Eastern reflector, 17 March 1911


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





I U Mil V
PROCEEDINGS OF THE
COUNTY
OF FEBRUARY MEETING
m Carolina Home and Farm The Beg,,,,.
Paid for Current Expenses,
Salaries, and Fees Collected.
The board of county commission-
was in regular monthly session
Monday, with three of the members
present.
The following aggregate sums were
drawn on the For paupers
1240; superintendent of health
county home advertising and
printing court house
bridges and ferries clerk
superior court register of
deeds jail Inspector
smallpox sundries
officers salaries, clerk
of deeds sheriff
county stock law county
roads roads
roads Farmville
roads Greenville roads
Some errors In tax list were corrected
and exemptions made.
J. L. Mooring, constable-elect of
township, having failed to
qualify, the office was declared
cant and J. I. Jams was elected to
All the same. The latter tendered
his official bond and qualified.
The following were added to the
pauper list to receive per month
Rosa Rives, John T. James,
R. M, James Hill and Richard
Jerman.
Petitions were presented for
In school districts in and
Greenville townships, and the
were ordered.
The elections ordered at last meet-
for school districts in Farmville
and Swift Creek townships were re-
The county officers made the fol-
lowing report of fees collected for
the month of Superior
court clerk register of deeds
sheriff
Mi
REGISTERED,
That there more to a Fertilizer than
Analysis is proven conclusively by the results
obtained every year from Royster Fertilizers. I
hey are made from experience obtained by
actual field experiments of what the plant
requires, and not from ready reference
formulating.
I i in Royster Goods is
selected for its plant food value, and has its
work to do the proper time, therefore the
plant fertilized with ROYSTER goods is fed
regular from sprouting time until harvest.
I Ask your dealer for Royster goods and
see that the trade-mark is on every bag.
When you see this H. you know
Fish Fertilizer.
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY,
FACTORIES AND SALES
NORFOLK. VA. N. C COLUMBIA
MONTGOMERY ALA
THIS DOG IS SMART.
Up Paper and Finds
Used Article.
Mr. E. B. tells us of a
smart dog he has, and says that
hereafter we ought not to be opposed
to dogs any more. Mr. lost
a driving glove and put an ad. about
U in The Reflector. When the paper
was delivered at his home that even-
lug the dog got it and chewed it up
afterwards the dog went off, found
the lost glove and carried it home in
his mouth. Now somebody please
figure it out how chewing Up the pa-
per containing the advertisement led
the dog to go and find the glove and
take it home. All the same It shows
that advertising i Tho Reflector
pays.
Marriage Licenses.
During last week Register of Deeds
Moore issued licenses to the follow-
White i
Craft and Ada Moore.
Coward and Lillie Channels
Arthur Gardner and
e. and Fleming.
H, Rives and Eva Evans.
Page and Ada Evans
WHAT THE STATE
WILL GET
THE AMOUNT REACHES
How This Is Appropriated by The
Legislature.
The appropriations bill adopted by
the general assembly makes the fol-
lowing provision for the various State
institutions for the next two
For the Home at Raleigh,
annually for maintenance, out
of which is to be paid the present de-
For the School for the Deaf and
Dumb at Morganton, annually
for support and maintenance;
annually for installing water system;
annually for equipment.
For the Colored Orphan Asylum at
Oxford. annually for support
and maintenance.
For the Appalachian Training
School at Boone, annually for
support and maintenance; an-
for equipment.
For the Normal and Industrial
school at
ally for support and maintenance;
annually for support and main-
For the Institution for Deaf, Dumb
and Blind at Raleigh, annual-
for support and maintenance;
annually for library incidentals.
For the Hospital for the Colored
for maintenance; an-
for improvements.
For East Carolina Train-
School at Greenville, an-
for support and maintenance,
out of which the present deficit must
be paid.
For the Croatan Normal school
Robeson county, annually ,
support and maintenance; a
for improvements.
SOUTHED COM.
J. S. Carr to Address
of Welcome.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Atlanta, Ga., March third
annual convention of the Southern
Commercial Congress opened today.
Senator Fletcher, of Florida and Sec-
, Wilson, of the department of
For the University at Chapel Hill, agriculture, were the principal speak-
annually for support and today- Governor Brown extended
welcome and Julian a
maintenance; annually for
four years for improvements.
For the Normal and Industrial Col-
at Greensboro, annually
for support and maintenance;
annually for improvement.
For the College of Agriculture and
Mechanic Arts at Raleigh, an-
for support and maintenance;
annually for improvements.
For the for
at annually
for support and maintenance;
annually for improvements.
For the Agricultural and Mechanic-
College, colored, at Greensboro,
annually for support and
maintenance; annually for
For marking graves of Confederate
dead in cemetery in Raleigh, an-
To give weaker public schools of
the State four term
annually.
For Guilford Battle Ground,
annually; annually for erection
welcome and General Julian S. Carr,
of North Carolina, responded.
other speeches by prominent
business men were made.
Arguments are never able to con-
anybody but the fellow who
makes them.
WOOD'S HIGH-GRADE
Farm Seeds,
We
race at Goldsboro; annually IT
for support and maintenance; j
manually for Improvements Carolina room in the
For the State hospital at Raleigh,
annually for support
maintenance. i .
Morgan. What a boy wants from his grand-
ton, annually for and .
the beat in all Farm seeds.
Grass and Clover Seeds
Seed Corn, Cotton Seed,
Cow Peas, Beans,
Corn,
Millet Seed, Peanuts, etc.
Crop issued
monthly
gives timely information as to
seeds to plant each month in
the year, also prices of Season-
able Seeds. Write for copy,
mailed free on request
T. W. WOODS SONS,
Richmond, Va.
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
GREENVILLE, N. O, FRIDAY MARCH 1911.
Number II,
Where Farmers Fail in Fertilization for Tobacco
O. L. JOYNER, President Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Company
There is no one thing that is more
generally ignored by farmers, or
treated Indifferently by them, than
the matter of fertilizing for the to-
crop, while In reality, there is
probably no one feature In the grow-
of tobacco that more import-
ant. For a long time, our farmers
used almost exclusively for tobacco
a brand of fertilizer analyzing 3-8-
that is to say, a fertilizer con-
per cent, ammonia, per
cent phosphoric acid and per cent
potash, which to be more explicit
means that in a ton of fertilizer
containing this analysis there are
pounds of ammonia, pounds of
potash and pounds phosphoric
acid. By actual test, it Is known
that pounds of tobacco takes
out of the soil about pounds of
potash and from to pounds of
ammonia. Of course, our tobacco
soils all have a certain amount of
ammonia and potash, but the
question for the farmers is
whether this ammonia and potash
that is present in the soil, is avail-
able in sufficient quantities to make
complete plant food for a growing
crop of tobacco. Most of our farm-
use about pounds of
to tho acre. This means they
put in pounds of potash and
pounds of ammonia In commercial
form. If there is sufficient quantity
of potash and ammonia available in
the soil to complete the plant food,
all well and good, but if not, the re-
is a poor crop of tobacco, some-
thing with which a great many of us
have been afflicted during the last
few years, and in this connection,
here, it is not out of place to
say that no amount of fertilizer is
going to make a good crop of to-
when such abnormal seasons
as we have had in Eastern North
a for the last few years
although proper preparation
will, to a large extent, overcome the
deficiency in seasons, and will en-
able the plant to employ the plant
food put in the land to a much bet-
advantage. The Important
however, with farmers is, do
we use enough ammonia and potash
in our tobacco fertilizer As a gen-
rule the answer is
ably, no. We should therefore use
fertilizer running higher, especially
in potash.
One of the most painstaking and
intelligent farmers in my knowledge
Mr. Leon F. Evans, has clearly
by a series of experiments
that the use of guano running high
in sulphate of potash will pay. In
his tests, he used fertilizer running
from per cent to per cent potash,
and from to per cent ammonia.
From tobacco on which he used
pounds of fertilizer analyzing per
cent potash, he sold something over
worth of tobacco per acre more
than from the tobacco fertilized
with 3-8-3, and all the tobacco was
treated, cultivated, cured and sold
alike, except in the matter of
It has been found, very much to
the disadvantage of our Eastern
North Carolina tobacco, especially
that its burning qualities are not as
good as the burning qualities of the
old belt tobacco and in a series of
meetings last fall, held under the
of the Tobacco As-
of the States, and
participated in by Mr. E. H. Matheson
an expert from the United States De-
of Agriculture, this import-
ant matter was urgently called to the
attention of the farmers. Mr. Mathe-
son contended that the general use
by farmers of a fertilizer running
or per cent in sulphate of potash
would very materially Improve the
burning qualities of our tobacco, and
thus materially add to its value. This
matter should be seriously considered
by all our farmers, for while in in-
instances, may ma-
add to the money value of
their crops of tobacco by using more
potash, yet, to improve the general
quality of our tobacco, farmers, us a
whole, must adopt this system of
fertilizing.
The use of pounds of
running per cent sulphate pot-
ash gives to the tobacco the
ate use of lbs. of sulphate pot-
use of pounds of sulphate of pot-
ash. That soil would therefore have
to be very deficient In potash content
that did not yield a good crop of to-
with pounds of such
in normal seasons. The serious
condition and discussion of this
question will redound to tho
good of the tobacco farmers.
A Pointer to Farmers.
The Sun is always glad to aid the
farmers and do what it can for their
advancement and the promotion of
their Industries and give them a
greater success.
Mr. W. C. the buyer for
the A. T. Company, gives us a hint,
and we use it in the hope that it will
be beneficial to the farmers and at
the same time enable them to real-
better results from the sale of
their tobacco. The suggestion is
Before planting tobacco seed blow
the carefully to get out the chaff
or faulty seed, and in this way you
can rid the planting of seed that will
make a faulty of tobacco. Or
else, another way is to put the seed
in just before planting, and
this will bring all of the faulty seed
to the top and can easily be
The farmers are requested to do
this before they bow their plant bed,
and thus improve the next crop. Such
a precaution has been known to in-
crease the value of crops In other
states to a very handsome per cent.
It is worth Sun.
The Man Who Helps.
A town's best asset is a bunch of
men who have money, enterprise
public spirit. A man who establish-
es an enterprise which enables many
other people to a living while
he makes something on their labor,
is a desirable citizen and public
The man who has a pay-
roll to meet is not a theoretical but
a practical Star
Rotation for Farm Conditions.
Now is the time to plan crop rota-
for the farm and while changes
may be made, if necessary, it will be
found most satisfactory to lay out
the fields and plan the crop rotations
so that there will be system and
method in the farming operations.
A lawyer or doctor may spend weeks
studying one case, why should we
not put our best though and
time in planning a rotation of
crops for the farm Surely the
of tho matter merits our
best Farmer.
Sometimes the harder a man is
to land the less he pleases the
who lands him.
The more talking a man does the
more denying he has to do.
Nitrate of Soda for Crops,
If wheat or oats do not seem
thrive as they should, it is o good
practice to apply some nitrate of
soda. I have used as much as
pounds an acre on wheat, always
plying when the leaves are dry, to
avoid scalding. In one experiment
I increased the wheat crop nine bush-
els an acre on part of fie Held with
an application of of
nitrate, this part making bushels
where the rest of the Held made
bushels, the land being in rather a
low state of fertility. But followed
that wheat with peas and gathered
only the peas, the next season
that land made a fine corn crop. Could
have made heavier one had fol-
lowed the peas with crimson clover,
but at that time we had not found
out the value of this clover.- V.
Massey, in Progressive Farmer,
HIM





LI i,
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
GREAT VALUE
OF THE DAIRY PRODUCTS
IT IS A PROFITABLE INDUSTRY.
A Matter of Interest to the
of Keith Carolina.
According to Information furnished
by the United Stales department of
commerce and gal-
of cotton seed oil were produced
in North Carolina In 1909. This was
worth approximately This
is a considerable amount of money
and the market which demands this
product is an important one to the
people of the Slate.
This fact has held men who wish
to see oleomargarine take the place
of butter to make it appear that the
manufacture of oleomargarine fur-
one of the greatest if not the
greatest reasons for this market de-
Hut such is not the case. In
fact the value of the cotton seed
used in the manufacture of this-
product is so small in comparison
that it is not worthy of the least
consideration, especially when the
value of the dairy products of the
state are considered.
We do not have the statistics
but in the value of the
cotton seed oil used in the
of oleomargarine in this country
was 499,458.42. The value of all
the cotton seed oil produced in
was This
means that less than one per cent
of the cotton seed oil sold was
in making oleomargarine.
According to the department re-
port, North Carolina produced about
per cent, of all the cotton seed
produced in 1909. Using this figure
for and we find that the
of the cotton seed oil used in oleo
margarine returned to the cotton,
farmers of North Carolina the com
small amount of
967.50.
According to figures compiled by
the United States department
agriculture, the value of butter pro-
in North Carolina in 1908 was
or for every dollar's worth
of cotton seed oil used in making
oleomargarine the cows of the state
returned over worth of dairy
products.
These are facts which the farmers
of North Carolina should carefully
consider before they lend their sup-
port to any movement which dis-
courages dairying. An in
the production of dairy products in
North Carolina will be just times
of greater value than an increase in
the production of oleomargarine. This
is not even taking in to consider-
the value of dairying in build-
up the fertility of the soil, thus
making the land more productive in
growing cotton.
The farmers of North Carolina
should awake to the benefits of dairy-
and should use every legitimate
means to footer and promote this
important industry.
PIONEERS NEEDED.
The Tasks of The Country
Districts.
New Industries.
The following new industries have
been established in North Carolina
during the week ending March
railway com-
com-
publishing
company.
lank.
Scot land and lumber
company.
One of most difficult things is
to do things a little differently from
your neighbors and yet that is
among the first of the needs in the
life of America today. The
life of the city is different from that
of the country. There the quicken-
influence of growth and
accelerate development, co-op-
is in voluntary and there is
less need for a large number of
leaders.
In the country the problem is more
complicated. The average farmer
lives the year round in a rut. Many
of his customs he has inherited from
his father. Others he copies from
his neighbors. As a result life pro-
from one year's end to an-
other with not one-tenth degree of
the progress witnessed in the city,
into which Is all the time pouring
new Ideas and new influences.
To illustrate, it has been the
tom for decades in the country to
squabble over land lines, over differ-
in religious opinion, etc. It
has been a custom here and there to
indulge in that baneful neighborly
gossip which does no one any good
and does everybody concerned an
Infinite amount of harm. One com-
may have the one horse habit
where it should have the two horse
habit. One county may be sticking
to old Inherited methods of
when It needs modern, scientific
methods. One county may need more
schools, or better teachers, or longer
terms and more teachers.
One fact, thousands
of them in this
each year to the city a great many
more of its young men and women
than it can. afford. There is a way
to keep these young men and
men at home, and to invest in the
country the energy that
in the city.
Now, I suggest that if you want to
write yourselves down as a
factor to your fellows, that you get
out and start doing some of these
things that the rest of your neighbors
are too lazy, too blind, or too busy to
do or see.
One wide-awake, energetic, self-
sacrificing man in a county can ac-
wonders.
The results may net he apparent
at once, but if the task is followed
with patience and persistence, they
are sure in the long run.
In the olden days, when this
try was a wilderness, it took the
hardest sort of courage for men to
be pioneers. It takes as much or
more courage of another sort to be
pioneer in our civilized age, when
it conies to starting the task of up-
building our country districts. The
man who launched it is going to run
up against enough snags and dis-
and and in-
difference to make him feel that he
is wearing a crown of thorns.
Rut in the end he will triumph
and be rewarded by the crown of
gold that comer, from the gratitude
of bis awakened friends and neigh-
For the mass the farmers are
not so unreasonable or unresponsive,
all. Once shown the right way
Report the Condition
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE
At
in the State of Carolina, the close of business, March 7th, 1911.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
Overdrafts. 4,415.17
Banking house
Furniture Fix.
Demand loans. 4,913.74
Due from banks and
bankers.
Cash items. 3,026.84
Gold
Silver coin, including all
minor coin 1,179.83
National bank notes and
other notes 12,241.00 13,648.33
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid 50,000.00
Undivided profits, less cur-
rent expenses and taxes
paid.
Time certificates of de-
Deposits subject to check
. 156,026.02
Cashier's checks
655.93 217.310.94
Total
Total,
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. County of Pitt,
I, Jas. L. Little, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear
that above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
JAS. L. LITTLE, Cashier.
B. W. MOSELEY,
Subscribed and sworn to before me, W. B. WILSON
this 11th day of March, 1911. J. G.
H. D. BATSMAN, Directors.
Notary Public.
commission expires October
3rd, 1911.
SEE THE FREE SEWING MACHINE
at our store. Absolutely
throughout and runs without effort
The is the Only Insured Sewing
The Free Sewing Machine in addition to being warranted
tor five bra. wear, fire,
lightning water
Taft VanDyke Furniture Store
THE MEN'S LEAGUE
AFTER THE
and once convinced that a man is
trying sincerely to benefit their con-
their gratitude is decidedly
worth the
A. Barrett, of the Union.
Continues to Have Helpful Influence
The meeting of the Men's Prayer
League in the Methodist church,
Sunday afternoon, had another large
attendance. The subject
Without made an inspiring
topic and the leaders, Messrs. J. A.
Lang, E. H. Thomas and Wiley J.
Brown spoke with much Interest
A letter was read from Dr. William
Black, out whose meeting here in
November the league was organized,
which came in response to a resolution
thanking him for what he had done
for Greenville.
The meeting next Sunday afternoon
will be held In the Presbyterian
church. Subject,
Text, Mark
Messrs. L. H. Pender, C. C.
and E. B.
can tell nobody dreadful
r yet they'll go shrieking
through the streets.
Mayer Gives Or.
tiers a Hunch.
Maggie Roberson, Dora Bullock,
Sarah Moore and Mamie Foster, all
colored, were in the mayor's court
to answer the charge of keeping a
disorderly house. They were all
found guilty, and each was sentenced
to a thirty term of Imprison-
the sentence to go into effect
any time within two years if the
defendants are found Pitt county
after o'clock on March 14th.
These women have been maintain-
a resort similar to that in which
the outlaws were harbored in
j son that caused the death cC the
deputy sheriff of that re-
It is well that the
should be rid of such characters
and that such places of evil be
Public sentiment should
support every step the officers
hi that direction.
The Carolina Home and farm and The Eastern Reflector.
Gives relief for all Nerve, Bone and Muscle
Aches and Pains more quickly than any
other remedy known.
Its peculiar penetrating properties are
most LINIMENT.
May be used with absolute confidence in its
purity for Internal and External Uses.
It is Triple Strength. A powerful, speedy
and sure Pain Remedy, therefore most
effective in producing results.
Not only contains the old-fashioned
but also the latest and up-to-
date LINIMENT.
Recommended and sold under a guarantee
for the Rheumatism in all
forms, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints
and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Cramps,
Colic, Toothache, and all Nerve, Bone
and Muscle Aches and Pains.
Drug stores in cities and towns, general
Stores in the country, and
the bottle, and money back if not sat-
Isn't this fair
HE
Proof Positive
Cured of Ti me
bad i.
for yearn, i I
Noah's Liniment, and
Hat It cured mo
better than l have In two
Liniment will all y ; .
S. EL Cyrus, Donald, B.
Pain In Side
five years I i
. pain In side.
pain In side, i
sleep. I tried
the first application made m. I
Mrs. A. See,
Couldn't
no t
and
bet-
free from pain. A.
Chester,
AND
IN
MAN
NO.
UNDER THE FOOD AND
DRUGS ACT,
PRICE, THIS CENTS
AND S
NOAH REMEDY CO,
Va., a M ,
Bad
used Noah's for
rheumatism, stiff Joints and bi
and I can say It did more good
any pain remedy. Rev. George W.
Smith, S.
Sprained Ankle.
have been benefited greatly by
Noah's Liniment, using for u sprained
Mrs. W. L. Robertson, West
important Notice
The genuine Noah's Liniment looks exactly like the
above. Look for Noah's Ark on every package, our
trade mark, registered in the U. S. Patent Office, for
your protection. Noah's Liniment always appears in
red Ink on the original, both on the label and on out-
side container. Accept nothing but Noah's Liniment.
It is the only Pain Remedy sold under a positive
guarantee. If your dealer will not supply you, send
in stamps and we will mail you a bottle and re-
fund money if not perfectly satisfied. Beware of
fraud; accept no substitute.
the
suffered ten years with a dread-
fully sore pain In back, and tried
different remedies. Less than half a
bottle of Noah's Liniment made a per-
cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D. Billingsley,
Point Eastern,
mid
wife suffered for years
with neuralgia and toothache. She used
about half a bottle of Noah's Liniment
and got immediate relief. J. S. Fisher,
Policeman, Hodges, S.
i;
received the bottle of Noah's
and think it has me great-
I have rheumatism in my
it relieved it right much. Mrs. Martha
A. Lambert, Beaver Dam,
For Horses.
have never used a liniment we
consider the equal to Noah's Liniment
for bruises, sprains, strained
and to use on throat, sides and chest
for distemper, colds, etc. Richmond
Transfer Co., Richmond,
Than fill Remedies.
cheerfully all stable
men to give Noah's Liniment trial
and be convinced of ;. mil
properties. , obtained
good if not Letter results from its use
than v. e did from remedies costing
n-r bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth
Transfer Co., Norfolk,
HOW TO TREAT A HAM
Au Old Virginia Inventor That Has
Acquired the Dignity of an
Institution.
That friend of ours who laid In a
fine old Virginia ham as a part of
the stock of Christmas provisions and
since writes pleasantly, sawed
off a couple of slices for
is not Virginian nor a resident
Virginia that part of West
Virginia not honeycombed with gas
and coal We should
known that if we hadn't known
the writer. We are not advised
the work was done at a sawmill
or whether the old ham was adjusted
to the sawhorse in the woodshed and
by hand. In either case
hope our friend will not Bee
the proper uses of old
ham and the usages of that
of which the said old ham one
of the finest products were utterly
disregarded. It would be in just as
good form to split, maul, chop, chisel
or dynamite an old ham as to
it. You might as safely run a rail-
way through a Chinese graveyard, in-
the ancestors of a Japanese, pro-
pose a Hindu's hump-back cow for
packing purposes or water a
Scotchman's whiskey as to try to
caw the ham of an old Virginian
household. It belongs the
portraits, the colonial silver, the
claw-footed furniture of
the mansion. It is to be eaten, of
course, after it has rested for a suit-.
SIRE ROAD TO GLORY.
ESTABLISHED
able length of time on the
table in the parlor, but under such
conditions and with such ceremony
as become a time-honored institution
We shall not insult the Virginians
non-coal-producing West
who read these columns by
telling them how a ham should be
prepared for the table; nor shall we
flatter those who are not Virginians
by assuming that they might learn.
Cooking a ham, one might say, is not
be learned at all; it is a matter of
tradition an inheritance, almost an
instinct. It is sufficient to say that
if it isn't done right it ought not to
be done at all. A ham is better run-
wild in the timber than
and improperly cooked. It may be
said and must be admitted, that hams
are produced, cured, boiled, baked
and eaten elsewhere than on Virgin-
soil and especially in the neigh-
boring states.
I In the reflected of
many things are done in very
correct imitation of the true pattern,
and what is more to the point, there
is in other parts of the world a strain
of Virginian blood that insures the
observance of the
j of the old states. That does not
pair the force the foregoing
We haven't time to go to an
encyclopedia to find out where the
I first ham came from, but we are
j sure it was eaten raw unless it was
eaten in W. Va.
I Free Press.
The Great Shown by Condemn-
ed Criminals.
In the days when hanging was
the penalty for a capital crime in
North Carolina, every poor devil
who was hurried to eternity at
the end of a rope professedly went
direct to heaven. The of
the State chair which succeeds the
gallows and of which there has
ready been several, go the same way.
Many living, if taken away suddenly,
are not as well prepared as it seems
to be in the case of these condemned
criminals. And why should,, how
ever, a criminal be reprieved, and
the shadow of the gallows or
chair be removed, would he hold
fast to This profession, or wander
back to the paths of sin Has the ;
murderer, the rapist, or the bur-
condemned to die, a better op-
than the average human j
being drifting along life's way, in- I
differently, it may be. It is good that
the miserable ending of these
lives is brightened by the hope
and gleam of a blessed immortality
but it is a road no one would prefer
by choice and is only taken through
necessity and with no other
conversed with three
men who were hanged in Forsyth
county and they were all sincere in
their belief of a complete forgive-
of their sins. In it all there is
a lesson, that if every condemned
Wholesale and retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid tor
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Barrels.
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat-
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages,
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, Tables,
Lounges Safes, P. and Gail
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco,
West Cheroots, Henry George Ci-
gars, Canned Cherries, Peaches.
Syrup. Meat, Flour, Sugar
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Food.
Oil Cotton Seed arid
Herd. Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts.
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass,
and
and Cheese,
best Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma-
chines, ed numerous other
Quality and quantity
Come to Bee me.
Number
o b f i
TI
criminal goes direct to the of
the blessed after death, then tin i e
who obey the laws and lead honest,
moral and lives e a
far better opportunity if they live
to the end of their days- as God in-
tends that they should and why
Winston Republican.





II l
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF PAUL N.
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
Winterville. X. March 1911.
Prof G. E. of Raleigh.
spent Friday night in town.
Miss Virginia Ives, an old student
of High School, spent
Friday in town.
Mr. W. L. House and family have
moved to Florida
If you need a nice pair of slippers
come and examine our stock.
A. W. Ange Company.
Mr. Cox returned from Wash-
Friday evening.
Miss Grace Virginia Cox, Dr.
little girl, is very sick with la grippe
Miss Mary Smith, of Ayden,
Friday with Miss Pearl Hester.
A new lot of horse collars am
bridles just arrived at A. W.
Prof. H. F. Brinson left
morning for Grove,
ford county, where he will
Sunday.
Mr. Lee Moore, an old student
Winterville High School, spent Fri
day night in town.
Dr. N. R. of Wake Forest
will give five lectures on the
of Matthew in the Baptist church
beginning Friday evening. March
17th, at He will also give one
lecture Saturday evening at
and three on Sunday at o'clock
o'clock and All arc most
cordially invited to hear these
Harrington. Barber Company are
opening some nice spring suits
cheap.
by Literary Society.
The Vance Literary society of
Winterville High School held its an-
mid-term debate at A large
and enthusiastic audience was pres-
The query was, That
the United States should own and
control her The
was ably represented by Messrs.
S. S. Roberson, C. E. Langston, R.
T. Causey and X. The
negative was strongly maintained by
Messrs. L. G. Whitley, Herbert Sharp.
Gordon Johnson and H. G. Cox. The
judges were Rev. M. A. Adams, of
Winterville, Prof. C. L. Koonce, of
find Mr. W. R. Hunsucker, of
Winterville. The decision
in favor of the negative by a
close margin. Both sides were ably
represented, bringing the debate up
to the usual high standard of those
formerly given. The society has
done excellent work during the
having developed several new
men into good speakers.
Winterville, N. C , March
Elisabeth who has been
visiting her father, near Bel Cross,
returned Tuesday.
Mr. Fountain Cox, who is attending
at Wake Forest, few
hours at home Monday night.
you need a nice pair of spring
call and examine our line
before W. Ange Com-
Remember that Dr. W. R.
Wake Forest, will lecture in the
church Friday, Saturday and
Sunday nights.
Don't forget Ledbetter cotton
and corn planters at A. W. Ange
Miss Smith, of Ayden, spent
Saturday and Sunday with Miss Pearl
Hester.
Mr. Lonnie and Miss Lizzie Whitley
students or Winterville High School,
called home Monday morning
D their mother being
very ill.
The regular monthly missionary
meeting was held in the church
Sunday night They bad an excellent
Mr. Eugene Cannon spent Sunday
it Mr. T. B. Smith's.
Miss Cox. who is teaching
n Ahoskie. spent Saturday and Sun-
lay at home.
Mr. Bob. Abbott and Mr. Ernest
spent Sunday in Ayden.
Mr. W. Harris is all smiles this
is a girl.
For new and up-to-date slippers
ail and see Harrington, Barber
Company.
For spring and summer pants, the
est that can be had for the money,
Harrington, Barber Company.
GIRL SWEARS OFF.
Experience of a Durham Young Lady
in Her father's
There is a certain girl in our city
who has quite recently
thrown down the armor and declares
that woman suffrage, the harem skirt
and even the divided riding is
a nuisance, an
thing that women should steer clear
of and wear the proverbial garment,
even to the extent of the
One night last week this girl
don't intend to call get the
spirit of mischief into her lovely head
and went forth with an idea to scare
things up in general. She donned her
father's clothes, shoes and hat, while
the other members of the family, with
a guests, were in complete
of her intentions. When her
attire was complete she. with a
stealthy step, made her way around
the house, pulled her hat over her
eyes and peeped in the window. The
desired results happened. Her
caught a glimpse of her, screamed,
hollowed is a looking
in the. went into hysterics,
and then the chase. When Mis-
started to retrace she saw her
brother headed her way and also saw
in his hand a gleaming in
the moonlight. She turned and con-
fronted her father with a Winchester
she didn't faint or scream or do
any of the little stunts characteristic
of her sex. she simply backed up in a
corner of the house, just as a bullet
from the Winchester whizzed over her
head. She waited as the stops from
both directions drew
got exclaimed her
brother in a Sherlock Holmes voice.
don't mean said Mis-
with a perfect ripple of laugh-
That's all except we venture to say
. there are two men in town who feel
like thirty cents, and a certain plucky
girl who exclaims
Durham Sun.
Indigestion.
Don't worry a minute longer; it's
easy to get rid of indigestion
days. So if you have gastritis, ca-
of the stomach or simply fer-
of food, cheer up; for
Coward Wooten has a
called that turns old
into sweet ones in a few days or
money back.
There's happy days ahead you
and for your poor, flabby, tired out
stomach if you won't be
Just lay down cents and say
want a box of
They are made from the formula of
the most successful prescription for
indigestion, catarrh of the
and all stomach distress ever known.
Take one or two tablets with or
after meals for a few days and then
if you don't agree with us MI-
is a marvelous
can have your money back. We'll
leave it to your good sense o fair-
whether that's a square deal or
not.
stomach tablets promptly
relieve belching, heaviness, pain in
stomach, heartburn, sour stomach,
foul breath, coated tongue;
nervousness, sick headache and sleep-
is sold by Coward
Wooten, and leading druggists
Get Enough Horse Power.
I was once talking with a State
commissioner of agriculture, re-
marked that when I was farming on
a large scale I used ten mules. He
said, is too many. A four-
horse farm is all that one man should
and his idea of a four-horse
farm, was a tract of land on which,
where I now live no one would think
of using less than eight horses. On
such a farm as this man indicated,
every one of the four horses would
be hitched to a plow to plow the
land for the crop, and every plow
would take a man, and the plowing
would be about three inches deep,
while the eight horses would take
no more men, but the team would
plow at least six inches deep, and
the same four men would cultivate
a far larger area with two-horse rid-
cultivators. We need to get away
from the old idea of estimating a
farm by horses, and should use all
the horses we can make profitable.
W. F. Massey, in Progressive Farmer.
Good Story of Archbishop
Memories have been freshened by
the death of Archbishop Ryan, and
many incidents in his life are being
told by those who knew him. Among
them, one that ho took great pleasure
in telling himself, is the
At the breaking of ground for one
of the new buildings for the Catholic
university at Washington Cardinal
Gibbons was officiating. He turned
over a large piece of grass-covered
earth, when it was discovered that
there had been a hitch in the
said the cardinal, sup-
pose that we will have to dig another
no, said Archbishop
Ryan, go back on the old
Philadelphia Evening Times.
WE INVITE YOU TO INSPECT THE
new styles of Dorothy ox-
fords, just received. All
J. R. J. G.
OF
POLICEMAN CLARK MAKES AN
IMPORTANT CAPTURE
FINDS RAZORS AND PISTOLS GALORE
Bear Name of Washington
Hardware Firm Whose Store Had
Keen That A
Gang of Burglars Were Planning
Haiti on
As a sequel to the action of Mayor
Wooten, Monday, in suspending
sentence over four colored women for
keeping a disorderly house, the
sentence to go into effect if they
were found in the county twenty-
four hours after the trial in his court,
there were some important develop-
Monday night.
One of the women over whom this
sentence was hanging was packing
up her belongings preparatory to
taking her departure, when she miss-
ed a pair of shoes. She reported to
Policeman Clark that the shoes had
been stolen and the officer went out
to investigate. The officer inquired
who had been at her house and she
told him only some men, one of
them called having arrived
from Washington Sunday night and
brought two suit cases with him.
Learning that one of the suit cases
had been left at he house of a woman
named Mattie Sutton, Officer Clark
went there and found it contained
twelve new razors and two new
pistols, which he took possession of.
The other suit case was found at an-
other house, but it was empty,
though a new pistol was found hid
in a bed.
whose name is Arthur
Carney with several aliases, was
arrested and locked up, and the
men in whose houses the suit cases
were found were detained. An exam-
of the razors showed the
name of J. H. Harris Plumbing and
Supply Company on some of them.
Officer Clark telephoned to that firm
in Washington and learned that their
store had been robbed Saturday night
Deputy Sheriff Lucas came up from
Washington and took and
the stolen goods back with him.
It is believed that the order of
Mayor Wooten that the women tried
Monday leave the county, and the
of nips
in the bud a plan for a gang of
burglars to collect here and make
raids on stores and residences, with
a possibility of a repetition of the
recent tragedy in Wilson.
ROYAL ARCH MASONS.
PONY, AND HARNESS FOR
sale; good as now; a bargain. Write
Box Greenville, N. C.
Elect and Install Officers Monday
Night
At the annual convocation of Green-
ville Chapter, No. R. A. M., held
Monday night, the following officers
were elected and
R. C. Flanagan, H. P.
R. Williams, R.
O. L. Joyner, Scribe.
J. N. Hart, C. of H.
J. M. P. S.
P. D. Foxhall, R. A. C.
C. C. Vines, M. 3rd V.
II. Ward, M. 2nd V.
Q. G. Couch, M. 1st V.
J. K. Winslow, Sec.
M. Schultz. Treas.
J. J. Harrington, Sentinel.
Circumspection.
If Mexico were to plant a large
army and navy on the edge of the
United States, with the announce-
that these forces were to be
used us in case we did not
handle our affairs to suit Mexico,
what would happen
Mexico is a peaceful neighbor of
the United States. It has scrupulous-
Observed American rights, and has
not committed any act of hostility.
Mexico's troubles are her own. Why,
then, should the United States make
an armed demonstration against Mex-
If nothing happens on the Mexican
border this great military
have cost the United States
a lot of money uselessly. If some-
thing does happen, it will be because
the United States has precipitated it
by this warlike move.
We are convinced that the people
of the United States do not want war.
They do not want Mexico, and they
do not wish to in Mex-
international troubles. They do
not care whether or the
win. They are concerned
with their own affairs, and are
that this country should be at
peace abroad and tranquil at home,
so that every man can devote him-
self to his own business.
It would be an irretrievable step
if an American army should enter
Mexico. No man can tell the con-
sequences of such a move. The effect
upon the administration, the changed
relations with Mexico and the rest of
Latin America, the attitude of for-
are a sealed
book. All that can be said with
is that any step in the direct-
ion of the occupation of Mexico is
most momentous and fear-reaching,
and should be considered long and
carefully.
The of troops on the
can border is a step toward the
of Mexico. It may not be so
intended, but the effect may be the
same as if the order contemplated
the capture of the City of
a clash should occur between
can and Mexican troops, the
can army will march forward. It will
never turn backward until the City
of Mexico is occupied, and perhaps
not then.
Nothing is easier than to make a
demonstration of military force. The
military advisers of the president
may be depended upon to make the
most of the argument that a prompt
display of force will tend to prevent
trouble and disrupt the revolution in
Mexico. But this advice is freighted
with menace peace of the Unit-
ed States. There are greater factors
involved, which the military men may
not estimate at their full value.
The situation calls for
on the part of the United Stater
government, and a rigid control over
the that are pouring into
Texas and
Post.
Eastern
DEFEAT
DRUNKEN-
THROUGH
I Kings
Is not tor kings to drink wine; nor for
princes strong drink.--Proverbs
lesson recounts on in-
of the land of Israel by
King over-lord of
Syria, who had under him
kings of Syria and n large
Warfare in those days, of course, was
very different from what it is today.
The Lumbers in conflict were fewer
their weapons inferior. Their
motive was plunder.
Our day witnesses a considerable
advance along the lines of diplomacy.
Wars and Invasions now are always
based upon some
h a u t
motive to free
people from bad
government, or to
compel them to
pay their debts,
or to open up
their country to
civilization, or to
give them more
responsible o n d
rep
government, or
greater freedom
of religion. Rob-
or seen peace and right-
may be likened to Israel, to
God's people. and bis thirty-
two kings and their armies would
respond to Satan and bis various hosts
of unrighteousness. We may name
these hosts as we please. To some,
one portion, and to others, other
of these hosts are the more rep-
Many of these kings may
represent various Trusts which, by
manipulation of life's necessities, are
attacking the welfare of the people.
Others of these kings may represent
political grafters. Others may
sent various vices which prey upon the
public, including intemperance. The
forces thus set battle array against
the public are appalling, especially
when the wealth at their command is
considered.
The demands of these various
come first upon the honorable
and well-meaning public servants. But
w h e n the de-
and have to tell your husband every
time you go out the
Miss Harrison made the trip in a
short walking skirt, shirt waist and
and comfortable walking
shoes.
The distance between New York and
Tampa by the railroad route is 1,242
Dispatch to the
X. V. World.
AUTOMOBILE AND BICYCLE
HAVE A COLLISION
AH
Curious Remedies.
Curious remedies children's
diseases have been found in many
countries where
It was believed in Ireland
that any child would Le cured of
whooping cough if ho were placed on
the back of a donkey marked with a
cross and the beast was led to a
The doubtless cross-on the
donkey and in the the
charm its potency. The blood of o
black cat was regarded as a cure
for the
king Syria.
and pillage,
by an invading army, ore reprobated.
Whatever is taken from the conquered
people must be obtained by the levying
of an Indemnity fund. All this speaks
to us of a higher moral sense, even
though much relating to it be
The very need for the hypocrisy
implies that, with a considerable
there are qualms of conscience on
the subject.
The Was Lord's, and of
Ho Won
sent his demands to King
saying, silver and thy gold
are mine; thy wives and thy children,
even the goodliest of King
Ahab, recognizing the greatness of the
army and his own for
resisting them, answered, Lord.
O King, according to thy saying, I am
thine. I and all that I But
when the invader broadened bis de-
and included with it the wealth
of all the nobles of Israel, their wives
and their children, etc., resistance was
aroused. Thereupon the invaders set
the battle army against the walls of
Israel's Capital, Samaria.
At this juncture God sent a Prophet
to Israel's King, informing him that
he would deliver the invaders into bis
hand and give him a great victory.
The astonished Ahab asked by whom
the battle be waged against the
host. The answer was at the
command the princes of the provinces
should fight under Ahab's direction,
supported by the militia. By this
victory God would demonstrate
his power by protecting the nation
with whom he had made the Law
Covenant.
The Divine order was followed. Two
hundred and thirty-two princes, or
chiefs, of the people at noon passed
out of the gates of the city, followed
by seven thousand small
number wherewith to meet a host.
Apparently this was poor generalship;
but the Lord was the General
overruled the results. King
and his associates had boon drinking.
Syria were ordered to capture
alive, this they not
do, fop Syrian forces were in
disorder and completely routed, flu
manly speaking, the battle was lost by
over-confidence, and par-
his indulgence in
liquors.
Which May Draw
inn broaden,
and it Is evident
that general
is the
the voice of
the Lord should
be rd and
h e and a
stout resistance
be made.
As with Ahab.
t b e resistance
should not be de-
merely
The call is for the princes, chiefs
of the people, who love righteousness,
to go out first to do battle with all
iniquitous invaders the rights, hap.
and Interests of ho people.
And these princes or loaders who
stand for righteousness should be ably
seconded by all the courageous and
of the people.
Baa Out, but Escapes
The mighty princes.
TO TAMPA.
Wins Wager for 1,849 Journey
From New York on Fool.
Miss Dora Harrison, of Evergreen,
Long Island, arrived here, after
the entire trip from New
on foot. She left Brooklyn on Jan-
on a wager between her
mother and Henry
Miss Harrison made an average of
miles a day; sometimes she walk-
ed miles, and one day made the
distance between Baltimore and Wash
miles. She followed the
railroad tracks, coming via Raleigh
Savannah and Jacksonville.
At Savannah she was joined by a
Mrs. Brown, who said she was some-
thing of a pedestrian herself, but
following Miss Harrison a few
days she found the pace was too hot
and gave it up.
One of the provisions of the wager
was that Miss Harrison should have
no assistance from her home, and as
a consequence, she had to depend
upon people along the way for a place
to sleep and something to eat,
the end of nor day's trip
found her at a distance from shelter
and food and would have to sleep
out. Sometimes she went hungry.
Upon her arrival here, Miss Harri-
son wired home, and in a few hours
the amount of the wager was
graphed to her. She a vivacious,
handsome young woman, brown
eyes a merry laugh that ring;,
out on the slightest She
is feet In height and
pounds. Altogether, the Is de-
attractive, and along the way
she baa of
with of marriage.
want rot married
Saturday afternoon Mr. J. Turn
age was running his automobile out
Dickinson avenue. A colored man
named Andrew James was rid-
a bicycle the same direction
and was keeping along by the side
of the automobile, but not near
enough to the iron; for Mr.
to see him or be aware of his pres-
The anticipated that
the automobile was going straight
ahead to the depot and did not ex-
it to turn a corner, but reach-
Pitt street Mr. turned
his machine to go in that direction
A collision followed, the bicycle and
rider plunged into the automobile,
in the mix-up both of these went
under the machine and were run
over. The man fortunately escaped
with only some bruises, while his
bicycle was considerably broken.
In the meantime seeing the man
and bicycle go under the automobile
somewhat excited Mr. Turnage and
the machine knocked down a section
of Mr. J. c. yard fence
butted into the porch before
it stopped. The automobile was not
damaged, but gave the bicycle rider
a call.
Again Lei Remind You.
Subscription statements are being
mailed to all persons who owe The
Reflector, and those receiving them
are asked to make prompt remittance.
Some are responding, and we hope
every one will do so without delay.
Paper Knife.
Besides the foreign papers sent
the editor of The by Editor
Clarence H. Poe, of the Progressive
Farmer, he sent us a paper
knife as a souvenir of his trip abroad.
It is indeed a novelty and we
it highly.
There's hardly anybody who
think if they are his own, are
arguments.
A FACT
ABOUT THE
What is known as the
is seldom occasioned by actual exist-
external conditions, but in the
great majority of cases by a dis-
ordered
THIS IS A FACT
which may be
by t. a course of
r . went to
., . and life for a while. You can't
The honest, the holy, the you Celtic down
the LIVER.
They bring hope and to the
mind. They bring
to the body.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
a.
in urn





i m m
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
THE TOWN OF BETHEL
IS PROGRESSING RAPIDLY
AHEAD IN IMPROVEMENTS
Men Houses and Men
iii Good Spirits.
The editor the forenoon in
Bethel was agreeably surprised
to good town growing so
rapidly. The residential of
the town is extending westward
from the depot, and several handsome
houses are Hearing completion. A
new Methodist church is being built,
and when finished will be a credit
to the denomination and the town.
Talking with several business men,
they were in the best of spirits over
trade conditions and felt that the
spring had good things in store.
The graded school is nourishing
and the people are proud of the fine
work it is doing.
Just at present is much sick-
around Bethel, and it gives the
people much concern because the
doctors themselves arc among the
sick. Dr. recently had a
break down and went to the western
pun of the state to regain his health,
and not many days later Dr. Ward
was taken with pneumonia, and while
he is improving he is not yet out
of bed so he can return to his
It was a pleasure to spend a while
in the company of F. C. James
and Col. N. M. Hammond, two of
Bethel's oldest and most honored
citizens, who have spent long lives
in the service of their fellow men
and have been a help and inspiration
to their section. Col. is
now years of age, remarkably
well preserved for his advanced years
and speaks with pride of his having
read The Reflector from its begin-
and said Democracy grows
better and my trust in God grows
as I grow
MR. EVANS SEES THE MID.
Seems Unable to Look Below-the
Surface.
WITH J. L. WOOTEN.
Entertains in Honor of Mrs. T. M.
and Mrs. Tom Washington.
Notwithstanding the of
the weather, Mrs. John L. Wooten
was hostess Wednesday afternoon at
her, home on Fifth street, at a re-
complimentary to Mrs. T. If.
and Tom Washington,
Wilson.
guests were received by the
hostess and her sisters, Mrs.
L. Coward and Mrs. E. G. Flan-
Delicious was served in
the rear by Miss Viola
Of Charlotte and Miss Marie
of while the lurid glow
Of the charming drawing room fires
coon rendered the shivering guests
entirely comfortable.
The interior of the home was a
of loveliness in its decorations.
The color scheme in the parlor was
very suggestive of spring in the
tie arrangements of while
i front hall drawing room and
library were attractive in
of ferns and
beauty roses.
At the conclusion of the afternoon
dainty ices were served by Misses
and Annie
Leonard Tyson.
A argument never gets
very strenuous.
Editor
Some few days ago, when the sun
was shining, and no doubt The Re-
thought that spring had come,
your editorial column chided the anti-
bond people with a decrease in their
criticism of the sand clay roads. But
like the whole bond proposition, only
the present was thought of, and no
eye was cast into the future. Now
the rain has come, the mud is deep,
and the sand-clay roads ought to be
ashamed of themselves to place their
boosters in such a plight. Why even
the plank road, the road that all the
bond advocates have pointed to with
so much eloquence is a mud-terror.
A few days ago the
were giving joy rides out on the
Falkland road to demonstrate its
magnificence; today not a one of
them will venture upon its bosom. A
few days ago a bond advocate would
have split his shirt in eulogizing that
road; today no man who lives on it
can refrain from cussing. Any up-
man who has plodded
his youthful ways along the red clay
roads of Granville and other count-
to the west, and who has lived
down here with us for quite awhile,
could not resist the tears of youth-
memories, nor refrain from whist-
ling Sweet when first
his eyes rest upon the long red
streak of mud that wends its way
toward Falkland. Out there now can
be heard no honk honk of the joy
the slip-slop slip-slop,
of some lonely mule pulling a pair
of wheels, who had rather be dead
than subjected to this modern
Mr. Editor, it seems to me that the
present condition of things ought to
demonstrate to all that sand-clay
roads are only fair-weather roads,
and also incidentally, that the sum
doesn't shine all the time. Of course,
some bond agitator will Bay that the
present roads are not constructed
properly and all that; and then the
question arises if it costs a thousand
dollars a mile to make them they
are now, how much more will it take
to construct them properly.
Some time ago you were shouting,
to the people to but it
seems to the writer that the friends
of the bond issue would be afraid to
call an election for fear a shower of
rain would catch them in the midst
of their campaign; and if it did, then
they would have only the art gallery
in front of The Reflector office to fall
back upon.
W. F. EVANS.
A Fierce Night Alarm.
Is the hoarse, startling cough of a
child, suddenly attacked by croup.
Often it aroused Lewis of
Manchester, Q,, R. No. for their
four children were greatly subject to
croup. in severe
he wrote, were afraid they would
die, but since we prove what a
remedy Dr. King's New Discovery
is, we have no fear. We rely on it
for for coughs, colds or any
throat or lung So do thou-
sands of others. So may you.
ma, hay fever, whooping
cough, hemorrhages fly before It.
and Trial bottle free. Sold by
all druggists.
On the other hand, charity some-
times begins away from home and
ends before it gets there.
PRESS FOR SALE.
Having placed an order for a new fast news-
paper and book press, to be installed the middle of
April, we have a newspaper press that will be
sold at a bargain for delivery May 1st.
It is a Press, large enough
to print four 6-column pages, or two 9-column
pages and has steam fixtures so that it can be run
either by hand or power. Been in use six years.
It is a splendid press for a weekly paper and
is in good condition to do many years good
vice. We used a press from the same factory for
years before installing this one, printing a daily
paper with small circulation about years of that
time. Its speed, an hour, is too slow for a daily
paper with the present circulation of The
tor, and for that reason we are having to displace
it with a faster press.
Any one interested and a good press
for a weekly newspaper, can see this press at work
every day in the Reflector building, before our new
press is installed, one who cannot come to
see it at work and examine it, can get particulars
by addressing
The Reflector Company,
Greenville, N. C.
RAINY DAYS
to Life has more ups
than downs. Right now, while you are
making, you ought to be saving; then
when the downs come you will have
something to fall back on.
Where is the you have been
earning all these years You spent it
and somebody else put it in the bank.
Why don't you put your own money in
the bank for why let the other
fellow save what you earn
BE INDEPENDENT
AND
START A BANK ACCOUNT
WITH
THE NATIONAL BANK
of Greenville, N. C.
Pres.
F. J. FORBES, Cashier
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work.
For Slate
or Tin
Tin Shop Repair Work, and i I f C hi Q
Flues in Season, see J
GREENVILLE, N. C.
C. T.
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY
The Carolina Home and and The Eastern Reflector.
T.
AT BANQUET.
The Senior Class of Greenville Grad-
ed School Enjoy Evening.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley
Brown was the scene of youth and
happiness Friday evening, when the
senior class held its annual banquet
there. The only guests were, Supt.
Smith, the high school faculty, and Welcome.
so many good things to eat, a
of interesting toasts, teeming
with v it and originality, were res-
ponded to. Mr. Smith made a most
interesting toast master for the fol-
lowing
Toast Master, Mr. Smith.
we
Mary L.
a former teacher, Mrs. Harvey.
As the guests arrived, they were
received by Miss Mary and Mr.
Adrian Brown, and by Miss Mary
Lucy Dupree, the class president.
The were ushered to the cloak
room, from there led to the
punch bowl in the hall, which was
presided over by Miss M. Ruth Tun-
stall and Mr. David Moore.
The punch bowl was surrounded by
pink orchids and evergreens. The
keynote in the decoration was pink
and green, the class colors. Cut
vases, here and there in the hall and
parlor, were filled with pink
the class flower. The young
ladies were charming in their pretty,
girlish frocks of either pink or
greens, while the young men were
handsome in conventional black.
So joyous was the occasion that
it was difficult to tell which were
pupils and which were teachers. The
class of 1911 is a remarkable one,
both as to individuals and as a
whole. They have worked faithfully
and have won the admiration and
respect of their faculty. To have
seen their easy grace, to have heard
their responses, and to have listen-
ed to the different class members,
would have convinced the most
that the high school is the place
to lay the foundation for an
After a short while was spent in
lively conversation, the class
dent and Mr. Smith led the eager
banqueters to the board. The din-
room was prettily decorated with
the class colors. Each guest found
his place marked with a card bear-
his or her name and class motto,
can. These were tied
with pink and green ribbons to a large
pink carnation. Pretty menu cards
were placed at each plate. The
center of the table was marked by
a reflector, surrounded by evergreens
and orchids, bearing a vase of pink
The only other table
decorations were candelabras, bearing
fourteen pink and green candles,
one for each member of the class.
Directly above the table hung a
the lights of which were
softened by pink shades. From this,
to either corner of the room, were
wreathed pink and green garlands of
crepe paper. The colors were also
draped over the doors and windows.
When the banqueters had been
seated, the following menu was
served.
know your own degrees, sit
Oyster Cocktail
Chicken Salad
Roast Turkey
Cranberry Jelly
Cream
Punch Losing Cup
full, the epicure would say,
cannot harm have dined
Smith.
After the several courses had boon
served, a loving cup was passed and
toasts were drunk to the seniors.
Lest digestion should suffer from
Professional Card
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith
Stables, and next door to John Flan-
Buggy Co's new building
Greenville, N. Carolina
Brewer
Harvey
Gaston
The Lewis
David Moore
Eloise Ellington
Appetite. Miss Maggie Savage
Drinking. Mr. Adrian Brown
The Senior. M. R. Tunstall
Class History Marguerite Higgs
Taylor
Class Inez Pittman
Class Poem. Josephine Little
Alma Spruill Spain
Class Prophecy. Nina Harris
Parting. Miss Mary Brown
Class B. P. Fleming
have not slept one
It was in the hours,
when the class song was called for.
The banqueters arose and sung
School to the tune of
Watch on the Each
one present departed reluctantly,
having had a good
March the tenth, nineteen hundred
eleven, was the beginning of a new
era in the lives of the seniors, and
in those of their guests. To them
it is a warning that soon each
will be expected to go out into the
world and do something. They ac-
eagerly their
I are anxious to show to
the world that,
nigh to grandeur is our dust,
So near to God is man;
When duty whispers, thou
The youth replies,
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office formerly occupied by J. L.
Fleming.
. . N. Carolina
W. C. D. M. Clark
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
Greenville, . X. Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
In Building
Greenville, . N. Carolina
Sliced Ham
Beaten Biscuits
L. I. Moore, W. H. Long
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Greenville, N. Carolina
CHARLES C. PIERCE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Practice in all the courts. Office up
stairs in Phoenix building, next to
Dr. D. L. James
Greenville, . N. Carolina
Schedule
ROUTE OF THE
NIGHT EXPRESS
Schedule In effect December
N. following schedule fig-
published as information ONLY
and arc not guaranteed.
TRAINS LEAVE
a. m., daily, Night Express Pull-
man Sleeping Car for Norfolk.
a. m., daily, for Norfolk and
Bern. Parlor oar service between
New Bern and Norfolk, connects for
all points north and west.
p. m., daily except Sunday, for
Washington.
a. m. daily for Wilson and
connects north, south and
west.
a. m., daily except Sunday for
Wilson and Raleigh, connects for
all points.
p. m., daily for Wilson
For further Information and
of sleeping car space, apply to
J. L. Agent
. . N. Carolina
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
Catarrh, A Surely Dangerous Disease
Thousands of people allow catarrh
to slowly undermine the whole sys-
until a serious -disease develops
sometimes consumption.
People who have catarrh should
use every effort to get rid of it, but
should above all adopt a
method.
Stomach dosing, sprays and
douches won't cure catarrh because
it is a germ disease, and the germs
must be destroyed before the disease
can be conquered.
is the one sensible cure
for catarrh because it reaches every
fold, crevice and nook in the mucous
membrane and gets where the germs
are. You breathe and as
it passes over the inflamed
its soothing influence heals
the soreness and destroys the germs.
A complete outfit costs
This consists of a bottle of
and a hard rubber inhaler. Pour a
few drops of into the in-
haler, and breathe it a few minutes
each day, that's all you have to do.
It is guaranteed by Coward Wooten
and druggists everywhere to cure ca-
coughs, and sore throat
or money back. Extra bottle of
costs CO cents. Free trial
ample from Booth's
Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
HARRY SKINNER
LAWYER
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
JULIUS BROWN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Greenville, . . X. Carolina
H. W. CARTER, M. D.
Practice limited to diseases of the
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Washington, N. Greenville, N.
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. James.
a. m. to p. m., Mondays.
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office in building, Third St.
Practices wherever his services are
desired
Greenville, . . N. Carolina
Another Reminder,
Do not lay aside the statement of
you owe Tho Reflector for sub-
until you have made a re-
The money is due and the
rarer coeds it.
C. LANIER
DEALER IN
Tomb Stones
Iron
C.
L.
Why not take a trip to FLORIDA
or CUBA They have been brought
within easy reach of the splendid
through train service of the
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD
Write for booklets, rates or any
other information, which will be
cheerfully furnished.
T. C. WHITE,
General Passenger Agent,
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Water Supply for the
Country Home
No matter where you live, or how
situated, you may have every con-
of a city water supply by
the use of a
S. J. Nobles
MODERN BARBER SHOP
furnished, everything do n
attract- e, the very
best barbers. Second lo none
AM PRESSURE WATER SYSTEM
Water under pressure for kitchen,
laundry, bathroom, sprinkling lawn
and garden, watering stock and for
Cue protection.
An air-tight steel tank In tho base--
or in an out house, stores the.
water as it is pumped by hand or-
power and forces it through the pipes.
and faucets by compressed air in
upper portion of the tank. No
or attic tank to freeze and be-
come stagnant. Water kept cool,
clean and pure.
If you want of the kind,
see me and I can make you low prices
on the complete system installed In
your home or farm.
ND
GREENVILLE, K. C.
Opp. J. R. J. G.
. j
You can often what a woman
really moans by what she doesn't
7--





WT-------
The Carolina Home and and The Eastern
Toe Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
COMPANY,
D. J. Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, year, . .
Six
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
of respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
per line, up to fifty lines.
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the post office at
Greenville. North Carolina,
act of 1879.
year more teachers came than could
get rooms, and the people of the
town had to open their homes to
them in order that they might get
the advantages of the school. For
the coming summer courses
every room in the dormitories has
already been engaged, with addition-
applicants coming in at the rate
of five or ten a day which have to
be denied for lack of room.
In the face of such conditions and
the failure of the legislature to pro-
for them, we can well repeat
that the action of that body toward
the school was most niggardly. The
school should have more buildings
and the State ought to provide them.
at all. The Reflector has information
that these roads, seen at their worst,
are not near so bad as Mr. Evans
pictures them, and it is more than
likely that his own excoriation was
not based on personal knowledge.
THINGS THAT ARE NO NEWS.
SHORT MEASURES.
FRIDAY, MARCH 1911.
THE SCHOOL TOO SMALL.
The niggardliness of the last leg-
towards East Carolina
Training School becomes
more apparent in comparison with
what was done for other educational
institutions. In almost every other
instance appropriations were not only
made tor support and maintenance,
but also for extensions and improve-
Yet tor East Carolina Teach-
Training School there was only
a scant appropriation for
with an existing to be
paid out of this, and the school got
nothing for improvements.
The people of Eastern North Caro-
have sufficient cause to feel that
this matter they were treated bad-
and unjustly by the legislature.
The education committee of that body
visited the school, saw its needs of
enlargement and recommended the
making of an appropriation accord-
but the appropriation failed.
Greenville and Pitt county put
in the building and equipment
of this and presented it to the
State, and State has only put
in it. Every State official
who has seen school acknowledges
that the State has a line property
In it. If the was not doing
good work there might be some ex-
for the State not being as gen-
with it as institutions.
Hut that is not the case. On the con-
there is not a school in North
Carolina doing better work than East
Carolina Training School.
From all sections of the East ad-
mission is sought and many
cants have to be turned away because
of insufficient room In the
to accommodate them.
The school is not yet two years
old, but has become so popular that
it la already overcrowded. During
the courses for teachers last
The House Weights and
Measures Club is a new organization
recently perfected in Indianapolis,
Ind., with a membership of several
hundred women of that city. The
club has officers and trustees, and is
said to be the first of its kind ever
formed in this country. Its establish-
it is believed, will be followed
by the organization of similar so-
in other large cities. The
purpose of the organization is to ob-
a strict enforcement of the
laws regarding scales, weights and
measures.
The women of Indianapolis are
represented as taking a great inter-
est in the movement. Every
of the new society, by reason of
its rules, must weigh and measure
all goods delivered at their houses,
and whenever any thing is found to
be short, the fraction of an ounce or
an inch, it is to be the duty of the
member to call up the city
tor and vigorously prosecute the of-
fender. The Post does not know
whether there is need for such a
society in hopes not
but in cities where there is a call
for an organization of the kind, it
appears, it would be a good thing.
The society would at least have a
healthy effect in bringing about
strict honesty in
Post.
His of the press through-
out North Carolina are glad to know
that Editor C. H. Poe, of the
Progressive Farmer has returned
from his trip abroad which covered
a period of about six months. His
trip embraced many foreign countries,
and he gathered a fund of
that will be of great value to
his readers. In a personal letter
to the editor of The Reflector, Mr.
Poe says he had an interesting, trip
and enjoyed every moment of it. We
are glad to have been among the
friends he remembered during his
absence, and appreciate copies of
Japanese, Chinese and papers
which he sent us. Of course we
cannot read them, except the one
from India, which is printed in Eng-
but they are a curiosity. The
Japanese paper has a circulation of
which shows that they are
reading people over there.
of them want to come back. We
know a man who sold out and moved
away from Pitt county some years
ago, who is now trying to buy a
farm here so he can come back to
Pitt. That is right, come back home
to the best county in the State.
A South Carolina school teacher
whipped one of her pupils and the
father of the child assaulted and
cussed the teacher. He was con-
and got a sentence of five
years on the county chain-gang.
Guess he will learn his lesson by
the time the expires.
-o
This reminds us of a joke we once
read on a housewife who weighed
all articles as soon as they were de-
livered at her home. The butchers
and grocers found out what she was
doing and the good woman learned
that she could not get orders filled.
Mr. W. F. Evans, blinded to only
one side of the proposition, is unable
to see anything but mud, so in the
mud he grovels. Any one knows that
the sand-clay roads In question
new in construction, and that they do
not get perfect as soon as built for
building them is a process not an
operation. Anybody also knows that
they are ideal roads, even under
moderately dry conditions, and that in
seasons of extreme wetness they are
better than before the work was done
on them. Formerly they were sand
beds in dry weather and mud holes
In wet weather. If they do now get
muddy surface when excessive
rains fall like in the last few days,
is better to have good roads a part
The Reflector will certainly be
glad when it succeeds in hammering
into the minds of the people the fact
that Greenville needs more man-
enterprises. The growth
of our population is slow because
people cannot afford to move to a
town unless they can find some
employment there. If there were
started up in Greenville
enterprises to give employment
to an additional thousand people,
the thousand people would be here
in a very short time. Every ad-
citizen helps the town that
much.
Pitt county will in a few months
more have a new court house, one
of the finest and most modernly con-
in the state, and every
of the county will be proud of it.
The Reflector wants to say here and
now that the honor of presiding over
the first be held in this new
court house should fall upon Judge
Harry W. Whedbee, and we hope the
matter will be taken up in time for
the governor to make such an ex-
change between judges as will per-
this honor to come to him
After noting that the London
hotels are to charge a day during
the coronation, the Greenville Re-
declares that this
our going, and our friends across the
pond can take notice that we will
not be Queer kind
of friends Whichard must have, to
expect him to bring his lunch and
hire his own bed when he goes to
see Dispatch.
They are not all as clever to us as
you are, Jim.
, viM C
of the time than never to have them They go away some time, but most
The campaign preceding the com-
municipal election in Charlotte
is certainly developing into something
warm, and the opposing candidates
are using advertising space right
along to tell their respective sides
of the controversy.
Weather conditions will form no
obstruction to Easter coming at the
appointed time, and preparations for
that event will go right along with
the fair sex. Hence the importance
of the advertiser not waiting on the
weather to tell of his offerings.
Senator Bailey gave a rapid fire
illustration of the initiative,
and recall. He took the
resigning, referred it to the
governor of his State, and then re-
called it.
Just as was predicted in advance,
Editor W. C. Dowd, of the Charlotte
News, made the right man as speaker
of the house of representatives. That
body has had no better speaker than
he made.
Report comes that an egg years
old is being exhibited in New York
City. Bet we chewed on its mate last
Dispatch.
Wouldn't acknowledge feeding on
stale eggs, Jim.
There be an old. saying to
express a thing as being slip shod
or shiftless to call it
Maybe that is where the Greensboro
News got its idea that the harem
skirt will scare
The announcement that London
hotels have made rates a day
the coronation of King George,
precludes our going, and our friends
across the pond can take notice that
we will not be there.
Mexico certainly did have a scare
over our troops mobilizing on the
border. When Uncle Sam moves
his fighting boys it is enough to
make any of sit up and take
notice.
The fool who puts a dynamite
cap on a stove is in the class with
the one who rocks the beat.
The following from the
Journal states The Landmark's
there is a death in the
county, the is glad to
as a news matter the facts about
the life and death of the individual.
That is a paper's business and is a
part of the news that people take
the paper to get. But after that
is done, it is not a matter of news
to record long obituary notices go-
again over facts already print-
ed, or to publish resolutions of re-
and of There-
fore these are charged for, at the
regular rate of one cent a word.
When our friends send them in we
expect them to count the words and
send along the cash.
and of don't really
do anybody any good at
While this rule has been in force
in The Landmark office for some
time, we occasionally receive
of respect sent by lodges and
other organizations with the
expectation that they will
printed free. The Landmark is
oblige its friends and pa-
but matter of the character
mentioned is not news and is of in-
to so few people that
space cannot be given to it.
Statesville Landmark.
And yet some people complain be-
cause a paper does not burden its
columns with such things free of
charge. It is remarkable what things
papers are sometimes asked to print,
things that are usually of no interest
at all except to the person sending
them. It has not been many days
since The Reflector received an
on the death of a person that
occurred four years ago. In sending
articles for publication people ought
to consider whether what they are
writing is of interest others of
the paper's readers besides them-
selves.
What has become of the
child that eat what was set be-
fore him and asked no questions.
Durham Sun.
He took his departure long since,
Jim, and-wears wings now.
o--------
Lightning is getting in its deadly
work early this season. Already two
fatalities from lightning have occur-
red in this State, with the season for
storms hardly begun.
Greenville is not a good town for
burglars to plan to operate in. We
have officers here who do things, and
it is not safe for some folks to come
this way.
Old man Cannon was game to the
finish. He will be back in congress
if not in the speaker's chair. He may
get the chance to take some of his
own medicine and see how it tastes.
When man feels that one day
in his home town is worth two days
anywhere else, he is getting his at-
on right.
If we had Canada and Mexico both
annexed, Sam would have a
bin; sure enough, and one
he would find hard to manage.
Good roads, the Torrens land title
system, and the commission form of
municipal government are three
things that must come.
The ground hog may have it all
his way now if he wants to. There
will be some weather that will knock
him out along about July.
Wonder if there will be something
to recall what happened to the Maine
and subsequent events in this mob-
of troops on the Mexican
border.
The best asset of a community are
its men. But that does not include
kickers, as they belong to another
distinct class that brag.
An exchange wants to know why
should a man use profanity He
should not use it at all, but does
so in absence of anything better to
say.
The Wilmington Dispatch favors a
commission form of government for
North Carolina. Not a bad idea,
either.
The Washington Progress has just
put in a new press and undergone
a great improvement in enlarging
to eight pages.
The man who makes up his mind,
whether or no, to be against good
roads will pick up any excuse for an
argument.
Sure, the harem skirt will be at
the sea shore, with the accent on
the Dispatch.
See Sure.
Mr. Bryan says that the modern
newspaper has lost much prestige
and influence. And Mr. Bryan is
editing a paper.
The headline to an editorial in an
exchange reads for
We do not believe there
is any.
It is getting the thing down fine,
but some people are really not worth
as much to a community as the space
they occupy.
Charity and Children made a good
point on the legislature in saying
threw sawdust until the very
The Reflector has several times
been asked what the last legislature
did. To tell the truth, we don't
know.
Nothing has been said on the sub-
in a long time, but a hospital
would be an exceedingly good thing
for Greenville.
Joe King's editorial squib column
in the Durham Herald reminds us of
again, on again, gone again,
o--------
March may monkeying with
these snow until it gives us a
sure enough snow.
if the New York legislature holds
together until it elects a United
State senator, the outlook is for a
long session.
With congress and the legislature
both quiet now folks might get down
to work and make things count.
If it is just for maneuvers, Uncle
Sam is going to much expense in
rushing so many troops to the
can border.
The English house of commons is
imitating the recent American con-
in holding all night sessions.
John Small is too valuable a con-
to be putting himself in
the way of trolley cars.
No, you don't have to go out and
hunt for mud, it comes to the door.
But still it will not stay long.
The umpire is dressing his hide
preparatory to the cussing that is
coming his way.
Mr. Bryan has been to see Gov-
Wilson. Wonder what he
thinks of him
The legislature had about the usual
ending with merriment, songs and
speech making.
The man with a good job indoors
ought to appreciate it this kind of
weather.
Greenville just will lead. Even
our mud is up with any of them.
Chickens did not follow eggs in
the downward price.
Woodrow Wilson is growing as a
presidential possibility.
The store that does not advertise
is in the cold store-age.
Do not call it spring yet, it is any-
thing else.
The Blade and the Ear.
The Greenville Reflector is not a
little disgruntled over the scantiness
of the sum set aside by the
tor the Eastern Carolina Train-
School Our contemporary cites
the excellent work that the school
is doing and declares that although
not yet two years old this institution
has become so popular that many
applications have to be denied tor
lack of room. It thinks under the
circumstances that there should have
been an appropriation for extension
and improve as well as tor
maintenance and support.
We cannot fail to recognize the
naturalness of The Reflector's
but none the less we counsel
patience on its part. The entire
state finds cause for great
in the work which is being ac-
at the Greenville
but its progress, owing to the
necessities of the case, must and
will be gradual. While the people
are thoroughly alive to the
of education, the de-
for money in this direction
are already very large. The
the A. M. College, the
state Normal have needs which are
nothing short of imperative. We be-
that the legislature showed
commendable impartiality in doing
its best for each of the four higher
institutions. That it could not do
much more for all is certainly a mat-
of regret, but the state's income
can not be handled as if it were
made of rubber and indefinitely
tic.
The Eastern Carolina Training
School has more than justified its
establishment. Not only are its reg-
courses proving valuable but
the summer months are being used
for normal training that must make
felt in the public schools during
the years immediately before us.
The energy and intelligence which
have been displayed in its inception
are excellent guarantees that this
standard will be maintained.
and improvements will come
not as fast as they might be utilized,
but none the less surely. To come
into its own in the fullest sense the
young school has but to manifest a
willingness to do first-class work
with what equipment it possesses.
This willingness is and has been in
evidence. It is a case of the
blade, then the ear, after that the
full corn in the Ob-
server.
-0-
is hardly a doubt that Raleigh
is missing them.
If you can't boost, quit trying to
make a noise.
--------o
Ballinger, unlike Bailey, did not
recall his
Winter came back all right.
Whither Are We Drifting
The citizens of the United States
are witnessing a spectacle perhaps
never before seen in modern times.
The chief executive calls the nation
to arms and leaves on a vacation,
His secretary of state also goes on
a pleasure tour and the assistant to
the secretary is preparing to
away from the capital. And to add
to the gravity of the situation, it is
stated that the chief executive and
his secretary are at outs calling
the army into the field, the former
acting in the matter without the ad-
vice of the letter.
The question might aptly be
Is the army a big alarm clock, which
can be set to run until a certain de-
time, when it will call the
officials to duty Indeed we have
cause to inquire, whither are we
Post.
Envy is ambition that has turned
sour.
Probably there is nothing
Industrious than an idle rumor,





The and Farm Mil lie Eastern Reflector.
Carolina Home and The Eastern
COAST LINE LEAGUE
BASEBALL ORGANIZED
IX THE LEAGUE
THE ELECTION OF
The Mew Electoral College The
Political
Kinston,
to Good Ball
A meeting was held in the city
ball today, of representatives
from Kinston, Grifton. Ayden and
Greenville, looking to the
of a league, composed
i. of the four towns. They
were Messrs. Leon and S.
R. Clary, of Kinston; Dr. W. W.
and Mr. L. J. Chapman, of
Messrs. M. M. Sauls. J. R.
Turnage and C. L. Parker, of Ayden.
Dr. E. A. and Mr. J. James,
Of Greenville.
Mr. James was made chairman of
the meeting, and details of or-
league were fully dis-
ed. The league is to be com-
posed entirely of home players of
each town, and the series of gamers
will begin about the middle of June.
The name selected was Coast Line
the following officers
were
President, Dr. B. A. of Green-
ville.
Vice Proficient, Dr. W. W. Daws on,
of Grifton.
Secretary, S. it. Clary, of Kin-
Treasurer, J. If. Turnage, of
den.
A. Leon
C. J. Tucker, V. Can-
non and I. James.
ii. was appointed to draw
up the and by-laws for
league and Leon to
range the schedule of games.
It mean;, some good ball
for the four towns this season.
FINE YIELD OF HEWS.
A. J, Scott o County, is
Delighted His Success.
Mr. A. J. Scott, of is
In the and talked very
to a Free Press
about some remarkable
a ho has having with the soy
bean bis farm.
measured said Mr. Scott,
feet square and put it in soy
beans. The land was not manured at
all and would not with-
out fertilizer, throe bushels of corn
to the acre. When the beans were
ripe cut and threshed out bush-
els from my little patch. I calculate
that this is at the rate of
bushels to the or equivalent to
bushels of corn. I have sold every
one of these beans at two dollars a
bushels and could have sold more
If had ed
Mr. wry highly of the
of the State department of
and fie work that it is
doing hi spreading new interest in
improved Free
Press.
The new electoral college will con-
Of members. The States
are surely will have
representatives in the college, while
the that are almost, if not quite
so surely Republican will have
representatives. The doubtful suites
will have electors. There are
twelve of these Ida-
ho. Indiana, Missouri, Monti Ne-
Nevada, New Jersey, New
Fork, West Virginia and Wyo-
ming. The Democrat's. Lo be success-
the next presidential election,
must capture votes from the
doubtful column, as rotes will be
necessary to elect. They must carry
York, New Jersey, Indiana, Mis-
and West Virginia, and at least
two of what are called the
States. K they s one
doubtful larger States, they will lose
election, unless they can capture
some of the which are regard-
ed as certainly Republican.
It i generally admitted that the
Democratic victories at the recent
election's were the or
disaffection rather than the actual
Democratic strength, In New
State, for example,
cans stayed away from the polls alto-
In Ohio not loss than
Republican voters in their
tents, and so it was in nearly all the
where the Democrats won.
party is on trial, and it must
make good now or prepared for
next year. At the Baltimore
meeting Mr. Clark and Senator Bailey
the other speakers made this
point
Dispatch.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green-
ville, and Kinston. Effective November 1st, 1910.
Norfolk Ar.
Ar.
Ar. Washington
Ar. Williamston
Ar. Plymouth
Ar, Greenville
Ar. Kinston
For further
agent
nearest ticket
Agent Green-
address
II. Ticket
ville, N.
W. J. P. T. Bl T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
, v
FOB HELP,
Millions of Friends.
would like to
your friends
docs astounding
i . i made
thorn Its tho b Salve In the world
; . burns, bolls,
i its, corn ;. Bore eyes, sprains,
. bruises, old sores. Has
equal for at all drug-
gists.
always nuke
but left
Luis of it In Greenville,
Growing Less.
The kidneys cry help.
Not organ the Whole body
so delicately constructed.
Not so important to health.
The kidneys arc the the
blood.
Whoa they fall the blood becomes
foul and poisonous.
There can Lo no health whore
there is poisoned blood.
Backache id one of first
cations of kidney trouble.
it is the kidney's cry for
Heed it.
Kidney Pills are what is
wanted.
Are just what overworked kidneys
need.
They strengthen and Invigorate the
kidneys; help them to do work;
never fail to curt any case of kid-
disease.
Mrs. Disco Walnut St.,
Tarboro, N. C, some time
i bad not been feeling well and
thought that my might be
ordered, as my back was
weak and the kidney secretions an-
My sol mo a box
y and i u .
h-a I
Ill i in ; I ll i
. . i. I. . i
it ever;
lo . i ; loan's o;
for by all fl rs. I
New York, i a; t . Lb
States.
i member the c a d
take no other.
CHESAPEAKE LIKE TO BALTIMORE
Connecting with rail lines for all points
SOUTH WEST
JUST THE SEASON TO ENJOY A SHORT
WATER TRIP.
ELEGANT
Dining Service Carte Table
leave Norfolk p. in. from foot of Jackson street
and arrive Baltimore 7.00 n. in.
For full particulars and reservation, write
F. E. T. P. A.
G run by Street,
Norfolk, Virginia
Company
SELL INSURANCE
FOR THE
Central Life Insurance Co.
Carolina School
G.
Spring and Summer Courses for
1911 Spring Term, March to May 20th-tea weeks. Sum-
mer Term, June 8th t; July weeks.
AIM OF THE TO KITE It EQUIP
THE ills
Those used in the public schools of State
further Information, address,
ROUT, II. Ii Pros
r.
,;. .,
BOW EN
Hon t of Fashions,
OLD PL A
A Book That Inspires The
Heart
Several years ago I purchased and
a great deal of pleasure
and information this book, Old
The author, the Rev.
Jas. Battle Averitt, was a minister
the Episcopal church in this State,
and I have frequently inquired about
him, but only until recently could I
get any information concerning him.
Some time ago, I saw an article in
Confederate from the
author of this book, whose post office
address I learned was Cumberland.
Md. I thereupon wrote him to
if I could get another copy from
him as some friends had borrowed
and neglected to return mine, and in
answer, he told me that the book
was now out of print, and that he
had been treated very shabbily by
the publishers, who only had derived
revenue from the publication of the
book, but that he would endeavor to
secure a copy for me. which he did,
and I received it a few days ago.
The book is written in a highly
attractive style, and portrays the
manners and customs, and depicts
the scenes of the old plantation life
in the South before the war. A few
years after I had read this book the
first time and became so much
pressed with its characters and the
beautiful imagery of the times, writ-
ten In the matchless style that only
one who has lived amid such scenes
can write, I happened to visit the
section in which the farm, the model
from which Old was
written In Onslow county. As I
drove down the road so minutely de-
scribed in this book, on each side of
me, as far as I could see, extended
a level plateau or table land, as fine
farming land as I have ever seen.
On each side of the roadway before
the war, there was a very thick row
of cedars, so thickly set that at mid-
day the roadway was almost entirely
obscured of so dense was
the shade. The original plantation
contained something over
acres, and while today it has been
cut up, and is owned by many
yet, the passer-by will witness
many evidences of the splendor, ex-
tent and magnitude of Old
Plantation No true Southern-
can read the book without feel-
a deeper interest and kindlier
feeling for his country, and for
civilization which must have been
one of most enchanting, delightful
and fascinating ever lived on earth,
and the like of which will probably
never be witnessed again.
O. L. JOYNER.
Attacks School Principal.
A Revere attack on school principal,
Chas. B. Allen, of Ga., is
thus told by him. more than
three he writes, suffered in-
describable torture from rheumatism
liver and stomach trouble and dis-
eased kidneys. All failed till
I used Electric Bitters, but four
of this wonderful cured
me Such results arc
common. Thousands bless them for
curing stomach trouble, female com-
plaints, kidney
and for new health and vigor. Try
them. Only at all druggists.
EGGS SALE.
Brown Leghorn eggs for sale. The
kind that lay. Per Setting.
C. WASHINGTON,
House, N. C
HOW TO MIX
Information Needed on
Its
Ayden, N. C, March it is
about time to be buying and home
mixing guano, I will give you my
plan of getting a thorough mixture.
Will take cotton seed meal, acid and
as an example. Pour out as
many sacks of each as your room
will allow. I usually get under a
good size shelter with hard bottom.
Have three hands in order to do the
work properly. Let two of them
have shovels and stand directly op-
each other and shovel the mix-
to a new pile two or three feet
from where it was first poured out,
each man being strictly required to
pour his shovel full right on the
pinnacle of the pile to which they
are moving it. In this way all little
clods and knots will roll down the
side of the pile to the bottom when
the third man can see them and crush
them with the back of a shovel or
hoe. Now and then the others can
help him keep up with clod crush-
Two movings in this way will
give a splendidly mixed fertilizer,
especially as it will then have to be
put into the sacks again.
While writing about mixing
I will also give a little opinion
of some men about acid. You may
talk to them about acid mean
acid phosphate, of and they
will say it it no account, that
tried it and got no benefit from it.
Yet they will buy guano with
per cent, acid, per cent ammonia,
and per cent potash and think it
all right. Don't know that there is
four times as much acid in that mix-
as there is ammonia of potash.
There is a crying need for a more
general information on this
subject. Dead oodles of money are
thrown away for guano for want of
knowing anything about it.
W. A. DARDEN.
-The-
Ledbetter Planter
Kills A Murderer.
Merciless murderer is
tis with many hut Dr. King's
New Life Pills kill it by prevention.
They gently stimulate the stomach,
liver and bowels, preventing that
clogging that invites appendicitis,
curing constipation, headache,
chills. at all drug-
Hints.
Another
Reflector subscription statements
are going out now to those who owe
a dollar or more, and the list will be
gone through as fast as they can be
made and mailed. When yours is
received, please let us have a prompt
response. If an error is made in any
statement, you only have to call at-
to it for it to corrected.
We believe you appreciate the paper
enough to pay for it promptly, at
least you ought to do so.
Invitations.
The Reflector has a line of samples
of engraved and announce-
for school commencements,
and can fill orders for these. The
samples embrace many handsome
designs and can be seen at the of-
i , i
AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS.
Take a thirty days practical course
in our well equipped Machine Shops
and learn the business
and accept good positions.
AUTO SCHOOL,
N.
Plants Cotton one seed at a time. No skips
no bunching. Plants a peck or more to the
acre one to six inches apart, always one seed
at a time. Saves half the work and labor In
chopping. Positive force feed means absolute
regularity of drop without cracking or crush-
the seed. Each plant has room to grow,
though chopping be delayed.
Levels the bed, opens the furrow, plants
seed any depth desired one seed at a time and
and presses earth over seed.
See every seed as it comes from the hopper v
to spout. Plants Corn one grain at a time, m
eight inches to forty-eight Plants
Pea Nuts any quantity desired. TRY THE
LEDBETTER. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Greenville,
N. Carolina
Look The Date.
The Reflector is now using a
mailing machine in addressing papers,
and the subscriber is printed on the
margin of the paper instead of be-
written. This makes the ad-
dress plainer and lessons the danger
of a paper getting lost by being poor-
addressed. Another advantage is
that after the name appears the date
to which the subscription is paid, and
the subscriber can toll how much he
owes tho paper. For illustration, if
after your name should appear the
figures 3-10-11, it means your sub-
is paid to March 10th, 1911.
You can easily get the date from the
figures after your name.
Address to Union.
President Robt. H. Wright, of the
East Carolina Training
School, will address the
Union of Pitt county, on the subject
of Life at the city
hall on the second Saturday in April
at It o'clock. Public cordially in-
WOOD'S HIGH-GRADE
Farm Seeds.
We are headquarters for
the beat in all Farm seeds.
Grass and Clover Seeds
Seed Corn, Cotton Seed,
Cow Peas, Beans,
Sorghums, Corn, t
Millet Seed, Peanuts, etc.
Crop issued
monthly
gives timely information as to
seeds to plant each month in
the year, also prices of Season-
able Seeds. Write for copy,
mailed free on request.





ma i,
The Carolina Rome and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
I OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
before buying.
J. R. Smith Company. .
THE FURNITURE CO.
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
AROUND AYDEN. Neck farm In Craven county.
Cash or Installment mice, the height and breadth
conforming to the dimensions of a
proportioned and symmetrical
whole-a-thing of beauty.
Questioned as why they wanted to
purchase such a funeral car as this,
they say they did any
king was too good for the people of
and surroundings.
Items and
interest
The singing class from the Oxford , ;.
Ion X. C, March 11.-Miss Marv
News Notes of Orphan Asylum, will give their usual
, concert here Thursday night, .
of March, it is needless to i
Purchases a Couplets Sleek of
tins and Caskets,
In not many is Ayden be-
bind the largest cities, in many
things it right up them, if not
a little ahead, the latest of
which ii has to boast is a funeral
car. That is no indication that
dead however, or that
unhealthy one. On the con
Smith Friday night in Winter-;
attending the debate at Winter-
ville High school,
A phone message to us yesterday
conveyed i . sad news that Mr. Toni-
was returning from
Farm ville Thursday with a load of
fell to the ground and
when another party ahead of him
to help him up found that he
as dead.
A and calf for bale by
W. Smith.
Hodges left today to
. the bedside of his father who
. i i. sick.
Capt. G. Berry spent
Li
Mr. Julius and wife, who
been visiting relatives for
weeks, returned to their homo
in Petersburg Saturday.
Mr. B, Josey, Scotland Neck,
Thursday night in town.
. and Mrs. Alfred Forbes and
spent Sunday
. i. in
Sophia of Greens-
visiting relatives in Ayden.
i . W, It. Grant, State deputy of
iii Carolina, formerly of the State
of Illinois, delivered a public lecture
in the . O. F. hall Friday nigh;
i i of the Modern Woodmen
; i America,
; at clean salesman, Mr. W. J
;. came in Thursday to spend the
with his family.
i fails to speak a good word for
Ayden wherever he goes.
Old Uncle George Button, one
oar oldest colored citizens, is very
sick.
Mr. J. F. Moore, of Falkland, is
g a few days with his nephew,
Taylor.
Ayden is soon to vote on bonds to
a brick graded school
The bod renovators seem to be a
Ayden, N. C, March J. J.
a severe stroke o
last Sunday morning
live o'clock, which impaired
and ho lies in a stupor. Mr.,
was for a long time agent for
l c Atlantic Coast Line hero, and re-
position and
for and bought cotton.
In he retired almost from pub-
life and looked after his farming
Interest, and exposed himself to
and cold from early morn until
night. His health soon began to fail,
yet ho kept up a good spirit. He
several light attacks of par-
prior to one. His many
lends hope he may soon recover,
though from the present situation,
recovery very doubtful. Ho has
a wife and four email children.
vs reached here Monday even-
our people and the sun .
community are liberal, when it
comes to orphans and widows.
The dock will open each first and
third Thursdays p. in., at J. R.
Smith get a ticket
with each dollar purchase besides
your dollar's worth, and they give
you a chance at the crockery, etc.
The Baptists composing this district
will hold their union meeting with
the church hero. Rev. Ii. W.
man, the jolliest man in South-
Baptist convention, has spoke
for board here, we guess he's coming
besides many other able are
expected.
We have a copy of Rev. R,
and
dotes, is sure good for the
blues. Dr. Whitaker has many tide
and relatives who live in Ayden, while
he lived in Raleigh up to his death.
Sunday was a bad day for the
Smiths. Mr. Elmer Worthington and
Mies Clara Smith were oat riding.
His horse runaway, throwing
out in the load, and a horse
coining up from behind, stepped on
Miss Clara's arm and face
and bruising her, though not
Mr. W. G. Smith, wife and
baby were coming homo from a visit
Sunday, his horse balked and throw
them all out. but we did not hear
the amount of damage done.
Mrs. Enoch Braxton, of Winterville,
is visiting the family of Mr. W. J.
Braxton, on Leo street.
Mr. Richard Kennedy, an honest old
farmer, died at the home of Mr. Bill
Brown, one mile from hero, Monday
He was years old, went through
the civil war without a scratch, lie
was at the battle of Gettysburg,
and the seven days
fight in the wilderness. He was a
member of Ayden Christian
a staunch prohibitionist, and a good
Democrat. HA remains were laid
beside his wife, near Airy Grove
church, in Lenoir county; Tuesday
evening.
Mr. Robt. Abbott, of Winterville,
was here Sunday evening.
Rev. M. A. Adams gave us two m
of his usually good the
Baptist church Sunday morning and
Might, if people would heed his ad-
vice, there would be but little
Of an awful judgment.
For good cow end.
R. W.
Mr. Joseph Gaskins has traded
farm on the New Bern road to Mr.
Sol. Harris for his Bryant Jones place
near Ayden.
We learn that a burglar entered I
the home of Mr. Henry
night last week and stole .
the family sound
fortunately no one awoke as
is to be one
,; the places that traveling
men make In all their rounds and
statistics show that the death rate h
as low, lower, than that of an
municipality anywhere.
But the matter about which We an
going to write is based on a desire
to be more serviceable in the
to do more for one's fellow
man pride you an
pleased to term It, the effect ii com
men dab
The Ayden Furniture Company he
just purchased a new funeral cu
which is a handsome thing, a
that not only till the but
satisfy the most ambitious, one need.
but see it to admire it and agree
what is here said about it is true.
The funeral ear was specially de
signed, built in Detroit, Michigan,
one of the largest concerns of
kind in the country, made of the very
best material and finished with the
greatest care, it is strong and
weighing over pounds, its
makes it very steady and
in movement, i is massive but
cumbersome, and despite its size and
weight it Is real and trim in appear-
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
Department of Mate.
CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION.
All to Whom These Presents May
Whereas, It appears to my
action, by duly authenticated record
the proceedings for the voluntary
thereof by the unanimous
of all the stockholders, de-
in my office, that the J. R.
Company, a corporation of this
whose principal office is sit-
lated at Second street in
ho town of Ayden, county of Pitt,
of North Carolina R. Smith
the agent therein and in charge
hereof, on whom process may be
Las complied with the re-
of Chapter of
entitled
to the issuing of this
v ate of dissolution.
Now, Therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes,
of the State of North Caro-
ma, do hereby certify that the said
did. on the 8th day of
larch, 1911, file in my office a duly
and attested consent in
to the dissolution of said
executed by all the stock-
thereof, which said consent
the record of the proceedings
are now on file in my said
as provided by law.
In Testimony Whereof, have
set my hand and affixed my of-
seal, at Raleigh, this 8th day
f March, A. D. 1911.
J. BRYAN GRIMES,
Secretary of State.
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N. C.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, March 1911.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
11.09
831.09
Overdrafts.
Banking house, furniture
and fixtures.
from banks and
bankers . . 55,654.52
Cash items. 100.00
Gold coin. 20.00
Silver coin, including all
minor coin currency. 2,373.18
National bank notes and
other U. S. notes. 2,552.00
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid
Surplus fund.,
Undivided profits, less cur
rent expenses and taxes
paid.
Deposits subject to check.
Savings deposits.
25,000.00
15,625.00
4,736.94
57,417.90
28,859.32
Total.
Slate of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, J. K. Smith cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
J. R. SMITH, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before 14th day of January, 1911.
STANCILL HODGES,
J. R. SMITH, Notary Public.
R. II. GARRIS, My commission expires March 1911
it. C. CAN RON,
Directors.
learn that a burglar entered
home Of Mr. Henry DIxon one Ai A
the death of J the house after the robbery.
mother of Mr. Willie E, I A full lino of hardware of mo-it
any mill supplies, lime, cement,
furniture, a fall assortment. us
moved flora near
the the year to the Buck
wish lo your attention our new line of which
, . , v i. buying year and we
Ian doubtless would , we can our wants m Shoes, Hats. Ginghams No-
hem with an which he left in and that i carried in
Store
C it us v you
i Hart Co., Ayden, N. C,
TWO AND
WELL PLAYS
HIE TROUBLE l MEXICO.
BY E. T. T. S. CLASS.
Rendered With Much Credit to Them-
selves and the School.
It is a pity that such beastly
came Monday evening as to great-
interfere with the audience in East
Carolina Training School
to witness the two plays by the
class. As it was there
was a fair sized audience, but many
more would have gone over from
town had it not teen tor the weather.
Those v BO braved the inclemency
were more than repaid for going for
the plays were truly delightful and
faultlessly rendered.
The Reflector has print-
ed the cast of characters in these
plays, so will not repeat them now.
The first play
a comedy in one act, was rendered
by Misses Jennie Williams, Lillie
Tucker, Louse Fleming. Mary Wood-
bum, Essie Ellington, High-
smith and Juanita Dixon. They
were well chosen for their res-
parts. A lost purse con-
money and rings, which was
supposed to have been stolen by a
kleptomaniac, created a great stir
and confusion, which was relieved
upon finding the purse in
the cloak pocket of the owner, the
discovery being made by one of the
guests who put on the wrong cloak
when about to take her departure
The second play was a farce,
Proposal Under
by Misses Pattie Grace
Bishop, Lillian Carr and Mattie
sell. From beginning to end this
kept the audience almost convulsed
with laughter over the ludicrous
situations of two boys being in love
with and trying to make love to the
same girl at the same time, the dis-
of one being increased by
the young lady's maid who came in
while he was rehearsing his
before a mirror and thought he
was making love to her.
The entire performance brought
credit to every one participating in
it, as will as to the school, and a
are to be congratulated.
The weather keeping so many . cf
the town people from getting over
to see the play, they missed a great
deal, and The Reflector believes they
would appreciate another
of seeing it. We know the pupils
of the school are very busy with
their work, but think they might be
induced to repeat the plays one night
this week if the people cf the town
express a desire to that effect. The
plays wore so excellent as to be
more than worth the effort to go
them repeated.
The Right Place to
The business man who neglects to
promote his business by means of an
advertisement in The Reflector, is
certainly missing an opportunity.
This paper is read eagerly every day
by its more than twelve hundred sub-
as well as by other members
of their families, to say nothing of
the additional large number of
rowers. In fact every person who
can get a hand on the paper reads
It, not only the news but also the
advertisements, and it is the place
where business announcements
should be placed to be read.
Some men make a lot of money by
selling other people money
secrets.
V Newspaper Man an Insight
Into the Heal
Atlanta, Ga., March news-
paper man who has been in the field
with the Mexican insurgents writes
as follows from Maria,
Mexico in rebellion against the
rule cf President or
are scattered bands of bandits to
blame for the upheaval in the sister
republic
From my observation in the field.
I have concluded that the trouble in
Mexico is a real uprising of
against the Federal government
that the sympathy of the ma-
of the people are with the
Liberals, and that men with brains
and money are organizing and head-
the with a determination to
win.
and other
been treated with exaggerated
consideration and their property re-
by the
the official proclamation of
the provisional officials declare
that F I. was legally
elected president of Mexico. They
he was thrown into prison by
his election and the
of the people balked. Having
failed to change the government by
peaceful means, they have taken up
Everywhere that I went
the people widely enthusiastic
for the new order and eager to vol-
was impressed with a speech
made by Guerrero, the in-
leader In at the
village of San where forty-
one men had been lined up to hear
the reading of the proclamation.
with he said, we
can promise you hardships, hunger,
and possibly death. If we win we
can promise you better conditions, a
right to vote, a right to hold up your
head like a citizen of a republic, not
to head your back like a peon slave
under an autocratic
the forty-one men whom he
addressed, twenty-two volunteered
and nineteen were accepted.
there are about
men under arms. It is a conservative
estimate to say that here are at
in the fighting
line in Chihuahua.
until new, it has been the
I of the insurgents to avoid at-
fortified towns hut to win
I their recruits and spread their pro-
through the rural districts.
. leaders have decided that their
forces now are large enough to cap-
the cities and are con-
on several garrisoned
towns.
every battle that the Insurgents
i had with the Federal soldiers,
j Liberals won. This Is
due to the fact that the sol-
i tiers are in sympathy with the Lib-
I saw a letter signed by
offering to surrender
and join the fight against the gov-
The are the best
lighters In the Federal army.
to the resource the
It Is claimed that
rifles were bought In Eu-
ope, shipped to St. Louis and from
point sent in small lots over the
border. More than half these
guns are now In Old Mexico.
revolutionists make the
which they say backed by
the original written orders received
Federal Officials has
LOOKS MORE AND WORE LIKE
INVASION OF MEXICO
CALL MADE FOR MILITARY MAPS
MAW CASES REPORTED.
Several Carloads of Heavy Projectiles
Artillery.
By Wire to The Reflector.
San Antonio, Tex. March
levy made upon the war department
today Tor technical military maps of
northern Mexico added a new
of affirmation to the report
that the soldiers of the division en-
camped In the department of Texas
will invade the southern republic.
This is the most significant move
made since the soldiers camped at
Fort Sam Houston. The mimic at-
on Galveston which was to have
been the principal feature of the war
g i- has been abandoned, at least
for time being. The only
now contemplated consist in
marches which will take the troops
nearer to the Rio Several
carloads of heavy projectiles for the
artillery arrived today and was not
unloaded. This is also regarded as
,. i ant.
race riots and
sough to i the blame on the
puny.
Insurgents tell a story which
may explain the attitude of the
States government. A year ago
It said, made a treaty with
the Japanese government which
gives control of the
Railroad to Japan. This road
the isthmus above the Pan-
canal and by some is believed to
be a menace to American interests
there.
summing up the situation
from what I know of the
the leaders and the money back
of the movement. I believe that the
outbreak in Mexico should be classed
as a rebellion of the Mexican
against the of
believe that the fighting that has
passed has been mere skirmishing
to what is to
Machinery Tax Assessments.
l which has just ad-
passed n law which
ed upon the c commission
the authority of a Tax Com-
There is to be a tax as-
. . r for each county and the act
is specific In requiring the
commission as State tax
commission to each county and
instruct the assessors and to finally
as s upon the of the
of valuation applied in the
carious counties In the assessing
of property. The act multiplies the
work of the corporation commission
and likewise provides
for additional compensation for
each cf the three members. These
county assessors are newly created
and v. HI have supervision of the
work of township and ward as-
in listing both real and per-
property and assessing real
estate, a work that recurs each fourth
year under the North Carolina sys-
tom of assessment.
The appointment of these tax r-s-
will probably be made by
the corporation commission early In
April when the new method for tax
assessment throughout the state be-
gins. This is one of the best bills
of the late as a rev-
producer is one of the best
among the revenue and ma-
nets for last general as-
High Point Enterprise.
Progress of the in i
State.
The progress of the campaign
against hookworm disease in N
Carolina is splendidly shown by the
growth in the number who have I
of feces to the State
Laboratory of During i e
year of 1910 the growth was a
First quarter,
Second quarter, examinations
Third quarter, i.
Fourth quarter, examinations.
1911, examinations.
These examinations represent
children more largely than any other
class, however, the state militia, a
number of college students, and
other adults are included. Many
physicians treat the disease without
having a laboratory examination
made. It is learned from those in
the State who are treating the dis-
ease about one-half the active
that about 15.000 cases
have -already been treated. The
Commission, State Bard
of Health, Raleigh, N. C will tend
about this disease which
has been found to affect about one-
third of the people, free and the
State Laboratory of Hygiene.
X. C, will make the
for it free.
Cannot Praise Highly
Enough for the Good it Has
Done Me.
mm
H.
MRS. HOP.
MRS. JOHN Webster
O L. I., N. Y.,
have been suffering for the past
ten years with many symptoms
dent to my age, also catarrh and
I was weak and discouraged,
had no ambition, could not sleep
night, and lost greatly in weight.
tried other remedies, but with
access, until I commenced to take Po
I now feel better in every
peat, can sleep well, and have gained
in weight. cannot
highly enough for the good it
me.
any women are suffering n I
i would them to try
convince themselves, has done
me good. I know by my experience
that it is worth its weight in gold
any one Who needs it.
also constipation.
In connection with I found
it helped me where other
Now Well of
Miss Parmele, N. C.
have been taking your
and can say that am well of tin
thank yo for our kindness
your
-.-.,





U M i III
.;.
The Carolina Home and The Eastern Reflector.
INTERESTING NOTES
fROM THE UNIVERSITY
BASEBALL OTHER EVENTS.
Class of 1901 Preparing for
Reunion.
Chapel Hill. N. C, March The
varsity scrub baseball teams
lined up for the first practice game
of the season Friday afternoon. The
scrimmage lasted seven innings and
came out to in favor of the var-
The line-up for the first string
was Lee and Sloan, pitchers; Wither-
catcher; first base
Hasty, second; Lindsey, short; Ed-
wards, third base Hackney center
Page, left field; right
field. The prospects are that Caro-
will have a fast infield and will
fee weak on batteries. Clancy has
announced his intention to try to de-
a team that can win by its hit-
ting and base running, things that
he says win the majority of college
games.
The first round of the
debate between Carolina, Virginia,
Tulane and Georgia will
come off this spring, probably on
April The question is the nation-
income tax. Each college will de-
bate both sides of the query. Carolina
has the negative against Virginia and
the affirmative against her time hon-
enemy, Georgia. Carolina won
from both Georgia and last
spring and from the University of
Pennsylvania last fall. A strong
crowd has entered for the
nary contest that will be held this
week and the prospects are that
Carolina will be able to keep to the
high standard that she has
during the last ten years.
The basket ball team closed its
season with a close game on
floor Wednesday night.
and everybody interested in the
outcome expected Virginia to win by
a heavy lead. The score was only
to Carolina came back in the
second half and scored nine points
to Virginia's This was the first
basket ball team that has ever rep-
resented the University and their
work is regarded as having been
highly successful.
The officers for the Y. M. C. A.
have been nominated for next year
as J. C. Lockett, president;
Fred. vice-president; G. E.
Norman, secretary; W. D. Barbee,
treasurer. The officers for the year
that is fast drawing to its close
E. W. Turlington, president; D. B.
Bryan, vice-president; H. C. Smith,
secretary; George Graham, treas-
Bishop Robert Strange of the East-
Diocese of North Carolina spent
last Sunday, Monday and Tuesday in
Chapel Hill. He preached in Ger-
hall Sunday night and on the
following days in the Y. M. C. A.
building to receive his friend among
the students. His sermon in Ger-
hall drew a large crowd of
dents as his sermons always do.
The class of 1901 is preparing to
have its decennial reunion at com-
1911. The secretary asks
those who of the class
of 1901 at any time during the four
years cf college life, to please com-
with him, whether they can
d commencement or not. A
complete class record for the ten
yarns be published after com-
The secretary is R.
E. Bureau of Soils, Washing-
ton, D. C.
LONG DISTANCE WIRELESS.
Marconi Receives Message Through
Air of Miles.
An important discovery in the field
of wireless telegraphy by
Marconi, as the result of experiments
during a voyage to Argentina, is at-
attention in the scientific
press of the world. An official of
the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Corn-
pan- states in London Engineering
that the results point to the
of the system as being now
beyond limit. Mr. Marconi took
with him on his voyage a receiving
instrument and a kite and made
for the transmission to
the ship of messages from the
at Ireland, and
Bay Nova Scotia. The kite was
flown by means very long wire,
the inventor receiving messages by
this means from a distance of over
miles in the daytime. But for
the fact that a storm arose and made
the flying of the kite impossible, mes-
sages could have been received at an
even greater distance.
The transmission and reception of
a message at such a distance easily
constitutes a record, according to our
technical contemporary, and the value
of the result is considerably enhanced
by the fact that it was attained
the daytime. Hitherto, for some
reason which has not been fathomed,
it has been found possible to trans-
messages at much greater dis-
by night than by day. Al-
most invariably the long-distance
messages regarded as record-breaking
from the point of view of distance
have been transmitted by night. In-
deed, so great have been the dis-
traversed by night at times
that they have come to be known as
The sending of a
receiving wire to a much greater
by means of a kite will, it is
relieved, take the instrument far
above those influences which inter-
with the electric waves, in ad-
to telegraphing at any
distance
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE
FARMVILLE, N. C.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, March 1911.
RESOURCES.
Loans and
Overdrafts. 371.61
Banking house, furniture
and fixtures. 1,785.35
Due from banks and
bankers. 30,255.32
Cash items. 889.20
Gold coin. 900.00
Silver coin, including all
minor currency. 777.54
National bank notes and
other U. S. notes.
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid 16,500.00
Surplus fund. 4,125.00
Undivided profits, less cur-
rent expenses and taxes
paid.
Total
130,119.24
Happiness of Home.
It makes little difference in home
happiness whether you own your
house, or have one little room on the
sixth floor of an apartment house.
You can make that one little room
the perfection of all that is worth
living for, a quiet harbor to which a
husband will turn feeling that he
has run out the storms of his day's
work into the security of something
that is real.
We are not all born with the sun-
shine in our hearts as the Irish
prettily term it, but we can all
coax some of it in there if we only
try.
The faculty of seeing bright
side, or, at least the edges of that
side, is one that married people
might cultivate with profit to each
other.
Courtesy is of more value in the
home than many believe it to be. It
is easier to love a person than It is to
be always courteous to him, and yet
it is one of the most valuable recipes
for keeping that love fresh within
our Sun.
Time certificates of deposit
Deposits subject to check
Cashier's checks
Certified checks.
2,455.15
15.244.01
91,763.05
25.03
7.00
Total,
130,119.24
Stale of North of Pitt,
I, J. R. Davis, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
J. R. DAVIS, Cashier.
W. M. LANG,
W. J. TURNAGE,
R. L. DAVIS,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before 10th day of March, 1911.
J. A.
commission expires July Notary Public.
J- S. MOORING
General Merchandise
Buyer of Cotton and Count Produce
FIVE POINTS, GREENVILLE, N C.
The breath of scandal is
for much breezy conversation.
Burning Lime at Home.
Where oyster shells can bu Had
cheaply, the oyster shell is,
doubtless, the best. But so far as
lave observed most of the
put too price on this
lime. If you can get shells
can get them where I live
about cents a you can
the lime economically on the farm
Put a layer of logs on the ground
an opening between the middle ones
to be stuffed with straw for firing
Then put on a layer of shells
inches thick. Then a layer of dry wood
and brush. Carry up in the middle
an opening like a chimney from
firing opening and stuff it with straw
or Then build up
heap in a conical shape with alter
layers of shells and wood
it is about six or eight feet high
hen start the fire from the opening
left between the logs, and as
is the wood seems to be
well, cover the whole heap with
and burn it as you would a tar kill
or a charcoal kiln, keeping the
open till all is burning well, and
then close over with earth. You can
make as much lime in this way as
you will need, and in sections when
there is limestone it can be broker
up and burned in the same way on
the farm. When well burned, the
lime and ashes will go together
be article than you could buy
have done this and know what
am writing P. Massey, In
Progressive Farmer.
NAPOLEON IN LONDON,
want
may give; w
to take away.
And it's what a man has been that
takes him what he is.
John Burns Corrects Lord
and Furnishes Data of Visit.
The question whether BOna
ever visited was raised
Mr. Lucas and Lord Rose-
jerry, who was consulted on the point
that he had never heard of the
and could not conceive any one
the slightest credit to it.
Lord is now put right by
John Burns, who declares that
eon's presence in London has gone be-
mere rumor, and quotes
of Charing Cross and Its
by J. Holden
not generally known that the
Napoleon Bonaparte lodged in
in George street, a thorough-
are which extends from Duke street
the embankment.
Mr. Matthews, the bookseller
f the Strand, used to relate that he
the Corsican
here for five weeks in 1791 or
1792, and that he took
cup of chocolate at the
coffee house, opposite North-
house; that he there read
and preserved a provoking
toward the frequenters of
the coffee house.
his manner was stern,
deportment was that of a gentle-
Express.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The
IS.
three addresses before the Caldwell
Association, the teachers
and the citizens of Lenoir March 3rd; it's funny how sympathetic some
Professor M. C. S. Noble delivered and 4th. I are u
Mr. Hugh Dead.
A telegram received by Mr. Frank
this morning announced the
of Mr. Hugh W. Holcombe,
occurred Sunday in
Richmond. Some years ago Mr.
lived in Greenville, being
manager of the American Tobacco
business here, and he made
many In this sec .
IN CHINA
f EDUCATE, HOT INTERFERE.
The Heavy Price of Forestry
Neglect.
Another thing that has burned it-
self into by memory is the heavy
penalty China is now paying for the
reckless destruction of her forests in
former years. On this trip I have
seen river valley after river valley,
. once rich and productive, but now be-
come an of desolations
covered over with unnumbered tons
of sand and stone brought down from
the treeless mountain sides. While
the peaks were forest-clear, they held
the rain-water like sponges, giving it
out slowly from the decaying leaves,
humus, and well-soaked soil. Now,
however, the mountains are in thou-
sands of cases merely enormous rock-
piles, the soil completely washed
away, having laid waste the country
below; while other mountains show
the destruction ill going on, rent as
they are by gorges through which
torrents rush down,
once fruitful plains with rock and
unfertile the
Chinese farmer around here has
to do with piddling little
such as the have made
disgracefully common the South;
he prefers to cultivate in broad fields
where the plowman will not have
to waste half his lime in
round at the end of garden length
furrows. In the devastated valleys
however, I rind that John Chinaman
is often against his will, into
this sort of patch-farming simply be-
cause it is only here and there
fertile streaks have been left
ruined. In these cases he has piled
the rocks in little heaps and saved
some remnants from general soil
wreck.
Saturday I rode over the bed of a
once deep river. Now it is almost
entirely filled up with sand and rock
and of the once splendid arches .
bid stone bridge. I found only a few
feet of the upper part not yet sub-
merged in sand Once Cue clear,
deep, steadily Sowing water ran here
month after month, and all around
were well-tended lowlands; DOW
when a rain comes a mad fury o
waters sweeps over the lowland;.
leaving a ruinous deposit behind, and
later there are long weeks when
river-bed is dry and deserted-like. So
it was when I saw it yesterday, the
old bridge itself standing amid
waste a melancholy monument to th
gladness and fertility of a vanished
era Clarence Poe, in Progressive
Farmer.
This, Says Mr. Object el
Peace
Before leaving tor North Carolina,
he will spend a week with
bis family, Mr. Theodore
. of Maryland Peace So-
said yesterday that he thought
the United States should fortify the
Panama canal. This declaration is
regarded as an index of the attitude
of the peace advocates throughout
the country.
Mr. had been questioned
about the attitude of the Maryland
Peace Society toward the possible
intervention of this country in
can affairs. He the society
would take no steps to step the move-
of the American army.
have no disposition to inter-
he said, nations arc
about to engage in war. Our plan
is to educate the people so that they
eventually come to regard an
International court as the proper
.; u settle disputes between
Even then we do not expect
to prevent war entirely.
approve of the fortification pi
the Panama canal by the United
States;, vs contradictory as it may
appear. Torts there would naturally
be able to save us many ships In
case we were engaged in war. While
t would Increase our armament in
way, i might prove useful In
seeping it down in
more Sun.
Legal Notices
STATE OF
Depart of State,
England's Area Writer.
Arthur Morrison, author of
Hole the of Mean
the stories
and the of Martin
is the author if the Pod Triangle
Mystery series now being given
away absolutely with the New
York Sunday World. Next Sunday's
complete by the great author
is entitled Gate of the
and is another of the
Red Triangle stories.
SCHOOL BUILDING OVERRUN.
Cannot Accommodate All Who Aw
Applying.
Applications from teachers
fog to attend the summer school
terms of East Carolina
Training school have been
in such large numbers that he. build
are not going to accommodate
near all who wish to attend. Every
room in the dormitories has already
been engaged, and every day
dent Wright is receiving more
that have to be turned
down because of the lack of room.
It is said that fortune knocks once
at every man's door, but some other
knockers are not so easily
aged.
PUBLICATION OF SIMMONS
North
In the Superior Court.
j. c. Harrington
rs
defendant above mimed will
take notice that an action entitled
as has been commenced in the
court of Pitt county against
the defendant by the plaintiff for the
purpose of obtaining absolute divorce
and the said defendant will further
notice he is required to
I ear at the term of the Superior
of Pitt county to be held on
the I; t Monday in May. 1911 at the
court house of said county in Green-
ville. Carolina, and answer or
to the complaint in act-
ion, or the plaintiff will apply to the
C a ; for the demanded in said
complaint.
This the 0th day of March, 1911.
C. MOORE,
Clerk Superior Court
Pitt County
IX THE SUPERIOR COURT.
North County.
J. administrator of
George Forbes, deceased,
vs.
Jane Forbes, Forbes,
and Forbes.
defendants George Forbes and
Forbes above named, will
That an action entitled
. ore bas commenced in the
Superior court of Pitt county, to sell
ti e land of the late Forbes
to ma o assets for the payment of
his debts; said defendants being heirs
at law of the said George Forbes,
deceased, and the said two defend-
ants Will further take notice that
they are required to appear before
the clerk of the Superior court of
Pitt county, at Ids office, in the town
of Greenville, North Carolina, on the
day of April, 1911, and answer
or demur to the complaint and
filed in said action, or the
plaintiff will apply to the court for
the relief demanded in said
This the day of February,
ton.
D. C. MOORE,
of Superior
F. James Son,
tor plaintiff ltd
CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION
Ti All to Whom These Presents
Whereas. It appears to my
faction. by duly authenticated record
of the proceedings for the
dissolution thereof by The
consent of all the stockholders, de-
posited in my office, that Tin- Build-
Lumber Company, a
lion of this State whose principal
office is situated rt .
in the city of Greenville,
Pitt. State of North Carolina J.
Cobb being the agent therein and
in charge thereof, upon whom pro-
may be has complied
with the requirements of Chapter
of 1905. entitled
preliminary to the Issuing of
this Certificate of
Now, Therefore. I Bryan Crimea.
secretary of State of the State of
North Carolina, do hereby certify
that the said corporation did, the
12th day of December. 1910, We in
my office a duly executed and
consent in writing to the dissolution
of said corporation, executed by all
the stockholders thereof, which said
consent and record of the proceed-
aforesaid are now on file in my
said office as provided by law
In Testimony Whereof, I have here-
to set my hand and affixed my
seal, at Raleigh, this the 12th
day of December, A. D. 1910.
J. BRYAN GRIMES,
Secretary of State.
STATE OF CAROLINA
Department State;
CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION.
Y. W. A. Services.
Mr. conducted Y. W. C.
A. services the Training school
Sunday evening. He made an excel-
lent talk on are the Pure
in Heart for They Shall see
The Y. W. C. A. appreciates the
aid which the faculty gives in this
work.
In compliance with Section o
the Rev. laws of 1909, I will attend
the following named times and
places, for the purpose of receiving
he taxes due from those Who are
et delinquent. All persons owing
axes for year of 1910 are urgently
requested to meet me and pay the
I will be
Falkland, Falkland township, Sat-
March 11th, 1911.
township, Man-
lay, March 13th, 1911.
X Roads, Swift Creek
Tuesday, March 14th, 1911.
This February 10th, 1911.
L. W. TUCKER,
Tax Collector Pitt County
Stray Taken I p.
I taken up a black female
log, weight about pounds, in
poor condition, marked two slits in
oar. Owner can get same by
proving ownership and paying
es. M. D. LEWIS,
Conetoe, N. C
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
letters of administration upon the
estate of I. S. Owens, deceased,
this day been Issued to the
by the clerk of the Superior
court of Pitt county, notice is hereby
given to all persons holding claims
raid estate to present them
to us for payment on or before the
18th day of February, 1912, or this
notice will be plead i bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to
Bald estate are requested to make
mediate payment to us.
This the day of February.
1911.
W. D. OWENS.
J. B. GARDNER,
Administratrix of the estate of I. S.
Owens, deceased.
Blow. Attorneys. ltd
To All to Whom These Presents May-
Whereas, It appears to my
faction, by duly authenticated record
of the proceedings for the voluntary
dissolution thereof by the unanimous
consent of all the stockholders, de-
posited in my office, that the T. R.
Smith Company, a corporation of this
State, whose principal office Is sit-
at No. Second street In
the town of Ayden, county of Pitt,
State Of North Carolina R. Smith
being the agent therein and in
thereof, upon whom process may be
has complied with re-
of Chapter of
1905, entitled
to the issuing of this
of dissolution.
Now, Therefore, L . Bryan Grimes,
secretary of the State of North Caro-
do hereby certify that the said
corporation did, on the 8th day of
March, 1911, file in my office a duly
executed and attested consent In
writing to the dissolution Of said
corporation, executed by all stock-
holders thereof, which said consent
and the record of the proceed in git
aforesaid are now on file in my
office as provided by law.
In Testimony Whereof, I have here-
unto set my hand and affixed ray of-
seal, at Raleigh, this 8th day
of March, A. D. 1911.
J. BRYAN CRIMES.
Secretary of
S 11-ltd
Strayed,
Cow, small size, pole red
harp horns, marked crap and slit
in right ear. Send Information to
G. W.
R. F. D. No. Greenville, N. C
LAND SALE.
By of a mortgage executed
and delivered by Adam Hemby and
Wife to L. I. Moore, on the 28th day
of May, 1900, which mortgage was
duly recorded In the office of the
register of deeds of Pitt county, in
L-8, page the undersigned
will sell for cash, the court
house In Greenville, on Monday,
April 1911, the following described
parcel or tract of land, lying and be-
In the county of Pitt and in
township, adjoining the lauds
Of J. F. Allen on the north; L. I.
on the east; the new road from
to the old plank road on
the and another tract of said
L, i. Mo re on the west, containing
more or less. For a more
accurate description, reference is
hereby made to sold mortgage.
Th March 1911.
F. G. JAMES SON.
Attorneys for owner of the debt.
PUBLICATION OF SUMMONS
North County
In the Superior Court
Battle Sellers
VB
T. If. Sellers
Tim defendant above named will
take notice that an action entitled
as above has been commenced In the
Superior court of Pitt county
the defendant by plaintiff for the
purpose of obtaining absolute divorce,
and the said defendant will further
take notice that he i required to
at the term of the
court of Pitt county to be held on
the 1st Monday in May. 1911 at the
court house of said county in Green-
ville, North Carolina, and answer or
demur to the complaint In said action,
or the plaintiff will apply to court
for the relief demanded in said com-
the 9th day of March, 1911.
D. C. MOORE.
Clerk Superior. Court
Pitt County





The and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
State
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR
EXCHANGES TODAY
CONDENSED FOR OUR BUSY READERS
Suicide Near Ben
at In Lee
County Assault in
County- Negro Tries to Kill
His Concord.
While burning off some old straw
In a field near Hookerton, last
day morning, the clothing of Mrs.
Mary Heath caught Are and she was
burned to death, despite the frantic
efforts of her daughter, who had
been assisting her In burning the
straw, to extinguish the flames of
her mother's burning clothing. The
daughter herself was badly burned,
as was a who was in the field
hitched to a plow. The fire burned
more rapidly than the woman ex-
and caught, her in a trap, be-
fore she was aware of it. Mrs.
Heath was a widow and an Indus-
woman, who was loved and
respected by her
Free Press.
Feeling against J. S. Sugar, the
Jewish merchant at Snow Hill, who
was bound over to court under a
1600 bond on the charge- of arson,
has undergone a great change, after
a fuller Investigation of the
Are which occurred there last
week. Tho weight of public
men has acquitted him of any
connection with that fire. In
chronicling the news, the Free Press
but stated the facts as they wore
presented. However, the paper lakes
pleasure in giving Mr. Sugar the
of this public statement and
hopes that a full Investigation will
exonerate him
Free Press.
Out of a dense, black cloud, which
swept down upon the city with a
startling suddenness, yesterday, after
noon at o'clock, came one of tho
worst hull storms that has visited
Wilmington and vicinity ten years,
In tho opinion of many. Except the
smashing of several skylights, there
was no damage in the city, but it is
feared that truck throughout this sec-
has suffered, Information regard-
which was not obtained last night
on account of the fact that the
storm accompanying the hail
prevailed until a late hour and those
having telephones in the country
were afraid to answer tho
Star.
March first
white homicide to occur In Lee county
since Its establishment took
three and a half miles east of Jones-
yesterday morning, when Mr. M.
A. Wood killed Dr. J. C. Cox, by
striking him across the head with a
piece of pipe, it seems that they fell
over a account. Dr. Cox de-
Bled owing the account, and it is
Mr. Wood then Dr.
sitting on a log at Mr.
mill. is reported that
there raj only one eye witness
to the killing, Mr. Wood has made
bis escape, though the sheriff and a
posse of men are In search of him.
Will Cannon, a half-witted
was arrested yesterday on the farm
REGISTERED.
ft
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. N. C. COLUMBIA, C. O,
MACON, COLUMBUS. GA. MONTGOMERY, ALA. BALTIMORE. MO.
DON'T MISS THE BEST
A Full Line of Farm Machinery
DOUBT YOUR MIND AS TO WHETHER OR
THE LET US PROVE OUR POINTS TO
weeders and on all our
FARM AND GARDEN IMPLEMENTS J,
or Mr. J. P. Allison, In No. township
find is now jail. In a fit of in-
sanity Saturday night Cannon at-
tempted to murder his entire family,
assaulting hie step-son with a razor.
The boy managed to keep from
him until he secured a poker and
knocked Cannon down. The neigh-
came to the rescue and when
the officers arrived yesterday Can-
was bound and tied securely
with a strong rope. Arrangements
arc now being made to place him in
asylum at
Tribune.
New N. C, March
day morning about o'clock, Miss
Burlington, years old.
daughter of Jesse Harrington, of Kr-
a small station on the Norfolk
Southern railroad, seven miles from
Newborn, committed suicide by blow-
part of her head off with a double
barrel shot gun. She went Into an
unoccupied room, loaded the gun with
No. shot, placed it on the floor and
I against her head and then touched
I the trigger. Ill health Is supposed to
be the cause of the deed.
SEE J. It. J. G. FOR LAWN
and cemetery fencing.
UNLOADING SEED
oats. J. R. J. G.
Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, X. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 1911.
THERE WILL BE WAR
IF THIS THING GOES ON
INVADE TEXAS
AROUND THE CAMPUS.
Mexican Detective Arms
Ammunition In Antonio.
Dy Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, March seizure
of mU and ammunition by alleged
agents of the
at San Antonio and the invasion of
Texas by Mexican
brought the Mexican situation for-
to the attention of President
Tuft again today. Appeals have
come from Brewster county, Texas.
for protection against further
This and the action of private
detectives in the employ of the Mex-
government in seizing a
In San Antonio has given the
situation a serious aspect.
Statistic on Tobacco Average.
The voted down the
measure authorizing the agricultural
department to collect statistics con-
the acreage and condition of
the tobacco crop during the season,
that the trade might use this
to establish prices, which
usually, because of lack of
start low at the opening of the
market and the small farmer sells
his crop at a disadvantage.
Tho cost of gathering this
would be a mere bagatelle
and, as Mr. O. L. n
tobacconist of Eastern North
Carolina, who was here yesterday
suggested, the tux listers could easily
secure the acreage of last year and
the present year. Of course the con-
would depend upon the sea-
son, but with the number of acres,
which Information the above plan
certainly reveal, the probable
yield would be very accurately an-
before the opening of tho
market.
The Southern Tobacco Journal was
in favor of the Idea to provide some
way of securing accurate Statistics
as to acreage, etc., if such a plan
would be adopted throughout the to-
growing sections, it would be
of value to the trade.
We think Mr. Joyner's plan is u
good Times.
East Carolina Training
School Notes.
Supt. Chas. L. Coon, of Wilson
schools, gives instruction in writing
at the Training school each Saturday.
Miss Davis read an excellent paper
at the March meeting of the Pitt
County Association on
Gathering of Local Historical
Mr. Austin of the science depart-
addressed the
County Association at their
March meeting.
Dr. Kent, a member of tho general
assembly from Caldwell county, vis-
the school and made an interest-
and helpful talk on the relation
of the teacher to the health of the
community.
Mr. spoke to the teach-
of Martin county on March 18th.
The spring term for teachers open-
ed March 14th. Almost double the
number that could be accommodated
applied for admission.
Mr. F. C. Nye, of Winterville High
school, on a recent Sunday evening,
made a most interesting talk to the
Y. W. C. A., on Missions in
Eastern North He showed
thorough knowledge of conditions.
Mr. made a talk to the
Y. W. C. A., on last Sunday evening.
The students have derived a great
deal of pleasure and profit from
from grand opera given by
the vast singers on a Victor talking
machine. Only the red seal records
have been used. Miss has
en delightful running comments on
the singers and operas. She realizes
the value of bringing the students in
contact with the best in music.
SCENES OF DISORDER
IN ITALIAN COURT
PRISONERS ATTEMPTED ESCAPE
Soldiers Called Into Court to Quell
and Restore Order.
Italy, March
caused by opposing lawyers during
the trial today caused a
hasty adjournment of the case and
soldiers were called in to clear the
court room. The guard
found themselves unable to cope with
the situation and a company of reg-
infantry was compelled to bat-
the contestants into submission.
The prisoners attempted to escape
from the cage but were finally whip-
A riot was precipitated when
Cavalier Santo, crown advocate, made
a motion to place the gold ring men-
in testimony in evidence
No sooner had the motion been made
than opposing counsel began burling
taunts and insults at the lawyer rep-
resenting the
betrayer of The court
tried in vain to restore order, spec-
joining in the Cam-
battered the door of the
cage, attempting to force the lock,
but were beaten back by
Finally soldiers were called in and
order restored. The judge then
pended court and reprimanded the
lawyers.
FARM LIFE SCHOOL LAW.
With Explanation of ii Workings Be-
Issued in Booklets.
The county farm life law and ex-
by state Superintendent of
Public Instruction V.
just issued from the state depart-
of education and is being dis-
into every county In the
state with a view to stirring up move-
for the establishment f such
schools which are especially de-
signed to prepare boys for
pursuits and girls for home
making and house keeping on the
farm; conduct agricultural and farm
rat ion work and
and extension work for the ad-
of farm life conditions In
the localities, to be done co-
operation with the state and national
departments of agriculture, with
meetings for the farmers and
wives and daughters at the
school from time to time. Only ten
of these schools can be est
with state aid one year. The lo-
securing one Issue
bonds for the school plant and
annually toward maintenance.
Then the state, adds annually
toward support. The Indications are
that there will be a rush by a
of enterprising counties for the ten
schools which will he available for
this year.
CABINET MEETING.
Well Known Here.
The news of the sudden death of
Mr. W. M. Russ, of Raleigh, which
occurred last night, caused some sad
hearts in Greenville where he was
well known and had a host of friends.
He married a Greenville lady, Miss
Henrietta Williams, and sty hearts
go out to her and the children in their
great sorrow.
The best treatise that can be writ-
ten on how to manage a husband is
a good cookbook.
Reciprocity, Mexican Situation and
Turin Discussed.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, March cab-
met today for the first time since
the president went on his Southern
trip. Reciprocity with Canada, the
Mexican situation and the tariff
commission were considered. His
message to the special session of
congress was gone over in detail. It
is understood the message will deal
only with reciprocity and the tariff
commission.
Good Corn Yield.
Floyd Gayer, the Oklahoma boy
who won a trip to Washing in by
growing bushels of corn to the
acre, says he did it as
land in November inches do
Harrowed land thoroughly, planted
It In rows three feel apart and in-
in the drill. Cultivated it on the
level; used harrow and cultivator
very freely. Cultivated II seven times;
worked late In season in order t
hold moisture. Had very dry weather.
Carried water and II on c to
keep it from The Sun,
Baltimore.
When slander Is denied is the time
it really gets busy.
Just how far does the kitchen
Small Fire.
This afternoon n h I i
to Sam Humphrey, near the corner
of Evans and First
fire in the roof. It was j out with-
out any damage of CO., ;


Title
Eastern reflector, 17 March 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
March 17, 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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