Eastern reflector, 16 June 1911


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





HOT
-------O.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern
Sold for Cash or Credit,
everything purchased
from our factory is
GUARANTEED
if you buy a buggy or
Harness from us and are
not satisfied. We will sat-
you or give you
our money back.
The John Flanagan Buggy Company
GREENVILLE,
NORTH CAROLINA
BUGGIES and HARNESS
NEWS THAI IS OF
TAR HEELS
GATHERED EXCHANGES.
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's
Bob Headers.
whole city was
Shocked late this afternoon, when the
news was received that Claude
was drowned at
son's mill pond, about lour miles
north of the city. A large crowd
mediately went to the scene in
and buggies and on bi-
cycles. It was about when the
accident happened and the body was
not recovered until about C o'clock.
Mr. T. R. Rouse, cashier of the
Rouse Hanking Company, of La-
Grange, was last night appointed
temporary receiver of the Bank of La-
Grange by Judge Whedbee, before
whom application was made at Golds-
The order is made returnable
before Judge Peebles at Kinston June
to show cause why the receivership
should not be made permanent. The
Hank of LaGrange was closed
day by the corporation Commission
because the officers had been running
it contrary to Times
As the result of too much liquor
and a disagreement with Will
a Ed a white man
of the Zebulon section, is dead, and
his assailant is in the Wake county
jail to await trial in July for
The tragedy occurred at Mr. S.
Gill's saw mill, three and a half
miles northeast of Zebulon, last
about o'clock, ac-
cording to the best Information, be-
cursing the who returned
In kind and later struck the white
man twice across the head with a
pine limb, crushing the skull and
causing Evening
Times.
The State Optical society will meet
In Asheville July and The
State Optical and Retail as-
will meet here July and
These meetings are held in the
same place and in close succession,
because of the fact that a majority of
the members of the State Optical as-
are members of the other
association. The meetings will be held
at the Battery Park hotel. It is
thought that about members and
delegates will be in attendance.
Ward suffered a
severe attack of vertigo last night
and was taken to Pittman Sanitarium
where he has remained all day. Court
has been adjourned. Dr. Julian Baker
says he will not be able to hold court
this week. The last heard from the
judge is that he slept some today and
is improving.
The Call of The Nurse.
No calling has more rapidly ad-
in public esteem the past few
years than that of the trained nurse,
and every movement looking to
proving the efficiency, and widening
the sphere of usefulness of those who
adopt nursing as a life work should
engage the attention and cordial
of the public. The meeting
next week of the American Society
Of Superintendents of Training
Schools for Nurses in Boston prom-
to be a noteworthy occasion in
the annals of the
The trained nurse should be a
nurse by instinct as well as by train-
She should have that
able something about her that calms,
rather than excites, the patient. She
must love her work, as the true
loves his, having an instinct
for relieving the suffering.
The white-garbed angels of the
hospital wards are doing a noble
work. They give an air of gentle-
and quiet to the sick room that
robs the hospital of much of its
dread, and those who have once been
under their ministrations are their
friends for life. All honor to the noble
young women who go forth from
their homos to the relief of suffering
Virginian.
Take The Reflector With You.
If you are going away for the sum-
mer, leave your address with The
Daily Reflector, so the paper can
go and give you the news from home
during your absence.
No Levers. No Springs.
Always in Balance
Hart Hadley
Greenville, N. C.
YES
THOROUGH BRED
TOBACCO
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy.
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to-
taste. No spice to make your tongue
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco, with
all the improvements up-to-date. CHEW
IT AND PROVE IT at our expense, the
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail to
us with your name and address for attractive
FREE offer to chewers only. W
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
Post Office
Farmers actually want the on account of Us
many distinctive features. Which are Operators weigh
balances gangs. Perfectly balanced pole without even so mart as
a balance lever. Simplicity a lever, spring, racket
or other nuisance on it. Light of draft, because it weighs less aid
has draft closer to shovels. of cultivation, that to, move-
does not affect position of gangs. Six shovels, spring break
Works perfectly in widest or rows cotton, corn, beans,
peanuts, tobacco, potatoes, etc.
Learn more about tills cultivator. Fifty of nest farmers
In Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let us demonstrate
to you its many distinctive features.
We also sell the celebrated NEW DEERE WALKING
the best and most satisfactory walking cultivator en the
market. When In need of anything in the hardware line be sure
to see us.
Subscribe to The Reflector.
fr
Agriculture is the the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
N. C, Fill DAY,
HIMSELF
L. V. Hart, of Tarboro Bank, Commits
Suicide
A SHORTAGE IN HIS ACCOUNTS
Motive For Desperate Act Found To
Have Been The Discovery That
Cashier's Accounts Had Been Found
Short by State Examiner
Tarboro, June more stunned
or shocked community would be hard
to find than Tarboro about o'clock
this afternoon. Report came down the
street that Luther Hart had shot him-
self.
At one o'clock Mr. Hart was seem-
in his usual good humor, even
told a man that he would see him
dinner, to which he was on his
way. Soon after reaching home his
wife, who was in a room superintend-
the serving of dinner, when in a
room above, heard a pistol shot.
A hurried visit up there disclosed her
unconscious husband lying prone with
a wound through his head. The ball
had entered just above the temple
and came out just back of the ear on
the other side. Physicians were sent
for, but they could no nothing.
For years he has been the
cashier of the Bank of Tar-
The motive for the suicide became
known about four o'clock, just about
the time Mr. Hart died.
As Bank Examiner
ed into the books, he began to find en-
tiles that needed explanation. Of this
he asked Braxton Hussy, the assist-
ant cashier, who, after being plied
with questions, broke down and stated
that the stealing had been going on
for seven years and that he was glad
it was all over, that he knew the
crash would come and he was glad
that the suspense was over.
Solicitor apprised of this
confession, swore out a warrant for
Mr. Hussey and had him bound over
to court.
There are all kinds of speculations
about the extent of the shortage. Mr.
Hussey says he received but
no one believes that this will begin to
cover the amount of the shortage.
Mr. bond was fixed at
Mr. Hussey not only made a
but he also conveyed to the
bank every item of property that he
had.
Sub-Committee of Congress Hiving it
Consideration
Hank Failed to Open.
Tarboro, N. C, June Bank
of Tarboro failed to open its doors
today, following the discrepancies in
accounts of Cashier L. V. Hart, who
suicided yesterday. The deposits of
the bank are and the capital
HOME BOYS WIN ANOTHER GAME
It Was Almost One-Sided As Visitors
Could Not Find Kali.
The team of Wilson came
over Wednesday and played a game
here with the Greenville team. It
was practically a one-sided game,
the visitors not being a match for
the home boys at any point.
Score by R. H. E.
Wilson
For Greenville, Riddick
and Lanier. Kincaid, Ed-
wards and Davis.
Struck By Lanier, Kincaid.
Edwards,
SHERIFF DUDLEY CLIMBING UP.
He Finds A New Point Of
Sheriff S. I. Dudley took a climb
up in the this morning. He
was seen up on the very highest
around the tower on top of the
new court house, fully a hundred feet
above ground, and with an imaginary
Held glass was viewing the landscape
o'er. Just how far he could see or
what was spied was not learned, but
that he took in the territory for miles
around there is no doubt. Now, ye
law breakers, you had better watch
your corks, or from this new lookout
the sheriff will get his eye on you.
WILL TAKE EXPRESS COMPANIES
And Operate Them By The Govern-
Connection With Hail
Charges of Ex-
press Companies For Carrying
Small
Washington, June sub-
committee on post offices and post-
roads met today and took up for con-
the Lewis bill, which pro-
for condemning and purchasing
the express companies and adding
them to the Postal system, and es-
a complete system for the
quick transport of packages and the
eatable products of the farm and
truck garden, etc. At their last con-
in Washington the
of the business men of the
country and the granges ask-
ed congress to establish such a sys-
and representatives of these in-
were present at the hearing
before the committee today.
are two main reasons why
the express companies must be added
to the postal said Mr. Lewis
in his argument. the express
company service does not reach be-
the railways to the country or
the farmers, which the post office
does, through the rural free delivery,
which is waiting with empty wagons
to receive the express packages and
take them to the country stores and
the farms, and carry back to the
towns and the cities the produce of
the farms and truck gardens for the
people to eat, at living prices. Sec-
the contracts of the express
companies with the railways give
them an average transportation of
throe quarters of a cent a pound; and
with this rate the express charges
by post would be reduced from two-
thirds to one-half on parcels rang-
from pounds to pounds, and
about per cent, on heavier weights,
as a consequence of the co-ordination
of the express company plants with
the post office and rural delivery, and
the elimination of the express com-
profits, which are averaging over
per cent, on the investment.
express companies are positive
hindrances and obstacles to the
of the country. The average
charge carrying a ton of express
in Argentina is and for the
countries of Europe while the
average express Co. charge in the
States is They charge I
times as much to carry a ton of ex-
press as a ton of freight in
countries. Here the express
charge times as much. O
course, these charges simply
by half or more of the traffic of th
United States. Our average is
than one hundred pounds per
while that of the other countries i
over two hundred per capita,
we have far greater demand for I
on account of our long-1
distances and more extensive
cannot have an efficient
eels post. The government
conduct it on mail railway
rates, at over four cents
pound, in competition with the ex-
press paying but
fourths of a cent a pound,
the weight of equipment in both
which enables the express
to pay over fifty per cent,
profits to themselves, although
no service whatever to
farmers and to points off the
ways.
Mr. Lewis has worked out a s
torn of based on
methods, from which a
package, for instance, can be sent
miles for cents, while the
now charge cents a
for like distances; from
Maine, to San Francisco, will c
cents for live pounds, and
for pounds, as against the
company charges of cents a
7.50.
With the rural free delivery a p
of the express system, an
parcels post will market the
produce and save them the time i
labor of marketing their truck. Ra
even lower than those Quoted
on Page
., .





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
IT IS TRULY ft
BY A
Fays An Eloquent To Mother-
hood.
Editor
I have heard it said that the most
beautiful sentence in the English
language was Dr. Johnson's opening
sentence in his hook, and
indeed it is beautiful, but for fine
sentiment, true to our best smooth
flow of words, beautiful imagery and
exquisite beauty, I have read
equal to this from Clarence Poe,
of North Carolina. Writing of a
departed princess of India,
in whoso memory her
band had erected a temple called the
reported to be the most ex-
building upon earth, he
walked the ancient
way of motherhood, that way along
which woman finds the testing of her
soul, the mystic reach and infinite
meaning of her existence as man finds
his in some bitter conflict that for-
ever frees him from the bonds of
selfishness. Seven times she walked
the mother's ancient way down to
the gates of death and brought back
a new life With her, but the eighth
time she did not
Can this sentence be surpassed
Isn't it sublime To me it signifies
that we have in North Carolina a
writer and patriot such as we have
never had before; one whom we should
delight to praise and honor, for he
will be remembered when many who
now think they arc great have been
forgotten.
Of course many of your readers
have read the quotation and admired
it, but many more have had no op-
to read it and many only
gave it a careless perusal, and as I
was so impressed with its grandeur,
sublimity and beauty I wanted others
to enjoy reading it.
We do not always appreciate our
great men, and often those whom we
think great in a few years appear
o those whose prospective Is more
for right judgment pig-
I may have erroneous opinions
f Mr. Poe, but from my point of
he is an exceedingly promising
man, and if properly
by us his name and statue will
day be in the Hall of Fame.
A. J.
THE BOARD COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
PROCEEDINGS OF LAST MEETING.
POISONED BY MATCHES.
Amounts of Disbursements And Col-
At the regular June meeting of the
board of county commissioners, all
the members were present. The fol-
lowing aggregate sums were ordered
paid out of the For paupers,
superintendent of health,
county home, coroner,
court house, bridges
and ferries, conveying prison-
and insane court cost,
jurors, jail, cap-
distillery, clerk to board,
clerk court, printing
and stationery, postage,
salaries, register of deeds, clerk
court, sheriff,
county stock law,
county roads,
stock law, roads;
Beaver Dam roads, Bethel
roads, Greenville roads,
The several Officers tendered their
reports for the past month which were
approved and ordered recorded. The
collections were, by register of deeds
by clerk court, by
sheriff,
W. A. Forbes was elected
of roads for twelve months at
a salary of per month.
Some changes in allowances to
were made, and some corrections
in tax list ordered.
The board also held a recess with
the building committee to examine
bids on furnishing the new court
house and jail and to make contracts
for the same. While tin's has not yet
been completed by the committee and
recorded, it is learned that furniture
was bought that will be in keeping
with the new court house.
ELDER D. DEAD.
Ate a Box Each, But Doctor
Got There In Time.
Farmville, June the two
two-year-old children of Capt.
Smith and Mr. Robert Barrett
ere playing together, their mother
out of the room, and they
a chair, climbed up to a bureau,
n which was a gross of matches. They
cured the matches, took them a box
and sat down to have a feast,
discovered they had devoured
box each and were on
e second.
Dr. Patrick was hastily summoned
id told the trouble, he came prepared
battle with the poison in a few
and the work of he-
With purging and vomiting he
had their little stomaches empty
id though weak, they were soon all
Died After An Illness Of Only Two
Days.
Elder George D. a prom-
minister of the Primitive Baptist
church, died Saturday night at his
home in Robersonville after a brief
illness, and was buried Sunday.
Elder was years of
age, and apparently looked the
of health, being as splendid a
specimen of physical manhood as is
usually seen. Only a week previous
to his death he returned from a
month's trip through several north-
states where he attended several
associations of his denomination, and
after getting home spoke of how well
he had felt during that trip and how
much he had enjoyed it.
Last Thursday he spent the greater
part of the day out on his farm.
returning home that evening he
was taken with paralysis of the mus-
and nerves, and in two days
had away.
His death was indeed a shock, and
a great loss to his section and to the
denomination he served.
COME TO SEE US FOB MOST LAST-
tag and satisfactory hosiery for la-
dies, children, men and We
guarantee our hosiery, Whit Leather
Brand, per pair. Linen Wear
Brand, per pair. J. R. J.
G.
FOR SALE- FIELD PEAS,
t o. b. Iron peas all
good stock. G. A. Johnson Bro.,
Grifton, N. C.
As the spring begins and you want to do
your spring shopping.
Go See for Dress Goods in all
ties and colors--Ladies and Misses Tailor-
made Skirts, Ladies Shirt Waists, Muslin
Underwear, Notions, Shoes and Oxfords,
Household Goods, Traveling Bags and Grips
Furniture, Chairs and Mattress.
Go See for Crockery, Glassware,
Tinware, Wood and Willow Ware.
Go See for Cultivators,
all Farming Utensils
Plows and
We want your trade. We have the goods
and will make prices right
It makes no difference what you want we
can supply it. When you want it and want
to buy it right, Go See
We have the largest and most complete
stock of merchandise ever carried in Green-
ville. Don't think because you go and see
that you must buy from him, but we
want you to come and learn we have to of-
fer you and see if we cannot make it to your
interest to deal with us. We want to say
once more no matter what you want,
for personal use, home or farm, Go See
J. G.
Greenville, North Carolina
Condensed Statement of
The National Bank of Greenville
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
at the close of business March 7th, 1911
RESOURCES.
boa and 180,407.19
Overdrafts.
S. Bonds. 21.000.00
Stocks and bonds. 3,000.00
Furniture and fixtures 7,281.30
Exchange for clearing
house. 8.919.67
Cash and due from banks. 47,586.04
per cent, redemption
fund. 1,050.00
1271,648.16
LIABILITIES.
50,000.00
Surplus. 10,000.00
Undivided profits. 3,614.99
Circulation. 21,000.09
Bond account. 21,000.0
Dividends unpaid. 69.93
Cashier's checks. 498.13
We invite the accounts of Banks. Corporations. Firms and
Individuals, and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those
contemplating changes or opening new accounts.
We want your business
F. J. FORBES, Cashier
mm
mm
ft II. p The
THE STATE PRESS
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Resolutions of Respect Adopted
Lodge A. F. and A. M.
ANNUAL SESSION 86-28.
Retailed Program of Convention
Mountain Outing.
The following is the detailed pro-
gramme of the meeting to be held in
Lenoir, June 26-28 and of the out-
to immediately
Monday Evening, June o'clock.
The convention will be called to or-
by the president, Mr. M. L. Ship-
man, of the Hendersonville Hustler.
Prayer by Rev. J. O. Atkinson, of
the Christian Sun.
Address of welcome by Hon. W. C.
Newland.
Response by Mr. Josephus Daniel,
of the News and Observer.
Tuesday Morning, June O'clock
Meeting called to order by the
president.
Report of executive committee on
new members.
President's address.
Supervision of Public
Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, state
geologist and secretary of North
Carolina Good Roads Association.
Basis of the
Mr. Wade H. Harris, of the Char-
Chronicle.
Newspaper and Public
Dr. W. P. Few, president of
Trinity College.
Open Mr. J. J. Far-
of the High Point Enterprise.
to be Derived from Treat-
of the Hookworm
Dr. John A. Ferrall, state director
hookworm campaign.
Appointment of committees and
miscellaneous business.
Question box.
At p. m., the editorial
party will be taken to Hibriten
where a light luncheon will be
served.
Tuesday Evening, O'clock.
Reading of Historical Paper, Mr.
D. J. Whichard, of the Greenville Re-
Annual oration, Mr. James H.
Cowan, of the Wilmington Dispatch.
Annual Poem, Mr. W. Lowrie Hill.
of Our Fatherless Ones.
Appalachian
Rev. Hight C. Moore, of the Biblical
Recorder.
Wednesday Morning, June
O'clock.
Press as a Factor in
Fire Hon. James R.
Young, state insurance
Best Method of Securing and
Retaining Local Mr. W.
C. Dowd, of the Charlotte News.
and Aims of the Pied-
and
Mr. B. H. of the
Shelby Highlander.
Intra-Coastal Waterway and
Its Relation to Piedmont-Western
North Hon. John H. Small.
Liberty of the Dr. W.
Louis Poteat, president of Wake For-
est College.
Special order,
of officers.
Wednesday Afternoon.
At o'clock the editorial party will
leave Lenoir Blowing Rock,
where the night will be spent. On
Thursday they will be taken to
where dinner will be served
on the campus of the Appalachian
Training School. Thursday afternoon
the party will be taken back to
Blowing Rock, where will take
Whereas, it has pleased the
Architect of the Universe to
remove from our midst, our late
brother, Blount
And, Whereas, the intimate
long held by our deceased
brother with the members of this
lodge render it proper that we should
place on record our of
his services as a Mason and his
merits as a man; therefore, be it
That while we. the members
of Greenville Lodge No. A. P. and
A. M., bow in humble submission to
will of the Great I Am. we do
the less mourn for our brother,
who has been called from labor to
rest.
That in the death of Blount
Coleman Pearce, this lodge loses its
charter member. He was
a zealous in his work.
to advance the interest of
the order, although he removed from
this jurisdiction to another, Sanford,
X. C. in 1898, yet he kept in
with his old lodge, who was
always glad to have him In their
midst.
That In his death the state loses
n esteemed. loyal and patriotic cit-
the family loses affectionate
and loving father and husband.
That this lodge tender its heart
felt sympathy to the family and rel-
of our deceased brother in their
Bad affliction.
That a copy of these
be spread upon the minutes, a
copy be sent to the Oxford Orphan
Friend. The Express, and
The Daily Reflector for publication,
and a copy be sent to the bereaved
family.
J. M.
R. WILLIAMS,
H. HARRISS,
Committee.
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. Smith
Stables, and next door to John Flan-
Buggy Co's new building
. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
formerly occupied by J.
Fleming.
Greenville, Carolina
v c D. M. Clark
CLARK
Engineers and Surveyors
. . Carolina
Spring Bedding Plants
for beautifying the yard.
j Decorative plants for the house
Choice Cut Flowers
for weddings and all social events
Floral offerings arranged in the
most artistic style at notice.
Mail, telephone and telegraph or-
promptly executed by,
J. L. Company
Florists.
Ask for Price List
Raleigh, N. C.
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
In Building
. H.
I. Moore.
IV. H. long
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
. K. Carolina
Central Ea tar Shop
Proprietor
Located in main business of town,
Four chairs In operation and each
one over by a skilled
barber. Ladies waited on at their
home.
DR. R. L. CARE
DENTIST
. . N.
SKINNER
LAWYER
. . Caroline.
H. W. CASTER, M. D.
limited to diseases of tin
Wye, Bar, Nose Throat.
Washington, N. C. Greenville, n. C
office with D. L. James
a. m. to p. m., Mondays.
THE MODERN SHOP
S. J. NOBLES
furnished, everything
and attractive, working the very
best barbers. Second to none.
i OPPOSITE I. B. J. G.
ALBION DUNN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
office in building, Third St.
Practices wherever his services are
desired
. Carolina
Rooms For Rent
Suitable for light
I in or bed rooms. Apply to
Mellie M. Harris,
Dickinson Avenue,
Greenville, N. C.
Marriage Licenses.
During the week Register of Deeds
Moore issued marriage licenses to
the following
J. C. Moore and Mamie rope.
Jesse L. Rollins and Susie Taylor.
Walter Weed and Lena Whitfield.
Robert Barnhill and Hattie Alston.
Langley and Lula Edwards
H. S. WARD. C. C. PIERCE.
Washington, N. C. Greenville,
WARD PIERCE
Greenville, N. G
Practice In all the Courts.
Tire Iron Master.
Iron photo-play at
the tonight is one of
best of its kind ever brought to
Greenville and should not miss
seeing it. The program will consist
of three thousand feet of film with
one extra reel.
in the fine drives and views, and
where a luncheon will be served. On
Friday morning the editors will get
an early start Linville, stop for
lunch at Grandfather mountain, get-
ting into Linville in time to see the
attractions there and do some fishing
in the lake On Saturday morning
the train will be taken at
in time to make connections at Hick-
Lincolnton and Gastonia.
No meeting of the association that
has ever been held offers a more de-
than is
ed this year, and no editor, no matter
how busy he is, should fail to take
la entire trip
. z-
Established 1875
and Retail Grocer
Furniture dealer. Cash paid
Hides. Fur. Cotton Seed. Oil Bar-
Turkeys, Bedsteads
Mattresses, etc. Suits, Baby Car-
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits,
Tables, Lounges, Sates, P. Lon-
and Gail Ax High Lite
tobacco, Key West Cheroots, Hen-
George Cigars, Canned Cherries
Peaches, Apple, Syrup, Jelly,
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap,
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil,
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar-
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Prunes, Currants, Raisins
Glass and Wooden-
ware, Cakes and Crackers,
best Butter, New
Royal Sewing machines and
numerous other goods. Quality
quantity cheap cash. Come to
see me.
Phone Number
hen You Are Warm
Come try r Delicious Ice Cream, Candies
We deliver ice cream on Sundays if orders
are placed in time. Will be in from to
a. m. Sundays to answer calls.
The Candy kitchen, Phone
Will Celebrate Anniversary.
On Friday, June 30th, the
of the breaking of ground for the
erection of the buildings of East Car-
Training school will
be celebrated with appropriate
Gov. W. W. KitChin and other
prominent speakers will be present.
Bun
The branch that crosses Evans
street just south of the graded school
has for several days been as dry as
the streets. This is something we do
not recall ever seeing before.
Work Will Start Soon-
After you take Tr. King's New Life
Pills, and you'll quickly enjoy their
line results. Constipation and
vanish and tine appetite re-
turns. They regulate stomach, liver
and bowels and impart new strength
and energy to the whole system. Try
them. Only at all druggists.
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED TWO
cars machinery, consisting of
everything needed on a farm. Terms
to purchaser. E. Sons,
.-.,





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Carolina and Fan Mir Eastern
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and I he
Eastern Reflector for Winterville an d vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
day after a visit in Virginia.
That roofing sold
Winterville, N. C, June
W. E. Cox, of Wilmington, spent Fri-
day evening and night with his moth-
Mrs. W. E. Cox.
When you have wheat you want
ground carry it to Harrington, Bar-
mill. They good
flour.
Mrs. J. D. Cox and Miss Jeannette
Cox made a trip to Greenville Thurs-
day through the dust and returned
through the rain.
Plenty of floor oil on hand at A.
W. Ange Ai Co.
Miss Mary Smith, of Ayden, is
spending a few days with Miss Pattie
Sutton.
Get your turned work and repair-
done at Harrington, Barber
Co. shops, prices are reasonable.
Messrs. Cox and Eugene
Cannon went to Ayden yesterday.
When you want a good cook stove
see A. W. Ange Company. They
have good stoves cheap.
Mr. J. W. Harper has purchased
the L. L. Kittrell home and will move
there next week. He is fixing to
make another soul happy.
Now is the time for you to begin
to make your arrangements for your
hay balers and manure spreaders.
See Harrington, Barber Company
and save time.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, of Kinston,
are spending a day or two in town.
Misses and Dora Cox made
shopping trip to Greenville yes-
Messrs. Harrington, Barber Com-
are selling some good hats very
cheap for the cash. See them for
hats while they last.
China Wedding.
Thursday night the home of Rev.
and Mrs. M. A. Adams was the scene
of a beautiful twentieth anniversary.
The home was tastily decorated with
flowers and potted plants, when both
old and young gathered to enjoy the
evening. Mr. and Miss Adams stood
beneath a beautiful arch while a wed-
ding was played, and the mar-
people followed by the next near-
est married until all the party march-
ed in and congratulated them. The
party then went to the dining room
where refreshments were served.
Quite a nice collection of handsome
china was received and reviewed by
the party before departing.
Winterville, N. C, June
Messrs. Eugene Cannon and
attended church at Grin-
Sunday.
Harrington, Barber and Co. sell
roof paint. Will stop
leaks and prevent rust.
Mr. Thomas Dawson, of
Ayden, but now of Florida, spent
Monday in town.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
are purchasing a lot of high
grade buggy material and will soon
be rolling out some of their best make
of buggies.
Mr. O. W. Rollins, of Ayden, was
in town Sunday.
See the lace and hamburg at A. W.
Ange and
Prof. H. F. Brinson came in
by
Harrington, Barber and Company is
taking quality and price
into consideration.
Mr. J. F. Stokes, of Greenville, was
in town Tuesday looking after the
interest of the Pitt County News.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
are well prepared to take care
of the dead. Nice coffins or caskets
on hand and can give excellent
ice.
Mr. J. D. Cox has returned from
Fairmont and is spending a few days
at home.
Lime and cement at A. W. Ange and
Mr. Ola Tucker, of Greenville, was
in town Saturday.
Harrington, Barber and Co. have
a beautiful line of and
black silk hose.
Misses Alice Folds, of Kinston and
Minnie Greene, of Wilmington, spent
Monday night with Mrs. B. D. Forrest.
Bring your corn and wheat to
Harrington, Barber and mill,
grind any day, satisfaction
teed.
Cannon was all smiles last
night, in town.
Dr. and Mrs. B. T. Cox attended
services at Red Banks Sunday.
Mr. Hugh made Winter-
ville a pleasant visit Sunday.
The picnic season is now open with
the usual mos
and gnats. But there is fun,
just the same.
Miss Lula Chapman and
had a pleasant ride
over to Ayden yesterday evening.
Surprise Marriage.
All were surprised Sunday afternoon
to learn that Mr. J. L. Rollins and
Miss Susie Taylor had been united
in marriage. It was quite a surprise
to all for none expected it. Miss
Susie made many friends while here
in school last year, and said she
would return, but no one thought
she would change teachers. She is
the daughter of Mr. Lemuel Taylor,
near Kinston, and Mr. Rollins is
bookkeeper for A. W. Ange and Co.
We wish them all the success and
happiness possible while traveling
through life in double harness.
BY DR. STRAYER
Speaks to Teachers and Citizens at
Training School
ADVANTAGES OF SUMMER SCHOOL
Tendencies in Public
Interestingly Discussed By
This Able North
Carolina Fortunate in Having Him
School Doing
did Work.
Some Flies For the Fans.
Greenville is certainly the
Greenville has more eggs in the
basket to give teams that come this
way.
When the Coast Line League opens,
then keep your eye on Greenville.
Wonder if the fats and the leans
will get together again this season.
Come along boys.
Lanier do pitch great ball.
They will have to take something
larger than a bat to find the ball
pitched by Lanier.
Lutterloh unnerved the visitors
with an the fence home
the second time he went to the bat.
The grand stand went wild.
The Wilson Times says Greenville
has the best amateur team in the
slate. Keep up reputation, boys.
Dr. George D. Strayer, of
University, who is one of the
faculty for the summer term at East
Carolina Training School,
instructing a class of school super-
and principals on school
administration, delivered a lecture
in the school auditorium on Monday
night, to the entire student body and
a number of town people who went
over to hear him.
The subject of his lecture, which
v.-as able and entertaining, was
Tendencies in Public
He handled his subject under sever-
headings, the first being the age
of the child and its physical
and care. He pointed out the
need of gymnasiums and playgrounds,
not alone for recreation but for
cal development of the child; and
that medical inspection, school nurses
and dental clinics are necessities for
the preservation of health. He ad-
open air schools, schools for
the blind, the deaf and dumb, for the
cripple, that these might have equal
chance in life with physically
more fortunate.
Dr. Strayer also stressed the moral
feature of education; that moral
training is essential to character
Parental schools, juvenile courts
and reform schools were all given
their place in importance. Moral
training does not reach its height
in the school room unless we have
moral teachers.
Then he carried his hearers on
through the various needs for
of the boys and girls into a
useful life; the boys should have clubs
for debating, for dramatic diversion,
for athletics, and training along me-
and business lines. The
girls should also have clubs for sew-
cooking, social and literary feat-
and their training in home
making, sanitation and nursing
should not be neglected.
The sphere of public education
should also extend to the adult
that they may be qualified for more
effective work. They should have
lectures, civic clubs, centers of rec-
libraries, associations of par-
near their schools, so that the
interest of the community may be at-
to and centered in the school.
The conditions for accomplishing
these are better and broader
for children, youths and adults.
Public education is not local or
It should be compulsory. The
length of the school term should be
increased to from to nine months, in
fact, school of some kind should be
going on oil the year. And the
should be compelled to attend
school not less than month in the
year. Sentiment should also be
to the point of paying teachers
sufficient to keep them in the work
the minimum should be a living wage
that is pay enough during the
months they teach to support them
all the year. Not only should there
be a longer term, but a longer school
day, more hours being put in the
work.
All through Dr. Strayer's lecture
was filled with the best of thought,
this report only touches the
outlines here and there. He is an
educator of unusual ability, and the
people of Eastern North Carolina are
more than fortunate in his spending
some weeks here in this summer
school to impart instruction that will
be felt through years to come in our
educational work. The time is past
when education is nothing but books.
It is character building, home
better equipment for life's duties
and service to others, more comfort,
more joy, more
not only for time but for eternity.
That is what this institution here in
Greenville is doing in the training of
teachers.
The summer school is doing
did work. The dormitories and town
are filled with teachers taking ad-
vantage of the splendid opportunities
here, and they are manifest-
much interest in the course of
It is not a time of play,
but genuine school work for all in
Now Lay Me Down to Sleep.
The fire upon the hearth is low,
And there is stillness everywhere
Like troubled spirits, here and there
The firelight shadows fluttering go,
as the shadows round me creep,
A childish treble breaks the bloom
And from a farther room
lay me down to
aid, somehow, with that little prayer
And that sweet treble in my ears,
My thoughts go back to distant
years,
linger with a dear one there;
as I bear the child's amen,
My mother's faith comes back to me
Crouched at her side I seem to be,
mother holds my hands again.
for an hour in that dear place
O for the peace of that dear time
for childish trust sublime
for a glimpse of mother's face
do not seem to be alone
Sweet magic of that treble tone
And I lay me down to
Eugene
Wires Down.
The received notice this
that all the press wires
of Washington were down by
the storm, which would cause a cur-
of our wire news service to-
day or make it late. These mishaps
are unavoidable, much as they are
regretted.
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 trying a course of
They regulate the LIVER.
They to the
mind. They bring health and tic-
to the body.
TAKE NO .
Th Hume and Farm and The Eastern
All Over
are says Mrs. Nora Guffey, of Broken
Arrow, Okla., use my letter in any way you want to,
if it will induce some suffering woman to try I had
pains all over, and suffered with an abscess. Three
failed to relieve me. Since taking I am in
better health than ever before, and that means much to me,
because I suffered many years with womanly troubles, of
different kinds. What other treatments I tried, helped me
for a few days
TAKE
Cheese
TO MERCHANTS
making contracts for fall de-
livery, write or wire for contract
prices.
TAKE
Don't wait, until you are taken down sick, before
care of yourself. The small aches and pains, and other
symptoms of womanly weakness and disease, always mean
worse to follow, unless given quick treatment
You would always keep handy, if you knew
what quick and permanent relief it gives, where weakness
and disease of the womanly system makes life seem hard
to bear. has helped over a million women. Try it
Write Advisory Dept. Chattanooga. Medicine Co. Chattanooga, Tenn.,
for Special Instructions, and 64-page book. Treatment sent free. J
V-
THE REMODELED
THE SEA
THE RESORT MADE BEAUTIFUL.
POWDER
Is Death to Hawks -Life to Chickens and Turkeys
Cock of the Walk
I take Chicken Powder and
feed my children it too. Look at
me and observe the Hawk. Cock-a-
The Barnyard
Died after eating a chick of that
old Rooster, which had been fed on
Chicken Powder. Alas Alas
Registered trade mark U. S. Patent Office April 1910. No. Guaranteed
by W. H. under the Food and Drag Act, June 1906. Serial No.
CHICKEN POWDER
Kills Hawks, Crow, Owls and Minks. Best Remedy for Cholera,
Gaps, Limber Neck, Indigestion and Leg Weakness.
Keeps Them FREE From Vermin, Thereby Causing Them to pro-
duce an Abundance of Eggs.
Manufactured by
W. H. Chicken Powder Co.,
Box Norfolk, Va.
For sale by Merchants and Druggists
to
The cheese of highest quality of-
in this territory. Brand
in More sold than any
other brand offered in Eastern North
Carolina.
J. Benjamin Higgs
Distributor
Greenville, North Car.
kept on as cleanly
white sections of
Greensboro Record.
a plan as the
SEW YORK'S SANE FOURTH.
BREAKING UP A NUISANCE.
Delegation of Colored Citizens Protest
Against Disorderly Houses.
A large delegation from the
of colored New Zion Baptist
church, headed by the pastor and
board of deacons, visited police head-
quarters the other morning and en-
complaint against several
denizens of the neighborhood of their
church in Jacksonville whom they
wished prosecuted for running
houses. The delegation of col-
citizens, both men and women
thoroughly in earnest concerning
the matter and exhibited unusual
to testily against the
women.
Warrants were sworn out for the
alleged disturbers of the peace and
it is probable that they will be given
a hearing in the city court Monday.
The delegation told of wild
carousals at night in the settle-
declared that, they wore
unable to worship at their church in
peace on account of the terrible dis-
This action on the part of the
of Greensboro's settle-
establishes a precedent and if
continued its results will be far
reaching. Members of the delegation
this morning complained of the fact
that no such houses are allowed to
h conducted in this city by white
women, but if they would properly
consider the fault lies wholly with
the better class of .
Heretofore great difficulty has been
experienced in successfully
ting even the worst criminals
they either have the other
members of their race in a certain
fear of them, or for some other reason
testimony which may be relied upon
is hard to obtain. If the
who really desire law and order will
help to see that it is observed the
settlements will soon be cleared
which infest, them and they b
Parade Of Nations Is One Of The
Features Of Program.
Mayor Gaynor's and sane
Fourth of committee is
for local celebrations in every one
of the five boroughs, and, whore
at several centers in each of
them. Isaac V. treasurer of
the committee, believes that plenty of
funds will be forthcoming as soon as
the citizens realize what is being
planned.
In Manhattan there will be
es in the morning in front of the city
hall, at which Mayor Gaynor expects
to preside. It is hoped that the
speakers will be Gov. Woodrow
Wilson, of New Jersey, and the new
Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson.
As at all the celebrations organized
by the committee, the Declaration of
Independence will be read.
The National Guard will not parade
this year, but Dr. George F.
chairman of the committee, has organ-
instead a novel parade. A pro-
cession of of the is to be held
all around the City Hall Park. Every
nationality in Manhattan is to be
represented by an entire family, the
head of which will carry the colors
of the country in which he was born.
It has been suggested that the general
offer a prize for the largest
family in line. England, Scotland, Ire-
land, Italy, France, the German em-
Russia, Norway,
and the Balkan States are
among the countries to be represent-
ed, and the procession will pass before
the mayor and the invited guests be-
fore the regular proceedings begin.
New York Times.
STOLEN ONE DIAMOND
ring, between 3-4 and 7-8 karat,
Tiffany setting. Liberal reward for
information leading to recovery.
C. D. c
The New Virginia Beach In All Its
Glory And Attractiveness.
Norfolk, Va., June the
completion of the vast improvements
as planned and already under con-
by the Norfolk Southern
railroad, former patrons of Virginia
Beach will not recognize the place.
While in the past this resort has
always had an interest and character-
all its own, yet the new
Beach will be so far in advance
of its former self as to practically
have its existence in a new resort
world.
Thousands of dollars are being
spent this year by the Norfolk South-
Railroad for permanent buildings
wonderful improvements at the
beach. Thousands of additional
are planned for and being spent
by the citizens and residents of the
beach to create additional improve-
and advantages for this city
by the sea.
The mammoth new casino that is
already under construction at
Beach will cost the Norfolk
Southern over in its erection
alone. This casino will establish a
new standard for summer resort
amusement parks. It is over feet
in length and feet in width, con-
a spacious pavilion, a
moth and modern equipped and
grill room, convention hall, a large
airy ball room, and commodious and
well equipped bath houses. The ball
room is feet in length by feet
in width, enclosed in glass and
rounded by a spacious veranda. The
casino building throughout is unique
in style and attractiveness. Of the
bungalow type, with it.; spacious
connecting hall ways and
surrounded beautiful walks and park-
ed areas, it will indeed be a place
beautiful.
But the casino is not the only great
accommodation feature at Virginia
Beach. There are numerous sum-
mer hotels and cottages which vie
with each other in appointment, neat-
and attractiveness. The rates
at the several hotels and cottages
sufficiently low-priced to satisfy
one, when the excellent service
is taken into consideration, the won-
is how these rates can be so
reasonable.
Virginia Beach is truly the
port of the At the same time
is noted for its cosmopolitan ways
The rapid increase of interest in this
resort and the wonderful increase in
its population are the causes which,
has lead to the planned expenditures
already under way in the way of
increased buildings, added
and magnificent improvements
that will this year add to the
of the place.
The Norfolk Southern Railroad has
prepared a neat folder which fully
describes the advantages, scenery and
accommodations at this popular re-
sort. This folder also gives a list
of the hotels and cottages, and rates
for accommodations of all kinds.
These folders may be obtained from
any of the Norfolk Southern agents
and representatives, or can be
cured by writing the general pas-
W. W. Nor-
folk, Virginia.





Carolina Home Fan- -an he Eastern
The Carolina Borne and Farm and The Eastern
THE SKIMMED MILK
QUESTION AGAIN
KB. HEARSE DR.
This To The
Baby.
OFFERS CHALLENGE
FOR EXHIBIT AT COUNTY FAIR,
Editor
Not a great many of your readers
may recall an article credited to the
New York Times as it appeared In
The Daily Reflector of Fewer
still, perhaps, retained an
from it sufficiently definite to
fully appreciate a communication In
your issue of June 9th. If the reader
should take a humorous view of Mr.
contentions, he should not
miss a re-reading of The Time's
Mr. Harris betrays no effort
In this direction, however, his
apparently, being altogether in-
and as serious as possible.
For this reason bis letter should
bear a second reading and a
with the article to which it re-
Letter of Mr.
New June 1911.
Editor
Greenville, X. C.
I was interested in reading In your
May 27th issue an article with the
caption Skimmed milk in
which you quote Doctor Wiley as
Wiley says he is con-
that the lives of almost an
unlimited number of infants are en-
dangered every day by the use of
such
Dr. Wiley has evidently changed
mind since he published the second
and
and their He
says in said book on page
med residue which is left
from the removal of cream is known
as skimmed milk. Skimmed milk
contains the principal part of the
constituents of milk, the
greater quantity of its sugar and a
very large quantity of its mineral mat-
It is a very valuable food prod-
lacking only the element of fat.
Naturally the composition of skim-
med milk would be that of milk
for the abstraction of fat. It
contains some little fat when
pared by the gravity method and only
a very small portion when separated
mechanically. The abstraction of the
fat increases the relative proportion
of sugar and
On page he states
It does not differ greatly in its chem-
properties from skimmed milk,
although there is a slight difference
in the relative percentages of the
milk solids in cream as compared
with the same constituents in whole
On page ho states
If sweet milk does not meet
the requirements, sour milk or but-
properly modified may be
It is evident from the above quota-
that skimmed milk is a
substance, and that it is also
necessary to modify cow's milk prior
to feeding it to an infant.
Yours truly,
H. L. HARRIS.
The Times
crusade against manufacturers
of condensed skimmed milk who mis-
represent their product, has been
started by the Department of
has recommended that
certain manufacturers be prosecuted
ARE YOU
GOING TO THE
Let Is Hear From The Neighbor.
hood Thai Will Take Them Up.
Editor
I hope the committee on premiums
of the Pitt County Fair Association j
will give a blue ribbon at least to j
the neighborhood that makes the I
most creditable all round exhibit. The j
State fair offers premiums to
and farm exhibits. We might, it
I appears to me, limit ours to neighbor-
hoods and individual farms.
don't mean Grimes-
land, as your printer made me say
In a former challenges any
other in the county to
with her. We want the
space immediately to the left of the
main entrance to the warehouse and
like for our competitor to be
upon the right.
We will have in this display
co, cotton, corn, peanuts, beans,
oats, wheat, potatoes white
and sweet, collards and pop corn,
cows, fat cattle, sheep, home-
raised horses. Let us hear through
the paper from the neighborhood
which, is willing to compete. By
the way, I forgot to mention the
exhibit in which we take most pride-
boys and girls, young men and young
women, to the manor born and
brought up, of course. We have ten
farms all upon one road extending
about two miles in our burg.
A. J.
or doses will cure any
eases of Chills and Fever. Price,
for violation of the pure food law and
it is probable that proceedings against
them will be started within the next
few days.
a result of an investigation of
the condensed milk situation, which
been in progress, at the Bureau
of Chemistry for some time, Dr. Wiley
says he is convinced that the lives
of an almost unlimited number of in-
are endangered every day by
the use of such milk.
department is doing every-
thing it can to stop the sale of con-
skimmed said Dr. Wiley
Its effect throughout the country
on infant mortality can only be
estimated, but I do know that it en-
dangers the life of every child to
whom it is York Times.
Does it appear that Dr. Wiley has
changed his or that Mr.
L. Harris, conscious that hand
la quicker than the slyly
for that other
article which interested the Bu-
of
After a careful reading of the above
letter, isn't it delicious to find that
the article with which it belabors
poor Dr. Wiley doesn't say a solitary
word about
The Daily Reflector of May 26th
said
is now up to the skimmed milk
condensers to get acquainted with Dr.
Wiley and the Agricultural Depart-
Did The Reflector have in
mind the method adopted by Mr.
study of And Their
W. A. B.
SEASHORE
The ATLANTIC HOTEL, at Morehead
offers superior attractions,
accommodations, the. largest variety of
and guests here enjoy the j
most invigorating and healthful climate on
th Coast.
Ideal Surf Fishing in the World-
Sate Sailing on Inland Waters or the Atlantic Ocean
Largest Bali Room in the Hall en-
SPLENDID CUISINE
SOUTHERN COOKING A FEATURE
The Summer Home for Mother and Baby-Cool
Sea Special
Low Rate SEASON, TEN-DAY and WEEK-END
excursion fares via
NORFOLK SOUTHERN R. R.
Hotel Rates,
Morehead City,
Formerly Manager if White Springs. W. Va.
V--- t
THE HOME BOYS
HER GAME
SCORE, AURORA,
Another Snappy Game With Some
Good Features.
In the second game between Green-
ville and Aurora, played in the park
here y afternoon, the home
boys again came out winners in a
score of to Aurora has a good
team, and do as fine field work as
any can show, but they are weak at
the bat, and their being shut out
was due mainly to inability to find
the balls off Greenville's pitchers.
The features of Thursday's game
were the home run of Jordan, bring-
in two men, the home run by
and the superb fielding of
for Aurora. With one foot
on the fence he caught with one hand
a fly that would have been a park
ball, as pretty a catch as was -ever
seen on any
Score by R. H. E
Greenville G
Aurora
Greenville, and
Riddick; Aurora, Holiday and
son.
by base on
balls by Holiday base
on balls
Mr. Franks.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green-
ville and Kinston. Effective May 16th, 1911.
Norfolk Ar.
Hobgood
Hobgood Ar.
Washington
Williamston
Plymouth
Greenville
Kinston
SEES END OF TROLLEY CARS.
For further information, address nearest ticket
agent or W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent Green-
ville, N. C.
W. J CRAIG, P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Tells National Electrical Association
Of His Latest Invention.
Thomas A. Edison was the guest
of honor yesterday, the third day
of the convention of the National El-
Light Association. Mr. Edi-
son bowed his thanks and Mr. Samuel
read a set speech for him. After-
ward the inventor said he was ready
with the inventions of which he had
spoken storage battery
that will run a car or wagon and the
motion picture machine with the
words spoken as the action proceeds.
storage battery for a wag-
said he, operating on a butch-
wagon in Orange. It costs
cents to run it miles. You recharge
it at the end of every trip with an or-
feed wire. The battery is fit-
under the seat.
surface car is being
at Concord, N. C, and they are
laughing at the rest of the United
States for using trolley cars. , It
Buying Patent Rights.
We advise our readers not to buy-
patent rights. There is some hum-
buggery connected with ninety-nine
of every hundred of them and in
ninety-nine cases out of a hundred
the buyer either cannot or will not
work profitably the hundredth right.
So there is hardly a possibility of
success with them. We have known
hundreds who bought patent rights.
but do not know a single case where
was made. If there is such
big money in them it looks like
some purchaser would succeed with
his right. We are glad to note that
people do not buy patent rights so
readily as they did years ago. We
have known people to buy farm
rights and some have even mortgaged
their lands to buy state rights. What
is a patent right It is just a
to sell some new thing. Some-
times it is a patent fence, or a
churn or a quilter or a knitting ma-j
chine or a combination tool. Al
kinds of patent rights have been sold.
There is no telling what kind of thing
some fellow will come around with.
We are not writing against agents.
They have put many valuable articles
in the homes of the people. If you
want and are sure it is all right, then
buy it but do not buy the privilege of
something. We once heard
of a man who sold a farm near a
town for the privilege of selling
tombstones in a certain county, when
In fact as an American citizen he was
born with the right to sell tombstones
in that county. When you invest
your money be sure you are getting
something for it. Most men who buy
patent rights soon discover that they
have paid out good money for a for-
tune which will never come. Have
you bought a patent right Then you
have been humbugged and the best
thing to do is to go along at your
regular work and think and say as
little about it as possible. If you have
been humbugged do not try to hum-
bug others. Just remember that you
have met a shrewd for you
one. who has fleeced field
Herald.
when a bill is paid, it is paid for good. You
have your receipt, one that is easy to keep, easy
to find any time, and that you can always verify at
our bank.
Not only this, but you have a check on your
know where every cent goes, you can figure it up any time
and know just what you make, you spend it for.
here is no chance for a mistake in making no
danger of loss or theft in carrying the money.
Safety, simplicity and accuracy are the notes of a
, checking account at our bank, and these are only a few of
the many advantages to be derived from one.
We make no charge for the accommodation, so do not
hesitate any longer to avail yourself of these ad-
vantages.
The Greenville Banking Trust Co.
Capital Stock
Greenville, N. C. C. S. CARR, Cashier
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH
THE CHESAPEAKE LINE
Daily Service Including new Steamers
just placed in Service the of and City
of are the most elegant and up-to-date Steam-
between Norfolk and Baltimore.
Equipped with Wireless Telephone in Each Room.
Delicious Meals on for Comfort
Convenience.
Steamers Norfolk
Steamer Old Point Comfort
Steamer Arrive Baltimore .
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North-East
and Reservations made and any information
furnished by
W. H. PARNELL, N Virginia
very
moving picture and talking
machine combination, the inventor
said he and his associates were near-
ready to place it upon the market.
have a in the Bronx
with a stage bigger than the
opera house. We have about
actors going through new dramas.
They talk into a megaphone. We have
about forty dramas. All that is to be
done is to get the business end
straightened out and they will be
in the moving picture shows.
not applied it to the Shakes-
dramas yet, but it will get there
It will be good for every kind of
ma. We've had tests of it and it's all
When asked if the trolley car was
lining to be out of he
After awhile there won't
be any more
Edison said that his was the first
electric light convention he had ever
attended, although he invented the
electric light in York
American,
Boot, of The Guards.
Reporting the Canadian trade
agreement with the Root amendment,
the senate finance committee is true
to a long record of distinguished
service. That committee is
the very citadel of the interests. In
its rooms tariffs written by the trusts
are O. jokers intended to
wise legislation are contrived and
amendments deadly to reform arc
drawn and forwarded.
Without the Bluster backing of a
group as carefully chosen as this,
Elihu Root's adroit amendment would
have little notice. It is clearly enough
the paper amendment, but the
hopes of all the trusts hang upon it,
for if accepted by the senate it opens
a way to kill reciprocity and block
progress. The senate may eliminate
it, but that will take time, and time
is valuable to trusts as well as to men
who fight for life.
Owing to circumstances not pleas-
ant to recall, the fatal amendment s
presented by Mr. Root and affects
the paper traCe, whereas if there had
been no scandal in Illinois it might
easily have appeared In the
of Mr. and re-
lated only to lumber. We cannot con-
Mr. Root upon the company
that he but here arc some
compensations in the fact that if
is to be assassinated the man
put forward to do the job cannot be
said to owe his election senator to
Many Horses Get Too Much Hay.
Experience and observation have
convinced the writer that we feed
very much more hay to our driving
and hard-working horses than is best
for them, and these observations are
theoretically, by the small
stomach of the horse, the fact that
he must work hard while digesting
his feed and the experimental
that he does not digest coarse
feeds so well when at hard or fast
work. On the other hand, it must
not be inferred that the horse does
not need a certain amount of hay or
roughage. There is a general rule
that the horse should have from
to 1-2 pounds of roughage to every
pounds of weight, daily. For
work, there may be no objection to
his receiving the larger 1-2
pounds daily for every pounds of
bribery by the trust that will profit
by it.
Even if the amendment had merit
its purpose is to prevent and not to
perfect an agreement. Its adoption
may mean the failure of the move-
The disposition of the lumber
and paper trusts on our northern
boundary will then be re-established
Every other trust the land will be
confirmed in its exertions. That will
be a trust victory, indeed, for if this
reform comes to naught it will be the
people and their president, and not
a political party merely, that will be
discredited and
York World.
his hays are cheaper than
concentrates, but for the hard-work-
horse, the smaller
pound daily for every pounds of
his better. We are not
able to quote definite experimental
evidence to support our experience
and observation, but we feel pretty
safe in stating that this smaller
amount of the roughage and giving
all of it at night feed, give bet-
results than the roughage the
horses will eat, or able to eat, during
the time they are in the stable, morn-
noon and night. With the
or saddle-horse, especially, we
feel morally certain this is true We
would, therefore, advise against the
feeding of hay in the morning or at
noon, and only a moderate amount at
over pounds to a horse
weighing Butler,
in Farmer.
A Charming Woman
one who is lovely in face, form,
mind and temper. But its hard for a
woman to be charming without health
A weak, sickly woman will be
and irritable. Constipation and
kidney poisons show in pimples,
blotches, skin eruptions and a wretch-
ed complexion. Hut Electric Bitters
always prove a godsend to women
who want health, beauty and friends.
regulate stomach, liver and kid-
purify the blood; give strong
nerves, bright eyes, pure breath,
smooth, velvety skin, lovely com-
and perfect health. Try
them. at all druggists.
mm





H ii
The Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
THE HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
MIX COMPANY, lac
D. J. Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
Subscription, one year,
Six months.
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of th inks an
of respect will be chained for at
sent per word.
Communications advertising
will be charged for at three
per line, up to fifty lines.
as second class matter
August at the post office at
Greenville. North Carolina,
act of March 1879
FRIDAY, JUNE 1911.
PRAYING FOR
of comment on the streets during
the last few days that in these
ices the preacher prayed that it
might not rain on any tobacco field
before the 15th of June, by which
time, without rain, he expected all
the tobacco plants would die. The
15th of June is nearly here, and there
has not been any rain of consequence
yet.
Greenville does not
need the and those
who do not want to see the Sabbath
desecrated with the carrying on of
such business, should be equally ac-
as are the advocates of the meas-
-o
LADIES SHOULD HE RESPECTED.
Who opposes praying for rain
Bishop of Albany, urged his
clergy and people to pray God to
a joyful rain upon his
and refresh it. since it is
dry, to the great comfort of his
worthy servants, and to the glory
of his And the next day it
News and Observer.
This reminds us of something that
happened in Pitt county some years
ago. It was in the midst of a severe
drought, and at several churches the
people assembled to pray for rain.
In one neighborhood there were two
churches not very far
Baptist and Methodist. The
Primitives gathered one day in their
meeting house and prayed for rain.
It did not rain that day, and they
quite naturally accepted it as so fore-
ordained. A day or two following
this the Methodists met In their
church to pray for rain. Before they
got back home there was rain sure
enough, a regular downpour that
filled ditches and washed away the
bridges.
The following the Prim-
preacher came to town, as he
usually did on Saturdays when he
had no preaching appointment.
Bunches of folks gathered here and
there discussing the big rain and the
condition of crops. A friend who did
not mind joking him said to the
preacher, the Methodists
seemed to beat you on praying for
he answered, just
look what a rain they got. They
ways overdo everything they go
Another thing this calls attention
to is that there is now in Greenville
a tent, on the lot on Fifth street be-
tween and the
School campus in which what are
called preachers have been
holding services every night tar
last few weeks. It has been a sub-
What has become of the manliness
of the men The man who is a gen-
in all that term implies will
lot be unmindful of the feelings of
ladies, nor will he do anything that
will cause them embarrassment One
thing going on in Greenville that is
occasioning much complaint, and
should be stopped at once, is the con-
of men at Five Points, es-
on Sundays, to watch the la-
dies of the Training School as they
pass going to and from church. It is
really like the ladies were having to
run the gauntlet of inspection, and
not a few of them have stayed away
from church on Sundays and remain-
ed in the dormitories at the school
rather than face such embarrass-
The men thus congregating
and watching the ladies pass may be
more due to thoughtlessness than the
intention of being disrespectful. The
ladies are entitled to every respect
and courtesy, and these should be
accorded them, but it is neither res-
nor courteous to congregate
on the street to watch them when they
pass. The real gentleman stands
ready at all times to both respect and
protect an unprotected lady, and the
ladies at the Training School being
without the protection for the time be-
of their fathers and brothers,
makes it more upon the
men of Greenville to accord this. We
believe this mention of the matter
will sufficient to remove the cause
for complaint.
Every time in recent years that
there has been a change in the board
of aldermen of Greenville, there have
been renewed efforts to get repealed
the ordinance relative to business on
Sabbath and permit places sell-
cold drinks, cigars, etc., to have
In view of the be-
ginning of a new fiscal year on the
first of July, when several new
will be on the board, those
wanting the change have already be-
gun an active campaign for the
Mrs. Carrie Nation, who made much
reputation as a and
had quite an eventful career died
Friday night in Kans.
She was as known as any
man in the country, though her
was not the kind that most
women would envy.
Talk about a mixed up affair, or one
that is likely to get mixed in the long
run, a double marriage that took place
in Austin, Texas, Sunday, is it. The
brides were twin sisters, of Texas,
and so much alike that their most in-
friends cannot tell them apart,
while the grooms are twin
of Missouri, and as much
alike as two peas. At the marriage
the brothers were dressed exactly
alike, as were the sisters, and the
only way the latter could be
was by carrying different
colored bouquets. As the brothers
had only known the sisters about a
year, if the two couples live near to-
they may get so mixed up as to
be unable to tell from
A Boston school who has
followed the profession of teaching
for forty-nine years, and in all those
years never landed a man, may
be that she did not want in de-
livering an address to young women
school teachers said that flirting
do much to rest a tired mind after
the arduous duties of the school
Yes, and it sometimes brings
about a state of affairs in which there
is no rest at all.
You do not have to look far to see
that great changes have taken place
in Greenville and in Pitt county in
the last few years. While progress
has been made morally, socially, ed-
and commercially,
cultural has kept even with it,
and farms and country homes have
shown wonderful improvements. And
all this is but the beginning of an
era of progress which the next few
years will show. Just keep your eye
on Pitt county.
The Charlotte News talks like it
wished Editor Caine had smuggled
some of that Asheville booze and took
it over to the press convention at
Lenoir. Why, he couldn't have got
one of the boys to touch it. Every
one of them would call for butter
milk.
.-o-
China is demanding six millions
dollars in gold from Mexico as in-
for the slaughter of about
three hundred Chinese subjects in
that country and the destruction of
their property.
This is a time when it is best to
be careful about what you eat or
drink. The warm weather and
proper food make a combination
dangerous to health.
In Georgia experiments are in
on a cotton plant. The
idea is to develop a cotton plant that
is and bearing bolls filled with
large seed which will be much richer
in oil than the regular plant.
We are not kicking about base ball
enthusiasm, but just suppose the
were as enthusiastic for securing
manufacturing enterprises. There
would be something doing.
Four thousand bottles of liquor, re-
captured in blind tigers, were
emptied into the French Broad river
at Asheville on Wednesday. Guess the
fish all had a spree.
is going to reap a big
harvest off the Americans at the
coronation. and and J.
Johnson will not be the only
there.
Do not be boastful over the man
who appears to be beneath you today.
He may be above you tomorrow.
come often in life.
In a horse hitched to a
brewery wagon bit off the ear of a
man who was standing near on the
street. Another case charged up to
near-beer.
With all Central America about to
become involved in a revolution, there
seems to be little prospect of peace
and rest in the countries south of
us.
The weather makes one feel like
packing his grip and going where it
is cooler. But with most of us, it is
too far to walk.
The last few days have been cool
enough and with sufficient breeze to
make Greenville as delightful as the
seashore.
o---------
They used to call Colonel Bryan
the but the Wash-
Post has changed it to
less
It is rather premature to call a man
the next president, when it is not
even known that he will get the
nomination.
---------o
Even if you should like knocking
better than boosting; people will not
think so much of you doing it.
The way not to have a dead town
is to continue bringing something
alive to it.
Possibly the earthquake down in
Mexico may help some to stop the
disturbance.
It has to be done, whether you
want to or not. So go on and list
your taxes.
They are about to go to the Root
of it in the argument over the
matter.
It takes all kind of people to make
a town, yet every town has some
that are no good to it.
m . .
The fly is ever present, but his room
preferable to his company.
o---------
They had Senator going
to resign some weeks ago, but he
holds right on.
There are other people who might
learn the lesson from Mr. Bryan of
sticking to his job.
J. P. and Jack J. are both there
for the coronation.
Also and
The ice man is one you do not hear
complaining about the weather be-v
warm.
Give us a red head every time In
preference to being bald with so
many flies around.
---------o
The mountains must yet be full of
liquor, if we can judge from the way
they have been finding it in Ashe-
ville and Hendersonville.
A million dollars endowment for
Trinity College sounds good. We
hope it will be a certainty, and that
con.
terminal just opened in Chicago. How
to get there to look at it is the ob-
in the way.
Mr. Roosevelt now says they told
it on him too quick, as he has not
pledged himself to support Mr. Taft
nor any one else for the next
nomination. Oh, well, if any-
body has lied, he should remember
that he once headed the list of the
Club.
If The Greenville Reflector is to be
believed that newly launched Pitt
county fair should be a wonder when
it reaches maturity next fall. Won-
of the Training School girls will
add to the ornamentation of the
Observer.
Yes, they will be right there, and
worth coming miles to see. You need
not put any on about believing
us.
time in local affairs to put the
re-
The Henderson Gold Leaf is
for the
you ever observed how lit-
talent and standing it takes to be
a first class You will find
that in about nine cases out of every
ten the fellow who has accomplished
little for himself and done less for
the community in which he lives is
the one who wants to every-
body and every thing. When you
find that you are just bound to give
vent to your pent up feeling by do-
some get you some
sort of an implement and go to the
field and knock
make but natural the slight over-
sight complained of, Noah, did his
duty as commanded, and he was or-
to preserve rather than destroy.
If the present generation is equally
well there would not be a fly left to
tell the story in a fortnight. It is
useless to attempt to burden down
the shades of the departed
for sins of omission of the pres-
News.
If a man is really opposed to good
roads, he ought to think a long lime
before letting anybody else know he
is in such a back-number class.
If some of the Americans who have
gone over to the coronation could be
kept there, this country would not
lose anything worth speaking of.
When the senators are elected by
the direct vote of the people, they
will be more careful how they vote
on matters affecting the interests of
the people.
A New Jersey shoemaker fell heir
to a quarter million dollars, and
forthwith dropped his last and awl.
Possibly his first investment will be
in an automobile.
It is all fixed now so far as the
Republican nomination for president
is concerned, ex-President Roosevelt
having announced that he will give
his unqualified endorsement to
dent Taft for re-nomination in 1912.
What the colonel says goes.
Indiana must also have some medal
seeking reporters. An item comes
from a town in that state which says
that during a storm a church, filled
with was struck by
lightning and a prayer book held by
a woman was burned out of her
hand.
It was very kind of the Chicago
North Western to send us
a ticket cf admission, with the
vices of a guide promised, to make
an Inspection of its new passenger
Those towns that want to swing
around to Sundays and let
certain lines of business be done on
the Sabbath as on other days, ought
to take a day off and memorize the
Fourth Commandment. Some
men want to do business on
Sunday, but doth it profit a
man if he shall gain the whole world
and lose his own The sight
of a dollar makes some people for-
get that God yet rules the universe.
That awful tragedy in Tarboro,
Wednesday, shows that men in
of trust where the handling of
money belonging to other people is
involved, cannot filch this money and
apply it to their own use without
their misdoings being discovered
sooner or later. When men do such
deeds they not only waste their own
lives, leading to
as with one of the parties in this
case, but they also bring misery and
suffering upon others. Oh. that men
would think of these things and not
permit themselves to be led into acts
of dishonesty.
Even if the is a long one,
keep cheerful. Rain is coming after
a while, and crops will be better than
many anticipate. Nobody hereabouts
is going to starve for the lack of
something to eat. Let the farmers
keep the grass out of their crops, and
the business men hustle for more
business, and the fall will find you
all getting along as well as ever.
Don't waste the time grumbling, but
keep busy.
Mayor Gaynor, of New York, paid
a handsome tribute to the Southern-
who attended the Cotton Seed
convention in that city. In
delivering the address of welcome to
the delegates, he took occasion to
have votes of South-
people, who now live here. Let
me tell you they are the best votes
we have. They have brought with
them the pure political sentiment of
the South. They vote right every
The poor man holds in his power
that which is most important not
only to himself but to the rich man
for he helps himself and makes his
more fortunate neighbor richer with-
out increasing the burden on either
when he votes for good roads. How
is this It is an old tale; we have
told it over and is by the
increase in values caused by good
roads. The bonds voted in every
community for good roads have
never cost a cent, the increase in
valuation have more than paid
Courier.
Would Make a Good Governor.
Ex-Governor Glenn has been ten-
the editorship of a paper to be
established in Texas and asked to
name the salary at which he will take
the place. Should Mr. Glenn decide
to enter the newspaper field North
Carolina would afford him a better
opening than Texas. Reidsville
Weekly.
There is one man essential to the
welfare of this or any other town.
The average every day citizen who
lives within his means, cares little
for social functions or society shin-
who pays his debts, is the man
after all who is helping most to
build up this and every other town.
He is not only the kind of man who
is making this town but he is the
man who will keep it going. This
fellow about whom we are talking is
the salt of the earth. Sometimes
he is a store keeper, a shop hand or
day laborer, sometimes he is a pro-
man. No matter what
his station in life; he is always on
the job and can be depended on.
Asheboro Courier.
A Turtle Years Old.
Four hundred years ago, according
to estimates, Indians, with their crude
fishing devices, might have tried to
catch a large turtle that appeared at
times in the Bay, but it
eluded generation after generation
of red men, white sailors and oyster
fishers until a few days ago, when
it was finally captured and sent to a
fish merchant in Homestead. It will
make soup for persons or more.
The turtle, weighting pounds
and measuring nearly five feet in
across its shell was captured
in the river, near
Md., and created a sensation in that
town. According to the owner, there
are barnacles on its shell.
Post.
Noah Attacked.
The Wilmington Star invades the
realm of forgotten years to shower
forth anathemas upon the head of
Noah for not killing the two flies he
carried with him into the ark.
There are, as the lawyers, say, ex-
which should
weigh with the jury in the case. In
the first place Noah was years old
when he took charge of the Ark, a fact
in itself which should excuse him from
the ignoble task of slaying insects.
Besides, with such a cosmopolitan
jumble of fowls, fishes and beasts on
hand it is but natural that the very
multiplicity of detail work should
The School.
We have been attracted by an
contributed to The Carolina
Union Farmer, by Mr. W. T. Swanson,
describing a model school which he
has discovered at George, on the Tar
river, in county. It
is called a high school and Miss Han-
Starr is the principal. But it
is of the work of Miss Margaret
Brown, an assistant, that Mr. Swan-
son chiefly talks. Miss Brown, he
says, knows what the world, wants,
people who can do things and
do not mind doing them. He tells
us that she has laid off the back
ground of the school plot into thirty-
six gardens, about by feet, and
numbered them. She has left a
narrow walk between the gardens
for the pupils to stand and work.
A narrow walk is laid between the
tiers of the gardens for a passage.
Each of the thirty-six children is
assigned to a garden corresponding
to his or her member on the plat
book. Each pupil is left to choose
such plants as desired, but the teach-
carefully inspects all seeds
brought. The little gardeners are
shown how to fertilize the gardens
with barn manure. The ground was
previously plowed as deep as
stances would permit. The manure
was thoroughly mixed with the soils,
then dug and hoed, till the surface
was as fine and smooth as a salad
bed. Each pupil was required to do
his or her own work. When the
seeds were presented she told the
gardeners how far apart to plant the
seed and how deep to cover them.
She is not a boss, but a mild cheer-
sweet director.
Then there is David H. Brown, a
graduate from the West Town
cultural School of Pennsylvania, who
has charge of the Ear Row Contest
among the large boys. His field lies
still to the rear of the garden de-
The rows are laid off
about as usual. The plat is heavily
manured and well plowed and
rowed. Each boy has his own row.
All of these rows are fertilized with
the fertilizer ingredients just alike.
Each boy chooses his own variety of
seed corn, and the plat is to be
just the same all over. The
same number of stalks are to be left
in each row. Strict account is to
be kept of everything, and the boy
who gets the most, pounds of shelled
corn takes the prize, and of course,
his corn to be considered the best
variety. It seems to us that through
Mr. Swanson, The Carolina Union
Farmer has discovered the model
school. Charlotte Chronicle.





IF HE BUYS
IT WILL BUN THE SOOTH
fAXES ABE IX HIE WEST.
Leave The South Hake
Johnson City, Tenn. June
D. Roberts, of the
city, asks all
Southern people to Bend a copy of
their newspaper to him and
so to J. A. T. Bacon,
States Information Bureau,
Keystone Avenue, Seattle, Washing-
ton, especially when it contains mat-
relating to agricultural
and development in the South,
marking such items. Mr. Roberts
wishes to reprint them in the
and Mr. Bacon will
give them out to people who want to
know about the South.
Ralph A. Parlier, formerly Le-
N. C, writes from Everett,
Washington, as
are extremely high here,
and if get in shape to buy a farm,
it will be in the South. think
Bacon, of Seattle, is exactly right
about people making a mistake com-
here from the South. As he says,
the first sell you land
at from to an acre, and then
it costs to an acre
to put it in shape. This country is
suited for raising only a few things,
such as potatoes, turnips, berries and
garden truck. Wheat raised here is
not used for flour, but for stock feed.
The potatoes we have here are not
as good as those raised in the South.
People who buy land should buy in
the South where everything that
grows can be
WILD IS CALIFORNIA.
The Fly Season.
At about the same period of the
year when it becomes necessary to
begin talking about sane Fourth of
July celebrations, the house fly also
comes up as unfinished business.
The scientific has proved the
qualities of the fly and has
also pointed the way to exterminate
it most effectively. To screen the
doors and windows is good as far as
it goes, and to kill the flies that
in running the and
getting into the house is also good;
but best way is to
Herod by killing the firstborn flies
before they are born. Each
fly travels only a short distance
from the place of his birth, and the
places that serve as hatching
grounds few and easily deter-
mined. Flies are hatched in piles of
refuse and decaying organic matter,
animal or fact, almost
any place that is nasty and offensive
to the senses of people of clean
its. If you keep your premises free
from such material, there will be no
flies in your immediate neighborhood,
and you may be escaping typhoid
and summer complaints and
ills that are in the list of the
harmless little
World-Herald.
Remnant of a Tribe Has Kept Itself
Hidden for Forty Years.
The discovery of the remnant of a
tribe of Indians hiding in a wild and
unsettled portion of county by
scientists from the University of Cal-
has held to the keenest inter-
est among anthropologists, and an
fort is being made to have the gov-
of the United States take
charge of the remaining members.
Prof. A. L. of the depart-
of anthropology of the
of California,
there should be a tribe of en-
wild Indians at this date in so
thickly settled a state as California
seems absolutely incredible.
When the first rumor of the
tamed aborigines in county
reached the University of California,
it was known at once who the Indians
must be if they existed at all, for the
so-called or Mill Creek tribe
of this region had long been regarded
as one of the smallest and at the same
time most unique tribes in California.
But as this band was last seen in
1870, the possibility of their having
been able to keep themselves entirely
hidden for forty years was remote.
expedition headed by T. T.
Waterman, an instructor in the de-
of anthropology was out a
month and whole after the most
kind of work and most vigilant
care they were unable to meet any of
the Indians in person they brought
back evidence which indisputably
proves their existence.
tract which they inhabit is
only a few miles square and an easy
day's journey from Vina on the Shasta
route of the Southern Pacific rail-
road. It is without question the
roughest and most impenetrable
stretch of country in California. The
Indians know every inch of this
As soon as one of their trails
becomes worn they abandon it for
less visible paths. The trails go
brush instead of through it, so
that the Indians do most of their
traveling on hands and knees. This
prevents the stock which occasionally
strays into the region from following
the trails and beating them out.
limbs have to be removed the
Indians cut them with old saws or
knives that they have stolen from
neighboring ranchers, so as to avoid
the sound of chopping with an ax,
which might lead to their being lo-
the country which they inhabit
is absolutely useless even to cattle It
is practically never entered. The few
ranchers that cross the country prefer
to travel around the tract instead
of through Francisco
THE SUNDAY
WILL BE DISCUSSED
AT THE PRATER LEAGUE-
LAW OF COTTON DRAFTS.
SEE J. H. k J. MOTE FOR LA.
muslin under-
wear; best grades at lowest prices
B, ,
The reason a girl can dance all night
without getting tired is she couldn't
handle a broom for ten minutes with-
out breaking down.
The Aldermen Especially Invited to
be Present Sunday.
The Men's Prayer League has
now for about seven months been
holding meetings each Sunday after-
noon, and the good it has done the
men who attend, and through them
the community, has been very
Subjects are announced a
week in advance and three leaders
appointed to open the discussion on
it, others present having the
to speak as they desire. Those
who have attended the meetings have
been impressed with the subjects and
character of these discussions, as
they have been of such trend as to in-
spire and uplift men to a higher life,
making them better Christians and
better citizens.
Quite naturally the members of the
league are interested in matters that
affect the moral well being of the
community, and as just now the
town is threatened with what is call-
ed the Sunday the effort be-
made to get the aldermen to per-
places selling cold drinks, cigars,
etc., to keep open on Sundays and
carry on their business then as on
other days. So the subject selected
for discussion at the league meeting
next Sunday is, the Open Sunday
in Keeping With God's The
text is Exodus with the fol-
lowing references also given for read-
on the Exodus
and Ezekiel and
Matthew John and James
The leaders appointed for this dis-
are Prof. H. E. Austin, Dr. J.
W. Bryan and Mayor F. M.
and many others are expected to take
part In it. The meeting will be held
in the Christian church at
o'clock p. m., and all men of the town
are invited to be present, with special
invitations to the aldermen of both
the present and incoming boards, the
ministers, classes, Sunday
school officers and official members
of the churches. It is intended that
the meeting shall the sentiment
of Greenville on this question.
There was a very good meeting of
the league the past Sunday after-
noon in the Presbyterian church when
the subject was Treasure
The leaders, Messrs. W. J.
Brown, B. S. Warren and B. W.
Moseley, gave splendid talks, as did
also some others who followed them.
Be sure that you read up on the
text and references for next Sunday,
and attend the meeting in the Chris-
church.
Suits Will be Brought Against
for Recovery of Million Dollars.
Pending litigation for the recovery
of money lost as a result of
lent cotton bills of lading is being
watched with much interest by the
Federal Judge Noyes overruling the
demurrer in the case of Anthony .
Hanny against the Guaranty Tr;
Company has alarmed some of
foreign exchange men; while the
by the appellate division
the lower court's decision in
suit against the Hanover
Bank, holding the bank
liable, has had the effect of
bankers feel that there is little ch
of their being compelled to n
good the losses sustained by the
of the drafts accompanied
the spurious bills of lading. As
matter of fact, the banks do
know exactly where they stand, a.
in the event that Judge r
is sustained by the higher
it is expected that they will
obliged make drafts
several millions of
Both the Springs suit and the Hi
nay suit were test cases, the fort
having been brought in the
court and the latter in the Fed
court. Inasmuch as the
the appellate division in the
suit was unanimous, an appeal c
not be taken unless permission s
granted. Should it be refused,
decision rendered last Friday t
stand as the law of New York st
The draft in this case was a l
and it made no reference
the bills of lading; and the
held that Springs Co.
it, they became obliged
pay according to the
New York Journal of Commerce.
TO SEW YORK
And Return By The Atlantic Coast
Line.
On Thursday, June 15th, the Atlantic
Coast Line will sell round trip tick-
from Greenville to New York and
return, either via all rail, through
Richmond and Washington, or via
Norfolk and Old Dominion S. S. Co.,
for limited to return June
Rate for children between the
ages of five and twelve years will be
For Pullman and steamship
accommodations, call on W. H. Ward,
ticket agent, or T. C. White, general
passenger agent, Wilmington, N. C,
or W. J. Craig, traffic man-
ager, Wilmington, N. C.
Let Them Talk.
Some folks are kicking because
Woodrow Wilson is going around the
country making speeches. Gracious
If the man would sit down and keep
a still tongue we'd never know what's
in him. The country wants to know
right now what all the presidential
timber stands for, and, if the gentle-
men can afford to talk, it's for the
people to listen and them up by
what hey say. That's the way we
found out a whole lot of things on
Col. Bryan, Col. Roosevelt, Judge
Taft and Captain
ton Star.
Why Dread Typhoid I
Secretary Stimson has set a
example to the army by having h
self vaccinated against typhoid
All the officers and men of the p
maneuver camps have been
with the result that an
them typhoid the dreaded dis.
of entirely abs
It is sad to think how th.,.
sands of sick American soldiers and
how many hundreds of deaths
have been saved if this new
had been available at the t
of the Spanish war. A
proportion of the army is now
against typhoid, and the t
general has recommended
vaccination be made compulsory
all.
What is good for the
health is good for the civilian's
well. Typhoid vaccine prepared
reliable firms under
supervision is now on the mar.
The three injections at about ten-
intervals cause very slight
some people experiencing only a
local soreness or stiffness. Then
no sore, no bandage or anything
the kind beyond, in most cases, a
or two of fever for twenty-i
hours and the naturally
but not incapacitating effects.
immunity, which is not absolute
very but absolute as
for about th
years. A number of Charlotte
pie have already been
against typhoid, and we hope t
many others here and .
will have their doctors
them without
server.
FOR HEAVY YOKE OF
and nearly new cart. G. T.
Tyson. R. F. D.
Legal Notices g L. I -CROSS TOE ST
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Letters of administration upon the
estate cf J. J. Smith, deceased, j
this day been issued to the under- i
signed by the clerk of Superior court
of Pitt county, notice is hereby given
to all persons holding claims against I
said estate to present them to me j
for payment, duly authenticated, on
or the 4th day of May, 1912,
or this notice will be plead in bar
of their recovery. All persons in-
to said estate are urged to
make immediate payment to me.
This the 3rd day of May. 1911
THERESA SMITH,
Administratrix of estate of J. J. Smith
deceased.
Jarvis Blow,
ENTRY OF VACANT
State of North Carolina,
Pitt County.
A. A. Smith enters and claims the
following piece or of land, sit-
in the county of Pitt, Swift Creek
township, described at.
Beginning at a sweet gum, near the
run of Swift Creek, it being the
of J. G. and J. J.
Moore, and runs to a water
oak, J. B. Smith's corner; thence
southward to J. B. Smiths corner in
the run of Swift Creek; with
the run of Swift to the begin-
containing eight more or
less.
This June 1911.
A. A. SMITH.
Any and all persons claim title
to or interest in the above described
land must tile with the protest
in writing, within the next days,
or they will be barred by law.
This June 1911.
W. M. MOORE,
Ex-officio Entry Taker.
SCHEDULE
leave effective Jan-
g,
YEAR HOUND
a. Atlanta, Birmingham
Memphis and points West,
and Florida points,
at Hamlet for Charlotte and
Wilmington.
SEABOARD MAIL. No.
wit i coaches and parlor car. Con-
with steamer for Washing-
. Baltimore, New York, Boston
FAST MAIL--No.
m. For Richmond, Wash-;
g. in York Pullman
J coaches and dining car.
pi u at Richmond with C.
and points West.
. . with Pennsylvania
. and for
i. . I
MAIL No.
i. n. Atlanta, Charlotte,
Memphis,
i West Parlor cars to
kM
Start
IT NOW
War
-4
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having this day been appointed and
qualified by the clerk of the Superior
court of Pitt county, as
tor, with the will annexed, of Flor-
E. Home, notice is
hereby given to all persons holding
claims against the estate of said
Florence E. Home to present them,
duly authenticated, to me for pay-
on or before the 2nd day of
June, 1912, or this will be plead
in bar of their recovery. All per-
sons indebted to said estate are also
hereby notified to make immediate
payment to me.
This the 31st day of May, 1911.
E. A
Administrator, with the will annexed,
of Florence E. Home, deceased.
Jarvis Blow,
ii No. for
Oxford, and
. No. for
. . . and points West, Jack-
and all Florida points.
i sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
. a in.
, Arrives a. m.
a. m. New York
p. m. Penn. station. Pullman
to Washington and New
York.
I. B. OS P. A., Portsmouth, Va.
II. D. P. A Raleigh, X. C.
A. D. Brown, President of Hie Hamilton-Brown Shoe St.
and Boston, clerked when he was a hoy. He saved his money
He bought U Interest in his old employers store. He Is now worth
millions. Thousands of men work for him .
Make Hank Bank.
THE BANK OF
J. s. MOORING
POPULAR EXCURSION.
To Norfolk, Va Thursday June
via Southern
From Goldsboro, Beaufort, New
Bern, Washington, and intermediate
stations, the Norfolk Southern rail-
road will give greatly reduced rates
to Norfolk, on Thursday June 1911.
Following is the schedule and
Fare.
SALE OF PROPERTY.
On Saturday, the 24th day of June,
1911, at o'clock noon, before the
court house door in Greenville, the
undersigned will expose to public
sale, all the property of the
Company, consisting of chairs, tables,
desk, bottles and extracts, together
with the right to make, sell and man-
This sale will be
made for the purpose of closing out
the business formerly con-
ducted by the Company.
This the 31st day of May, 1911.
J. W. HIGGS,
Secretary and Treasurer of the
Company.
By F. C. Harding,
From Schedule.
Goldsboro a. m.
LaGrange 7.25 a. m.
Kinston . a. m.
General Merchandise
i O
I i
C. L. but
Life, Fire, Accident, Health, Steam Plate Glass,
Liability, Burglary, Fidelity and Court Bonds.
The Only Exclusive Insurance Agent in Greenville
COMMISSIONER REPORT.
Beaufort
New Bern
Vanceboro
Farmville
Greenville
Washington
ABOUT TELEPHONING.
3.00
3.00
3.50
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
2.50
And a fertile imagination may pro-
duce nothing but weeds.
Why Stop Two People To Answer A
Call.
We have often wondered why
in using the telephone do not give
their message to the person who
answers the call. In a large major-
of cases this could be done
but instead of this the
person who answers the call is apt
to be asked if another person is in,
that other person has to be called
a. in. .
a. m. .
a. m.
a. m. .
a. m. .,
. a. m. .,
Arrive Norfolk p. m.
Returning, special train leave
Norfolk at a. m., June 17th,
1911.
R. E. PIPKIN. F. W.
Promoter. General Agent.
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
W. W.
G. P. A., Norfolk, Virginia.
to the phone, and thus two people
are stopped from their business to
do what one could have done in half
the time. This may seem
cant to some people, but It means u
great deal to people who are busy.
Be considerate of the other fellow
when you use a phone, and have in
mind to put the person called to as
little inconvenience as possible, just
as you would like for others to do
when you are the one called.
Sums Saved to State by Salary
System
State Insurance Commissioner J.
R. Young is now preparing his report
and in it he treats of the matter
of revenue. In his report it is shown
that since the department was formed
in 1899 there has been collected and
paid into the state treasury a total
of
But the point in his report that is
more striking than this, is that it is
that great sums have been
saved to the state by the salary sys-
which would otherwise have gone
to individuals by the fee system. In
the report the astonishing statement
is made that since under the
fee system, there would have been
paid out for the
of insurance companies, or an
average of each year. Com-
missioner Young in his report says
amount before the salary sys-
supplanted the fee system, would
have gone into the office of the sec-
of the state and that it would
have paid in more than the total cost
it the department, including all
and other expenses.
The revenue section of the report
to what a large amount the
of Insurance companies
n North Carolina has grown. In
the receipts were
In 1910-1911 they had been multiplied
per showing a total of
And without the fee system
there would each year have gone great
for transacting the business.
The amount collected for the year
prior to the organization of the de-
was It
is also worthy of note, as of interest
showing one of the advantages of
the department, that there has been
collected and paid into the state treas-
of the amount that would have
under the old law gone to the
of state as his fees or
for supervising insurance com-
the sum of This
shows an average of an-
and more than the total cost
of the department, all
and other
Landmark.
If a man has nothing to do, he Is
always equal to the task.
POOR PRINT





inn i.
Carolina Home Farm n The Eastern Reflector.
H.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
SEW DORMITORY FOR to 7th verse.
The saw mill machinery, lumber,
married Mr. Sylvester Garris.
Mr. R. H. Garris, of Ayden, has
purchased a four passenger Overland
touring car.
Messrs. J. R. Turnage and A. E.
Garris returned about noon today
with a handsome touring car for Mr.
R. H. Garris, which is the first one
bought in our neighborhood.
Excursionists Return Former
Referred to The Scriptures.
Ayden, N. C, June Odd
Fellows officers for the ensuing term
G. F. Cooper, X. G.
Dr. W. H. Dixon, V. G.
E. A. Garris, Sec.
H. G. Burton, Fin. Sec.
J. R. Smith, Treas.
Forest fires are burning in the
community of Elm Grove church.
A protracted meeting is now in
progress at the Methodist church.
Rev. Mr. Hocutt, of Hookerton, is
assisting Mr. Caraway. We hope
much good may result from this meet-
Messrs. W. B. Alexander. Leon
J. A. Harrington, Richard
Wingate and Jesse Hart have all re-
turned from Florida. They report a
pleasant, hot and dusty trip, also that
ham sandwiches were cents, shaves
cents, coca-colas cents per
glass. Mr. Wingate was taken sick
and did not go any further than
Jacksonville. They stopped over at
Savannah and saw Jake and
John L. Sullivan fight three rounds
according to rules.
There must be a prophet at More-
head, Mr. W. F. Hart writes that he
went out fishing and landed trout
weighing pounds each. At the same
time his lantern fell over board. He
reported this to a fellow fisherman
and the next day his friend was trawl-
along and thinking he was
a fine and upon
found it to be the lost lantern
Read the 6th chapter of 2nd Kings,
log carts, etc., of Mr. W. J. Braxton,
were burned Saturday evening and
was a total loss. This makes the
second time this mill plant has been
burned recently.
The trustees of the Baptist Semi-
nary have let the contract to Mr. J.
A. Griffin to build a dormitory, which
will be up to date and contain about
rooms. They also contemplate
overhauling the present school build-
making it much larger and more
convenient.
We claim that North Carolina
troops were the first at Bethel, fur-
at Gettysburg and the last to
lay down their arms at
This, no doubt, is true. We have re-
a letter from Sergeant
showing the people of Ayden and Pitt
county what metal Robert Lester
Jones is made of. This letter will
speak for itself. This is the same
young man who distinguished him-
self a few months ago, by saving a
town from a destructive fire. This
young officer is the son of Mr. Monk
Jones, who once lived near
ton's Cross Roads.
The game of ball with Bethel Fri-
day was a farce, Ayden winning by the
score of to The feature of the
game was the home run of for
Ayden.
Mrs. Pennie Garris, mother of Mr.
A. B. Garris, fell a few days ago and
sustained injuries from which she
died yesterday. She was buried to-
day at Memorial church. Rev.
E. T. Phillips conducted the
She was a Miss Kittrell, and
Ode To A Street Sprinkler.
Sprinkle, sprinkle, little cart,
How I wonder where thou art,
When the dust is high and dry,
Xever can I find you nigh.
When the clouded sun is set.
And the streets with rain are wet,
Then you wing your little flight;
Sprinkle, sprinkle, left and right.
Boston Transcript.
RIVER STAGE AND
Figures Snowing The Condition of
Both Here.
Mr. R. M. Hearne, who is the gov-
observer of the river and
rain fall for this point, has furnish-
ed The Reflector some interesting
figures.
On Monday, the water in Tar
river stood at 2.9, the lowest level
reached this year.
The rainfall on the 12th was
Between June 1st and 12th the fall
had been making a total of only
less than half an for
the twelve days. During the month
of May it was 1.50.
The government thermometer on
Monday registered in the shade
on the north side of the house, the
highest record so far this year.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N.
In the State of North Carolina, at the of business, June 1911.
stock paid in . .
Banking House, profits, less
expenses and
Demand loans
Due from banks and subject to
Silver coin, including
minor coin currency
Bank notes
other U. S. notes . Total
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I, Stancill Hodges, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
STANCILL HODGES, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me,
this 10th day of June, 1911.
D. G. BERRY,
Notary Public.
My commission expires February
1911.
J. R. SMITH,
ELIAS TURNAGE,
R. C. CANNON,.
Directors.
Let Us Have Your Order
NITRATE OF SODA. PRICES ARE
TEED. WE HAVE JUST UNLOADED TWO
CARS OF FARM MACHINERY. TERMS TO
SUIT THE PURCHASER.
The Carolina Route and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
NOW IN FULL BAST
AT
LARGE ARRIVAL OF GUESTS.
Seat Compliment To A North Caro-
Girl.
Beach, June
the arrival of some guests who
have made reservations at the Sea-
shore Hotel, as well as a number of
others who came to spend week-end
at the beach, the realization that the
summer season is upon us has been
brought to our minds, and as of yore,
the surf is dotted with bathers, while
the Banks Channel is once more
alive with pretty little sail boats,
launches, etc., the whole scene being
one of pleasure and society.
The past week has been marked
by many fishing and sailing parties,
notable among these being a fishing
party given by Judge R. B. Peebles,
at which time several gentlemen par-
took of his hospitality to enjoy a
few hours on the briny deep,
in the fine sport of deep sea fish-
Among the guests was Mr. W.
C. Carrington, of who
for several seasons past has been one
of the most, ardent sportsmen, and one
who each year visits the Seashore
Hotel, from time to time during the
season. The party went out in the
and the occasion was
greatly enjoyed by all present.
One of the most pleasing features
of the music at the Seashore Hotel
last evening was the rendition of
Sweetest Girl in which
catchy little song came out some
years ago, when it was dedicated to
Miss Pearl Fort, of Pikeville, and
which was most beautifully rendered
by Miss Tully, one of the members
of the orchestra at the Seashore.
Miss Tully sang this song in
to Col. W. B. Fort, of- Pikeville,
who is well and favorably known
throughout this state, and who is a
most welcome guest at the Seashore
Hotel. Miss Fort is the attractive
daughter of Col. Fort, and the little
compliment was greatly appreciated
by him, while the splendid music
furnished by the orchestra was much
enjoyed by all who were present.
A large crowd of
as well as practically all of the guests
on the beach attended the beautiful
week-end dance at on
day evening, when
did orchestra furnished most
site dance music, and all things
tended to make this one of the most
delightful dances of the early sum-
mer season.
Wrightsville Beach, June
of the most delightful dances in the
history of took on
Monday when the Tidewater
Power Co. entertained in honor of
the little folks, they being given the
exclusive use of the ball room, until
nine o'clock, when the grand march
was formed, and attractive souvenirs
were presented to the children, these
being little sail boats, full rigged, and
It is unnecessary to say that the
children were greatly pleased.
Another delightful dance took place
at on Tuesday evening, when
the grown folks were also given a
souvenir dance by the Tidewater Co.,
at which time many guests from the
city, as well as the visitors and
dents of the beach availed themselves
of the opportunity to spend a delight-
evening at this splendid resort.
One the most successful and at
the same time one of the most enjoy-
able fishing parties of the season
was given on Monday, when a party
of gentlemen, guests of the Seashore
Hotel, went out in the sharpie
to the Five Mile Rocks,
where several hours were spent in
deep sea fishing. Those in the party
were as Mr. E. Reeves, of
New York; Mr. W. C. Carrington, of
S. C; Mr. M. F.
of Concord, and several others. Be-
tween and members of the
finny tribe were lauded, and the fish-
are enthusiastic over the
of their trip.
Residents of the beach are glad to
learn that a large number of
will visit here on June 28th,
when an excursion will be run from
Atlanta, in two sections, one solid
section of sleepers and one of coach-
es. The trip will be for a ten-day
visit to Wrightsville, and it is es-
that there will be between
1200 and 1500 Georgians who will take
advantage of this splendid
to visit Wrightsville Beach.
Mr. S. S. Lanier, of Birmingham,
Ala., entertained about guests in
the private dining room of the Sea-
shore Hotel, at a very delightful din-
a few days ago, given
to the representatives of
the various coal companies register-
ed at this popular These
gentlemen are here trying to secure
the contracts for coal for the A. C.
R. Railroad Company. The dinner
was greatly enjoyed by all present,
and is but one of the many pleasant
social functions which will be given
at Wrightsville Beach, from time to
time, throughout the season.
GALLOWAY'S X ROADS
The Happenings Down in
Township.
Galloway's X Roads, June
Mr. Caraway filled his regular
at Salem Sunday afternoon.
The farmers say their crops are
suffering much for the need of rain,
especially tobacco.
Mr. J. C. Galloway made a trip over
to Hookerton Friday. He also attend-
ed the meeting of the Union
Saturday at Farmville.
Mr. Charlie Elks, one of our old
home boys, who has been at work in
South Carolina, returned last week.
We are glad to have him with us again
Mr. M. C. Tyson is all
a boy.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hudson and
daughter, Miss Maggie, attended
church at Red Banks Sunday.
Mr. G. S. Porter went to Greenville
Monday.
Mr. H. H. Porter was all smiles
today. He was driving his new bug-
Mr. G. S. Porter says his screen
doors are proving to be right much
benefit to his soda fountain.
Messrs. Mason Edwards and
Cannon say they like to work in a
store as long as they have the pleas-
of waiting on so many pretty
girls.
Favorite Songs.
Mr. Than
Mr.
Mr. and Over
Mr. Your Sins
Be As
Mr. for a Thous-
and
Mr. The Sweet By and
Mr.
FOB
Gen. A. F. Haw of Washing-
ton, D. C, have
and find It very beneficial
for kidney trouble, and especially
good for
coughs, colds
and catarrh
Gen. A. f.
Hawley.
Kidney Trouble for Nearly Thirty Years.
William Bailey, Past Col. Enc. No. Union Veteran Legion, and prom
identified with many of great labor protective associations in
Chicago and New York, and secretary of one of the largest associations
in the former city, had for nearly thirty years been with kidney
troubles.
Within a short period ho has been persuaded to try and his
present healthy condition is attributed to his judicious use of that great
remedy. Washington climate is notoriously bad for kidney and liver
troubles, yet by a judicious use of the remedy ho is now quite cured and in
excellent physical condition.
This brief statement of facts, without exaggeration or hyperbole, appears
to toll the whole story, which the Company is authorized to use, if
it so chooses, believing, as I do, that by so doing it will for the general
good. William Bailey, I St., N. E., Washington, D.
Kidneys Weak.
Mr. M. Broderick, Secretary and
Treasurer Local Union No. Inter-
national Brotherhood of Teamsters,
writes from E. 46th St., Chicago, HI.,
as
have been suffering from a weak
back and kidney trouble for some time,
and have been able to find relief only
through the use of
the season I usually
keep a bottle of your medicine in the
house, and by taking a at night I
am feeling the next morning.
of my friends assure mo that
is equally as good for var-
ailments as it is for my complaint;
but I do know that for kidney trouble
and suffering from a weak back it has
no
Cold Settled in Kidneys.
Mr. Joseph East 4th St.,
Topeka, Em.,
My wife took for liver trouble
and a run-down condition incident to
the same. A few bottles built up her
health and strength.
took for a cold which set-
in my kidneys, giving me much
pain. In two weeks I was much better,
and in a few months I was
For Liver and Kid
Mr. W. H. Armistead, Cumberland,
C. II., Va.,
has cured m of chronic
catarrh of long standing. I thank you
much for your advice. I think it is
a great medicine. It will do ail that
you recommend it to do. Besides, I can
recommend it to all liver kid-
Chronic Kidney Trouble,
Judge O. J. Park, It. F. D.
Ga.,
For a long time I was troubled with
catarrh of the kidneys, and after taking
I feel like a new man. I think
it the greatest catarrh medicine of the
and believe it will any case of
catarrh on
ITEMS.
Crops, Items Personal
Notes
N. C, June L.
B. Stokes went to Ayden Friday morn-
It is down this way.
Tobacco is small and a poor stand,
dome cotton is nice, while some is
not up to chop.
Mr. John D. Stokes, who has been
quite sicK, is able to be out again,
Mr. and Mrs. Stokes spent
Saturday and Sunday with relatives
down in Craven.
Mr. of Ayden,
spent Thursday night here.
We boast of having as good public
roads as any section in the county.
But they certainly need sprinkling
occasionally in this dry weather.
Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Stokes went to
Saturday to visit
and returned Sunday.
Mr. Jack and family from near
Simpson, spent Saturday night and
Sunday at Mr. D. C.
We had a large crowd at Sunday
school Sunday afternoon.
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION
Society Christian Endeavor,
July
On account of the above occasion,
the Atlantic Coast Line will sell round
trip tickets on July and from
Greenville to Atlantic City at
with return limit July but tickets
may be extended to August by
depositing with joint agent and pay-
of
For further particulars, schedules,
reservations, etc., apply to W. H.
Ward, ticket agent, Greenville, N.
or address T. C. White, general pas-
agent; W. J. Craig. Passenger
manager, Wilmington, N. C.
Try An Advertisement.
If the merchants would do more
advertising, they would find
better, even if it is the dull
time of year. When people do not
have much to spend they are on the
lookout to invest it to the best ad-
vantage, and the advertiser who holds
out the best inducements to them will
get this trade.





rum
COMING BUCK
TO SOUTHERN STATES
; MOVEMENT
iii From Scattered
Wasting to
S. June
all over the are
; letters from Southern
i and Northwest, which
who are coining back
me The secretary of
Association, W.
Johnson City, Tenn.,
i several gathering
addresses of people who have
g i e west. Me says Inquiries
i in lands for rates are x
rate of fifty a day. most
i from former Southern people
i of them, lie says, requests
be given to their ft
. sections of Went
of and boards
trade in the South are
In this movement. Ev
mail to the West Carries
Is of letters and pieces Of
which set forth the
of this country and a direct
e appeal to its natives to come
back to their own home Eve
women are at work; mothers i
writing to their children and
lo brothers, all telling of the
great development of the South.
On the first of July the
Association will begin pub-
an organ for circulation
among the million of Southerners in
other states. It will he called the
Magazine. An announcement
of it sent to the West has brought a
great many requests for copies.
HELPFUL WORDS.
From A Greenville Citizen. .
Is your hack lame and painful.
Does it ache especially after
Is there any soreness in the kidney
region
These symptoms indicate weak kid-
There is danger In delay.
Weak kidneys fast get weaker.
Give your trouble prompt
Kidney Pills act quickly.
They strengthen weak kidneys,
cad this Greenville testimony.
J. Perkins, Fourth St.,
N. C, says, am confident that
Kidney Pills are a good
i e. medicine and I feel justified in
them. My supply was
obtained from the John L. Wooten
Company, and the result of their
bowed that they can be relied
to bring relief from kidney com-
sale by all dealers. Price
iV Co., Buffalo,
sole agents for the United
, the name
other.
gasoline engine, one Bell
Threshing machine, practically
B, Turnage Sons, Ayden.
or ti doses will cure any
Of Chills and Fever. Price.
Life without love is like a good din-
without an
We Said of That Cause
Disease.
M. Pasteur, called the
Greatest Physician often said be-
that we shall one day rid the
world of all diseases that is caused
by
Of all the diseases caused by germs
catarrh is one of the most persistent
and loathsome. Catarrh can be
cured, but only by destroying the
germs.
Breathe it
and cure catarrh by kill-
the germs. The
is the only sensible method, be-
c u e you breathe the highly anti-
septic and germ killing air directly
over the entire membrane infested
with catarrh germs.
will cure catarrh.
1.1. be tome cases where
but the chances are ten
to one in its favor, and the sufferer
catarrh takes no risk, because
. a guaranteed remedy, and
I doesn't cure Store
II refund the purchase price.
will also give instant re-
lief and cure in bronchitis, coughs,
and A outfit,
eluding bard rubber pocket inhaler,
costs only If you now own a
Inhaler you can get a bottle
of for cents.
Long of New Ones The
Week.
For the week ending 7th, the
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the
following new industries for North
Alia wood
company.
company;
railroad company;
construction company.
Bessemer cotton mill
mine.
casket factory.
peanut factory
bottling works.
company.
Hobgood brick and build-
company.
hotel company.
warehouse com-
pump
company.
Wilmington. quarry.
Stale liar
The thirteenth annual meeting of
the North Carolina Bar Association
will be held at Lake June
18th to 30th. Addresses will be made
by Hon. J. S. Manning, of Durham;
Hon. J. J. Britt, of Washington, D.
Ci Hon. Martin W. Littleton, of New
York and Hon. T. M. Pittman, of
Henderson. Col. Harry Skinner, of
is chairman of the ex-
committee and secretary of
the memorial committee, for both of
which lie will present the annual re-
port.
Public Stenographer.
Miss Lucille Tripp has opened a
public stenographer's office in The
Reflector Those desiring
her services can call at the office or
phone number
ST RECEIVED TWO CAB LOADS
it .;.; .; soda. Can your
Prices E. Turn-
Sons Ayden
That will please you are printers
that know their business and this
shop is complete in this line.
I The Reflector Co.
and Porch Screens
-inn,, J You have only to telephone
us your order for that Ham-
mock and Porch Screen you
have been neglecting to get
time end we will
send them right to you. June
it here and July will soon fol-
low so you can't put off your
order any longer Just
yourself lying back in
one of these nice hammocks
on front porch protected from the glare of the street by one of our new and
improved porch screens. You can see the passers but the passers can't she you, thus
protected, and can enjoy a sweet rest in tee cool. COME TO SEE US
Taft VanDyke Phone
Why be to The Beaufort
Ample Hotel Accommodations.
Now Has
THE INLET INN
BEAUFORT, CAROLINA
Announces that it has added new additional bedrooms,
with a sea view and new furniture, new felt mattresses; an up-to-
date 50-room hotel, with every room in the house an outside room
and every room with a sea view, except three; a large lobby, new
parlor, additional and spacious verandas, all modern con-
artesian water; faces Atlantic Ocean. Most delightful
spot on the coast to spend your summer. Write and secure rooms
for summer. and up; weekly, and up. Special
rates for families and parties.
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair
Work, and Flues in Season, See
J. J. JENKINS
Greenville. N. C.
The Home of Women's Fashions
Pulley
Greenville,
North Carolina
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
in
health
Organization of Sanitary Clubs
Urged
INSURANCE MEN INTERESTED
of a Report on The Present
Condition of Thirty-Two
Cities Prepared by Hi-
J. Messenger, A. s., Actuary
the Travelers Insurance Com-
my, Hartford, Conn.
York, June at least
per cent, of the population in
cities of this country equipped
good water supply systems main-
use well water that is subject to
was stated in a re-
rt of a special investigation of the
condition of thirty-two Amer-
submitted to the
of Life Insurance Presidents to-
by Hiram J. Messenger, actuary,
Hartford, Conn. In cities with
systems the population living
unconnected with sewers
en at about forty per cent.
investigated are with one
two exceptions in the South and
West, and are as
Roanoke, Knoxville, Chat-
Nashville, Louisville,
Indianapolis, Bloomington,
St. Louis, Memphis, Lit-
Rock, Vicksburg, New Orleans,
Montgomery, Birmingham, At-
Macon, Jacksonville, St. Au-
Charleston, Au-
Columbia, Charlotte, Danville,
New York and Hartford,
n addition to water supply and
systems, the principal points
covered disposal of garb-
inspection of milk, meats and
provisions; board of health
for maintaining sanitary
laboratory equipment and
of the department of
climatic conditions; location of
and natural character of
country; character of city
character of people,
ti special reference as to whether
not they appreciate the importance
maintaining proper health
Is and whether or not there is a
public that can
j brought to bear upon the city
in regard to such
evidence found practically
through the
showed that there
been a most wonderful improve-
t in the general sanitary
i during the last ten or twenty
states the report, in
South in proportion to their
, as a rule, are spending as
money in improvements affect-
e general health of the city as
e North,
was found that as a rule most
pities visited had a fairly good
pf city water. The important
n in regard to the city water
Is not so much the character
water furnished by the city
systems, but the extent to
the inhabitants use the city
and the extent to which they
use of some other source of
regard to the disposal of garb-
conditions in most cities were
unsatisfactory. The most sanitary
way of of garbage is prob-
ably to burn it. About half a dozen
of the cities investigated had
plants and as a rule these
plants were working in a reasonably
satisfactory if they
were not it was generally because
the work of collecting the garbage
for burning was subject to political
influences with unfavorable results.
In the great majority of the
garbage dumped on vacant hits,
frequently within the city limits and
sometimes not far from the heart of
the city.
for inspection of milk,
meats and perishable provisions were
quite general, and it is clear that
they are being enforced with
effectiveness every year; but
work of this kind depends
mainly upon three
from political control, a competent
and particularly a courageous board
of health and a strong public
ion in favor of thorough enforcement
of the work.
a large city in the South one
of the great public markets was vis-
and the conditions were simply
revolting. Great quantities of meat,
vegetables and more or less over-
ripe fruit were displayed in an open
market extending for two blocks,
with no kind of protection for the
perishable provisions. Never were
such swarms of flies seen before. In
one case a big piece of meat was so
covered with flies that it was really
difficult to make out what it was.
Fortunately, a movement is on foot
to have this market done away with.
All public markets of the kind ought
to be abolished. It is impossible to
maintain sanitary conditions as
long as such things
The report urged the organization
of sanitary clubs in every city in the
country and it was suggested that the
Association of Life Insurance
dents take the lead in this work
through its agents, medical
and other representatives in
communities.
THE BEAUTIES OF
EASTERN CAROLINA
ALONG HISTORIC
The Great
of Nature
NEW STYLES IN
and oxfords; all
leathers, Just arrived. J. R. J. G.
A woman feels her superiority
when a man refuses to argue with
her.
NEW LINE GOODS AND
silks; new styles at J. R. J. G.
There are two choices of what to
with your is to waste it
and the other to lose it.
It takes a real estate promoter to
make a mountain out of a molehill.
Wins Eight Life.
It was a long and bloody battle for
life that was waged by James D.
of Newark, N. J., of which
he lost much blood
from lung hemorrhages, and was
weak and rundown. For eight months
I was unable to work. Death seemed
close on my heels, when I began,
three weeks ago, to use Dr. King's
New Discovery- But it has helped
me greatly. It is doing all that you
For weak, sore lungs, ob-
coughs, stubborn colds,
hoarseness, la grippe, asthma, hay-
fever or any throat or lung trouble
its supreme. and Trial bot-
free. Guaranteed by all drug-
gists.
Handiwork
Displayed.
Hanrahan N. C., June 1911.
I have watched her with peculiar
admiration and intensified
from where she merges into the Trent
near that historic though not very
progressive old town of New Bern.
And I don't wonder that her people
are not as progressive commercially
as are sonic others, when I
plate the sublime grandeur and
luring beauties of nature that her
people daily and hourly behold. Yes,
I have watched the old Neuse from
there to near her fountain head, and
I have yet to see one spot along her
banks and in her channel that failed
to enrapture me with the one thought
of God's great love to man and all
of His creation. I have watched on
her north side the fertile land with
abundant crops of cotton, corn and
golden grain. I have gazed upon her
stately oaks hung with that long gray
moss as they seemed to typify
strength and love, wrestling beneath
and even supporting old age. I have
watched her wild flowers and clinging
roses, seemingly planted to cheer the
lonely boatman who away from home,
wife and children, guides
his boat that carries our commerce.
I have watched her southern banks
with little lowlands and far from the
fertility of soil; having running
most parallel with her channel and
about one mile from her banks, from
seashore to well up towards her
source, a belt of sand bearing only
small black jacks and wire grass, but
here and there and not separated by
much space the yellow
vine, it seems as are the
foot prints on the sands of time to
cheer a forlorn and perhaps a fallen
traveler, who seeing might take
age and go on. But of all the beau-
spots that I have seen situated
on this or any other river, is the one
about mid way between Goldsboro
and Kinston and half a mile above
the little village of White Hall, made
historic by one battle during the Civil
war. On the north spreads out that
fertile valley, and on its south bank
is a range of hills scattered here and
there, but just at this spot are seven
of these looming up from its bank
and seemingly purposely arranged in
a half circle as if placed there for
eternal vigilance to keep with a strict
injunction to ever watch and never
to sleep, and guard with safety the
same number of springs that find
their source in your bosom and send
their life giving waters from your
feet to mingle a few yards distant
with the somewhat red waters of the
Neuse lest some one bent with years
and wrecked with life's burdens and
financial or other cares, should slip
in, drink and be made young again,
and thereby be cheated out of heaven
for many years.
three miles north of this spot
and on that sand belt, that this
first saw the light, heard the
chickens cackle and crow, and the
birds warble out their sweetest lays.
must digress just here to say,
that it was here the banks and
on the same side of this river, about
miles east of there, and in a spot
almost as beautiful as is that at
en Springs, where born and
reared a of beauty, love and
force. So powerful was her brow
and keen the arrow that when it was
aimed at our worthy superintendent
its force and cutting point went
Straight to his venerable heart Per-
haps this accounts for his great love,
well guided zeal, fatherly devotion
and never flagging energy for the up-
lift of all the people, and especially
those of Pitt. It takes deep sorrow
and keen disappointments to bring
out the best there is in a great and
good man. This b learned our
professor another lesson, that a man
does not have to ride in the finest
dire at the most costly
hotels, and make the greatest display
to win that love that worthy of his
bestowal, but by riding in whatever
is most convenient, or going on foot
if needs yes. and eating and sleep-
big in some of the most humble
homes, doing anything In any way
for God that he has won the highest
regards of not one, but of all the
people. So the hand of Providence
was guiding it professor, and what
was her great loss been our
state's and Pitt county's eternal gain.
Be
N. my last your printer made
me say, back the god of man, instead
of the god of wine; and,
thy brim have passed instead of have
pressed.
Write your copy a little
and plainer, and the printer can
it
Kills Took Coin Prom Holes.
On Shylock's principle, take
my life when you take the means
whereby I rats came very
near eating up Mr. J. L.
mules on farm, five miles
south of town. For some time he
had been noticing that his mules
were falling off more rapidly than
they should have, even in work time
and hot weather. One day last week
he discovered the cause, which was
nothing i than the rats were eat-
the n which he fed to the
mules, literally robbing them of
their meals. By watching he found
that the rats, which were of
size, swarmed out as soon as
lie had put the corn in the box for
the mules and left the stable, and
dragged the whole ears away to
their hiding places and devoured it.
He them carrying it off and
he also found an immense pile of
cobs hidden away under the barn,
where they had devoured it. He
lost no time in setting upon the
rats and smote them with clubs,
dogs and even a shot gun. After
the slaughter he found that
had been killed. Fortunately his
crib was rat-proof, or he would have
had no corn to feed the mules in
the first Journal.
League Opens Next Friday.
The Coast Line League, composed
of teams of Ayden, Grit-
ton and Kinston, will begin the sea-
son next Friday, 16th. The opening
games will Ayden at
and Grifton at Kinston.
Liniment Is
remedy for
Sciatica, Lame Back,
g fl Joints and Muscles,
Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, Bruises,
Colic, Cramps, Neuralgia,
Toothache, and all Nerve,
Done and A c o I
and Pains. The genuine
has Noah's Ark on every
and looks like this
cut. hut has RED hand on
front of package and
always
in Ink. Beware of
unit noons. Large bottle,
cents, an sold by all
do a c r s In in
or money
by Noah Remedy
Jo., Inc., Richmond, Va.
-i.





p-r-
IS.
Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
from Page
promised, by having the rural and city
carriers assemble the small consign-
of the individual shippers and
utilize the fast freight service on
trunk lines, with passenger trains on
the branch roads to hurry the stuff
to destination, at the regular fast
freight rates. The post office will re-
coup itself by securing carload rates
for the assembled shipments, while
the small shippers get their
over the present conditions by
having their collect and delivery sys-
for practically nothing.
PITT COUNTY BOY
FRONT
PROVES HIMSELF A REAL HERO.
SEEKING RELEASE OF
PITT IN KANSAS JAIL
Goes Out In A Capsized Boat And
Saves Six People.
The letter published below should
have appeared in our Ayden
Tuesday, but through an
oversight the correspondent failed to
get it in with his other copy, so it
is published
Fort Hancock N. J., June 1911.
Mr. R. W. Smith, Correspondent,
The Eastern Reflector,
Dear
Having sent an article to your val-
paper a few months ago con-
Lance Corporal Lester Jones,
of the Coast Artillery Corps, of Fort
I now take the pleasure
to call your attention to another ex-
equally heroic.
Since I wrote you before, the com-
of which he is a member, has
changed station to Fort Hancock, N.
J. Here this brave son of
North Carolina distinguished himself.
While taking a walk one evening by
the beach he saw out in the bay a
boat in apparent distress. While he
was getting a boat ready in which to
go out in, the boat turned over. With
all possible speed he put out to the
capsized craft and got there just in
time to save the lives of six helpless
people. This, I think, ought to be
brought to the attention of his friends
and relatives at home. Like all real
heroes, he himself, would never say
anything about the matter. I being
a son of North Carolina, things of
this sort make my heart swell with
pride. Hoping to see this in an early
issue of your valued paper, I remain,
a constant reader,
MICHAEL J.
Bread Sergeant, Co. Artillery.
EXCAVATION CAVES IN.
Burled Ferd Hum hill And Gives Him
Close Call.
Tuesday afternoon while workmen
were excavating for the sewer on
Sutton lane, there was a cave-in that
came near resulting seriously. At a
point where the ditch was about ten
feet deep, Ferd Barnhill, colored,
foreman of the street hands was at
work at the bottom of it, when with-
out a moments warning the ditch
caved in and he was completely
buried under a huge pile of dirt.
Other hands happened to be near
and they quickly dug Ferd out of
his grave. Fortunately he- received
no injury, except slight bruises, but
it gave him a close call.
Asks Governor of Oklahoma to Inter-
cede in Behalf of W. J Nichols.
Oklahoma City, Okla., June
Governor received a letter
Monday from the secretary of state
of North Carolina, asking his as-
in securing the release from
the Federal prison at
Kan., of W. J. Nichols, a former
member of the North Carolina
Nichols was convicted of
the postal laws, under the
name of C. L. Jackson, in-connection
with the operation of the Little
Crater Crude Burner Company.
Nichols sold county rights for the
sale of a new patent crude oil burn-
maintaining headquarters at El-
reno. Through the efforts of Post-
master E. E. Brown, of Oklahoma
City, the Federal authorities were in-
to start prosecutions for us-
the mails to defraud. Nichols
handled thousands of dollars as a re-
of his scheme, but was convicted
and sentenced to serve two years. A
short time ago Nichols wrote the
governor, accusing the Federal of-
of the western district of
and Postmaster of
having conspired to railroad
him to Observer.
ITEMS.
Personal News In That Hustling
Neighborhood.
N. C, June
Smith and Mr. Mills Smith are sick.
Miss Agnes Smith left last Thurs-
day for Asheville to spend some
time.
Miss Winnie Evans spent a few
days of last week at the home of Mr.
Ivey Smith.
Mrs. Walter Gay of Farmville,
spent a part of last week here.
Miss Lucy of Ayden, spent
last week here with friends. She
returned home Monday.
Messrs. Walters and Pittman con-
ducted a meeting at the Free Will
Baptist church at Arthur last week.
The meeting closed Sunday night
with two additions.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith were vis-
his mother, Mrs. Pattie Smith,
Sunday.
Mr. Tyson and little daughter
of were here Wednesday.
Mn and Mrs. C. E.
went to Farmville Saturday.
We had a fine shower Monday
and night.
Mrs. C. C. Cobb and daughter, of
Norfolk, are spending some time at
Excursion.
Make your plans to go with the
excursion to Morehead City
and Beaufort on Thursday, 22nd. De-
trip with eight hours at the
seaside. Round trip, children
under years,
Another Tiger.
Mayor Wooten had another
before him Monday. Reed
Gorham, colored, an old offender, was
caught the and was
bound over to Superior court.
And a lazy man will take any kind
of a job he can't get.
New Century
No Levers. No Springs.
Always in Balance
Farmers actually want the on account of Its .
many distinctive features. Which are Operators weigh
balances gangs. Perfectly balanced pole without even so as
a balance lever. Simplicity a lever, spring,
or other nuisance on it. Light of draft, because it weighs less
has draft closer to shovels. of cultivation, that is,
meat does not affect position of gangs. Six shovels, spring break
Works perfectly in widest or narrowest rows cotton, corn, beans,
peanuts, tobacco, potatoes, etc
Learn more about this cultivator. Fifty of nest
in Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let us demonstrate
to you its many distinctive features.
We also sell the celebrated NEW DEERE WALKING
the best and most satisfactory walking cultivator on the,
market. When in need of anything in the hardware line be sure;
to see us.
Hart Hadley
N. C.
TOBACCO
YES
THOROUGH BRED
TOBACCO
A quarter pound plug of sure enough g
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to-
taste. No spice to make your tongue
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco,
all the improvements up-to-date. CHEW
IT AND PROVE IT at our expense,
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail
us with your name and address for
FREE offer to chewers only.
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
Post Office.
Subscribe to the Reflector.
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 1911.
Number
RECEIVER APPOINTED
FOR BANK OF TARBORO
BANK HOPELESSLY WRECKED.
Mr. Ed. Pennington in Charge and
Investigation Proceeds.
Late Monday afternoon Judge Ward
READY FOR CORONATION.
Final Decorations And Finishing
Touches Put Today.
By Cable to The Reflector.
London, June orders
were issued today to troops
which will participate in the
nation. King George received all
foreign envoys and ministers at
who is still at the hospital gradually n . , , . ,
Buckingham Palace last night. The
convalescing, or rather
growing
much stronger, so that he does
not feel that dizziness when in an
upright position, upon the
of Chairman of
the Corporation Commission appoint-
ed Ed. Pennington, cashier of the
Farmers Banking and Trust Co.,
receiver of the Bank of Tarboro, pend-
a suit instituted to wind up the
affairs of that institution.
The order making the appointment
required a bond of and that
he should enter upon his duties as
soon as qualified. This was done. By
noon the bond was given and Mr.
Pennington took charge.
But the examiners are still at work
and hope to complete their labors to-
morrow.
The condition of the bank cannot
yet be approximated. There are so
many overdrafts and checks paid
but never charged to accounts that
no one can tell till there has been a
more close inspection of all the
books and. probably many suits.
What the checks paid meant when
not credited is yet to be ascertained.
They may have been drawn with the
knowledge that they had or should
have had a balance to their credit.
Or they may have been some of the
many good accommodations
of the cashier out of the trust fund
in his charge.
Receiver Pennington probably will
have an expert accountant to go over
every account of the bank, and then
barring results of litigation the con-
will be known.
Not much news has developed or
come to the surface since last issue
unless it be evidence of greater
and the efforts to rob, or
defraud any and every one that had
money in the bank or could be in-
to put their funds therein.
Examiner does little talk-
last decorations were put up today
and all finishing made for
the coronation.
London, June rehearsal of
the coronation ceremony was held in
West Minister Abbey today.
TODAY'S EVENTS IN
NATIONAL CAPITOL
ANOTHER MESSAGE FROM TAFT.
Taft on The Go.
By Wire to The Reflector.
New York, June Taft
leaves New York this morning for
New Haven, after spending the night
with Henry W. Taft.
are Southerner,
for publication and what one ob- June 20th.
is by inference. He promptly
told the Southerner man that the
bank books, he called them padded,
showed deposits of loans
yet on his report to the
commission it is alleged that
the deposits are apparently
These with borrowed from
banks make liabilities that padded
books showing loans with
security in less or more
cases cannot overcome. But let it
not be inferred that these figures dis-
close all liabilities or assets. They
are given to show that as far as
the money was
and these padded books
show that at least of de-
posits went into the maelstrom of
reckless speculation.
To the stockholders Mr.
has promised to make a report to-
morrow afternoon at o'clock.
Unless there was something sen-
street talk would not be in-
Most every thing has been
voiced out except the safety deposit
box he had in the bank. The
is to be brought here tomorrow and
then more ills than even sensations,
if not more ills than ever resulted
from the opening of Pandora's box
Mrs. Lea Improving
Says Gobble Small Concerns
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, June
Taft sent a special message to con-
urging an amendment to the
pure food law, making the penalty
for misbranding drugs.
Senator Root spoke in favor of his
amendment to the reciprocity bill.
Horace continued his
testimony before the committee in-
the Sugar Trust. He de-
that it was better for the small
business concerns to be gobbled up
by the trusts than that they should
fail.
Mrs. Lea, wife of Senator Lea, of
Tennessee, to save whose life the sen-
had a quart of his blood infused
into her body, is much better today
with great hope of her ultimate re-
The senator is also recover-
from the loss of his blood.
ANOTHER STEEL TRUST
Judge Gary Said It Would Be Form-
ed.
By Wire to The
New York, June E. H.
Gary before sailing for Europe in-
today that an international
Steel Trust might be formed. He
denied, however, that it would en-
to control prices. He said
there would be an effort
ate by all steel makers in the
ACCOUNTANT SUICIDES.
TRIAL WILL COLLAPSE
Government Cannot Sustain Charges
Against
By Cable to The Reflector.
Italy, June
witnesses have failed to substantiate
the government charges against the
it is predicted that the
cases will collapse and the prisoners
be freed.
Jumps From Fourteenth Story Win-
By Wire to The Reflector.
New York, June from
John D. an ex-
pert accountant, jumped from a four-
teen-story window at Broadway
this morning. The fall of his body
created a panic on the street.
CHOLERA SITUATION
FOUR CASES IN N. Y. HARBOR.
STRIKE SETTLED.
Various Lines Enter
Agreement.
By Cable to The Reflector.
London, June end of the
strike was officially announced to-
day by the International
Union. The Cunard, White Star, Al-
Dominion, and other lines agree
to the increased scale.
What of time we waste in
wandering about things e that are
none of our business.
Quarantine Other Ships Arriving With
Suspicious Sickness.
By Wire to The Reflector.
New York, June cholera
situation is causing alarm. There
are now four cases aboard the Italian
liner de Ships from
Berlin and Trieste with suspicious
sickness aboard, were today ordered
to quarantine.
YALE COMMENCEMENT.
President Tait Heads The
By Wire to The Reflector.
New Haven, June Yale
commencement is being held in
Hall. President Taft, Justice
Lunar and other notables are pres-
The commencement was head-
ed by President Taft, after which ex-
were held.
It is better to be pleasant than
Important you can not be both.


Title
Eastern reflector, 16 June 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
June 16, 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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