruff in two weeks or
money back
Parisian Sage is the discovery of
an eminent scientist and
specialist, and is made in this
try only by the Mfg. Co.,
N. Y.
Parisian Sage Is a pleasant,
daintily perfumed hair dressing, and
besides curing dandruff, your drug-
gist will return your money if it fails
to stop falling hair or itching of tho
scalp.
It will make hair grow, and women
Who desire soft, beautiful and
ant hair can have it in two weeks
preparation. It is not sticky or greasy
by using this acting
What The Law Makers Arc Doing.
From First
Governor Jarvis had accepted an in
to address them.
The senate had some petitions, of
local interest only, and acted on a
number of bills that had been sent
over from the house. The only new
bills of importance
ed was the one by Senator
of Rowan, to appoint a state build-
commission and erect an
building, the bill provided
for a bond issue of for this
purpose.
Several bills their second
and third reading.
The house heard reports of corn-
on numerous bills, and many
passed third reading. If tho new
bills introduced nearly all wore of
local nature. The only ones
general interest
of To
compensation of clerks in state of-
fices.
of To make
owners of dogs liable for damage.
Nunn of To
proceedings against delinquent
companies.
Clement of To amend
law. ,
it gratifying W M
We are too apt to share our trouble
to W Gut to
POOR PRINT





i. m
, r
Tho Homo and Farm and The Eastern Reflector
WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO.
Their Wort Keeps O
Strong
All tho blood in the body passes
through the kidneys once every tin
minutes. The kidneys Alter the blood.
They work night and any. When
healthy they remove about
of impure matter daily, when
healthy some part of this
matter is left in the blood. This
brings on many diseases and
toms pain back, headache,
nervousness, hot. dry skin,
gout, gravel, disorders
eyesight and hearing, dizziness,
regular heart, debility,
dropsy, deposits in the urine, etc.
But if you keep the filters right you
will have no trouble with your kid-
T. It. Moore. Evans St.
ville X. C, can recommend
Kidney Pills, for I have used
them with the greatest I was
troubled with lameness in my back
and my kidneys did not do their
us they should. I got
Kidney Fills from the John L.
Drug Co. and I had not used
them long before I received relief.
can say that this remedy acts just
as represented.
For sale by all dealers. Price
cents. Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the
States.
Remember the
Changes in The Ranting System.
The first reform in rent contracts
that I would urge is the inclusion of
a clause requiring the tenant to sow
on every acre from which
he harvests wheat or oats and to sow
in all corn grown on upland,
as well as in land corn in
Lome localities. There would prob-
ably be little difficulty in getting
tenants to consent to this, pro-
the seed were on hand
at the time when planting should be
done. As a. matter of fact, ten-
ants have no seed at that
time even if some has been gathered
in the fall. Therefore, the most
method of enforcing this de-
change is for the landlord to
agree to provide the seed, at
the expense of the tenant. However,
even if the landlord should have to
furnish the free, he would
gainer in the long run by
son of the improved condition of
his
Any tenant complying fully with
and with other stipulations in-
to make his farming more
should be offered
for full compliance. The most
jam one would be to stipulate that
as long as such progressive methods
practiced the tenant
have over all other ten-
ant to renew the lease from year to
year. Indeed, if the character and
financial backing of even the
lest tenant should justify the land-
lord in entering into a contract for
years, a long lease would in
the end far better for both parties
of great advantage to the pub-
P. in Raleigh Pro-
and Gazette.
Democratic Victory A Ken
Id i m
pro-
. i in,,, em
-lit printed with the
information was by
the Associated It
Is said the movement
s in section
the i States during the
It is November
question of constitutional
i a
In I Io Missouri. Okla-
. h ma .-. u, , th i
tat b, Alabama
to consider constitutional
phase of prohibition by
twenty
do not, think this is a fair state-
as one would conclude from it
that constitutional prohibition had
prevailed in named, whore-
as, the contrary is true, constitution-
prohibition being defeated in every
one of these State. But, we are told,
in of the fact that the Federal
reports indicate increasing con-
of liquor, the last twelve
months have witnessed radical
strengthening of organization among
the forces opposed to the drink
and the year 1910 closes with the
liquor question nearer the center of
the political stage and a more vital
issue in a score of States than
many years This would seem
o indicate that after all it is a
political rather than a temperance
and we are not at all
at the confession.
This, however, only in passing. Our
immediate purpose is to say some-
about the State of Maine, which
had State prohibition since 1854,
of this State, the Associated
Prohibition Press says in The World
Almanac that the Re-
publican was
September, 1910; first time
in thirty years; better enforcement
In his inaugural address,
Governor the new Demo-
governor, after noting that
the Democratic party had . promised
to submit to popular vote the
of constitutional prohibition, re-
man can
refrain from feelings of disgust at
the failure of the Anti-Liquor law.
Not only has the purpose failed of
accomplishment but hypocrisy,
and disrespect for law have
been
This is a fearful arraignment of
morality by legislation after fifty-
seven years of actual trial and in a
State which has always been noted
for the law-abiding character of its
Times-Dispatch.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANKING
and TRUST CO.
AT GREENVILLE,
;. the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, January 1911.
RESOURCES,
Loans and
Overdrafts . 3,651.16
and fixtures. 4,042.25
Demand loans . 10,000.00
from banks and
bankers. 45,703.53
items. 11,122.83
Silver coin, including all
minor coin currency. 1,121.23
National Bank notes and
other U. S. Notes. 18,129.00
Capital stock paid 25,000.00
Surplus fund . 19,500.00
Undivided profits, less
current expenses and
taxes paid. 3,110.28
Notes and bills
counted. 2,402.82
Bills payable. 7,500.00
Time certificated of
deposit . 46,233.97
Deposits subject to
148,210.77
Cashier's checks
outstanding . 828.19 195,272.93
Due to banks and bankers. 1,605.04
Total
I 254,391.07
Total
254,391.07
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, C. S. Carr, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
C. S. CARR, Cashier.
E. G. FLANAGAN,
H. A. WHITE.
CHAS. COBB,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before me, this the 13th day of January, 1911.
ANDREW J. MOORE, Notary Public.
My commission expires April 1911.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE,
In State of North Carolina, at the close o, January 1911.
Loans and
Overdrafts. 1,267.2
banking Furniture
and Fixtures. 1,173.53
Demand loans . 3,000.00
Due from Banks and
bankers . 7,713.26
coin . 10.00
Silver coin, including all
minor coin currency
National Bank notes and
other U. S. 1,630.00
Total,
30,344.97
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid
surplus fund.
Undivided less cur
rent expenses and tax-
es paid.
Time certificates of de-
posit .
Deposits subject to check.
Cashier's checks
5,000.00
1,450.00
604.92
579.03
22,467.70
243.24
Total,
30,344.91
lie in Always Right
Hon. John II. Small was the only
congressman North. Carolina
voted right the other day on the
Cannon matter. He voted as he voted
in the last congress, and was con-
The Democrats who changed
made a big
and
Increase Should be Given
The bill calling for an increase of
for the governor of North Caro-
should pass. It cannot be charged
as a partisan measure, because an ad-
in salary could not apply to the
present incumbent. It could be-
come effective with tho next
nor, and whether that chief executive
would be a Democrat or
can would be for the people to cay,
and they say, too, before the
placed in effect. The
present of per annum
Is too email for the great State of
Carolina to give its governor
Both parties should want to raise the
Dispatch.
Slate of North Carolina, of Pitt,
I, C. T. Cox, cashier of th bank, do solemnly swear
the above is- true bet of my knowledge and belief.
T. COX, Cashier.
F. HARRINGTON,
J. E. GREEN,
A. W. ANGE,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to this 13th day of January, 1911
U. If. Notary Public
commission expires March
After God. created the world men
tag work of u.
J. S. MOORING
Mow in Sam While Store on Five Points. More room and larger Come to tee me
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
C. T.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
Government Against the Printers.
The newspapers of the land are
being with news articles
sent out various departments
of the state and national government
a kind of press bureau service
becoming a distinct feature. Usu-
ally speaking, the matter is so -vol-
that only a few papers can
it, and yet much of it would
be of value if it were in a more
doused form. All of which
to our mind that if the thous-
ands upon thousands of dollars spent
each year in printing useless books,
reports, bulletins and the like,
comparatively few people read, were
diverted and a portion thereof given
to the newspapers, these papers could
arrange for such increase and the
people of the whole country would
get benefit therefrom. Uncle Sam
is not with the printers
generally. The high tariff has
paper at enormous the
post office department makes
gent rules postage; and the gov-
Is a direct competitor with
every job printing plant in the
try in the printing of private
opes. Let some mind devise a
method whereby both a saving to the
government and practical benefit to
the people will
Enterprise.
The Champion Kicker.
There is some people who are just
literally kicking their way through
life. They were born and
have never stopped since. A little
kicking now and then is relished by
the fellow who wants something
righted, or a wrong corrected. A
good kicker, with his feet, however,
is a valuable adjunct to a foot ball
team. So there are kickers and
kickers in this world.
But the champion kicker has been
discovered He was released from the
Ohio penitentiary the other day after
serving a of three for
burglary and larceny, having been
sent up from Cleveland. He kicked
about everything and anything every
time he got a chance to kick, and
when released from the pen he kick-
ed about the railway schedule be-
cause a train didn't leave for an hour
and he had to wait. He kicked so
hard that he was finally told to go to
the station and wait for fear the of-
might take tho notion and lock
him up.
The happiest moment in the lives
of some men is when they are making
others about them miserable by their
Sun.
TRY THIS
It is Curing Thousands Dally, and
Saves Time and Money
Get a bowl three quarters full of
boiling water, and a towel.
Pour into the water a teaspoonful
of
Put your head over the bowl and
cover both head and bowl with towel.
Breathe the vapor that arises for
two minutes, and presto your head
is as clear as a bell, and the tight-
in the chest is gone.
Nothing like it to break up a heavy
cold, cure sore throat or drive away
a It's cure. You'll
enjoy breathing You'll feel
at once its soothing, healing and
beneficial effects as it passes over the
inflamed and irritated membrane.
cents a bottle, at druggists every-
where. Ask Io extra bottle
.
The Cotton Ticker.
A Chicago mechanic named Cam-
bell, backed and helped by Mr. Theo-
Price, the well-known cotton
merchant of New York, has invented
a cotton picking machine known as
cotton
about which those interested are very
enthusiastic. Long before the event
this paper predicted the flying ma-
shine. It has with equal
predicted a cotton picker. Perhaps
there are those who think the
machine the more
cresting of tho two but this is
scarcely the case. The m
may be more but ii. is
a plaything and will remain
so for a long time to come.
In the cotton picker the welfare
of the world in matters of clothing
is involved. It costs now
to pick the cotton
The picking is all done by hand work.
The picking must, be done in a limited
time, approximately days in each
year. The power used is
power, somewhat as hand sewing is
power. If man power or horse
power or engine power could be
plied to cotton picking as it has been
to sewing, the would be
as great. With a good, economic
cotton picker and gasoline power to
operate it the cost of picking the
American crop of say bales
should not exceed
over the present cost of
annually. There are difficulties
in the way, of course, but the prize
is too to call these difficulties in-
surmountable.
The owners of the
machine claim that it will pick
pounds of cotton in a day and that
the cost of hand picking. We have
not learned how much cotton is left
behind in the field after the picker
has done its work. The
may be the beginning of the real cot-
ton picker. Its ultimate form, by
whomsoever invented, will be a de-
as was the case with the
locomotive, the and
the sewing machine and other similar
inventions. One word of criticism;
would seem to be
claim too much. Te new machine-
according to the inventor's story
is not only a cotton picker but a
chopper and cultivator. A picker
that will pick clean and economically
is enough. There is a possible
of a year when it is
brought to do its work as well as the
sewing machine does and that ought
to satisfy.
We are confident that the cotton
come the
beginning has already come. C. T.
Mason of Sumter, S. C, made a pick-
about twenty years ago which gave
more promise than any we have yet
seen put out to practical
Observer.
TO
A To The Western Union,
Say
If you wish to transmit a telegram
to Western Union office by Home
Telephone simply say,
The operator will connect you with
the proper Western Union telephone
Thus you may your telegram
and save yourself the inconvenience
of waiting for a messenger.
For the convenience of the pub-
this new method is now in effect
in all cities in which the Home Tel-
phone Company operates.
Are you a telephone subscriber
HOME TEL. TELEGRAPH CO.
Solves a Deep Mystery.
want to thank you from the bot-
tom of my wrote C. B. Rader.
of W. Va., the won-
double benefit I got from
Bitters, in curing me of both
a severe case of stomach trouble and
of rheumatism, from which I had
been an almost helpless sufferer for
ten years. It suited my case as
though made just for For
indigestion, jaundice and to
rid the of kidney poisons that
cause rheumatism, Electric Bitters
has no equal. Try them. Every bot-
is guaranteed to satisfy. Only
cents. At all druggists.
The dignity of labor is overseeing
another to do it,
See That Your Ticket Reads
via
CHESAPEAKE LINE
To Baltimore
ELEGANTLY STEAMERS
PERFECT DIKING ALL OUTSIDE STATEROOMS
Steamers leave Norfolk daily 6.15 p. m. from
foot of Jackson st, arrive Baltimore at 7.00 a. m. Direct connection
made with rail lines all further particulars call
on or write
F. R. T. P. A., st, Norfolk, Va
Q.
Spring and Summer Courses for Teachers
1911 Spring Term, March 14th to May weeks. Sum-
mer Term, June 8th to July weeks.
THE AIM OF THE COURSE TO BETTER EQUIP
THE TEACHER FOR HIS WORK.
Text These used in the public schools of the State
further information, address,
H. WRIGHT, Pres
Greenville, V C.
Company
SELLS INSURANCE
FOR THE
Union Central Life Insurance Co.
Get in The Reflector Contest,
. H
POOR





It
the Carolina Horn Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
I OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN O OF R. W. SMITH
be
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Ayden end vicinity.
H Advertising rates furnished
Ayden, N. C, Jan. W.
B. Burnett, of spent Sun-
U. . C.
In
by.
with her sister, Mrs. W. II
0111-
is
cation will
David Adams Richard Blount
duel, Saturday night, at the
home of former at a dance.
Sheriff took thorn before
Mayor Result Adams is in
Jail and Blount is In the guard
house.
Mr. W. J. nines has the
farm near the
Samuel Mumford place.
Mr. Richard Wingate has
the old Henry Smith farm of
Mr. Cox, near
Roads.
We will soon have another
dent, Dr. J. who has en-
gaged a suit of offices in the Smith
next door to R. C. Cannon
ft Sons, and will locate here about
February 1st
Furniture, furniture, furniture, a
solid car full assortment. Come and
R. Smith Company.
Mr. J. Jones, who for several
years has been a prominent citizen
of street, left with his family
i r their now home in Beaufort
County. They are some of the best
citizens and we arc to see them
go, and wish then; much success in
their now home.
heaters, ranges and re-
pairs, ll. Smith Company.
Mr. J. . one of our
best died Of last
Thursday night and was buried with
Masonic near his home Sat-
evening. He leaves a widow
and several children, was a devout
member is the Disciple church, also
the Masonic order.
Mr. Anderson, of Bethel,
waft here
The stockholders of the Loan and
Insurance met last Friday de-
and paid a dividend of per
betides carrying some to the
Surplus fund. We think this sneaks
well for Mr. Joe Ross, is a
born insurance The same
Officers were elected for the ensuing
year.
There will be work in the initiatory
degree at the I. O. F. next Mon-
day night. This order has recently
a full of paraphernalia,
and is enjoying a rapid and wonder-
growth,
Messrs. Gideon and Wilson Lamb,
of Baltimore and spent
Tuesday here.
have soon more cotton
marketed here this season than
any previous year, they have
commanded a much better price.
When you want poultry v. ire, be
sure to us, Can do you good.
J. R. Smith Company.
Mrs. W. a. mount, of Born,
is visiting her husband at Hotel
Blount. j
R. L. of
is visiting her sister Mrs. R. Win-
A of Mr. Bill Dennis, near
don, very sick with pneumonia.
You marry girl, we will fur-
for R.
Company.
made a
see his
trip to
father,
and wife spent
Mr. Benjamin T. Smith, of
ville. R. F. D was a visitor
town Sunday.
We there has bee.;
more moving this winter than there
has been in many years. This pro-
diets a good crop year, a new-
man and a new v ill sure raise
a dust.
Mr. E. L. Drown
Kelford Sunday to
who is sick.
Mr. J. C. James
Sunday at
Mr. John Howard returned Tuesday
from a visit to Ahoskie. and will re-
his position an salesman
Tripp, Hart Company.
Mr. Amos of Port Barn-
well, spent Sunday here.
Mr. Frank has
his family back from Craven to hi.-
old home near. Fountain Hill, in
Greene county.
Joe Wilson, an industrious color-
ed man near
Shot his wife last Friday night and
she died Monday. It seemed during
the night she got up and went out
Held in Plymouth, January
to
Following is the program of the
p g of Union to be held
Baptist church, Plymouth,
January 27th, and
Friday.
7.00 p. m.-Devotional
Andrews.
-30 p. m. Introductory
V. Joyner.
p.
3.30 p. testimony meet-
Saturday.
a.
O. Diggs.
10.00 a. of
10.45 a. in
and A.
11.15 a.
F. G. J.
pastors.
church wot
Sullivan.
Dowel
This popular remedy never fails to
effectually cure
Constipation,
Biliousness
And ALL DISEASES arising from a
pi j Liver and Bad Digestion
The natural result is good appetite
I solid flesh. Dose small; elegant-
sugarcoated and easy to swallow.
Substitute.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
2.00 p.
E. Hoffman.
2.15 Miscellaneous business.
2.30 p. conference.
7.00 p. exercises--.
L. Rogers.
p. m. What Baptist
are worth to the world t
W.
Sunday.
-1.00 a. m.-Address by Sunday
Secretary E. L. Middleton.
7.00 p.
of house and
on returning,
husband not mistook her
a burglar and- shot her,
entering her breast. She
husband were Industrious ;
well together. No is
the load
and her
lived
attached
him for the accident,
Notice
hereby given that
be made to the piece
legislature for an amendment to the
charter or the town of Ayden.
This January 18th, 1911.
J. F. Mayor.
Curiosity a Blew
from Trial Judge.
Wine The
Wheeling, W. Va., Jan.
-omen will be barred from the trial
of Mrs. from now on. This
was announced In court by Judge
Jordan, a great deal of
which was unfit to print had
been given by the medical witness.
o be Dedicated Sunday, January
29th.
The congregation of the Christian
will entertain the first
meeting. 1911, of the Hookerton
January 27th to at which
a full quota of from
counties embraced in the Union,
re expected to be As a
feature of this union
the local congregation will
the pleasure of their
-use of worship, the debt on which
J practically provided for in cash
personal checks. President J.
Caldwell, of the Atlantic Christian
liege, will preach the dedicatory
at ll a. m., January and
popular college will be
to inspire all with songs,
of all religious faiths arc
to participate in the joy of
occasion. for the
will be made public later.
The i et f c v. ho ha money to
burr, are not lye who kindle
The people are expressing their
thoughts of the express companies.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Very Good
is A
Showing,
For the second in January
Register of Deeds Moore
to the following
White.
W. A. Talley and Briley.
Carr and Fannie
H. H. Manning and Bertha Vincent.
J. C. Davenport and Alice White-
INK OF
THE SANK OF AYDEN
AT N. O.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, January ion.
i j i -v- ;
RESOURCES.
and
Alonzo
lard.
Walter
Smith.
J. K.
Duck.
and Lillian Pol-
Q. Cay and Rosa
Edwards
banking house,
and fixture
Due-from banks and
Gold coin
coin, including
minor coin
National Bank notes
other u. s.
Total
LIABILITIES.
Capital paid
Surplus fund.
Undivided profits,
current expenses
paid .
Deposits subject to check.
Savings deposits .
Cashier's
checks.
Ices
and
15,625.00
2,427.07
73,550.00
26,301.33
86.85
38.00
Total
143,029.21
end E.
Colored.
and Francis
Grimes and Caroline
James Pierce and Emma
Leonidas
Williams.
Dempsey
Dunn.
Lester Cox and Sporty Leggett.
Casar Rives and Margaret Du-
Will Wilkes and Sena Vines.
Smith and Francis Red-
ding.
w. e. M. J. Mills;
and Slow,
and
State of North County of
I. J. R. Smith cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly -swear that
die above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
. ., , , J- R. SMITH, Cashier
and sworn to before day of January 1911
HODGES,
R; Notary Public,
K. C. CANNON, commission expires March
ELI AS TURNAGE,
Directors.
We wish to your attention our line of fall which
now have. We taken care i i buying this w
dunk we can supply your wants Shoes, Gingham--, No-
and and in fact anything that is carried in a
Dry Store.
Come let us v you
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N.
.-.,
The Carolina Home and Farm and Tat
IS.
INIQUITOUS GOVERNMENT
I Kings
i .
. K -fie I
CHE o
. ;
I n t.
. on n
Israel's tis
death of sue-
and the to
the East of the put tins; them
an annual of the fleece of two
hundred thousand He a new
Capital, the city of and success-
fully outranked a
of his people, along re lines. Ac-
cording to I s Covenant with the Al-
mighty there was but the
priesthood end the one holy Jo-
for the whole pi ope of
Israel, and it was at Jerusalem
worldly wisdom guided Jeroboam to. com-
separate the ten from the
two tribes by establishing new of
worship the and
a golden calf so the
tame ;
to a t f
closer
to the
toms and idolatry
of surrounding
died. or. ac-
cording to the ice
i . t,
W r
in biography, but it la simply
. biting of poverty and
it aroused , el want while it is
Death is often the pen-
paid by the high boy
who attempts to put himself,
ed, through If he is
ally vital and enduring he may pull
through. But there are thousands of
e successful who In after years
to that their
. m or weak spot is
ed and
U one B,
ft i at th-
class t who
. In
in tn th
eh t i . ten-
e i
ii i idol and
d the m-
with the
rue i
Bo It I I . if i n v I
. .,.,,
Proud
talk of
lived
J , r
boasts if personalities.
ability to It ore succeeding, but
l t t or . . ,,
than the Word of memo Set of tome or those Old
God, and in gen- college dark days are ever a horror.
they all tell
the more tales.
people of our day to separate them
selves to say in language
Tin; There are great numbers of
selves to say m me language ., i.,. ,., i.-
Joshua. ye flay y poor boys who would have been
for me and my we ; more useful if
serve the , , . .
Ahab and ,.,, the double
As ell students know. ,. respectable stand
Ahab and Elijah were of th-
as and I- i n g for bread, v true.
Owed much greater things In tin ex j , poverty obstacle actually
appreciable
power h by any recent bestowal
u The Improper ., i Evidently
of Ahab contrary , ,.,,,
o -h- typified the on whit, especially at
of of church and State. The when the coat or living is
Ii is a problem commended to
thought of the. benefactor
e are not from
this Declaration t-
draw the
that as a wicked
man be to
eternal
and that th nu
of the tor
Is sleep
are we to
think of as
saintly and going
to heaven and to
imagine th those
In heaven are
asleep
to think of
having gone to
Purgatory and that the experiences there
are drowsy must leave all Bitch
notions respecting the dead.
good and bad. We must come to
the and from It learn that all who
like St Stephen
to await the morning cf the resurrection.
when the Redeemer will call all forth
from the tomb
Ahab
Ahab's name his fa-
And surely he Ills
was appropriate. His was a reign still
more successful In unrighteousness Tor
twenty-two years he devoted himself to
the further undermining Of true
to the Introduction of worst
forms of licentious, heathen idolatry lie
was greatly assisted in this course by his
the daughter of the King
Cf the Her name Signifies
yet she used her great Influence
With her husband and throughout the
for the furtherance or In
connection with the known as
rites a-id
with the worship of Baal and of
the divinity
Lessons Here For Us
All civilized people deeply interest-
ed in earthly governments and their
We all crave social and financial
Nevertheless it Is still true
that prosperity la injurious In proportion
it separates the people from the Divine
arrangements and the which
thereto attach. Only righteousness cur.
exalt u nation Every form of
is Injurious, however t at the
time seem contrary to this. Ours la
day of the greatest worldly prosperity
this earth has ever known But
is not a day cf religious prosperity. On
the contrary, there was a time
when unbelief in a personal and in
the Bible us his revelation was so general
amongst Intelligent people, Our church
edifices are becoming temples of fashion,
concert and lecture halls, while the real
worship which alone Is pleasing to the
Almighty Is far removed.
Tho worship of Mammon, the bowing
to the golden calf, the of lives
to the acquirement of -wealth, belong to
our day as truly as to that of
on a more scale and therefore the
more deceptive and Insidious
we tint Clod
wrath of man,
in of where Jezebel
ls mentioned by name.
The Lord Charged
i Church system, was
or permitted to leach and
people from the proper cf
The same Scripture
. . .
how to help tho worthy Individual,
not one by but by the hundred
thousand, that without injuring
the boy by pampering he may go
college; how to get figures
who was by
. ; a a type
; f lower this year
reduce the year after year
come.
The library and tho dormitory
. more than fifty years A
Ti, poor Bey
. ,.
i ii i e
.;. . . lore
L hope to get a college
the question of his personal
. being considered Evident.
the nearer his hone,
farm or village where he lives,
land facilities of board arc great-
; because there small
rood schools not far from tho poor
i Hut these excellent and
B Institutions are not the
of lute overwhelming en-
pi Rhodes scholarships plainly
. . e But are there any
ins helps directly to
that can recalled
that pay current
college reduce, or per-
. . in some rare Instances,
tuition lees. No doubt a cheap-
at any point works to the
advantage. Cut. of a
is the living, the
a lion i g of the Ii h
e boy in, i theory, to e
to study for four years, it
of m who
aW be true that study Is his
. that the college-
i fun work.
Ti say that boy with scant
may bis is not to
he point. That is a forced effort, a
necessary extra labor. It may do
be body good. But there is no de-
the fact that such outside work
is universally regretted in its
subtraction of energy by all
instructors. The professor
help, the young man, but he
sorry give the course his
attention. Thousands of
i o fellows have broken down 1111-
the hard strata of
Such failure in college
year and will continue.
f Working ho very
mm a century-long plan that.
would enable a million poor
go through college without passing
soup and scrubbing midnight floors;
in a summer hole to earn their way
plan that would alleviate the
need of toil days the year
every snatched moment, and car-
a man's full toil besides.
fact remains that a broken col-
education is simply of the
to large a ratio
our population it fifty
rears J. in
York
Step The Traffic
of the Immigrant question
, met that the attorney general is
the international
steamship lines, under the Sherman
Is very significant and far-reach-
;. The reason Europe is scraped,
is it were, with a tine tooth comb
, c million or more immigrants
tally In this country it
;, great extent In fact
traffic is Immensely
to the great steamship lines
such as the
c i, the White Star, tho
lean, and several
make yearly in
this traffic and it Is a
tad that they carry large bodies of
steerage passengers both ways.
least half million are taken eastward,
back to the every year.
What War lbs-ally
Mis. Harding Davis tells
bow, on a visit to Concord In war
time, she heard Louisa Alcott's
chanting roans o the war Em-
mid Hawthorn listening the
angel which
awakening the Nation to a lofty life
unknown Hot different
from this poetic conception
of war was the actual fighting u she
seen
--1 com up tho border
ere I teen the actual war.
filthy the
teal jobbery Union and
ate camps; the malignant personal
hatreds wearing patriotic masks, and
by burning homes and out-
raged women; the chances in it, well
improved on both for brutish
men to grow more brutish, and for
honorable men to degenerate into
thieves and War may an
. angel with a mission, but
, habits of the
Vi. real effect of war upon Nation
d development and vitality has
mere clearly set forth by David.
In an delivered last
survival of fittest in the
struggle for Is the prime
moving of race progress and
race changes. In the red stress
of human history, this natural pro-
of selection is sometimes
A reversal of la
the beginning or degradation. it is
degradation Itself. The only race
degradation ever known is that pro-
by those forces which destroy
the best, leaving for tho fathers
of the future those who could not
used in business Of war or
that of colonization. The of
emigration are on a parallel with tho
effects of war, but with this
difference; tho strong men who em-
are not lost to tho world.
The loss of one region is
of another. But the of war
an yield no corresponding gain.
The warlike Nation of to-day is tho
Nation of tomorrow. Ii
ever been so and in tho nature of
things must be Raleigh Pro-
Farmer.
mi tho steamship, lines
ant and traveling
g every means and inducement n
Immigrants to this country.
o a stop put la
man who pays his debts In this
worn won't owe much in
World.
man who
from 1911 will look beck upon the
era with surprise, If not with
amazement. call St
call progress
if they wore all there were of the
This is a mistake. The
wide circulation of
and tho magazine practically put
a professor, a lawyer, o doc-
tor and a clergyman, as well an an
and an artist, almost every
The best work of the ablest
in every walk of a
market in tho publication
ice. Newspapers and magazines
lave supplanted, In part the library.
ind we fear, are tho
the college and the
than they should, it would
have been Well i-i We could have
stopped here. No movement
;. ever without
without hotheads. want to go
fast and too far. So the yellow
press and the writers
come, displaying of
lie Really it is ban-
or of the disturber But they will
of tarry long. Already the
Is giving way to the business
the theorist to the practical re-
former, and the to the or-
Weekly.
POOR PR





The Carolina Home farm aid The Intern
.
THE MOVEMENT.
of Southerners In Other States
Collected.
N. C, Jan.
night's session of the Immigration
Board of Associated Railroads in the
South marked the beginning of co-
operative action on the most remark-
able plan of Immigration ever under-
taken In this country.
The Home is
simply that of specially inviting each
person who has moved from the South
into states beyond the Mississippi
and Ohio rivers to re-visit his old
home country with a view of again
living there. With the invitation are
given facts concerning the changes
and wonderful Improvements which
have taken place in the South in the
last few years. The plan was
by the industrial department
of the Carolina, and Ohio
railway last August, and a tender
of the methods it has employed was
formally made to and accepted by a
majority of progressive railroads of
the South in a conference which
closed here last night.
Throughout the day yesterday,
letters and telegrams were received
from Southern editors and
organizations offering support,
and sending long lists of former
Southerners in other States.
conference will be held at Chat-
February 15th, when the
organization will be perfected, and
a permanent press bureau establish-
ed. Until then W. D. Roberts,
industrial agent of the Clinch-
field road will continue the press
work for the board, and the gather-
of names and addresses. The
governors of Southern Stages
will appoint one delegate from each
congressional district and two from
the State at large to attend the Chat-
convention, and confer with
the railroad representatives, and all
newspaper editors are invited to be
present.
A number of boards of trade are
gathering names and the
Is that in the next two months two
million or native Southerners
will be asked to come
which means that fully five millions
of people in other states are going
to hear of the South as the best part
of the United States in which to live
and prosper.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
North Carolina, Pitt County.
By virtue of a power of sale con-
in a certain mortgage deed ex-
and delivered by T. J. Cox and
Stella Cox. of the county of Pitt and
state of North Carolina to Franklin
Edwards, bearing date of January 8th.
1908, and duly re corded in the Regis-
office of Pitt county, in Book Q
page the undersigned as
aforesaid, will on Saturday, the
11th day of February, 1911, expose to
public sale before the court house
door in Greenville, to the highest bid-
for cash, the following described
tract or parcel of land, to
Lying and being in the county of
Pitt and state of North Carolina, and
in Greenville township, adjoining the
lads of Mack T. J. Cox
and others, beginning at a light wood
stump on the edge of Griffin branch,
running northward a straight line to
a stake to the public road;
thence with said road southeastward-
to line; thence with
line to a poplar on the run
of Griffins branch; thence with the
run of said, T. J. Cox's line to the be-
ginning, containing acres more or
less.
This sale is made to satisfy the
terms of said mortgage deed. This 9th
day of January, 1911.
FRANKLIN EDWARDS,
Mortgagee.
P. C. HARDING, Atty.
FARMERS AT
The Institute There Wednesday a
Good One.
The farmers meeting or Institute,
at Farmville, Wednesday, was a
good one. The attendance while not
large, was good, those present show-
lug interest and attention.
The corn exhibit was large and
very good. Mr. B. P. Cobb, of
Dam, was awarded the prize,
for the best five ears.
The meeting under the
of the State Agricultural De-
Mr. F. F. Parker discuss-
ed soil Improvement; Mr. T. B. Par-
corn contest; Mr. W. N.
home fruits; Mr. C. R. Hudson, how
to the crop. These discus-
took in the various phases of
there questions.
Mrs. conducted a woman's
discussing domestic, science,
and kindred subjects.
MORTGAGEE'S SALE.
By virtue of authority of a
gage executed to me by Asa Bullock
and Lula Bullock on the 14th day of
October 1908 and duly recorded in the
Register's office In Pitt County in
Book G Page to secure pay-
of a certain bond bearing even
date therewith, and the stipulations
in said mortgage not having been com
plied with. I shall expose at a public
auction, for cash, on Wednesday the
8th day of February, o'clock
m. at the Court house door, in Pitt
County, the following
Adjoining the lands of S. E. Nobles,
Piney Claude
House, D. C. Barnhill and others, be-
ginning at a Sweet gum on the land
of D. C. Barnhill and S. E. Nobles
corner running South with a line of
marked trees to a bay at S. E. Nobles
corner thence North a straight line
to Wyatt corner thence East
with a line of marked trees to a
with V. and
Claude House thence down the canal
the beginning containing acres
more or less.
This January 1911.
R. L. BUTLER, Mortgagee
W. H. HARRINGTON Jr
S. J. EVERETT, Atty. Assignee
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION.
The firm of Whichard Whichard,
doing business at in Pitt
county, was dissolved by mutual con-
sent on December 24th, 1910, W. H.
Whichard purchasing the interest of
A. G. Whichard in the business. W.
H. Whichard will settle the
of the firm, and all accounts
due the firm are payable to him.
This December 31st, 1910.
A. G. WHICHARD,
W. H. WHICHARD
Items.
N. C, Jan. 1910.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Smith went to
Snow Hill Saturday and returned Sun
day.
Mrs. Pattie Smith is visiting
near Farmville.
Mrs. Mills Smith is visiting Mrs. A.
J. Flanagan near Farmville.
Mr. C. E. went to see
his father, Mr. J. B. near
Ayden Sunday.
Mr. T. E. Little came in from Farm-
ville Tuesday night.
Miss Rosa Smith went to Green-
ville Tuesday.
A little girl of Mr. Sam. Erwin was
very badly burned last Friday.
Cards are out announcing the mar-
of Miss Rosa Dell Smith to Mr.
Walter G. Gay, January 1911.
The man who has friends Isn't I Every man with horse sense
apt to need them. times kicks like a mule.
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.
Style Leaders
Greenville, N. C,
How About Your Home
Is it comfortably If not you
would find it interesting to visit our store and
look over our stock of FURNITURE and
HOUSE-FURNISHINGS. Everything needed
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make
you sit up and take notice.
J. H. BOYD, JR.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Letters testamentary having
day been Issued to me by the clerk
of the superior curt of
at last will and
Of J. T. Worthington and
having duly qualified as
notice is hereby given to all per-
sons holding claim.; against the estate
of the said J. T. Worthington to
sent them to me for payment on
before the 17th day of December 1911
or this notice will be plead in bar
their recovery. All indebted
said estate are to
mediate payment.
This the day of December 1910
L. WORTHINGTON
Executrix of J. T. Worthington
Jarvis Blow. Attorneys. ltd
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power contained
in certain deed of trust, executed by
William Best to F. G. James Son.
trustees, on the 12th day of August.
which deed Of trust was prop-
recorded in the office of the Keg-
of deeds of Pitt county, in Book
OF REAL ESTATE.
North Carolina,
By virtue of a power of sale con-
In a certain mortgage deed ex-
and delivered by E. L.
to L. C. Arthur, January
22nd, 1906. in the
Register's office of Pitt county, In
j i undersigned
NOTICE OF SALE.
By virtue of a power of sale con-
in a certain mortgage deed,
executed by T. C. Cannon to W. H,
and Mary S. Allen, on the In day
of January, 1910, and recorded in;
Book M-9, page in the office of.
the register of deeds of Pitt county. ,
we v ill offer for public sale u th
6th day of February i. at
o'clock, noon, to the highest r.
before the court house floor
In N. C. Identical
tract of land allotted to
Mills in the division of lands I.
C. Cannon. as appears of
record in Hook B-9, pages
which was conveyed said T. C
Cannon Maggie Mills and her
Adam in u deed
March in, 1909, and to which deeds
reference is directed for more
finite description, excepting, however,
a small tract or said lands, contain-
1-4 acres, conveyed to V,. O.
Cox in a deed recorded in Hook P-9,
page
Said is made for the
of satisfying said mortgage.
This January 1911.
W. H. MARY S. ALLEN,
Mortgagees.
By W. F. Evans, Attorney.
court house door in Greenville, on
Monday, January 23rd. 1911, the fol-
lowing described lot or parcel of
land, situate in the county of Pitt,
and in Bethel township, described as
to
in the road at the North-
east corner of Warren line;
thence with Warren line to
the Northeast corner of
Barnaul's lot; thence with said
back line southeast
corner of his lot; thence nearly cast
i straight line to a ditch; thence with
the ditch to the Bethel and Tarboro
public road; thence with said road to
the beginning, containing one half
others.
This Dec. 1910.
r. u. ., SON.
Trustees.
day of February. 1911. expose to pub-
lb sale, before the court house
Greenville, to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
tract or parcel cf land, to v.
Lying and being In the town of
Greenville, state of North
and described as Begin-
at a stake in the northeast
of Pitt Street as extended and
Street running thence north-
ward with the eastern boundary of
Pitt extended about feet
to a stake at a corner on Greene St.
as extended about feet to a stake
on northwest corner of Greene and
Mill Street; thence vest ward with
beginning, containing one northern boundary of Mill
ere and being the to said J g w g J at tho
Pest by J. K. Grimes . o containing about
LAND
LAND SALE
of a mortgage executed
and delivered by J. s. Pittman and
wife Mary E. Pittman to John Z.
Brooks, on 5th, day of January
which mortgage was duly re-
corded in the office of the Register
of Deeds D-9 page which note
and mortgage was before maturity
and assigned to tho Hub-
bard Fertilizer Company.
The undersigned will sell for cash
before the court house door, In Green-
ville, on Monday, the 6th day of Feb-
1911 the following described
tract of land situated in the county
of Pitt, and in Swift Creek Township,
adjoining the lands of J. J- B. Cox,
the Wilson land, the Laura Pugh land
and the Zeb Bland land, containing
acres more or less, being the
land deeded by Jesse Cannon
to Mary E. Pittman, reference to
which deed is hereby made for ac-
curate description.
This the 6th day of January 1911.
The Hubbard Fertilizer Co.
Assignees.
F. G. James Son, Attorneys, ltd
one-fourth of an acre more or less
ii made to satisfy the terms
mo deed.
, ;. ; .,. . . of January, 1911.
L, C Mortgagee
Harding
HA OF REAL ESTATE
Pitt County.
;. power Of sale
delivered by Berry Jam N ,.,.,,;,,. Pitt County.
Caroline James, to II
Bullock, on of A II,
U which mortgage was
in the office of th R
,; it., of county In Boo 8- i,
, , j.-,. undo, signed will sell
. b . court door
;,. me. on Saturday. I
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
. Carolina County
By virtue of a now of sale
d In a ;
,.,. red by W. U
to S. I De n I
23rd. and recorded In
,. ;, pow.-r . sale con- R . . ,,,,. ,,, pm County In
In a certain mo deed , ; , M ., ,.,,.
and delivered Mow I .,, will y, i I lib
a, . King to L. C. Ar- . LOU. at I-
i i . i.-i i I . .
. . ., J ;. ; i .
. I in the-P p
ti en ., v ill Bo H. R pi
, ., i V ill .
. . i to p In for-
. d
for
. in-els i
NOTICE OF SALE.
By virtue of a power of sale con-
in a certain mortgage deed,
executed to Dr. Zeno Brown by J.
R. Corey and wife, on January
1901. and recorded in Book W-G, page
in the office of the Register of
deeds of Pitt county, we will on the
6th day of February, 1911, at
o'clock, noon, offer for public sale,
at the court house door in Green-
ville, N. C, to the highest bidder, for
cash, the following described tract
or parcel of land, lying and being in
the town of Greenville, and described
as
Beginning at T. E. Hookers
on east side of Pitt street, and
running with said street a southerly
course feet to B. E. Par hams
corner, then a northwest course with
line feet, thence a
northwest course, parallel with the
first line feet to T. E. Hookers
line, then with said Hooker's line to
the beginning.
The said sale made to
mortgage.
This January
W. H. MARY S. ALLEN,
Assignees and
W. F. Evans,
Attorney.
. ; h laud is sold to satisfy
y mortgage, which was given for
e purchase said land.
This December 1910.
CROMWELL BULLOCK,
r. G. James H Son, Mortgagee.
Attorneys.
MORTGAGE SALE.
By virtue of the powers contained
In a certain mortgage executed to
O. L. Joyner, by Harvey Stancill.
dated 17th day of December. 1909,
and recorded in Book M-9 page
Register of Deeds office, Pitt
I will expose for sale, before the
court house door in the town of
N. C, on Monday, January
30th, -1911, for cash, the following
described parcel or tract of land, to-
One certain tract or parcel of
land, and being in the county
of Pitt and State of North Carolina.
hi township, at Hell's Cross
Roads, adjoining the lands of the
B. S. Atkinson, et and upon
dell is now situated a store house;
;., i, g land d to O.
and it. H. by Jo
,,;, is and others by deed,
dated October 21st, 1902, which
is recorded In the Register of Deeds
of Pitt county, in Book Q-7,
page and also being the same
land this day conveyed by O. L.
and wife to Harvey Stancill.
O. L. Mortgagee.
NOTICE OF SALE.
Under and by virtue of an order
of the Superior Court of Pitt county
made in a special proceeding entitled
Nashville Jr., Administrator
vs G. W. and J. H. made on
13th of December, 1910,
signed will, on the 23rd day of Jan-
1911, at o'clock noon, before
the court house door of said county
offer for public sale, lo the highest
bidder, for cash, a certain house and
lot in the town of Winterville, N. C.
on the west side of the A. C. L. Rail-
road near Lewis mill, being
a lot purchased of J. T. Smith, by
Nashville Sr., the deed for
which is recorded In book page
in Register of Deeds office of Pitt
county, to which reference is directed.
This December 1910.
NASHVILLE JR.,
Administrator of Nashville
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk of Pitt county
as administrator of the estate of Eu-
gene Wilson, deceased, notice la here-
by given to all persons indebted to the
estate to make Immediate payment to
the undersigned; and all persons
claims against said estate are
that they must present the same
the undersigned for payment on or
before the day of January, 1912,
or this notice will be plead In bar
recovery
This 10th day of January, 1911.
FRANK WILSON,
of Eugene Wilson
. the eastern
., . .; . street; then-
. . . with northern
; . of Mill et about to
q . i at a stake; then-
e parallel with
about feet to a stake at the
corner of Minor Street; west-
wards with the southern boundary
of Minor Street about feel to a
at the corner to the
This Bale is made to satisfy the terms
of said mortgage deed.
This the 4th day of January, 1911.
L. C. Arthur, Mortgagees
F. C. Harding, Attorney.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the mortgage executed
delivered by Fleming and
wife Maggie Fleming to Caesar Blount
on Aug. 24th, 1910, which mortgage
appears of In the office of the
Register of Deeds of Pitt county in
book 0-9 page the undersigned
Will sell for cash before the court
house in Greenville on Feb-
11th, 1911 tho following
ed lot situate in the town of Green-
ville lying on the Bast side of Read
Lug the house and lot
t here he said Fleming and wife
now reside, beginning on street
at Henry Gordon's corner and running
with Reade feet
thence east feet; thence north-
parallel with Reade street
feet; thence with said
Gordon's line feet to the begin-
To satisfy said mortgage.
This the 10th day of January, 1911.
BLOUNT,
Mortgagee.
F G. JAMES
trees to a knot near a rose-
pine known as a lore and aft
in said Nelson's line; thence an
course with a line of mark
d trees to a post oak stump on a
near the head of said ditch;
thence a north east course with said
ditch to a slake; then an
course with a line of stakes through
field; thence with a line of marked
trees to a stake in the
creek, T. C. Nelson's line; thence a
northerly course with said Nelson's
line to Stokes corner; thence with
Stokes line to a ditch in a small
branch, thence up said ditch to the
beginning, containing acres more
or less. One other tract beginning in
Aha Pittman's main line, runs S.
1-3 E. 1-2 poles to Jno. B.
way's line, thence N. 1-4 poles to
W. D. Holloway's corner, thence N.
1-2 W. poles, thence S. W.
1-4 poles to the beginning contain-
2-5 acres more or Also one
other tract adjoining the above, be-
ginning at a stake in Swift erect in
the old patent line and runs west
poles lo the edge of the field, thence
N. 3-4 W. 2-5 poles to the
of the ditch, thence up the ditch
poles to the corner, thence N.
3-4 poles to a stake, thence S.
1-4 E. poles to a stake, thence
N. 1-2 E. poles--to. beginning,
containing 4-5 acres more or less.
This mortgage is made to satisfy said
mortgage deed, this the 9th day of
Jan. 1911.
s. F. harper, Mortgagee
F. C. HARDING, Atty.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION
The partnership existing between
Fannie Waters, J. B. W. C.
and T. J. Worthington
the firm name of Holton,
Company was dissolved Jan. 1st,
1911. Fannie Helton and T. J. Wort-h-
retiring. J. B- and W.
C. Edwards will continue business
the firm nae of and Ed-
wards. All persons owing the old
firm are to make immediate
settlement with the new firm and all
Standing indebtedness of tho old
will paid of the new.
This January 1st, 1911.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Alex. Sutton having this day
as executor of the last will and
testament of J. W. Sutton, deceased,
before D. C. Moore, clerk of the
court of Pitt county, notice is
hereby given to all persons indebted
to said estate to make immediate pay
to the undersigned executor;
and all persons having claims against
estate are hereby notified that
they are required to tile their claims
with the undersigned executor on or
before the 20th day of December, 1911,
or this notice will pleaded in bar
of any recover of said claims.
This the 20th day of December.
1910. ALEX. SUTTON.
Executor of the last will and
of J. W. Sutton,
j-J
urn
. .
POOR PRINT





et
The and Farm and The Reflector.
NOTES FROM THE
STUDENTS IN THE MIDST OF
EXAMINATIONS
THE ATHLETIC EVENTS TO FOLLOW
Schedule of Basket Ball Games
Valuable Acquisitions to The Li-
University Faculty Rank
High Among Scientists Of The
Chapel Hill, N. C. Jan.
the meeting of the State Historical
and Literary Association held In
January Professor E. K.
Graham, head of the department of
English and dean of the academic
school, was elected president for the
coming year.
Examination began today and for
the next ten days there will be lit-
doing except on the
part of the students. But things
will liven up immediately after this
period ends. The night of the last
day of examinations the University
will engage in the first
game of basket ball of her
history. The schedule opens
with Wake Forest, and includes
games with Tennessee, Charlotte
and Durham Y. M. C. Virginia
Christian College, Guilford and two
with the University of
one in Chapel Hill and one in
The main purpose
of the team this season is to get the
sport established. The men are in
most cases green, but they hope in
spite of their inexperience, to make
a creditable showing.
The ball schedule will be publish-
ed during the next week. The last
few days have been very warm and
the players have availed themselves
of an opportunity for a little
practice before the examinations
Captain Hackney will call out his
men for steady work just as soon as
examinations close. Coach
will report In Chapel Hill the first
week in February.
The University library has recent-
made some valuable acquisitions.
In December-through some friend of
the University, a copy of the
constitution of the Ku Klux Klan,
printed in Pulaski, Tenn., in 1863,
was obtained. There are only two
other documents in the United States
The library has also secured a copy
the rare work, Natural
History of the Carolinas, Florida
and the Bahama Islands. The work
is in two. large folio volumes,
illustrated. It was pub-
in London in 1754. This is
the only copy of the work In North
Carolina.
Dr. L. R. Wilson, librarian of the
University library, was elected chair-
man of the library department of
the Southern Educational
at the meeting held in Chat-
December 27th to 29th.
Of th seven North Carolina sci-
were given a place among
tit C thousand best scientists in
tho States, six are members
of faculty. Making a
ratio between the number of
and the number of scientists
in this one thousand. Chapel Hill
comes second In the list of the towns
whole country.
REGISTERED.
The Origin of Fertilizers.
Mr. Royster success awaited the
Manufacturer of Fertilizers who would place quality
above other considerations. This was Mr.
idea Twenty-seven years ago and this is his idea,
to-day; the result has been that it requires Eight
Factories to supply the demand for Royster Fertilizers.
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY,
FACTORIES AND SALES OFFICES.
NORFOLK, VA. TARBORO. N. C. COLUMBIA, C. O.
MACON. COLUMBUS, MONTGOMERY, ALA. BALTIMORE. MO,
COMMANDER AND THREE FLAGS AT HALF MAST,
OF CREW FOUND DEAD A SHIP OF
Twenty-Seven From Delaware Reaches Port
man Submarine. With Dead Solders.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Kiel, Germany, Jan. com-
of German submarine, which
sank yesterday, and three members
of the crew were found dead when
the vessel was raised today. Twenty-
seven men were taken off late yes-
but these found dead
remained aboard, refusing to leave
the vessel. The vessel had been par-
but was still in a
position. The men were sup-
plied with air, but it is believed the
air tubes in some way became dis-
connected.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Norfolk, Jan. her flag
at half mast, a veritable ship c
death, the battleship Delaware
rived here today from
She had on board the eight men
were killed and one seriously
ed from boiler yesterday
Several others were injured
The vessel's arrival j was de
by the snow storm and gale
It was compelled to anchor and
several hours for the gale to
down.
JUDGE WHEDBEE W WAKE
Makes Favorable Impression on
People
Wake county Superior court for the
trial of the criminal began a
session weeks
siding over it being Judge H. W.
Whedbee, of Greenville, who holds
first court in Wake county.
Already Judge Whedbee has made
l most favorable impression upon the
Wake county bar and the public. His I
charge yesterday to the grand jury I
was an able one, and dealt in direct i
terms with the -work of the grand .
jury and the crimes which are indict-
able. He directed attention to tho
crimes in the sales of near beer,
cigarettes to minors, saying also that
no matter what is the opinion as to
prohibition law that it is the duty
f the grand jury to see that it is en-
His review of crimes that
ire Indictable was clear and explicit.
News and
Solves a Deep Mystery.
want to thank you from the bot-
tom of my wrote C. B. Rader.
of W. Va., the won-
double benefit I got from
Bitters, in curing me of
a severe case of stomach I and
of rheumatism, from which had
been an almost helpless sufferer for
years. It suited my at
though made just for For
indigestion, Jaundice and to
rid the system, of kidney poisons that
cause rheumatism. Electric Bitters
has no equal. Try them. Every bot-
is guaranteed to satisfy. Only
cents. At all druggists.
Stray Taken Up.
I have taken one Jersey heifer
about one year old, solid color, no
mark. Owner can get same by pay-
cost and proving property.
EDD. SAVAGE,
At W. E. Nichol's farm, one mile
from Greenville. ltd
If a man hasn't a fad the chances
are h has worse.
MORTGAGE SALE
By virtue of the power contained
in a certain mortgage deed executed
by William L. Jones and wife Bet-
tie L. Jones, to J. G. Williams, on the
30th day of October, 1909, as appears
of record in book b-9, page of
Register of Deeds office of Pitt
the undersigned will expose
sale for cash before the Court
louse door in Greenville, N. C, on
Saturday the 18th day of February,
the following described tract
f laud, to
certain tract or parcel of land
being in the County of
and State of North Carolina and
as In Greenville
Township, North Fide, of Tar River
the lands of J. B. Fleming
ind others, and known as a part of
he Shivers land containing acres
or less, and bounded on the
South by the Greenville and Bethel
on the West by Amy Mooring's
land, North by Billy Whichard; East
by Ed
A. M. MOSELEY,
Assignee, of J. C. Williams.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly the
Superior court clerk of Pitt county
as administrator of the estate of Pen-
ale Hathaway, deceased, notice is
given, to all persons indebted
to the estate to make immediate pay-
to the undersigned; and all
persons having claims against the
said estate are notified that they
must present the same to the under-
for t on or before the
7th day of January, 1912, this
will be plead in bar of recovery
This 17th day of January, 1911.
F. C. HARDING, Attorney,
ABNER EASON,
of Hathaway
Help for Advertisers.
Advertisers are invited to look
over the specimen sheets of
cuts at The Reflector office.
They can have the free use of any
cut selected to illustrate their ad-
We will also help you
to get up the advertisements or write
them for you when desired.
U IV.-., Mo,. MM . . W T
Volume
A. FRIDAY, JANUARY K, MM.
GOOD ROADS
THE Gil EN
DISCUSS THE MEASURE
j. Allen, J. G. Taylor,
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED BILL
It Provides for of Board
Real Trustees Who Shall be An-
,;. Bonds I a.
.; Exceeding t
In The Township.
A mass meeting of the citizens
. was held In
. Monday to
v.
for a -o u .
in the township- T
a hundred people In the meeting
representing all classes- -merchant,,
professional men, farmers, laborers
in fact, every calling and interest,
making it in reality a representative
meeting of the township.
Mr. E. G. Flanagan was made chair
man of the mass meeting, and Mr.
D. J. Whichard secretary. A rough
of the proposed bill was
read by sections and opened for dis-
amendment and adoption or
rejection as the meeting might decide.
The first section was tabled for the
time being until all other sections
of the bill should be passed, then
that section was again taken up and
in open meeting the gentlemen
to form the board of road
trustees were nominated and chosen
and their names inserted in this
section.
The meeting was quite a
one, there being much speech
and discussion of the various
sections of the proposed bill. The
bill finally adopted for submission to
the general assembly is as
A Bill to be an Act to Provide Good
t. G.
U. Q. W. A.
Mayo, J. L. Evans and R. L. Smith,
ire hereby constituted a board
trustees for the public roads of
Greenville township In Pitt county,
four shall bold the
,. ., for six years,
for four years,
j tWO year. At
i of the terms of any.
-heir successors shall be elected for
six years by the county board of
commissioners of Pitt county. All
vacancies caused by death,
Lion or removal from the said town-
shall
by the remaining m-id-
. d board Provided,
. ., snail
office within the meaning
article seven, section fourteen of
e Of North Carolina
said board of
, ,,. B j successors, shall
., a body
me and style o
. Trustees of
. and by that
same may sue and be sued, make
contracts, acquire real and personal
by gift, purchase or device;
hold, exchange and sell the same, and
exercise such other rights and
as are incident to other mu-
corporations.
Section That it hall be the duty
of the said board of . to take
control and management of the roads
or said Greenville township, and said
trustees are vested with all
the rights and powers for such con-
and management as are now vest
In ad by the board of
of Pitt county.
.,,, ., in this Act shall be
construed JO to bridges over
Tar river.
management of
J. J.
LARGE INCREASE IN THE RECEIPTS
Beads In Greenville Township,
Pitt
The general assembly of North
Carolina do
Section That J. G. J. P.
Evans, J, S. Mooring, L. A. Randolph,
Section The board of trustees
shall annually elect a chairman and
secretary and treasurer. Tho treas-
shall have charge of all road
funds of the township, and shall be
required to give bond in sufficient
amount to cover funds coming Into
his hands. Tho board of trustees
shall annually elect three of their
number, who shall constitute and be
known as the executive committee.
This committee shall meet at stated
intervals, as may be directed by the
on 13th
Improvement About Prises
and Comparison
Betti
;. ii as
i West,
Superintendent j. J
h's t to
at
, lie assumed
U give.
M . ., and
, . that hit
31st,
showed large appreciation of the
State's property by substitution of
young fine mules horses for the
old worn-out stock and tho latest
improved farming Implements for old
and out of date Implements that were
discarded by all practical farmers a
I decade ago.
i In his report he states that he
does not take into account articles
produced and consumed on the
those values balance themselves,
the i umber convicts has grad-
eased for the past
because chain-gangs in
only
from these and that'll
ins system continues in a
-ears the prison population will
The receipts, he states,
the fact that we have earned
and paid into the treasury over
the amounts of any preceding
two years, at the same time show
an increase In that
-this was inevitable when con-
sider the run-down condition of the
stock and that
proved kind of agricultural
have saved during the
season a day. detail
he gives the improvements in build-
and stock, and tolls of about
mi repairing
S. fa. m to
valuable I d
a. d lo on
en l
. b .
, . , ii
., f. d i
. i o p a-
. b to no-
net there were four deaths In the
past two years, one a man years
old and no case Of typhoid fever In
S. -1.
camp In Eastern North Carolina.
where ore men, there were
, the In one From
.-i c mil rood camp in
. .-i o
, . deaths from
In two years. From D. H. Car-
railroad camp Hyde county.
. -o deaths in 1909, one in
old man of
. . death -r from trouble,
few after eating a hearty
. I H the camp In
North Carolina, with
generally, there was one death
1909 and one In As to this
In Western North Carolina,
Superintendent says
there were more deaths and more
losses from sickness than at camps in
any other part or tho State, -which
goes to show the conditions
i Eastern North Carolina.
In regard to the health conditions,
the of Dr. F. M. Reg-
physician to Slate farm, the
;, g -Our health rec-
. rood for the last
. h i mm call, your
re n to
, i of V c in
, in two
E . c- o deaths out of nearly
prisoners, none among sixty or
employees and no typhoid fever
hat he attributes record of
to driven pumps; thereby get-
pure water, good food, sanitary
surroundings, regular hours, and last
m not least, everything thoroughly
from Hies and
and that believe that the eastern
of the State will compare with
y other part, if people will
. pumps and thoroughly screen
The malaria. ho
says, is In a great measure prevent-
on 12th
POOR PRINT


Title
Eastern reflector, 20 January 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 20, 1911
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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