Eastern reflector, 7 July 1911


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





Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most the Most Noble Employment of Washington.
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY JULY 1911.
Nu in her 27-
OF
Of Breaking Ground for the Buildings
of E. C. T. T. School
SCHOOL AUDITORIUM WAS FILLED
Ex-Gov. Gives Interestingly
History of Origin and Growth of
The by
Governor Dr. Strayer and
Mr. Make Dona-
for Library Fund.
This is another proud day for
Greenville and Pitt county, and it
fully demonstrates the interest our
people feel in the institution they la-
bored so earnestly to have located
here, and none are more rejoiced than
they over the great success to which
this institution has attained.
On the second day of July, three
years ago, the first spade of dirt was
thrown in preparation for the build-
to be provided for East Carolina
Training school. The an-
of that date following this
year coming on Sunday, today was
as the day upon which to
the event with appropriate ex-
Beside the people of the town and
county who were out in large
there were many here from
other towns, in fact, the eastern sec-
of the state was well represent-
ed. Some business houses of Greenville
were closed during the exercises, so
they might have an opportunity to
attend, and the auditorium of the
school was filled. The president and
faculty and board of trustees of the
county and town officials, and
speakers taking part in the program
had seats upon the rostrum.
After prayer by Rev. C. M. Rock,
pastor of Memorial Baptist church,
and the singing of Hail the
Power of President
Wright welcomed all here, and in in-
ex-Governor T. J. Jarvis,
who was to give the history of the
origin and progress of the school, Mr.
Wright stated that the spade with
which the first dirt was broken by
Gov. Jarvis and the photograph taken
of the scene had been and would be
preserved as long as the institution
stands.
Governor historical sketch
of the school was as
Ladies and
As we are assembled to celebrate
the third anniversary of the breaking
of ground for the buildings of the
East Carolina Training
school, I deem it appropriate to give
you a brief account of the beginning,
growth and work of this school.
The act establishing the East Car-
Training school was
passed by the legislature at its
in 1907, and was ratified March
8th, 1907.
On the 7th day of May, 1907, the
people of Greenville, by practically a
unanimous vote, authorized the board
of aldermen to issue and sell
000.00 of bonds with the distinct
that the larger part of it
was to be appropriated to this school,
if it should be located at Greenville.
And, on the 14th day of May, 1907,
the people of Pitt county, by a large
majority, -voted to issue and sell
000.00 of bonds for a like purpose.
The act creating the school
towards the
and equipment of the buildings
and authorized the state board of
education to locate the school at some
point in Eastern North Carolina. A
number of the progressive towns in
the eastern section of the state made
attractive bids for the location of
this school in their midsts. Green-
ville and Pitt county jointly offered
the state board of education
000.00 in cash, to be expended in the
purchase of a site and the erection
of buildings, if the school should be
located at Greenville.
The state board of education vis-
the several towns bidding for the
school, and inspected the sites offered,
and in July, 1907, the board, after
careful consideration, located the
school at Greenville and selected the
present site.
The trustees of this school were
appointed by the state board of ed-
in accordance with the act
creating the school, and these
tees met in the town of Greenville
on the 9th day of March, 1908, and
organized. At this meeting J.
Jarvis, J. Y. Joyner and Y. T. Or-
were appointed an executive
committee, and Hook and Rogers, of
Charlotte, and H. W. Simpson, of
New Bern, were chosen architects.
The second meeting of the board of
trustees was held in Greenville on
April 16th, 1908, at which time the
architects submitted to the board the
plans, which had been approved by
the executive committee, for four
buildings, An administration
building, a dormitory, a
dormitory and a refectory. The
plans were approved by the board,
and the committee was instructed to
call for bids and proceed with the
erection of the four buildings. How
well the committee obeyed their in-
and performed their duty
you can judge for yourselves by an
inspection of these four buildings.
The committee advertised for bids,
and on the 9th day of June, 1908,
these bids were opened. There were
eighteen bidders present. They came
from Georgia, South Carolina, North
Carolina, Virginia and New Jersey.
There was difference be-
tween the highest and lowest bids,
the highest being by G. W.
Wharton, of N. J., and the
lowest by the Building and Lumber
Company, of N. C, for
The Building and Lumber Company
gave the bonds and executed the con-
tracts required by the committee, and
on the second day of July, 1908,
three years ground was
broken for the erection of these
buildings; and it is this event we
celebrate today. I make bold to as-
that nowhere else in North Car-
at any period in her history,
has so much done in the cause
of education in the same length of
time as has been done here in the
last three years.
Hear This Marvelous
The contractors began the work of
construction as soon after July 2nd
as they could complete their
rations, and they pushed the work
with all speed with good
workmanship, both Messrs. York and
the managers of the contract-
company, giving it their constant
attention, and the architects and ex-
committee making frequent
inspection. In excavating the ground
for the administration building the
contractors encountered at its west
end, on the highest point of the
ground, an extensive pocket of black
quick sand, into which one might in-
a rod several feet with one
hand. This unexpected difficulty
a suspension of work on
this building till we could go into
the woods and cut and haul piles, and
get a pile driver on the grounds to
drive them. As soon as this could be
done piles from to inches
in diameter and from to feet
long were driven into this
of quick sand, and on top of these
were put three feet of concrete. It
cost extra to make the
safe and secure, and when this
was done the work on this building
proceeded.
The legislature of 1909
the sum of for two ad-
central power
house and an for the
furnishing and equipping all six of
the buildings, including the laundry
and refrigerating plant. The com-
directed the architect to
pare the plans for these two new
buildings. Bids were asked for these,
and the furniture and equipment for
all the business. These bids were
opened on the 4th day of May, 1909,
by the executive committee, and the
contract for the two additional build-
was awarded to the same con-
tractors at the price of The
committee remained in session three
days and let the contracts for the
furniture and equipment for all the
buildings.
The board of trustees met on June
11th, 1909, and after having received
full reports of the progress of the
work of construction, determined to
upon the school for the reception of
students on the 5th day of October,
1909. At this meeting Prof. Robert
H. Wright was elected president of
the institution, and C. W. Wilson, H.
E. Austin, Sallie Joyner Davis, Maria
D. Graham and Minnie E. Jenkins
were elected professors. The other
positions were filled later on; and
by earnest and untiring effort the
buildings were ready and the officers
and teachers on hand prepared to
open the school on October 1909.
The enrollment of students on the
first day exceeded our fondest ex-
on page





The Carolina Home and Fara The Eastern
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
Out of Their Own Mouths.
Speaking on the floor of the United
States senate the other day, Hon.
Elihu Root, Protectionist though he is
and has always been, gave utterance
to this
I never have thought that the duties
which were imposed upon farm pro-
ducts were of any real general
fit to the farmer.
And no more do the vast majority
of the Republican apostles and de-
fenders or inordinate Protection so
believe. The fact is that the party and
the men who put and have kept so-
called protective duties on staple
products acted in the be-
ginning, and have ever since continued
to act, not with a view to
the but with a view to de-
the agricultural interests into
the belief that they were sharing in
the spoils of Protection and so into
support of the protective system. To
say that they have not resized from
the start that no amount of pro-
could effect, one way or the
other, the prices in the domestic mark-
et of products of the soil of which we
grow a surplus for export, over and
above a sufficiency for home
would be to credit them with a
lack of intelligence which they have
far from shown in any other
What they have done has been
to play upon the credulity of the farm-
and so Induce them to serve as
to save the chestnuts of the
inordinately protected manufacturing
Interests from burning.
And what is true of the farmer is
also true of labor. It is these two
elements of the citizenship of the
country which have kept the
policy alive and in effect, lo, these
many years, both deluded into so do-
by the utterly fallacious plea that
they were the beneficiaries of the sys-
The fact is, as both the
and the working man are
now beginning to realize, that neither
is by Republican
On the contrary, both are in-
When even avowed Protection-
are themselves driven to admit
so much, certainly It is high time the
farmers and the workingmen were
making their awakening complete and
ceasing to act as stool-pigeons for
the few privileges beneficiaries of a
system which robs them in the name
and under the guise of Protection.
The Dog and The Tax.
A correspondent in today's
speaks a word in behalf of the
dog. We had not supposed the
had been understood to be
war on all dogs, for there are
good dogs and bad
dogs and vagabond dogs. The collie
and the shepherd are practically use-
to the farmer while every farmer
should keep his own bird dog, hunt
out as many of his own partridges
as he might desire and save them
from destruction by the pot hunters
But he should pay tax on his dogs.
The very objection which our
urges against the dog tax.
that rather than pay this tax
many owners will kill their dogs, is
the exact reason why the Chronicle
urges the imposition of the dog tax.
man who owns a dog worth paying
taxes on will sacrifice the dog for the
sake of a dollar, but the operation of
the law would result in weeding out
the hordes of vagabond dogs which
over-run the state. In some of the
counties in which a dog tax was
a number of dogs were killed
by their owners this year. A dog law
that would operate otherwise would
be of no account. We believe our
correspondent will agree with us that
any man who owns a good dog ought
to be willing to pay taxes on him.
And a dog not worth paying tax on
ought to die. Save the sheep should
be the slogan of the next
Chronicle.
Never leave home on a journey
without a bottle of Chamberlain's
Colic, and Rem-
It is certain to be needed and
cannot be obtained when on board
the cars or steamships. For sale by
all dealers.
Change at Postal Oilier.
Mr. O. D. Phillips, who for several
months has been manager of the
Postal telegraph office here, has been
transferred to Wilson. He is
in the office here by Mrs. M.
B. of Augusta, who took
charge Monday.
Owning Home Industries at Home
The best city in the South, as far
as the knowledge of the writer ex-
tends, from every point of view, is a
small city in which every industry,
with one exception, is owned by
who reside in the city, is operated
by local people and by people whose
interest center almost exclusively in
the place. The industry owned
by outsiders was established by lo-
cal people and much of its stock is
yet held by them. As an illustration
of how local ownership of industries
helps, there is one large industry in
the city referred to which was found-
ed twenty-five years ago with
capital of this concern has been
increased to and every dollar
of the new capital has been earned
by the company in the course of its
quarter of a century in business.
There are several men interested in
this business who have wealth by
means of the earnings of this
If it had been established and
owned by persons living elsewhere,
the profits would have been
elsewhere and would have gone
to enrich other cities and towns.
Greensboro Telegram.
SAVE .
WHY
NATURE
TEACHES US
TO C
INTO THE if-
BANK Now
So You'll
ST WHEN YOU
NEED IT. ITS SAFE IN
THE BANK
JAMES J. HILL, the great railroad king,
made a pick when a young man.
He BANKED and SAVED his earnings. He be-
came a contractor and multi-millionaire.
Make OUR Bank Bank.
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier
R. L. Davis, Pres. S. T. Hooker, V-Pres.
H. D. Bateman, Cashier
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application, as
roach the diseased portion of the car
There hi only one to cure deafness,
and by constitutional remedies
Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed
of the mucous of the
Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or
hearing, and when It Is entirely closed,
Deafness Is the result, and unless the In-
ran be taken out and this
tube restored to Its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever; nine
out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
Is nothing an Inflamed
of the mucous surfaces.
will Hundred Dollars case
by
Hill's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars,
f CO, Toledo, Ohio.
Bold by
Take for constipation,
The Taper Trust And Senate.
Reporting the Canadian trade
agreement with the Root amendment
the Senate finance committee is true
to a long record of distinguished
plutocratic service. That commit-
tee is the very citadel of the inter-
In it's rooms tariffs written by
the trusts are O. jokers intend-
ed to nullify wise legislation are
contrived and amendments deadly to
reform are drawn and forwarded.
Without the sinister backing of a
group as carefully chosen as this.
Elihu Root's adroit amendment
would have little notice. It is clear-
enough the paper trust's amend-
but the hopes of all the
hang upon it, for if accepted by the
Senate it opens a way to kill
and block
York World.
TRINITY COLLEGE
1859
1892
1910-1911
Three memorable The Granting of the Trinity College; the Removal cf
the College to the growing and prosperous City Durham; the Building of the New and Greater
Trinity.
Magnificent new with new equipment and enlarged facilities.
Comfortable dormitories and beautiful pleasant surroundings.
Five Academic; Mechanical, Civil and Electrical Engineering; Law; Ed-
Graduate
For and other information, address
R. L. FLOWERS, Durham, N. C.
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL
Established 1898
Location Equipment unsurpassed.
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College. Special
attention given to health. A in looks after the living conditions of boys
under his care.
of college graduates. Most mode-n methods of instruction.
Fall term opens
For illustrated address
W. W. PEELE, HEADMASTER Durham, N. C.
FAIR GOVERNORS TO MEET.
There Should he a Large Attendance
Friday.
Next Friday, 7th, the date for
the meeting of the governing board
and township committees of the Pitt
County Fair Association, and there
should be a large attendance. The
revised premium list will be ready
to submit that day and the township
committees should also bring in a
report of donations secured for
It is time to be actively at
work now to make the fair a great
success.
Farmers throughout the county
are taking much interest in the fair
and many of them are going to make
exhibits.
An egg in the hand is worth two in
the grocery.
Pied The Form.
Senator Clark, of Arkansas, voted
with the Republicans for the amend-
to put the direct election
senators under federal supervision.
Thus it is that a so-called Southern
Democrat pies the form.
Federal supervision of elections in
the South during
days was sufficiently experimental
for all who were living here in those
days.
For nearly a half century a few
Democratic senators of
have succeeded in defeat-
of combinations of capital. Ir
their party's policies in the in-
this instance one man was
Maxton Scottish Chief.
Reputation is the world's measure.
Character is we really have.
CROPS mi D
Work On The Seminary And General
Improvements.
Ayden, N. C, July Osceola
Ross and baby, of Zebulon, are vis-
her father, Mr.
Sr., at Fountain Hill.
Friday evening at o'clock the
barn and pack house of Mr. C. J.
in was
burned, and with it his carts, wagons,
hay, oats and peas, causing a loss of
with no insurance. The
gin of the fire is unknown unless it
was spontaneous combustion.
Mrs. Jesse Cannon has returned
from John Hopkins hospital, where
she has undergone a successful
for kidney trouble.
Capt. Levi Whitehead, section master
who has been located near Parmele,
has been returned to this section.
Mr. W. J. Braxton is getting the
timber on the ground to enlarge the
Seminary, and Mr. J. A. Griffin has
already laid the foundation for the
dormitory; ere long we hope to see
the school well equipped, and endow-
ed, as it is a certainty. Mr. Daniel
letter in the Free Will
had the right ring to it, with Dr.
St. Claire in the field, Geo. Vance at
the bat, Exum in the pit, Phil-
lips and Prescott on deck, Prof. Saw-
umpire, this community, with
all the F. W. B. wire working, we
feel sure of scoring with Greenville's
base ball team.
Mr. W. F. Hart and wife, who have
been visiting here, returned to their
home in Morehead Monday.
We guess that Ayden and Griffon's
ball teams must have felt like
cents when they read the last two
issues of the Pitt County News, es-
the two pitchers. But all is
well that ends well.
We don't think we could expect
crops to be any better than they
Cotton and corn is certainly fine in
this section. Still, it is hot and dry.
Installation of officers Monday night
G. F. Cooper is N. G., and Dr. W. H.
Dixon, V. G.
Dr. C. R Riddick and wife left Mon-
day to visit relatives in Gates
They will be gone about two
weeks.
Mrs. A. E. Garris is very sick with
gastritis of the stomach.
Ex-Judge J. L. Hobgood was in
town Saturday. He tells us Mr. H. B.
Smith, who for some time has been
suffering with rheumatism, is able
to get about without the use of crutch-
es. Also that Mrs. Tripp is
very sick with abscess on the brain.
Mr. W. H. Smith, son of Mr. W. G.
Smith, is sick at his home in Greene
county with typhoid fever.
We met our friend, Mr. John Bill
Cannon, last Friday as he alighted
from the train after hearing Gov.
magnificent speech. He
said that he could tell you how to
farm, teach school, manufacture, mer-
and conduct the affairs of
the state, and no doubt but he will
be our next U. S. senator, as he had
made good every trust committed to
him. Mr. Cannon said he was like
the man in Cleveland county, who
regarded Governor Kitchin as the
greatest statesman of his age. Mr.
Cannon is a good Democrat and is
usually correct in his diagnosis of a
man. That Governor Kitchin had
been tried, is never denied and his
friends are safe in trying him again
and again.
Our city fathers met Tuesday night
to transact the regular monthly
Durham, Lenoir, Beaufort and
other counties have sanitariums
for the benefit and of
the public. Why not have one in Pitt
county There are not many weeks
but we see some patient going away
for surgical operation. Our county
has the money, and plenty of brains.
We only like the push and energy.
We would like to hear this matter
discussed.
Uncle is a good
fisherman among his other
He told us he had white shad
for breakfast last Thursday morning,
caught from the Little
Creek. Our waters produce some-
thing more than cat fish and eels all
the year round.
Messrs. S. E. Harrington and Dan-
Moore have about the best tobacco
crops near here. John and Alfred
Grimsley and Luther Meadows have
nice tobacco crops also. While the
majority of tobacco is so badly
en as to fall way below the average,
our corn and cotton is nice all
around here.
Miss Myrtle is visiting
Miss Mary Smith this week.
We thought this was the dull sea-
son of the year, but we took a look
through the manufacturing plant of
L. L. Kittrell Saturday and found
things humming. The three men re-
check, measure, toll, grind and
deliver the meal when ground. We
expect to soon sec a roller Hour
mill installed so as to further ac-
our farmers. They are do-
a nice lot of work, turning col-
sawing balusters and making
cabinet mantels, manufacturing
and various other articles. This
is a fine opening for buggies. We soon
hope to see their factory start to
buggies for the fall trade.
Mrs. Nancy Turnage and daughter.
Miss Myrtle, has returned from Kin-
where they had been visiting
Mrs. B. Turnage.
Miss Edith Mumford, who has been
visiting friends at LaGrange and Seven
Springs, returned home Monday.
When you talk about pretty corn
and cotton just include
township.
Capt. Levi R. Walston, who is en-
on a log train at Spring Hope,
is home here for a few days.
Mr. John S. Ross, of Zebulon, own-
of the Blount Hotel here, arrived
yesterday with a force of hands and
we hear Will overhaul his hotel, re-
pair, repaint and have a rat killing
in general, thereby making the hotel
more attractive and comfortable.
Girl Fire Chief.
Fort Tampa, Fla., is to be protected
from fire by a brigade organized and
trained by the daughter of a the late
chief of the Tampa fire department.
This girl, Maggie Harris, is said to be
the first girl in the United States, and
probably in the world, to organize a
fire department. About forty men
have agreed to serve under her
She is drilling them according
to the rules and methods of her late
Mechanics.
Condensed Statement of
THE
N. C.
At of Business June 1911.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts .
Overdrafts . 2,925.78
U. S. Bonds . 21,000.00
Stocks . 2,500.00
Furniture and Fixtures . 7.136.30
for Clearing House . 10,929.31
Cash and Due from Banks . 37.007.70
per cent. Redemption fund . 1,060.00
LIABILITIES
Capital .
Surplus . 10.000.00
Undivided Profits .
Circulation . 21,000.00
Bond Account . 21.000.00
. 24,325.00
Dividends Unpaid . 91.42
Cashier's Checks . 723.33
Deposits . 140,385.74
TOTAL DIVIDENDS 11,300.00
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms and In-
and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those
contemplating changes or opening new accounts, fl We want your
business. FORBES, Cashier
Accused of Stealing.
E. E. Chamberlain, of Clinton, Me.,
boldly accuses
Salve of sting from
burns or pain from sores
of all distress from boils
or piles. robs, cuts, corns bruises,
sprains and injuries of their
he says, a healing remedy its equal
don't Only at all
gists.
The men who do not need a spur
often need a balance-wheel.
Atlantic Coast Line
Low Round Trip Fares From
Greenville, N. C.
Tickets on Sale July and 1911.
City, N J.
Account Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. Final return
limit July which may be extended to August by depositing
ticket and paying
Account Mystic Shrine. Final return limit July which
may be extended to August. by depositing ticket and
Via All N Y
21.45 Vii Norfolk II I.
THESE RATES ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.
For illustrated booklets of each of the above cities and
trips and for schedules, Pullman reservations, etc., call on
W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent. Greenville, N. C.
or address
W. J. Pass. Traffic T. C. WHITE, Gen. Pass.
W N. C.
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH
TRAVEL VIA
The Chesapeake Line
Dully Service Including The new Steamers just placed
in Service the of Norfolk and of are the
most elegant and up-to-date between Norfolk and
more.
Equipped With Wireless Telephone in Each Room. Delicious
on Board Everything for Comfort Convenience.
Steamers Norfolk
Steamer Old Point
Steamer Arrive Baltimore
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North East and West.
Reservations made and any Information courteously furnished by
W. H.
Norfolk, Virginia
. m.





The Carolina Home and Far and The Eastern Reflector.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
Winterville, X. C, July H.
J. Langston returned Wednesday
from the western part of the
state.
Get your repair work done at
Barber and shop. They
do alL kinds, and their prices are
reasonable.
Miss Gladys Sutton, of Greensboro,
spent Wednesday in town with
Harrington, Barber and Company
have received a large shipment of
mowing machines and
self-dump See them before
placing your order.
Miss Lizzie Cox, of near Cox's Mill,
spent the week with friends in town.
If you want a nice pair of pants,
A. W. Ange and Company has them,
and cheap, too.
Miss Eunice Woodard and little
brother, Albert, of Wilson, is spend-
a few days with Miss Chap-
man.
Harrington, Barber and Company
are carrying a large stock of repairs
for the and Os-
borne mowing machines.
Messrs. C. T. Cox and Albert Wood-
ard paid St. Abrams Spring a visit
Thursday evening and thoroughly en-
Joyed It. Uncle Abram has made a
good many improvements there.
See Harrington, Barber and Com-
for your lime. A car load on
hand.
Quite a number of our people went
to Greenville yesterday, some to at-
tend the exercises at E. C. T. T. S.,
and some to attend the exercises at
the ball ground.
Large stone jars at A. W. Ange
and
Mrs. Forrest and two
of Rocky Mount, spent
and Thursday with her broth-
Mr. B. D. Forrest.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com-
are putting in some nice wagon
and cart material. We also notice
they are making shipments of a few
carts and wagons.
Miss Lizzie Cox returned home to-
day after spending several days with
friends in town.
Come and see the wall paper
at Harrington, Barber and
They have a complete line and from
the leading wall paper house of New
York.
We notice in the weekly paper,
the Carolina Home and Farm and the
Eastern Reflector, that our Ayden
correspondent has come to life, but
he had to use Winterville items to do
it. was the printer's mix-up.
Winterville, N. C, July M.
L. Barker and son, left Sat-
to visit relatives near
son.
Miss Cox, who has been at-
tending school at and
visiting her aunt, near Asheville, since
school closed, returned home
day evening.
Some extra good values are being
offered at Harrington, Barber and
in summer dry goods and hats.
Mr. Jno. R. Carroll came in
day night from Blue Mont, where he
attended the Young Men's Christian
Association.
Miss Elizabeth Boushall, of Bell
Cross, a teacher in Winterville High
School, spent a few days with her
many friends here this week.
Messrs. Harrington, Barber and
Company are selling their stock of
shoes at greatly reduced prices, in
order to make room for their fall
stock.
Miss Pattie Leary, of Ahoskie, who
is attending the E. C. T. T. S., f pent
Sunday and Monday with Miss
Cox.
Several of hay riders made
us a visit Monday night.
Repair your tobacco furnaces. A.
W. Ange and Company has the lime
to do it.
Capt. Levi Whitehead and family,
who sometime ago left us and went
to Bethel have returned and Capt.
Whitehead has taken charge of his
section of railroad again. We all are
glad to have them back with us.
Miss Cox left Monday even-
for Greenville to attend the E.
C. T. T. S.
The best molasses and the best roof
paint at Harrington, Barber and
Quite a number of our boys attend-
ed the ball games yesterday.
Miss Sarah Barker came in from
Chocowinity yesterday.
See Harrington, Barber and Com-
for your matting, floor oil cloth
and wall paper.
Miss Esther Johnson and
Cox spent yesterday In Ayden.
For thermometers and to-
twine, see A. W. Ange and
Company.
Miss Eunice and Mr. Albert Wood-
ard, of Wilson, who has been visiting
Miss Chapman, returned home
yesterday.
Mr. Herbert Cox is spending a few
days at Grimesland.
St. Luke's Episcopal Sunday school
made the park at Dr Cox's merry
with laughter and fun Monday
evening, croquet and other
games were much enjoyed by the
and last but not least, was the
cake and cream which was served at
o'clock.
Misses Helen and Elizabeth Adams
left this morning for Ahoskie to spend
a week or two with friends.
We are glad our Ayden correspond-
has come to life.
GETS BACK TO
SCHOOL ROOM
PAYS EULOGY TO HIS DEAD DOG
Traveling Salesmen
Are selling Remedies,
Flavoring Extracts, Spices, Toilet
etc., to over two million farm
homes in every section of the United
States and Canada. We want a bright
energetic young salesman to handle
our business in Pitt
The J. R. Watkins Company, South
Gay street, Baltimore, Maryland. Es-
Capital over
Plant contains over acres
floor space.
Sprains require careful treatment.
Keep quiet and apply Chamberlain's
Liniment freely. It will remove the
soreness and quickly restore the
parts to a healthy condition. For
School Keeper Cuts Short The Flow
of Eloquence.
Hanrahan, N. C, July my
last had come to a
close and books are called. With
sad hearts we had to respond to that
authoritative call. So here he went
each one trying to
make the most racket. Our tyrannical
school keeper had fully settled down
to his day's task. I had been plan-
marshaling my forces,
consisting of the small boys and
for something that I deemed
more entertaining than spending that
long afternoon in looking at the few
pictures in that old blue-back speller.
That faithful old servant of God, the
circuit rider they called him in those
days is called now the pastor in
who got around one Sunday
in about four months, had preached
the day before, Sunday, at our nearest
church, live miles away. Papa and
mother went and ca. us children,
Mrs. Meadows and her two children.
The preacher gave a long discourse
sermons were the standard by
which talent was measured in those
on the life and labors of Mr.
Meadows, the one that the tree kill-
ed. He had told of his love for
country, his devotion to home and
family, of his tragic, untimely death.
He told in loud and thrilling tones
of the pitiable condition of his
ow and two helpless children left in
this cold world without an earthly
pilot to steer their over life's
troublesome sea, no star of hope
from which to get their bearings, no
light house on the craggy rocks nor
beacons of friends nor loved one
standing along the shore. All seem-
ed darkness, gloom, yea, even dis-
pair, for besides the loss of husband
and father it was war times, and the
looming of the cannon could be heard
from off Fort Fisher.
But with all its gloom and sadness,
my young heart and soul had caught
on fire with inspiration and I deter-
mined at some future day to
duce in my own words a part, at
least, of this sermon as a eulogy to
my murdered dog, for then I thought
that dog almost, if not quite, equal
to any man, and vastly superior to
many men, his slayer, for instance.
But I had not the slightest idea that
the yearned-for time and place would
so soon present itself, but
come only to those who use
them, a lesson that my oldest sister
had taught me, though I was young.
So on entering that old cabin the
small boys and girls at my
planned signal, each and all
in a space arraigned behind the
door, as I had hoped would cut off
from view of that old man. Soon he
had called up the large boys and
girls to their reading lesson.
This was the time of my
So I mounted one of those
sharp edged benches and began my
discourse in real My subject
was faithfulness of a true dog
to his I had told of his no-
qualities, of his sleek black hair,
his charming beauty, of his never
guarded faithfulness, especially to his
young master. I was about to reach
the climax as I then thought a pow-
oratorical display, of eloquence
and pathos. I was telling with
feeling of the tragic death of
that faithful companion and play-
mate of mine, and saw in reality, or
imaginary, tears of sympathy rolling
down the cheeks of my attentive list-
when I felt a severe rap across
my back was repeated for
several times h. quick succession.
As soon as my glands would
secrete I began crying. are
you doing he yelled out,
learn you how to quit your books and
lead this whole gang of children off
with you. I'll teach you how to
your school master when you
think you are hid behind the door,
you impertinent little
By this time he had slackened his
licks and I had the rejoinder. So I
said was only paying a eulogy to
the life and character of my dog
that you deliberately, without any
cause, killed, and if for that you are
treating me in this style, I shan't
come back here any more, for I don't
like you any He saw that I
would die before I would be driven,
so he sauntered back to his seat
after making my hearers face to-
wards his cabin.
The remainder of that afternoon
wore drearily away until o'clock,
then he let us out to go home. I
told papa that if he would not send
me back there, that I would not
him with my many questions, and
that I would daily sit at the feet of
my oldest sister and drink in her
sweet counsel, and even try to learn
of wisdoms ways. So he let me stay
home.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
BELIEVED ATTEMPT TO
PRESIDENT
SPENT BULLET STRIKES A LADY.
Police Hunting The Men Who Fired
The Shot
Tuesday being the Fourth of July
and a holiday, caused some of The
Reflector's telegraphic news to come
late after the paper for. the day had
been printed. One of the dispatches,
even if a day late, is of sufficient In-
to be given
Indianapolis, July seat-
ed in the reviewing stand from which
President Taft was to witness the
parade, Mrs. Henry wife
of the chairman of the committee on
arrangements, was struck by a spent
bullet. This occurred shortly be-
fore the president's arrival on the
stand. Police are unable to find
where the shot was fired from, though
they are hunting for two men who are
believed to have plotted to kill the
president.
n aBS
pus
pun pun
Nobody seems to know how to go
out and swim when it means leaving
a pretty girl on the beach.
Mills
This popular remedy never fails to
effectually cure
dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick
Biliousness
And ALL DISEASES arising from a
Liver and Bad Digestion
The natural result is good appetite
and solid flesh. Dose small; elegant-
sugar coated and easy to swallow.
Take No Substitute.
INTERESTING NEWS FROM
SCOTLAND NECK
CHURCH BUYS LOT PARSONAGE.
Woman Found Dead In
Weather, But Good Crops.
Scotland Neck, N. C, July
Mr. Editor, as this is the fourth of
July, will try to write you a few
squibs.
We are having it very dry here,
though we have a light shower
and cotton and corn in this
section are doing well and are very
fine. Gardens are suffering for
The Baptist church here has
chased a two thousand dollar lot and
is arranging to build a handsome par-
on it. It. is on Church street.
Rev. O. L. Powers, pastor of the
Baptist church, after being away for
a few weeks, is home again and fill-
ed his pulpit Sunday morning and
night. He goes to Robersonville this
week to assist in a meeting.
The work of the graded school
building is progressing very rapid-
The relatives and friends of Mrs.
Walter Marks were greatly shocked
here Sunday evening when they learn-
ed that she was found dead in bed
that morning at her home in James-
ville. There was one in the house
that was living except her nine
months old baby. Don't know what
time of day she was found. We think
it was the saddest case we ever heard
of. She was well Saturday night as
usual and Mr. Marks was up very
early Sunday morning and was going
on an excursion, and thinking to let
his wife rest, did not disturb her, sup-
posing she was well. You may be
sure it was a great shock to him
when he learned that she was a
corpse. Her remains were brought
here Monday morning and buried in
the Scotland Neck cemetery. The
burial services were conducted by
Rev. Mr. Powers.
There was a large crowd of Scot-
land Neckties went off this morning
four or five miles to somebody's mill
pond There were five
or six wagons loaded down and we
are not going to tell how many bug-
carts, carriages and automobiles,
but enough to fill the road a con-
distance. I told them that
I hoped it would rain before they got
back, but there is not much
for it now at three o'clock. It
is so hot I'll have to stop.
More Need Good Roads.
The road-drag joy ride is an idea
from Missouri. A few weeks ago a
farmer south of Columbia put into
operation an efficient system plan
when he used his road-drag for a
wagon on a trip to town with pro-
duce. He could boast afterward that
he had combined two pieces of
business in one movement.
Yet a later experiment goes even
further than this by welding
and pleasure. This is the Mel-
System, named for L. T. Mel-
of Huntsville. Chronicles the
Columbia
His wife wished to visit a neigh-
about a mile away, and, as he
was using the team to a road-drag,
he placed a few boards and a seat on
the drag, Mrs. was hauled
to the neighbor's and later brought
home on the drag. Thus the road work
was not delayed nor the lady
pointed.
The only unpleasing aspect is that
the lady must have reached the
neighbor's badly mussed from jolting,
and somewhat sprinkled with dust.
Yet from this crude beginning
legislation may spring, as,
say, a law requiring all joy-riding
to tow road-drags. This
would improve the roads and reduce
the speed of Weekly.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
SESSION
IS WELL ATTENDED.
or doses will cure any
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,
Stubborn Case
was under the treatment of two writes
Mrs. R. L Phillips, of Indian Valley, Va., they pro-
my case a very stubborn one, of womanly weak-
I was not able to sit up, when I commenced to
take
I used It about one week, before I saw much change.
Now, the severe pain, that had been in my side
has gone, and I don't suffer at all. I am feeling better than
in a long time, and cannot speak too highly of
Prominent Sunday School Workers
Deliver Interesting Lectures.
The Sunday School Institute for
this district held under the direction
of the North Carolina Baptist Con-
began here this morning in
Memorial Baptist church, to continue
for three days. About thirty people
from a distance were present at the
opening, and those with the town
people made a good attendance.
The devotional exercises this morn-
were conducted by Dr, I. M.
Mercer, of Rocky Mount. Then after
some announcements by Mr. E. L.
Middleton as to the purpose of the
institute, the regular program for the
day was taken up.
The lectures by Mr. Middleton, Dr.
Brewer and Dr. were excel-
lent and received the closest
These are especially helpful
to Sunday school workers, and of
much interest to others. All who
can do so should avail themselves of
the opportunity of hearing these dis-
speakers.
The for tomorrow is as
a.
a. in the Life of
R.
a. Elementary De-
L. Middleton.
a. Train Teachers
I. J. Van
a. Preparation of the
E. Brewer.
p. to Train Teachers.
I. J. Van
p. Preparation of the
E. Brewer.
p.
p. in the Life of
R.
p. Sunday School In
American J. Van
ties voting bonds as a matter of
Chronicle.
TAKE
The
if you are one of those ailing women who suffer from any
of the troubles so common to women.
is a builder of womanly strength. Composed
of purely vegetable ingredients, it acts quickly on the
womanly system, building up womanly strength, toning up
the womanly nerves, and regulating the womanly system.
has been in successful use for more than years.
Thousands of ladies have written to tell of the benefit they
received from it Try it for your troubles. Begin today.
. Chattanooga.
Special and 64- page book. Horn Treatment See. j
For Roads.
Major A. A. in The
Fayetteville Observer, is advocating
an issue of in bonds to build
good roads for Cumberland county,
and one argument which he uses is
to all counties. It is that
it is cheaper to issue bonds than it is
to build roads by the direct tax
system. He gives the figures to prove
it, says Major
three years ending December
1910, that our county has spent
946.75 for good roads, an average of
per year, and at each meet-
of the commissioners there are
delegations from outlying districts
begging for our small convict force,
and under a bond issue we could give
such sections relief. Under a bond is-
sue of at per cent, would
cost per annum interest,
which is less than we are now
paying, so that we would only have
a sinking fund to provide for. With
under contract system, we
could build good roads for the whole
county in a short time, and in my
opinion at less cost than we are now
paying per The bond issue for
building good roads in the state is
growing in popularity. Iredell gave
it an impetus when that county voted
an issue of If Iredell can
stand that much, certainly the big
county of Cumberland could stand
half as much. It is a good sign that
the people do not stand so much in
fear of bonds as formerly. A few
years hence, we expect to see
When The Failures Talk.
Truly says the Greensboro Daily
makes us tired to hear a
poor man who will not work trying
to express sympathy for or an interest
in the laboring
And this thought can be carried on
and on, with profit. The man
with the right spirit in his heart,
with the proper amount of common
sense in his mind and any mat-
at all in his cranium hates to hear
the failure in any branch preaching
in support of some thing which caused
his failure. If he is going to be man-
enough to act as a horrible exam-
all right, but when he tries to
pose as a shining that is where-
in he makes a fool of himself. When
a man tries to preach morality he
should be in a position for people to
know that he is sincere, that he is
consistent, that he really knows some-
thing. When the failure, with pomp
and bravado, commences to tell a
person how a business should be con-
ducted, why he should be given the
No man has a right to
teach unless he has made something
of himself. This does not mean that
he has got to be worth money, nor,
on the other hand, does it mean that
because he is worth money
may have been left It means
has his life profited him or others
Is he a manly, an intellectual
Along the same line of reasoning
we hate to hear the bum talking
against prohibition, and we despise
to listen to some hypocritical
shouting for it. Many con-
men, those of intellect,
fer on the question of prohibition, and
one does rot mind turning a listening
ear to either side, but when the hypo-
talks disgust sweeps over the
listener, and when the bum com-
to damn prohibition the feel-
is one of repugnance. The bum
who talks against prohibition is
a spectacle of himself and even
the honest chap who is against
should feel disgust when he
raises his vote in such a strain.
Wilmington Dispatch.
Prohibition Will be Given Real Test
With the elimination of the near-
bear saloons in North Carolina the
prohibition law will be given a real
test. The old saloon with its
of crime and vice passed away
when the prohibition law came into
effect, but the near-beer saloon took
its place in many parts of the state.
It is true that some of these places
were kept clear of vice and run in a
manner. But attendance
upon the sittings of a recorder's court
in almost any town of the state would
convince any one that these places
were the centers from which a large
part of the crime committed in the
community radiated. It was in con-
either direct or indirect, with
these places that the greater part of
the illegal sales whiskey were
made. The gruesome murder recently
committed to county in con-
with one of these places
brought home in an impressive man-
to the people of this section the
criminal aspect of near-beer saloons.
With the elimination of the near-
beer saloons the last hang-out place
of the saloon element has passed.
What other center this element will
congregate around remains to be seen,
and the workings of the real
law will be watched with much
interest from this time
ham Sun.





Rome Farm The Eastern Reflector.
AN OPEN LETTER
FROM EVANS
TO ROADS
Takes Issue With Bond Advocates
For Using Term.
An open letter to the Greenville Town-
ship
Dear
In Wednesday's issue of The Re-
I notice a call you for a
mass meeting to be held in Greenville,
on July 4th, for the purpose, as you
give it, of forming a Greenville
Township Association,
and to carry to a successful issue the
election for a bond issue, which was
recently provided for by the
What I wish to know is. how you
can link both of these propositions
together and ask all who are in favor
of good roads to with you. There
are very few, if any, in the township
who are not in favor of good roads,
but there is quite a large number,
an overwhelming majority, I think,
who are opposed to the bond issue as
proposed in the legislative act.
I have noticed that those who favor
the bond issue are continually
calling themselves the friends of good
roads, and in the same breath are
dubbing those opposed to this bond
issue as the opponents of good roads
which strikes me as another effort
to befuddle the issue and mislead the
people.
How strange it is, that those who
favor the issuance of bonds are con-
trying to find some other
banner under which to conduct their
campaign Why is it that you do
not forthwith openly and boldly form
an association for the ostensible
pose of carrying the election for
bonds, and like men who have faith
in their cause, hoist on high a flag
that represents your true position
If your meeting Tuesday is called
for the purpose of organizing to car-
this election, it looks as if the
meeting is not to be exactly as rep-
resented. There are men all over
the township who would be glad to
meet together to devise ways and
means to make better roads, but who
should not be into coming here
to merely the and
devised by a hand
full of who did not represent
the township when they met here in
Greenville one night last winter with-
out giving more than twenty-four
notice that such meeting would
be held, and proceeded to fix a law
according to their own sweet way.
W. F. EVANS.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
College of Agriculture and
Mechanical Arts
The State's Industrial
Four-year courses in in Civil-
Electric, and Mechanical Engineering, in
Industrial Chemistry, in Cotton
and Dyeing. Two-year courses in
Mechanical Art and in Textile Art. One-
year courses in These courses
are both practical and scientific.
nations for admission are held at all county
seats on July For Catalog address
THE REGISTRAR,
West
It's easy to believe that you have
good taste, but it isn't so easy to
convince others.
PRAYER LEAGUE HAS
PATRIOTIC
NEXT SUNDAY
League Votes Down Proposition To
Suspend For Two Months.
The timeliness of subjects discussed
by the Men's Prayer League at the
meetings each Sunday afternoon has
been observed by those attending as
well as those keeping up with the
reports of the meetings.
as it Relates to was the
subject for the past Sunday at the
meeting in the Methodist church, and
the talks by the leaders, Messrs. O.
B, Warren, C. C. Pierce and R. M
Hearne, were in splendid keeping
with the subject. The songs at this
service also breathed the Christian
spirit of true patriotism.
Owing to the warm weather there
was some discussion on the question
of suspending the meetings of the
league for two months, but a motion
to that effect was voted down almost
unanimously. This shows the spirit
and interest of the men who are at-
tending the meeting.
Next Sunday at p. m., the
meeting will be held in the
church, when the subject will
be View or Text,
Romans Matthew and
Leaders, Messrs. Tom Du-
J. C. Tyson and J. A. Lang.
RAIN IN BEAVER DAM.
Asleep With Head On End of Cross
Tie.
Beaver Dam, N. C, July 1911.
On June 28th this section was vis-
by a copious rain accompanied
by some rain and wind. The latter
did but little damage, while the crops
are much by the rain, not
so much moisture falling since March.
The old man that the editor saw
that early morning in the deep rail-
road cut near Arthur, was not a
tramp proper. He is a carpenter of
three score years, who was returning
to his work in the Ballard section.
He took along a pint of Farmville
corn juice to help up his heart if it
got slow, and his brain got sleepy.
The good old man laid down with his
head on the end of a cross tie to
rest, knowing as he says, that the
midnight train was by and the could
get a few nap by the next
train. When he awoke the engine
was passing his head. He says,
I saw all that red light I
slipped my head off that cross tie
and lay close to the ground. That
seemed to be a long train. I'll nap
no more with my head on a cross
Institute.
In this issue appears the notice of
Institute, Whitsett, N. C.
This school has had a remarkable
history for the last twenty-five years
and has grown to be one of the state's
leading boarding schools. Last year
it had two hundred and fifty students
and forty graduates. Dozens of
dents from Pitt, Greene and
rounding counties have attended this
school, and all have been well pleas-
ed. If you are interested in schools
you should write for a copy of the
beautiful which is now
When duty calls some in
another direction.
Go See
As the spring begins and you want to do your spring
shopping.
GO SEE for Dress Goods in all qualities and
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, Plows and all Farm-
Utensils.
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 mer-
ever carried in Greenville. Don't think because
you go and see that you must buy from him, but we
want you to come and learn what we have to offer 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. R. J. G.
Greenville, North Carolina
Needs County Hospital.
Dr. J. Howell W. Day, of
ville, an ex-president of the North
Carolina Medical Society, in a re-
cent interview, urges the necessity
of county hospitals for the care of
the sick.
He says that future generations
will wonder at our great
for our court houses and jails,
while caring for the sick is left to
private enterprise. Dr. Way insists
that physicians should be better
paid. In closing his interview Dr.
Way
is an undeniable fact that the
average North Carolina doctor of
medicine works harder for less
money than any other educated class
of men in the state, or in their re-
communities. But in this
matter tradition, refined ethical
conceptions, habit, sympathetic con-
for former patients, and
other influences so affect the aver-
age doctor, that he will not lift his
hand to better these conditions hence
it behooves the friends of the
thinking men and women, who
realize that at no time in the history
of civilization has the work of the
physician been so valuable as in the
present era, to see they are better
and more promptly
Record.
Venters X Roads Items.
Winterville, N. C, June H.
A. Windham preached at Rose Hill
Sunday. There was a large crowd to
hear him.
Mr. Johnnie Moore and Misses
Helen Page and Nancy Mills, from
Cox's Mills, Sunday with Miss
Misses Sallie and Branch.
Miss Lula Haddock spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Miss Sadie
Harris.
Mr. W. A. Garris and wife went to
Winterville today.
The farmers are busy laying by
their corn and tobacco.
OUR WEEKLY
WASHINGTON LETTER
TAFT STANDS BY ALDRICH.
Democrats Are Fulfilling Their
Promise.
Clyde H.
Washington, July young
members of the house are working
like veterans. The present house is
one that no Democrat, or any other
American citizen for that matter,
need apologize for. I believe that
the country thoroughly appreciates
this, Thus declared Speaker
Champ Clark. He was hard at work
in his private office at the time, sit-
ting behind a desk piled high with
correspondence, reports of
gating committees, and an assort-
of books that would serve any
ordinary man as an entire library.
members of the house are
fighting a good said the speak-
are fulfilling as rapidly and as
literally as possible every promise
made to the people.
promised in the Denver plat-
form to reform the rules of the
house, and we have done it. That is
an accomplished fact.
opponents declared that only
under the old rules could the
of the house be transacted. It
was predicted that if the committees
were named by the house chaos would
result.
have reformed and liberalized
the rules and elected committees and
we business and bring joy
to the hearts of all lovers of the re-
public.
promised the people that we
would submit a proposition to amend
the constitution to permit the people
to vote direct for United States sen-
The house promptly passed
such a measure.
promised to pass a bill com-
the publication of campaign
expenses before the elections. That
has been done.
promised to admit New Mex-
and Arizona. We have done our
best to bring that about. It is up to
the senate.
promised to cut down the dis-
of the government. We
have already made a beginning by
abolishing more than one hundred
useless offices in and about the house
of representatives, thereby saving
annually.
is only an earnest of what
we will accomplish.
are living up to the
doctrine of in the
public expense that labor my be light-
No doubt we will be
sneered at by spendthrifts as cheese-
parers, but hard-headed sensible
folk will our action, because
it deserves to be
promised to repeal the tariff
on wood pulp, print paper, lumber,
timber and logs and that those
would be placed on the free list.
So far is the Democratic house is
concerned that pledge has been
filled in the reciprocity bill and the
free list which now
sleeps in the Republican
Taft Still With Aldrich.
President Taft's recent statement
that the adoption of ex-Senator Aid-
currency system, designed to
put the control of American money
absolutely in the hands of Wall street
bankers, is the most important
now pending, has resulted in
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
the old issue being raised between
himself and progressive Republicans.
He has presented himself and his
administration as a new menace to
public interest and raised the Dem-
and progressive Republicans
to a higher plane of public useful-
as the only effective force the
public can rely upon to resist the
money power of Morgan and
the president's efforts to serve it.
Both Aldrich and Mr. Taft declare
there is no intention of establishing
anything like a central government,
bank. But nobody can read the Aid-
rich plan in detail without realizing
that it is a central bank of issue that
he proposes. His so-called
association of is to be the
depository and fiscal agent of the
national government. It is to have
the sole issue power. It may receive
deposits from those national banks
that are stockholders in it. It shall
establish branch banks which just as
under the central government bank
scheme, will rush their local deposits
to the central bank, thus taking
money out of the community which
would otherwise be loaned out for in-
vestments in home enterprises. It
may buy and sell government and
state securities and gold coin or
lion. may paper for
banks depositing with it.
In short, the Aldrich reserve
is a bank with immense
and powers, but without the
name of a bank. Wall street will
control it. It is obvious that the
words were
because of the prejudice against
such an institution by the country
banks. Uncle Sam once tried a
bank. It was manned and ma-
by politicians and brought
a panic on the entire country. Aid-
flimsy misrepresentations even
though endorsed by Mr. Taft, will
accomplish but little. Remembering
its last experience, this government
will not stand for another central
government bank.
A Democratic Doctrine.
Election of senators by the direct
vote of the people, which is now held
up in congress by an amendment
supported by of Kansas, and
the entire group of special privileges
servers in the senate, is distinctly a
Democratic proposition. The report
of the proceedings of the Republican
national convention of 1908 shows
that the vote on, including in the
platform a demand for the election
of senators by the people Yeas
and nays
What Free List Menus.
The Democratic free list bill in
congress simply means that the farm-
will get his vehicle, farm tools,
wire fencing harness and shoes for
less money. Is not that a good thing
Can You Figure This Out J
While the Republican trust-buster,
Kellogg, was prosecuting the Stand-
ard Oil Company for the government,
he was receiving regular and
compensation from the steel trust.
Directors of the concern that paid
him these were stockholders in the
concern he was prosecuting. What is
the answer
A King Who Left Home.
Set the world to talking, but Paul
of Buffalo, N. Y., says he
always keeps at home the king of lax-
King's New Life Pills
and that they're a blessing to all his
family. Cure constipation, headache,
indigestion, dyspepsia. Only cents
at all druggists.
DIRECTORY
AND CITY OFFICIALS
Satan smiles every time he sees
a church closed for the summer.
Churches, Lodges and Social
County.
Superior Court C. Moore
SheriffS. I. Dudley.
Register of M. Moore
B.
C. OH. Laughing-
house.
C.
P. D.
J. Holland, J. J. May, B. M. Lewis, W.
B. Proctor.
Town
M. Wooten.
C. Tyson.
L. Carr.
Chief T. Smith.
Fire D. Overton.
E. Nobles, C. S. Can.
W. A. Bowen, E. B. Higgs, J. F.
Davenport, E. G. Flanagan, Z. P.
VanDyke, H. C. Edwards.
Water and Light A
White, C. Laughinghouse. K. L.
Humber.
G. Couch.
Churches.
Baptist, C. M.
Rock, pastor; C. C.
C. W. Wilson, superintendent Sn-
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary.
C. C. Ware,
J. G. Latham, clerk; C. C. Ware,
superintendent of Sunday school; J.
A. Lang, secretary.
Episcopal, St. rector at
present; H. Harding, senior warden
and secretary of Vestry; W. A. Bowen
superintendent of Sunday school.
Methodist, Jarvis J
If. Shore, pastor; A. B.
clerk; H. D. Bateman, superintend-
of Sunday school; L. H. Pender,
secretary.
pastor at
P. M. Johnston, clerk; P. M. John-
superintendent Sunday
Miss Olivia House, secretary.
Chapel
Rev. W. O. pastor.
Lodges.
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M.
L. H. Pender, W. M.; R. Williams,
Sec.
Sharon, U. D., A. F. and A. M.
H. Harding, W. M.; E. E. Griffin,
Sec.
Greenville Chapter No. R. A. M.
R. C. Flanagan, H. P.; J. E.
low, Sec.
Covenant No. I. O. O.
Brown, N. G.; L. H. Pender,
Greenville Encampment No. I. O.
O. F James Brown, C. P.; D. C.
Moore, Scribe.
Tribe No. I. O.
R. S. Sachem; J. L.
Evans, C. of R.
Tar River No. K. of J.
Woodward, C. C; A. B. Ellington,
K. of R. and S.
Tar River Ruling No. F. M.
W. Brown, W. R.; J. W. Little,
W. C.
Clubs.
L. Hall, president;
M. R. Turnage, secretary.
End of E. O.
fries, Pres.; Mrs. E. B. Sec.
Sans
president; Mrs. W. L. Hall, secretary
Round K. R.
president; Mrs. S. J. Everett,
Civic W. H. Ricks,
president; Mrs. E. V. Smith,
Daughters of L
TWO WOMEN KILLED
BY LIGHTNING STROKE
MAN SEVERELY SHOCKED
Were All Working Id a Field Near
Jack.
During the thunder storm Thurs-
day afternoon two women were kill-
ed instantly by the same stroke of
lightning while they were at work in
the field of Mr. A. B. Hudson, near
Black Jack. They were Mrs. W. H.
and Mrs. Alfred Edwards. A
son of Mrs. Corbett who was plowing
nearby was also struck knocked
insensible, but soon revived. The
electrical storm was very severe in
that section of the county, while they
had only a little rain.
Mrs. Edwards leaves a husband
and several small children, the old-
est about nine years.
Mrs. Corbett leaves a husband and
one child nearly grown. They were
buried this afternoon.
Creek Items.
Grimesland, N. C, June
through this section are very good,
people are nearly through laying by.
Things are not nearly as dry as they
were before the big rain.
Miss Hattie Mobley spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
L. D. Buck at Grimesland.
Mrs. J. L. Williams is all smiles.
She has a nice
Mr. Sam Holliday and Mrs. Edd
Holliday spent Sunday afternoon
with Mrs. J. L. Williams.
Mrs. John Wilson spent Saturday
night and Sunday at Mr. L. W.
son's.
Mr. Jim Stokes and wife spent Sun-
day with Mrs. J. L. Williams.
A crowd of our people went
Monday afternoon. They
had good luck, but got run out of the
woods by a thundercloud before they
all got their buckets full.
Mrs. Nancy Elks of Grimesland
spent Saturday night and Sunday at
Mr. M. L. Riggs.
There are two girls in this section
that says they are run over with
work and would like to have help.
Attack Like Tigers.
In fighting to keep the blood pure
the white corpuscles attack disease
germs like tigers. But often germs
multiply so fast the little fighters are
overcome. Then see pimples, boils,
eczema, and sores
and strength and appetite fail.
This condition demands Electric Bit-
to regulate stomach, liver and
kidneys and to expel poisons from the
blood. are the best blood
writes C. T. of Tracy,
Cal., have ever They make
rich, red blood, strong nerves and
build up your health. Try them.
at all druggists.
Important Notice.
The board of equalization will meet
in the office of the county commission-
on Monday, July 10th, for the
purpose of giving those who have not
done so an opportunity of listing
taxes, and also to hear any complaints
as to valuation of property for
order of J. B. chair-
man of the board of equalization.
J. Jarvis, president; J. L
en, secretary.
The Kings A. L.
Blow, president; Mrs. J. G
L- . it





The Carolina Home and farm and The Eastern Reflector.
THE HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE REFLECTOR COMPANY, Inc.
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year, . .
Six
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
f respect will he charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
as second class matter
August 1910. at the post office at
North Carolina, undo
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, JULY 1911.
EDITORS AT
The editor of The Reflector is back
at his post after an absence of four
days attending the meeting of the
North Carolina Press Association at
Lenoir. He has attended many meet-
of the association since he be-
came a member in 1878, when he
Joined at Catawba Springs, near
Hickory, and can truthfully say that
none of them was more delightful
than this last meeting at Lenoir. The
people of that progressive mountain
city did everything that seemed
to add to the pleasure of their
guests.
Arriving at Lenoir Monday evening,
the editors were met by a committee
of citizens and taken to their
stopping places, most of them
being quartered at Davenport Col-
where the sessions of the con-
were held. Rev. J. B. Craven,
president of the college, and his
charming wife, gave every attention
to the comfort of those stopping with
them.
At the first meeting of the con-
Monday night, the board of
trade distributed envelopes contain-
post card views of Lenoir for
the use of the members in writing
home, and checks for cold drinks or
cigars at any of the drug stores.
Tuesday morning they were taken in
carriages and automobiles for a
drive up Hibriten mountain and lunch
WM served on the mountain top.
That afternoon while the members
were engaged in meeting, the ladies
of the editorial party were delight-
fully entertained at a reception by
the ladies of Lenoir. That evening
the men had automobile trips around
the city.
Tuesday night and Wednesday
forenoon were devoted to the
of the convention. In addition
to the part taken by the editors in
the splendid program, there were ad-
dresses by several distinguished men
of the state, these being Dr. Joseph
Hyde Pratt, Dr. Few. president of
Trinity College, Dr. John A. Ferrell,
Hon. J. R. Young. Dr. Poteat, founder
of Wake Forest College, and Con-
John H. Small.
The work of the convention was
completed by dinner Wednesday,
though the program had to be rather
hurried, and that afternoon a large
number left on the three
trip to Blowing Rock, Boone,
Grand Father
Mountain and other points in that
beautiful country. While The Re-
man was among those who did
not take the extended mountain trip,
he nevertheless another de-
afternoon before facing home-
ward. Dr. A. A. Kent, a leading
physician and Caldwell county's rep-
in the legislature is
a brother-in-law of President R. H.
Wright, of East Carolina
Training took us out over
the Turnpike mountain roads for a
trip of about twenty-five miles. Be-
sides the pleasure of discussing
topics with a gentleman so
well informed, the ride over the fine
roads among the mountains was much
enjoyed.
SHADE TREES.
come to the governor and other
of the state who are here today
to attend the celebration of the an-
of the breaking of ground
for the buildings of East Carolina
Teachers Training school. We are
all proud of our splendid institution
and are glad to have others come
here and see what we have. The in-
speaks for Itself.
-o
The lawyers took a step in the
right direction at the meeting of the
Bar Association at when
they recommended that the number
of Superior court judges be increased
to twenty-four, that the present sys-
of rotation of judges be abolished,
that solicitors be put on salary, and
that the law relating to the selection
of jurors be amended.
The silver maple as a shade tree
is tabooed by the shade tree com-
mission of Trenton, N. J., and they
impose a fine on any one planting
them in that city, oil account of the
established fact that this particular
tree is short lived, will not stand the
strain of heavy winds, and
is too small when full grown to
ford any great amount of shade.
The shade tree commission of
Trenton is doing a splendid work
along the line of beautifying the
city. We believe a similar com-
mission for Greenville would be a
good thing. There is too much
less slaughter of trees here by
who have no conception of civic
beauty, and we suggest that the new
board of aldermen elect a committee
of its members to look after this in-
of the town and not leave it up
to the police as heretofore.
It is important that we have
shade trees and that they be protect-
ed and not butchered by the author-
as it were.
It is to be hoped there will be a
large attendance of the board of gov-
and township committees of
the Pitt county fair at the meeting
to be held on next Friday, 7th. Town-
ship committees should be busy
soliciting premium list donations be-
fore the meeting and report that
day.
They have come across another
senatorial scandal, the charge being
made against Senator Stephenson of
Wisconsin, that was used to
secure his election.
The New York Journal of Com-
reports the condition of the
cotton crop for June at 85.9, two
points better than in May and five
points better than a year ago.
Two French editors struck a
over an race and
settled it in a sword duel, each re-
a wound in the arm. France
still recognizes the duel to be legal.
The mid-year dividends paid by the
banks of Charlotte amounted to
Charlotte does things on a big
scale.
The wire trust is now running the
gauntlet. Maybe they will reach the
rope trust after a while and bang
somebody.
Carolina Home Farm The Eastern Reflector.
t.
With today's issue of The Farm-
ville Enterprise
ton's term as its editor expires, he
having resigned to take a more
position on a tobacco market
elsewhere. Since taking up the
work of The Uncle
has endeared himself to many
of its readers and he will be missed.
Mr. G. A. Rouse, formerly of Snow
Hill, will succeed him.
Greenville extends a cordial
The government requires that a
citizen must take an oath
the constitution of the United
yet the government will issue to a
citizen a license to sell liquor in a
prohibition state and thus help that
citizen to become a violator of the
law. This is rank inconsistency.
The Charlotte Observer has dis-
covered that North Carolina produces
more cotton per acre than any other
state. Then the other states must
have a very small yield, for even in
North Carolina, the state that leads,
it is not half as much per acre as it
should and could be made.
You can wait for the casualty re-
turns, especially from the North,
from the use of pop crackers on
this, the biggest of all national
Down here ii the South we
go fire-works crazy in celebrating
Christmas, a senseless custom, and
the North takes Its bug-house turn
when the Fourth of July comes.
When the new court house is com-
we would like to see work
start up on something else as large
to fill in the gap between now and
the beginning of work on the gov-
building.
We offer our congratulations to the
press association upon its selection
of so Enterprising a man for its new
Observer.
That kind of a pun is hardly
it
Cowan jumped the game, and don't
know what he missed by not being
there. Guess he could not leave off
watching the girls in bathing
Now they are saying that dollar
bills are full of microbes. Bring them
along this way dollar we'll
take care of the microbes.
o---------
We have seen it, and can say that
Raleigh's new auditorium building is
something large enough to brag
about.
And the charge is that former
dent Roosevelt was sweet on the
sugar trust.
The city water is all right again.
It took only a few days for the
to be corrected.
No more June brides for a year,
but the October ones will come in
the meantime.
Be in Greenville Tuesday, July
Fourth, and help organize a township
good roads association.
You should be equally as patriotic
every other day of the year as on
the glorious 4th.
According to advices from
Cowan in the Wilmington Dispatch,
you should also boil eggs.
---------o
The Fourth of July orator today got
off his speech about the signers of
the Declaration of Independence.
When they come they get their
eyes opened about Greenville.
Greenville's only Fourth of July
diversion will base ball.
Now, is you catch a fellow selling
near-beer swat him.
Greenville will have a real sane
fourth unless some of the ball rooters
overdo their job.
o---------
Congressmen are not thoroughly
appreciating having to stay in Wash-
and work all the summer.
July Fourth is good roads day all
over the state. It is a good way to
observe independence day.
Raleigh's new auditorium is bring-
it into note as a convention city.
The dentists will meet there next
year.
Our congratulations to William-
upon having installed a good
electric lighting system. It is a sign
of progress.
The State Bar Association in
away last week elected ex-Judge
Francis D. Winston president. It is
an honor he will wear worthily.
Beverly is once more occupying
top of the column position, all be-
cause the president is summering
there.
There will be some growling on
the part of the fellow who failed to
list his taxes when he faces a double
tax.
The state building commission has
decided to cut down one story on the
new administration building and make
it four stories instead of five.
Now listen at them go after the
governor for the place on the
ration commission made vacant by
the death of Commissioner Brown.
If all the North Carolina papers
have said about Lenoir the past week
was put in a book, it would make a
big volume.
And some of them are actually
charging that this unusually long hot
spell is caused by Halley's comet
coming so near the earth a few months
ago.
An increase of in exports
and in imports for the city
of Wilmington the past fiscal year
shows a gratifying growth of business
in North Carolina's chief seaport.
Greenville, in keeping with her
spirit, extends a cordial welcome to
every visitor here at the Sunday
School Institute. The best that
the town has is theirs, coupled with
the wish that each may have an ex-
pleasant stay among us.
o-
California got another shake, but
a bad one.
The city of Charlotte has made an
appropriation of toward the
support of two trained nurses to at-
tend poor people who are unable to
provide themselves with proper at-
in cases of sickness. This is
a step in the right direction.
Editor Isaac London, of the Siler
City Grit, was awarded the mendacity
medal at the recent press convention,
and will wear it the coming year. He
has certainly told some whoppers
during the past year.
President Taft was the center of a
sensation in Indianapolis on the
fourth. A spent bullet striking a per-
son the platform from which he
was speaking, brought out the stir
that two thugs were trying to kill
the president.
Mr. Henry C. Brown, one of the
members of the state corporation
commission, died Tuesday morning at
bis home in Raleigh. He served as
clerk to the board for many years, and
at the last state election was chosen
a member of the commission.
---------o
The Fairmont Messenger, a good,
live weekly paper, published in
Robeson county, has recently
chased a cylinder press and
will soon have it installed ready for
use. This is a mark of progress we
are glad to see.
Whichard sat in this chair a few
minutes during the writer's absence,
but that is not the reason some of
these squibs are red-headed.
Greensboro News.
Guess you found the seat warm, too.
Eh In fact, it was too warm for us
to tarry long.
An Elizabeth City correspondent
must be trying to get in the
sen class with the Hendersonville
low. He reports an old dig-
about a stump and unearthing
a pot that contained in gold.
His story was looking a little
until he said the reported
the find to his employer on whose
land he was digging stumps, and the
latter took a few pieces of the gold
as souvenirs and let the carry
the balance home to his family. That
ruined the story.
About Advertising.
A business ebbs or flows, goes up
or in proportion as the business
man let people know- what he has
to sell them. To act on the idea that
what people want they will come and
seek after, might do if all business
men followed it. But the shrewd, up-
to-date business man will not follow
such fossilized methods, but through
judicious, attractive and generous ad-
tells the public what he has,
and the public reciprocates by
with him. In truth, people do not
want to bother themselves with won-
where they can get an article
when the fact can be brought to their
notice through an ad in the local
paper. The invariable rule is no ad-
little business; fair
fair business; generous ad-
prosperous business. Why
the rule works out so infallibly is
clear to every Intelligent mind.
Standard Laconic.
latch the front door, people in
caution as to disease, in
steps to keep from getting some j Presidency may be studied to ad-
malady, often leave a loop-hole. by certain gentlemen within
Champ Clark's Strength.
Mr. Clark's attitude toward the
comes as the result of just a little
thoughtlessness, or, perhaps, of a
weak spot in the armor of thorough-
and it is this weak spot that
the disease-shaft frequently hits. It
is not an infrequent occurrence for
people, when they go to public places,
to make certain of the purity of the
drinking water, before touching it, and
yet give little heed to the receptacle
that holds the water, or the drinking
cup that is hanging nearby, of per-
haps resting on some soggy spot. And
the cup probably holds more
germs, more kind of germs,
running the gamut of disease,
consumption, and
than anything else. Hence, now
much attention is being given to this
menace. The attention is widespread,
but it is going to be even wider, and
of much greater force. Means now,
such as paper cups, each cup suitable
for but one usage, are being adopted,
and many people go armed with their
own drinking cups to public places.
Just what will be the reason-
able and easiest working, solution re-
mains to be seen, but it is a matter
that should be given attention by the
individual.
The following brief item from the
New York Tribune is interesting and
helpful in the
city bacteriologists of Chicago
have made a collection of public
drinking cups from hotels, schools,
stores and railway stations, and have,
with a view to proving their unclean-
made bacterial cultures and
microscopical examinations from
them. They found germs of many
varieties and specimens of diphtheria
and pneumonia. Pigs were inoculated
with these germs, and all those
which were treated with the pus
germs developed fatal Many
positive tests were also made with the
diphtheria cultures. The secretary of
the Illinois Board of Health, writing
on the same subject, pub-
drinking cup is as antiquated as
the ducking stool and the inquisition;
people never think of eating from pub-
plates or wearing public clothes
or smoking public
ton Dispatch.
whose bonnets the buzzing of the
presidential bee deafens them to the
voice of common sense and the call
of public duty.
a result last year's
the party placed me in the
most responsible position it had to
give. My duty is here helping the
house to make good, and I am going
to stay here as long as there is any-
thing for me to do. In other words.
I am not going to neglect the work
here in order to run around the
try after another
Previous to this year and the open-
of the session called to deal with
the for-seeking reciprocity
policy, it cannot be said that Mr.
Clark's claim to B presidential
nation was regarded as very serious,
nor, perhaps, would his name now
be placed near the head of the list
of probable nominees. But he has
developed a remarkable aptitude for
minding the business he has in hand
and letting his future take care of
itself, which opens up very interest-
York Times.
And The Drinking Cup.
Like a person who locks down all
the windows at night and forgets to
King Cotton.
In spite of a general and
early adverse crop condition, it is
now predicted that the South will
present this year the cotton
crop in the history of its cultivation.
In a recent article in the
Record, Editor Richard H.
Edmonds made this
The value of the cotton crop of
1910-11 is probably
than the combined output of all
the gold mines of the world. The to-
exports for the year of cotton
and cotton products amount to
this being in ex-
of the combined exports of bread-
stuffs, meat and dairy products, cat-
hogs, and sheep, mineral oils and
iron and steel. As Mr. Edmonds well
says, cotton is not simply an asset of
great value to the South, but also
of vital importance to the prosperity
of the United States.
In the cultivation of cotton and the
manufacture of its various products
the South has a field of unchallenged
supremacy and prosperity. A proper
exploitation of this field means a
quick growth of population and a
wonderful increase in property val-
News.
The Railroad.
Some of the big railroad systems
of the country have adopted the plan
of oiling their roadbeds with a view
to eliminating the dust nuisance which
is particularly annoying during sum-
mer travel. If the innovation works
well it will remove one of the most
disagreeable features of traveling by
rail.
Dust is not only annoying, it is
It is now recognized as a
good medium for the dissemination of
disease germs. The oil treatment
has been applied successfully to city
streets and public roads for some
years, and the use of oil as a
of dust is increasing rapidly.
Now that some of the are
beginning to employ it there will be
a still wider field for the crude pro-
duct of Mr. numerous
wells.
The traveling public will hail the
railroad with joy, and will
hope that its mileage may increase.
In time, perhaps, we shall also have
the railroad, and it will be
for the weary traveler to get
an breath of fresh air and
a view of the landscape without the
necessity of a subsequent visit to an
Embezzler Arrested.
Deputy Sheriff R. H. Harper, of
county, arrived in the
city last night for the purpose of car-
back to his county Charles
Chaney, a white man, charged with
embezzlement of from Edward
Davis, of Elizabeth City. Chaney
was first located in Edenton, and
from there he came to this town,
where he was arrested by the chief
of Police Geo. N. Howard, at the
request of the Elizabeth City
Chaney is a young man,
and has only been here a short while
Accompanied by the deputy sheriff
he left on the Southern train
this News.
Only Seen by the Man in the Moon.
You needn't talk about the
when in the silvery moon-
light a gallant young gentleman is
looking his angelic sweetheart full in
the face, and there is no eye all
the world to
Star.
-v.





V.
.-,, .
H.
The Carolina Hone and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
QUITS SCHOOL
DAYS
GOES TO THE SEA SIDE.
How Ocracoke Her
Way Out of Difficulties.
Hanrahan, N. C, June 1911.
It seems that digression is a large
part of my profession when looking
for something better than I have in
possession. So from my first day at
school I'll wonder away, and in-
stead tell something of my sea-side
stay.
What did I see at Ocracoke Lots
of tame-wild geese and many dead-
live oaks. To a kinder people I
never spoke. They will feed you,
sleep you, and tell you a Joke, take
you to the surf, let you tumble and
soak; they will tell you the traditions
of ancient Roanoke, but history
at Ocracoke. They will tell you
how the island got her name
never say how a ship that was
passing in the darkness got lame.
She carried as a mascot a cock that
was game, by crowing at day light
he had reached some fame. The ship
had sunk to edge of her and
a voice was heard through an old
fashioned funnel, and the captain ex-
claimed, Crow let each
get quick to his bundle and respond
to the call from the funnel, and
through the darkness they waded
ashore and since that time this name
it bore, except for that
have been put upon it.
One of the most amusing stories
those people told me while there, was
of a genteel young fellow from
Greenville, Goldsboro, Raleigh
cause that city gent was so green,
hen he sat down on a turf near by,
off with his shoes, rolled his pants
legs high, then took his girl with a
tender embrace and bore her over to
a dry place. Then as each couple
came in turn, this same lesson our
young man learned. Now when he
thinks to go to Rome, he asks,
the people there act as they do at
His girl pardoned him for
his breach of their etiquette, she
agreed to try to learn the etiquette
of interior. So today they are
happy up in the interior. She can
adopt the customs of our people, and
when they visit her parents on the
coast, she will have taught him that
it is no breach of their etiquette if it
Is necessary to pull off your shoes,
roll up your pants, take up your girl
and bear her across the stream or
from boat to shore.
learned on our return home
that Kinston had secured the school
for the feeble-minded. If adults
were allowed to attend this school,
then Kinston would be filled to her
utmost capacity.
Will resume my in my next.
EDITORS ELECT OFFICERS.
some other city up in the interior.
But his destination, wherever it may
have been, even if it were Hanrahan,
he had evidently never in broad day-
light and in the presence of her
father, mother and others embraced
a girl. But awhile ago one of those
lovely belles, who live close to
and nature's God, came up in
the Interior, and her winning ways,
cultured discourses, many of
them are posted on most any subject,
learning both from observation and
by being trained in our best
and refined looks captured his heart.
So he took a trip after corresponding
a while to see her, and to be sure he
was putting on all the dignity he
knew how. Sunday came and it was
church time. They both wore their
best tailor-made clothes, silk hose
and patent leather slippers. They
were followed by her parents, and
several other young couples made their
way to the church. About mid way
the island is a slough that at high
tide is about knee deep in water.
This must be crossed to reach the
church. On arriving at this slough
our gent from the interior was very
much embarrassed. He stood for a
while and looked at his girl and then
at the water, but what to do he did
not know. As he was from the city
she hesitated in suggesting a way
out of his dilemma. So at last he,
with shoes and all plunged in and
waded across, leaving his best girl
on the opposite side. She seeing no
other way out waded in, too. A nice
plight they were in to attend church.
So they stood awhile and pondered.
He would look at his girl and then
his vision wandered. He saw she
smiled, but why he did not know.
So while they were hesitating and
he was strenuously meditating, an-
other young couple arrived on the
They laughed out right, be-
Probably Meet In Morehead City
Next Year.
At the meeting in Lenoir the North
Carolina Press Association elected
the following officers for the coming
President, J. J. Farris, of the High
Point Enterprise.
First Vice-President, J. H. Caine,
f the Asheville Citizen.
Second Vice-president, H. C. Martin,
of the Lenoir Topic.
Third Vice-president, J. T. Fain, of
or the Greensboro Telegram.
B.
Secretary and Treasurer, J.
Sherrill, of the Concord Tribune.
Historian, R. F. of the Mon-
roe Journal.
Orator, Josephus Daniels, of the
Raleigh News and Observer.
Poet, William Hill, of Barium
Springs, Our Fatherless Ones.
Executive committee, H. A. Lon-
don, of the Pittsboro Record; R. M.
Phillips, of the Greensboro News; D.
T. Edwards, of the Kinston Free
Press; R. W. Vincent, of the Charlotte
Observer.
The association will probably hold
its meeting next year at the Atlantic
Hotel in Morehead City. While the
selection of the time and place of
meeting is left with the executive
committee, the association expressed
a preference for Morehead City and
recommended that the committee
that place if satisfactory arrange-
can be made.
Thirty Tears Together.
Thirty years of
of it. How the merit of a good thing
stands out in that the worth-
of a bad one. So there's no
guesswork in this evidence of
Concord, Mich., who
have used Dr. King's New Discovery
for years, and its the best cough
and cold cure I ever Once it
finds entrance in a home you can't
pry it out. Many families have used
it forty years. Its the most
throat and lung medicine on earth.
for asthma, hay
fever, croup, quinsy or sore lungs.
Price Trial bottle free.
A leading
BOARDING SCHOOL Low
Wide Excellent
Location
with views and full
particular sent Free
Write Adorns
MM H
V.
Have you found out what interest-
news is contained in the want
page There is a reason why
want ads are interesting to every-
body. Supply and demand create
a market. The man who has an
article which he has no further
use for, with the assistance of a
little want ad, can find rapidly
the other man who is looking or
just that article.
Phone Your Wants to
The Daily Reflector
The Carolina Home and The Eastern Reflector.
Bed Room Suits
WITH A LOW BASE, LONG MIRROR IN GOLD-
EN QUARTERED OAK BUREAU, ALSO A
SPLENDID LINE OF MIRROR-BACK
CHINA CLOSET IN QUARTERED POLISHED
OAK. THE NEW PERFECTION OIL COOK
STOVE WILL KEEP YOU COOL AND COOK
WITH SO MUCH MORE COMFORT
Taft VanDyke, Furniture
J. S. MOORING
General Merchandise
Buyer of Cotton and Country Produce
FIVE POINTS, GREENVILLE, N. C.
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair
Work, and Flues in Season, See
J. J. JENKINS
Greenville. N. C.
Subscribe to The Reflector.
SHOULD HAVE ATTENTION.
y Important Matters to The Farm-
of The State.
any sections of the state are pass-
through the most severe drought
y have ever experienced at this
son of the year.
any of us, as we review the farm
rations of the past three months,
where we have made costly mis-
es. We also see where we hit the
so to speak, and scored
We have illustrations and
or opportunities for
on the farms of others, the
of these successes and mis-
We should make careful note
these and they will serve us in
stead in the years to It
Id be a day well spent to take
at this season and drive over the
and observe the crops on the
fields and farms along the
make inquiry as to date and
th of breaking, subsequent
date of planting, and method
cultivation, and previous crops
noting carefully the physical
mechanical condition of each
d. In this way we can get in-
matter for discussion at
ion meetings, Alliance
Clubs, picnics and social
It is thus that we can
and teach some most valuable
sons in and crop manage-
t, and thereby make our mistakes
tributary to our future success,
the past, with all that it teach-
Is behind us; the immediate
e engages our attention; harvest
not yet; the critical period is just
us, and we should try to
laking further mistakes. In the
of the season our
thoughts were engaged
with the problem of proper fer-
in most instances, methods
preparation and planting received
consideration. Many of
did not reckon with the problem
moisture, but just took it for grant-
that it would be forthcoming, and
we find the cause of some of
most costly mistakes.
is the most important
In the production of crop-, and
by which water may be
fired in the subsoil and conserved
future use by the crops should
our most careful
early in the season.
The planting season in many see-
opened with less water in the
than ever before, and the
in most places since April
is below the average for this
by several inches. As a re-
It, the soil is unusually dry, and
e soil water unusually low for this
of the year. And, as already
we are just entering the
period in the growth of the crop
the stage of growth at which most
is required to bring to good
and maturity.
With a normal rainfall the
of the growing season it will re-
tire our utmost skill to produce a
Ir crop in many sections. We will
to conserve every particle of
possible, and herein we need
i be resourceful, and perform the
in the most efficient manner.
e only thing to do is to cultivate,
titivate shallow, cultivate frequent-
Avoid open furrows. The man
takes a shovel plow, or solid
and opens a ditch on each
of the raw, as some are now do-
is guilty of
of plant life. cot-
ton sweeps, harrows and cultivators,
set to run shallow, not over one or
two inches deep, and good implements
to use in making a dust mulch. Lay
aside the Dixie and shovel plow and
thereby save the crop. Make all
possible haste to stir the soil after
a Under present
it is imperative that we do this;
if we do not, and a crust is allowed
to form and remain for a few days
the soil actually becomes dryer than
if no rain had fallen, and the crop
suffers severely.
We should keep the cultivation go-
even if no rain falls to form a
crust. In some instances it may
be better to run a drag or a light
roller constructed for the purpose to
break the crust or compact the soil
where too open and loose. Go over
the crop every week or ten days;
if allowed to lie too long, injury will
done by cultivation.
it behooves us as farmers to study
the situation, to stand by our crops,
seek advice from each other and try
not to let our crops suffer through
any mistake of ours.
There is another thing that should
not escape our scarcity
and high price of hay. Many farmers
are now paying to cash per
ton, and to on time for
thy hay. The drought has cut short
the hay crop in the north and west,
and hay is going to be scarce and
high next winter and spring.
Fortunately, it is not too late for
to yet the and
that we will need. An acre or two
sowed or planted to sorghum now, or
any time in July, and well fertilized,
will yield an abundance of forage.
Millet can be sown, as also can corn,
cow peas and soy beans, and no op-
should be spared to grow an
abundance of these crops to provide
ample supply of forage for winter and
spring.
In the fall, rye, winter oats, wheat,
barley, crimson clover and vetch can
be easily and cheaply grown, and is
far superior to the best timothy
hay.
We recently saw a farmer paying
cash per ton for hay, and we
wondered by what process of reason-
he arrived at the conclusion to
grow cotton and to buy hay instead
of growing the hay himself. And as
we pondered we thought of the re-
mark of a ten-year-old boy, who stood
in a cotton field, leaning on his hoe
handle, in the middle of an after-
noon, about the last of May, watching
a farmer driving by with ten bales
of hay on his wagon. He had passed
early in the morning on his way to
town and was now on his way home.
As we drove by with the cultivator
the boy said, I have just been
thinking. If that man had gone out
last fall with his team and prepared
half an acre of land and sowed to oats
and crimson clover, and cut with
mowing machine this spring and put
in the barn, it would not have taken
longer to do this work than he has
been gone from home for this load of
hay, and he would have made as much
or more hay, too, and could have
saved the money he paid for that
Was the boy right
Unless more than ordinary
is paid to our forage crops from
now on, many farmers in this state
will buy hay next summer at prices
higher than they have paid for it
in years. The hay crop out West it
short. In fact, it is short everywhere,
and we may reasonably look for ex-
high prices for hay next
REAPING BENEFIT.
From The Experience of Greenville
People.
We are fortunate indeed to be able
to profit by the experience of our
neighbors. The public utterances of
Greenville residents on the following
subject will interest and benefit thou-
sands of our readers. Read this state-
No better proof can be had.
Mrs. Jane L. Godwin,
son avenue, Greenville, N. C,
feel justified in recommending
Kidney in return for the
benefit I received from them. For a
long time my back ached and I had
dizzy spells and headaches. The
kidney secretions also annoyed me
and I had pains through my lions.
When I read of Kidney Pills,
I got a box from the John L. Wooten
Drug Company, their use as
relieved me. I can now rest
much better at night and my
has improved in every
For sale by all dealers. Price
cents. Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the and
take no other.
AS TO EXPERIMENT PARKS.
Teacher at Training School.
Miss Daisey B. of Raleigh,
has been elected teacher of Latin at
East Carolina Training
School, to succeed Miss Birdie
Kinney, who resigned. Miss is
a graduate of Peace the
State Normal and Industrial College,
and took a degree from Cornell this
spring. She has taught in the graded
schools of Wilmington and Raleigh,
and is highly recommended.
Trinity College.
Attention is called the advertise-
of Trinity College and Trinity
Park School, at Durham. These
schools stand at the head of education-
institutions and offer superior ad-
vantages. sent on
cation.
Teachers to Statesville.
Misses Margaret Blow and Nellie
Pender, of Greenville, have been elect-
ed as teachers in the Statesville grad-
ed schools for the next term. We can
assure the Statesville people that ex-
selections were made in these
two young ladies.
In Regard to Their Establishment In
Each County of the State.
Mr. J. L. Burgess state
mist, has addressed a communication
in regard to the value of establish-
farm experimental stations in
each county in the state and
sizing at the same time the need that
the press of the state aid in the work
that has been started to inculcate
more scientific farming principles in-
to those engaged in this vocation.
Farmers of Mecklenburg have re-
a copy of the following letter
from
are aware that the local press
takes great interest in the welfare of
the that the interest
of the two are at many points
cal.
The leading function of the North
Carolina Department of Agriculture is
not its police work but that of pro-
agricultural wealth among
the farmers of the state. With this
in view, we are establishing in each
county a number of local
farms, one on each public road
leading into the county seat, on which
simple but vital experiments are con-
ducted in plain view of every passer-
by. This local experiment work is
planned with a view to arousing in-
on the part of the farmer
the study of his own local conditions
of crop production. In this way we
hope to aid the farmers in each
to increase their crop yields and
thus enable the state to grow at
home the millions of dollars worth
of food supplies which are now an-
shipped into the state from
outside sources. We are enclosing a
copy of our contract which will show
the subject and indicate the scope
of the work.
now on we shall desire to
reach the farmers of your county
through your paper and with your
permission, will offer you, from time
time, for publication, short
on our work as it progresses in
your county and on other agricultural
subjects of interest to your
truly yours,
L. BURGESS,
By direction of the commissioner.
Colored Man Needs Help.
Willis Clark, of the best known
and most public spirited colored men
of Greenville, is permanently dis-
and has been for sometime, and
is in need of assistance. He was for
years connected with the colored fire
department and a faithful fire fighter,
rendering the town much service. He
will appreciate anything the people
do for him in his affliction.
summer. Begin now to prepare for
the evil day. If your stubble land is
too hard to break with a plow, run a
disk or cutaway harrow over it at
once so as to form a mulch and stop
evaporation of the little water re-
in the soil. Then when the
first rain falls prepare and sow at
once with some crop for hay. A fail-
on the part of the farmers of the
state to attend to this now will re-
in costly experience next sum-
mer.
T. J. W. BROOM,
Assistant Demonstrator
ALDERMEN ORGANIZE.
And Elect Officers for the Coming
Fiscal Year.
The fiscal year of Greenville In
municipal affairs beginning the first
of July, the recently elected and hold-
over aldermen met at noon today to
take over the administration from
their predecessors. Mayor F. M.
Wooten presided and administered the
official oath to the aldermen. The
board is as
First J. E. Nobles.
Second A. Bowen and E.
Third F. Davenport and
J. S. Tunstall.
Fourth P. VanDyke and
B. F. Tyson.
Fifth C. Edwards.
The following officers were elected
by the
Alderman J. E.
Nobles.
Clerk and tax C, Ty-
son.
L. Carr.
Chief of T. Smith.
Assistant A. Clark.
Night H.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
Ayden. M. C, June had a
fine game of base ball yesterday.
Mr. W. F. Hart and wife, of More-
head City, are visiting friends in
Ayden.
A large crowd, about two car loads
of people, came down from Green-
ville to witness the ball game Tues-
day. Next time we shall expect Dr.
G. Ernul, Messrs. Ben. Patrick
and to come and help
root for Greenville.
Field peas are getting scarce, as
our people are sowing more and more
each year.
Corn and cotton is extremely fine in
this section, while the tobacco crop
is not worth talking
Mrs. J. and son,
Jack, passed through here Tuesday
for Ocracoke, where Mr. Jake
will wed, on Wednesday,
Miss Virginia Dare Pittman, the ac-
daughter of Capt. Bob.
Pittman, formerly of Grifton.
Mrs. Mary Dickinson is visiting rel-
in Granville and Person county,
also attended the celebration of the
24th of June at the Oxford Orphan-
age.
Quite a large delegation of Ayden-
expect to hear Gov. Kitchin speak
in Greenville Friday. Governor
Kitchin is very popular with our
den people.
Mr. J. F. and family
spent Wednesday in Ayden.
Messrs. R. W. Smith and W. F. Hart
spent Thursday with Mr. E. E.
in Greene county.
Mr. Marshall Tripp had his right
hand badly cut in a machine that he
was operating this morning, cutting
off the ends of three of his fingers.
Our farmers should feel very grate-
for their nice crops of corn and
cotton, the largest for the time of
year for several years. Our vicinity
has had ideal seasons so far and a
bountiful yield is expected.
Work has begun on the large
on the Seminary lot which will
be an ornament to Ayden and the
pride of the Free Will Baptists.
Rev. M. A. Adams, pastor of the
Baptist church, gave a brief report
to his congregation Sunday afternoon
of his trip to Philadelphia, where he
had been attending the Baptist Alli-
of the World. These meetings
are held once in five years, the next
one will he held at Berlin, Germany.
FOR FAIRBANKS
Morse gasoline engine, one Bell
Threshing machine, practically
new. E. Turnage Sons, Ayden.
WE HAVE RECEIVED TWO
cars of machinery, consisting of
everything needed on a farm. Terms
to suit purchaser. E. Turnage Sons,
Ayden.
JUST RECEIVED TWO CAR LOADS
of nitrate of soda. Can supply your
needs. Prices guaranteed. E. Turn-
age Sons, Ayden.
NEWS THAT IS OF IN-
TAR HEELS
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES.
J. H. Assigns.
Mr. Jesse H. Starkey, a main street
grocer, made an assignment Sat-
night to Mr. T. M. Hooker.
He reserved his homestead
Total assets estimated about
with liabilities about the same.
The Jury's Verdict in the Hill Tragedy
At Jamestown.
With the commissioners of Guilford
county who met yesterday for their
regular monthly session the report of
the coroner's jury in the Jamestown
tragedy of June when Mrs. Ida
Hill, of Lexington, met her death, was
filed by Coroner Wood, the last meet-
of his jury having been held last
Tuesday, the 27th. Their verdict
threw no light on the mystery that
has baffled the community in which
it occurred, and has caused consider-
able speculation on the two theories
of murder and suicide. The verdict
as filed
the undersigned jurors, sum-
and empaneled this day
by W. W. Wood, coroner of
ford county, to inquire into the cause
of the death of Mrs. Ida Hill, of Lex-
N. C, which occurred at
Jamestown, N. C, on the night of June
or morning of June in the home
of her mother, Mrs. Emily J. Rags-
dale, being duly sworn and having
viewed the dead body of the deceased
and after examining the evidence and
circumstances available and brought
before us, find that the death of the
deceased was unlawfully caused by
means of strangulation, but by whose
act we are unable to ascertain. Signed,
W. W. Wood, coroner; J. W.
D. F. Staley, H. P. Staley, E. S. Arm-
field D. W. Moore, C. V.
The jury first met on the day fol-
lowing the tragedy, but being unable
to ascertain any definite information,
deferred adjournment until the 27th,
which Coroner Wood states, was that
something tangible might develop.
Filed with the verdict was testimony
taken from Dr. J. R. Gordon, J. W.
and J. W. on June
8th.
Despite the verdict of the coroner's
jury the death of Mrs. Hill has gone
on record as one of the mysterious
tragedies in the history of the state.
The case which is still a subject of
discussion bring forth two theories,
those of suicide and murder. Every
effort that has been made has failed
to unravel the tangle, or to absolutely
dislodge either of the conflicting
ions, and although detectives have
spent many days studying, their efforts
to trail a murder have not resulted
in News, July
4th.
The Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
ONE WHO KNEW.
IS.
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's
Readers.
representative of the
Daily News was today shown a let-
from a Mr. stating that Lee
Sigmon is at Woodlawn, well and
hearty, and will write his wife as
soon as he reaches his destination,
which the writer refused to disclose.
Sigmon, who was baggage agent for
the Southern and C. and N. W. rail-
roads in this city, disappeared Mon-
day night, and foul play had been
but if credence can be attach-
ed to Mr. letter, anxious minds
will be set at rest.
During a baseball game In Char-
Saturday the umpire, named Nu-
gent, made a decision that incensed
the crowd and but for the protection
of policemen the umpire would have
been mobbed. Protected from the
crowd at the game he was later as-
sailed by a mob when the car on
which he was riding reached the
square and the police had to get an
automobile to get away.
Gastonia Thirty or more spin-
mills in Gaston county will be
closed down for the next ten days, or
two weeks, and as a consequence
many thousand mill operatives will be
idle for that period. This number
represents per cent, or more of the
spinning mills and even larger per
of spindles in this country.
L. F. Davis, cashier of the wrecked
bank of LaGrange, was arrested at
Asheville last Friday night and car-
back to La Grange where he
stands indicted, under a warrant
charging him with the embezzlement
of the funds of that institution.
Mr. William F. suffered a
stroke of apoplexy this morning and
died within a few hours, the end
coming about o'clock this after-
noon. He was in apparent good
health and was this morning at
his barber Free Press.
attempting to
rest a group of gambling at
Falls last night, about
o'clock, Chief of Police Silas
shot and killed a whose name is
unknown. The Is said to have
had a pistol drawn on the officer.
Mr. W. L. Vaughan has been re-
elected superintendent of education
for Beaufort county.
Enlightens a Visitor on Our New
Buildings.
Two gentlemen of color, one a
visitor, were walking up the street
together. Reaching the corner the
visitor lifted his eyes in astonish-
at the new court house and
new jail.
fine he ex-
claimed. am
replied the native,
is fine fur a big
see in front am de min-
while de udder
one back am de boy's
and and they went
for other scenes.
Potato Fanning.
A gentleman who planted one acre
in potatoes, did not dig when others
did, but gave his some extra time to
get more growth and more potatoes.
He dug this week.
On the acre he put worth of
fertilizers, the cultivation cost
and the seed potatoes cost
His crop was some over three
barrels, a mixture of seconds and
culls.
Potatoes were almost a failure this
year.
Dangerous, But-
Owing to the rottenness of the sash
in an upper front window of the
Mercantile store, the lower part
gave way and two large panes of
glass fell to the sidewalk with a rat-
crash. Fortunately no one was
hurt, but it was a dangerous thing.
FINE PROGRAM.
The Three Reel Service at
Good.
The
Those present at the
Tuesday night witnessed one of
the best motion picture programs,
that has ever been shown here. Three
reels were projected and each one
was of the highest order, and the
two last Fool Day and
the Trip Along Pongee River, China
deserve special mention.
Odd Fellows Install Officers.
Last night the following officers of
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F.,
were installed by L. H. Pender, deputy
grand master.
James Brown, Noble Grand.
E. G. Flanagan, Vice Grand.
L. H. Pender, Secretary.
D. W. Treasurer.
A Financial
Where To Live.
Fountain Inn is a town in South
Carolina. The editor of the
of that address, says he would
have his present position than to
write editorials for a metropolitan
daily, one of his reasons being that
in the great city he would know a
few boys around the office, be on
speaking terms with the patrolman of
his block have a nodding
acquaintance with his next-door
neighbor and know his
janitor, while ninety-nine out of
one hundred faces he passed in
the street would be unknown. He
would rather hunger for the open
county and board walks, for fields of
clover, wheat, and barley, and he
would miss the cackle of the hens. In
Fountain Inn he knows all the first
names, hardships and triumphs,
and faults; he can sit up with
neighbors when they are sick, and
they will take notice when it is his
turn to die. The town is without
rich or poor, without saloons or
dens; the- people like the
churches, and the children deemed
fortunate in their school. We like
the looks of the It is In-
It announces at the head
of its editorial page that it will not
accept patent medicine or other
it is published
in what the editor in his enthusiasm
conservatively calls the richest farm-
district on earth; and It is a
pleasant and wholesome theory that
he finds Fountain Inn plenty large
enough. Many a person who rushes
to the big cities manages only, as
Marlowe has it, to live in grief and
baleful Week-
from page
and in a few days the
school was fully organized with a
large attendance and doing earnest
work.
On the 12th day of November, 1909,
the president-elect was formally In-
president of the
in the presence of the board of
trustees, many notable educators
from other institutions, the student
body and a large concourse of
tors.
The first regular session of the
school opened on October 5th, 1909,
and closed on May 20th, 1910. There
were enrolled at this session
students.
The first summer session opened
on the 24th day of May, 1910, and
closed on the 30th day of July, 1910.
There were enrolled at this session
teachers.
The second regular session opened
ed on the 13th day of September, 1910,
and closed on the 23rd day of May,
1911. There were enrolled at this
session students.
The present session of the sum-
mer school opened on the 6th day of
June, 1911, to close July 29th, 1911,
and up to the present time there
have been enrolled teachers. The
total enrollment for the two years,
1.010.
From these recorded facts, we are
able to make this marvelous sum-
In three time we built, furn-
and equipped with the most
proved, up-to-date conveniences and
appliances, six beautiful buildings,
well fitted and adapted to school
work, and that students have
entered these buildings and have re-
instruction from an able corps
f high class teachers. In addition
d the number that have been enroll-
d, not less than others have
lied for admission into the
for the two summer terms. The
resident was compelled to write
that every room was taken,
of these found room in the
own. And just here I wish to thank
he town people for the generous
in which they have opened
heir doors to these teachers. But
this was not sufficient and great
lumbers have been kept away who
the instruction. Such a rec-
rd cannot be found anywhere else
r at any other period in the state's
and well may I call it mar-
There is another fact In this record
lat should not be forgotten. The
tie to this property, building, furn-
equipment and everything per-
thereto, is in the state, but
state has put into this
plant, while the county of
and the town of Greenville have
at into it To that the
ate Is still behind by
his remarkable record teachers these
lessons that should appeal
the friends of education every-
There was a place for this
and it is filling that place;
ere was a need for this school, and
is meeting that need. The people
predate and approve the stand it
taking and the work it is doing,
cause they see In mission the
ming of better schools for their
and they are rallying to it.
So far, ladles and gentlemen, I
have simply been rehearsing facts
which are of record, and which any-
one may verify. I now propose to
submit a few reflections of my own.
This school is what its name
Training School,
nothing more and nothing less.
It does not aspire to be a college or
to do college degree work. It is not
in opposition or competition with any
college In the state, but it seeks to
serve them all by stimulating and
informing the public schools from
which they must draw their patron-
age. It has its own chosen field, and
it is content to occupy it. It does
not hope to completely fill this field
because its borders are ever widen-
and its opportunities and de-
ever increasing. The service
it is rendering in its chosen field is
fundamental and invaluable, and it
takes great pride in rendering this
service.
It stands for trained teachers for
our public schools, and it is bend-
all its energies to furnish such
teachers. It is so near the public
schools and comes in such close
touch with them, that it may well
be called a part and parcel of the
public school system of the state.
Ninety per cent of our people are
dependent alone upon the public
schools for what education they get.
The only training they and their
children can receive to fit them for
the duties of life, and for the dis-
charge of citizenship, is what they
are not trained to help conduct the
get in the public schools. If these
public are poor, then the
training they get will be poor. If
the training in these public schools
Is what it should be, then we may
look for an educated citizenship,
pared and equipped for the duties
that lie out before them. It there-
fore follows that a school that is
pouring its life into public
schools to make them better, is
great service to the state and
society.
The governments of our country
are coming nearer and nearer to the
people, and the people are being in-
and urged to take more effect-
control and management of
governments, national, state and
municipal. For the people to do
this wisely and well, it is absolutely
necessary that they should be
and fitted for these duties.
It must be clear to every thoughtful
man, that the great masses of our
people are dependent upon the
of the public schools, is de-
pendent upon the efficiency of the
teachers, and the efficiency of the
teacher is dependent upon the
of his training. The train-
ed teacher for the public schools,
is therefore, a public necessity. The
private schools and the denomination-
colleges may supply some of these
teachers, it is hone the less the
duty of the state to make ample pro-
visions for this vitally essential work
and to see to it that all the public
schools are supplied with trained,
competent teachers.
The state has taken charge of the
public schools. It levies and col-
the taxes for their support. It
appoints and licenses the teachers
to teach them, and it supplies the
money to pay them. It is therefore
imperative duty of the state to furn-
competent teachers for the child-
who are forced to attend these
schools or none. Anything short of
this is a criminal neglect of a public
duty.
The school and audience then sang
Old North and
dent Wright introduced Governor W.
W. Kitchin, who spoke. The govern-
or had every cause to feel gratified
at the ovation given him as he arose.
Governor Address.
He said it filled him with pride to
be here, and in looking around upon
what is here, he must say that he
never saw a healthier three-year-old
institution, and that much credit for
it is due ex-Governor Jarvis, Super-
W. H. and the
late Hon. J. L. Fleming, who labored
so earnestly to secure it.
The state of North Carolina may
have made a good bargain in
this school, but if Governor Jarvis
made a bad bargain for Greenville
and Pitt county, it was the first bad
bargain he ever made.
The state levies taxes to maintain
schools not for the benefit of a few,
but for the benefit of all the people
of the state. We want to see North
Carolina occupy a high place; we
want to see our farmers and
prosperous and happy. We
want to see the lawyers, the doctors,
the teachers so honorable, so high
above suspicion, so worshiping at the
shrine of truth and Justice that the
finger of criticism can never he point-
ed at them. Teachers are laying the
foundation for this hi an educated
citizenship. If the teachers fail in
their duty, the structure of citizen-
ship is erected on a false
Civil government is taught in our
schools, and it is well. I would not
say that the old govern-
of thousands of years ago was
not the best the men of that age were
prepared for. In those old days there
was no printing press, no rapid com-
so the people had to
struggle along with patriarchs, kings
and nobles to make laws for them.
The struggle of the successive ages
has been to throw off these and bring
the government to the hands of the
people. Self-government has come
to stay. The printing press and rural
mail delivery, coupled with the work
of the earnest teacher, the freedom
of the press, freedom of speech and
growth in intelligence have made
things change.
The old highway robber found the
farmer on his way to the market
an easy prey. Those robbers have
been succeeded by the green goods
and gold brick swindlers, and it re-
quires more intelligence to protect
themselves against these. When you
find men advocating an unjust law,
they do so under the guise that it is
best for the people. We need a high
class of citizenship to prevent being
deceived by these, and here is where
the work of the good teacher conies
in. Men must be above corruption
and the purchase of influence, and
they must have the courage of their
convictions and to do right.
Let no one think that because gen-
ago some great men were
produced who never saw inside of a
school house, that this can be done
now. The farmer who now plants
and cultivates corn after the methods
of the past can raise some corn, but
he's a failure as a farmer. Education
is preparation for life work, for con-
for the environments with which
you are to be surrounded. The thoughts
that stick are the ones that count.
Education makes people honest. Do
not think because you are honest now
that you need no fortification. The
tide and current of temptation run
high, and we need to strengthen
against this by a love of honesty and
honor. Overcome one temptation and
the next one Is easier to overcome,
likewise the yielding to one
makes it easier to fall under the
next. The first downward step is the
one to be regretted. Had not the
first step been taken no failure would
occur. The difference between a good
man and a bad man is not in statue
nor brilliancy, but in moral
One man resists temptation and
is good, another succumbs to the
temptation and is bad.
The sour man is not happy, he may
have accumulated a fortune, but if
he lacking in human kindness,
friendship and sympathy he is a fail-
You need friends for the good
you can do. Your enemies will not
follow your advice, but it is only your
friends upon whom you can count.
No one rejoices more in the strides
North Carolina is making than myself.
We are on the up grade agriculturally,
industrially, commercially, education-
ally and Yet we need the
help and sympathy of every good
man and woman. Love your duty
and do it bravely.
Dr. Address
Dr. George D. Strayer, of Columbia
University, was the next speaker. He
drew a striking comparison of the
schools of Germany and those of Dem-
America. In Germany they
government, but to be subservient to
authority. The ideal American school
prepares for the public good. He em-
the administration of the
on page
Mrs.
of Missouri.
FACIAL NEURALGIA.
Mrs. C. 1311 Woodland
Kansas City, Mo.,
feel it a duty due to yon and to
others that may afflicted like myself,
to speak for
trouble first came after la grippe
eight or nine years ago, gathering la
my head and neuralgia. Buffered
most all the time. My ears and
eyes badly affected for the last two
years. I think from your description of
internal catarrh that I must had
that also. I suffered very severely.
ever relieved mo
It keeps mo from taking cold.
the exception of deaf-
I am feeling perfectly cured.
am forty-six years old.
feel that words are inadequate to
express my for
Stomach Trouble Seven Years.
Mrs. T. K. R. Hickory Point,
Tenn.,
been afflicted with catarrh
and stomach trouble for seven years,
and after having tried four different
doctors they only relieved me for a little
while. I was induced to try
End I am now
an Ideal Laxative.





The Carolina Home and Farm art The Eastern
GREENVILLE TOWNSHIP
GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION
MADE
Committee Will Be Appointed t Con-
duet Campaign for Roads
A meeting was held In the city hall
at noon today for the purpose of or-
a Greenville Township Good
Roads Association.
Owing to a change in the hour of
meeting from o'clock to noon, and
the interest that centered in the base
ball games of the day, there was only
a small attendance at the meeting,
but it was deemed best by those
present to proceed to the election of
of officers and leave the direction of
a good roads campaign of the town-
ship to the direction of a committee.
The following officers were
E. B. Higgs, president; J. F. Evans,
vice president; D. J. Whichard, sec.
and treasurer.
The appointment of a campaign and
membership committee of twelve was
left with the officers above named,
and the committee will be
later.
COX SCHOOL HOUSE ITEMS-
Hews From That of
Township.
Grimesland, N. C., July and
Mrs. J. B. Oakley, from near Winter-
ville, spent Saturday night with Mr.
and Mrs. C. A. Porter.
Miss Martha Cherry spent Saturday
night with Miss Olive Kittrell.
Miss Maggie Hudson spent
day night with Miss Daisy Porter.
Little Misses Eula and Mavis Lee
Oakley are spending this week at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Porter.
Mrs. Eva Tucker, from near Green-
ville, spent Saturday night and Sun-
day with Mrs. Delia Tucker.
We are sorry to hear that Mr.
Johnson Mills is quite sick.
There was a large crowd at prayer
meeting Sunday night. We were glad
to have so many out. Hope to have
as many with us again.
Miss Annie Walker and brothers.
Masters Roland and Clarence, from
the Oxford orphan asylum, are spend-
the vacation months with Mrs.
J. S. Porter.
Quite a large crowd attended the
children's day exercises at Salem
Sunday.
Crops throughout this section are
still doing very well, but none of
the farmers have cured any tobacco
yet.
Mr. Harvey Cannon spent Friday
night with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ivey Cannon.
Ten Tilings to do In Typhoid Fever.
In all cases of typhoid, however,
mild, the patient should remain in
bed. The course of the disease may
be greatly shortened by keeping the
patient in a prostrate position.
The vessels used in the sick
room should be thoroughly scalded
after use.
All food utensils should be
washed and scalded separately be-
fore placing with dishes used by the
family.
Bed linens, towels, wearing
be plunged into boiling
water or water containing a strong
solution of carbolic acid before they
are washed.
Chloride of lime, which can be
bought in dozen cans, or
of mercury, are safe disinfectants for
vessels used in the sick room.
The caretaker should cleanse
her hands with a disinfectant
acid, of mer-
before taking food.
Treat all excreta from patient
with disinfectant of sufficient strength
that all typhoid germs may be killed
before removing from the sick room.
Bury all excreta from typhoid
patient.
Keep all flies from the sick
room.
Write to your State Board of
Health for literature upon the care
and treatment of typhoid fever.
Raleigh Progressive Farmer.
Right in your busiest season when
you have the least time to spare you
are most likely to take and
lose several day's time, unless you
have Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Remedy at hand and
take a dose on the first appearance
of the disease. For sale by all deal-
Map of Greenville
Mr. D. C. James has just completed
for the town officials a very complete
and handsome map of Greenville. It
will be submitted to the post office
department of the government for
as to the plan of numbering
the town for free mail delivery.
Happiest Girl in Lincoln.
A Lincoln, Neb., girl writes,
had been ailing for some time with
chronic constipation and stomach
trouble. I began taking Chamber-
Stomach and Liver Tablets
and in three days I was able to be up
and got better right along. I am the
proudest girl in Lincoln to find such
a good For sale by all
dealers.
A man's idea of a charitable
man is one who doesn't hand him
lemons.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
State Normal and
Industrial College
Maintained by the State for the
en of North Carolina. Five regular
leading to Degrees. Special
Courses for teachers. Free tuition
to those agree to become teach-
in the State. Fall Session be-
gins September 1911. For cat-
and other information address
JULIUS I. FOUST, Pres.
Greensboro,.
C.
Grand Picture Program
The Three Reel Film service used
at the is direct from
the Grand and Revelry
Raleigh. They were splendid last
night. See tonight's program on page
our.
best remedy tor
Sciatica, Lame Back,
fl Joints and Muscles,
Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, Bruises,
Colic, Cramps,
Toothache, and all Nerve,
Bone and Muscle Aches
and Pains. The genuine
The Greenville Banking
Trust Company
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Condensed Statement, June 7th
HE SOURCES.
Loans and discounts .
Overdrafts . 2,251.2
Stocks and bonds. 1,227.96
Furniture and fixtures.
Cash and due from banns. 34,333.03
LIABILITIES.
Capital .
Profits . 2,064.16
. None
Bills payable . None
Deposits . 145,055.75
J. R. President G. S. Cashier
A. J. MOORE, Asst. Cashier.
i-
Tr- i
My
We have on sale at our factory the
Columbia, Rambler, Crescent and
Bicycles, for ladies and Gentlemen, boy
and girls. bicycles are known the
world over for their easy running and
We guarantee them. If you are
thinking of buying, come to see us.
THE JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
The Home of Women's
Pulley Bowen
Greenville,
North Carol
Views From Court House Tower.
Mr. Henry Sheppard has taken
some very interesting photo-
of views of the town from the
of the new court house tower.
front of The views show up well. Mr. Shep-
always
in RED Ink. Beware of d hag many pictures of the
imitations. bottle,
cents, and sold by an court house which were taken at
Guaranteed or money re- Stages during the progress
funded by Noah Remedy j ,
Inc., Richmond. work.
NOTICE OF
The firm of Ricks Brothers v
June 6th, 1911, dissolved by
consent, W. H. Ricks
entire interest of J. A. Ricks P
business. W. H. Ricks
outstanding obligations of
for merchandise purchased
store, and all accounts due
for merchandise are payable t
JNO. A. RICKS,
W. H. RICKS,
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
Legal Notices
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Letters of administration upon the
estate of J. J. Smith, deceased,
this day been issued to the under-
signed by the clerk of Superior court
of Pitt county, notice is hereby given
to all persons holding claims against
said estate to present them to me
for payment, duly authenticated, on
or before the 4th day of May, 1912,
or this 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
Jarvis Blow,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk as
tor of the estate of Mrs. Margaret J.
Moore, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons having claims
against said deceased, to present
the same, duly authenticated, on or
before the 17th day of June, 1912, or
this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. All persons indebted
to said estate will make immediate
payment.
This June 17th, 1911.
C. G. LITTLE. Administrator,
of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND.
State of North Carolina,
Pitt County.
A, A. Smith enters and claims the
following piece or parcel of land, sit-
In the county of Pitt, Swift Creek
township, described as
Beginning at a sweet gum, near the
run of Swift Creek, it being the
of J. G. and J. J.
Moore, and runs eastward to a water
oak, J. B. Smith's corner; thence
southward to J. B. Smith's corner in
the run of Swift Creek; thence with
the run of Swift Creek to the begin-
containing eight acres, more or
less.
This June 1911.
A. A. SMITH.
Any and all persons claiming title
to or interest in the above described
land must file with the their protest
in writing, within the next days,
or they will be barred by law.
This June 1911.
W. M. MOORE,
Entry Taker.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION.
Notice is hereby given that the firm
of and White has this day
dissolved co-partnership by mutual
consent, Samuel T. White buying the
interest of G. G. in said
piano and organ business. The
will be continued by Sam White
Piano Company. All persons owing
the firm of and White will
pay the Sam White Piano Company.
All accounts due by said firm should
be presented at once to Sam White
Piano Company for payment.
G. G.
T. WHITE.
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, deceased, 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 notice 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,
SALE OF PROPERTY.
On Saturday, the 24th day of July.
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,
desks, bottles and extracts, together
with the right to make, sell and man-
This sale will
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, Attorney.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has qualified as
c. t. a. of the estate of J. K.
Gowan, deceased. Persons owing said
estate will please make prompt set-
and those to whom said es-
is indebted will present their
claims within twelve months of the
date of this notice, or the same will
be pleaded in bar of their recovery.
July 1911.
J. M.
c. t a., J. K. de-
W. F. Evans, Atty.
Good For The Lawyers.
At last the State Bar Association
has done something besides meet and
frolic. It has taken in favor of
reform in the judiciary system of the
state. The reforms which it would
advocate and which it will press be-
fore the- next legislature, are the
same that The Chronicle urged on
the past legislature, but to no avail,
because not a single lawyer came to
its support and the judges by virtue
of the dignity of their office, were bar-
red from even a suggestive support.
The State Bar Association has gone
on record on four important points
that the number of judges be
ed to twenty-four, that the present
system of rotation be abolished, that
solicitors be put on salary and that
the laws relating to the selection of
Jurors be amended. The association
appears to have been waked to the
importance of this judicial reform by
the very earnest and forcible remarks
of Mr. Chas. W. Tillett, who placed
the matter in such a light that a law-
even though a blind one, could
see. This action stamps the meeting
of the lawyers at as the most
important one they have held in this
state in years. If the reforms
are brought to pass, then will
the North Carolina Bar Association
have accomplished four distinctly
changes in the judiciary system
of the Chronicle.
The Path of Safety.
The Declaration of Independence
charged George III with endeavoring
prevent the population of these
by foreigners. It would
pear to be about time for a new de-
against the of
Record.
Certainly, it is high time our
laws were so strengthened as
effectually to keep out the scum, riff-
and chronic criminals of other
countries. This class of alien
we ought not to want and can
not afford to have under any
other kinds of
should be welcomed and encouraged.
But if there has to be any swerving
from the straight path to that end,
let it be on the side of too straight
rather than too lax, regulations. Bet-
keep out a hundred desirable
migrants than let in one recruit from
the Black Hand, the or the
Grandfathers and grandmothers
have been primarily responsible for
many of the present-day divorces.
South a Land of
It is the aim of the Progressive
Farmer to start a crusade for paint-
Southern farmhouses. Not only
does painting a house add greatly to
its beauty and to the beauty of the
whole farm on which it is situated,
but there is no doubt about it that
it has a subtle psychological effect in
bringing everybody on the place to a
more cheerful frame of mind.
There is something depressing about
a weather-beaten, unpainted house
that can not fail to have its effect
upon the temper and disposition of its
occupants. They can not have quite
the cheerfulness and buoyancy that
comes from beautiful surroundings
with the contagious suggestion of
cheerfulness and prosperity in them.
Paint the farmhouse and the farm-
will very soon decide that he must
have a farm fit to keep company with
the house; he will decide that he must
clean up the ragged patches and stop
the ruinous and cure the gal-
led and sickly spots and he will pres-
begin to take more interest in
his own appearance also. It is
to tell just how far-reaching are
the effects of a properly painted and
beautiful farmhouse.
Nor will this good influence stop
with the individual farmer. His
neighbors will presently become
ashamed not to have equally
homes for themselves, and the
neighborhood might soon become a
neighborhood of painted farmhouses,
and then this neighborhood might, by
the same process, awaken the em-
of other neighborhoods and
spread the good work still farther.
Not only is it worth while to paint
the farmhouse for the sake of the
beauty and also for the sake of the
cheering effect upon the persons who
live in it, but it is also worth while
as a matter of simple economy.
is already expensive, and
more so all the time, and paint
lengthens the life of the lumber.
The South is today the only section
of the country in which the painted
house is not the rule rather than the
exception. There might have been
some excuse for our backwardness
in this matter when cotton was selling
for or cents a pound and farm
lands worth to an acre, but
for the condition to exist today is an
indictment of our civilization. Our
farmers have money enough to enable
them to paint their houses and there
is no excuse for their not doing it.
We would like to have every Pro-
Farmer reader enlist himself
or. herself in this crusade for well
painted farm houses in the South. Of
course, the farmer who has had a
great deal of sickness in his family
or some similar misfortune, or who
is struggling to pay off a mortgage,
may be excused; but we should like
for the painting habit to become so
contagious among all others as to
make people the prosperous
farmer has not painted his house, he
is not a reader of The Progressive
And even the man who
feels that he can not yet afford to
paint, the small farmer in debt, the
tenant, can whitewash his buildings.
Whitewash is wholesome and will
make the lowliest home look neat and
thrifty and
Farmer.
also contains much information which
will be able to use with
advantage in the prosecution of the
trust.
The prime object of the organizers
of the steel trust was to restrict com-
petition. It was capitalized at
although at the time of
its organization it owned tangible
property worth only Its
tangible property is now estimated
to be worth as against
outstanding securities amounting to
In ten years its con-
of production has dropped from
to per cent; but It now con-
per cent, of the Lake ores,
and its position stronger than It
was in actual resources. The
which formed the steel corpora-
got in cash for its
work. The corporation has made
average annual profits of per cent,
on the money invested. All the pro-
of the trust have not been
developed, so that the dividends from
the properties that have been de-
are larger than per cent.
The trust does not now control more
than per cent, of production, and
the competition now is more active,
apparently at least, than it has been
in the last ten years.
The object for which the steel trust
was formed was in restraint of trade;
its cornering of the Lake ores was
for the purpose of strengthening its
hold upon the steel-makers industry
of the country. Whether or not
the monopoly which the steel
trust has sought to make can
be defended within the rule of
reason is a question the courts
must determine. In the meantime, the
congressional committee should be
able to pick a many good thing out
of commissioner Smith's report which
will add greatly to the interest of the
inquiries it is making as to the loop-
holes of the law through which this
giant worked its way to its present
dominating position in the business
TREES OF AGATE AND TOPAZ.
Beauty and Wonders of the Petrified
Forest of Arizona.
The Great Steel Trust.
Herbert Smith, United States
Commissioner of Corporations, has
made an exhaustive report on the
United States Steel Corporation, which
will be of much value to the con-
committee now engaged in
investigating that great trust
The petrified trees in Arizona that
are of red moss agate and amethyst
and smoky topaz and agate are nearly
or entirely transparent and so
fully preserved that all the veins and
even the bark can be plainly seen.
The hardened dewdrops of this en-
chanted wood, says the Yoga
Messenger are purple and amethyst
and topaz such as one
found in the heart of an ancient
king of the forest.
In an outlying part of the forest
are different logs. They are perfectly
opaque and tinted in soft browns and
grays. They are partly covered by a
great deposit of limestone and strange
bluish clay, whose depth shows how
many millions of years they
been there.
The most striking part of the for-
est is called Chalcedony Park. Here
is the greatest number of petrified
trees found in any one place in the
world. One of them has fallen across
a deep canon, feet wide, thus form-
the only bridge of solid agate in
existence.
The wood of these trees makes
beautiful ornaments when polished,
but it is so hard to cut that even mod-
methods find it extremely
cult to saw through it.
The man who considers the world
a lemon to be squeezed usually has
a sour disposition.
.





Carolina Home and Farm -no The Eastern Reflector.
OF
from page
American school, and declared that
the type of education that is demand-
ed cannot be had until the needs are
recognized by those in authority.
Turning from the teachers to the
he said this school here is
doing an admirable work, but is not
properly equipped for the work re-
quired of it. It is for the people to
say whether these teachers are to
be able to do their work. They have
the right to demand of the people a
liberal education, a minimum term
and a minimum salary. This school
needs a practice school and a library.
Mr. Address.
Mr. E. C. Brooks, editor of North
Carolina Education, was next intro-
He said this institution came
in the midst of a great educational
awakening. With a determination
that the most remote school should
have the best trained teacher, the pa-
spirit of the people of Green-
ville and Pitt county was asserted in
founding this school. But there are
still further demands that must be
met. There are yet people who do
not believe in public education, and
school boards who are inclined to
select relatives as teachers instead of
those equipped for the work.
against those ideas must con-
until they are corrected.
Ail the speeches at these exercises
were excellent, but space forbids
only brief reference to them. The
songs by the student body that in-
the speeches were a pleas-
part of the exercises and re-
credit upon the school.
In his closing remarks, President
Wright referred to the aid
fund, contributed by the last
class, and read the following
as coming voluntarily from those at-
tending the present summer term,
which indicates their sentiment in
keeping with the motto,
that has been adopted by the
On June 1911, by permission of
the president, a mass meeting of the
student body of the summer school
was held in the auditorium, its
purpose being to form plans for
raising a fund toward increasing the
school library appropriation. This
fund to be a testimonial of the
to the state of the
afforded in the Training school
through the efficient services of its
able corps of earnest officers and
teachers.
The purpose of the meeting was
stated by Miss Daisy Reed, met with
a most enthusiastic reception. A
chairman was elected, committees
pointed, and work begun at once, and
today we find in the treasury
in cash with notes aggregating quite
an appreciable sum payable in a short
time.
The entire anniversary exercises
were most successful and marks an-
other era in the history of the
school.
And no more do the vast majority
of the Republican apostles and de-
fenders or inordinate Protection so
believe. The fact is that the party and
the men who put and have kept so-
called protective duties on staple
products acted in the be-
ginning, and have ever since continued
to act, not with a view to
the farmers, but with a view to de-
the agricultural interests into
the belief that they were sharing in
the spoils of Protection and so into
support of the protective system. To
say that they have not realized from
the start that no amount of pro-
could effect, one way or the
other, the prices in the domestic mark-
et of products of the soil of which we
grow a surplus for export, over and
above a sufficiency for home
would be to credit them with a
lack of intelligence which they have
far from shown in any other
What they have done has been
to play upon the credulity of the farm-
and so induce them to serve as
to save the chestnuts of the
inordinately protected manufacturing
interests from burning.
And what is true of the farmer is
also true of labor. It is these two
elements of the citizenship of the
country which have kept the
policy alive and in effect, lo, these
many years, both deluded into so do-
by the utterly fallacious plea that
they were the beneficiaries of the sys-
The fact is, as both the
and the working man are
now beginning to realize, that neither
is by Republican
On the contrary, both are in-
When even avowed Protection-
are themselves driven to admit
so much, certainly it is high time the
farmers and the workingmen were
making their awakening complete and
ceasing to act as stool-pigeons for
the few privileges beneficiaries of a
system which robs them in the name
and under the guise of Protection.
Out of Their Months.
Speaking on the floor of the United
States senate the other day, Hon.
Elihu Root, Protectionist though he is
and has always been, gave utterance
to this
I never have thought that the duties
which were imposed upon farm pro-
ducts were of any real general
fit to the farmer.
Henry Brown Dead.
Raleigh, N. C, July Henry
Clay Brown, member of the North
Carolina died
this morning at o'clock, after an
illness that has steadily grown worse
since May when he was last at
his desk.
It was as successor to the late B.
F. Aycock, that Mr. Brown was first
appointed on the commission, May
1910, after he had given to the com-
mission service as secretary since
1891, that eminently equipped him for
the commission and won for him the
universal verdict of being the best
equipped man for the place that could
be found for the
He was born in Randolph county, in
1857, a son of John Randolph and
Mary A. Brown and while yet a youth
held clerkships at Chapel Hill,
being a in a cot-
ton mill at the latter place. He took
a business course at Poughkeepsie
business college and in 1885 became
cashier of the Bank of Mount Airy,
continuing in this position with the
railroad commission up to the time
he was appointed secretary to the old
railroad commission and the
corporation commission up to the
time he was appointed commissioner
by Governor Kitchin. Following his
appointment May 1910, he was
in the state Democratic con-
in July and elected in No-
and was filling out his first
elective term at the time of his death.
or doses will cure any
case of Chills and Fever. Price,
King of all Farm Wagons.
The man who uses Weber wagons will use
His judgment is good. Why not fol-
low his advice We have a Weber wagon
awaiting your inspection. If you want to
save yourself money, investigate. For sixty-
six years the Weber has been the pride of
all users. Use one and let it be your pride.
We have literature concerning this wagon
that we want you to call for. Call to-day.
Let us talk over the wagon proposition. If
you don't buy, you will know the merits of
the Weber wagon and will be in position to
know a good wagon when you see it. Get a
Weber you will get the best. We have
what you want. We will be glad to see you
anytime.
Hart Hadley
N. C.
TOBACCO
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.
Name-
Post Office,
-X-
Agriculture is the Host Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, 1911.
Number
WILMINGTON TYPHOID
FEVER SITUATION
LESS THAN TWO CENT. ILL-
Report Is Result of Health Or.
of City.
Wilmington, N. C, July has
been learned this city during the
past few days that reports are
being circulated over North Caro-
and also different Southern
cities relative to typhoid fever in
Wilmington. These reports, in most
instances, are absolutely at variance
with the facts in the case. From May
1st to this date one hundred and sixty
cases of typhoid fever have been re-
ported as shown by the records in
office of superintendent of health,
and there is no doubt about every
case being reported as a very strict
ordinance was passed some time
since requiring physicians to report
all cases of typhoid and some ten or
fifteen other cases within twenty-four
hours. Of the cases in the above to-
twenty-eight were treated at a
local hospital and part of these were
from out of the city. Something over
thirty of the cases reported have
been discharged and there have been
only five deaths, two of these being
patients at the hospital and who were
brought here for treatment. This
shows that the death rate as to
patients has been less than
two per cent. At the present time
there are about one hundred and
twenty of typhoid in
ton, and, when it is taken into con-
that this is a city of
as shown by the last census, the
number is not considered as large by
any means. For a period of two
months there have been less than six
cases reported for each thousand of
the inhabitants. The type is very
mild and some of the leading
say it is what known as para-
typhoid, this being a name given to
the type of fever by Dr. Osier. In
para-typhoid the deadly typhoid germ
does not appear and patients often
recover in from ten days to two
weeks, and such has been the his-
of many of the cases here.
Records show that the number of
cases of fever here has been but lit-
if any, greater than in the other
towns of the state, but the reports
probably got started on account of
the council under the new
form of government passing a
number of stringent ordinances
sanitary conditions and are
seeing that the ordinances are being
enforced, in other words, the health
department with Dr. Chas. T.
a physician with splendid train-
for the work, began to clean the
city up ad it had never been cleaned
before and compelled the
of all sanitary laws.
Some of these reports had it that
typhoid was also at Wrightsville
Beach. This is absolutely untrue and
in a statement just issued by Dr. W.
D. county superintendent
of health, ho
Beach, North Carolina, has ever been
and is today entirely free from fever
of any Water at
Wrightsville Beach is secured from
an artesian well feet deep and
analysis shows it absolutely pure.
to escape interviewers.
A hot fight for senator from Mis-
is now in progress . Gov-
expects to succeed
Senator Percy.
Washington, July La-
arraigned
dent Taft in a speech today on the
Canadian reciprocity bill. He de-
Taft has not kept his
pledges and denounced practical-
all acts of the president's
He said Taft and the
party are recreant to tariff re-
form pledges.
government paid,
to assistant prosecutors
from 1900 to 1911 in ad-
to in salaries to the
same period, according to a report
furnished the house committee on
expenditures in the department of
justice.
STORE BROKEN
OPEN AND ROBBED
J. AND BRO. VICTIMS.
TODAY'S EVENTS IN
NATIONAL CAPITOL
DR. WILEY MAY LOSE HIS JOB.
A woman has about as much use
for a man who doesn't admire her as
a fatted calf has for a prodigal sou.
NEWS THAT IS OF IN-
TO TAR HEELS
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES.
Mrs. Ere In Fight
la
By Wire to The Reflector.
Washington, July La-
today introduced a cotton
and wool amendment to the
bill now before the senate.
Testimony before the com-
now investigating the sugar
showed that the railroads have
discriminated in favor of the trust
in lighter charges.
Dr. Wiley may lose job as he
allowed Dr. II. H. to collect
illegal fees from the government
to twenty dollars per day
as an expert pharmacist President
Taft is having this matter
gated.
Miss Kelsey, who married Edward
Valentine Dee, the navy paymaster's
Clerk, who defaulted to the amount
of forty-six thousand dollars from the
battleship Georgia, is in hiding at
Colonial Beach, Virginia, She tries
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's
Busy Readers.
The twin infants of Mr. and Mrs.
Hurley Griffin died yesterday after-
noon at their home on West Depot
street, their death occurring only a
few minutes Tribune
Mr. J. J. Moody, who has been a
good gardener for fifty years, says
that the present is the worse time he
has ever seen on gardens with the
exception of one year, probably 1881.
Robinsonville, July
the 6-year-old son of Mr. A. F.
a prominent merchant and hotel
man of this place, was kicked in the
head by a horse here and instantly
killed.
The final vote on the special tax
for those outside of Kinston, but in
district designated by the
to come Into the Kinston
graded school district was for to
against. The total registered vote
was Free Press.
Amount Taken Not
Rounds Sent For.
Sometime during Wednesday night
the store of and Bro. near
the Atlantic Coast Line depot was
entered by an unknown party and
some of their goods was taken, the
exact amount of which cannot be
learned at the time this is being
written, because the store is closed
waiting for the bloodhounds to be
brought from Tarboro to trail the
thief.
Entrance to the store was made
through the front door by breaking
a glass and unlocking it from inside.
A back window was found open and it
is thought the escape was made from
there.
Early this morning Policeman G.
A. Clark got on the trail of a
actions led Mr. Clark to fol-
low him up. About o'clock he was
located in the neighborhood of the
graded school, but escaped to
the woods of the branch between Mr.
R. A. Tyson and the Anderson place,
where he was located about two p.
m. Sheriff Dudley and several others
were now with Mr. Clark. Being
in the swamp, the who
proved to be Andrew Wilkins, was
soon caught. With him were some
of the goods which have been
as some taken from Mr.
store.
Sometime during the day while
they were after the a pistol
was fired by someone unknown and
when the was captured, it
found that a ball was in his left
thigh. He was taken to Dr. Skinner's
office who looked after his wound,
but failed to locate the ball. Later
he will be given a hearing on the
charge of robbery.
In this cast-, Mr. Clark did more
than his duty. Of course, he
While to him is due so
much credit, others also did their
duty, hut he was there from start
to last. That's Mr. Clark.


Title
Eastern reflector, 7 July 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 07, 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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