Eastern reflector, 14 July 1911


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





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.





Jamaica
The island of Jamaica, Great
possession in the West hides,
has looked with envious eyes upon
the reciprocity agreement between
the United States and Canada. The
Telegraph-Guardian of Kingston goes
so far as to suggest that Jamaica be
annexed to Canada if there is no
way In Which the reciprocal
can be secured.
It is interesting to note that the
citizens of Jamaica have
watched with satisfaction the de-
of Cuba and Rico
under American administration. They
know the conditions which prevailed
in those islands under Spanish rule,
and the contrast is most marked.
Rico as a dependency of the United
States, has made progress along com-
and educational lines, while
Cuba, even though it now has its de-
pendent government, owes its exist-
as a republic to the United
States. This is the evidence which is
before the eyes of the Jamaicans, as
they want some share in the pros-
of their fellow-islanders.
Washington Herald.
Collections.
R. B.
of the office of Collector Geo, H.
Brown, of the Western re-
venue district, reports collections
for last month aggregating
and the remarkable feature of the
report is that none of the revenue
collected was on spirits. In fact
it is the month In the history
of the office that nothing was collect-
ed on spirits.
The collections In this district
the fiscal year which closed with
last month totaled an
increase of over the
ceding year. Practically all the in-
crease was in the collections on to-
Since the state prohibition
laws became effective the collections
on spirits have gradually decreased,
but the collections on tobacco have
showed an enormous increase, hence.
Well Said.
Few men have grown more in twelve
years than has Bryan Grimes. A
representative planter to begin with,
whose father's fame is an undying
heritage, he proved Immediately up-
taking office that be was wort;
of it He made a model secretary
Of State. But lie has not been con-
tent With this. He has taken a place
In the fore front of the
men. He is a leader at once of the
farmers, of the progressive Demo-
and of state's library and
historical interests. He developed
remarkably as a public speaker, and
in any campaign he is prepared to
do full service. He appears to be In
fine and ready for twenty
of political progress.
In Carolina Democrat.
Save
WHY
NATURE
VS
Aldermen Scrap,
There was an exciting scene en-
acted in front of the city market last
night at o'clock, when at the
conclusion of the monthly meeting
of the board, aldermen Alexander
Webb and J. Sherwood
clinched, alderman Webb throwing
to the pavement,
face down. The two were taken in-
to custody by officers Brown and
Wyatt and gave bond in the sum of
each for their appearance before
the acting police justice Monday
morning at o'clock.
The affair had its origin in the
meeting of the board, when alderman
Upchurch called alderman Webb a
and Observer.
hiss Worth It.
Kisses at per are rather ex-
thought
Of Chestnut place, -X. J.,
facing Judge Van S. of
in court and paying that sum
on a charge of disorderly conduct
committed when lie seized Mar-
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. B. Hudson of oil Clay
avenue, west, and placed an ardent
kiss on her lips.
will give you said
no
The Judge was determined and the
fine was upheld.
was worth it, said the
oscillator,
INTO THE
NOW
TO
Stock Farm for Beaufort.
Washington, C., July Car
of Mooresville, Ohio, has re-
purchased the Bowen farm, a
few miles below this city, on
river, and will run a high class stock
farm there during the next several
years. He expects to raise fine horses
and has already shipped a carload of
line horseflesh here. It is also under-
stood that he will open up a race
track during the coming fall.
Accepts Call To Farmville.
Rev. C. who has been
studying at the Atlantic Christian
College for several years, spent to-
day in the city on his way to
where he; has accepted a call
to the pastorate of the Christian
church of that town, and will move
his family there. Mr. is
one of the strong young men of his
denomination In this state, and that
he will accomplish much good in that
Held is beyond
Free Press.
For Bummer in children
always give Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Remedy and
oil, and a speedy sure is
For sale by all dealers.
Happiest in Lincoln.
A Lincoln, Neb., girl
had been ailing for some time with
chronic constipation and stomach
trouble. I began taking Chamber-
Stomach and Liver Tablets
and in three clays I was able to be up
and got better right along. I am the
proudest girl in Lincoln to find such
i good For sale by all
dealers.
Ahead f Greenville.
The home-raised watermelons
this season made their appearance
on the local market today, and they
brought fancy prices. Mr. George
Lee brought in four right nice ones,
which were sold for cents each.
Kinston Free Press.
LL HAVE
WHEN YOU v
IT. ITS
THE BANK
JAMES J. HILL, the great railroad king,
made slinging a pick when
He BANKED and SAVED his earnings. He be-
came a contractor and multi-millionaire.
Make Bank.
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier
R. L. Davis. Pres. S. T. Hooker. V-Pres.
H. D. Bateman. Cashier
if you would have Others think
well of you set an example by think-
well of yourself.
State of Ohio, city of Toledo, I
Lucas County, f-3,
Frank J. makes that lie la
partner of ho firm of P, J.
Co., doing business in the of To-
County and State aforesaid, and
that Bald firm will pay the sum of
hundred dollars for each and
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured
by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURB
FRANK J.
Sworn to before mo and subscribed In
my presence, this day of December.
A. D.
A. W.
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Pure is taken internally
and acts directly upon the blood and mu-
surfaces of the system. Send for
testimonials, free.
F. J. CO. Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists,
Take Hall's Family for constipation.
Mystery of The Sphinx.
Prof. George A. of Harvard
after several years of tire-
less research, has announced that the
figure on the Sphinx is that of a lion
equipped with the head of
a Pharaoh of Egypt on the
fourth dynasty, who ruled in about
the year B. C. This is the king
who built the second pyramid, which
is known to archaeologists as
meaning is
was the son of Cheops, and
he was succeeded, in turn, by
nus, who built the third pyramid.
The investigations which disclosed
the identity of the Sphinx began in
and were finally only
a short time ago. purposes
form an interesting story of
research, three noted
gists, representing three big nations,
being the leading actors. They were
each given permission to delve for
hidden treasurers beneath the desert
sand, and settled by drawing lots as
to how they should divide the ground
pyramid, and his discoveries were of
chosen for the purpose. To Prof.
fell the investigation of the third
unusual
Mechanics.
A Famous Detective Story Free.
The complete story in book form
that will go with every copy of next
Sunday's New York World is the third
adventure of Mr. Peter Ruff, entitled
Demand of the Double
by D. Phillips
the greatest writer of de-
stories this country has ever
produced. There will also be two
most interesting love stories in The
Sunday World's Fiction
Diabolical by Chris-
and Other by
Sara Cone Bryant. The Sunday
World's Fiction Magazine is worth
the cost of the big Sunday World
alone. Order your copy in advance.
Ohio Bribe-Takers.
Ohio bribers are getting it In the
neck. Monday a verdict of guilty was
returned against Rodney J.
senate by a jury
which gave sixty-six and one-half
hours to deliberation. was the
alleged go-between in the bribery.
He and his wife and daughter sat
moved when the verdict was an-
Two indicted senators, how-
ever, who were in the court room
were visibly perturbed. at-
gave notice of the filing of a
motion for a new trial. It is believed
that the defense attorney's fees will
aggregate One of his law-
C. J. of Dayton,
ed is a poor man. The
inference generally drawn is that a
large fund for legal defense has been
made up by indicted
lobbyists and others who fear to be
dragged into the case. The penalty
which faces is a prison sen-
of one to five years and a fine
of to He may have to stand
trial on two other indictments.
Greensboro Record.
Pellagra Treatment.
An of the Beaumont Mills,
S. C, went into
and Floyd's drug store the other day
and bought some tincture of iodine.
He said he had pellagra and was us-
the iodine as a remedy. He said
he took one drop in water three times
a day for a week, two drops three
times a clay third week, and then
went back to one drop again. He
said lie had had pellagra for a year,
but since beginning this treatment
had improved. The man asserted that
a woman living at Saxon Mills had
cured herself of pellagra with this
treatment,
PROCEEDINGS OF
COUNTY
AT THE EAR MEETING
TO SEA HIGHWAY.
Wort
Drawn on Treasurer, Report
of and Other Matters.
The board of county commission-
were In regular monthly session
on the 3rd, with all the members
present.
The aggregate were
drawn on the
Paupers .
Court House .
Printing .
Opening Gates .
Bridges and Ferries .
County Home .
County Commissioners .
Jury Tickets .
Roads, general.
Stock Law .
Supt. Health .
Dr. C. .
Clerk of Court .
S. I. Dudley .
Register of Deeds .
.
Salaries.
D. C. Moore, clerk.
S. I. Dudley, sheriff.
W. M. Moore, register, .
W. B. Wilson, treasurer, . .
Tax Listers.
J. J. Elks,
S. A. Carolina, . .
J. C. Gaskins, .
S. W. Joyner, Beaver Dam,.
D. C. Barrow,
T. L. Williams, Falkland, .
W. A. Forbes, superintendent
road convicts, renewed his bond
for the ensuing year.
The various county officers filed
their several reports.
A petition from the supervisors of
township for for its
roads was approved.
W. B. Gray and wife, and Mrs. Mary-
Taylor, were ordered moved to the
county home.
237.00
. 1.520.87
. 90.50
11.40
104.55
. 230.79
. 113.75
. 14.50
79.00
. 62.50
5.00
9.20
. 31.85
15.70
. 36.40
. 250.00
. 333.33
,. 250.00
. 200.00
120.00
78.00
129.30
72.00
75.00
120.00
of
Of
The Route Located and the
Will Scum Begin.
Raleigh. July
Joseph Hyde Pratt, who is
with Chairman Varner, of.
board of trustees of the Central
way. was In Raleigh today and
his report on the location
the section of the Tennessee line,
giving the details of the conditions
that are to be met with in the con-
of this section of the
highway that is to from M
head and Beaufort to the whole
length the state to the
line. From Raleigh to he
adopts the route via Cary and Morris-
ville, as against the and
East Durham route. From Durham
to Graham he adopts the route by
way of Hillsboro and Mebane rather
than the route by Chapel Hill route
is put in shape it can readily be In-
on the map and tourists Pan
use either route. From Graham to
Greensboro the run will be by
of Elon College and The
run from to Salisbury is
to be via High Point.
Lexington and Spencer. The road
thence lo is to be by New-
ton and Hickory and Connelly Springs
Then the run is to be by Glen-Alpine
and and and on to
Old Fort. Thence the run to Ashe-
ville is to be by way of Black
and the Swannanoa Valley road
through Buncombe county, while the
he Asheville to the Tennessee line
Statement of
THE NATIONAL BANK
It t Business
IS
Loam .
.
. Bonds.
.
Furniture and F .
Exchange i H .
ks .
per c lion fund .
C.
Bill.
C .
Surplus .
Pro
.
Account . .
.
Divide id
Cashier's .
2,500.00
7,136.30
10,829.81
37.007.70
1.050.00
. 10.000.00
. 2,366.95
. 21.000.00
. 21,000.00
. 24,325.00
91.42
723.33
. . 140.385.74
1269,892.44
ORGANIZED 1908. TOTAL DIVIDENDS
We Invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Finns and In-
and will be pleased to or correspond with those
contemplating ages or opening new accounts. He want
J-
Jurors For August Term.
Jurors drawn by the commission-
for the August term of Pitt
court are Criminal
T. E. Pollard and J. L. Lewis, of
J. B. Gurganus, Carolina;
C. T. Kittrell, J. B, Jenkins, E. T.
Burney. W. J. Mumford, G. G.
J. J. Taylor, C. J. Tucker and
S. A. Jenkins, R. M.
and J. W. Elks, J. W.
Moore, Willis Moseley, W. G. Newton,
J. H. J. M. Williams, Sr., S.
F. and K. R. Wooten, Falk-
land; Paul Allen, Farmville; S. C.
E. C. Jack S. Smith,
J. Stanley Smith, S. W. Goodwin, H.
Burnett and J. T. Bundy, Farmville;
B. L. Smith, James Tripp and W. P.
Jr., col., Greenville; J. R.
Chauncey, C. C. Smith, M.
B. Harper, W. H. Chapman and Asa
Jones, Swift Creek.
FOR CIVIL TERM.
B. Worthington, W. B. Alex-
and J. L. Tripp,
T. F. Proctor, Harry C. Evans and H.
H. Proctor, J. A. Newton and
J. T. Matthews, Falkland; M. O.
J. T. Edwards, S. E. Gates,
J. N. Hart, Henry Edwards, W. J.
G. A. Evans and O. W. Elks,
Greenville; J. R. B. B. Sat-
the
is to be through county until
the Madison county roads can be got-
ten in shape, which will take a year
at least. However. Dr. be-
that the Central Highway be
has mapped out will be In such
that tourists can readily make the
run all the way from the seashore to
the Tennessee line by October of this
year.
This report was to the
Central Highway meeting held here
at which there were enthusiastic
speeches by a number of people and
resolutions were adopted calling on
the Wake commissioners to take steps
at once to do Wake's full part In the
road building. Dr. Pratt reported
that he has secured the- services of
three government engineers for v.
in laying out the highway route and
the plan to issue
to persons desiring maps of
the road carries and something like
expense, the road work will ho under
way with a well defined survey for
guidance very soon
Telegram.
Low Round Trip Fares From
Greenville, N. G.
Tickets on Sale July S and , 1911.
18,75 Via M Rail H
14.40 Norfolk bUy, It J.
Account Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. Final return
, S may be extended to August by depositing
ti k and paying
Account Mystic Shrine. Final return limit July which
may be extended to August by depositing ticket and
23.80 Via All H Y
21.45 Vi Norfolk II
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. II. WARD, Ticket Agent Greenville, N. C.
or address
H w. Pass. Traffic Mar. T. WHITE, Gen. Pass.
Wilmington, X. C.
-i . i
or G will cure any
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,
NEW STYLES N
and oxfords; all
leathers, just arrived. J. R- J-
Slate Reunion.
The state reunion of the veterans
will he held this year at Wilmington.
X. C, on 2nd and 3rd or August Our
Wilmington friends extend to every
veterans a hearty invitation and will j
surely give us a royal welcome. I
order that they may have the
as to how many to prepare
accommodations for it Is
necessary that they should know the
number that expects to attend least
two weeks before the meeting. So
I urge upon the veterans to lei me
hear from them as soon as
make up their minds, so that I may
send in the Information as to the
number they may expect from this
Camp.
The railroad fair I suppose will
be about. cent per mile both ways
as usual.
J. A. LONG,
Com. Camp Jones No. 1206
want I
ES, Cashier
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH
TRAVEL VIA
The Chesapeake Line
including new Steamers just placed
i service the of Norfolk -City of Baltimore are the
most elegant and up-to-date Steamers between Norfolk and
more.
Equipped with Wireless Telephone In Each Room. Meals
on Board Everything fer Comfort mid Convenience.
Steamers Norfolk
Steamer Old Point Comfort.
Steamer Arrive
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North Last and West.
Reservations made and any information courteously furnished by
H.
Norfolk, Virginia





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
A GOOD PLACE FOR ton, Barber and company. They have
And
a largo stock on hand.
Items In- Miss went to Green-
ville to visit relatives and
Messrs. J. F. Harrington, B. F.
Local
t crest.
Winterville, X. C, July
M. U. Bryan was called to
Sunday to attend the burial of her Manning and Eugene Cannon went to
mother. Norfolk and Ocean View Saturday
Mr. J. Cox came in Saturday returned by Mon-
night to spend a few days. day morning. They report a good
in .- i , time.
I Cheap summer goods at
A. W. Ange and Mr- M B- Bryan and family, for-
here, but now of Raleigh,
Mr. J. A. of Grifton, spent
Sunday with friends near bore.
Mr. J. L, Rollins went to Which-
Sunday to attend the burial of
his grandmother.
Miss Kate Chapman is visiting near
Gardner's X Roads.
Lime, tobacco, cotton, lanterns,
thermometers and alarm clocks at A.
W. Ange and
to spend a day or
came in Sunday
two at home.
Barber and Company
have just received a car load of royal
Hour.
Mr. Ernest Cox left Monday even-
for
When you buy from home mer-
chants, you are helping the town and
Miss Chapman is spending the thereby you share in the profits of
week Miss Cora Carroll.
Miss Minnie Mae who
is attending the East Carolina Teach-
Training school, spent Sunday and
Monday at home.
Winterville has a fine opening for
a good barber.
Rev. m. A. Adams returned home
Monday.
Messrs. G. R. Dixon and
Buck returned Tuesday from More-
your own purchase.
R. L. Abbott and partner at-
tended the game of ball at Ayden
yesterday.
Judging by the way the farmers
are buying handy tobacco trucks and
tobacco Hues from the A. G. Cox
Manufacturing Company, they must
be about ready to cure some
co.
Messrs. Eugene Cannon and C. T.
head, they spent several days Cox drove over to Ayden yesterday
fishing. evening.
Harrington, Barber and Company If it is a regular style of Hunsucker
have fifty thousand shingles for sale, buggy you want, or a special job you
All red heart cypress. prefer, the A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Mr. T. C. Nelson and family have Company is in a position to satisfy
moved to Greenville. you.
Winterville is a hustling little town Miss Annie of
as is proven by the number of drum- is spending a day or two in town to
that come; just yesterday seven the delight of her many friends,
got off one train here. We are giving carts and wagons our
See Harrington, Barber and Com- special attention now. When you get
for your summer pants. They ready to buy, come to see us or write,
are selling them cheap. We have something to say to you. A.
Mrs. E. E. Cox left for Washington Q. Cox Manufacturing Company.
Monday evening to visit friends and W. E. Proctor and children,
relatives. several days with Mrs. Ben.
Miss Evelyn Sutton left Monday to Tucker this week,
visit friends in Kinston. Winterville, N. C, July W.
Miss Cox, after spending I. Wingate left Thursday for Fair
Monday at home, returned to E. C. Haven, Mass., to visit two of his
T. T. S. that evening. daughters who arc
When you get ready for your baling For the cash and while they last,
wire, it will pay you to see Harrington, Barber and Company are
selling all their summer stock
dress goods, such as lawns, batiste,
and poplins at about half of
the cost price, so they can have room
for the fall stock. It is a chance of
a lifetime to get a bargain.
Mr. J. S. Ross, of Ayden, in
town Thursday.
Don't forget the price has been
made low on slippers at A. W. Ange
and
Mrs. J. H. C. Dixon returned Wed-
from near Gardner's X Roads,
where she spent some time with her
father who is quite sick.
For cash and to give the trade a
wonderful bargain, Harrington, Bar-
and Company have marked their
hats down and you can get a
good hat for a little money.
Messrs. G. R. Dixon and Williford
Buck left yesterday to spend a week
at Morehead.
Fruit jars and rubbers at A. W.
Ange and
Winterville has a fine opening for
a first-class barber shop.
Rev. M. A. Adams left Thursday
morning to attend the Sandy Bottom
Association, near Carthage.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox spent
Friday in Greenville.
See Harrington, Barber and Com-
for your requirements in lime
for repairing your tobacco barn furn-
aces and all other work when lime
is needed.
Mr. R. L. Abbott attended the base
ball game at Grifton yesterday.
Misses Mimic and Dora Cox at-
tended the Sunday School Institute
in Greenville this week.
Mr. Eugene Cannon,
as went to Ayden yesterday
to see the boys get beat in a game of
ball.
Get your pumps, piping and points
at Harrington, Barber and
They have a large stock on hand.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox left today
for the mountains in the western
part of the state, where they will
spend some time.
Misses Esther Johnson and Pearl
Hester went to Greenville today to
spend a few days with friends there.
WRIGHTS AD MEASURES
What Was
Found In
Last Monday.
The Twin Seat Hunsucker is a leader in and quality.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company are making other
good style buggies. Send in order and get your choice.
The report on an investigation car-
on last May of the weights
measure conditions in Charlotte by
the bureau of standards, has been
received by Mayor C. A. Bland and in
its pages of facts, there is much
interesting reading.
In the report it is said there is
power invested In the board of
regarding the regulation of
weights and measures within the city
limits, but that the board has never
exercised the power vested in it.
The county has a standard keep-
whose apparatus is very
and his sealer's record sheet is
in a deplorable condition.
weights and measures were found
scattered about in the rear room of
a gun shop and apparently no care
had been given them in
general our investigation shows
that the supervision of the weights
and measures of the city of Charlotte
is very insufficient and characterized
by great
While 26.3 per cent, of the beam
scales tested were incorrect by more
than per cent, per cent, of the
computing and 57.1 per cent, of the
spring dial scales were in error more
than this amount. Of the counter
scales tested and over which
were sold per cent, were
. A number of scales which
in favor of the dealer so much
as an ounce in one pound, were re-
ported to have been tested by the
county standard keeper.
Of the weights tested, only 64.6
per cent, were correct within 1.2 per
cent. Of the remainder 35.4 per
cent, incorrect weights, 51.4 per cent,
were light in weight. Some of the
errors were more than per cent, a
very poor showing for this class of
apparatus.
Not only were 55.5 per cent, of the
dry measures tested found incorrect
by more than per cent, but all of
those found incorrect were short
These figures, however, do not
the correct percentage of dry
measures short for the general
here is to measure dry beans and
sometimes green beans and
berries by liquid -measures. The
liquid measure when used for
dry commodities deliver per
cent, and upward less than the
amount.
In some cases the bottomless type
of measure found in use and
since this type generally deliveries
per cent, or more less than the
amount of the larger dry com-
the consumers of this city
suffer further from short weights by
its use in the market
Great carelessness characterizes
the scale of liquid commodities.
Nearly all of the brands of print
butter found in the Charlotte market
and examined, averaged light in
weight. These shortages were hi
most cases not large four out of
the seven brands of regular brands
of regular print examined were
in error less than per cent.
Of the packages of commodities
put up by local stores and found In
several different stores, one-half
were full weight and the other half
underweight. The average error of
all of these packages was only
per cent and the maximum error
only 4.2 per cent, underweight.
seems certain that an enact-
by the state and rigid enforce-
of such laws as are advocated
by the National Conference of
Weights and Measures, could not fail
to bring order to the present chaotic
state of the weights and measures
in this city and others of the state
of North
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
We're Proud of Our Record.
Established in 1868. Capital over
Headquarters for the
farmers of North America. Over 2.-
customers. Over sales-
men on the road. Over eighty first
class household articles needed in
home at every season of the year.
Our plant contains over ten acres of
floor space. Right now we need a
reliable energetic young man to
el and sell our products in Pitt
Address the J. R. Watkins Com-
South Gay street, Baltimore
Maryland. Established in 1868. Cap-
ital over Plant contains
acres floor space.
Exhibiting Fine Pictures.
Judging from the crowds that
witnessed the picture play at the
Gaiety last evening, they are
exhibiting a high class of pictures.
One of the features for last even-
was both educational and Inter-
Your and re-
a great deal of comment.
We desire to call your attention
to their program that appears else-
where daily in this paper, for future
reference.
Catarrh of the Stomach
a Prevalent Disease
Difficult to Relieve.
SOME INSURANCE
ITEMS.
A PROMPT AND
Mr. S. W. Jackson, Weaver Block, I
Greenville, Ohio, I was
superintendent of construction of J. F.
Bender and Co., of Hamilton,
Ohio, I became entirely unfit for
with of tho stomach.
friend called my attention to a
remedy for this condition. I begun to
improve at once. I was soon to re-
turn to my former profession.
would require many pages to de-
scribe the condition I was in and the re-
lief I have
Here is another case. Officer George
Y. Stout, North Broadway, Haiti-
more, Md., suffered very much
with catarrh of the stomach and
Indigestion. I lost fifty pounds in
four months.
friend called my attention to a
remedy, which I used, and gradually-
got well. I have gained half my lost
weight back
Chronic Stomach Trouble.
Mr. Egbert J. Gillespie, South
Main St., Los Angeles, Cal.,
of Lather's International Union, was
also suffering from catarrh of the
a long time. He grew thinner and
paler, lost all ambition and appetite.
Sick at the stomach, indigestion con-
A friend also called his attention to
a remedy, which brought a de-
improvement. Alter continuing
the use of the remedy for a month, he
considers himself permanently relieved.
Now, once more. Mr. Christian
man, Pa., says ho suffered
for many years with catarrh of the
stomach. It produced a miserable
cough, day and night. Ho tried doctors
and many remedies. At last his
was called to a remedy, the same
remedy that relieved the others which
have been referred to above. He m
that he was entirely rid of his stomach
difficulty.
Brought Back Health.
What was the remedy that has
wrought this remarkable relief So far,
the remedy has not been mentioned.
If any one doubts the correctness of
these statements it is very easy to
them by writing to the people whose
names have been given, enclosing a
stamp for reply.
The remedy is within the reach of
every one. It is simply the good, old
reliable remedy known, as
REMEDY.
If the truth were known, the
are that has relieved
as many cases of catarrh of the stomach
as any other popular remedy in
We have a great many
testimonials from all parts of the
United States, declaring in strong and
enthusiastic terms has en-
relieved them of catarrh of the
stomach, that they were wretched and
miserable beyond words, but Permit
has restored them to health, vigor and
happiness.
These are the facts. Now, if you have
stomach difficulty, it is up to you to act
upon them or them, as you
please.
Symptoms of Stomach Catarrh.
affection may result from
in diet, or the use of alcohol. The ex-
use of tobacco, especially when
the juice or the leaves are swallowed,
is likely to cause it.
seasoned or coarse, irritating
foods, sometimes induce the disease.
chronic gastritis of the
is essentially a secondary
affection, one of the primary causes is
an unhealthy stale of tho mouth, nose
or throat, such as bad teeth or catarrh
of the nose
patients are usually poorly
nourished, pale, sallow, thin, fatigue
easily induced, muscles flabby. Loss
of appetite or capricious appetite,
tongue is usually coated brown-
gray. Cankered mouth is a com-
occurrence.
is not common. When present
it is usually dull, and is aggravated by
food, especially when this i.- of an
character.
may occur in the morning,
Also after meals. Sickness to tho
frequent and persistent.
produces dull headache, and a
feeling of general nervous distress.
Constipation usually quite
These symptoms, given by Gould and
Pyle, coincide exactly with the frequent
descriptions Dr. is receiving
from patients all over the United States.
If you have any of these symptom
get a bottle of Take a dose be-
fore each meal. See if your stomach
does not immediately feel better,
appetite improve, your digestion at
once resume business.
People who object to liquid medicine
now secure rerun tablets.
raw
JACK ITEMS.
Local Happenings Of Interest In
This Section.
Black Jack, N. C, July
are having some dry weather through
this section at this time, and crops
are suffering very much for rain.
Farmers through this section are
getting ready to cure tobacco.
We are having a nice Sunday school
at Black Jack now. We invite you
all to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Clark, of
Grimesland, spend Sunday with rel-
and friends here.
Mr. J. R. and sons went
to Washington Saturday.
W. will fill his
appointment at Black Jack Sun-
day.
Mr. W. L. Clark and son, J. H.
Clark, went to Washington
day.
If a young man hasn't the cheek to
kiss a pretty widow, she may be will-
to furnish It.
Hope Well Items.
Hope Well, N. C, July
Well Sunday school is progressing
line.
Misses Mae and Lena are
spending a few weeks at Norfolk.
Miss Annie Stokes from Wall
street spent this week with Miss Lela
Some of our friends wore all smiles
Sunday over their friend returning
Saturday evening.
Mr. Oscar Manning spent Sunday
at
Quite a number of people from this
section attended the picnic on the first
of July at
Crops are very good throughout
this section.
Listen out for the wedding bells
soon.
North Carolina Gel
Payments.
From the Insurance Press is
the facts that life insurance or-
of the United States and
Canada distributed in
in 1910. The various paid
were and the dividends
and payments f
For policy holders who were able
to hold their protection throughout
the year dividend payments were in-
creased largely. The record of
paid by the companies that re-
ported in New York showed an in-
crease to the amount of
compared with for increase
in 1909 and for increase in
1908. Several millions of dollars of
dividends were applied for the
chase of annuities and paid-up
to insurance carried.
According to that record a notable
feature of tho transactions was that
the amount of the dividend
was in ex-
of the amount of disbursements
for surrendered, lapsed and
ed policies
Besides showing increase of the
amount paid, the record accounted for
of dividends and
paid, including amounts left on de-
posit, an increase of com-
pared with for increase in
1909. Dividends declared on or
portioned to annual and deferred div-
policies in 1910, payable In 1911,
amounted to an Increase
of over declared dividends
for 1910. The amounts set apart, cal-
or provisionally ascertained
upon deferred dividend policies bad
a total of an Increase of
for the year.
Business insurance boomed, the
amounts of new Insurance ranging
from to The
of life insurance for the
protection of business interests has
increased notably in tho past three
years. Chief executives and managers
of departments of corporations, on
whose energy and experience success-
transactions depend, have taken
insurance against the contingencies
of financial loss and interruption of
operations in the event of death.
Life insurance for the individual
capitalizes unearned income; for the
corporation or partnership it capital-
productive value in affairs less
sentimental than those of tho home.
In amount of beneficiaries paid New
York state heads the list with
500.000, with Pennsylvania and
following. New City heads
the list of cities with
with Philadelphia and
Chicago next. The total
payments for Carolina were
The largest individual
payment in the state was at Kinston,
the next was at Grifton,
Charlotte came third with
Some total payments in Pitt county
were as At Grifton,
Greenville, Falkland,
These represent the places only at
which more than were paid
and do not include various smaller
amounts at. other places.
Post Oilier Receipts.
The receipts of the Greenville post
office for the fiscal year ending June
1911, were tome more than
100.00.
The Latest News From Our
Village.
N. C, July W.
. Harper went to Ayden Friday.
Mr. James A. Stokes went to Green-
ville Saturday.
Mr. S. K. Harper went to
dine Saturday morning.
Mr. Yates and family, of
Raleigh, are visiting relatives and
friends here.
Mr. Frank Stokes returned from
Vanceboro Saturday.
Several of our boys went to Gard-
Saturday to play base ball.
Messrs. and Lev Stokes
went to Ayden Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Stokes, of
worth, spent Sunday here with rel-
ate .
Crops are Buffering considerably in
tins section on account of the dry
weather,
Mrs. W. Harper and daughters,
Misses Mattie and Bessie, spent Sun-
day at
Mr. J. C. Stokes and family, of
Vanceboro, spent Sunday here
We had a large crowd at Sunday
school Sunday. Glad to sec so many
out. Come again and bring your
friends.
Mr. J. A. Stokes, of
spent Monday afternoon here.
It is very dry throughout this sec-
lion. The creeks and swamps have
dried up and most every body re-
ports a scarcity of water in their
wells.
Their Infant Son Pond.
Little Zeb. Warren Brown, nine
weeks old, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. Brown, died at their home In
South Greenville, Friday afternoon.
The little fellow was laid to rest Sat-
in the family burying ground,
near town.
Of
A new degree has been invented by
the University of Michigan. It is rep-
resented by the letters P.
which mean of public
The first P. degrees were con-
a few days ago upon Ev-
ans and who have been very
successful in chasing germs to their
lair and catching them. The new de-
it seems, is to be reserved for
the honor of scientists who do some-
thing notable in the way for
the public health by hygienic,
or other
Morning News.
Marriage Licenses.
The only license to marry issued
last week was to one white
Hilton Garris and Julia Tripp.
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 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 poisons indebted
to said estate will make immediate
payment.
This June 17th, 1911.
G. LITTLE, Administrator,
Of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.
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. 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.





Carolina Rome Mi and The Eastern Reflector.
, ; .
FARMVILLE MOVING
SWIFTLY FORWARD
NEWSY LETTER ROM THAT
Going
Entertainment -Base Rail, Too.
Farmville, N. C., July
you haven't seen a column dedicated
to Farmville In some time, we are
moving quietly and forward.
There are a good many people that
haven't been to our prosperous little
town in a year or and we Invite
them to pay us another visit and
have their eyes opened as to our
activity.
There are at present three hand-
some new residences nearing com-
and six others under con-
Among them are Mrs. F.
L. Joyner and Mr. Long's, which
will he one of the most modern in
the county.
We had quite a large real estate
deal on Main street the first of the
week, the and Overby Hard-
ware Company bought feet of Mr.
Jim Lang's property. They are going
to tear down the old building and
erect at. once three nice tWO-Story
business houses. The material Is be-
hauled two Other new two-
story brick stores further down
street.
Now, if you people
don't hustle, we are going to over-
take you, and when we have succeed-
ed in doing that we are going by
you.
There was B hay ride given by the
young men last week and two big
wagons were filled to overflowing
with happy young couples on the
roads the stillness
of the night with laughter and songs
as the wheels rolled along. After re-
turning to town with many Jostles
and peels of laughter all went to
Burnett's drug store and were served
with refreshments.
for them and sent them home with
the sad term to
Will was here on our
No doubt they
to be elsewhere before our
I the home
pi
The borne boys played in fine form
and in the end had crossed the
plate, while the visitors played
hard they all ma I co i and
In the end only had reached borne,
and be would have been out but for
a wild throw on the part of one of
the home boys.
Today we cross bats with Snow
Hill and a and closely contested
game Is expected.
Lost Valuable Cow.
The Enterprise says
Mr. J. C. Roberson, of
lost a valuable cow last week. She
gave four gallons of milk and two and
a half pounds butter daily.
TRAINING SCHOOL VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. John Entertain,
Mr. and Mrs. John Stanley Smith
elegantly entertained at a progressive
heart heart party Monday evening
from to o'clock at their lovely
home on street, in honor
of Miss Virginia Hoke. from West
Virginia, and Martha Glenn, of
The guests were greeted at
the door by Mr. and Mrs. Smith and
from there they passed Into the hall,
where delicious punch was served by-
Miss Rosa Moore and Mr. Ed-
wards.
The guests were then invited into
the parlor which was very tastily
orated with cut flowers and potted
plants. Here followed the Interest-
and exciting game of heart dice.
After an hour's playing it. was
found that Mr. Arthur and Miss
Martha Glenn won the prize, a lovely
card case. Many other little games
and a tree contest were indulged in
and Instrumental music was charm-
rendered by Miss Blanche King.
After this the guests were Invited in-
to the dining room where delightful
ices were served, after which the
guests departed, all declaring this
lovely party more than sustains the
reputation already won by Mr. and
Mrs. Smith as charming entertain-
Base Dal i.
we have been hiving
base ball, too. Our team went to
and brought the game
home, with them. Pinetops was here
Tuesday with her first nine line.
The home boys proved to be too swift
Make Interesting Talks To Tin-
Students.
Col. John s. Cunningham, of Per-
son county, East Carolina
Teachers Training school today and
made an interesting talk to the
dents at the opening exercises this
morning. Col. is now
connected with the United Stales de-
of agriculture in the bu-
of plant industry and tobacco
investigations. His work will be
largely in North Carolina doing
work among tobacco
farmers.
Lr. W. W. Garner, chief of the to-
Investigations of the United
es department of agriculture, was
also in Greenville today, lie is on
way to South Carolina to visit
i lie tObaCCO growing sections of that
state. Dr. Garner has been very lib-
with his recommendations for
aiding North Carolina tobacco grow-
Miss Edith Royster, of Raleigh, as-
superintendent of Wake
schools, spent today visiting the
Training school and delivered a
to the students this afternoon.
Negro Woman Kills White Man.
Roper, X. July
less, a middle-aged woman,
shot and probably fatally wounded
W. C. at Gum Neck, in
county, yesterday afternoon.
The shooting look place on the wharf
of one of the steamboat lines running
from Elizabeth City to Hyde county.
was die agent. A number
of more or less drunken had
gathered lo meet the steamer and,
coming disorderly, ordered
them to quiet or leave the place,
whereupon the woman
drew a thirty-two revolver and
proceeded lo empty every chamber
at short range, three
balls taking effect in his side and
back, passing out on the opposite
side.
She escaped to the but
was finally captured and together
With man who aided her in
her attempted escape, are In
Jail.
Accused of Stealing.
E, Chamberlain, of Clinton, Me.,
boldly accuses
Salve of sting from
burns or pain from sores
of all kinds the distress from boils
or piles. cuts, cores bruises,
Ins and Injuries Of their
j a, a healing remedy its equal
don't Only at all
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 MOTE for Crockery, Glassware, Tinware,
Wood and Willow Ware.
GO SEE MOTE for Cultivators, Plows and all Farm-
Utensils.
We 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 Move that you must buy from him, but we
want you lo come and learn what we have to offer you and
sec 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 L
Greenville,
J. G.
North Carolina
Home and Philosophy.
Dr. Stone, the president of Purdue
University, has obtained a divorce
from bis wife because she has adopted
an East Indian religious cult, known
as Yogi philosophy. She has been
away from the doctor for four years
now, enjoying among others
of the cult in Germany.
When a true wifely philosophy runs
up against the Yogi Philosophy and
gets knocked out, it is time for a
divorce.
It is always a sad case when a
wife's mind gets all up with
occultism the strange
of the Indies. It interferes with good
bread, ordinary beds, flowers on the
able, regular meals, nursing the
baby, attending church those
little habits and ways that make a
sane and cheerful home. No true
philosophy, no amount of Intellectual-
should drive a woman from her
home. If it is not a homo that
responds to her intellectuality, then
there is something the matter, with
her intellectuality. If a woman docs
not fit a home like a song fits a can-
throat, then it is time to pause
and State Journal.
Years 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.
And some church members seem to
think it is up to the minister to
make good for the entire
Summer girls mostly have very
wintry heart affairs.
the Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
OUR WEEKLY LETTER ,
THE ALLIANCE
Progressive Republicans
See Taft Defeated.
To
Clyde H. special Wash-
correspondent of The Re-
Washington, July
Taft will be opposed by progressive
Republicans for a re-nomination on
the ground that he is still the mouth-
piece of Aldrich and the great law-
defying industrial corporations of the
country.
If proof was necessary to show that
the old alliance between Taft and
Aldrich still exists, the president
himself furnished it on two notable
occasions within the last couple of
weeks when he went out of his way
to the Aldrich near-central-
bank scheme, which is designed to
give Wall street absolute control of
the money and credit of the United
States, and thus make it the
lute master of business and
try.
Progressive Republicans contend
that if the president should be re-
and re-elected would
continue to be the complaisant help-
mate of schemers like Aldrich, who
are striving constantly to make the
great masses of the public little more
than the serfs of the few men who
compose the great financial
nation, of which J. Morgan
and the Standard Oil capitalists are
the most And
Mr. Taft now publicly confirms the
fears of the progressives.
Therefore the only thing left for
the public to conclude is that Mr.
Taft's re-election would necessarily
place back in control of congress the
same class of men who were swept
out by the indignation of the public
in the last election.
Democrats Making Honest Efforts.
The Democrats are sincere in their
efforts to run the house of
on an economical business
basis. The report of Jerry Smith,
chief clerk of the house, just made
public, shows that during the month
of June a saving of was
effected as a result of the abolishing
of useless offices. This item, which
does not include the big reduction
on the police force which the senate
has not yet concurred in but will
prove shortly, means a saving of
in a year.
This is not a stupendous sum, It is
true, but the spirit is in striking
contrast to the wastepaper bas-
in the offices of Postmaster Gen-
Hitchcock and the expensive
recreations taken by the Aldrich
commission at. public expense
at Narragansett pier.
Taft
Once more the White House press
bureau has been to back-track.
It was like Franklin A. Shot-
well, of Omaha, secretary of the
Progressive Republican League of
Nebraska, came to Washington, had
a talk with the president, and was
quoted by the White House press bu-
as saying that Nebraska was
strong Taft for re-nomination
and Now it. happens that
the league which Mr. Shotwell was
made to appear as speaking for, is
against Taft instead of be-
for him. When the officials of
the Nebraska organization heard of
Shot statement they promptly
passed resolutions repudiating it. and
wired them to Washington. The fact
is the real progressive Republicans
stand as a unit against Taft's
and every indication is that
if he secures the nomination they
will permit him to go down in defeat.
Then they will make an attempt to
re-organize the Republican party.
Progressives Lose
When it is too late some of the
Republican Insurgents in the United
States senate who are opposing
may learn that they are com-
one of those huge political
blunders that have been described as
worse than crimes.
Real Revision
The wool bill, passed by the Dem-
house, but not acted upon as
yet in the Republican senate, reduces
the tax cloth out of which the
poor man's clothing is made, from
per cent, to from 2-7 to per cent;
on women's dress goods from
per cent, to from to per cent.,
and on blankets from per cent,
to per cent.
DIRECTORY
CITY OFFICIALS
CURED TO STAY CUBED,
Greenville citizen Found Complete
Freedom from Kidney Troubles.
If you suffer from backache
From disorders
From any disease of the kidneys.
Re cured to stay cured.
Kidney Pills make lasting
cures.
Greenville people testify.
Here's one case of
James Hardison. Fifth St.,
N. C, says, had trouble
from my kidneys and the kidney
passed too frequently at
night. In the morning when I got
up, there was a lameness across my
lions and I also suffered from back-
ache. Kidney Pills, which I
procured from the John L. Wooten
Drug Company, relieved all these
symptoms of kidney complaint, and
restored my to a normal con-
At the present, time I am
free from backache and I have no
hesitation in giving Kidney
Pills the credit, for bringing about
this given Jan-
Ho Trouble Since.
On December 1910, Mr. Hardison
take pleasure in confirming
my former statement in praise of
Kidney Pills. This remedy
made a permanent cure In my case
and during the past two and a half
years I have had no need of a kidney
For sale by all dealers. Price
cents. Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
the
take no other.
So Prints,
When the poet tries his hand he
should also show his name. The fail-
of to disclose his
accounts for his poem not getting
In print. It has been said perhaps
a few less than a thousand times,
that this paper does not print any-
thing without knowing who writes
it.
Never leave home on a journey
without a bottle of Chamberlain's
Colic, and Rem-
It is certain to be needed and
cannot obtained when on board
the cars or steamships. For sale by
all dealers.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Churches, Lodges and Social
County.
Superior Court C. Moore
SheriffS. I. Dudley.
Register of M. Moore
I. Wilson.
C. Laughing-
house.
C.
P. D.
J. Holland. J. J. May, B. M. Lewis, W.
E. Proctor.
Town
M. Wooten.
C. Tyson
L. Cur.
Chief T. Smith.
Fire D.
E. Nobles, C. s. Car,,
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, R. L.
Dumber.
G. Couch.
Churches.
Baptist, C. M.
Rock, pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk;
C. W. Wilson, superintendent Sun-
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary.
C. C. Ware, pastor;
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, J
H. Shore, pastor; A. B. Ellington,
clerk; H. Bateman, superintend-
of Sunday school; L. H.
secretary.
Presbyterian- No pastor at
P. M. Johnston, clerk; P. M. John-
superintendent Sunday school;
Miss Olivia House, secretary.
Chapel
Rev. W. O. pastor.
Lodges.
No. A. F. and A. M.
L. H. Render, W. M.; R. Williams,
Sec.
Sharon, U. A. F. and A. ML
H. Harding, W. M.; E. E. Griffin,
Greenville Chapter No. R. A. M.
R. C. Flanagan, H. P.; J. E. Wins-
low, Sec.
Covenant No. I. O. O.
Brown, N. G.; L. II, Pender, Sec.
Greenville Encampment No. I.
O. Brown, C. P.; D. C.
Moore, Scribe.
No. I. O.
R. S. Sachem; J. L.
Evans, C. of R.
Tar River No. K. of P.- G. J.
Woodward, C. C.; A. B. Ellington,
K. of R. and S.
Tar River Ruling No. F. M.
W. Drown, W. R.; J. W. Little
C.
Clubs.
L. Hall, president;
M. R. Turnage, secretary.
End of E. O.
fries, Pies.; 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
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith
stables, and next door to Flan-
Buggy Co's new building
. K. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
formerly occupied by J. L.
Fleming.
Greenville. . If, Carolina
C. D. M. Clark
ft CLARK
Engineers and Surveyor
N. Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
In Building
Greenville, . N. Carolina
L. I. Moore, W. EL long
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
. n. Carolina
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
Greenville. . . M.
HARRY SKINNER
LAWYER
. . N. Carolina
H. W. CARTER, M. D.
Practice limited to diseases of the
Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat.
Washington, N. C. Greenville, K. C
Greenville with Dr. D. L. James.
a. m. to p. m., Mondays.
ALBION DUNN
AT LAW
Office In building, Third St.
Practices wherever his services are
desired
. . Carolina
H. i . WARD. C. C. PIERCE.
Washington, N. C. Greenville,
WARD PIERCE
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Greenville. N. C.
Practice in all the Courts.
Greenville Cabinet
WORKS
Antique Furniture
ed. Cabinet, Stair and Re-
pair Work a Specialty.
Charley Denser,
Third St., Greenville,
THE SHOP
S. J. NOBLES
clean
and attractive, working the very
best barbers. Second to none.
OPPOSITE II. J. G.
J. Jarvis, president; Mrs. J. L.
en. secretary.
The Kings A. L.
Blow, president; Mrs. J. G.





Tie Carolina Home and Fan and Eastern Reflector.
THE HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
THE REFLECTOR COMPANY, Inc.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
tee Carolina Home and Earn and Tie Eastern Reflector.
Subscription, year.
Six months.
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
Entered as second class matter
August 1910, at the post office at
Greenville, North Carolina,
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, JULY 1911.
HOW CITY PEOPLE LIVE.
People who live in the country and
country towns, where there is plenty
of room and abundant space between
buildings, have much to be thank-
for, especially amid such torrid
temperature as has prevailed for
some days recently. They read of
intense heat, and prostrations and
deaths occurring in the cities, but
the news dispatches give only a
slight idea of the intense suffering
In the densely populated centers.
While the temperature may really be
no higher in the cities than In the
country regions, the sun pouring
down all day upon the compact stone
and brick buildings makes them so
hot that they are almost like ovens,
and this heat is so retained that the
buildings do not get cool during the
night.
The writer has Just had an
during a forced stay of a few
days in Baltimore of seeing how
suffer under such conditions.
They exist through the day some
how, and at night they almost live
on the streets and in the parks.
Along the residence section every
house had a group of people with
chairs and pillows on the sidewalks
In front, and hundreds of men
on benches and grass plots in the
parks. Finding a place cool enough
to sleep in was a problem with many
of them.
In this, as in many other things,
the people of the country are far
more blessed than the people of the
city.
the Republicans for, for
these many tariff pro-
for
cal as the
Democratic party stands for free
trade think it would be more in
keeping with Mr. Simmons to work
to that end. What a party looking
A Democratic
working for high tariff protection of
an
Do you know who feeds the
baby He is the man who needs
the money most and that's why he
voted the Democrat ticket, so let us
have free trade in everything or join
the Republican party.
--------o
The Simmons and Cummins changes
of the free list bill are having a hard
time. From all reports the senate
won't stand for them and will vote
them down today. It seems to us
that if any merchandise or
ties are admitted free, all should be.
Democracy advocates free trade, and
why not have it Lots of Demo-
and Republicans both are beat-
the devil around this, the same
bush. Interests is the cause of the
inconsistency, and when we vote we
should be mighty sure we are voting
for clean, strong men.
There are five candidates in the
Georgia senatorial contest and the
first ballot is being taken today. Gov-
Hoke Smith and Senator Fer-
are thought to be in the lead, one
of whom will probably be elected in a
second ballot, as it is expected the
first vote will be too close to get a
majority.
North Carolina is going to have it
just as bad. Wonder if all those
fellows are after this one particular
Job just for the name there is in it, or
well, there Is so much of the other
you may guess.
how she managed to do the trick of
deceiving the northern would-be
to fill her coffers, a full
account of which is published in this
paper.
The state reunion of Confederate
veterans will be held at Wilmington
the 2nd and 3rd of August. That city
is making much preparation for the
entertainment of the veterans. We
have not heard of any movement on
the part of Pitt county veterans to
attend this reunion, but suppose there
are a number who will go.
Senator F. M. Simmons has in-
an amendment to the Can-
reciprocity bill, providing flour
as well as wheat, and fresh meats as
well as live stock on the free list.
He says this amendment is in the in-
of the farmers, as it is unjust
to them to admit wheat and live stock
and not flour and dressed meats.
Here is food for a Mr.
Bryant Branch volunteered in the
Confederate army, and was engaged
in the battle of Seven Pines, and had
not been heard from since the bat-
Recently he turned up at his
old home in the Bear March sec-
A notice in another part of this
paper requires the sidewalks cleaned
by the occupants, under penalty of
law, before the 20th of this month.
Get busy and clean up. Such a no-
should not be required at all.
Civic pride ought to prompt the act.
--------o
Senator Lee S. Overman, of North
Carolina, is one of the party in com-
with President Taft taking a
cruise on the There
is hardly a more popular senator than
North Carolina's junior member.
RECIPROCITY ON FREE TRADE.
Simmons may be right in sticking
to his agreement and trying to keep
a high tariff on lumber, but that
very thing is what we have been
That little joke about the raw-hide
traces and a hill which must be climb-
ed with a loaded wagon and it rained,
told editorially in this week's issue
of the Siler City Grit is so old It is
hoary. Editor London will have to
be more original if he wants to keep
the mendacity medal. The fact that
he tells It as an actual occurrence ac-
in his county may be a point
in his favor though.
Because a girl who had typhoid
fever three years ago was allowed to
wash milk cans on her father's farm
there is an epidemic of the fever in
Englewood, a Chicago suburb. The
case was discovered by the health de-
Thirty-four persons taking
milk from the girl's father are ill.
She is what is known as a
of germs.
Miss Hoffman, of western North
Carolina of is
brought before the public again by
the editor of the Cleveland
Star, who, while at the press con-
week before last, discovered
Mr. Henry American am-
to Mexico, set the Mexicans
a very poor example when he refused
to show the usual respect of standing
while was played through
courtesy by a Mexican band.
France is showing a rapid Increase.
Over here we continue to chew cow,
as horses come too high to kill and
eat.
Charlotte was first in the state to
come with an announcement of the
coronation in moving pictures.
Thought it was about time for the-
pictures to be along.
When a man has to be always ex-
plaining his actions to other people
there is some doubt as to his honesty.
Give us the man who does not have
to explain.
--------o
Hoke Smith is now senator from
Georgia. Look out for him, he'll
more than likely make a noise that
can be heard.
is to figure in the news
reports from Washington again on
the resumption of his election
today.
They say the coolest place in town
is the top of the court house tower,
but we have not been up to test It
--------o
A woman who couldn't swim floated
for- hours in New York bay until res-
cued. She must be made of cork.
Watch the bottom drop out from
under Senator Simmons He has
ceased a stand pat and is running.
Hoke Smith was born in North
Carolina. Wonder if the Charlotte
Observer wants to claim him.
Now when King George dies the
coronation will have to be done over
again, new crown and all.
--------o
Senator Simmons is entitled to
membership in the club
evidently.
Now Chairman Eller is after Sen-
Simmons. He says he
say
The typhoid fever reports from
have done that city no lit-
damage, and it appears there was
little cause for any such alarm as
has been broadcast during the past
two weeks by calamity howlers.
We are not taking up for the house-
fly especially, but what would be-
come of us if they were exterminated
while human beings and other
are so unclean
If Representative Kahn's
could become a law it would help
the American republic to kinder re-
its self respect, which is being
somewhat battered by the
marriages for bankrupt titles.
The consumption of horse flesh in
There are numerous receptive can-
for the corporation
vacancy.
The governor might hurry up the
appointment for corporation com-
missioner and stop the contest.
Bicycle delivery is popular with
the Greenville grocers. The good
streets make this easy.
You would do better by advertising
to get business than by complaining
at not having any.
--------o
It is the time of year to expect
warm weather, and you would be
awfully surprised if It was to
Congress is making quite an effort
to get through by August first.
Mr. Eller Is
a Democrat.
The hot wave continues to roll.
It Is not near-hot but real hot.
The death list from heat wave
has been large.
Such big fish yarns as they do send
UP from the seashore.
o--------
You cannot help Greenville by never
taking part in anything that means
for progress.
The first ward is doing some more
bragging. says they have the
best alderman in the bunch.
The defaulting of bank cashiers in
North Carolina is becoming most too
popular. reports the latest.
He had a shortage of
Oxford has caught the craze from
that Elizabeth City story and gone to
hunting for eleven hundred dollar
gold pots.
o--------
The weather man has been
something cooler for days,
but it failed to come on schedule
time,
Wonder what the Charlotte
Is going to say about Buncombe
county investing a thousand dollars
In blood
They have not yet discovered the
cause of the typhoid fever epidemic
In Wilmington, but are all
steps to prevent It
Many licks are taken at the house
fly, but he continues to cause dis-
ease and expense and will continue
lo do so until exterminated.
but what have we got to offer in
the way of employment to induce
them to come
Luck conies even to a newspaper
man once in a while. Mr. J. P. Lucas,
of the Charlotte Observer staff, has in-
from an uncle who
died in Texas.
Extra space is given an account from
the News and Observer, of a trusted
employee attempting murder and
robbery, on account of the lesson It
should teach.
selves and their business more prom-
before the buyers. People
soon those whose names they
do not see in print.
-0--
In his home town John D.
feller's six drive horses are valued
at each. The profit in oil ought
to enable him to own better horses
than that.
is too much selfishness In
Greenville for the town to prosper
like it ought to. When the business
people unite for a thing it comes, but
when they pull apart nothing comes.
Harry Atwood started from New
York in great shape to to Wash-
It has been several days and
he has not reached the capital yet.
A good walker could have made it
on foot In less time.
Representative Hobson has intro-
a bill in congress to construct
a national highway Niagara
Falls to New York. The government
will take interest in public highways
some of these days.
There are sixty-five candidates be-
fore the State Board of Pharmacy for
license, thirteen of whom are
Raleigh aldermen settle their
with their fists. They ought to
to Greenville and learn how to
end their disputes only in words.
o--------
The state has paid over the
for the site for the new
building in Raleigh, and work
on the buildings will soon begin.
is going on in
has taken its accustomed place in the
editorial column of the Durham Her-
when Joe King goes a fishing.
o--------
Some enthusiasm in the direction
of securing manufacturing
es in Greenville would be a good
thing for the town.
Newcomers, and many of them,
wasted to help Greenville grow,
It is too late now, several years
ago we licked Spain for it, to say
that the Maine was blown up by an
internal explosion. But that is the
opinion that General chief of
the engineers.
The question of keeping dogs off
the streets of Greenville unless they
are muzzled, was a warm one before
the board of aldermen Thursday
night, Alderman Nobles, of the first
ward, being against the dogs, and Al-
of the second ward,
for them.
A and a white man were
rested and tried together, in Durham,
for running a blind tiger. That is
usually the blind tiger combination,
the in the front doing the sell-
and the white man backing him
under cover.
The Biblical Recorded, of Raleigh,
the organ of the Baptist denomination
in this is years old. Quite
an honorable age. and the Recorder
is as good as it is old. In these
years the paper has had ten different
editors.
The prospect of good crops ought
to make the merchants more active
in advertising so as to keep them-
In the bond election Tuesday Char-
people showed that they placed
higher appreciation on schools than
they did upon an The
school bonds received a majority of
and the auditorium bonds
Charlotte folks usually have their
ideas on right.
Charlotte celebrated Independence
Day, July 4th, in a way that counts
for progress. On that day an election
was held on the question of issuing
bonds, amounting in the aggregate to
for various city improve-
and the vote showed a large
majority in favor of the bonds.
--------o
The Folly of Lawsuits.
Whatever else you do, don't get
into a lawsuit over some trifling dis-
agreement with a neighbor. The
courts are full of suits which could
have been settled by mutual
or by arbitration to the great
advantage of all parties except the
lawyers in the case. Just the other
day a suit was decided after two or
three years of expense and worry on
the part of two families. It was
over a disputed line, as so many such
suits are, and the land in dispute
was probably not worth fifty dollars.
The suit cost the winner and
the loser, being taxed with the costs,
necessarily had more to pay. It is
probable that each party spent at
least worth of time in monkey-
with the case.
Another case recently noticed is
where a farmer had a right to get
water from a spring on a neighbor's
land. He wanted to build a spring-
house, the owner objected. The first
man had got along without a spring-
house for years, it would not have
damaged the land-owner a penny,
yet an injunction has been issued and
a lawsuit Is on. Each party will
probably spend several hundred
and be no better off, and the old
friendliness of the neighborhood will
be a thing of the past
To begin a suit in court over some
such matter which could easily
be adjusted by a little give and take,
is not only the poorest sort of
case of wasting
dollars to gain possible cents,
but is also a crime against the com-
and a foolish waste of the
best part of life. For what shall It
profit a man if he gain a needless
lawsuit only to lose the goodwill of
his neighbors and his own friend-
towards Pro-
Farmer.
interest of one is the Interest of all.
No town will become a business
center so long as its men rely
upon a few merchants to make the
effort to bring trade to the town.
Too often the men in a few lines of
trade are about the only ones that
reach out for custom. Other mer-
chants will wait until these men have
induced the people to come to town
and content themselves with trade
that naturally drifts to their place.
A public spirited man should ask
himself if he is doing his part in at-
people to town to trade.
Maxton Scottish Chief.
Taxing The Childless.
Wisconsin starts an attack on race
suicide. It is a small start, but even
a start is revolutionary. The
has passed an income tax bill
which becomes law if endorsed by the
people at next year's election. The
tax proposed ranges from one-half
of one per cent up to six per cent, in-
creasing with the size of the income.
But there is exemption up to a
point. In the case of an
man this is For each de-
pendant, and here's where the attack
on race suicide comes in, an extra
is exempted. Under this rule, as
a man's family grows, his tax de-
creases. The decrease is not enough,
in this case, to make much incentive
to large families, but it establishes the
principle, which is important. Our
taxes have always run just the other
why. So far as tariffs increase
prices they subsidize race suicide, for
those taxes increase as the family in-
creases. Even our system of direct
taxation has that effect. Let a baby
come, and we do not penalize the
father with a tax on its cradle
Nebraska State Journal.
How To Make Our Town.
One man cannot make a town. The
newspaper cannot do it. But one
man on a newspaper with the help
of the wide-awake men of the place
all pulling together, can make a wide
difference In the place. Every man
who succeeds in a town is a help to
it. The more money he makes, if he
spends it, the better for the com-
The larger business he
builds up, the more he advertises,
and hence the more attention he
brings to the town. A man cannot
build up an honorable business in the
town without helping the country. The
Indicted For Failing to Suicide.
Establishing a precedent in local
courts, Irving a young white
man, was indicted in the recorder's
court yesterday and will be tried this
morning on a charge of attempting to
commit suicide, which is a
or under the common law.
was found Saturday night lying across
one of the tracks of the suburban line
between League and parks.
It is stated that he was lying with his
feet across one rail and his head
across other. He was seen by Mo-
W. C. Baird, who was on a
car returning from the beach on a
parallel line, and was picked up. He
is quoted as saying that he wanted to
commit suicide is the reason he lay
down on the track. It is thought Bur-
was under the influence of
key at the Star.
It Is Great
The granulated appearance of a
watermelon Indicates the
imprisoned particles of sugar develop-
ed from the saccharine constituent of
the kind grown in the generous loamy
soil of eastern North Carolina. Some
foolish people cut a watermelon with
a knife, totally ignorant of the Pender
county method of breaking open a
juicy specimen and fanning the bees
away while getting away with the
delicious hunks as fast as they can
be lifted from the shattered rind.
should the heathen
Why, it's simply because they want
to come to eastern North Carolina
where the best of everything grows
to the quintessence of perfection.
Wilmington Star.
or doses will cure any
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,





la.
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector.
Pin COUNTY FAIR
NOVEMBER AND
GOVERNING BOARD NAMES DATE
Splendid Premium List Arranged For
Exhibits.
The governing board of Pitt County
Fair Association held an interesting
meeting today in the city hall. Thurs-
day and Friday, November and
were selected as the date for holding
the first county fair, and the fair
promises to be a great success.
A premium list for exhibits was
adopted that aggregates something
over This premium list is in
the hands of the printers and will be
published in a few days.
THE CITY FATHERS
TO WORK
ALDERMEN THURSDAY NIGHT.
SAYS ITEM WAS WRONG.
Mr. Everett Gives Correction of
The Trouble.
The following item appeared in
The Reflector on January 7th.
telephone message to The Re-
tells of a serious trouble that
occurred not far from House station.
The message says that Mr. Tobe
Fleming went to his father's, Thurs-
day, to assist in killing hogs, and up-
on returning to the home found a
man named Everett there.
Fleming ran Everett away with a gun
but was prevented by Mrs. Fleming
from using the gun. Friday night
Fleming went to House,,, and he and
Everett get Into a difficulty in which
Fleming was badly hurt. The trouble
has led to the separation of Fleming
and his wife, both of them returning
home of their respective par-
Mr. Everett, who recently
returned from Petersburg, where he
had been since early in January, says
that he was the man referred to in
this article, as he had a fight with
Fleming at House station the night
before he went away, and that all of
it except the reference to the fight
is a mistake and does him an
We give him the benefit of this
correction.
Officers
Ordinance.
Little routine business was trans-
acted by the board of aldermen at
their regular meeting last night.
Perhaps the most important of their
proceedings was passing a dog
This ordinance declares dogs run-
at large a public nuisance, and
provides that all such dogs must be
and providing for impound-
and killing of all dogs found run-
at large not properly muzzled.
License was granted for five res-
and two pool and billiard
rooms. License for two others for
restaurants were refused.
The officers elected, their salaries
and duties are as
Chief of T. Smith, salary,
per month; bond, He is
so assistant tax collector.
A. Clark, salary, per
month. He is also building inspect-
or.
Assistant P.
salary, per month. He is super-
of the market, team and
street work.
Night H.
per month.
C. Tyson, salary, per
month; bond, He is also tax
collector and clerk to the Water and
Light Commission.
L. Carr, salary,
per month, bond,
The mayor's salary was fixed at
per month.
Coolest Fountain Ever
enjoy drinking here delightfully cool,
dainty and delicious drinks cool you within, the fast
revolving fans cool you without. Our Ice Cream excels
The Carolina Home Fan and The Eastern Reflector.
II
If there is a Drug Store in this town where The Price,
The Service, The Quality and Variety of Stock count
for anything it is at
White's Drug Store.
TRINITY COLLEGE
1859
1892
1910-1911
Three memorable The Granting of the Charter Trinity College; the Removal of
the College to the growing and City Durham; the Building of the New and Greater
Trinity. t , .
Magnificent new buildings with new equipment and enlarged facilities.
Comfortable hygienic dormitories and beautiful, pleasant surroundings.
Five Academic; Mechanical, Civil and Electrical Engineering; Law; Ed-
Graduate
For and other information, address
R. L FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham. N. C.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Of The Board Of Aldermen Of
Greenville.
At the meeting of the board of
Thursday night Mayor F.
M. Wooten appointed the following
committees for the fiscal year begin-
July 1st, the first named on each
committee being
B. J. E.
Nobles, W. A. Bowen.
E. Nobles, H. C. Ed-
wards, B. F. Tyson.
F. Tyson, Z. P. Van
Dyke, H. C. Edwards.
Lights and F. Daven-
port, J. S. Tunstall, J. E. Nobles.
P. VanDyke, W. A.
Bowen, E. B.
B. B. F. Ty-
son, J. S. Tunstall.
A. Bowen, Z. P. Van-
Dyke, H. C. Edwards.
Property and C.
Edwards, J. S. Tunstall, J. F. Daven-
port.
Municipal F. Daven-
port, W. A. Bowen, Z. P. VanDyke.
SEE J. R. J. G. FOR LA-
and muslin under-
wear; best grades at. lowest
Miss Leila Bryan
Entertains.
Seldom has i-here been seen in the
community a more brilliant scene of
jovial youths than was manifest at
the home of Mrs. W. E. Tucker, on
Thursday evening, when Miss Leila
Bryan, in her usual graceful manner,
entertained a number of her young
friends. The hall, veranda and lawn
was beautifully lighted in keeping
with the color scheme, which was
pink and green. Roses and
were seen in profusion.
The guest were received by Miss
Leila Bryan and Mr. Fred Ward
and ushered to the parlor,
where they were received by Miss
Earl Proctor and Mr. Arthur B.
Corey.
After merry greeting and laughter,
the guests were served with lemon-
ice and lady fingers by little Miss Lei-
la Bryan and Master Leon Edwards.
After many delightful and various
games were ended, cut hearts were
drawn and the guests retired to the
beautifully decorated dining room,
where they were served with cream
and cake by Miss Elmo Tucker and
Mr. James K. Proctor.
At eleven-thirty the guests depart-
ed reluctantly, declaring Miss Bryan
a charming hostess.
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL
Established 1898
Location ideal; Equipment unsurpassed. . ,. ,, c
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College. Special
attention given to health. A teacher in each looks after the of
under his care.
Faculty of college graduates. Most modern methods of instruction.
Fall term opens September
For Illustrated address , .
W. W. PEELE, HEADMASTER, Durham, N. C.
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-
The Home of Women's Fashions
Pulley Bowen
Greenville,
,.
North Carolina
STORMS DEVELOP
MEAT OAKS
A STORY OF DAYS LONG GONE.
Type of the Old School Where Teach-
Was Thorough.
Hanrahan, N. C, July
the high tide of prosperity to the
comparatively few who owned slaves
in the South, and before the Civil
war had brought on the idle tide for
a while of adversity, but which after-
ward made it possible for every man
to stand on equal footing, my oldest
sister had finished the course at St.
Mary's, then as now, one of the best
female schools in our South land.
Then that school did not give
mas, but one thing it did, old Dr.
Sneed, of blessed memory, instilled
high ideals into the minds and hearts
of every one of his pupils if such
principals could be imparted to them.
Any girl who attended his school two
years and did not return a strong
advocate of abolition principles that
wanted to see everything have liberty
and freedom,, hating to see a bird
caged, rather feed and treat them
kindly, that they might sing more
sweetly their songs of love and cheer
as they flit from tree to tree. An-
other practical idea old Dr. Sneed in-
stilled into the mind of my sister was
that of a love well nigh kin to de-
for the very best literature
that was and still another
was to even use the simplest
at her command to express
clearly the thought that she might
wish to convey. These ideals and
principles followed her even until at
she crossed over to him with
others in the beyond.
So the next day after my first at
the old log cabin school house, I took
my place at the feet of this sister and
listened- to her charming stories and
the gems that she so often read to
me, and oh, how my mind and heart
did yearn to be able just to say or
write something that would Jingle
and lift one's soul up as did some of
those lines lift mine up. I dreamed
-and pondered, thought and wondered,
ever trying with my heart still sigh-
for the gift to write just four
lines that would jingle. She had
taught me that the only way to at-
anything with the while was by
close application and the strictest
care and observation of the small de-
tails that, come to us in life. So the
days went by and wore into weeks,
months, and two years had passed,
the war clouds had recoiled back and
left the terrific storm of
days, when all the offices of our
land, even to the country offices, were
filled by men. One day
during this period, on a sultry
June day, mother, sister
and I were sitting in the front yard
underneath the canopy of the state-
oaks that added so much beauty
and comfort to our home in the long
summer days. Little Eugene Mead-
came running and screaming at
the top of his voice. We all rushed
to meet him to find the trouble.
please, my mama was making soap
in the yard and her frock catch fire,
and she until she fell and
when I her she could not
talk, and she is dead and has let
sis and me. Oh, please come go with
me The frame of a horse that
my older brother had gotten from
the Yankee camps was harnessed as
quick as possible, and papa and
drove over there. They found
r burned beyond recognition,
lying in the little clearing about
yards from the cabin, with the little
girl kneeling over her dead mother.
They wrapped the body as best they
could and prepared it for burial, then
sent for two of the nearest neighbors
to come stay that night with the
corpse. That night as we sat on the
porch at home, papa and mother were
talking of the sad, sad condition of
the little boy and girl. Papa said
that there was nothing else to be
done with them except to bind them
out and that the clerk of the court
was a hard-hearted and
man, and that he felt sure they
would have to go to some one that
would but little, if any, mercy
towards them. It was sad for us all
and the way seemed dark and, oh, so
gloomy for the two children. My sis-
listened at the dark picture until
she could her sentiments no
longer, then she quoted these
Judge not the Lord by feeble
But trust Him for His grace;
Behind a frowning Providence
He hides a smiling face.
She said that she felt that though
the early life of little Eugene would
be dark and tossed on many rough
billows, that before him there was a
great mission in life. She said it
took storms to develop the great oaks
and rough seas to develop and make
the very best mariners, and she felt
that out of all this chaos that God
would bring some great blessing to
the world in days to come.
Be
ESCAPED DEATH.
Versatility In The Army.
Is there anything that can not be
done by officers of the United States
army And done exceptionally well
There is nothing. For example, take
Colonel Goethals and watch him con-
the Panama Canal with ease
and grace after various civilians had
tried their hands at the Job without
achieving any glittering success. Then
take the five bachelor lieutenants at
Fort Scriven, Georgia, who gave a
chafing dish party, the particulars of
which we find in the Army and Navy
Journal. It was a surprise party. It
was given in the Club. The
service publication which makes
known the achievements of these
heroes justly remarks that great
deal of praise is due the bachelors
for having given such an elaborate
party without the assistance of the
ladies of the For
dining room and den, in them-
selves very handsome, were lavishly
decorated with carnations and ferns.
The beautiful pale pink flowers were
massed in profusion on the mantel
and library table in the den. In the
dining room a large vase, filled with
the same gorgeous flowers adorned
the table. As a souvenir of the
a large bouquet, tied with pink
tulle, was presented to each of the
young ladies present. A delightful
Welsh rabbit was served with dainty
sandwiches, and a mild punch was
served during the It is
not plain that these bachelors are
artists and poets as well as warriors
What bachelor outside the service
could tie a bow of pink tulle around
a bouquet Doubtless, also, any one
of the five, like Cyrano, could com-
pose a ballad while preparing to
transfix an enemy on the point of
his service sword. a
toast, standing, to the army men who
can conduct a Welsh rabbit which
will not kill either at close or long
News.
When a woman of laughs heart-
means it
All Because A Trusted Fell
Asleep.
Wilson, July most sensational
and blood-curdling story was told in
Mayor Dickinson's court this morning
of the intention of a Wilson by
the name of Sylvester who
formerly had been employed by
Messrs. George W. Barnes and Bros.,
grocers, on lower East Nash street.
Only from the fact that fell
asleep last Monday night, Mr. George
Barnes would have met a most tragic
death. As stated, had been
in the employ of Barnes Bros, for
some time, and they had let him go
simply because he had an opportunity
to better his condition, telling him
that if his new place did not prove
satisfactory to report to them and
they would reinstate him. They re-
posed the utmost confidence in him.
Mr. George Barnes had been in the
habit of sleeping in his store, and on
last Monday night, after closing hours,
rapped on the back door and
asked Mr. Barnes if he might not
spend the night in his store that he
would sleep in a chair. Permission
was granted him, and when Mr.
Barnes awoke next morning
was dead to the world, snoring loud-
On Tuesday morning
Richard Farmer, a 15-year-
old delivery boy, and said to
Richard, I've a plan whereby we can
make a bunch of money. If you will
join in with me and fix the window
tonight so that I can enter the store,
I'll go in and rob and give you half
what I get. Will you do
The boy has the requirements
of a good seemingly to
agreed to enter into the con-
and told him he would leave
the shutter unfastened and the rest
easy sailing. Then
told Richard about his sleeping in the
store the night before, and that it
was his intention when Mr. Barnes
fell asleep to chop his head off with
the meat and continuing, he said
forget; tonight leave the shut-
unhooked; we'll go in and fix
Barnes and then go to old man Gal-
their's and rob his place. He has a
bag of money as long as you are. You
know the old man can't see much,
and when he finish the job the old
woman won't see at
The faithful boy went to his em-
and unfolded to him the
plot. Mr. Barnes called in
Police Officer Wynn and asked him
what he should do in the matter. The
officer instructed Mr. Barnes to keep
to mention the matter to a
living cautioned the boy to
do just as wanted him to do
even to entering the store with him.
Late in the afternoon met
the boy on the street and said to him
forget tonight. And I say, did
you have a good day at the store to-
Richard told him a good
had been done, when re-
make a good spill to-
night,
This was last Tuesday, and Mr.
Barnes, who was on the watch on the
inside, when he heard the noise on
the outside,
answered, It's
Mr. Barnes recognized his voice and
refused to turn him in. con-
to fumble at the window when
Mr. Barnes fired his pistol and the
ran away.
Friday afternoon he met Richard
and wanted to know if he had not
given him away. The boy told him
he had kept his word and that he
J wouldn't tell on him for a hundred
dollars. It was then agreed that the
job should be pulled off between
and this morning. The boy told Mr.
Barnes of the new arrangement, and
at the appointed time both of the
showed up. and entrance was
made by the window by Rich-
In the meantime the three Barnes
boys, Officer Wynn and the day
operator at the Atlantic Coast
Line depot had secreted themselves
around the building. As soon as
things got quiet in the store Policeman
Wynn fired off his pistol, which had
been agreed on as a signal for Richard
to come out and surrender. After
Richard came out the officer called to
to come out, but received no
response. Then firing in the air five
or six times, the frightened wretch
came out with his hands up.
After hearing the evidence, Mayor
Dickinson required a justified bond of
for appearance at
court, failing to give which he
was placed in Jail.
FARM WEALTH.
Wonderful Progress for Caro-
Una in Ten Years.
North Carolina's agricultural
given out from the Census
Bureau in Washington several days
ago, makes a fine showing for the
state. The increase in value of
farm lands and farm buildings for
the decade of 1900-1910 was wonder-
The value went from
in 1910 to in 1911,
an increase of per cent. The in-
crease in the value of land alone was
per cent. The increase in the
use of fertilizers was per cent.
There was a per cent, decrease in
the number of acres per farm. In
other words, the North Carolina farm
has been reduced from acres to
acres. This is a healthy sign.
The smaller the farm the better the
farmer. The total acreage fell off
per cent, in the ten years.
The average value of land per acre
went up from to
a gain of per cent. That is
a remarkable showing for the state.
Short Weights and Measures
The federal experts from the bu-
of standards swooped down up-
on Columbia merchants several days
ago and found of the total number
of scales used In the stores of that
city that per cent, only were
within per cent, while 47.5 per
cent, were doctored to cheat the
chaser, per cent, were short weigh-
customers to the extent of per
cent or more. Nearly every store In
the city was found to be
dry commodities by liquid measure.
Of the few liquid measures in use
quart measures were found
which were more than per cent,
The practice of guessing at
the quantity in measuring liquids is
declared to be common. Of but-
prints investigated only one was
found to be correct in weight. Tests
made put up by local stores showed
per cent, of the packages to be
short in
State.
STRAY TAKES HAVE
en up one sow, weight about
pounds, nearly black with three
white feet and large face, marked
two slits in left ear, two slits and
under bit in right. Owner can get
same by proving property and lay-
charges. Marion
ville, N. C, R. F. D. No.
7-8





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER
Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity.
Advertising rates furnished
Ayden, N. C, July of the
most pleasant communications of
Ayden Lodge No. A. F. and A. M.,
was held here yesterday. There were
several visitors in attendance, the
occasion being the annual
of officers. The lodge was con-
at by the master, and
after the routine of business was dis-
posed of, the gavel was turned over
to Mr. R. W. Smith, a past master,
who installed the officers for the
ensuing year. At meridian the craft
was called from labor to refreshments
and assembled at the Imperial To-
Warehouse, where the table
was groaning under such a
dinner, consisting of barbecue,
ham, chicken, cake, pickles, etc., that
go to make such a success. Quite a
number of the brethren took with
them their wives, daughters, mothers,
sisters and a few boys, who are due
much credit for making the day a
success. When dinner was over there
were several basket fulls of
taken up. The lodge was call-
ed from refreshments to labor at
o'clock and two candidates were
prepared and took their first step in
the secrets of Masonry, after which
the lodge closed in due form and
harmony, to meet and eat barbecue
again next first Thursday at one
o'clock.
The loss of Mr. C. J.
was instead of in last
letter.
If you know anything that will
make glad the hearts of your neigh-
tell us; if not, keep it to your-
self.
Mrs. Annie Coward left Wednesday
for Va., to visit her
Mrs. Joseph Dixon. Mrs. Cow-
ard is getting along in years, but
carries sunshine in her soul and
mellows with age. Miss Olivia Berry
accompanied her.
Mr. R. H. Garris has returned from
Fremont, where he was summoned
to the bedside of his daughter, Mrs.
W. Ed. Hooker, who is very sick.
Kinston and Ayden play ball here
today.
Mr. Joe Fed. and wife, of
are visiting Mr.
Jones, in East Ghent.
Mr. Stancil Hodges is having a sys-
of water works installed in his
residence.
Mrs. J. R. Spier, of Ridge Spring,
spent Thursday with Mrs. Agnes
Blount.
Miss Lucy Hodges, of Kinton, Is
visiting Mrs. J. R. Turnage.
There were local rains in the vi-
of Grifton, Ridge Spring and
yesterday.
Ayden, N. C,
John S., and Sam Hart,
all left Saturday for Morehead and
they go from there Monday down
further where the ponies grow wild.
The annual penning and branding
takes place on the of May each
year.
Mr. Geo. W. returned a few
days ago from down on the Atlantic
coast and tells us while cruising along
the beach his attention was attracted
by the sign of some high sea
track, and by reason of himself
being born and raised near there, he
recognized it as a turtle's track and
while meditating upon it and exam-
in the sand, he found her nest
containing fourteen dozen or eggs,
as large as a walnut. He gave some
to his comrades and took a quantity
home with him and served them at
his hotel here in Ayden.
Rev. W. B. Everett has returned
from Morehead, where he has held a
successful meeting. He tells us that
a generous hearted sea captain took
him out and gave him a lesson In
catching fat-backs. He says that he
was not afraid of being drowned, as
he was too sick and his head was
swimming all the time.
Prof. J. E. Sawyer has returned
from an eastern tour, where he has
been lecturing in the interest of the
Seminary.
The most wonderful thing to relate
is that Mr. Jack of our town, has
a hog that was hurt in some way last
spring, and the trouble settled in his
shoulder to the extent that his leg,
shoulder blade and all has come off
and the place cured up and haired
over. He gets about on three feet as
though nothing had happened. The
pig weighs about pounds and we
expect to see it on exhibition at the
Pitt county fair.
Mr. J. J, Hines left Sunday for
Richmond to spend a few weeks in a
sanitarium there and will possibly
undergo an operation.
Mr. J. R. Smith is giving his house
a new coat of paint.
Mr. J. M. up on Lee street
is improving the looks of his home by
painting his houses and front fence.
This is a good sign of progress and
will help any town or community to
repaint their fences, clean up, white
wash and keep healthy, which is next
to Godliness.
There was a large crowd in town
Saturday, and we hear that in many
sections that corn is drying up and
that oak trees are dying the
road.
Mr. Edgar Dixon was in town
Saturday selling green corn which
found a ready market, and was first-
class.
We have had several calls for de-
and application blanks since our
last barbecue. We judged this would
wake the boys up. They will come
if you make the meetings interesting.
Miss Myrtle who had
been visiting relatives in town, re-
turned home Sunday.
Mr. Will Cox lost a nice horse last
week.
We hear that Mr. J. H. Cobb
a nice drive horse last Saturday.
Mr. O. W. Rollins went to Stokes
Sunday to attend the funeral of his
grandmother, Mrs. Maria Rollins.
We took a stroll Monday through
the campus of the Seminary and
was struck with surprise and
ration, seeing so many mechanics at
work, hammering, squaring and
timbers for the large
and each piece fitting so nicely.
We then went on to the main school
building and found another squad of
workmen remodeling the rubbish, and
also preparing timbers and other ma-
and everything moving on so
nicely that we wondered if the master
builder had not been taking lessons
from the trestle board of Grand
Master Hiram.
Mr. Harry Burton and wife, and
Miss Edwards are spend-
some time at Wrightsville Beach.
Grifton and Ayden played ball here
Tuesday afternoon
Mr. Jim Little, who has been play-
on the Ayden team, is sick and
was carried to his home near Hook-
Saturday. We hope he may
soon recover and return, as we sure
need him to help fan out the other
boys.
Miss Myrtle Tucker, who has been
visiting her uncle, Mr. E. E.
returned Monday to her home in Whit-
The of the Baptist and
Christian Sunday schools will enter-
the Tuesday evening
in Winfield park.
J. R. Carroll fulfilled Mr.
Adams pulpit at the Baptist church
Saturday and Sunday, it being
meeting.
We have never noticed a greater
improvement in any farm than was
made on the west side of the late
Abram Cox homestead. Last year a
great portion of it only supplied fire
wood, brush, brooms and straw, and
a harbor for foxes and rabbits. This
year Mr. Titus the champion
farmer, has reclaimed the most of it,
opened the ditches, put a good wire
fence around it and has a fine crop
of peanuts, corn cotton thereon.
Good seed, good soil, and a good farm-
together can make a wonderful
show in a short time.
Mr. J. Carl Jones and family are
spending a few days in Lenoir county
looking after his farming Interest.
Mr. Osceola Ross and little girl left
Tuesday for their home in Zebulon.
Master Johnnie Lyn Jenkins return-
ed Saturday from Middlesex.
The barber shop near Jone's mar-
is taking a vacation.
Mr. Jesse left Sunday for
Richmond, where on Monday he wed-
Miss Esta Talbert, of that city.
They came in on the train Tues-
day to make their future home in
den.
PROF. HAROLD BARNES
AT E. C. T. T. S.
LECTURE HIGHLY APPRECIATED.
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED TWO
cars of machinery, consisting of
everything needed on a farm. Terms
to suit purchaser. E. Turnage Sons,
Ayden.
Killed By The Train.
Simon Harris, colored, was killed
by the Norfolk Southern train Sat-
about two miles west of Farm-
ville. He was struck on the head.
Evidently he was sitting on the track.
It is supposed that he was not sober.
FOR FAIRBANKS
Morse gasoline engine, one Bell
Threshing machine, practically
new. E. Turnage Sons, Ayden.
-Not Buttermilk.
Those editors who got only butter-
milk on that mountain trip must have
been too slow for anything. When
we saw them it did not look like but-
That story
though is a one to tell the folks
back at Times.
JUST RECEIVED TWO CAR LOADS
of nitrate of Can supply your
needs. Prices guaranteed. E. Turn-
age Sons, Ayden.
Western Evening
With Field and
No audience that has assembled in
the auditorium of the Training school
was ever more delighted than the one
gathered there last evening. The
was a lecture by Prof
Barnes, of Gerard College,
His subject Western
Evening With Field and
In the final part of his
Prof. Barnes discussed briefly
reading under the following
teach to read
Reading and literature symbolizes all
the thought and emotions of man.
It is of various kinds.
Various selections call for
methods of interpretation and
expression. All are not read the same
way.
Great necessity for
on the part of the teacher.
Value of distinct articulation,
enunciation, etc.
Remaining too long on the study
of a reading lesson or literary pro-
effect
Supplementary reading its
uses and value.
The old Friday afternoon ex-
Value of being a good reader.
Illustrations of different types.
The teacher should be a good
strong talker. Should know how to
dramatize, etc.
Prof. Barnes gave much valuable
information upon this important sub-
and every teacher present will
be able to teach reading much more
intelligently now than she has ever
done heretofore. Following this
splendid discussion of reading and
expression Mr. Barnes gave a
magnificent living, present
of the truth that reading means
something when properly done, as he
read and interpreted as finely as we
have ever heard the following poems
from Field and Riley;
Sugar Plum
and
and
Things at
Singing in God's
Little Boy of
the Frost is on the Pump-
to
at Old Aunt
No one can portray in print the
splendid way in which these poems
were given. You must hear to know.
Prof. Barnes has been one of the in-
in this summer term from
the beginning and has won the ad-
of every one, both as a man
and as a teacher. The entire
showed their appreciation of
him last evening by enthusiastic
time and again during the
of the best lectures ever
delivered before the is the
unanimous opinion of everybody who
heard Prof. Barnes last evening.
He's a wise son who doesn't neg-
the education of his parents.
Blood Was Wrong
AH women, who suffer from the aches and pains, due
to female ailments, are urged to try the reliable,
scientific, tonic remedy, for women. acts promptly,
yet gently, and without bad effects, on the womanly system,
relieving pain, building up strength, regulating the system,
and toning up the nerves. During the past hart century,
thousands of ladies have written to tell of the quick curative
results they obtained, from the use of this well-known medicine.
TAKE
The
Mrs. Jane suffered from womanly trouble for
nearly ten years. In a letter from N. G, she
was not able to do housework. My
stomach was weak, and my blood was wrong. I had back-
ache, and was very weak. I tried several doctors, but they
did me no good I used tor or A months, and now
I am in the best health I have ever been. I can never praise
It Is the best tonic, for women.
Whether seriously sick, or simply weak, try
Instruction,, book. Horn. for
SPECIAL LICENSE TAXES.
Adopted by the Aldermen of Green
for the Fiscal Year Be-
ginning July 1st 1911.
On each pool, billiard and bagatelle
table, per year or part of a
year.
On opera house or hall used as
opera house, per year or part
of a year.
On theatricals and min-
showing in other than
ed halls, per day.
On public auctioneers, per
year or part of a year.
On butchers, per year or
part of a year; fresh meat dealers
subject to the same tax.
On wood and coal dealers,
On of medicines or other
articles of merchandise, selling
on foot, from stand, or vehicle,
or in a house temporarily rented or
used for that purpose, per day
On dealers in fire works, or fire-
crackers, not including cannon crack-
per year or part of a year.
On dealers in cannon crackers
per year or part of a year.
On dealers in second-hand cloth-
per day.
On dealers of a circus and men-
combined, to both of which
only one admission fee is charged
for each day or part of a day,
two rings or more, on
each side show On show
given under canvass or otherwise, Ir
which animals are exhibited or trapeze
or juggling performances are given,
for each day or part of a day
whether free or otherwise. Circus-
es advertising or parading in town,
but showing outside corporate limits,
are subject to the same tax.
On itinerant oculist or optician,
per year or part of a year.
On on the streets of lemon-
and cold drinks, fruit and con-
per year or part
of a year.
On each slot machine with fixed
returns, per year or part of a
year,
per year or part of a year.
On undertakers, per year or
part of a year.
On photographers, per year
or part of a year.
On itinerant photographers,
per month or part of
On junk dealers, per year or
part of a year.
On livery stables, per year
or part of a year.
On hotels charging per day,
per year; charging per
day, per year; private board-
houses taking more than, two
boarders, per year or part of
a year.
On skating rinks, per month
or part of month.
On each real estate and rent col-
or agent, per year or
part of a year.
On dealers in pistols, metal
bowie knives, daggers, etc.,
per year or part of a year.
On per year or
part of a year.
On exhibitions of wax works or
curiosities for profit, per day.
On merry-go-rounds, stand or
place for any game or play used for
profit, per day.
On drays, for each horse
used per year or part of year.
On Gypsies, palmists, fortune tel-
etc., per day or part of
a day.
On feather renovators,
year of part of a year.
On bill board posters,
year or part of a year.
On every person or firm retailing
cigarettes in town, shall pay a license
tax of per year or part of year.
On all persons or corporations
selling illuminating oil, lubricating
oil, benzine, or gasoline
where there is located in town an
agency, station or for dis-
of such oil in quantities of
gallons or more in any one tank
or receptacle, shall pay a license tax
of per year or part of a year.
On all persons issuing trading
stamps as deferred in section of
the revenue act of North Carolina of
1909, shall pay a license tax of
per year or part of a year.
On moving pictures shows in other
than licensed hall, shall pay a tax
of per month or part of a
month, or per year or part
per
per
of a year.
On every person or corporation
peddling clocks, stoves or ranges in
town per year or part of a
year.
On every individual or firm, or his
or their agents, engaged in the
of buying and selling bicycles or
bicycles and motorcycle supplies and
fixtures shall pay a license tax of
per year or part of a year,
On every commission merchant,
broker or dealer, buying or selling
goods or merchandise on commission,
shall pay a license tax of per
year or part of a year.
On pawn brokers, per year or
part of a year.
On gift enterprises or any person
or establishment offering any article
for sale and proposing to present the
purchaser with gift or prize as an
inducement to purchase or on every
itinerant dealer in prize photographs
or prizes of any kind, shall pay a
license tax of per year or part
of a year.
On switch back railway, shooting
gallery, or place for any kind of game
or play with or without a name shall
pay a tax of per year or
part of a year.
On every dealer in stocks, bonds
or other certificates, shall pay a
license tax of per year or part
of a year.
On each firm or corporation man-
or bottling soda water,
Coca-cola, ginger ale, and
like preparations, shall pay a
tax of per year or part of a
year.
On every person whether as agent
for another, or as principal who en-
gages in the business of taking orders
for enlarging photographs or who
enlarge photographs, shall pay a
license tax of per year or part
of a year.
On merchants, per year or
part of a year.
On barber shops, per year or
part of a year.
On express companies, per
year or part of year.
On telegraph companies, per
year or part of year.
On jewelers, per year or part
of a year.
On drug stores, per year or
part of year.
On warehouses for the sale of to-
per year or part of a
year.
On dealers in sewing machines,
per year or part of a year.
On dealers in musical instruments,
per year or part of a year.
On manufacturers that sell other
finished goods than their own make,
per year or part of a year.
On that carry stock for
sale, such as pipe belting or
repairs of any kind per year or
part of a year.
On dealers classed as mer-
in agricultural implements that
are either stored or sold in town,
per year or part of a year.
On ice cream and cold drinks,
less sold by merchants in building
they use daily for their merchandise
business, per year or part of a
year.
On dealers in or agent for
biles, per year or part of a year
On embalmers, per year or
part of a year.
On Banks or banking institutions,
per year or part of a year.
On pressing clubs, per year
or part of year. Tailors are sub-
to same license. When both
are run together only one license is
required.
On automobile transfers, per
year or part of a year for each ma-
chine used.
On transfers for each
used per year or part of a year
On plumbers, per year or part
of year.
Baseball Wives.
In the early days a woman with a
ball club was a rarity. Now it Is
common for seven or eight players to
take their wives on long trips and
sometimes their children. Managers
admit that the women have a re-
straining and refining influence, but
they are not wanted. Often managers
make wry faces when notified that
some of the men are taking their
wives. The women take the minds of
the players off the
a good tiling, but more frequently a
bad one. If there should be a quarrel
the wives are certain to take sides.
Two of the Cubs lost their tempers
one night and clashed. It was over
in a minute, and both were sorry.
Chance, sitting as a judge, passed this
fine you each and
if either of you dares tell his wife I'll
make it Magazine.
Industries.
For the week ending July 5th, The
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the
following new Industries established
in North
cigar factory.
Lumberton automobile
company.
gas plant.
We understand that a farmer
living not many miles from town
was putting out soda in his crop a
few days ago, and while passing to
the field passed a mud hole in which
he noticed a of tad poles and
he decided to see what effect a little
soda would have on them, so he toss-
ed a little soda into the hole and
waited a few moments and to his
surprise they were full grown frogs,
it is said in fifteen minutes, and went
hopping Guide.
Fire Horror Grows.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Bay City, Mich., July solid
wall of flames is sweeping northward,
threatening to blot out the entire up-
per part of the lower Michigan
Twenty-one counties are em-
braced in the fire zone. Villages and
hundreds of outlying homes have been
obliterated. Scores of the
are dead and hundreds are
doomed in the path of the fire.
is adding to the fire horror.
The women and children are fleeing
through the country. Governor Os-
borne is campaigning to care for the
homeless.
Militia In Fire District
By Wire to The Reflector.
Detroit, July companies
of the state militia was mustered in
today by Governor Osborne for service
in the fire-stricken region.
PRICES REDUCED OX ALL LOW
cut summer shoes and oxfords. J.
R. and J. G. N
NEW CORNED
catch of the season. J. R. and J.
G.
TRY THE
and you will be surprised at
the satisfaction you will get. J. R.
and J. G.
FRESH CORNED MULLETS, AT J.
R. and J. G. Dept. Store.





, urn in
MISS ROYSTER
AT TRAINING SCHOOL
LECTURE TO BODY.
How To Enlist Community Interest In
School Work.
Miss Edith Royster, the assistant
superintendent of schools in Wake
county, spent the day Friday in
visiting the E. C. T. T. S. school.
Miss Royster has been so intimately
connected with the public school
work of the state for the past eight
or ten years that she is thoroughly
acquainted with its needs. She has
always been an enthusiastic worker
and Wake county is showing the
fruits of her work by making strides
in educational progress that but few
counties in the state are now making.
At the last period of the day for
work in the Training school Friday
the student body assembled in the
auditorium and was addressed by
Miss Royster. She spoke to them on
Speaking first
of the work of the teacher in trying
to remove the dragon of ignorance
from our state, she said that it was
our duty to enlist every one in the
in the work. We need the
help of the people. The great work
of the teacher is to get the
to fight with her in this gigantic
struggle. We must stand for the best
and have stand with us. We
must first do something ourselves and
then have others assist. To work
for the community means to forget
self. This spirit always brings
both help from others and
to us. She told of many in-
stances in her own county where the
teacher had exhibited the community
spirit and in every case fine results
had followed. She pointed out how
this would result in having the com-
make voluntary contributions
to extend the school term and better
educational conditions, saying that
in Wake these conditions had amount-
ed to as much as one year's school
fund in the past seven years. To do
this work of enlisting the community
and working with the community
spirit, means sacrifice, but it pays
in the end.
Miss Royster spoke of a number of
things which she hoped soon to see
in the public schools coming through
the co-operation of teachers and
community. She mentioned specially
the individual drinking cup, oral
and rural libraries. These are
means to get community interests. She
said in her county co-operation was
being added by the Union.
On this excellent talk to the school
Miss Royster said many things which
will be exceedingly to the
teachers in their work, and her visit
here was an occasion of much pleas-
to the school. She will always
be a welcome visitor here.
King's Lineage.
Rev. Hyde, rector of the
Trinity Episcopal church of
mouth, believes not only that the
British are direct descendants of
the Israelites but that King George
V is a lineal descendant of a cousin
of the house of David.
royal house of says
Mr. Hyde, its back
to the line of David and of Judah.
be specific, Tea
of the last king of
line married the young
king of the in the north of
Ireland, in B. C. They were
married by the prophet Jeremiah and
crowned on the Bethel stone.
himself was of the royal
line of Judah. since he was a de-
of one of the twin sons of
Judah, David being a descendant of
the other twin son.
marriage was the beginning
of the royal house of the Scots and
this line in time, though the
and Stuarts, became the royal line
of the British empire.
V, therefore, is a descend-
ant of David, and belongs to a
which can never cease to exist,
for it has the promise of God that it
will never cease to have a descend-
ant to reign over the people of Is-
The people
are this race; hence they are the
people of God.
we can trace the lineage
of the British rule back even as
far as Adam. Anna, a cousin of Mary,
the mother of Christ, married a prince
of the royal house of and,
hence became an ancestor of that
house.
said that He would establish
the throne of and
that David would never cease to have
a descendant. George T is a fulfill-
of these words, for he is a de-
of David, and he sits upon
the throne of
The Greenville Banking
Trust Company
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Condensed Statement, June 7th 1911.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts.
Overdrafts. 2,251.2
Stocks and bonds.
Furniture and fixture. 4,115.86
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 C. S. CARR, Cashier
A. J. MOORE, Asst. Cashier.
fatten
in
f We have just received an
arts elegant Go-cam
and such
and please you. We want
Greenville Must Have a Contest.
If the boys in every town in North
Carolina would smite the flies as the
boys in Texas are smiting the germ-
breeding pests, we would soon have
flies and very few, if any, cases
of typhoid lever. As the result of
a fly-killing contest at San Antonio,
Texas, yesterday, one and a quarter
million dead flies lay in heap,
a pile three feet high and five
feet wide, which represented the
slaughter wrought by small boys.
The boy winning had a record of
dead Post.
The View from An
It is a great surprise to the
to see how uniform the
face of the earth appears when view-
ed from a great altitude. Although
individual objects are hard to
such things as rivers, and
railways are easily recognized by
their contour, direction or some slight
individually or characteristic which
can readily be shown upon a map,
especially if the maps are made or
corrected by men who fly above the
earth and get an accurate and literal
bird's-eye view of its surface. Ob-
seem to loom up with the
greatest clearness to one standing on
the surface of the earth appear very
different and quite insignificant when
view from above; while a patch of
colored soil which would not be no-
at all by a person standing on
the ground is a most valuable land-
mark to the air sailor. Map cases
are fitted to the aviator's seat, on
touring where they can
be readily seen, and M. Prier on his
journey from London to Paris had
his route clearly shown on a map
which he carried mounted in a clever-
arranged map-case inside of which
it could be unrolled, keeping his route
continually before him as he passed
rapidly over his course. This case
was provided with a
cover which thoroughly protected it
from the wind, rain and oil thrown
off by the motor. a map, watch
compass, aneroid and revolution
the air pilot is thoroughly equip-
for navigating the atmosphere
and traveling as far as his motor will
take without
to call your special attention to our Victor and Triumph
Refrigerators. They are lined -with Wool and give
most sanitary results of any line on the market. We have a
big lot on hand and we will delight in showing you these
goods whether you buy or not.
Yours truly, Taft VanDyke
J. S. MOORING
General Merchandise
Buyer
FIVE POINTS,
of and Country Produce
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work
For Slate or Tin, Tip Shop Repair
Work, and Flues in Season, See
J. J. JENKINS
Greenville. N. C.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
College of Agriculture and
Mechanical Arts
The Collie
Four-year in Agriculture; 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 Agriculture. These courses-
are both practical and scientific.
nations for admission are held at all county
seats on July For Catalog address
THE REGISTRAR.
DR. F. FITTS
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Kinston and Greenville
In Greenville a. m. to p. m.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Saturdays.
All curable diseases successfully
treated without drugs or surgery.
Office over Frank Wilson's Store
Phone Examination Free
man will always find
what he's looking for if he looks long
enough.
Notices
North Carolina, Pitt County,
In the Superior Court.
Abram Mills
vs.
By virtue of an execution directed
to the sheriff of Pitt county, from the
supreme court of Pitt county in the
above entitled action, I will on Mon-
day, the 28th day of August 1911,
it being the first Monday of the Aug-
civil term of the superior court
of Pitt county, at the hour of
o'clock noon, at the court door
in said county, sell to the highest
bidder for cash, to satisfy said ex-
all the right title and
which the the defend-
ant, on the 15th day of January 1903,
or at any time thereafter, had in the
following description of real estate to
One tract of land lying and
being In the county of Pitt and state
of North Carolina, and in
township, beginning at a small bridge
in the Joseph Jones line, and runs
with a ditch to the head nearly op-
the house, then S. W. several
small pines in the head of the branch,
then N. 1-2 east poles to a
stake in the Joseph Jones line,, then
S. 1-2 east 2-3 poles to the be-
ginning, containing acres more or
less. Also one other tract of land
in said township, county, and state.
Beginning in the Franklin line on the
big ditch in the Fred then
running up the ditch to Henry Bed-
line, then with Henry Bed-
line to Lorenzo
line, then with Lorenzo
line to Biggs Stock's line then with
the Jones and line back to the
beginning, containing acres, more
or less.
Also one other tract of land in said
county and state, bounded on the north
by B. W. Tucker, on the east by the
Haddock land, on the south by B.
Tripp, on the west by the county
road, containing acres, more or
less.
This the day of July 1911.
S. I. DUDLEY,
Sheriff of Pitt county
It
p. .
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
to me.
This the 31st day of May, 1911.
E. A.
with the will annexed,
of Florence E. Home, deceased.
Blow,
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,
Ex-officio Entry Taker.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having duly qualified before the
supreme court clerk of Pitt county
as executor of the last will and
of Mrs. Sermons, de-
ceased, notice is hereby given to all
persons indebted to the estate to
make immediate payment to the
and all persons having
claims against said estate will take
notice that they must present the
same to the undersigned for payment
on or before the 8th day of July, 1912,
or this notice will be plead in bar of
recovery.
This the 8th day of July, 1911.
J. MARSHAL COX,
of Sermons
SALE OF PROPERTY.
On Saturday, the 24th day of July,
at o'clock, noon, before the
house door in Greenville, the
will expose to public
ale, all the property of the
consisting of chairs, tables,
bottles and extracts, together
Kith the right to make, sell and man-
This sale will be
for the purpose of out
he business formerly con-
by the Company.
This the 31st day of May, 1911.
J. W. HIGGS,
and Treasurer of the
Company.
y F. C. Harding, Attorney.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the
has qualified as
c. t. a. of the estate of J. K.
deceased. Persons owing said
will please make prompt set-
and those to whom said es-
is indebted will present their
aims within twelve months of the
of this notice, or the same will
i pleaded in bar of their recovery.
July 1911.
J. M.
c. t. a., J. K. de-
. F. Evans, Atty.
Two Agents Arrested.
Insurance Commissioner James R.
Young said yesterday that he had
procured the arrest of E. E. White-
head at High Point, who was
without license the Standard
Home Company, of Birmingham, Ala-
an investment company some-
what like the building and loan as-
in this state. A license,
required by section of the state
Insurance Laws, had been refused,
and the agent got what he might have
expected. Whitehead was tried yes-
and bound over to the Superior
court under bond.
Another arrest under the insurance
laws took place yesterday, when Cap-
W. A. Scott, arrested Calvin T.
Lewis In Brunswick county on the
charge of burning a store. Up to yes-
afternoon, as the insurance
commissioner said, the preliminary
trial had not been and
Observer.
-S. M. Schultz-
Established 1875
and Retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Bar-
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads
Mattresses, etc. Suits, Baby Car-
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits,
Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. Lori-
and Gail Ax Snuff, High Life
tobacco, Key West Cheroots, Hen-
George Cigars. Canned Cherries
Peaches, Apples, Syrup, Jelly,
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap,
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Chi.
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar-
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Prunes, Currants. Raisins
Glass and Wooden-
ware, Cakes and Crackers,
best Butter, New
Royal Sewing machines and
numerous other goods. Quality and
quantity cheap for cash. Come to
sec me.
Phone Number
S. M. Schultz.
Spring Bedding Plants
for beautifying the yard.
Decorative plants for the house
Choice Cut Flowers
for weddings and all social events
Floral offerings arranged in the
most artistic style at notice.
Mail, telephone and telegraph or-
promptly executed by,
J. L. Company
Florists.
Ask for Price List
Phone Raleigh, N. C.
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 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.
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 who agree to become teach-
in the State. Fall Session be-
gins September 1911. For cat-
and other information address
JULIUS L FOUST, Pres.
Greensboro,. . . C.
Vacation Outing
The Glorious Mountains of
Western
North
Carolina
Land of the
Sapphire
Where There is Health in Every
Breath. The Climate is Perfect
the Year Round. In Spring and
Summer the Region is Ideal.
Reached by
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Solid through train, including
Parlor Car, between
Asheville and Waynesville, via
Raleigh, Greensboro, Salisbury.
Oilier convenient through car
arrangements.
Summer Tourist Tickets on
Sale
SEPTEMBER 1911.
Let your ideals and wishes be
known.
J. H. WOOD, R. H.
D. P. A, T. P. A,
Asheville, N. C. Charlotte, N. C.
J. O. JONES, T. P. A.,
Raleigh, N. C
Wants
Mr. A. E. Kline, who did much
work building the Norfolk Southern
railroad, is now engaged in railroad
building in South Carolina, building
a road from Greenville towards
Charlotte. One of his old workers
says he wants hands, and has made
him an offer.
Central Barber Shop
HERBERT
. Proprietor
Located in main business of town,
Four chairs in operation and each
one presided over by a skilled
barber. Ladles waited on at their
home.
Chinese in the Philippines.
The Chinese merchants in the Phil-
form the greater portion of
the import market and are still in a
greater degree the collectors of our
exports. Their business ramifications
are without equal. The Manila
houses distribute and collect to and
from others in the provincial ports,
which in turn spare and gather from
the various towns where Chinese de-
posits are in touch with the stores
in the barrios through which small
and individual
sellers and buyers are reached. In
this respect they are the very back-
bone of the merchant community
and the stand-by of Philippine trade.
As a distributing medium they are
content with a very small profit, and
when one considers the very reason-
able figure asked for the commodities
of life by the little village or barrio
it will be seen how small
must necessarily be the profits of
the three or four middlemen. Of
course, many of the large import and
exports bodegas in Manila are own-
ed by Americans and European firms
as well as by Chinese, but the med-
of collection and distribution is
primarily through the
Monthly.
Loses His Job.
George P. Ward, years of age,
said to be the oldest in
the world, lost his job at Middleton.
Conn., because he got too slow to de-
liver three hundred papers on
time.
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.
SCHOOL
Wide
Location M t
Be
F and full
particulars Free
particular, Free -a
hi
f, T.
And Greenville Too.
Isn't It remarkable that with the
waterways we and the govern-
spending millions on inland
and for deepening our
that some fellow organ-
a steamboat line between New
Bern, Norfolk and
Bern Sun.





. -v
The Carolina Borne and Farm The Batten
AURORA NINE
VS. GREENVILLE-RAIN
GAME CALLED IN FOURTH INNING
Report in News And Observer Some-
what a
Defeats Greenville.
Greenville, N. C, July a
snappy game of ball here today the
fast Greenville ball team were de-
by Aurora, the champion
team of Eastern Carolina.
Of Aurora, was at his best and was
never in danger. The score Au-
Greenville,
The above item appeared in The
Raleigh News and Observer this morn-
and is to the Greenville
fans.
The game between Aurora and
Greenville here yesterday was called
account of rain in the forth in-
That left five to be played and
we can't see how the correspondent
an Aurora
figure that our team lost the
game with a score of to
though it stood thus at the call.
The game promised to be a crack-
good one, and but for the rain,
Aurora might not have been able to
make any such claim as the above.
Aurora, the champion amateur
team of Eastern North Carolina Bah
We've beat them three games to one
this season.
never in Why, we
had a man on both second and third
and one out when the game was call-
danger
GREENVILLE BEAT
THE SCORE BEING TO
Slow and Uninteresting Game From
The First Inning.
Since Greenville went to Kinston
July 4th and got beat so badly the
people here thought the game to be
played here yesterday would be hard
fought and closely drawn and the
fans turned out in full force expect-
to see something good, but the
day proved to be Greenville's and
the boys slugged the Kinston balls
all over the field, the score being
to in our favor.
Kinston took the lead in the first
inning by scoring one run, but in the
second Greenville recovered with six
to the good, making seven runs, thus
standing until the sixth, when two
more runs were added, and then to
the eighth and ninth when three
more were put on, making a total of
twelve. Heavy slugging of the Sloan
balls and some misplays put Kinston
to the bad.
Features of the game Dar-
den's running, one-hand catch, and
home run.
Score by
R. H. E.
01212
Kinston
Lanier and Reddick;
Sloan, Fleming, Rogers.
NORTH CAROLINA IN 1781.
Got. Letter Describing
at That Time.
An interesting letter from Abner
hash, Governor of North Carolina
and member of the constitutional con-
to Gen. Nathaniel Greene, Gran-
ville county, May 1781, brought
at auction in Philadelphia a few
ago. Nash, whose autograph
is rare, gives in the letter an account
of the deplorable condition of affairs
in his state at that trying period,
when Gen. Greene was trying to de-
feat the British forces under Lord
Cornwallis. Nash
my endeavors to raise the
even to obstruct the march of
Lord Cornwallis through this state,
proved in vain. I was myself in
their front most of the way, but able
to effect nothing. They have now
passed over Roanoke into Virginia,
where the joined enemy are greatly
an for the Marquis,
His force is not only small,
but he mentions in the letter of the
15th that he knows nothing of the
Pennsylvania troops.
Virginia militia are for the
present fresh and spirited, and I
hope they will prove of great support
to the Marquis. Our militia, especial
of the lower parts, are good for
nothing. I congratulate you, sir, on
your success against the enemy to
the southward, their being compelled
by the judicious methods you took
to abandon their strong posts in the
heart of the country.
Marquis is very public spirit-
ed and disinterested. He wishes me
to have much more at heart the re-
you than himself. Great
numbers have taken protection on
parole of Lord Cornwallis on his
march through the country, and par-
ties of robbers, commanded by
of his commissioning, rang-
through the committing
murder, robberies, and every species
of enormity. Could you permit Gen.
Summer to remain a while to assist
in punishing the guilty and in re-
covering Wilmington to this poor
distressed, and wretched
In the course of nine months Gen.
Greene recovered from the British
the three Southern states, North Car-
and South Carolina, Georgia,
and, at the close of 1781, had all of
the enemy's forces below Virginia
hemmed within the cities of Charles-
ton and Savannah.
Religious Ceremony Performed.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Paris, July religious mar-
ceremony between Emma
and Emilio was performed
today. They will spend their honey-
moon in Switzerland and Italy.
Pony For Ayden.
The express office in this city was
called upon Tuesday to
practically all day, a gentle
banker shipped by express
from Beaufort to Ayden. The pony
was crated and gave the officials of
the express company here all the
fun they were looking for. All day
was the express messenger kept busy
repairing the damages done to the
crate by the gently kicking and pro-
testing pony. It was, however, got-
ten on the train in the crate in
which it arrived here. As to what
happened after leaving Kinston, we
are unable to Free
Press.
Edward, Prince of Wales.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Wales, July the
six centuries old castle has
there been the scene of ceremonies
little less impressive than the
nation of Prince Edward today, which
invested him with the title of Prince
of Wales.
Weber
King of all Farm Wagons.
The man who uses Weber wagons will use
no other. 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
Web rand you will get the Hit. We have
what you want. We will be glad to see you
any time.
Hadley
Greenville,
TOBACCO
YES
THOROUGH BRED
TOBACCO
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good
chewing for cents. Got em all beat easy.
o 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.
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
lame
Post Office.
the Most M the Host Health the Host Noble Employment of Washington.
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JULY 1811.
Number
NEWS THAT IS OF IN-
TO TAR HEELS
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES.
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's
Busy Readers.
A part of Melville and Haw River
township held an election a few days
ago to vote on a special tax for a
school at Woodland. Every vote was
in favor of the and not a
single vote
The town has bought eight thous-
ands gallons of oil to be used on the
streets. It is figured that this will
cover the streets of the business
portion of the town and that it will
keep the dust down for about a year.
The total cost is about six cents a
gallon. It will be put down at once.
Monroe Journal.
in a most
substantial way its confidence in the
future of Wilmington, the directors
of the Seaboard Air Line, at a recent
meeting in New York, authorized an
expenditure of for still fur-
Improvements at Wilmington, the
amount being immediately available.
All told this will make about
spent by the Seaboard in the en-
and improvement of its
terminals at this port within the past
three years.
The splendid new steel bridge of
the Atlantic Coast Line across
river has been completed and
the work on the entire new route is
about completed. Freight trains will
begin to run over the new bridge by
August 1st. Work is now progress-
on the new passenger station and
before September 1st it is expected
that passenger trains will be running
regularly over the new route. The
building of this new route through
Weldon for the Atlantic Coast Line
has been a great piece of work and
has cost over including the
fine new bridge and viaducts.
MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS.
Pitt Lumber and Manufacturing Co.
Elect and Declare Dividend.
The second annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Pitt Lumber and
Manufacturing Company was held in
the office of the company yesterday,
the attendance being large. Business
has been good and a dividend of
per cent, was declared and a good
amount carried to the surplus fund.
During the year many additions and
improvements have been made, cost-
a neat sum. Otherwise the div-
would have been much larger.
This was the first dividend declared
by the company. About thirty men
are employed and the company does an
extensive business.
Officers elected at this meeting for
the ensuing year,
E. A. Sr., president.
F. J. Forbes, vice-president.
T. W. Whitehurst, secretary and
treasurer.
THE ROANOKE UNION
Another To Kinston Jail.
Deputy Sheriff T. R. Moore return-
ed yesterday from Kinston where he
went to take a prisoner. Josh
colored. Josh was under bond
to answer the charge of an affray and
some time ago skipped, but was re-
caught and now in Jail for
court.
In New Office.
Mayor F. M. Wooten has moved in-
ti his new office, up stairs In the
Wooten building, on Third street. Mr.
J. L. Wooten also has his office up
stairs. The offices on the lower
floor are not ready for occupancy
just yet.
Aviators Gathering.
By Cable to The Reflector.
London, July are
gathering for the race from London
to Saturday, for the
offered by the Daily. I
Fell Three Stories.
Edith Young
alive today only because when she
fell from a third story window she
fell in a half opened parasol. Three
ribs were broken but they belonged
to the parasol. The child was
hurt
Aviator Will Die.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Berlin, July
fell eight hundred feet from his ma-
chine today. He will die.
To be Held With the Baptist
Church, July
Friday, July
a. sermon
by Rev. C. M. Rock, Greenville.
p.
p.
p.
What is it How best enforced
C. W. Blanchard, Wilson; E. C.
Andrews, Plymouth.
p. Modern Baptist
Similar to, and Dissimilar
from the New Testament Church
J. G. Blalock, Weldon; T. L. Vernon,
Hobgood.
p. should be done
with a member who is not, and will
not become interested in the work
of the L. Powers, Scot-
land Neck; Walter Daniel, Esq.,
don.
p. by Duncan
Whitakers.
Saturday, July
a. exercises
D. F. Spring Hope.
a. is a church truly
fulfilling its M. Mercer,
Rocky Mount; R. E. Hoffman,
a. spiritual
of the Baptism,
W. O. Biggs, Elm City; Communion,
J. L. Rogers, Farmville; J. A.
van, Washington.
a. World Alli-
by those who were there.
and prayer service.
p.
p.
p.
p. Sunday School;
For its own sake, G. J.
For the child's sake, A. V.
Joyner, Tarboro; For the church's
sake, N. H. Shepherd,
Adjournment.
Sunday, July
a. School.
a. sermon, by
I. M. Mercer, Rocky Mount.
Open discussion on all topics.
Train Robbed.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Buffalo, N. D., July North-
Pacific passenger train was held
up near here last night by three ban-
who shot engineer Olson twice
and robbed the passengers, and then
they escaped.
Plunges Through Trestle.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Okla., July pas-
train of the Midland Valley
Railroad plunged through a trestle
near Avant this morning, injuring
many people.
Robbers Get from Italians.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Janesville, Wis., July
hundred Italian laborers on the Chi-
and Northwestern railroad were
held up by four robbers who obtained
at the of pistols,
Ex-Shah Defeated.
By Cable to The Reflector.
St. Petersburg, July
headed by the deposed Shah of Per-
All were de-
on the Persia frontier today.
The ex-Shah escaped into
Cholera Situation Better.
By Wire to The Reflector.
New York. July cholera
situation is well in hand. The Italian
steamer, Principe Die Piedmont, has
arrived. General quarantine is en-
forced.
Detectives Find No Cine.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Richmond, Va., July
are still at sea in the Beatty
case.
King Reviews Boy Scouts.
By Cable to The Reflector.
July George
reviewed eleven thousand boy scouts
here today.
Gates Improves.
By Cable to The Reflector.
Paris, July condition
shows marked improvement. His
family is much encouraged.
Store Wrecked.
By Wire to The Reflector.
Chicago, July failure to
pay the black hand demands resulted
today in a bomb wrecking the store
of Vincent


Title
Eastern reflector, 14 July 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 14, 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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