Eastern reflector, 28 July 1911


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is.
The Carolina Home and Farm mod The Eastern Reflector.
ESCAPES FROM
HIS CRUEL MASTER
starts dot in world.
To Find The Fame in Dream
Visit From His
Hanrahan. N. C, July
slept the remainder of the night after
his enchanting dream, for the
that lie had taken from his angelic
hand seemed; to him as
real as did the life-giving fluid of in-
fancy that he had so often imbibed
from her breast as he lay In her
arms, unconsciously clewed at her
dress front and cunningly smiled
into her sweet face, before any
thought of sorrow or fear of storms
had crossed his mind. But the crow-
of the cocks, and the neighing of
the horses that he at break of day
must feed, aroused him and he raised
from his reclining place to realize
that what he had seen was only a
dream. But surely it must not be
deception. Yes, it was a messenger,
an omen. Call it what you may, to
him it was a signal that pointed him
to what he deemed his only hope. So
all that tried to work while
he planned for his escape from his
master. Near the close of the day,
as he stood on the bank of the Neuse
work was near by this he
saw near the edge a canoe floating
down the stream. With a pole he
pulled it to the bank and moored it
with a grape vine in a place he was
sure he could find in the darkness
of the night. At night fall he took
the horse to the house, and with his
daily routine finished he tried to
seem cheerful in order to cover any
suspicion of his intention to make his
escape. He made his shuck pallet in
the porch as was his custom, and
threw himself on it until all was
quiet within and then with no light
save the stars twinkling above, he
stole his way to the river, and to the
spot where he had fastened his lit-
boat. Carrying only a cross-bow
that his father had made him, and a
hatchet, that his mother had given
him, alone with the darkness and
weary he unfastened his boat. With
no pillow, save a square block of
wood, he stretched out his exhausted
form on the bottom of the boat as
she drifted on the bosom of that
somewhat swollen river. The night
passed, he knew not how. Morning
came and he found himself lodged on
the upper side of that horse-shoe
bend that the Neuse makes several
miles above Goldsboro. So hungry
and no supply of food to draw from,
he must in some way replenish the
inner man. Dire necessity, and
when hunger is gnawing at
our inmost vitals, will cause one to
create thoughts and investigate plans
that would have never been reached
or thought of under different
So he remembered his cross-
how which was but young
birch trees stood thick on the pen-
when finished, they hastened to this
raves of tar, leaving on the ground
a pone of corn bread, some
crackers and a hand full of
salt in a little cloth sack. With
eagerness he seized these and an oak
chunk with a live coal on one end.
Then he made his way back to his
boat. He had not long to stay there
before a squirrel crept out of a low
hollow and was playing on the ground
A beautiful sight it was, but hunger
forced Eugene to offer this innocent
beauty as a sacrifice on his altar.
So with his bow he shot an arrow
that pierced its playful heart. He
dressed and broiled it, and with part
of this and the bread he broke his
fast. After gathering up the
he loosed his boat from her
mooring again started down the
river.
Ere this strict search was being
made by the cruel master that he had
left. Men were employed by him
and sent east, west, north and south,
with the strict that if Eu-
gene could any where be found that
he be bound hand and foot and re-
turned to him. Strict search was
made, even among the rubbish of the
cow shed, and sheep fold, but no
of the missing boy. His foot-
steps had been traced part of the
way to the river and then were lost
because of the hard soil. The
pointed master made a trip of
miles to the neighborhood of Eu-
gene's old home, and then offered a
reward for the capture and return
of the boy. But Eugene had
this effort to capture him and
he was ever on the alert, though he
longed to get one glance at the
scenery of his earlier days.
Some chapters in any book must
necessarily be dull, but these lead
up to where the first rung of the
ladder that reaches to fame and use-
is reached. So here we leave
our hero floating down the river, but
we'll meet him again in a more beau-
and healthful place in our next.
Be
The Way To Stop It.
At the term of the Superior court
of Stanley county, just adjourned,
Judge Daniels fined four men
each for selling beer unlawfully
while running a social club in
The judge at first sentenced
them to six months on the county
chain gang, but later changed it to a
fine on the earnest pleadings of at-
and some
Tribune.
N. S. First Excursion.
Beginning next Sunday the. Nor-
folk Southern will inaugurate its reg-
Sunday excursions to Morehead
City and Beaufort. Rates will be the
same as last summer.
Regular week-end rates to Nor-
folk and other resorts.
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 We have
what you want. We will be glad to see you
any time.
Hadley
Greenville, N. C.
WINS
SERIES
IX THE COAST LINE LEAGUE.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
insular against which his boat was
lodged. With his hatchet he secured I .
some of the strong bark and made t I
from this a string for his bow. Thus
armed he went in search of food. He
had gone but a few throw
before he had crossed the narrow
neck of land and had reached the
river again, though the distance by
the channel is perhaps miles. Here
he found some boatmen camping, but
was afraid to approach them. So
he stood in ambush and watched
them eat their morning meal and
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 I. FOUST, Pres.
Greensboro,. 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.
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
Name
Red-
Post Office
Subscribe to The Reflector.
A Sew Series of Twelve Games To
Begin Friday.
The first series of games of the
Coast Line League was completed
Tuesday, and the association held a
meeting In Grifton Tuesday night, to
arrange another series of twelve
games to begin Friday, 28th, two
games a week to be played in each
town.
Greenville won the pennant In the
first series with a per of
having lost only one out of ten
games. In the new series of games
that begins Friday, if some team
other than Greenville wins, then a
series of three games are to be play-
ed between that team and Green-
ville to determine which is entitled
to the pennant for the entire sea-
son.
It was agreed at this meeting of
the association that each town in
the league may secure two new
players provided their names are re-
ported by August 2nd. With this ex-
only those players who were
in the first series of games can play
in the second series.
The opening games of the new
series Friday will be between
Kinston and Greenville at Greenville,
and Grifton and Ayden at Ayden, the
games then to alternate to the
towns. Some good games may
be looked for in this new series as
all the teams will be in good trim.
X r
Mr. E. L. Stewart Married.
At Chapel Hill Tuesday morning,
Mr. Edward L. Stewart and Miss
lie Barbee were united in the holy
bond of wedlock, the Right Reverend
Joseph Blount Cheshire, bishop of the
Diocese of North Carolina officiating.
Mr. Stewart is well known in Green-
ville, where he has many relatives.
When you bump up against a man
who boasts of his iron will, an
sis will usually disclose the fact that
it is pig iron.
OPERA HOUSE FOB GREENVILLE.
Manager Advises High Class Plays,
Operas and Musical Comedies.
It was with the deepest regret that
the people of Greenville last season
were unable to witness a stage
of any interest, due to the fact
that they had no place to
date the plays that were billed, due
the ruins of the opera house that
was swept by fire previous to that
time.
, For the coming season the
will read with interest the open-
of the new opera house now near-
completion in the Edwards block.
As soon as the place is completed the
managers of the Gaiety will
occupy same until the fall season
opens for theatrical troops, for which
they have slated some of the very
best in grand operas and musical
comedies.
The building which is expected to
be completed within the next two
weeks will have a seating capacity of
four hundred people. They now have
en route opera chairs for same, of the
very best quality, together with this
they have a stage that will
any ordinary cast of perform-
The elevation of the floor is
most completed and together with the
arrangements in front in the way of
a ticket booth greatly adds to the
of an up-to-date opera
house.
The manager for the coming season
is Mr. H. G. Sparrow, who is well
versed In this profession, and has
years of experience, which gives
cut information that they will only
slate the very best on the road and
assures us of some of the very best
that are obtainable in North
Carolina. He furthermore states that
it is his intention to exhibit the very
best in pictures during the
time with the exception of the nights
he has plays billed.
The proprietors of the Gaiety, who
are Messrs. H. G. Sparrow and L. A.
Squires, of Washington, are certainly
displaying their ability and meeting
with much success since their opening
here.
WINS
Many a spinster insists that she is
true to the memory of her first love,
who was in the good-die-young class.
Last Stage, A Neck to Neck Race of
Miles.
England. Lieut.
a French officer, under flying
name of Andre Beaumont, today won
the miles circuit
land air race, capturing the
offered by the London Daily Mail. This
is the greatest aviation victory.
flew the greater part of the
last days stage, miles, in a neck
and neck race with his fellow
try man, Pierre Jules Con-
won in the circuit of Eu-
rope race.
NEWS IS OF IN-
TAR HEELS
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES.
Town In Revolt.
the town
of Glen Echo, Md., to be in a
of revolt and absolutely in defiance
of law and Mayor Louis C.
has written to Governor
of Maryland, asking inter-
Mayor complains
of the non-observance of the Sunday
labor law, especially at an amuse-
park in Glen Echo, patronized
by Washingtonians. He declares that
the town officials flatly refused today
to carry out his orders to arrest of-
fenders.
AH Normal Students.
Don't forget the meeting of all past,
present and future students of the
State Normal College, Greensboro, in
the auditorium of the graded school
building at o'clock Thursday morn-
The object of this meeting is
to discuss ways and means of
Pitt county's pledge of to
the loan fund. The field sec-
of this fund, Miss Jane Sum-
will be present at the meet-
Meeting of Lumber Manufacturers
WAUSAU, Wis. Wages, insurance
rates, uniform accounting, the new
workmen's compensation law and the
general outlook in the lumber trade
were among the subjects discussed at
the summer meeting of the Northern
Hemlock and Hardwood
Association, which met here
today.
The more coddling a man wants the
more he thinks he's a hero waiting
for his chance to show it.
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's
Busy Readers.
Kitchin has honored a
requisition from the governor of
for M. E. Starling, who is want-
ed in Brooks county, Georgia, for
forgery. Starling is now under
rest in Tarboro.
are being cir-
and are being freely signed,
asking the Chamber of Commerce to
take steps to secure the erection of
a union depot by the Atlantic Coast
Line and Norfolk Southern railroads.
Simmons has invited
to deliver an address before the Na-
Good Roads at its
meeting in Chicago the latter part
of September and has promised to
accept if his engagements at that
time will permit.
REIDSVILLE. Recorder Humph-
returned the verdict in the case
against Elder L. H. Hardy for con-
tempt of court and announced the
verdict as guilty. On account of the
age of the defendant and the fact
that he is a minister of the Gospel,
the court announced that judgment
would be suspended.
The building on West Main street
occupied by the Durham and Model
steam laundries was gutted by fire
at an early hour Monday morning.
The plant of the Durham laundry
was almost completely destroyed
along with the undelivered stock on
hand. The plant of the Model
dry was injured considerably by
Sun.
A record was broken in the
court when eight drunks faced
the judge. All were convicted and
his honor took advantage of the
to threaten to the
of the fines he has heretofore
posed for this offense unless a
cal change for the better is soon no-
on the police
Record.
In stealing kisses, young man, be
careful that the girl's mother doesn't
catch you with the goods.





The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
FARMERS MEETING TO BE
AUGUST
Comity Association to
He Organized.
Editor
am gratified to be able to an-
that Educational
Meeting will be held in the following
counties on the south side of the
Swan Quarter, Monday, August
7th.
Plymouth, Tuesday, August 8th.
Columbia, Wednesday, August 9th.
Greenville, Thursday. August 10th.
Washington, Friday, August 11th.
Saturday, August 12th.
Three experts from the United
states Department of Agriculture,
who are among the best equipped
on farm topics in the United
States, will discuss subjects of vital
interest to the farmers.
It is also expected that Dr. Joseph
Hyde Pratt will be present at most
of the meetings to discuss good roads.
An effort will be made at the after-
noon session in each county about
the hour of three o'clock to organize
a county good roads association. At
this hour business men and citizens
other than farmers are earnestly in-
to attend and co-operate in the
good roads movement.
Very respectfully,
JNO. H. SMALL.
NOT VALUED MONEY.
Wake County Praise The
I raining School.
A Wake county teacher writing to
Supt. Z. V. Judd, from the East Car-
Teachers Training school at
Greenville,
certainly am glad that I came
here. My eight weeks, here will cost
me Already I would not
exchange what have gained for a
hundred dollars. To me it is not
to be valued in
Another teacher, after her return
home from Greenville,
can never tell anyone how
much good I got out of the training
These teachers attended the sum-
mer sessions of the Training school.
Raleigh Times.
Thirty 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.
Cotton Wilt.
County Farm Demonstrator, Mr.
T. Brans, says cotton wilt is
all over the county. As yet
he has found only one farm that is
seriously affected. The cotton on
this one being considerably damaged.
He also has the matter up with the
state department.
The Lost
From Other House.
Upon awaking this morning
of the Peace H. C. V. Peebles
discovered that his clothes were not
in the place he put them when he
retired to sleep Friday night. In-
showed them to be in an
adjoining room, and he found that
they had been robbed of cents in
cash and a fountain pen. A watch
was removed from the trousers
pocket and left, presumably because
the thought it would lead to
his identification. Mr. Peebles went
at once to the pawn shop to see if
the pen had been pawned and learn-
ed that it had, by a little boy who
said he did it for a man. The
police are now looking for this
man.
Earlier in the night some one
opened the window in the home of
Mr. Douglass, next door to Mr.
residence, and entered, but
was frightened off by Mrs.
who, with the nurse and two
was at home. Nothing was
stolen at Mr.
Free Press.
ATTEND SCHOOL WITH MOTHER.
Another Man Who Saw His Father
Married.
A number of men were gathered
in front of the hotel in Bethel when
one of them remarked, can say
something that no man in the crowd
can Asked to state his
claim, he added, mother and my-
self were school
can beat put in another.
first marriage I ever saw per-
formed was that of my
Both of these claims seemed to
stump the others, and explanations
were asked for. The first speaker
said father died when I was
a boy. My mother afterward decided
to go to school and attended the same
school to which I The second
said, mother died when I was
small. Later my father married
again and I attended the wedding,
the first one I ever
Rather remarkable but both true
statements.
PITT COUNTY
Educational Meeting Thurs-
day, August 10th.
There will be held in Greenville on
Thursday, August 10th, a ed-
meeting for Pitt county.
There will be sessions both morning
and afternoon with addresses by
Profs. C. L. Goodrich and I. O.
and Mr. A. G. Smith.
In the afternoon there will also be
an address on good roads, followed
with the organization of a county
good roads association.
These educational meet-
are very beneficial, especially to
farmers and their wives, and there
should be a large attendance here on
August 10th.
To The Federal Court.
Deputy Marshall J. A. Potter went
to the convict camps Thursday and
got Ed. Mills, colored, who was fin-
a sentence on the roads for
selling liquor. He brought him here
before U. S. Commissioner King
a Federal In default of
bond he was committed to Jail
to await the Federal court at New
Bern next October to to the
charge of retailing.
In the year 1626 Peter Minuit bought the whole on which
New York worth four thousand million dollars is built.
He paid for the island. Had he put out that at per cent,
compound interest in 1626 it would now amount to as much as the
present value of New York City.
Make OUR Bank i Bank.
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier
R. L. Davis, Pres. S. T. Hooker, V-Pres.
H. D. Bateman, Cashier
FAKE INSURANCE
Street Boy President At Fire Dollars
A Week.
Philadelphia, Pa., a
hearing here today of three officials
of fourteen fire insurance
of this city on the charge
of operating fraudulent concerns, a
19-year-old boy testified that he had
been picked off the street and made
president of two of the concerns and
secretary of a third at a total salary
of a week. The witness, Harman
S. Robinson, said he was homeless
when hired to run errands. He was
told he must and said that
one of the defendants had outfitted
him at a clothing store. At the end
of the hearing the three officials,
David Jacob and
Charles were held under
bail for trial.
Robinson testified he knew he had
been made president, but thought it
was only a matter of form. He said
that the janitor of an office building
in which the companies were op-
from the same room was also
made president of one of the con-
Robinson further testified that
he had presided at directors meetings
of his companies, but had no idea of
what was done.
always read a newspaper or
went to sleep. did all the
he said.
Earnest K. Mueller, a solicitor em-
ployed by two of the concerns which
the state insurance department
charges were all controlled by the
same principals, testified that while
he was connected with the concerns
new ones were organized with a total
capitalization of
The names of the alleged subscribers,
he said, were taken from the city
directory. The office of the concerns
were recently raided. The concerns
it is alleged, wrote Insurance on all
parts of the country and it is claimed
Droughts.
Speaking of the deficiency in rain-
fall in June our attention has been
called to the following records of
published in an exchange
in
In the summer of 1621 twenty-
three days without rain.
In 1630 forty-one days without
rain.
In 1657, seventy-five days with-
out rain.
In 1647 forty-five rainless days
in succession.
In 1688, a drought of eighty-one
days.
In 1697, sixty-two days without
a drop or rain.
In 1705, forty days of dryness.
In 1715, forty-six rainless days.
In 1718, sixty-one days without
rain.
In 1720, ninety-two days with-
out rain.
In 1741, a seventy-five
drought.
In 1749 a terrible drought last-
one hundred and eight days.
In 1762, there was no rain front
May 1st to September 1st, one
and twenty-three days and very
little to sustain life came from the
ground that year and many people
sent to England for hay and grain.
Crabs Having A Feast
It has been so dry that the salt
water has gone up the creeks so
as to be killing out the fresh water
fish. The creeks are full of dead cat
fish and other fresh water fish can be
found floating all up and down the
creeks. Crabs are having a feast
and are Sentinel.
their total receipts were a
month.
The Carolina Rome and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.
EXPERIMENTAL FARM
WORK THROUGHOUT STATE
THE
EIGHTY PER CENT OF COUNTIES.
This Work of Much Benefit To The
Farmers.
RALEIGH, July 1911.
Editor
Some days ago we called the at-
of your people to the local ex-
farm work we are doing
the counties of the state.
Not all of the counties have these
farms yet, but we confidentially ex-
to get the work in at least
per cent, of the counties this year.
The work done on these farms is
as will interest every man who
tills the soil. Some of them have
fertilizer experiments; some cultural
methods experiments; some variety
tests; some testing the relative value
of fall as against spring spreading
manure, etc., in all of which the
farmer has a vital interest. Large
signs are erected in front of these
stations and the details of the work
are carefully with large let-
on painted boards so that all
who pass by may see and under-
stand the work in operation.
There may be a few cases where
from one cause or another, such as
failure to get a stand, unusually dry
weather, forced inattention to the
work on the part of the farmer, etc.,
the experiment in question may not
show what it is expected to show, but
we will have to ask you to wait till
the following experiment is placed on
the road as the results may be in-
You will generally find two
on your road each
during the summer and during the
winter and spring. The nature of the
experiment can always be under-
stood from the signs in front of it.
We have to grapple with weather
conditions just like you do, but we
are very much gratified to be able
to say that our work this year is do-
extraordinarily well in all the
counties considering the untoward
conditions under which our local ex-
have had to work. Much
credit is due them for the interest and
determination shown in carrying out
the instructions.
While the department furnishes all
the fertilizers, and all the seed, when
necessary, for the protection of this
experimental -work, the farmer does
not get anything extra for his work.
The work is so planned that the ex-
time given to the experimental
side of the work just balances the
extra fertilizer used on that part of
the acre under experiment. It
will be seen, therefore, that these
men are engaged in a patriotic
service to the state. The most
return is their increased
knowledge of their own local con-
Next week we expect to begin a
series of articles on organic matter
in the soil and will emphasize the
use of green manuring crops as the
best and easiest means of putting
in the soil which is the basis
of all soil fertility.
J. L. BURGESS,
X. C. Dept. of Agriculture.
Plant Between Corn
Hows For Hogs.
It is not too early to plan for
catch crops in the corn, and to
follow oats and wheat with which
to fatten the hogs and make hay this
fall. If all the corn land can not be
put into peas or soy beans, make an
effort to plant such of it, at as
is, or can be fenced, for the hogs.
The corn fields of the South offer
most unlimited possibilities for hog
production. Corn and soy beans make
an ideal hog food, and counting the
two crops, what part of this country
can produce more feed on an acre
during one season than a crop of
corn and soy beans will furnish
For fattening the hogs, we would
rely on soy beans, peanuts and corn.
are not only our best hog
feeds, but either of the legumes may
be grown on the same land on which
the corn is produced without mete-
lessening the yield of corn.
With the peanuts it may be necessary
to give greater space between the
coin rows than is best for the largest
production of corn, but corn rows
feet apart with the stalks inches
apart in the rows will give practical-
the same number of stalks on the
land as 4-feet rows with the stalks
inches in the row. Or 6-feet rows
with the stalks inches apart will
give practically the same number of
stalks on an acre as 4-feet rows and
the stalks inches apart in the row.
Raleigh Progressive Farmer.
Your Christian Duty.
From Speaker Champ Clark's Ad-
dress before Christian Endeavor
Convention at Atlantic City.
is no room in the United
States for a pessimist or idler. Any
man who misses two general elections
should, be disfranchised. Our for-
bears did not fight so we could sit at
home. They wanted us to have our
say at elections. That's what the
scrap was about. If I had one prayer
that was sure to be answered it would
be that every citizen should acquire
sufficient education to read his own
ballot and cast it as an American cit-
should.
run nine tenths of our
elections, and the hoodlum who goes
out and votes is a better man than the
citizen who fails to cast his ballot
is the duty of every Christian
to take a hand in politics. These
fine-haired citizens who say they are
too busy to enter politics are bad
The great question before the
American republic is the question of
good citizenship. I don't believe the
United States is going to the dogs, no
matter whether a Republican or a
Democrat heads the next
I believe the party in the power
will work for the perpetuity of the
American republic and amelioration
of the condition of the people and the
betterment of society.
world in general is growing
better and particularly our part of
the country. My opinion is that we
will soon a scheme that will
give labor the benefit of its toil and
keep riches from a few greedy souls.
Signs point that the change is in
sight and the employer will soon share
his profits with his
Dry In Bethel and Carolina.
While the recent rains have been
more or less general over the
around Bethel and in portions of
Carolina township the crops are yet
rather dry.
Special Prices.
In our Pulley
Bowen call attention to special prices
they are making to close out men's
and low shoes and
tailor-made coat suits. The prices
quoted are real bargains and you
should take advantage of them.
Condensed Statement of
THE NATIONAL BANK
GREENVILLE, V C.
At Close business June 1911,
Loans and Discounts
Overdrafts . 2.925.78
U. S. Bonds . 21,000.00
Stocks .,. 2,500.00
Furniture and Fixtures .
Exchanges for Clearing . 10,929.31
Cash and Due from Banks . 37,007.70
per cent. Redemption fund . 1,050.00
LIABILITIES
. 50,000.00
. 10,000.00
. 2,366.95
. 21,000.00
. 21,000.00
. 24,325.00
. 91.42
. 723.33
. 140,385.74
TOTAL DIVIDENDS
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Finns and In-
and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those
contemplating changes or opening new accounts, fl We want your
business. F. J. FORBES, Cashier
Capital .
Surplus .,
Undivided Profits
Circulation .
Bond Account .
.
Dividends Unpaid
Cashier's Cheeks .
Deposits .
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
SCHEDULES
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green-
ville and Kinston. Effective May 16th, 1911.
Norfolk
Ar. Washington
Ar. Williamston
Ar. Plymouth
Ar. Greenville
Ar. Kinston
am.
For further information, address
agent or If. WARD, Ticket
ville, N. C.
nearest ticket
Agent
W. J. CRAIG, P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Meredith College
One of the few for women in the South that confers an A. B. degree represent-
four of genuine college work according to the Standard Colleges.
Diploma awarded in the Schools of Elocution. Art and Music. Library facilities ex-
Systematic training in Physical Education under Director. Courts for basket-
ball and tennis. Boarding Club where, by about half an hour of daily domestic service
students save from to a year. Students not offering the necessary units for en-
trance may prepare in Meredith Academy. to be the cheapest woman's college
of its grade in the South. catalog. Quarterly Bulletin, for fuller information, address
Richard Tilman Vann, Raleigh,
The Home of Women's Fashions
Pulley Bowen
Greenville,
North Carolina





-V-
i, j
Carolina law and Farm The Eastern Reflector.
I iF.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity
Adv Rates on Application
WINTERVILLE, N. W.
Rollins came over from Ayden Wed-
Prof. F. C. returned
day from a trip through Onslow
county in the interest of the school.
We wish to call the farmers at-
again lo the fact that they
should take every advantage possible
in housing their tobacco crop this sea-
son. The tobacco properly housed
season will sell high. To let your
tobacco be bruised or broken up, is
like tearing up paper dollars. The
surest and best way, and the way
to save money is to use the
manufactured by the A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Co.
Mr. J. W. Harper spent several
days here this week In and around
Black Jack.
Trunks, suit cases and telescopes,
at A. W. Ange
Mrs. J. L. Rollins, who spent
days with her parents near Kin-
returned home Wednesday.
Tobacco twine, thermometers and
lanterns. Harrington, Barber
Mr. C. T. Cox and Miss Isabelle
Williams drove over to Ayden Thurs-
day evening.
We have a new lot of pants on hand.
Come and take your pick. A. W.
Ange Co.
Several of our young men attended
the ball game at Ayden yesterday.
Harrington, Co. are sell-
their stock of slippers now at
cost. Good time to buy.
Prof. F. C. Nye left Friday for a
trip over the river in the interest of
the school.
Along with the nice arrangements
for buggies, the A. G. Cox
Co. will be in much better
shape to furnish coffins and caskets.
They also offer excellent hearse
service.
Messrs. and R.
L. Abbott attended the ball game at
Greenville yesterday.
Fire, as all of us know, is a most
dangerous enemy when not under
control. You must ever handle it
carefully, or all your toils and
will be consumed by this de-
In spite of the knowledge the
firmer has of this truth, and in
spite of the fact that so many barns
of tobacco have been burned be-
cause of the owner not having safe
flues in the barn, they content them-
selves by saying, will get new
flues next year. Maybe they will
last me this In most cases
he waits one year too late. The only
way to prevent fire is to remove all
possibilities of a cause. The A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Co., of Winter-
ville, have the tobacco flues made for
you, and you had better examine your
flues carefully with an impartial eye
before you decide not to buy from
them this season.
Mrs. Marion Crawford went to
den last night to spend a few days
with her mother.
Get your repair work done at
Barber shop. Re-
pairing of all kinds, at any time.
Rev. Chas. E. Lee, of spent
last night with Mr. A. W. Ange on
his way to
The best molasses and pure apple
cider vinegar at Harrington, Barber
Several of our young people at-
tended a party at Miss Lizzie Cox's,
near Cox's Mill last night. They re-
port a good time, and we must think
they did by the time they were re-
turning this morning.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox, who for
time have been in the western
part of the state recuperating, return-
ed home last night.
, Theodore went over to
Ayden yesterday evening.
WINTERVILLE, N. Lucy j
Hester returned Saturday after spend-
some time visiting friends in
Mrs. J. R. Smith and daughter, Miss
Mary, of Ayden, came over Saturday
to visit friends near here.
The mowing machine
and self dump rake, the best of any
make, it will pay you to see
ton, Barber Co. before your buy.
Misses Helen and Elizabeth Adams
returned Saturday after spending
some time with their many friends
in Ahoskie. They were accompanied
by Miss Annie Parker and little
brother, who will spend
days with them.
Miss Eva Langston left Sunday
morning for Robersonville, where she
has been teaching.
It is a good time to begin placing
your orders for the rival or
disc harrows. See Harrington, Bar-
Co.
Mr. Louis Manning went to More-
head Sunday.
Mr. Eugene Cannon attended
at Red Oak Sunday.
See Harrington, Barber Company
for your 8-ounce duck cotton sheets
and scale beams.
Mrs. F. R. Mallard, of Wilmington,
Is visiting her brother, Mr. W.
Bail.
The Baptist Sunday schools of
Winterville, Ayden and several other
places are to have a Sunday school
picnic here on August 2nd. They
have secured Br. E. T. Carter, of New
Bern, to address them at o'clock.
If you want a cot for your tobacco
barn you can find a good one at A.
W. Ange
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hamilton, of
Ayden, spent Sunday here.
Mr. Jno. R. Carroll left Monday for
and vicinity in the in-
of Winterville High school.
longest way round is the
shortest way as the saying
goes, but one of our young men and
lady undertook to change this a lit-
by making the way away from
home the longest and sweetest. The
result, they both got lost, drove many
miles out of the way, called on friends
to direct them, yet they were not
afraid in these dark hours of the
night, as was along.
Feed your stock and poultry on
Dr. stock and poultry food
found at A. W. Ange
Miss Eva is visiting friends
in town this week.
Prof. F. C. Nye left Tuesday morn-
for Grimesland and Wilson the
interest of the school which opens
August 28th.
Mrs. E. E. Cox, who for two weeks
has been away on a visit, returned
home yesterday.
Good crops or something has en-
the farmers to buy
carts and wagons. The A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Company is ship-
ping and delivering them from their
factory right along.
We are very much grieved that our
friend, Eugene Cannon, had to go
home yesterday on account of his be-
sick. We hope he will soon re-
cover and return. Those night drives
did not agree with him.
A jolly crowd of hay riders from
near Cox's Mill visited our town last
night. They are always welcomed
here and we think they run up with
some water melons and a freezer of
cream while in town.
Don't forget to sec Hunsucker, the
buggy man, before purchasing your
next turn-out.
Mrs. King, of Durham, is visiting
Mrs. Chas. Langston this week.
Misses Sarah Barber and Ina Bell
Williams spent Saturday night and
Sunday in the country.
A good many of our people went to
Norfolk this week.
Messrs. B. D. Forrest and Roy T.
Cox are on the sick list this week.
Prof. On The Co.
Prof. Nye, of the Winterville High
was here this morning on his
way to Grimesland and other points
the interest of his school.
Last week Prof. Nye visited the
counties of Bertie, Hertford and Pam-
He reported much success in
his efforts in behalf of his school and
that everything in these counties are
in fine condition. Crops and people
are prosperous and he expects an
usual large attendance at his school
from there. That he has already
pupils for the next term from
Kentucky and expects them from other
states shows the work he is doing.
Miss Daisy Barber Dead.
It has God to take from
our midst Daisy Virginia Barber, who
on Monday afternoon at o'clock,
passed from life to eternity.
She was a daughter of the late
H. B. Barber and Mrs. Louise Barber,
near Winterville,
She was sixteen years old, and was
a member of the Free Will Baptist
church at Reedy Branch. The
funeral services were conducted
Tuesday, by Rev. C. L. Little, after
which her body was taken to Reedy
Branch cemetery for burial.
She leaves a widowed mother, two
sisters and a brother, and many friends
and relatives to mourn their loss.
The pall bearers Messrs. R.
H. Hunsucker, G. C. Vincent, H. H.
Manning, C. F. Little, A. G. Cox and
C. C. Vincent.
DAUGHTER OF THE
Kills Snake on Main Street.
Monday night about ten o'clock,
Edward Hearne was going to the post
office from the moving picture show
and as he passed Frank Wilson's
store he noticed something coiled up
on the sidewalk. He didn't pay much
attention to it until he saw it move.
He found it to be a snake. Not find-
anything to kill it with, he went
over across the street and got a
chair, went back and killed it.
It was a popular leaf was
most two and a half feet long.
Woman Found in Georgia Lived in
Three Centuries, Under Twenty-
Five Presidents.
ATLANTA, Mary
Proctor, aged years, a real
daughter of the American Revolution
a woman who has lived in three
when events were
the history of nations,, has just
been located in an humble one room
cabin in Barlow county, Ga. Her sole
companions are her daughter, Miss
Mary Proctor, aged and two great,
great grandchildren, of
another daughter, all who are left of
six generations of her family.
Mrs. Proctor was born in Wake
county, North Carolina. She is the
daughter of Wiley who left
North Carolina about 1800 and later
moved to Alabama, where Mary was
married to Hiram Proctor when she
was nineteen years of age. She was
Mr. Proctor's third wife. Her husband
was a of two wars, the
and the war of 1812.
On a bed of straw constituting a
mattress so thin that the rough plank
slats can be seen, this daughter of the
Revolution lies, her form emaciated,
skin wrinkled, almost a skeleton. Her
aged daughter never tiring of her fee-
efforts to give her mother every
possible comfort, administers to her
wants and tills the soil in a small cot-
ton and garden patch nearby. The
measure profits from the labor she
adds to a a month pension Mrs.
Proctor receives for the services her
husband rendered in the war of 1812.
She was born but a few years after
George Washington was elected Pres-
George Washington was the only
President who served before Mrs.
Proctor became a native of North
Carolina. She has lived under the
administration of twenty-five
dents, including John Adams and
H. Taft.
Until a year ago when her mind
became so enfeebled Mrs. Proctor
would tell her great grand children
of the epoch making incidents in
eleven decades over which her has
spanned. Her stories were vivid
pictures, treating of
her personal knowledge of the early
stages of the history of her own land.
The morning of her life she spent in
the eighteenth when the
United States government had just
been established; the afternoon in the
nineteenth when brother
fought against brother in the Civil
strife of 1861, and now in the
she hears of the discussions of
world wide peace movements, of long
journeys by airships, in striking con-
to the methods of travel when
she was a girl and the modern
of doing a thousand things in as
many different ways so foreign to
those employed a hundred years ago,
when she was eleven years old.
A movement has been started in At-
during the past few days to
raise funds that will be sufficient to
care for the two old women the rest
of their days.
JUST RECEIVED TWO CAR LOADS
of nitrate of soda. Can supply your
needs. Prices guaranteed. E. Turn-
age Sons, Ayden.
Pitt's Cotton Crop.
In Friday's Reflector the statement
was made that last year the cotton
crop of Pitt county was over
bales. The fact is that the gin-
reports show over bales.
The first statement was made on the
authority of a buyer.
Pitt county has made much more
than last year's crop. In fact, the
average is about bales. That
puts Pitt away up in the list of cot-
ton counties,
TRINITY COLLEGE
1859
1892
1910-1911
, The Granting of the Charier Trinity College; the Removal
the College to the growing and prosperous City Durham; the Building of the New and Greater
Magnificent new buildings with new equipment and enlarged facilities.
Comfortable hygienic dormitories and beautiful, pleasant surroundings.
Five Academic; Mechanical, Civil and Law Ed-
Graduate
For and other information, address
R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham. N. C
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL
Established 1898
Equipment unsurpassed.
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College. Special
attention given to health. A teacher in each locks after the living conditions of boys
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.
Bad Spells
I suffered, during girlhood, from womanly
writes Mrs. Navy, of Walnut, N. C. last, I was
almost bed-ridden, and had to give up. We had three
doctors. All the time, I was getting worse. I had bad
spells, that lasted from to days. In one week, after I
gave a trial, I could eat, sleep, and joke, as well as
anybody. In weeks, I was well. I had been an invalid
for weary years relieved me, when everything
else
If you are weak and ailing, think what it would mean,
to you, to recover as quickly as Mrs. Navy did. For more
than years, this purely vegetable, tonic remedy, for women,
has been used by thousands of weak and ailing sufferers.
They found it of real value in relieving their aches and
pains. Why suffer longer A remedy that has relieved
and helped so many, is ready, at the nearest drug store, for
use, at once, by you. Try it, today.
i . i Advisory Dent. Medicine Co. Twin
book Treatment
Stock and Poultry Powders
by
L. P. ROYSTER, OXFORD, N. C.
Is the best Stock and Poultry Powder used. Always gives
results. Guaranteed cholera cure for hogs. Sold by
J. W. Bryan, Greenville, and other dealers
Narrow Escape.
Mr. Jake Massey narrowly escaped
death while driving with a Mr. Joy-
at Taylor's Cross Roads. The
horse ran and Mr. Massey was thrown
on the front shaft and dragged
yards. Mr. Massey was unconscious
for five or six hours. He was only
saved by the buggy striking a
phone pole, thus freeing the animal.
Wilson Times.
WE HAVE PAIRS OF KNEE-
land's low shoes for men, regular
price that will be closed out at
Pulley Bowen.
The Sensible Way.
A citizen of Greensboro started to
Wrightsville the other day with his
family. A friend asked him where he
was going to stop. Without hesitation
be named the hotel. His friend asked
if that the best hotel and he re-
don't know; there may be
others there just as good, but that
hotel is patriotic enough to advertise
in the Daily News, our home morn-
newspaper, and just for that I
am patriotic enough to give it my
The moral is plain.
Greensboro News.
About
Almost any man
can be conquered by kindness. Some
of course, are harder to manage than
others, but all firmly yield to gentle
treatment.
Nor is the most in-
tractable of all without
exception to the rule.
Heretofore he has proved a vexatious
problem to society, and time and
again the best minds have vainly
striven to devise some plan either for
his extermination or his uplift. But
the future promise his complete re-
generation.
It has remained for Governor Gil-
of Florida, to offer the wisest
of all the suggestions in these
line
The executive of the Everglades
State would neither swat nor kill the
bachelor. He would win him over
to the ranks of by the
of all
of tactful women.
But stop; let us explain in the
choice wonder of the Baltimore
can, since our own crude speech is
too clumsy for so delicate a theme.
Says our
the days of Eden it has been
a matter or why bachelors
are. Now an inspired genius has dis-
that is a
disposition, due to molecular action
in an inverse manner to the normal,
resulting in a declination of the power
of propinquity of maids and widows
over the men so afflicted. With this
explanation the rest is easy. It is
only necessary to treat the bachelor
as a man to be coddled and to be fed
from the hand of the resourceful
man. He must be made to appreciate
the sublimity, the divinity of woman
without having his eyes opened to
her artifice.
This is something of what Govern-
or Gilchrist is driving at in his high-
minded contribution to why bachelors
are and how they may not be. The
gubernatorial mind has been
by the subject and he turns to
the Book of Ruth in the Bible and
finds in the story of how two widows
managed to land a mighty man of
wealth for the younger and more at-
tractive of the pair an inspiration for
advice as to how to get rid of
Taxing them out of existence
has been tried in vain. They pay their
tax and are made obdurate. Ridicule
will not work; they are made immune
by their bump of conceit; they can
not be reasoned with because the
molecules in their craniums do not re-
right. The only thing thus fat-
found adequate for moving the
to the altar is sympathy and
cooing
only women everywhere could
be induced to accept the view of Gov-
Gilchrist and employ the model
of Naomi in her efforts to get well
settled in life her lovely, young
widowed daughter-in-law, there would
be more irresistible pictures of
gleaners than the world could absorb.
Ruth was a gleaner. Here is the
key to her success, according to the
Florida Governor. She did not go
after with a cudgel; she did
not invoke a breach of promise suit;
she did not make herself an over-
dressed frump; she simply gleaned in
the field of The woman who
can land the bachelor every time.
She must absorb his interest and
dwell upon his merits and be
over his qualities and boost his
BLACK HAND WRECK FACTORY.
Thousands Of People From
Their Homes.
NEW thousand people
were driven from their homes among
the tenements of the east side by an
explosion in the basement of a
which gutted the interior of the
structure. Fire followed the ex-
adding to the damage already
done. It is thought to have been a
black hand outrage.
Murder in Greene.
A most atrocious murder was
committed at church, in
section of Greene county
Sunday afternoon about o'clock
when Andrew Pool, a ex-con-
from the county roads,
out to death Caesar Wooten, a re-
colored member of the
church, who was worshiping with
the congregation and protested again-
st Pool's entering, when the latter
went there to raise a disturbance.
Kinston Free Press.
Belgian Queen Congratulated.
Elizabeth, who
has but recently recovered from a
very serious illness, received world-
wide congratulations today on the
thirty-fifth anniversary of her birth.
Before her marriage ten years ago,
her Majesty was a princess of Ba-
She is the mother of two sons
and a daughter, her eldest boy, the
heir to the throne, being now in his
tenth year.
Dead Rats Put
NEW Augustus
of California and principal
owner of the Federal Sugar Refining
Company of Yonkers, N. Y., gave the
most sensational testimony that has
developed before the Congressional
committee investigating the sugar
trust during the hearings here.
Besides giving a most important
sidelight on the conference between
John and the late H. O.
which is believed to have
ended the great sugar war, he de-
scribed under oath, the vicissitudes
of an independent sugar refiner. He
said that his plant in Philadelphia
before It was controlled by the trust
had been put out of commission
times by persons who threw
sand In the machinery bearings and
otherwise wrecked the plant. He
swore that at the Yonkers refinery
after he had turned down trust over-
dead rats were placed in bar-
of sugar ready for shipment and
that whole vats of liquid sugar had
been drained off in the night into
sewers. The nuisance of dead rats
continued until private detectives
pointed out a number of his
whom he discharged, refusing to pay
their wages in the hope that they
would sue him and thus enable him
to question them under oath as to
who had employed them. Much to
his disappointment he was never sued.
SMALL LOT OF LOW
shoes to close at a pair. Pulley
Bowen.
Morse gasoline engine, one Bell
Threshing machine, practically
new. E. Turnage Sons, Ayden.
ALL COLORS EMBROIDERY EDGES
yards to bunch, at Pulley
Bowen's.





The Carolina Home and
PROF. BARNES DELIVERED
LAST LECTURE
TERM AT E. C T. T. 8-
He Has a Hold I the People
Of Carolina.
The last lecture for the present
term was given in the auditorium of
the Training school Saturday evening
by Prof. Barnes. Mr. Barnes
had lectured for the school one even-
before this and also gave a short
talk at one period of the opening
exercises. Probably no man who has
conic to North Carolina to do
work has so gotten hold of
the people with whom he has come
in contact as has Prof. Barnes at
the summer term of the Training
school. Thoroughly, equipped for
work as he is, apt and skillful in
this work, thoughtful and
in every utterance, genial and
social in his nature, he has won the
esteem of the student body as com-
as any one we have ever
known. Knowing him as they do
the teachers expected to get some-
thing from Saturday evening's
They were not disappointed.
We have not heard a lecture fuller
of wise thought and practical
than this one. Prof. Barnes
subject was for
In his introductory remarks he said
many kind things about the South,
and expressed his great pleasure at
having had the pleasure of being
here during the summer.
Prof. Barnes gave first a strong,
clear cut definition of efficiency. It
is effective power for work and
ice during a healthy and active life.
An efficient nation made up of
individuals. It is the business
of schools to make efficient
Education for efficiency does
continue through adult years by
means of summer schools, evening
schools, etc.
Secondly, education includes two
training of powers,
and acquisition of knowledge.
should be trained in a large
variety of mental procession and in
the establishing of as many mental
habits as possible.
In the third place he said,
for efficiency must especially
part the habit of quick and
attention. Young people must
be taught to think. Prof. Barnes was
especially strong and practical in his
discussion of the necessity to think.
He stated that there was too much
hurry and activity in our daily
life. We do not have time to think
in this hurry. He was of the opinion
that studies were made too easy In
school, the pupils not doing enough
hard thinking. Teachers encourage
weakness and dependency by their
methods. Any subjects that have a
natural interest for the child will
supply a motive for good thinking.
Fourth, to inspire the motive for
hard work at an early age and to
train the power of consecutive think-
is the greatest problem in
cation for efficiency. This is a task
for the teacher and yet it can be done
and must he done to get the best
results.
Filth, the thoughtful home has
great influence in developing the
In thinking. Mr. Barnes here
gave a number of strong
of the truthfulness of this state-
Sixth. He next discussed the in-
the power, and the efficiency
thinking; in those who are taught.
Seventh. Any subject may be used
to teach the child to think hard. The
idea is, that he is caused to weigh
evidence, draw accurate inferences,
make fair comparisons, invert
form judgment, etc.
Eighth. The scientific spirit is the
great development of the 19th
Its characteristic is the pas-
for truth and for fact as is op-
posed to guess or imagination.
Ninth. Prof. Barnes here discuss-
ed the teacher, naming as requisite
for successful work and results first,
proportion and equipment, second,
school room efficiency, and third,
proper methods. Educational
means the discarding of super-
prejudices, inflexibility of
ideas, and it means the development
of a tendency to receive and accept
new thoughts and new ideas instead
of the old. He gave strong
of teachers hanging to one idea
or method in school work, etc.
Old ideas and methods
should be thrown into the educational
junk heap and new ones installed.
Individuality, courtesy and good-
breeding are absolute essentials of
the teacher.
Teaching of health and hygiene are
positive demands upon the teacher
in this age and time. Mr. Barnes
here mentioned and discussed briefly
medical and dental inspection of
the uselessness of epidemics
such as measles, mumps, etc., and
emphasized strongly the importance
of looking after adenoids, hookworms,
etc.
Tenth. Education for efficiency in-
education for citizenship. He
dwelt strongly upon this point, get-
ting the conclusion that the world
expects every man to do his duty.
Eleventh. The development of see-
good in every thing. Prof. Barnes
was exceedingly happy in his manner
of presenting this division of his sub-
and convinced us all that this
is a very important truth and means
much for us as individuals and for
the world at large.
On the twelfth and last place the
speaker spoke of
showing that men are
fast coming to think for themselves
and not accept every dogma pro-
At the conclusion of this
address Prof gave two read-
from Riley as
Weather and Deep in
have given only a brief synopsis
of this splendid address. No report
could do justly to any lecture so filled
with thought and so forcibly and
presented as this was. Prof.
Barnes will always have an audience
when he speaks here, because the
student body knows what is in store
them. The school was exceeding-
y fortunate in having him as one of
the faculty this year. He is equally
as strong in the recitation room as
he is on the platform, and his work
here during this summer term will
count for much in giving our schools
more efficient teachers.
Smart Chickens, These.
Our townsman, Geo. W. Bunn, has
a hen that lays two eggs every day,
so it is reported, and he says he can
prove it, There is also a widow lady
in town it is stated, that has a chick-
en which was hatched the last of
March and began to lay July and
continues to lay every other day.
Spring Hope Leader.
BEE PULLEY BO WEN FOR
, men's shirts. Special values at
of the teacher who and inspires and fl,
nun
The character of your printed mat-
makes an indelible impression
good or bad upon those who see
it. More people your stand-
character and quality of
that, than by any other one thing.
Therefore, the need for the right
kind of printing.
Our hobby is good
fancy, fussy good
printing, with character, quality and
right type, right stock,
right illustrations-all blended into a
strong, dignified kind
that will make a good impression
for you. Give us a chance on
your next job.
Reflector Company
Printers
It is better to have it and not need it, than to
need it and not have it. We write every kind.
MOSELEY BROS.
WATER WITH MEALS.
as
Illinois Professor's Experiments Up-
set An Old Principal.
When men and horses fall from the
heat there appears to be a double
point to the consideration of a new
theory which favors the drinking of
water in large quantities with meals.
Prof. P. B. Hawk, physiological chem-
of the University of Illinois, is the
first advocate of water at meal time.
The relation of this to sunstroke is
inferred here because nearly all other
medical men discountenance the use
of water at meals and again they
agree that the principal cause of
. sunstroke is an overheated skin,
which is in turn, most frequently due
to an insufficient absorption of water.
Prof. Hawk doesn't consider any of
the effects of not drinking water, but
simply gives the result of his ex-
on water drinking at meal-
time and between meals. These ex-
made in the of
the University of Illinois, have just
been made known, and the result
is said to revolutionize ideas that
can have obtained longer than anyone
can remember. The relation of this
new thought to heat prostration may
be found in the prejudice most
people against drinking water
while eating, owing to insistent
teaching of the deleterious effects of
the habit, and because it is notable
that many cases of prostration
low the reception of a hearty meal.
medical the re-
of Prof. Hawk says,
unanimously advise strongly
Hie drinking of large amounts of
water taken at mealtime. The
able features following the liberal
use of water taken at the proper time.
are thoroughly appreciated, but any
suggestion as to the taking of water
in large with meals is
strongly antagonized.
principal objection to the
copious ingestion of the fluid is based
on the supposition that the excess
water dilutes the gastric juice,
the normal rhythm of the digestive
Then he gives his experiment and
the result of it. The subject was a
years old. He was on
normal and constant for
teen days analysis being made of his
food before the experiment began.
Water was given sparingly at first,
only half a glass being allowed at
each at 7.30, lunch
noon, and dinner, 6.15. The supply
WM increased, with beneficial effect,
until the subject was drinking three
pints of water at each meal, and his
usual pint between breakfast and
lunch and dinner and between dinner
and bed time. This made six quarts
a day.
Every day the subject was weighed
before breakfast, and he gained
steadily in weight and healthy tis-
sue. All his physical processes
proved. He looked better and felt
better as the days wore on, and it
was found that the bodily activities
were stimulated so that separation
and distribution of foods were
proved and the system kept free of
toxic poisons. The effect was an in-
creased storage for nitrogen
in the body and the con-
constituents of the diet were more
economically during the
period of extra water
New York Times.
BED ITEMS.
Personal and Other Happen-
in Our Section.
Red Banks, N. C, July
have improved very much since the
rain.
Farmers through this section have
begun curing tobacco.
Mrs. Thomas Allen and children, of
Fairmont, are visiting her mother-in-
law, Mrs. J. W. Allen.
Mr. J. W. Brooks lost a nice horse
one day last week.
Misses Eva and Ruth Sermons spent
Sunday with Miss Martha Cherry.
We are very sorry our clever mail
carrier is sick, hope he will soon be
better.
Mrs. Lou Taylor and Miss Effie
Corey, or Greenville, were visiting at
Mr. J. L. Cherry's Sunday.
Messrs. J. C. Galloway and Mason
Edwards, of X Roads, were
in the neighborhood Sunday after-
noon.
Mrs. John Stokes and children, of
has returned home after
spending several days in the neigh-
with relatives.
HANDSOME OFFICE BUILDING
Large Amusement Hall On The Sec-
Floor.
The handsome two-story building
just north of the court house, erected
by Mr. H. C. Edwards, is nearing
completion. The building is x
feet, fronting on Evans street. The
first floor has six suites of offices
the court house, and these are
being nicely and conveniently fitted
up.
The stairway leading to the second
story is midway the building on
Evans street. The second story is
being fitted up for an amusement
hall feet. The floor inclined
and there will be opera chairs to seat
nearly people. The hall has
ready been leased by the proprietors
of the new and they
will move there as soon as it is fin-
It will be a nice place for
entertainments.
Glendale Items.
GLENDALE, N. C, July
Juanita Manning, of Richmond, who
has been visiting relatives here, re-
turned to her home Monday. See if
the boys health doesn't improve now.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. of
son, spent Saturday night at the home
of Mr. T. B. Manning.
Our base ball team lost the game
at Saturday. Quite a
of people were present.
The roads were very lively Sun-
day.
Crops are fine.
or doses will cure any
case of Chills and Fever. Price,
Attack Like Tigers.
In fighting to keep the blood pure
the white corpuscles attack disease
germs like tigers. But often germs
multiply so fast the little fighters are
overcome. Then see pimples, boils,
eczema, and sores
and strength and appetite fail.
This condition demands Electric Bit-
to regulate stomach, liver and
kidneys and to expel poisons from the
blood. are the best blood
writes C. T. of Tracy,
Cal., have ever They make
rich, red blood, strong nerves and
build up your health. Try them.
at all druggists.
expectation makes a blessing
dear; Heaven were not Heaven if we
knew what it John
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office opposite R. L. Smith A
Stables, and next door to Flan-
Buggy Co's new building
Greenville, . N. Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office formerly occupied by J
Fleming.
Greenville, . N. Carolina
W. C. D. M. Clark
CLARK
Civil Engineers and Surveyors
. N. Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
In Building
Greenville, . N. Carolina
L. I. Moore, W. H.
MOORE LONG
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Greenville, . N. Carolina
DR. R. L. CARR
DENTIST
. . N.
HARRY SKINNER
LAWYER
. . N.
H. W. CARTER, M. D.
Practice to diseases of the
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Washington, N. C Greenville, i. C
Greenville office 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
Greenville, N. Carolina
Spring Plants
for beautifying the yard.
Decorative plants for the house
Choice Cut Flowers
for weddings and all social events
Floral offerings in the
most artistic style notice.
Mail, telephone and telegraph or-
promptly executed by,
J. L. Company
Florists.
Ask for Price List
Phone Raleigh, N. C.
THE CAROLINA
College of Agriculture ad
Mechanical Arts
The r
Four-year courses in Agriculture; in Civil-
Electric, and Mechanical Engineering, in
Industrial in Cotton
and Dyeing. Two-year courses in
Mechanical Art and in Textile Art. Cue-
year courses in Agriculture. These courses
are practical and scientific.
nations for admission are held at all county
seats on July For Catalog address
THE REGISTRAR,
West
STILL WITH
The Mutual Life Insurance
Company of N. Y.
Assets
Insurance in Force
Annual Income 83,981,241.98
Paid to to
date 56,751,062.28
H. Bentley Harriss
H. i. WARD. C. C. PIERCE.
Washington, N. C. Greenville,
WARD PIERCE
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Greenville, N. a
Practice in all the Courts.
S. M.
Established 1875
and Retail Grocer and
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for
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, Oil,
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar-
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Prunes, Currants, Raisins
Glass and China ware, Wooden-
ware, Cakes and Crackers,
best Butter, New
Royal Sewing machines and
numerous other goods. Quality and
quantity cheap for cash. Come to
see me.
Phone Number
S. M. Schultz.
Greenville Cabinet
WORKS
Antique Furniture
ed. Cabinet, Stair at d Re-
pair Work a Specially.
Denser,
Third St, Greenville,
THE SHOP
S. J. NOBLES
Nicely every thing clean
and attractive, working the
best barbers. Second to none.
OPPOSITE J. It. A J. MOVE.
Central Barber Shop
. Proprietor
Located in main of town,
Four chairs in operation and each
one presided over by a skilled
barber. Ladies waited on at their
home.
The more questions a woman asks
the fewer answers she remembers.





The Bone and The Eastern
P .---,
ram am
THE CAROLINA HOME and
FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
HUE REFLECTOR Inc.
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor.
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Subscription, one year,
Six months.
MOO
rates may be had upon
application at the business office in
The Reflector Building, corner Evans
and Third streets.
All cards of thanks and resolutions
f respect will be charged for at
cent per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to fifty lines.
as second class matter
at the post office at
Greenville, Carolina,
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, JULY 1911.
GOVERNOR REPLY.
Governor Kitchin in Sunday's News
and Observer in reply
to the recent
letters in that paper and the editorial
comment of the paper in regard to
the governor's change of bust-
attitude before and after
The coming of Gov.
reply to these strictures was expect-
ed and had been heralded in advance,
hence it was read eagerly on its
Sunday morning.
Governor reply occupied
some over three columns in small
type, and was given front page
in the News and Observer. He
stood his ground squarely, said that
Senator Lockhart's statements were
mainly untrue, declared that he had
been steadfast and consistent in his
anti-trust attitude, and drubbed the
News and Observer for holding to
the contrary and trying to
his defeat.
It was looking like the governor
had taken care of himself all right,
but alas, in the same paper was a
nine column editorial that beclouded
the situation and upset every point
Governor Kitchin had made before
it was given time to stick. Really
it shows the near futility of
in a controversy with a news-
paper and the disadvantage when the
newspaper can talk right back in the
same issue, and have the last word,
too.
o---------
MERELY STATING FACTS.
savings compared with per cent
paid by the local banks, and that no
money can be drawn out of the
bank unless given thirty
notice while the local banks pay on
Bern Sun.
The Reflector was not boasting in
this particular in the sense that term
implies, but made the reference to
show that the government recognized
Greenville as a town of sufficient
importance to be classed with larger
cities in the establishment of Postal
Savings banks. Really, we have been
unable to see any special good to the
public from these Postal Savings
banks, or the need of them, but as
the government has seen fit to
these banks, and recognizes
Greenville as of sufficient importance
to have one, of course we can speak
of Greenville being In the class with
larger cities.
PITT FAIR.
HAVE AX EYE TO HAY.
Premium lists of the Pitt county
fair to be held in Greenville
and are now being sent out.
As the fair is not a money-making
enterprise but free to everybody, and
voluntary donations the only depend-
for premiums, of course they
had to be small, but the money value
won is not the highest thing to con-
sider. The fair is going to
much good, in that it will bring
a large number of people together to
exchange ideas and to compare
each other's products, and to explain
methods of making better yields and
raising finer stock. The
is more and
more prominent in Pitt county, and
the farmers are in friendly rivalry
to see which can succeed best. Those
who win premiums at the fair will
certainly have cause to feel proud.
From the number who are planning
to make exhibits at the fair, there is
every prospect of it being a great
success.
The farmers of this section had as
well turn their minds to making a
supply of hay this season, unless they
want to pay something like a ton
and upward for it winter. Ac-
cording to reports, the hay crop of
the Western States is largely a fail-
hence what is made out there is
going to demand a high price. We
are almost ashamed to tell it, but in
past seasons hundreds and hundreds
of car loads of Western hay have
been shipped to Pitt county, and if
that thing has to be done the coming
season it is going to cut a mighty
in the cash of the farmers. There
is not a farmer of consequence in Pitt
county but who can raise on his own
farm all the hay he needs, and some
to spare. That is the thing he should
be careful to do this year.
LET'S GO FORWARD.
THE CHAIN LETTER FRAUD.
A Postal Savings Bank will be es-
In Greenville August 19th,
and the Reflector boasts that this
puts in class with the
larger Surely the Reflector
cannot see any special good that in-
will do for the town, when
it only pays per cent, interest on
One of the greatest nuisances and
frauds of modern times is what is
termed and it is
astonishing how people will be duped
by them. If a person receives one
of these he should
promptly refuse to become a party
to the fraud in helping to pass it
further. Throw such letters aside
regardless of the appeal not to break
the chain. The latest instance of
this fraud called to
our attention came from New York
and was sent especially to
purporting to have been
by the Most Worshipful Grand Master
of the State of New for the
purpose of erecting a monument in
Canton, Ohio, to William
The Grand Master of New York de-
the letter as a fraud and
position. If any Mason who reads
this gets one of these
he should know how to treat it.
When Pitt county gets to raising
all her own supplies, something she
will come nearer to this year than
ever before, and gets to
her own raw material into usable
products, we will have an ideal
The farmers ought to and can
easily raise all the corn, wheat, meat
and hay used in the county, and there
ought to be mills for grinding the
corn and wheat into meal and flour.
Enough cotton is already raised here
to more than clothe the county, and
we ought to have mills to
this into cloth and yarns. These
things will come some day.
In an article elsewhere in this pa-
per Superintendent H. B. Smith, of
Greenville graded schools, gives time-
advice to parents in regard to
looking after the health of their
There is no better time for
doing this than during vacation, so
that when the children re-enter school
every hindrance to their progress
will be removed if possible. Parents
should carefully read the article re-
to.
The immunity of a head
from danger by a falling weight has
again been established. One was
ringing a church bell in Rock Hill,
S. C, when the clapper broke loose
from the bell and fell forty feet, land-
on the head. He was only
slightly stunned and suffered no
injury from the blow. The re-
port does not say if the bell clapper
was dented from the compact.
In a speech at Atlantic City, Hon.
Champ Clark comes out strong as
to the duty of a citizen in the mat-
of voting. He says it is the Chris-
duty of every citizen to vote and
take part in selecting those who are
to administer public affairs, and the
so-called good citizen who stays
away from the polls and leaves the
voting to the is really the
bad citizen.
It is to be hoped that nothing will
come to mar the prospects of good
crops that now prevail throughout
the county. Ask almost any farmer
you meet about his crops and he
will tell you they are fine. With the
continuation of favorable conditions
through to the harvest there will be
such a reaping as will make thous-
ands of hearts glad.
What Chicago cannot do in the way
of devilment is hardly worth looking
for elsewhere even by his Satanic
Majesty. The latest criminal
out that way is a band known as
the Their operations
consist in getting property insured
and burning it.
Pennsylvania Democrats are said
to be solid for Governor Wilson, of
New Jersey, for the presidential
It is remembered that Penn-
Democrats cut a very small
figure when voting time comes in
such an overwhelming Republican
state.
Though the price of cotton has
come down considerably from its high
level, we believe it will sell at a good
price this fall, even in the face of
predictions of a fourteen million bale
crop.
The chamber of commerce of
Hickory has raised as a fund
to guarantee the location of factories
there. The town that goes after
in that way will get them.
A Chicago woman steals in her
sleep. It so happens that the persons
from whom she steals are also
asleep. Her mania runs to rifling
pockets.
Wilmington has a
letter writer. One wrote a letter to
the city superintendent of health
warning to resign if he valued
his life.
The Greenville post office will be-
come a government postal savings
bank on August 19th. This puts
Greenville in the class with larger
towns.
---------o
Greenville has the opportunity and
the location, with raw material avail-
able for manufacturing enterprises.
They should be brought together.
Possibly the fellows who are op-
posed to good roads have an idea
that when airships get in use there
will be needed for the roads.
---------o
Even the newspapers have no
trying to elect a United States
senator. Let the people do that for
When Greenville gets busy with
manufacturing enterprises she will
come to her own.
Charlotte is crying for water. Dry
times up there.
It is not the best citizen whom you
hear knocking his town.
Senator is really getting
attention than he deserves.
If Eugene Young is hiding he is
making a good job of it.
That lumber circular appears to be
bone of contention.
Swatting flies and running politics
at the same time is keeping
busy.
trying to save four kittens from a
burning building.
Baltimore, in holding out her bid
for the next Democratic national con-
calls attention to the fact
times in the past
made in Baltimore have been
successful.
Kentucky wants the Republican
Domination for vice-president next
and is suggesting Senator Brad-
a running mate for President
I State Association of County
state commerce commission regulates one historian of international
Dr. Ricardo of Peru.
the railroads.
Possibly the trouble with the New
Yorkers is that they are over feed-
--O-
As they have passed the reciprocity
bill possibly congress can soon go
home.
That Richmond man who killed his
wife is one more who ought to go
to the electric chair.
Greenville has opportunities a
plenty, but they must be used to keep
the town growing.
Raleigh policemen are putting stop
watches on automobile speeders. The
speeders should stop and watch.
The prohibition fight in Texas was
a close one, the wets winning by only
about majority.
It is between Governor Kitchin and
the News and Observer, but only a
war of words.
Cowan is too busy watching bath-
suits on the beach to play with
the boys in the back yard now.
Talk about the value of good roads,
you cannot place a value on them.
They are worth it all and then some.
It is not hard to imagine why the
next nomination for governor is be-
mixed up with the senatorial con-
test.
ii of North Carolina will
i i Asheville on August 16th.
That will be a fine trip for the
from the eastern counties.
Greenville's public library could be
larger if it had more members or
subscribers. Even though small, it is
doing much good, but this could be
increased.
They must have a lazy set in Kent,
one of New York's suburbs. Up there
they turn guinea pigs into the lawn
to nibble down the grass instead of
mowing it.
certainly would like to see
Greenville business men enjoying a
larger trade, but if the trade circle
is widened they must do something
in that direction.
Poor old John D. Rockefeller has
lodged a complaint with the county
commissioners of his county because
of the valuation for taxes placed upon
his property. He is trying to get
the value reduced.
Besides being twice governor of
Georgia, and now elected United
States senator, Hoke Smith has been
a school teacher, a lawyer, a news-
paper proprietor, and was a member
of President Cleveland's cabinet.
-o
The Federal courts of Ohio are after
the wall paper trust. That is a bunch
who ought to be made to stick to the
wall
If you have any complaint to make
about the valuation of your property
you can tell It to the board of equal-
next Monday.
Our School and Church Record is
the name of- a four-column four-page
paper being sent out from Winter-
ville In the interest of Winterville
High School and the Neuse Athletic
Association. The first number is ex-
neat and newsy.
The Henderson Gold Leaf draws
the line and refuses to print accounts
of dances, card parties, wine suppers,
and the like. The editor of that pa-
per says most people have their
and he is willing
to be called a crank in that
President Taft spoke for peace at
the veteran's re-union on the Bull
Run battlefield, but the government
goes right on spending money for
war ships and a standing army.
Some non-subscribers to their home
paper waste several times the price
of the paper in time consumed in
going to borrow from their neigh-
No Chance to Fight Japan.
Under the old treaty it was pro-
that in case of war between
Japan and the United States, Great
Britain lend aid to Japan.
Under the new treaty Great Britain
is precluded from giving support to
Japan in a conflict with the United
States. This results from the terms
of the general arbitration treaty made
between Great Britain and the
States. The news papers in Japan
have been discussing the new treaty
that country has made with this. The
government press is Japan
upon this result, believing that the
new treaty practically removes any
possibility of war between Japan and
the United States, while the minority
newspapers criticize the treaty, be-
cause, in their opinion, it gives the
United States all the better position
and weakens the position of Japan.
Both countries are to be
upon the treaty, as it makes
for the peace of the world, and the
prosperity of both Japan and the
United States. If Captain Hobson
shall not be able to find a Santiago
channel through the treaty, we may
the wrinkled front of war
for the present at least, and seek by
some pretext or other to pick a
rel with some other country just for
the purpose of keeping the martial
spirit of our people on edge and the
congress ready to make larger
for forts and ships. It
doesn't matter much what country it
is, so long as it is not a fighting
country. There is Portugal, for ex-
ample, which would seem to require
attention from some one of the pow-
and it might be as well not to
withdraw all the troops from the
Mexican frontier, as there is talk
now of impeaching the new president,
and there is said to be much unrest
because appears to have been
making a corner in oil.
If we can't fight Japan, isn't there
some other country the can
find for our
Times-Dispatch.
Governor Hoke Smith cannot hold
v the governorship and senator-
ship as he might like to do, hence
he must give up one of them.
Life goes very cheaply some times.
A Los Angeles woman lost hers while
Attorney General comes
out in advocacy of Federal control
of corporations. He declared in favor
of the establishment of a government
corporation commission to regulate
the operation of industrial
in the same way that the inter-
The Name
Since the publication of the book
in which the name was
first applied to this continent, the
by Wald-
at St. Die, France, in 1507,
the four hundred and fourth
of which publication has Just
been celebrated, every history of
America has stated that the continent
was named for Vespucci,
oftener called by the Latin equivalent,
The paragraph in
book in which the name had its his-
inception is as
is a fourth part of the world
which Amerigo Vespucci has
and which for this reason we
should call America; that is to say,
the land of
The derivation given by
muller has been challenged by at least
who suggests that America is
an American word and that
Vespucci got the name
from the country in the same way, for
instance, as Dick, or
Pete gets his pseudonym.
In his of Dr.
discusses the origin of the
name. These are his
That America is a place-name in
Nicaragua and designates a chain of
mountains in the province of
where Vespucci landed.
That the termination
is encountered frequently in
the names of places and in the tongues
and dialects indigenous to Central
America, appearing to signify
and is applied
to mountain peaks in which there are
no volcanoes.
That given name was
That in no part of Europe was
a given name applied to
either man or woman.
That only crowned heads baptized
new countries with their given names,
as, for instance, Georgia, Louisiana,
Carolina, the while
gave them their surnames,
as in the cases of the Straits of
Vancouver's Island and Van
Land.
That Columbus himself has not
given the name or Chris-
but Columbia or Colon, to the
New World.
That according to the historian the
Viscount de Vespucci visit-
ed the New World for the first time
the end of 1499 in the expedition
of that the description he
wrote of the regions was published
by and that it was
who made
justifiable of putting the
name of the describer above that of
the discoverer.
says Dr.
its origin, from the remarks of
Columbus on his fourth voyage, from
its philological value and from other
considerations briefly referred to, it
can be deduced without great effort
that the word America, exclusively
indigenous, has nothing to do with
the captain
Without these hypotheses
it may be said that the two or three
authentic autographs of Vespucci, one
of which spelled were
all written subsequent to his dis-
that he was vain and would
likely be pleased with his alleged
nickname.
Dr. might have made further
deduction from the fact that the name
is fairly common in Latin
countries, and there is no evidence
that the orthography is varied by
writing it York
World.
Locomotive Blew Out The Fire.
Using a locomotive engine to
the flames in a burning build-
is new departure in
but this is what happened here.
On the outskirts of the city a
can hut situated about thirty-five feet
from the Missouri tracks caught fire,
and being out of reach of the fire de-
it became the duty of the
man nearest the blaze at least to make
attempt to put out the fire.
The Missouri Pacific's engine was
standing idle on the tracks and had
on plenty of steam. The engineer saw
the fire and steamed up to a point op-
the burning building, turned on
all his and blew the fire out in
a few minutes. The steam smothered
the Capital.





LOOK AFTER HEALTH
CHILDREN
VA THE FOB THIS.
Superintendent Gives Timely
To
Tin- graded schools of the town
of Greenville will open, as usual, the
latter part of September. It is now
about eight weeks till the date of
the beginning of the term. I wish
to urge upon the attention of par-
the importance of getting their
children ready for school before the
opening of the next session. There is
a number of children who need
medical and dental attention, and it
is this phase of preparation to which
I would like to call special attention
at this time.
Last year we had a good deal to
say about adenoids. A number of
people had their children treated, and
the difference in general health, and
especially in alertness and increased
power to manage school work, was
very marked. Adenoids seriously
pair the health of children, make
them dullards in school in nine cases
out of ten, and lay the foundation
for serious throat and lung troubles.
If your child snores much, does not
breathe freely through the nose, or
keeps his mouth open a good deal,
have your physician, or a specialist,
to make examination. Many
have bad cases of adenoids and
their parents do not know it. Last
year I think several parents were
surprised when we told them that
their children's throats were affected,
and that it looked as if adenoids
were the cause of the trouble.
Another source of trouble in school
is weak eyes. I know it is not
ways possible to have these defects
remedied in vacation but much can
be done for relief. We have in school
a good number of children whoso
eyes need attention, and it is much
easier to treat them during vacation
than during the school term when
more or less reading and study is
unavoidable.
Vacation is a good time to have
teeth attended to, also. Never a
week passes that from one to a half
dozen children lose time from school
on account of teeth. The teeth should
be examined by a dentist at least
once a year, and vacation is the best
time to have examination of school
children's teeth.
Another disease which prevails in
the school is hook worm. I know
that some people are disposed to treat
this subject with a jest. But the
fact remains that there is a
of children in Greenville, as well
as practically every section of the
South, who are affected with a disease
which reputable and reliable
call hook worm. Last spring
one of the physicians in the employ
of the State Department of Health
visited our schools, and I took him
through the grades. He told me that
he was positive that he saw a good
number of children who were suffer-
from hook worm disease. Twenty-
five or thirty of the parents of school
children had examination and treat-
of their children last year, and
in every case the change in
in brightness, in alertness, In
ability to do school work success-
fully, and the general toning up of
health was most remarkable.
There are yet numerous cases of
hook worm among the school
and in many cases the par-
do not even suspect it, I fear.
Examination costs nothing, and
whether parents credit or discredit
what is said of the disease, the fact
remains that if a child has it his
childish helplessness entitles him to
attention and treatment. If a child
is pale, delicate, rather stupid, not
growing normally, does not learn
well, and is indifferent generally, an
examination might reveal a
prise.
Few of the towns in North Caro-
make vaccination one of the
conditions of entrance into the public
schools. The importance of
nation is so well understood that I
do not deem it necessary for me to
say more about it than that it is
ways an important safe-guard, both
to the individual and to the public
generally. In the larger towns and
cities, no person is admitted to the
schools who has not been success-
fully vaccinated within required
of time.
I urge parents not to overlook the
matter of having their children ready
for school when it opens. Vacation
is by far the best time to have dental
work and medical attention for school
children. Our term is short, and we
need the children at school as reg-
as we can get them. No child
can do much in school who is not
well. Nor will he ever amount to
much elsewhere. This is an age of
health and sanitation. People are
realizing more and more each year
the utter futility of hoping to
a diseased child. It simply can-
not be done. And they are also real-
that it is useless to hope to
make an economic factor out of a
person whose health has been neg-
in childhood.
Please do not neglect your child's
health, and do not forget to have
him sound and well by the opening
of school, if such lies within your
power.
H. B. SMITH,
Superintendent of Schools.
Where There's a Will
There's a Way
This old saying that was spoken
centuries ago is as true today, as then.
We can furnish your home in the
best quality, or most economical way.
If you are not already our customer,
why not join in the band and become
one today
Our Matting, Carpet and
Rug department is in
did order to select from.
Yours truly,
Taft VanDyke
WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO.
Their Work Keeps Us
Strong And Healthy.
All the blood in the body passes
through the kidneys once every three
minutes. The kidneys filter the blood.
They work night and day. When
healthy they remove about grains
of impure matter daily, when
healthy some part of this impure mat-
is left in the blood. This brings
on many diseases and symptoms
pain in the back, headache, nervous-
hot, dry skin, rheumatic
pains gout, gravel, disorders of
the eyesight and hearing,
irregular heart, debility,
drowsiness, dropsy, deposits in the
urine, etc. But if you keep the filters
right you will have no trouble with
your kidneys.
T. R. Moore Evans street, Green-
ville, N. C, can recommend
Kidney Pills, for I have used
them with the greatest benefit. I was
troubled by a lameness in my back
and my kidneys did not do their work
as they should. I got Kidney
Pills from the John L. Wooten Drug
Co. and I had not used them long
before I received relief. I can say
that this remedy acts just as
For sale by all dealers. Price
cents. Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the
take no other.
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH
TRAVEL
The Chesapeake Line
Daily Service Including new Steamers just placed
in Service the of Norfolk of are the
most elegant and up-to-date Norfolk and
more.
Equipped Wireless Telephone in Each Room. Delicious Meals
on for Comfort and Convenience.
Steamers Norfolk
Steamer Old Point
Steamer Arrive AM.
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North Fast and West.
Reservations made and any information furnished by
W. H. PARNELL, Norfolk, Virginia
Training
East Carolina Teachers
School
A state school to train teachers for the public schools of North
Carolina. Every energy is directed to this one purpose. Tuitions
free to all who agree to teach. Fall term begins September 1911.
For and other information, address
Robt. H. Wright, President
Greenville, N. C.
Ideal Dustless Sweeping Compound
Manufactured by
The Ideal Manufacturing Co., Oxford, N. C.
on it. merits, not by running down the goods of other manufacturers.
Every package guaranteed to be ts represented. Ask your dealer for Ideal.
J. S. MOORING
General Merchandise
of Cotton and Country Produce
FIVE POINTS, N, C.
Roofing and Sheet Meta Work
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair
Work, and Flues in Season, See
J. J. JENKINS
Greenville. N. C.
Wholesale Prices Last Year Per
Cent Higher Than
The high cost of living is no myth.
An investigation by the bureau of
labor of prices of commodities
during 1910 shows that wholesale
prices in that year were per cent,
higher than in 1909 and 1.6 per
cent, above the average of 1907,
which was the year of highest
prices since 1890. In view of the
Canadian reciprocity discussion an
interesting item in the bureau re-
port shows that the wholesale price
of farm products was 7.5 per cent,
higher in 1910 than in 1909.
Wholesale prices in 1910 were
19.1 per cent, higher than in 1900;
46.7 per cent, higher than 1897,
which was the year of lowest prices
between 1890 and 1910; 16.6 per
cent, higher than 1890 and 31.6 per
cent, higher than the average price;
between 1890 and 1899.
The highest prices in this decade
were reached in October in 1907,
when a general decline began which
continued until August, 1908. A rise
then set in and there were monthly
increases without a break up to
March, 1910, when wholesale prices
reached the highest point in
They were then 21.1 per
cent, higher than the average of
1900; 49.2 per cent, higher than the
yearly average of 1897 and 33.8 per
higher than the average price
of ten years between 1890 and 1899.
Then followed a slight decline,
and from June to December, 1910,
prices remained nearly level and at
the close of the calendar year 1910
they were still per cent, higher
than the ten-year average between
1890 and 1900 and 45.4 per cent,
higher than the record year by the
low-price year 1897. Of the
commodities considered in the
showed an average in-
crease, showed no change and
showed decreases.
Prices of lumber and building ma-
Increased 10.7 per cent.; farm
products 7.5 per cent.; drugs 4.1 per
foodstuffs 3.2 per cent; cloth-
7.2 per cent., and the
group of commodities 5.7 per
cent. House furnishings decreased
0.1 per cent, and fuel and per
cent.
Some extraordinary variations were
recorded during 1910. Potatoes in-
creased per cent.; eggs per
cent; coffee per cent; mess beef
per cent.
Zoo Anaconda Mother Prevents Him
From Killing.
Forty-eight babies were hatched by
Big Annie, the anaconda in the Bronx
Zoo a few days ago, and each baby
measured three and one-half feet in
length yesterday.
Big Annie is twenty-two feet long
and thirty-six Inches in diameter. As
she turned her tremendous head and
gazed at her family she met the gaze
of the python, which is twenty four
feet in length and the father of the
forty-eight babies. The python was
furious. He shot out his tongue in
anger and across the cage to-
ward the forty-eight babies. Big An-
saw him coming, and she knew
he was bent on murder and a hearty
meal.
As he came close she struck and
the python fell back. Then on he
came again and again. Big Annie
was equal to the attack. The baby
snakes squirmed under their mother
and all about her. The fight was be-
coming more and more furious when
a keeper appeared. He yelled for all
the other keepers in the snake house.
Not a man of them dared enter the
cage. The python was lashing his
tail until the bars of the cage seemed
to bend time it struck them. Big
Annie was too wise to lash. One
blow from her tail would have killed
a dozen or two of her offspring. She
only raised her head and warded off
the attack of her husband and the
children's jealous daddy.
One of the keepers got a prong
through the top of the cage and jam-
med it down over the head of the
python. A second prong fastened his
squirming body a few feet down and
gradually he was made a prisoner.
Then Big Annie with a hiss drew her
slimy self to a further end of the cage
and her forty-eight children followed
her.
While the python was held down a
partition was arranged between him
and his wife and children, and later
he was persuaded into another cage
and locked up.
Big Annie came here from Trinidad
and was present to New York from
R. R. Mole. She is one of the biggest
snakes in York World
Will Remodel Court House
The bid of J. D. Grandy, Charlotte
to remodel and repair the
court house has been accepted and
as soon as the bond for the
performance of the contract is made
the contract will be signed. This
will be only a matter of days, and
Chairman Wilson acting on the in-
formation furnished by the contract-
or has notified all occupants of the
county building to by the
first day of August that work may
begin and the contractor have the
time asked for to complete his job
in seven South-
Unless a man is alive to his op-
he is a dead one.
Rt
Location
PH
Killed By Train.
Mr. S. O. one of our old-
est and best citizens, was killed by
a vegetable train on the A. C. L. rail-
road, which was coming in from Fay-
The occurred near
the Maxton Manufacturing Company's
veneering plant, where Mr.
was employed. Mr. was deaf
and could not hear the train
Just as he stepped on
the track the engine, which it is said
was moving at the rate of about
miles an hour, struck him in the
back and side, throwing him violently
a distance of several yards. He was
taken to the Maxton Hospital, where
he died in a few
Scottish Chief.
State of Ohio, city of Toledo,
Lucas County, I
Frank J. makes oath that he Is
senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Co., doing business in the City of To-
County and State aforesaid, and
that said Arm will pay the sum of ONE
HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured
by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE.
FRANK J.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886.
A. W. GLEASON.
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure 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 Pills for constipation.
Get The Habit
The department store habit is growing
stronger and stronger all the time, and you
need not be surprised, when you realize the
many advantages to be derived from trading
at a store that can supply you with all the
necessities and most of the luxuries of life,
without the needless worry and fatigue of
shopping at one store for Dry Goods, another
store for Notions, and still another for
Groceries, etc.
To See Us
Our many departments are complete in
every respect, and we guarantee you
faction in both quality and price. Now is
the time to get the habit. Make our depart-
store your headquarters for every-
thing you need, and save both time and
Don't hesitate, but come or phone, No.
J. R. J. G.
Department Store
Greenville,
North Carolina
A Whiter South.
The Progressive Farmer rejoices to
find from an analysis of census re-
turns that the rural South is rapidly
growing whiter and that the white
population of the whole South is in-
creasing almost exactly twice as fast
as the population. from
a selfish it comments,
realize that the best interests of
the South demand that the
be made more intelligent,
and prosperous. But at best
this process will be slow; and the
proportion of to whites in the
South has been too large even for the
own In some parts of
the South especially. Too large a pro-
portion of anywhere tends to
make race relations tense, to deprive
the white man of free action and the
of that full measure of
and example which contact with
the white man should afford. Under
such circumstances lawlessness thrives
and all the standards of civic life are
more or less debased.
relations in North Carolina
and Virginia are very much better
than in most of the states farther
South, and primarily for the reason
that are proportionately less
numerous. We recognize that the
South affords the his best op-
but from the larger
standpoint it would be well if his
were spread out much more.
It is his concentration In one section
which has caused all that section's
peculiar troubles, and his special con-
in certain states and
ties has intensified these troubles
Observer.
Happiest Girt in Lincoln.
A Lincoln, Neb., girl writes,
had been ailing for some time with
chronic constipation and stomach
trouble. I began taking Chamber-
Stomach and Liver Tablets
and in three days I was able to be up
and got better right along. I am the
proudest girl In Lincoln to find such
a good For sale by all
dealers.





mm
TIE TO STOP
MISREPRESENTATION
THIS SHOULD BE STOPPED.
Farmer Consolidated Tobacco Com-
Can Take tare of Itself.
WINTERVILLE, N. C, July 1911.
Editor Reflector
I want to Bay a few words about
our tobacco crop and tobacco trade
at homo. What tobacco we have is
looking line, but we will not reach
over per cent, of a crop. While
driving over about forty miles of this
section I have noticed that about one-
half of every tobacco patch is plant-
ed in corn or cotton.
I see men traveling over this county
investigating the tobacco crop. I
suppose you would call them
They, seem to be trying
to tear down their competitor's
to build up their own. They
seem to have their guns pointed at
the Consolidated people. One of these
men said to me, in the world
arc the Consolidated people borrow-
so much money for I am afraid
the old Gum warehouse will soon rot
down,
Why did he not ask do all
the banks of this county borrow
money
I have heard this and several other
misleading remarks over this section.
want to say to this class of men,
that if you have been hired to do this
kind of work you will soon lose your
job and have to move, as others have
done before.
This been called the new to-
belt, but it is getting old
enough to have its eyes open now, and
I think this dickering and back-biting
should be stopped among tobacco
drummers.
Now, one man after another has
quit cultivating tobacco, and one
market after another is going out of
business.
I have sold tobacco with every ware-
house in Greenville and they treated
me with all due respect, and I can
say the same of the buyers. But I
would be glad to see the warehouse-
men and the Tobacco Board of Trade
get together and stamp out this back-
biting business, and get the tobacco
business to a higher standing. Then
the pleasure and profit would be
greater to all concerned.
J.
HOT OR COLD IS THERE
Yes, Avoid the Swill Trough
Opposing Senator bill to
appropriate from the Federal
Treasury toward the cost of a Con-
federate naval monument at
burg, the New York Sun says, in
believe that the
soldiers and sailors have a finer
sense of the fitness of things. The
valor, the endurance, the noble pa-
of Confederate fighting men
were and are beyond praise. Alive
or dead, let them and their memo-
continue to stand far and honor-
ably apart from the crush and
low about the Federal We
too, question the good taste of Mr.
bill, at least pending an-
other generation's life. And we
appreciate the tribute to Con-
federate soldiers which The Sun has
paid. We may well believe that the
demoralizing and debauching effect
of pensions upon Federal soldiers
the G. A. It. becoming essentially a
grab not worth what it
Observer.
Degrees Below Zero In Siberia,
Above Algeria.
Plants and animals cannot exist
in temperatures far -higher or lower
than those to which they have be-
come accustomed, while man moves
from one extreme to the other with,
for the most part, but little
cal discomfort. Explorers will visit
the sands of Africa and the bleakness
of the Arctic Circle and return to
normal environments even improved
in physical condition.
Man inhabits about every part of
the earth except a few island regions
in the interior of continents and
immediate vicinity of the poles. It
is from dread of climatic conditions
that his tent has found no more than
a temporary resting place in some
of these far distant spots. It is not
thought that the heat or cold of any
of the unexplored regions of the
globe has a greater range of temper-
than many regions now
Science reasons that the
temperature at the earth's surface
are not found directly at the poles
but at some distance to the south of
the North Pole and to the north of
the South Pole. Likewise the great-
est degree of heat is not, as might
be supposed, to be found at the
tor, but prevails at some distance
to the north and to the south of that
imaginary line.
The coldest place on the earth's
surface of which there is authentic
record is in Siberia. The lowest
ever recorded in the open
air was degrees below zero
at central Si-
on January 1885.
The highest temperature of which
there is an authenticated record is
degrees above zero in
Algeria, northern Africa, on July
1879. These places of extreme heat
and extreme cold give a range of
temperature covering the whole in-
habitable world of degrees, or
two degrees more than from zero to
the boil-point.
In the United States the lowest
temperature ever recorded in winter
is degrees below zero in North
Dakota, and the highest ever record-
ed in summer is degrees above
zero in Arizona. This gives a total
range of degrees within about
miles.
There is an unauthenticated report
from an outpost of the Al-
bad lands, which gives a
record in the air of
degrees above zero
This if correct exceeds by degrees
that of the highest on record. It is
also stated that the temperature at
this place rarely gets down to
degrees. On one or two occasions it
dropped to degrees and the
shivered with the cold. Strange
as it may seem, the death rate of
French soldiers stationed at this post
is lower than that at more northern-
places having equable tempera-
People who inhabit these places of
extreme heat and cold are found to
be exceptionally healthy and live to
a ripe old age.
While men in all parts of the world
make their homes in these
hot or cold places and move
from one to the other without any
apparent physical discomfort, it is
found that animals or plants which
would flourish in one could not
vive in the other.
In the United States the extreme
range of heat and cold is not so
GALLOWAY'S ROADS.
The News and Happenings of That
Neighborhood.
GRIMESLAND, N. Mason
Edwards, the clever salesman of H.
J. Stokes Son, left on the Norfolk
Southern excursion train Monday
morning. He is laughing in Norfolk
today.
Mr. H. L. Cannon, who has been
employed by Porter Galloway, left
for Norfolk this morning. After spend-
a few weeks in Norfolk he will
go to Washington City, where he ex-
to accept a position. We hate
to lose him. He has our best wishes
that he may be successful in his new
work.
Mr. Charlie Elks left for Norfolk
this morning.
Mrs. Jessie Cherry and daughter,
Miss Martha, were visiting Mrs. J.
F. Buck Sunday.
Several of our people attended the
meeting at Bear Creek Sunday.
They report that a big meeting is
being conducted by the Holiness
Mr. H. H. Porter and wife spent
Saturday night and Sunday at the
home of Mr. C. T.
Messrs L. R. and Ben Buck went
to New Bern Thursday.
Mr. G. S. Porter went to Greenville
today.
are glad to hear that Mrs. J. W.
Buck, who has been critically ill for
several weeks, is improving.
Mr. W. A. Buck has been very ill,
but we are pleased to know that he is
better.
We are glad to know that Mr. J.
C. Galloway, who was very painfully
hurt last week, is improving very
fast.
Our village is still growing. The
hammer is frequently
heard.
Saskatchewan Premier Visited North.
Hon. Walter Scott,
premier of Saskatchewan, who came
over for the coronation, returned to
London today after a trip to Spitz-
bergen and the far North.
great but one may live in
comfort in any section; yet the
same conditions apply to animals and
plant life as prevail throughout the
rest of the world; animals and plans
that survive the winters of the south
could not endure the winters of the
north.
The greatest of the extremes of
heat and cold in this country are
found in the Western States, from
the Dakotas and Montana southward
to Texas and Arizona. The temper-
in the Northwest during the
winter frequently drops to
or degrees below zero and
runs below degrees,
while the heat of summer in the
West and Southwest touches
degrees or higher. Regardless of
such extremes the climatic conditions
throughout the entire Rocky
range are delightful for ten
months of the year.
The most equable temperature
throughout the year in the United
States is found along the
Nearly two-thirds of the entire pop-
lives in seacoast cities.
may complain of a few
and cold days in winter and
of a few sweltering hot and humid
days in summer, but with all things
considered the Atlantic seacoast from
Florida to Maine is about as
able a place of residence as any part
of the York Sun.
SAKES SWALLOW COW'S HORN'S.
The Carolina Home and The Eastern Reflector.
Both Die Thus Impaled Are
Taken Home by The Cow.
If you could have seen the bulge
of Sheriff eyes when one of
his cows came home with a large
black snake dangling from each
horn, you would have seen almost as
great a sight as that of the snakes.
The sheriff runs a large dairy
has a number of cows. One of them
is an old cow with extra long,
horns and this was the cow
brought in the snakes, which had
attempted to swallow
horns, making a partial success,
though still a fatal failure.
An after thought presented a
solution. That was about the
That morning this cow
had gored an old rooster that persist-
ed in eating with her. That left the
smell of chicken on her horns. Some
black snakes are extra fond of chick-
en. Therefore, finding the smell of
in the air, the snakes pro-
to investigate, tracing it to
the cow, which must have been lying
down asleep, when they mistook her
horns for something akin to chicken
and proceeded with the swallowing
act. Each snake took a separate
horn. When the swallowing act had
been so far completed that the snakes
mouths reached the cow's head, there
was a halt and owing to the formation
of mouths, especially for the
swallowing act, there was no escape
for the snakes but to stay there and
die. There must have been
squirming and a scared cow,
though she was apparently
of her unusual adornment
when she reached home that evening.
They had to be cut off the cow's horns.
The snakes were evidently mates
and in death they were nigh to-
IS.
STRAY TAKEN 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 pay-
charges. Marion Tripp, Green-
ville, N. C, R. F. D. No.
7-8
SEE PULLEY BOWEN FOR
men's shirts. Special values at
and II.
Nice Melons.
Mr. W. H. Allen had a wagon load
of nice melons on the market today.
He remembered the office with a very
good one.
Again we tip to Mr. Allen.
Next.
ALL TAILOR MADE SUITS
greatly reduced. suits now
suits now out.
Other priced suits in proportion.
Pulley Bowen.
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED TWO
cars of machinery, consisting of
everything needed on a farm. Terms
to suit purchaser. E. Turnage Sons,
Ayden.
Never bring the family skeleton out
of its closet for an airing when
strangers are present.
PAIRS SNOW'S SHOES FOR
men, in all leathers, being closed
out at Pulley Bowen.
Boxing Legalized.
ALBANY, N. has been
legalized by Governor Dix and is to
be regulated by a commission.
NEBRASKA POLITICAL
BRYAN NOT IN STATE FIGHT.
Republicans Badly
Supporters Busy Against Taft.
. LINCOLN, accordance
f. h the state primary law which re-
t that all of the political parties
hold their conventions on the
same day, the Republicans
bled in state convention here today
while the Democrats and Populists
met at Fremont. All candidates are
selected in primaries, so that all that
is left for the convention to do is
build platforms and select the state
campaign officers.
The conventions, nevertheless, are
attracting the attention of politicians
the country over. They are the first
state conventions of the year to be
held anywhere in the North or West.
Furthermore, they are held in a state
which has furnished some of the most
conspicuous leaders of the
movement in the Republican party
and at the same time still interests
the Democrats as the home state of
William J. Bryan.
Unless all signs go astray the Re-
publican convention in this city will
furnish more interesting develop-
than the gathering at Fremont.
The Republicans are badly split. The
and fought
and the Progressive Re-
publican was the outgrowth.
Then the latter party split and the
Nebraskan Progressive
Republican resulted, the lat-
consisting of those insurgents who
have returned to the support of
dent Taft, while the Pro-
are still fighting the ad-
ministration.
La emissaries have been
busily at work in Nebraska for some
time and have succeeded in working
up considerable sentiment favoring
the Wisconsin senator for the
nomination. If the La Fol-
supporters succeed in prevent-
the convention from
President Taft they will be satisfied.
If the president is endorsed they
will probably lose little time in or-
a La league and
beginning the fight in earnest.
Victor Rosewater, the Omaha ed-
is leading the fight for Taft,
while Governor Aldrich is an avowed
supporter of La A success-
or to United States Senator Norris
Brown is to be chosen before long
and this tends to still further com-
the situation in the
can party. Congressman Norris, one
of the foremost leaders
in congress, is an aspirant for the
and his friends will not
stand for any action on the part of
the convention that might militate
against his interests.
As Governor Aldrich has been
by Victor Rosewater with
a view to bringing out the governor
as a candidate for senator, the Aid-
rich and Rosewater interests are to
some extent in sympathy. At the
same time, however, Rosewater is an
ardent supporter of Taft, while Aid-
rich leans toward La Sen-
Brown, no longer of
Rosewater, is supporting Taft, thus
opposing Aldrich, whose support he
would like in the fight.
While the Republicans are thus
badly mixed up the Democrats, on
the other hand, appear to be working
in more perfect harmony than for a
number of years past. For the first
time in more than a decade they are
approaching a campaign with a
thorough organization behind them.
Mr. Bryan seems to have been
or to have eliminated himself,
from Nebraska politics. He has re-
from making any comment or
expressing any views on the local
situation. Whether or not he will
support the candidates selected by
the party is a question, but it is
that he has not endeavored in
any way to influence the choice of
candidates or the construction of the
platform.
Favors Direct Tax Roads.
FOUNTAIN, N. C. July 1911.
Editor
I saw in your paper of the 7th
where one Major
writing on good roads. He gave it
as his opinion that we could build
the roads cheaper by bondage than we
could by direct taxation, but I don't
think so. He says that his county
has paid out in three years,
which he says is an average of
315.18 per year, while he says if his
county would issue bonds to the
amount of that the interest
would be per year, which he
says would be less per year
than they are now paying. Well,
that much is all so, but I think if
he would consider rightly he would
be bound to say that it is cheaper to
work them by direct taxes. Because
when they are worked that way the
debt would be paid, when if they
bond their county to the amount of
they will have to pay that
as long as those bonds stand
which would cost twice as much as
it would to work them by taxation,
provided they were paid in due time.
It is the same way to the people of
our county. If we were to bond our
county to the amount of it
would cost the people of the county
each year to pay the interest
and if we have to be taxed to work
the roads had rather do it by a
tax. Then we will have no bonds
to be taxed to death under to the
ruination of our county. And, further-
more, if we work them by a direct
tax then the money will stay among
us instead of sending it away.
G. M. SMITH.
MAN NEVER WORE CLOTHES
A North Carolina Story AH The Way
From Atlanta.
comes to At-
via the North Georgia
of a strange man named John
who has grown to be
years old, hale, hearty and happy
without ever wearing a stitch of
clothing and without ever using a
single word but the
Says a traveler from Young Harris,
describing the
lives four miles east of Wind-
in Bertie county, N. C, and his
is perfect, not having missed a
meal in fifty years. When I visited
him he was entirely nude. He is the
strongest man ever saw. His body
is normal and well shaped, but his
strength is prodigious. He can break
a double plow-line as easily as if it
were a cotton cord. He is gentle and
has never been known to hurt a
soul intentionally. He cannot
speak a word except the one
which he uses, in varied
intonations to express his de-
sires and
When a man begins to sympathize
with himself it's a sign he has out-
lived his usefulness.
SIMPSON ITEMS.
Local Happenings of That Busy
SIMPSON, N. Julius
Strickland, of Wilson, came in Sat-
to visit her Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. Boyd.
Miss Elmo Tucker is spending the
week in Greenville with Miss Rena
Smith.
Miss Lula of Scotland
Neck, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
Jessie Clark.
Miss Alma Tucker, of Greenville
spent the week with Miss Daisy
Tucker.
Mrs. Robert Bright of Charleston.
S. C, has been visiting Mrs. Harvey
Elks.
Quite a number of our people board-
ed the train Sunday morning for
City.
Misses Lela and Delia Bryan and
Master Durward Tucker went to
Grimesland Sunday.
There is a very interesting Spanish
poodle seen around Simpson these
days.
Messrs. C. O. Elks, Mason Edwards
and Harvey Cannon left for Norfolk
this morning.
TRIAL MARRIAGE I GERMANY
Ancient Custom of Making a
Fair Still Exists Some.
An ancient custom of holding a May
fair for selecting brides and bride-
grooms on trial still exists some
villages of the district in Ger.
many.
On the day of the fair the young
men and women who have been
stand in groups on adjacent
locks, their names being inscribed on
a roll in the possession of the fair
officials, who sit around a table be-
tween the groups. The ages of the
young men are stated on the roll, but
not those of the girls.
Males are then called forward by
name in the order of their age, the
oldest coming and one of the
girls is called to meet him; if neither
objects the young woman is presented
with a wedding ring and the couple
are declared duly wedded for a year
on approval.
At the end of the year they may
separate and each is free to marry
again; or, if they are not quite sure
whether they will be happy, can
arrange to separate for a day of
before the next fair and then be wed-
again for another year. If a
couple remain together over the year
the marriage becomes binding for life,
or if any family is born the union is
also valid for life.
If a maiden refuses the first man
she is supposed to marry the next of-
to her. But this rule is not rig-
idly enforced now, though formerly
the names of candidates were taken
haphazard by the head man of the
community, who did not put up with
nonsense about maidenly coyness.
Nowadays it is generally arranged
beforehand to call together only those
couples who have been courting. The
system has worked good results
for centuries and will probably last
some while yet, until the farming dis-
become crowded with factories
and towns.
Is Tough On Him, Sure.
Just when Jack Johnson is having
the time of his life in London with
everything heart could wish for, so
far as it is in the power of England
to provide it, Texas send words that
it is harvesting red and
juicy watermelons.
BAY HEX LIGHTS HIS PIPE.
New Trick Accredited to the West-
Chester Leghorn.
Philadelphia, White Leg-
horn lien owned by John of
which was
said recently to have helped him
build a chicken coop by holding the
nails in its beak after he had smash-
ed his finger, is alleged now to have
learned a new trick.
It is said that when gets
home after his day's work and sits
in his easy chair on the porch the
hen goes into the house, gets his
bag of tobacco and pipe and brings
them to him. Then when has
filled his pipe, it is added, he puts a
match in the hen's beak and she
scratches it across the floor, and then
he lights his pipe.
declares he expects to teach
the hen next to put out the match.
Do Or Don't Do
Drink water and get typhoid fever.
Drink milk and get tuberculosis. Drink
whiskey and get Drink
soup and get fat. Eat meat and en-
courage cancer, apoplexy and
Eat oysters and absorb
typhoid gastric poison germs. Eat
vegetables and give the system
tic thin-blooded weakness. Eat dessert
and die with paresis or something else
Smoke cigarettes and die too soon.
Drink coffee and fall into insomnia
and nervous prostration. Drink tea
and get weak heart. Drink wine and
so drink gout. Blame it all, if you
want to keep well quit eating and
drinking, smoking and loving and be-
fore breathing or touching anything
see that the air and everything is per-
Women Cotton.
It is reported that Mr. Smith, Pres-
of the American Cotton Man-
Association said in a re-
cent speech
present stagnate condition
of the cotton mill business, how-
ever, is not only a question of over
production and the results of high
priced cotton, but we are also con-
fronted with an underconsumption of
cotton fabrics, and when
women in the United States stop wear-
petticoats, and use only five yards
of cloth to make a shirt instead of
to yards, with which no sleeves
are worn, and they use no braid or
trimmings on their skirts then the
braid mills suffer, the yarn mills
fer and the cloth mill suffer, and it
is to be devoutly hoped that the
fashion pendulum will swing in the
other direction, and that a larger de-
will be made by the women for
the production of the Southern
Lillian kidnapped.
NEW Graham, one
of the show girls held for shooting
W. E. D. Stokes, is in seclusion in a
sister's flat in Harlem. She says she
was kidnapped. She was found Sun-
day in Poughkeepsie,
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A torpid liver deranges the whole
system, and produces
SICK HEADACHE,
Dyspepsia, Costiveness,
Sallow Skin and Piles.
There Is no better remedy for these
common diseases than DR.
LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.





H.
The Carolina Hone and Fin and The Eastern Reflector.
Tit Home Pan and
U.
OUR WEEKLY LETTER
FROM WASHINGTON
EASY MONEY FOR STEEL TRUST.
Why They Are Trying to Dr.
Wiley.
Clyde H.
remarkable
of facts which have come to light
within the last twenty-four hours in-
that packers of embalmed beef
are the influences that have been
principally behind the plot to have
Dr. Wiley ousted from public service.
Manufacturers of embalmed beef
are at present, by virtue of an order
issued by the department of
permitted to use of
soda in whatever quantities they may
desire. Dr. Wiley not only opposed
the issuance of this order, maintain-
that the preservative is decided-
harmful in its effects upon the
man system, but has worked
to educate the people to the
danger lurking in packed meats in
which is used. The result
is that several states have passed
legislation absolutely forbidding the
use of the drug in any quantity what-
ever. Therefore, Dr. Wiley has be-
come a standing menace to the em-
beef industry. man
Wiley has got to was the edict
that went out from the embalmed
meat manufacturers.
When Dr. Wiley held that
of soda was harmful to the human
system, the packers appealed to the
referee board, especially
packed with friends of the food
dopers, which board very promptly
and reversed Dr. Wiley. The
board held that of soda in
small quantities, as five-
tenths of one gram per day, was not
injurious to healthy personal But
when the order was Issued legalizing
the use of no limitation
whatever was made as to the amount
of the drug the packers might use.
Remarkable circumstances attend-
ed the issuing of the order letting
down the bars to the food dopers.
The order was issued on March
1909, and was placed in circulation
March the day President Taft went
into office. It was signed by George
B. Oscar S. and
James Wilson, three cabinet officers,
as required by law. Of the three
men, two were to retire from office
the next day and actually retired be-
fore the scope of their order became
known.
This order giving government
to the use of the product of
acid meat that we were going
back years, for or its
products had not been used in the
preservation of flesh since the
stopped embalming their dead.
Chemist Floyd W. Roberson, one of
Dr. Wiley's prominent assistants, re-
appeared as a witness against
in an action brought by the
state of Indiana to prevent the sale
of foods containing and be-
fore Dr. Wiley had a chance to in-
Robinson's dismissal the
good of the followed.
Find the influence that was power-
enough to have the three cab-
officers issue the order
the doping of foods, Dr.
Wiley's and you will learn
the identity of the men who have
ever since been plotting to have Dr.
Wiley ousted.
Against Wiley.
Since Taft has been in the White
House he has invariably opposed Dr.
Wiley instead of having co-operation
with him in the interests of pure
food.
In his decision against Dr. Wiley,
in the interests of adulterated
key, the president reversed the find-
of ex-President Roosevelt, form-
Attorney General Bonaparte, Chief
Government Chemist Dr. H. W. Wiley,
Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, the
board, the United States
Pharmacopoeia, the internal revenue
bureau of the treasury, the standards
adopted by twenty-six states fifteen
of the United States courts, and
dent Taft's father, the former attorney
general of the United States.
Incriminating Evidence Disappears.
Following the mysterious
of the to letter
from the files of the interior depart-
comes the discovery that a full
set of Controller Bay maps have been
disappeared from the files of the
war department.
The maps in question were seen
not only by M. F. Abbott, but by Del-
of Alaska, Gil-
ford and by Secretary of War,
Henry L. Stimson. Yet Major J. B.
Cavanaugh, of the war department,
testified before the Graham commit-
tee that the maps are not in the files
now.
It is believed by members of the
committee that the Ryan
tors as soon as the present exposure
was threatened took means to have
moved from the government files all
Incriminating evidence.
The files have been tampered
This is obvious, and in fact,
only conclusion this committee
can reach in the face of the evidence
said Chairman Graham.
seem that the files are not to
be relied upon to give us the
Altering records is a serious offense
and this committee will go to the bot-
tom of
Doctor Wiley's Offense.
Doctor Wiley took one-third of the
time of a first-class man instead of
all the time of a third-class man.
That is the actual for
which the great friend of the people
is being harried by the Taft
The Same Old Cradle Howl.
That reduction of sugar duties
would ruin the domestic production
of sugar cane and that free sugar
would annihilate both the cane and
beet sugar industries the
is the cry from that lusty lunged in-
sugar trust.
In the name of the small growers
and producers the trust is whining
and pulling for a high pro-
With protection the small,
independent interest has the happy
prospect of being absorbed,
lated, wiped out, as soon as the tariff
succored infant is ready to smite its
go-between.
Easy Money For The Steel Trust
That the United States Steel
force independent concerns
to pay exorbitant prices for hauling
ore over its roads is a point that the
steel trust committee of inquiry will
investigate. The committee is inform-
ed that the trust roads charge enough
for hauling one load of ore for an
independent company to pay for
transporting two loads of its own.
The Greenville Banking
Trust Company
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Condensed Statement, June 7th
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts .
Overdrafts . 2,251.2
Stocks and bonds.
Furniture and fixture .-. 4,115.80
Cash and due from banns. 3-1,333.03
LIABILITIES.
Capital .
Profits .
. None
Bills payable . None
Deposits . 145,055.75
R. President C. S. Cashier
A. J. MOORE, Asst. Cashier.
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 Goldsboro,
Asheville and Waynesville, via
Raleigh, Greensboro, Salisbury.
Other convenient car
arrangements.
Summer Tourist Tickets
Sale
SEPTEMBER
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
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.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
State Norma and
Industrial College
Maintained by the State for the
en of North Carolina. Five regular
leading to Degrees. Special
Courses for teachers. Free tuition
to those agree to become teach-
in the State. Fall Session be-
gins September 1911. For cat-
and other information address
JULIUS I. FOUST, Pres.
Greensboro,. C.
SCHEDULE
leave Raleigh Jan-
S,
YEAR ROUND
a. Atlanta, Birmingham
Memphis and points West,
ville and Florida points,
at Hamlet for Charlotte and
Wilmington.
THE SEABOARD MAIL No.
a.
with coaches and parlor car. Con-
with for Washing-
ton, Baltimore, Now York. Boston
and Providence.
THE FLORIDA FAST
a. Richmond, Wash-
and New York Pullman
day coaches and dining car.
Connects at Richmond with C.
at Washington with Pennsylvania
railroad and B. O. for
and points west.
THE
p. Atlanta, Charlotte,
Wilmington, Birmingham, Memphis,
and points West. Parlor cars to
Hamlet.
p. m. No. for
Henderson, Oxford, and
Norlina.
p. m., No. for
O. for Cincinnati and points
Memphis, and points West, Jack-
. and all Florida points.
Pullman sleepers. Arrive Atlanta
a. m.
Arrives Richmond a. m.
Washington a. m., New York
p. m., Penn. station. Pullman
service to Washington and New
York.
C B. G. P. A., Portsmouth, Ya.
D. D. P. A., N. C.
There are times when a silent
witness is an unspeakable nuisance.
PAIRS LOW SHOES,
regular price, and
Ultras and Todd's, regular price
and now offered to close out
at and 1-2,
1-2, and 1-2. No goods charged
at these special Pulley
Bowen.
Manufacturing Criminals.
Judge O. H. Allen made some re-
marks to the grand Jury at he re-
cent session of Durham superior court
which are big with significance.
of the most fruitful sources of
declared his honor, neg-
childhood. A mistake that we
are making is in allowing the
of the community to develop
into criminals because we neglect
them and turn our attention too much
to the punishment of crime that is
already committed. There is hardly
a term of court held anywhere that
there are not a number of children
up for committing some crime. A
little investigation discloses the fact
that these children become criminals
because of neglect. I want you at
this term of court to determine if
there are any orphans or neglected
children in the county. If you should
find such neglected children it is
your duty to report the matter to
the clerk of court and homes will be
found for
Scientific criminology has long ago
decided that the reformation of
to obtain the best result,
must begin early. There will scarce-
be dissent from Judge Allen's
diagnosis as to the principal source
of supply. The rearing of upright
men and women is a matter which
requires the most painstaking
and care, and if these be lack-
through the death of
parents or their is the
easiest and most natural thing in the
world for the neglected boys and
girls to drift into unsavory environ-
From these they get an en-
twisted outlook upon life and
its relationships. It is this outlook
that makes them criminals and its
correction is an absolutely necessary
prerequisite to any permanent re-
form. Every year that passes over
the head of the unfortunate youth
serves to fix the erroneous notions
in his brain and to make them
harder of eradication.
The various orphanages scattered
over the state testify to the fact that
we have not been entirely unmindful
of these things, but Judge Allen's
experience that there is scarcely a
court docket without its child defend-
ants shows how much yet remains
to be done. The training schools
which the state being
and in stop the leak
a little further down the steam. But
the grand juries, if information were
furnished them, could strike at the
very origin of the matter, and in this
we think consists the enormous
of Judge Allen's
If North Carolina can devise
ways and means to empty her penal
institutions within the next genera-
by the proper training of those
who would have occupied them the
resulting gain to the Commonwealth
will be beyond the power of any
mathematician to compute. Char-
Observer.
to
best remedy for
Sciatica, Lame Back,
Joints and Muscles,
Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, Bruises,
Colic, Cramps,
Toothache, and all Nerve,
Bone and Muscle Aches
and P a n a. Tho genuine
has Noah's Ark on every
package and looks this
cut, but has BED band on
front of package and
always
In BED ink. Beware
imitations. Large bottle,
cents, and Bold by all
dealers in
Guaranteed or money re-
funded by Noah
Co., lac, Richmond,
Two Ways to Increase Dairy Products
Why are our dairymen not making
more profit out of their business
While few dairymen lose money, it
must be admitted that the majority
are not making the profits which the
business should be made to yield. It
seems to us that the reasons for this
condition of affairs are not difficult
to find. Two of these reasons stand
out more prominently than the
First, they are not up-to-date dairy
men. They are not employing the
dairy knowledge which is well es-
and easy to acquire by
those who seek it. They are not keep-
the records necessary to enable
them to know and dispose of the
profitable cows; they are not building
and using silos, and they are not
putting on the market a high class
product.
There is no longer any good excuse
for this failure to avail one's self of
this dairy information necessary to
insure success in these lines. Any
dairyman in the South can have the
competent assistance of trained men
to help him learn his business and
conduct it on modern and profitable
lines. Both National and State gov-
keep trained experts for
this purpose, the services of whom
may be had by any earnest dairy-
man at practically no direct cost.
The second reason why our dairy-
men fail to obtain adequate profits
is that they buy too much high-priced
feed, or if they produce feed, do it at
too high cost. By giving sufficient in-
attention to the production
of feeds and by a study of feeding
problems, the coat of production might
be greatly reduced. Our markets are
good, but our cost of production
together too high, considering the op-
which we possess. Better,
cows, more intelligently fed, and more
feed produced at less cost,
are the keys to better profits for the
average Southern dairyman. Natural
conditions are favorable and all that
is needed in the application of dairy
knowledge and good business
Progressive Farmer.
Legal 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 house door
in said county, sell to the highest
bidder for cash, to satisfy said ex-
all the right title and
which the said 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 Whitefield, 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
This the day of July 1911.
S. I. DUDLEY,
Sheriff of Pitt county
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
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. ML MOORE,
Ex-officio Entry Taker.
Twenty-five Cents.
Pays for the Carolina Democrat to
January 1912,. This remarkably
special offer is made to introduce the
new Democratic periodical to the
Democrats of the state. It is a strong
party paper, run on broad Democrat-
lines, and appeals to good citizen-
ship journal of real
Democracy and good
issued twice a month. It has the
endorsement of leading Democrats
everywhere, and its articles attract
great attention everywhere. It fights
the battles of the party with
and discretion, and appeals to
the best in our citizenship. When in
the hands of our people, it will be a
lasting tower of strength to Dem-
supremacy. Edited by Mr. R.
F. manager of the Dem-
press bureau in the campaign
of 1910. Send for special offer
till January, 1912. Agents wanted.
Address the Carolina Democrat.
Monroe, 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 close on the first appearance
of the disease. For sale by all deal-
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having this day been appointed and
qualified by the clerk of the Superior
court of Pitt county, as
tor, with the will annexed, of Flor-
E. Home, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all persons holding
claims against the estate of said
Florence E. Home to present them,
duly authenticated, to me for pay-
on or before the 2nd day of
June, 1912, or this notice will be plead
in bar of their recovery. All per-
sons indebted to said estate are also
hereby notified to make immediate
payment to me.
This the 31st day of May, 1911.
E. A.
Administrator, with the will annexed,
of Florence E. Home, deceased.
Jarvis Blow,
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has qualified as
c. t. a. of the estate of J. K.
Gowan, deceased. Persons owing said
estate will please make prompt set-
and those to whom, said es-
is indebted will present their
claims within twelve months of the
date of this notice, or the same will
be pleaded in bar of their recovery.
July 1911.
J. M.
c. t. a., J. K. de-
ceased.
W. F. Evans, Atty.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Having qualified as administrator
of deceased, late
of Pitt county, N. C, this is to notify
all persons having claims against the
estate of said deceased to present
them to the undersigned within
months from this date, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their re-
All persons indebted to said
estate will please make immediate
payment.
This July 1911.
J. J. MOORE,
Administrator.
F. G. James Son, Attorneys.
22-ltd
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 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
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk as
tor of the estate of Mrs. Margaret J.
Moore, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons having claims
against said deceased, to present
the same, duly authenticated, on or
before the day of June, 1912, or
this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. All persons indebted
to said estate will make immediate
payment.
This June 17th, 1911.
C. G. LITTLE. Administrator,
of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION.
Notice is hereby given that the firm
of and White has this day
dissolved co-partnership by mutual
consent, Samuel T. White buying the
interest of G. G. in said
piano and organ business. The
will be continued by Sam White
Piano Company. All persons owing
the firm of and White will
pay the Sam White Piano Company.
All accounts due by said firm should
be presented at once to Sam White
Piano Company for payment.
G. G.
T. WHITE.
ltd
EQUALIZATION NOTICE.
All delinquents who have not listed
their taxes for the year of 1911 will
please come forward on the 24th day
of July and list the same. All per-
sons having other grievances on ac-
count of valuation and assessments
will please appear before the board
of equalization on date as above
for the purpose set forth.
W. M. MOORE, Clerk.
J. J. HARRINGTON, D. C.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
Superior court clerk of Pitt county
as administratrix of the estate of W.
W. Perkins, deceased, notice is here-
by given to all persons indebted to
the estate to make immediate pay-
to the undersigned; and all
persons having claims against said
estate are notified to present the
same to the undersigned for payment
on or before the 19th day of July,
1912, or this notice will be plead in
bar of recovery.
This 19th day of July, 1911.
VIRGINIA H. PERKINS,
of W. W. Perkins.





The Carolina Home and and The Eastern Reflector.
HOW SEVEN SPRINGS
HI X AWAY BOY LOCATED THERE
Ho Finds That The Waters Were
Health Giving.
HANRAHAN, N. COne afternoon
about two weeks after Eugene's first
night's experience on the bosom of
the Neuse, the writer was out looking
for the cows. Cows roved the woods
in those days, and it took four to give
one gallon instead of one giving five
gallons as now. I was about two
miles from home and at an old Prim-
Baptist church, Pleasant Plains,
but it was a misnomer to some ex-
tent, for some things that had hap-
in this old building in former
years were not very pleasant in church
circles. It was here that the
split and part of the members
declared themselves missionary in
spirit. So they left and went with
that body of ever progressive Chris-
workers, the Missionary
The remaining few were left
to believe that whatever is to be will
be, any how. The feeling was any-
thing but pleasant for some time. I
only mention this in passing to say
that the old church is now entirely
abandoned, but on the steps of this
old building I sat me down to rest
and to listen for the tingle of the
cow bell. I had been there but a
short while, when I heard a voice
softly calling to me from the corner
of the house, the off side from the
road. I went quickly around there,
because I thought the voice had
something of a sound that had been
familiar to me. On reaching the
corner I heard Eugene say from a
clump of bushes nearby, here,
it is I, it is Then my heart
leaped for joy, out I was wonder
struck, for I could not imagine how
he came there. I had heard that he
had run away from his master and
knew that they were looking for
him, but except this, I knew nothing
of his whereabouts. back into
the he said as I approached
him. on earth is the matter
with he said, you look so
from what you I, too.
was I said, too, look
so different from the way you did
when you he said,
I feel so much better than I did when
I came Then he told me of
his escape and his long and lonely
trip down the river, and how as he
floated down one afternoon and sow
those hills and beautiful moss cover-
ed oaks, he moored his boat to a bush
near the south bank and climbed out
and had scrambled through the thick
under growth that hedged them in on
every side. He saw some springs
and being thirsty he drank freely,
then he examined and found that
there were seven of these in a space
not more than feet square. He
found, too, that each of these had
different taste. He said that I was
the only human that he had seen since
his escape except Uncle an old
colored man that helped to bury his
father. Said he knew that he would
not betray him and that I would not.
He said when he drank of that water
and felt so much better that he had
determined to stay in hiding around
there until he was entirely well.
must say in passing that he could
have found no better hiding place at
that time, for there was no trace of
a path that led to the springs and
the hills that surrounded them were
covered with a dense coat of myrtle
bushes and stately oaks. He said he
had slept each night in this old
church and at light each morning
he would wind his way back to drink
from these springs.
For fear that it may sadden some
correspondent's heart, or at least
give him much concern to know how
Eugene obtained his food during the
four weeks that he was lying in am-
bush and drinking of this life-giving
waters, I would say to such a one
that a raven in the form of Uncle
gave him some sweet potatoes
land with his cross-bow he secured
his meat. And for the benefit of the
same one, would say that miles
in those days was a greater
than is miles now. And the
man that Eugene was bound to was
rich in this world's goods for those
days and Eugene told me that he
spoke very kindly to him and treated
him very nicely that day at the court
house, and he was anxious to go
with him. Eugene thanked my par-
so much for their kindness to
him, but said he knew they could
not care for all the orphans In the
community just after the war. Fur-
I would say to that same
correspondent, that a more truthful
epitaph was never placed on any mans
tomb than is inscribed on my father's
head stone. These are the words
that are on his I was
an hungered and yet gave me
Matt. first clause of 35th verse.
Now, back to my subject. We had
but a short while to talk at this meet-
because the shade of night was
falling fast and at this point I heard
the tinkling of a distant cow bell.
So I must needs drive them home,
and Eugene must get to his hiding,
for well up the road that runs near
the old church we saw a man on
horse back. We agreed to meet again
at a different point two days from
then at an earlier hour. Then he
promised to lead me to the springs
that had done so much for him
the weeks that he had been
drinking from the. He said he was
sure those waters would restore me
to health, as they had about made him
well.
We parted for this time, and I did
so long for the time to come when
we should meet again, when he should
guide me to that which would re-
store my strength and make me feel
once more that life was worth living.
Please don't ask why we did not set
the next day to meet, I being so
anxious to gain my health. Do you
ask my trouble I answer, no one could
then tell, but now we know, it was
hook worm.
Another Germ Discovered
Dr. Smith of claims that
he has discovered that cancer is germ
disease. Being a germ disease it will
be only a matter of time till an anti-
toxin for its prevention and cure will
be discovered. Already the toxin for
typhoid fever is being successfully
used. By its use, soldiers along
the Mexican border have been kept
free from a single case of fever.
Dr. Hyatt Coming.
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be at Hotel
Bertha August 7th and 8th, Monday
and Tuesday, to treat diseases of
the eye, ear, nose and throat.
or will cure any
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,
Experience is like spending money
nothing comes back to you from
it.
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
We b r and you will get the est. We have
what you want. We will be glad to see you
any time.
Hart Hadley
Greenville, N. C.
YES
THOROUGH BRED
TOBACCO
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy.
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to-
taste. No spice to make your tongue
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco, with
all the improvements up-to-date. CHEW
IT AND PROVE IT at our expense, the
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail to
us with your name and address for attractive
FREE offer to chewers only. W
SCALES CO.,
N. C.
Name
Red-
Post Office.
Subscribe to The Reflector.
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of
Volume
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1911.
Number
NECESSITY OF ORGANIC
MATTER IN THE SOIL
IMPORTANT TO THE FARMERS.
NORTH CAROLINA VETERANS
Too Much Cultivable Lands
To Waste Through Neglect
There are two things absolutely es-
to successful farming in North
Carolina. One is deep plowing, and
the other is the incorporation in the
soil of humus or organic matter
from decaying vegetation.
We have heard a great deal about
deep plowing, and, on soils which
have stiff, heavy sub-soils, deep
plowing, and in some cases, even sub-
soiling, is entirely necessary. But
have heard all too little about
the organic matter content of our
soils. Indeed, some wag might say,
there is not enough organic matter
in most of our soils to about
anyway, but that is just why we
should begin to talk. Good plowing
and a liberal amount vegetable
or organic matter in our soils
constitute the two oars by which the
agricultural boat must be driven in
North Carolina. We have
done most of our pulling on the
plowing oar and as a result our boat
has inclined to go in a circle with
the result that the people or the
state are shipping in tens of mil-
lions of dollars worth of food sup-
plies every year when- they should
be selling more than they buy.
We are giving out no information
when we say that nine-tenths of our
soils are poor and unproductive.
These poor soils are and
read of all When we see a
boy nowadays with a thin, pale,
face, we are pretty apt to
say he has the hookworm, by which
we mean he has little red blood in
bis veins, low vitality, waning
strength, and little ambition. His
life forces are becoming weaker, he
is unable to do much, we Bay, and
his ability to do is becoming less
and less every day and will finally
be reduced to zero unless he is given
a treatment. Keep this in mind and
go twenty-five miles in almost any
direction in North Carolina and you
will see on every hand, fields of
white, pale, sandy soils thrown out
Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans
of North Carolina.
WILMINGTON, N. C, August
Hundreds of Confederate veterans
from various sections of North Caro-
and a number from the neighbor-
States are here in attendance upon
a two session, beginning today,
of the annual reunion of the Grand
Camp of Confederate Veterans of
North Carolina. Wilmington is
decorated in honor of the veterans and
friends. Maj-Gen. J. S. Carr presided
at the opening session. Tomorrow will
be held the annual parade and also the
principal social events of the reunion.
THE SECOND YEAR
OF TRAINING SCHOOL
THOSE DELIVERED LECTURES
Teachers Received Instruction to
Them More Efficient.
On July the 28th the East Carolina
BAPTIST YOUNG PEOPLE OF TEX.
Most Profitable Summer Assemblies
Ever Held This Section.
Texas, August 2.-If
a good attendance and attractive pro-
gramme make for success the twenty
first annual encampment of the
Young People's Union of Texas
which opened here today will be one
of the most profitable summer as-
Teachers Training School closed
. ,, ever held in this section.
second school year. During this year
of cultivation; you will see fields of
red and gray lands thrown out of
cultivation. Why this abandonment
of cultivable lands in North Caro-
Examine them and you will
find a good amount of all the
mineral elements of plant
food, but the humus or organic mat-
content is almost nothing. They
have no life in them and hence can-
not give life to vegetation. They are
they have hookworm, If
you will allow the figure, and can do
little without a treatment. The vi-
of these poor lands is so low
that it pays no one to cultivate them.
Deep plowing alone will not do.
The proper treatment of all these
poor or abandoned lands, that are
well-drained, is, first, give them a
heavy dose of organic matter either
in the shape of manure or
green manure. These are the two
sources of organic matter in our soil.
The one is, and always has been,
too limited to set much store by, while
the other is, always has been, and
always will be, the principal source
from which we must obtain humus
for the agricultural soils in North
Carolina.
Next week we expect to take up
the discussion of the bringing up of
these poor lands in the state and
will speak of the crops to be grown
first in an attempt at their
We want to call the attention
of every man, who has poor lands
on his farm, to this series of articles
which will likely extend over some
months.
J. L. BURGESS,
N. C. Department of Agriculture.
five hundred and twenty-eight
dents were enrolled. This in face of
the fact that the dormitories will
accommodate only about two hundred
students.
During the summer term three
hundred and one students were en-
rolled. term of eight weeks
was a most successful one. In ad-
to the regular class room work,
a series of public lectures on
subjects was delivered.
Among those who delivered address-
es were the Dr. L. G.
Gibbs, Dr. Geo. D. Strayer, Teachers
College, Columbia University, Mr. I.
O. West Raleigh, Dr. Jno. A.
Ferrell, Raleigh, Dr. Chas.
Laughinghouse, Col. Jno. L. Cunning-
ham. Durham, Mr. Harold Barnes,
Philadelphia, Miss Edith Royster, As-
Superintendent of Wake
schools, Raleigh, and Gov.
J. Jarvis.
The student body of the summer
term was composed of teachers and
supervising officials.
It is the aim of the summer term
of the Training School to offer to the
teachers of North Carolina a course
of instruction that will enable those
attending the school to become more
efficient. To do this it was necessary
to offer a variety of courses. There
were forty-six different combinations
offered. These courses were such
that any public school teacher
recognized his needs could take
just the line of work which would
supply that need and thus add to his
efficiency. As far as it was
cable, the books adopted by the state
were used as text-books.
The student body left a fund of
for the purchase of books for
the library, thus showing by this free-
will offering that they appreciate the
efforts being made for them. They
also presented to the president and
The covers two weeks
and provides for lectures and ad-
dresses by a number of religious
workers of wide prominence. Among
them are Dr. S. J. Reid of
Ireland, President Brooks of Baylor
University, Rev. B. H. Carroll, D. D.,
president of the Southwestern
Theological Seminary, and Rev
William J. Williamson, D. D., of St.
Louis, president of the Baptist Young
People's Union of America.
Kill More Than Wild Beasts.
The number of people killed yearly
by wild beasts don't approach the
vast number killed by disease germs.
No life is safe from their attacks.
They're in air, water, dust, even food.
But grand protection is afforded by
Electric Bitters, which destroy and
expel these deadly disease germs
from the system. That's why chills,
fever and ague, all malarial and many
blood diseases yield promptly to this
wonderful blood purifier. Try them,
and enjoy the glorious health and
new strength they'll give you. Money
back, if not satisfied. Only at all
druggists.
faculty a set of resolutions signed by
all of the students in attendance
the last week of the school. Fol-
lowing is a
the undersigned, wish to ex-
press appreciation to the entire
faculty of the East Carolina Teachers
Training school for their guidance and
untiring efforts in our behalf.
work has been an inspiration,
has deepened in us a love for our
profession and has a
greater desire to do and to serve. It
gives us great pleasure to
edge the benefits received from this
institution. Our best wishes go out
to ail who have aided in its develop-


Title
Eastern reflector, 28 July 1911
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 28, 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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