[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF G. H COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
One Man Killed
In Runaway
Engine
WINTERVILLE. N. C, June Mr. B. T. Cox made a pleasant
Prof. John K. Carroll returned Wed- Ayden last night and returned in
from Raleigh where he has the
been attending the commencement Bin. Rouse of is
Meredith College. god
After spending a few days with this week.
fiends and relative in Miss
Laura V. Cox returned
We selling slippers at reduced
rates, see our stock before
A. Ange and Company.
Mrs. A. G. Cox made a trip to
Wednesday afternoon.
Misses Ethel Mae and Bertha Car-
roll came Tuesday to spend their
cation at home. Miss Ethel is one
of the faculty while Miss Bertha is
a student at Meredith College.
If it is beef, sausage or anything
in the grocery line, don't fail to sec
the market man R. W.
Miss Olivia G. Cox left Tuesday for
Seven Springs where IBO expects to
spend most of the summer mouths.
The death visited the home of
Mr. L. M. Barker Wednesday at ; a.
m. when the spirit of his Wife took
its to meet the God who gave it.
The interment took place Thursday
afternoon in the cemetery where the
body was laid to rest in the presence
of a host of friends. She leaves a
husband and four children to mourn
her death. Our heartfelt sympathies
go out to the bereaved ones.
We have a supply of cultivators on
hand still. Come and let us sell you
one. A. W. Ange and Company.
While driving on the supposed streets
of Ayden last Thursday p. m.
C T. Cox's horse became
with a chain, one end of which was
fastened to a stake while the other
was attached to the horns of a cow.
the horse and breaking the
harness. Mr. Cox says that he wants
to know if it is to use cows
to keep the weeds down than to hire
hands
Card of Thanks.
I wish to express through there few
lines to the people of the town of
Winterville and the community the
heartfelt thanks of myself and
for their most excellent help and
sympathy during the sickness and
death of my wife.
M I. BARKER.
X. C.
Dashes From Raleigh Yards Into
Oncoming Passenger Train, j
Driver Keeps Post And Dies
CARELESSNESS
OF FIREMAN
THE CAUSE
THISTLE
SODA
WINTERVILLE. X. C, June
Mr. J. D. Cox returned from Fair
Saturday where he has been in
the interest of the Beaufort County
Lumber Company,
J. W. Gilbert of
county wag in town Tuesday shaking
hands with his many friends which
he won while here in school. We are
glad to welcome the old
R. W. will buy all your ,
hogs, chickens and bees wax. See
me before selling for I can save you
money.
Alter spending sometime In Eliza-
beth City visiting the
Rev. Claudius Smith and Washington
visiting friends and relatives, Mrs. B.
T. Cox returned Wednesday, much to
Graces pleasure.
H. J. who has been in
school at Wake Forest this year, came
Friday to spend the vacation at home.
Miss Dora E. Cox returned from
Raleigh Friday.
Miss Addie of Gold Point
is visiting Miss Annie this
week.
Miss Annie returned yes-
from Nash county where she
has had charge of . school for the
past session. It seems as if our teach
erg take a special In
county, or the schools at any rate.
Mrs. F. C. made a flying trip
to Greenville yesterday.
Mrs. Alfred left
day for House where she expects to
spend some time visiting friends and
relative.
Miss Agnes Dixon of Ayden spent
Wednesday night with Mrs. J. C. C.
Dixon. Wonder where A was
Mr. H. A. White was in our city
Thursday.
M. Bryan left Thursday for
Beach where he has accepted a at
position hotel clerk. Our best night.
in our midst and hope they
may avail themselves of the
of attending the convention to
be held here in July.
We can furnish you plenty of lime
to fix your tobacco furnaces. A. W.
Ange and Company.
I. L. Bennett conducted services
Sunday morning in the Baptist church
in the absence of the pastor, Rev. M.
A. Adams. Mr. H. J. took
charge of the night service.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Cox made a
business trip to Greenville Monday.
hundred head of
beef cattle. R. W.
J. I. Rollins was visiting his sis-
Mrs. Chancey of last Sun-
day who is very III.
Mrs. Jno. Cooper left Saturday for
Goldsboro to visit her father. Mr.
Hooks.
Prof. F. C. left Sunday after-
noon for where he will be-
gin the campaign on missions. He
will be aided by Miss Laura V. Cox,
who will lecture on her work In Mex-
Japan peas at per bushel at
A. W. Ange and Company,
Miss Minnie re-
turned Tuesday after spending some
time visiting Miss Brown of
Messrs. G. X. and Hardy Johnson
and G. H. Cox attended the com-
the K. C. T. T. S
wishes for a summer go
with him.
Jerome seems to
have bad some ill luck on his maiden
trio with bis machine yesterday. The
who went with him say he did
a couple of tilings, one was tearing
down a wheel the other
was his attempt to ride the wire
fence. W. do not think he was very
successful in the latter for the ma-
chine had to b pulled into town.
Mr. M. G. Bryan is visiting
and friends Whir-hard this
week.
Mr and Mrs. Lew's Nelson of Ma-
were visiting at the home
of Mr, Joseph y s. Mrs.
father, last week.
II. T. Cox R. I. Ah-
were friends in Ayden
List evening.
Beef, barbecue, fish and sausage.
always fresh at it. w. market
X. C. June 4.-Through
the of a fireman, a
powerful locomotive broke loose from
the Seaboard yards this morning,
headed north after running about
eight miles crashed headlong into
southbound passenger train
instantly killing Engineer
slightly injuring several
It was about o'clock this morn-
that the accident occurred, just
before daylight, the regular train be-
due in Raleigh at Two mag-
locomotives are lying besides
the track completely demolished and
overturned, and the express car is tel-
over the tank from the south-
bound engine. of the
care left the track and the
except for a rather severe shake-
up are Injured.
On train were Rev. J. E.
Cole, superintendent of the Methodist
orphanage; Dr. Delia Dixon Carroll
Douglas, sou of Mr. H. S.
district passenger agent of the Sea-
board Air Line. Mr. Cole, who was
returning from Va. took
the train at for Raleigh. He
says that when the accident occurred
he had no idea that It wag a wreck
as the shock was not i
and his supposition wag that the
air brake pipe had broken and the
brakes suddenly applied. His train
bad Just come on the main line after
being side-tracked at for the
north bound train to pass. Mr. Cole
hat his train was not
at speed as it was going up bill
and had only a few minutes start be-
fore the runaway locomotive struck it.
Passengers immediately got out of the
care to Investigate. The express
messenger. C. E. of Rich-
Va., was hemmed In his car.
hut was soon with willing
hands. He was not badly hurt, be-
able to walk back to the Pullman
where lie was induced to lie down.
Galloway Item,
X. C. June
Mr. his regular appoint-
at Sunday, his sermon
was line, as it always is.
Mr. W. I
Satin day.
could make the big league, judging
from his good fielding and heavy hit-
ting, but his sou needs a little more
practice In baiting. Finally the last
ball ascended the wall and we were
Buck went to Greenville unfortunate In not being to locate it
j hi st. so this broke up the game.
Mr. J. C. Galloway left this morn- Here's congratulations to Jack
to commencement at
Chapel Hill. We wish him a pleas-
ant time.
Some of our farmers have toped
of their tobacco.
Mr. Ben Buck went to
Sunday. He reports a pleasant trip,
and expresses his Intentions of going
again.
Our boys went over to Ayden Fri-
day to play a game of hall, but
tried to turn It Into a
contest. The game was call-
ed at about p. m. and the
went to work with a strong
nation to win, and the prospects for
the accomplishment of their efforts
were bright. They scored three men
In the first Inning and afterwards one
more, making four, while Ayden had
only two men, and that was
due to the excitement caused by
Jack's chasing one of our boys back
to the grand stand as fast as his
pedal extremities could play put down
U while trying to field a
foul ball which ascended the grand
stand and fell over In Jack's
for taking care of our balls and
them back to us.
A Doable Innovation
That any advantage of real value
is to be gained by the introduction
of sensational novelties in a church
the Sunday service, has
ways seemed to us to be extremely
doubtful. We hear of pastors who
the usual program with sec-
features, as though the
of the Cross were not sufficient
to all as Jesus prom-
And now the sweet strains of
the old hymnal are to be supple-
by u modified calliope In the
form of a whistling accompaniment.
At a church near N. J.,
two Sunday ago, the pastor sum-
twelve young lads of the Sun-
day school to the platform at the
evening service, where they went
through a program more suited to the
hall than to a religious meeting.
They marched around to the tune of
Christian
faced the audience, where they
ware Introduced as the Whist-
ling Club. Th.-y then gave the club
yell in rousing fashion. It was start-
ling, if not edifying, was follow-
ed by a promenade during which the.
club whistled the hymn,
Stand p for followed by an-
other, Words of
with organ
Christian Herald.
Ill-hop
Rt. Rev, J. F. Regis head
of the Roman Catholic diocese of
Pittsburgh, was born In Westmoreland
Pennsylvania, June s.
and received his education at St.
College at Pa. He
was ordained to the priesthood in
1879. and his first clerical appoint-
was as assistant at St. Mary's
church, Pittsburgh, where he remain-
ed two years and until assigned as
assistant the cathedral In 1881.
In he given charge St.
Paul's orphan asylum, the state re-
and the western
of Pennsylvania, together with a
at In 1891 he
was appointed chancellor of the Pitts-
burgh diocese and In 1893 as-
signed to the pastorate of St. Philip's
church, Grafton, whore he remained
two years. He returned to the
In Pittsburgh as pastor In 1896
and he was elevated to the
cotton patch. I think Uncle Jack bishopric.
It is so FRESH and PURE that
YOU USE ONE-FOURTH LESS
than with other brands. You save
money. You get better results.
SODA
is packed right where it is made only
soda factory in the and comes to
you in sealed, air-tight, strength-keeping
and pure.
Full Ounces to the Pound.
And no higher in price
SPECIAL
For a Limited Time Only.
Cut out the top from six Eagle-Thistle
packages enclose with coupon
shown below and to partially cover
expense, and we will send you promptly,
all charges prepaid,
Guaranteed Silver
Plated Teaspoons.
These spoons are beau-
in design and bear no
advertising. Retail value
per dozen.
All good carry our
one set
THE ALKALI WORKS,
Saltville, Va,
I enclose the tops cut from Eagle-Thistle
also Money Order for
send me, all prepaid, our
Guaranteed Genuine Silver
spoons.
Miss Mrs.
Plated Tea-
P. O.-.-
County-----
State.
A Fair Test.
The New Jersey primaries must he
accepted us a fair test of the
and Interest of the voters In the
presidential
In no other state has money or
political organization played so
a part In the campaign. With a
registration law and a drastic
law and opportunities
for corruption were reduced to a
minimum. The ballot was so simple
and the Issue plain that no
obstacles lay In the way of the voter's
expressing presidential choice
The primary against Governor
Wilson Is a fair measure of the Dem-
opposition to lit an in his own
state. The primary against Mr.
Taft Is a fair measure of the
opposition In Jersey to
his nomination. There Is no other
state In which the of a pres-
primary deserve to lie
with so much respect and
York World.
Major Contributes
Helli lo tile I'll-
The remarks of Mayor on
the present campaign In an inter-
view with The Sun yesterday are
sagacious and lull of Judge
has been mentioned from time
to time as good Democratic
timber, but that he, of course, de-
to discuss. He believes that
the palpable effort to sidetrack the
riff Issue will fail miserably; the
People, will not consent to be drawn
off no other Issues, it Is the belief
some that the commission of Mr.
Roosevelt will make so many other Is-
sues that the tariff will be forgotten,
just as It MM In Mr. cam-
when free Biker occupied the
country In one campaign and Imper-
In another, to the of the
Judge does not think
that this can happen again. But it la
certain that the plan of campaign to
be adopted by the high protective In-
will be to nominate Mr
and let the people forget the tar-
Hut the Democrats will not per-
this. Tariff reform Is win-
Judge Is right
in saying that the people will not con-
sent to have It sidetracked.
There are other questions, how-
ever, which not be forgotten, and
to some of these Gaynor directs
attention. The most serious, In his
opinion, Is rate discrimination by the
railroads. Rate favoritism, he says,
has been the greatest evil of our day
and generation. railroads are
our public highways, and the first law
their being, that t
be charged alike for the same service.
rates he or It can undersell rivals
put them out of business is
The remedy suggested by the
mayor for this evil put a govern-
general freight agent on every
road. The remedy he suggests for
the trust evil Is to repeal the
which the offending corporations
exist. the ho says,
formed in precise conformity with
for the purpose of form-
them. If that has led to evil,
then those statutes are the source of
the As to the attempts to
break up the trusts by suits In court,
he has little confidence In and
indeed, results of the
gnat trust cases have not been en-
The mayor can see no good In a
presidents going on asking
for votes. It Is a violation of all
precedent, and have been only
a few of for
who the stump. The
mayor thinks it is undignified, and, as
lo contest between Mr. Taft and
Mr. Roosevelt, he can find no issues
and asks subject
they have debated. He
that he does not know. The Inter-
view is not only Interesting, but It Is
full of thought and of subjects
for reflection. Baltimore Sun.
Out Look For Parcel Post
In tho current number The
World's Work Frank Parker Stock-
bridge forth the need
of a parcels post striking form. One
illustration shows eight rural delivery
empty except for letters,
stores but unable to de-
leaving the front door of the local
To allow one man or corporation such liver their merchandise. farm-
served by these must use
bis own time and own team to
their stores for even one
small necessity which
the wilier Judy denounces as a
foolish and tremendous economic
waste. Other civilized country
SUCh a state of affairs; each
has a parcels post. Why does
United States lack this elsewhere
most universal convenience still
methods that express companies
and Other have taken to
defeat the. says the
writer In this point, by endeavor-
to convince tho rural merchants
and retailers in small communities
If the system Is It will
wipe every one of these deal-
out of business, cause rural com-
to and leave tho
only con-
link between tho Isolated
farm and the congested This
appeal to Hide retailers has had
Its effect. They have seen, or think
they have soon, the mail-order houses
getting business and dollars that
should be theirs by right of
graphic location. Their knowledge of
economic principles la not great
enough to permit them to see that the
parcels post can be of very slight ad-
to tho mail-order houses,
which, whether the system
or not, will depend for the
of their goods on
freight; because freight will always
be cheapest form of conveyance.
Observer.
Nelson, former champion
lightweight pugilist, years to-
day. ,
GREENVILLE IS THE
HEART OF EASTERN
CAROLINA. IT HAS
A POPULATION OF FOUR
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED
AND ONE, AND IS
ROUNDED BY THE BEST
FA CO
INDUSTRIES OF ALL
KINDS ARE INVITED TO
LOCATE HERE FOR WE
EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAT OF
LABOR, CAPITAL AND
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
JOB AND NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
Agriculture Is the Most I the Host Healthful, the Host I Washington.
WE HAVE A
OF TWELVE HUN-
AMONG THE BEST
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN
PART OF NORTH CARO-
LINA AND INVITE THOSE
WHO WISH TO GET BET-
ACQUAINTED WITH
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL THEM WHAT YOU
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN
BE HAD UPON
ME
S. C E It.
BY
THE
CUBAN REBELS
Followers in Commander Gomez's Improvised Army Amputate Ears
Prisoners-Revolutionists Make Bold Attempt
to Burn Town
MANY Or THE ARE FLEEING TO LARGER TOWNS
SANTIAGO. Cuba, June de-
of government troops under
Major fought a bat-
today with the insurgents near
El ten miles to the west of
this city.
The rebels were defeated, losing
killed. The government troops made
effective use of their artillery and are
now pursuing tho fleeing insurgents.
Attempt to tails.
Santiago, June Gomez
troops repulsed the rebels In their at-
tempt to burn Monday
night, but the good showing made by
them has been by
reports of practices
of the volunteer who
sent the of government
forces in the died. Captain Ramon
who left Santiago last Thurs-
day with guerrillas, returned yes-
his men bringing as trophies of
their conflict with the rebels the right
of eight black men and
the prizes seemingly
with as much pride as though they
were well earned objects of war.
Public opinion grew so Intense that
It forced General the gov-
leader, to make a statement.
His reply to the protests against the
Inhumanity of his men was simply
the guilty will be
Captain who was asked for
an explanation,
one soldier Is guilty and he
has been
This Is known to be untrue. The
one man mentioned is In In
The uncivilized warfare
practiced by the few soldiers In
Held leaves them few sympathizers
among their own people
The purpose both the rebels and
the government Is causing a rapid
depopulation of the Interior. All of
the residents of those sections are
flocking to the larger centers. The
homes of many have already been
burned. The train leaving
was packed and before Santiago
was reached women and children were
fighting for a foothold on the steps
of the cars. majority of these
people become public charges as soon
as they reach their destinations.
hundred who
were Imported to work on tho sugar
plantations here are without funds
and are clamoring for return trans-
Consul has asked
Washington for advice on mat-
General the rebel leader, Is
now supposed to be retreating to-
wards the north shore, and Is expected
at before the of the
week with a strong force. Other
rebel bands are operating near Fer-
twenty five miles from Sand-
ago and Inland from This
Is near tho new headquarters of Col-
commander of tho dis-
of Santiago.
Foreign property of de
on Bay, Is burning but
details are unobtainable.
The Nashville has landed
a detachment of marines at Felton on
the west to guard property.
A force of rebels under the com-
of General has been
seen In the vicinity of de Tan-
in the northeast of the province
of
General Is reported to be
surrounded by the government troops
at Las between de
and The number
of rebels who attacked re Tan-
mo on the night of Juno when they
were repulsed, is said to been
The mayor of Santiago and the
members of the provincial council rep-
resenting the committee of defense
have handed In a protest to General
Jose de J. the command-
of the government troops, against
the arming of as
General replied that a
large portion of the regular troops
were and had hitherto proved
perfectly reliable. There had not been
a single case of desertion among them.
All Quiet, Navy Reports.
Washington, June
Usher, of the fourth division of the
Atlantic fleet In command of all the
marines and in Eastern
Cuba, today reported no new develop-
on the south coast and
quiet.
Battle Reported.
Cuba, June bat-
la reported to have been fought
today between government troops and
at a distance of ten
miles from the town of on the
north coast of the province of
near The result of the
fighting Is net known here.
Marines Marching to
Cuba, June de-
of United States marines Is
tonight to a point
near to protect the Amer-
property there.
The United States collier Cyclops
arrived here this morning and the
Cuban gunboat
with arms and ammunition for
Cuba's Insurrection and Two
Of the Means of Checking It
Photos by American Press Association.
ONCE the United States government has been obliged to make
preparations to the lid In Cuba and bas dispatched a strong
squadron under the command of Admiral with
armored cruiser Washington as bis flagship, to land marines at
and to such steps be necessary to safeguard American
Interests. Under the provisions of the amendment United stales
has right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban Independence and for
the maintenance a government to protect life, property Individual
government has protested Its to put down
Insurrection with Its regular and volunteer forces, which Include many
of the men who fought against the Spaniards In the war of liberation.
Washington la shown In the upper photograph, a detachment of the regulars
In the lower.
FOR TEDDY N. S. IN DANGER
Will Announce Himself For Women
Suffrage
WHOLESALE STEAL
L BET. ITS CUE
Smooth WorK of Steam Roller is
Going Merrily On
IT ID OR NIB
Magnitude Steal
Forces May be
Taken up by
Before Convention
DELEGATES FOR TAFT
Republican National Committee Grows
Stranger
DO NOT FEAR THREAT OF BOLT
With the Addition of the Souther
Delegates of Del-
Amounts to a To-
of
CHICAGO. June once Special to Reflector
observed that a grain of poison would I CHICAGO, June work
some times be fatal where an Republican national commit-
would prove Its own antidote. This tee twelve more delegates to the
figure of speech was today of the Taft strength on
when the Republican national com- he temporary roll of the Republican
placed the delegates from Art. convention. The much
and from other sections in the I cussed Indiana contests came be-
Taft column, where they did not be- committee and were decided,
long. The very magnitude of President's favor.
offense is expected to result in a back
Are and recoil from which Roosevelt
will profit when the actual balloting
begins. It is the opinion of the best
political minds tonight that, In the
With delegates comprised
in the Southern contests decided last
week In the Alabama, Arkansas, Flor-
and Georgia cases, today's gains
make a total of delegates added
event that the committee makes one to the Taft forces by the work of the
President Back At The White
House
to Reflector.
June
rested by his hour water trip. Pres-
Taft returned to the
House yesterday having gone to Ham-
ton, Va., to the meeting of the
of the Normal School.
The president has requested an
and report on tho narrow es-
cape of the collision the yacht
Mayflower, carrying tho Presidential
party and the Norfolk-bound
steamer Northland, early Sunday
morning. Naval officers claim the
pilot of tho passer was
blame and a Inquiry into tho
entire matter has been promised.
Immediately on returning to the
White House the President called for
the latest news from Chicago, and
went over the situation with a number
of his advisers.
Friends of the Colonel That
It Will be Part Platform lie Will
Submit at Convention.
OYSTER DAY, N. Y June
Roosevelt announced this
afternoon through Judge Pin
of Denver, that he Is In favor of
woman suffrage In this country and
that the platform which he will sub-
to the Chicago convention will
contain an declaration
to that effect.
Judge spent two hours with
Colonel today. The object
of his visit was primarily to persuade
the colonel to announce that was
in favor of woman suffrage. Here-
Colonel Roosevelt merely
said that ho believed tho question of
woman suffrage should be submitted
the women themselves for deter-
whether they wished tho
ballot. As tho Judge was leaving
Hill, he
Roosevelt has out decidedly for
woman suffrage. He was Induced
this Indefinite stand by what the
women voters have done in Colorado
In opposition to Messrs.
and Evans; in Washington,
and other western states. Colonel
told me that he was con-
from tins record of the ad-
vantage to the country to be gained
by placing tho ballot In the hands
Low hanging Wire Catches Con-
and
Men Were on Box Car When They
Came a Low Hanging
hone Wire. Were Thrown.
KINSTON, June
Coward, of the Norfolk Southern and
the flagman of the freight train of
which he was in charge, had
raw escapes from death lute
day, between and Lincoln
City, a suburb. The men were rid-
a box car and struck n
wire which was hanging low, the
train running at a fair rate of
The flagman was caught by the wire
across the chest and lifted from
feet, while tho conductor was cut by
it across the face, receiving painful
wounds about the eyes. Both men
fell and the flagman caught as he
was about to fall between the moving
cars. Coward also narrowly averted
falling under the car, rolling sever-
feet to Its edge.
consistent gigantic steal of It and
takes all the contested delegates in
eluding those from Texas and Wash-
Taft would then have, on the
face of the returns, a paper major-
of not more than this number of
Taft delegates who that hon-
Is the best policy even in poll-
tics, will come over to the Roosevelt
standard and it is even
at the worst the forces,
without leaving the convention hall,
could organize, recognize the
gates from Washington and else-
where where the claims of the
delegates are
to the Just and the colonel
would he declared the regular party
nominee.
Congressman Wilson, of Illinois,
who made the trip with Colonel
Roosevelt through the south said he
had heard It tho Taft program to
inaugurate a steal In North Carolina,
but this Is unlikely. Sup-
ported of Colonel Roosevelt are say-
some exceedingly
things about Duncan be-
cause he has voted steadily with
the Taft majority, but It Is not be-
that the North Carolina com-
would stand to have two
personal friends, and Green,
thrown out In the Ninth, no matter
how much Mr. Taft might need the
votes, to which no one thinks for a
moment he Is entitled.
national committee;. And with the
Instructed and uncontested
credited they bring bis
present total on the temporary roll
up to A large proportion of the
contested among the case
still to be passed on by the com-
represent delegates instructed
for Taft; the precise number Is
subject of much dispute, nor can It
be stated how many of these contests
Taft will win.
The cases decided today were those
of the Indiana delegation at large,
four in number, headed by Col. Harry
S. New, chairman of the convention
committee of arrangements an
in former vice president. Charles W.
Fairbanks and the district delegation
from the 1st. 3rd and 13th districts.
The contest in the fourth was with-
drawn and the committee confirmed
the two sitting delegates.
The real fight of the day In
committee came not on the contest
over the delegates at large, where. It
had been expected, the committee
unanimous In giving them to Taft.
but over the seating of tho two Taft
delegates from the 13th or South
Bend district.
James Montgomery, the author of
Ready will adapt for tho
American for A. H. Woods, tho
Viennese opera Woman
of women. Tho Colonel also said that
he had definitely decided to
rate In the platform which he will
to the Chicago convention
a woman's suffrage
Earthquake in North Carolina
. Town
WILMINGTON, N. C. June
common with a number of other south
em cities, Wilmington experienced an
earthquake this morning
The tremor was distinct and was felt
by a large number of people who
were awake at the time and a number
of others were rudely awakened by
the shock which houses. Some
noticed that small articles
So far as could he learned the
did no damage.
Mighty Few.
Mighty few of Tom Watson's read-
would have ever discovered any-
thing out of the way In Latin
Journal.
For aid
CHARLESTON, W. Va., June
The West Virginia to the Re-
publican national convention, who will
depart from here tomorrow for
go, will carry with them a boom for
Gov. for the
nomination in the event that T.
Roosevelt Is named to head the ticket.
The friends of Governor be-
that he is entitled to second
place on the ticket from the fact that
ho Is the original Roosevelt man. On
January 18th lust, almost two months
before the headgear of the
Rough Rider was tossed Into the cir-
Governor issued a pub-
statement In which he declared
that a careful canvass of the political
situation in West Virginia had con-
him that tho people of
State were overwhelmingly for Col.
Roosevelt for the Republican
n. and calling upon
the people to elect delegates to
go who would vote for his nomination.
Furthermore, it was pointed out,
Governor of West Virginia Is the only
one of the seven governor's who pro-
on Roosevelt to be a candidate,
who carried his state solid In the
contest for
POUR
GREENVILLE, N. C.
DAILY
Tall Bay be the
Heretofore the prediction hat
been that Roosevelt would bolt toe
MURDERER SLATS FAULT.
La., June
Moore, a prominent business
u, his wife and children and convention, but now cornea
two women supposed to be relatives Washington the effect that it
of the were found murdered Taft do the bolting. The
this morning; In the Moore home. result of the delegate getting con-
Their heads bad been mashed is extremely close, with the
an covered with blood mid hair strong probability that Roosevelt
was found. All were murdered in the national convention,
their beds. There Is no definite Taft himself is not
to the murderer, although search is of his own strength, but it
being made, it is said, for one per- seems that he is desperately deter-
suspected by the authorities. mined to beat Roosevelt at all
No robbery was committee and It
seems that only a desire for revenge It is said that the president If
could have prompted the murder perfectly desperate and is planning
less the work was done by a mad bold strokes for the great
event at Chicago. It has been
The dead that he had decided to have
Joseph Moore and wife; Herman William Barnes. Jr., the New York
Moore. years Catherine Moore, state boss, to be the leader of the
years old; Boyd Moore, years old; Taft forces at the convention. Now
Paul Moore. years old; Miss Edith is said that it has been so
years old; Miss Blanche that the proxy of a National com-
years old. from the South will be
Owing to the terrible to Barnes so he can get on the
the identity of the two young women committee and do heavy
could not at first be established. They for Taft.
were believed to be Mrs. Van Gilder I There are some that hint that this
and her daughter, relatives of the will be done to secure the solid South
Later they were positively
as the sisters,
of a wealthy farmer living a few
miles from who had been in
attendance at a church entertainment
here last night.
Horses neighing in the barn at the
Moore home caused a woman neigh-
to notice that no member of the
family appeared to be up. After fall-
big to effect an entrance to the house,
the city marshal was summoned, and
the doors forced.
Moore and his wife were the first
to be discovered. They were lying In
their bed In a front room. Then cams
the finding of the bodies of the two
guests and later those of the children
hi a third room.
for Taft, but we do not Bee how that
could be done without buying up
Roosevelt's Southern delegates.
It is believed In Washington that
Taft's real purpose now is to keep
the fight up and make it so bitter
JUNE
Editorial of Human Interest
it.
Part I.
Man has spent his active hours and
years
would give you a program
from all. because he looks fur-
back, and sees further ahead,
than any of those named.
Kier is not a great Socialist.
He is a good LITTLE MAN, and. like
all little men who Imagine themselves
radical, he can think of nothing more
desirable than to level things down-
ward.
If he were a monkey he would pull
the monkeys from the top branches
and say, all live near the
ground, like
If he were a fish he would
all stay near the shore
none of us go out too
If he were a bird he would say,
no bird fly more than fifty feet
above the ground. Let's pull down
the eagle and make him fly like the
Being a well-meaning, but not well-
say
and
working and accomplishing. Informed. Socialist he says are
that it will his support his quiet hours thinking and won- to master Parliament, control
enable him to withdraw from the
convention If it goes against him.
He is telegraphing to his workers
and friends to stick to him to the last
ditch and effect no compromise and
give no advantage to any Roosevelt
man. He is making a specially
strong light to hold his own in Ohio
and he refuses stoutly to make any
concession there.
To show how men are ever ready-
to desert a losing candidate. it Is
stated that several
tors have notified the President that
Items.
N. June
Mrs. Craven has been sick
for several days.
Mr. Roy Forrest and Miss Mary
Fierce were out driving Sunday
Miss May Holton has just returned
from school. We all were glad to
see her and am sure Hector was.
Mr. Wilbur Lyons and Kemp Jolly
were visiting Miss
Sunday night
Mr. Clarence Dall of Snow Hill
was visiting Mr. R. B.
Look out Hugh the Ayden
torses were tied at the gate Sunday.
Say, when you see Jerome coming
with his automobile, get out the road.
Dr. Guy went to Ayden
yesterday.
Mr. Holton attended the A.
C C. commencement
Miss May Holton and Miss Mary
Pierce spent Sunday at Mrs. Emma
Miss Gay Nell and Mr.
Frank were out driving Sun-
day afternoon.
Look out the Ayden boys
hone was at Gay Nell's home Sun-
day night.
Look out Luke, the county
horses were tied at her gate
Sunday.
The crops here are looking good.
the state, wipe out class, and make
the nation consist of
Every race has had its plan, its lit-
limited race has
vanished, and the plan has been for- Humanity will never out
gotten Always reality The struggle of human be
ambition. The wild vision of yes- has been to create is
is the sober reality of today. av- power, ability, know-
The ancient king dreamed only ABOVE THE AVERAGE. Class
a feast war chariot, with knives one or a few have
to the wheels to cut down the stepped further ahead than the others,
enemy. He little thought of the There is no class among monkeys or
ling gun or the flying machine drop- among are all citizens
JUNIOR BRANCH.
Williams in Indianapolis
they do not agree with him In his,
vigorous methods to get as much of
the votes of bis state as he can. They Henry IV. wished for each peasant
base their action on the contention a boiling pot with a chicken in it. He
that the president should be willing not dream of electric stoves, gas,
to compromise for the good of the
party. We do not see how any com- . . . .
promise with third will do for everybody such as he. the
the Republican party any good. never knew. Each individual . n of ,
The Ohio state convention will be bas his little idea. Few are they ca-
held next Tuesday and It is believed of seeing even dimly the won-
that Roosevelt's men will elect all race
the delegates at large to the Chi-
to guide, control
convention. Taft is claiming B
them and from some sources there and really own this planet. Let us
of and
Man bas the power of thought, the
driving force of ambition; therefore
individually, and in groups, men forge
ahead, and classes are established.
Without the establishment of
and the other passions to
which we owe our growth, there
would have been no progress.
GOV. WOODROW WILSON
Moil Democrat.
The problem is not, as poor,
One of the most significant, and
evidently one of the most stirring, of
the Democratic State Conventions re-
held, was that of North Caro-
which ended Friday morning Just
In time for breakfast, after an all-
night session. Those Tar Heel Dem-
were ever a lusty lot. They be-
in grappling an issue and hold-
it until it is settled. That is
what they have done In this instance
and the result Is that Woodrow Wilson
has spent Its force. The allies are
growing steadily weaker, while he is
stronger than at any time during the
campaign. As the time approaches
when a national leader must be chosen
Democrats that Woodrow
son Is the one logical man, both from
a standpoint of fitness as a candidate
and ability as a statesman. Governor
Harmon has been virtually
from the contest. Congressman
was never truly In the race.
The nomination of Speaker Clark, as
more and more Democrats are corn-
was a suggestion to compromise by consider the limited plan of one in- ant Kier says, wipe out
dividing the equally. Taft who has attracted attention, but to extend classes, and received their overwhelming to realize, would predestine the
refuses, and Roosevelt also says he member of the House make ever broader and more universal for the nomination at party to defeat. Woodrow Wilson
would not hear to it. The next lively I member the the privileges enjoyed by a few of
fight, therefore, will be In the Ohio ,. The eight delegates-at-large,
state convention next Tuesday, and British Independent Labor party, has the classes.
the action there will largely deter- announced the of
mine the chance for Taft at
go.
At present It la not believed he
has any more chance, and that he Is
getting his ducks in a row to bolt
If Roosevelt Is nominated at Chi-
Black Jack Items.
BLACK. JACK. N. C,
We all were pleased to see
a fine rain Tuesday evening.
Crops generally are good through-
oat our section.
Miss Williams of Cox Mill
Sunday with Misses Annie and
Maggie Clark last Sunday.
Mr. W. H. Wynne of spent
some few days at Calvin
left for his home Wednesday morning.
Misses Lula Arnold and Annie
spent Saturday and Sun-
stay with Miss Mills.
Miss Nannie Adams spent Sunday
with Dixon.
Elder W. H. of Cox
Mill preached the funeral of Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. little baby Sun-
day.
Dr. J. H. Hudson of Grimesland
was In our section last week
Joe Dixon Mills. L.
C Mills. Tucker Mills, all went to
Washington last Saturday.
K S. Arnold went to Greenville
Monday.
Home or our boys were out calling
Saturday night.
List Your Taxes Last fall.
To the Taxpayers of Edgecombe
County, whether residing In or out
of the county, notice is hereby given
all property owned by them,
either as principal or trustee, must
be listed In the township where sit-
on or before Saturday, June
15th, 1912. And thereafter all persons
who have failed to list their taxes
for any cause, are required to
pear before the list taker at such
times and places as he may designate
his notices and list their property.
After the dates named In the notice
posted by the list taker the tax lists
will be closed.
Attention is also called to the fact
that failure to list will result in your
being double taxed and the taxpayer
falling to list subjects himself to a
misdemeanor.
The same penalty Is provided for the
citizens of the county liable for poll
tax. The penalties prescribed by law
will be enforced.
By order of the Board of
of Edgecombe County.
H. S. BUNN, Clerk of Board.
Tarboro, N. C, June 1912.
till
Of course when any Socialist tails Of OWNERS OF BATHTUBS. This then, are
you what the of the consisted of Roman emperors, ed supporters of Wilson and the other
you know that he Is simply telling and a few patricians and rich vulgar-two are not unfriendly toward his can-
you what HE think, a. an Individual. THEY had bathtubs; the N-J.
In England. Jules had none. of
res In France; Victor Berger, Charles would have destroyed vote unquestionably fall to
E. Russell, Morris William the bathtubs, thus eliminating the bath I Wilson. His endorsement by the
English Walling In America, class. ate convention was emphatic.
were votes in favor of the
looms larger each day as a leader on
all Democrats and all
of them representing half a cans desiring a freer and a better gov-
vote, will go without formal In- eminent can Journal.
Press Comment
Socialist belief In different But nature and human evolution
What Hay Expect.
The meeting of the Republican
as compared with hundred committee at Chicago has pro-
ways, would each give you an entire- than made the against it. peacefully so far, giving Taft
different of bathtub class BIGGER. It now In-1 The of this action be- the delegates of Alabama and
And Victor Drury a real eludes many Socialists comes apparent when it is noted that The committee no doubt
of courageous, radical included among the million. In interests, allied with continue to give the delegate, to
the partisan, of other candidate., did Taft but the peace which has so far
if he cared to emerge from hi. retire- the bathtub class.
ESTABLISHED 1871
S. M. Schultz
Wholesale and retail grocer and hi
dealer. paid for Hides,
Fur. Seed Oil, barrels.
key., Eggs.
Oak bedsteads. Mattresses,
carriages, go-carts, par
suits, table., lounge., safes.
and Gail k Ax snuff, High
tobacco, Key West Cheroots. Henry
SIDEWALK SKETCHES
By L.
their utmost to prevent It. Senator marked the proceeding. will hardly
himself, the campaign man- be Maintained many
ager and chief money-changer of the Times.
Underwood left hi. duties at
The Real Test
Senator ha. again been
to resign and save hi. friends
THE FLY
THE fly i. an
agile and prolific
Insect with four
feet and one of
the most
stingers
known to sacred
or profane his-
It is look-
ed upon as a
pest . pursued
with ceaseless en-
by people
clad In filmy
robes of night
wire The fly lives
bread crumbs, babies and the
Mrs. A. Michel
requests the honor of your presence
at tho marriage of her daughter
Hazel
to
Edward Ferrell
on Wednesday evening, the nineteenth George cigars, canned cherries, peach hag roused out of a tuneful
es. apple, syrup. Jelly. Meat, flour by the rude footsteps of some able-
sugar, coffee, soap, lye, food, fly with no sense of propriety
and i
upon
sensitive apex of the man.
The average fly will forsake a
pie or a pineapple ice without a
moment's regret in order to turn a
few handsprings on a head which Is
not covered with anything but pure,
f; air. Many a bald-headed man
of June
Nineteen hundred and twelve
at eight-thirty o'clock
N. C.
e Had Help.
We feel to hope that C. W.
those who him He
Morse live long enough to punish numerous other goods.
did not do all the crooked work by quantity cheap for cash Com to
I. Greensboro News. CC
Washington and came to Raleigh, so
important did he consider the
of the North Carolina
from the humiliation of voting against
All the devices that had been after having voted for him
offspring along the path- ployed to defeat Wilson in other parts hi. former trial. It that Sena-
way of life in the most reckless and were centered V I. one among the
, m . State. Yet. when the telling moment who vote to him this
prodigal manner. The fly I. beset came the endorsed time. If the half of what has been
by pitfalls on all sides, ranging and the majority, if not all, about I. true, he will
the calloused hand of the hired girl the vote, will go to hi. credit j stick and be kicked out. If he Is the
to the poisonous finger bowl. Every Baltimore. I saint hi. friend, say he I. he will re-
year million, of files walk carefully outcome In North Carolina is i sign and save the men who have stood
into the embrace of a sheet of sticky
fly-paper, rear agonizingly on their
hind feet In an attitude of deep con-
then sink calmly to rest In a
gluey grave. The fly does not work
at his trade in the winter time, but
devotes himself to sharpening his
and educating what is left of
a happy and united family The
pastime of the fly Is to secrete
himself In a bed-room on a hot night
and walk up and down the face of
some citizen who slaps
himself on the verge of the vertigo.
People have consigned the fly to the
cold and silent tomb In large
ties for years, but every spring
he bob. up with a fresh crop of rel-
and renews his attack upon In-
man.
typical of conditions the country over, by him as long as they
The opposition to Governor Wilson Record.
Congratulations
Mrs. Humphrey Ward, famous
matches. oil. cotton seed meal and and a ball-bearing punch. We do not
hull., garden seeds, oranges, apples, now recall a more pathetic sight than
nuts, candles, dried apples, peaches, of a bald man trying to spear a
prune, currant., raisins, glass active fly with a palm leaf fan
china ware, wooden ware. cake, profane protest, that would year, old today.
cracker., macaroni, cheese, best but- a hole through an asbestos roof. Richard Strauss, celebrated
new Royal Machines and fly is the greatest little multiplier years old today.
Quality and now engaged in padding the Kenyon L. president of
returns. He doe. not live to him- Agricultural College.
self alone, but car and old
ATLANTIC HOTEL
OPENS 1912. Extensive Improvements
RaW Management, Finest In America. Every variety of
and fresh water fish abound In great abundance. The At
Untie Hotel front the ocean runs east and welt,
affording the much sought southwest-em water front, and Its
enjoy an invigorating ocean breeze throughout the
mer.
and exclusive advantages than can Here you have more
SAILING upon the beautiful and be found on the Atlantic Co
Atlantic. Still water and SURF BATH- placid Bogue Sound or the
and Deep Sea FISHING. Many Incomparable Sound
historic Interest DANCING, TENNIS, by points of traditional and
the Ashing Is good during POOL, MUSIC
mer, each variety of fish has its FISHING IS
boat catches during May and August, the entire spring and sum
and anglers have made the
ALLEN Manager, city, I. c.
remaining at large for the past
year., Tom a now j
years of age and the alleged
of a prominent white farmer of
South Carolina, was arrested
day night on the farm of W. C.
about three miles from
city In Edgecombe county, and
now In the city lockup awaiting the
arrival of an officer from
The murdered man was
a prominent farmer of bis
section and the murder caused much
excitement in that section at the time.
The was a wage on
Mr. farm and states as
bis reason for the murder numerous
beating inflicted upon him by Mr.
He a scar on bis
head now which he states was in-
with a knife In the hands of
Mr.
All Trust. Are Bad.
Although Roosevelt even
when he occupied the exalted
of chief executive of the nation, as-
that there are good trust, as
well as bad trusts, the consensus of
political opinion In so far as it has
found expression In this campaign
of conglomerated Issue Is that all
trusts are bad. The Texas demo-
in convention recently
bled has so declared, although Its
platform committee in starting out
to annihilate them by introducing a
new model of warfare up
the hill and then marched down
so to speak, and after such
a violent display Its prowess con-
tented Itself with merely
mending the enforcement of
law for their suppression
laws enacted by chosen agents of the
people under a representative form
of government.
However, as bad as the trusts are,
a flood of light is being thrown on
not only their operations, but on
the manner of and the Influences
that inspired their formation by in-
that are being carried
on by this government that many
politicians are asserting is
tent to the efficient discharge of its
function.
For Instance, we get from the
of Mr. Stevenson before the
congressional investigating commit-
tee this insight Into the dark places
of the steel trust. which gets its
charter from the state of which
Woodrow Wilson is the chief
Things became so
malting a we got
in a very nice hotel In
and fixed up a price of a keg.
Then we felt good and adjourned for
luncheon. And what do you think
that fellow Frank did He
for the telegraph office and
sent a telegram to a customer of his
offering to sell at 1.40 a keg. How
Why, he Just beat me to the
graph office, where I was going to do
the same thing myself. The girl
got the telegrams mixed up. She
handed me telegram and
asked me if It was all right. I said
sure, sent mine off and shoved his
Into my pocket.
This did not happen, as the New
York Herald suggests at a meeting
between and Bill to
determine upon a proved division of
the spoils, at a congress of
wolves In their mountain fast-
but at a convention of the
of of the steel
business. and the outcome was
merely the usual
In the light that is thus being
thrown on the operations of these
combinations, which so seriously
hamper competition, the people are
being educated not only as to how
to avoid useless but
are also accumulating information
that may be applied successfully In
legislation designed to effectively
them to such extent as to re-
move their menace to the public
Post.
Masons Meet st Deadwood.
DEADWOOD. S. D June
week of interest In circles
was ushered in here today with the
opening of the annual session of the
Masonic grand lodge of South Dakota
Tuckers School Items.
TUCKERS
Grover Manning spent Saturday after-
noon with hi. father, W. S. Manning,
last week, Mrs. Collie Dall.
Misses Bertha visited her sis-
Dimple Manning was the guest
of Miss Tyson Sunday.
Mr. W. W. Worth spent Sat-
night with Mr. M. G. Manning.
We are proud to see the look-
so well In this section.
Mr. Guy Skinner of Farmville and
Miss Louise Manning spent Sunday
afternoon at Mr. E. E.
Mr. J. Walter of Nor-
folk. Va., and Mr. David Allen of
Scotland Neck. C, visited Mr.
John Sunday.
We are sorry to note that Mr.
Manning is having bad luck with
his cattle. He lost one fine cow Sat-
night and have fine work ox-
ens sick at this writing.
Miss Alma spent Sunday
with Miss Manning.
Freckled Girls
. an absolute act that one cent
jar of WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM
will either remove your freckles or cause
them to fade and that two jars will even
in the most severe cases completely
cure them. I am willing to personally
guarantee this and to return your money
without argument if your complexion is
not fully restored to its natural
WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM is
fragrant and absolutely harmless.
Will not make hair grow but will
and
r Come in today and try it.
The jars are large and results absolute-
certain. Sent by mail if desired.
Price Mammoth jars
SON'S FAIR SKIN SOAP
For sale by
Pharmacy
LOOK LOOK
COM
ADAMS
W One Week Commencing
Consisting of E. Royal Hip-
or one ring Circus and
the largest snake in the world, Ad-
Old Plantation, one of the best
on the road today carrying up-to-
date colored performers. the
flying lady. Ferris one of
Merry-go-rounds in this
try, costing
Come One, Come All, to the
val Grounds and Have a Good Time.
tan
political device
a. was never
perhaps used so lustily and with such
remarkable results as yesterday in the
Republican State Convention of Ohio.
Time and again the steam-roller has
overcome obstreperous minorities, but
in this instance, apparently, it went
even further and bore down the ma-
itself.
In the preferential primary. Ohio
went for Roosevelt by a majority of
some thirty thousand votes; yet, in
the convention the state's six delegates
-at-large were awarded to President
Taft. By Just what manipulations
was accomplished, the reports fall to
make clear. It Is evident, however,
that the one of the
puffing type, but a particularly
deadly and well-oiled
employed. Not only were the six
gates-at-large delivered to Mr. Taft,
but there was also pressed through a
resolution commending his ad-
ministration. In short, the convention,
though by a slim majority, did
the reverse of what the people
at the polls had done.
It is to such methods that
dent Taft's hopes of renomination
must be entrusted, his cause is indeed,
a desperate one. The most that such
means can be expected to accomplish
the defeat of Roosevelt. The Taft
forces may succeed at Chicago in
the nomination of the
but in so doing they will render
virtually Impossible the nomination of
their own choice.
Weeks ago it became apparent that
Roosevelt would enter the national
convention with a formidable follow-
The New York Herald now credits
him with four hundred and fifty-two
delegates and Mr. Tart with four
hundred and eighty-eight. The Sun
gives Roosevelt four hundred and fifty-
eight and Taft five hundred and
The Tribune accords
four hundred and Arty-eight and a
half and Taft four hundred and eighty-
nine and a half. None of these news-
papers are supporters of the Colonel;
two of them are openly hostile to him.
though all of them are doubtless try-
to give as accurate figures at they
can.
With only twenty-two delegates yet
to be chosen, it is evident that the
contest between the present and the
former president for leadership in
is exceedingly close; it is close, that is
to say, if all the delegates stand where
they have been placed. It is just there
however, that the rub will come. For,
one hundred and twenty-dye delegates
places are to be contested by
and thirty-three by Taft. If we
eliminate all possible contests, the
record stands for Taft,
hundred and twenty-one, for Roosevelt
four hundred and twenty-nine. Five
hundred and forty votes are required
to nominate.
Clearly, therefore, the control of the
convention machinery will prove a
vital If not a decisive factor. If the
prejudiced steam roller Is plied
for Mr. Taft as effectually at Chicago
as it was at Columbus, Roosevelt's
chances will be pulverized. But can
it be Will the president's most par-
supporters dare to employ
Inevitably prejudiced, it not lose.
s case before the rank and file of
s party.
II is believed in some quarters that
the telling moment of the
there will he a violent swim; of
the now hesitating delegate, to the
Roosevelt standard. Others are of the
opinion that from the bitter struggle
a third iii emerge and that
perhaps, will Justice Hughes, form-
. . governor of New York. few
neutral observers predict the
of Mr. Taft.
i The I lately of the
interesting has ever arisen
national Whatever its out-
it will leave a breach in
J . will Open tor
the Democrats an opportunity, though
j . in character can turned
triumphant account, If the Demo-
themselves a leader who
I deserve, and who can Inspire the
country's confidence. Journal.
OLD BAY LINE
Packet
Hally. Including Sunday, between
NORFOLK AMI
Mall
Equipped with United
Wireless Telegraphy and every mod-
convenience. Cuisine
ed.
L. Portsmouth. Sundays pm
week days pm
Norfolk, daily pm
Old Point pm
Tickets sold to all North.
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH
TIA
The CHESAPEAKE
DAILY SUNDAY
The new Steamers Just placed In service the OF HOB-
and OF are the most elegant and
up-to-date steamer, between Norfolk and Baltimore.
Equipped with In each room.
meals served s board. Everything far
comfort and convenience. I I I I I
leave Norfolk p. m. dally, arriving at Baltimore
a. m. following morning.
Connecting at Baltimore for all points SOUTH EAST,
WEST.
Very low round trip rates to Baltimore, Washington, Phil-
New York. Atlantic City, etc.
Reservation, made inf any cheerfully furnished
W. H. T. P. A,
Norfolk,
SHORT
Transfer, Baggage and Express
Prom
Phone
888888888888888888
IRISH POTATOES
It will pay yen to oar
prices before selling.
Phone tOO
COMPANY
Greenville, S. C.
Southern Railway
CARRIER OF THE
Direct lines to all points
North, South, East and West.
LOW TRIP FARES TO
CAROLINA
Land of The
also to
California points and all principal
resorts
CONVENIENT
LIGHTED COACHES,
COMPLETE DINING CAR SERVICE.
If you are contemplating a trip to
any point, before completing arrange-
for same, it be wise for you
to consult a representative of the
Southern Railway, or write the under-
signed, who will gladly and courteous-
furnish you with all Information
as to your best and quickest schedule
and most way In which to
make the trip.
J. O. JONES.
Traveling Passenger Agent,
Raleigh. N. C.
H. F. CARY,
General Passenger Agent,
Washington. D. C.
An acute case of took com-
possession of one Greenville's
the other night. The gentleman
who later did the Rip Van Winkle
stunt had been gone a very long time.
At least a couple of days. He had
traveled far. The wanderlust had
taken bold of him by his coat-tail and
before he could catch his breath that
treacherous Norfolk Southern had
taken him to Raleigh. soon
he yearn. for the old home and the
folks therein. Back in the
rollers of the N. S. The train
backed Its way Into the slumbering
burg a after one o'clock a. m.
Our friend got off and wondered,
he really In Of
course he was There was police-
man Clark holing up the law and be-
sides lie had it on the conductor's
word. He was in Greenville once
more.
What changes our good town under-
went in a couple of days must be
gathered from the fact that the prod-
meant to go home direct, but
could not. He suddenly found him-
self utterly lost in the wildest wilds
of Forbes town.
Of course we prosper If you don't
believe it ask Mr. John Andrews.
Labor Notes.
NORFOLK SOUTHERN
RAILROAD
ROUTE OF THE
Express
TRAINS LEAVE GREENVILLE
a, m. dully,
Pullman Sleeping Car for Norfolk.
a. m. Dally, for Plymouth,
Elisabeth City and Norfolk. Broiler
Parlor Car Service connects for all
points North and West.
p. Daily, except Sunday for
Washington.
WESTBOUND
3-25 a. m. Dally for Wilson and Raj.
itch. Pullman Sleeping Car service.
Connects North. South and West.
a. m. Dally, except Sunday for
Wilson and Raleigh. Connects for all
points,
p. m. Daily for Wilson and
Broiler Parlor Car Service.
For further and
of Sleeping Car space apply to
J. L. HASSELL, Agent, Greenville.
W. R. HUDSON, W,
Supt. Pass.
WEEK RATES
to
Morehead City and N. C.
Sunday excursion tickets now on
and week end fares will become
effective Saturday, June 1st.
For specific rates and complete in-
formation apply to any agent of the
Norfolk Southern railroad.
Minnesota Firemen Heel.
Minneapolis, Minn. June
hundred and lire
In various sections of the stale are
represented by about fifteen hundred
delegates at the fortieth annual con-
of the Minnesota Stale Eire
Department Association, which met
her. today for a session extending over
days. Many of the delegates
are accompanied by their wives and
daughters. Fire prevention methods
laws governing Tire departments and
the best apparatuses for extinguishing
lire, will be discussed In addition to
the regular routine business of an an-
convention during the first two
days, while the third day will be de-
voted to sight-seeing and entertain-
The program for the closing
day of the gathering includes a motor
parade, an exhibition by the local
fire department, a trolley ride and a
banquet In the evening.
8888888888
88888888888888888
In ten years over have
been spent on strikes in Germany.
Saxony has organizations of
stenographers, with a total
exceeding members.
Germany the right to strike is
withheld from of municipal,
gas and water supplies and railways.
The number of unemployed
of unions affiliated with the San
Francisco labor council Is
proximately 7.596.
Cleveland has been selected for the
meeting place of the next convention
of the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers. It will he held in 1815.
Five European countries, Russia,
Holland, and
Italy, prohibit, under severe penalties.
Strike. In those services which
to the public.
In the year 1910 there were more
than thirty-thousand deaths from in-
In the United States
while more than five hundred thous-
and men were injured.
A state federation of labor has been
in Louisiana with a
i twenty-seven unions. Ac-
was taken applying for a char-
from the American Federation of
The Iowa State Federation of La-
w charter was revoked In
Minn because of its refusal to
ply with the constitution of the
lean Federation of Labor, applied
for re-affiliation.
The women membership of
Unions in England increased from
it the end of 1907 to
the end of More than four-
of the women are employed in
textile trades.
than has been
pended by International
Union in aiding sick and disabled
member, during the ton years.
according to figures contained in a
report issued by the officers of tho
international.
I. T. Spier fur Commissioner.
N. C. June 1912.
To the Voters of Pitt As
side of Tar river has not
bad but one county commissioner for
a considerable while and he lives In
extreme went side of the county,
name II. T. Spier who Is well known
and possesses all the talents to
a good commissioner.
G lid J. H. DAVENPORT.
No Need to Instruct
While North Carolina did not
her delegation she endorsed Mr.
son and elected delegates who are fa-
to his candidacy so we do not
fall to see the Bern
Sun.
THE CAROLINA HOME
and FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
lull COMPANY, In.
D. J WHICHARD. Editor.
CAROLINA
behaved people that can not seem he had promised to not speak in public A MONOPOLY THAT DEPENDED N
to get along.
You have got to kill the vice that
during his entire visit.
But he had recently started In Eng-
stands in your way. have got land a so-called
to know that it is there and then movement, which had been productive in upon a
it. realizing that unless you con- of immediately useful result In a change of mind,
it it will conquer you. of English cities and towns, where lady's name is withheld
When you have rooted out the vie- he had succeeded in bringing about present, for which
year, . . 11.00
months,. .
rates may be had upon
Application at the business office
Tb Reflector Building, corner Evans
stud Third streets.
Ail cards of thanks and resolutions
-it respect will be charged at
per word.
Communications advertising
dates will be charged for at three
per line, up U
i as second class matter
1910, at the post office a
Carolina,
act of March
FRIDAY. JUNE 1912
TWO ENEMIES OF IS ALL.
By Brisbane
Readers is such a common-
place, obvious sort of an editorial that
you will perhaps be impatient in the
reading of it. Nevertheless, at the is through steady, daily, ceaseless
in your disposition, then go sort of Informal union of all kinds
at the which is slow and of societies and forces that were work-
sleepy and can wait until the vice for the betterment of the
is killed. their effort might be mu- undisputed control of her fortune and
What do you need In any kind of helped. This idea had been naturally her secretaries were swamp-
a light You need a good weapon. UP American Review of Re--ed with schemes suggested for the
views from Mr. Stead's English work, investment of her funds.
A WOMAN'S CHANGE OF MIND.
The successful promotion of one
the most
for
will
appear later. It Is enough to say that
she was rich and influential,
family and social position. She had
risk of seeming tiresome and fond of
platitudes, we propose to discuss th
enemies of mankind and the
of conquering or avoiding them.
Ninety-nine per cent of every
human beings may be called
failures.
A man may do fairly good work,
in a against yourself you need the of
the one great weapon, which is will in a number of
power. towns. The plan had
Will force which makes pealed strongly to many people in Chi-
possible repealed, determined, steady who were glad to have the
the only thing that will followed by a
help yen life's permanent program for social
There are those that say that we moral progress. Mr. Stead was
can not change ourselves, that we. recognized as the apostle of such
must always remain as we were made, movements, and when called upon to
with our weaknesses and our strength expand his reviews he could not de-
at the beginning. what seemed to a call of
But that is false.
A man can change himself. The
drunkard in the gutter can rise to He spoke, not once, but many times,
the highest place, If he will try hard Chicago was to him a new and as-
enough, hounding phenomenon. In studying
The way to bring about the conditions that needed reform, he
was perhaps as a
duty and an opportunity for useful-
fort. There is no use In making a
violent effort, lasting a few seconds
and leaving you weaker in strength
than were before.
The way to get up early In the morn
for instance, is to get to bed
early the night before.
As long as you need to go to bed
may make a success in comparison too late, you will get up too late
with his fellow man and yet be a or if you do get up early you will
failure. be tired and your work will be of
A man who fails to do the best that no use.
is in him is a failure whatever he
may do, no matter how he may
pose upon the world with his work.
Of all the failures you have known,
can it not be said that vice or pro-
might account for every
one of them
Vice is a name that covers human
Drunkenness is a which
viciously suppresses, drowns the very
force, the mental unrest that ought
to bring success.
Self indulgence is another vice. It
makes us devote our energies in the
present to our various tastes and
likes, instead of controlling the pres
cut in order to provide for the
Vanity and egotism in
Reform must be begun at the right
end.
stranger must needs be, by novelty
and contrast. He did not quite under-
stand the wholesome forces that were
dominant after all in American
at any rate, he preferred to hold up to
American communities a picture of
their worst shortcomings. If he did
not understand Chicago, it is true In
like manner that Chicago did not
him. He wrote a book, which
he called Christ came to
Many good and tentative Americans
felt that this scattering exposure of
vice and crime lacked balance and pro
portion. Mr. Stead, of course, would
If you want to get out of for a moment have denied that an
vicious habit, remember that you can American might have gone at that
only do it by adding to your strength, time to London or Liverpool and found
Good sleep, wise eating, a well of misery, poverty,
nourished body, will do a great sin. and crime far worse than
to overcome a desire for drink. those existing in Chicago. Generally
If your mind is given lo foolish speaking, It seems better for the visit-
amusements, dissipation, own country,
remember that before you can whore he is responsible, than to expose
away that interest you must replace in any other country at the very-
it with some other. moment of bis first landing upon Its
Get a real Interest in your work, shores,
begin saving your money, realizing
that capital means independence.
plans, them out. try to
be as much interested In your own
powers of self control -s In the fool-
all forms some horse or the
arc Tin vain i. wastes, in of
elf approval, in the decoration of For young mm unmarried valuable The
his person, or in foolish self is probably the best possible Chicago visit caused him to be
the time, thought or money thing. It forces serious thought. Understood in America; and it certainly
Hut Mr. Stead did the thing that he
saw tit to do He was genius, a moral
enthusiast and a law unto himself.
He had made his exposure of vice in
London ten years before, upon his own
sensational plan, he had
that ought to be spent on Improve- brings a great interest with the
and a steadying sense of
Then there are all the other vices-
foolish, perverted forms of human In proportion to their numbers
tear men down and married young men commit times
make real growth and accomplish- as much foolishness as the married
men.
The man is like a ship
with no rudder, going in any direction,
erratically.
merit impossible.
Gambling, drink, love of display,
lack of moral these vices,
positive or negative, meet mankind
on the road toward good results; only
a few get by.
Many a man able to control the ac-
tr vicious side of his character is
destroyed by laziness, by the
liar hatred of effort so hard to over-
come in millions of us.
The world is full of men and women
who seem Intelligent, who might
for a number of years the
influence which his valuable political
and social articles might otherwise
have gained. Yet the great National
Civic Federation grew out of his
His friends are trying to make
amends for clash with the
One promoter presented a plan to
secure a monopoly of a profitable
Held, which had long been divided be-
tween trusts. These made up in force
of action what they lacked in
the trust's terms.
The plan was paper
too simple the lady's advisers thought,
but the promoter was persistent and
some of them were won over. The
question of terms came up. The pro-
demanded the sole management,
his compensation to be one-tenth of
the net profits and also the right to
subscribe for one-eighth of all issues
of stock. From this he would not
budge. Negotiations fell through and
the disappointed promoter left to
seek other backers.
Here the woman's whim entered.
A speculating capitalist of Hebrew
descent, with the gift of financial
prophecy so strong In his race, paint-
ed for her a vivid picture of the
profits, as well as other
the scheme did work. The
lady changed her mind, recalled the
promoter and the trust was launched.
Though not everything expected
was gained, success followed, but
trouble also arose. The promoter was;
a man of broad views, a visionary.
One of reasons for demanding such
organization and had been able to
fields, the promoter did not realize
the profits he had anticipated.
ed with the responsibility for internal
dissensions, he was deposed, and for
a time imprisoned. He died a
pointed man and his philanthropic
purposes were never realized.
All of this sounds modern. You
have read such stories in the
and newspapers, but this con-
tract was dated April 1492.
The lady was Isabella of
the the East India
trade the capitalist. Luis
of the family, the
of the fifteenth century.
IS GROWING.
Perhaps at no time during its his-
has the growth of Greenville been
as as it is now. The Proctor
Hotel contract will be awarded some
time at the end of the month. Con-
we are told, will begin
mediately. Mr. Small, some days ago
again told us that the Post Office build-
will be in the course of
early in 1913. The big Cooper-
age plant is rapidly nearing
ion, which means that many hands
will be employed there In a very short
while. There has already been some
talk for the next County Fair, and in
fact everything points to a nearing
season of prosperity that speaks very
well Indeed for the people of
ville and Pitt county.
Naturally the activity lb contagious
and got It is quite true that
the idea of a larger and better
tor has been in our minds for quite
some time. At intervals we have
spoken of it with a longing that
most equaled the longing for the kind
of pies that mother used to make. In
other words a away kind of long-
At all times however we have
been hopeful. Hopeful that the
to take the plunge Into
the report of the committee on rules,
aid that the majority of the com-
had reached the conclusion that
a nomination by n two-thirds vote
would give a more imposing effect
than a nomination by a simple ma-
He added that it to be
presumed that no one had the most
remote desire to frustrate the pro-
and provided a majority on
the first or second ballot fix upon an
individual, It was reasonably to be
expected that the minority would be
disposed to yield and unite with the
majority, so as to produce the effect
contemplated by the foregoing res-
The report was vigorously opposed
by a Mr. Allen of Massachusetts, also
a member of the committee on rules,
who asserted that the two-thirds rule
was contrary to the fundamental
of our government, that we
should be governed by the will of the
majority. It was undemocratic and
and directly in the face
and eyes of the constitution. The
the next day a motion to reconsider
prevailed and the rule was adopted.
II Is of Interest to note that the
General who In urged
the two-thirds rule as a means of
making Van nomination more
imposing and who declaimed any in-
tuition to frustrate the will of the
majority, was the same General
Saunders, who, in
1844. moved the adoption of the two-
thirds rule for the purpose of defeat-
Mr. Van and of thwarting
the will of the majority,
rule was defeated by a vote of
to The reporter adds that the
rule was brought forward for the
purpose of keeping Mr. R. M. John-
son of Kentucky out of the vice pres-
many being willing to make
no nomination rather than accept of
him. The opposition to Mr. Johnson
eliminate the Independent trader and ,.
now the stronger seemed to be on day would increased over night, for
be forthcoming, and that hope, with a
point of crushing the weaker.
The business problem hinged upon
transportation. The company In con-
of rates was bound to
win. As it happened, in spite of
their monopoly, the two trusts in
command of the field were doing bus-
at a constantly increasing cost
and both had suffered some serious
losses The cost to the consumer was
growing heavier, but so was the de-
for the goods, largely because
they ministered to vanity, that a
wide market was assured at any
price.
A AS GOOD
AS MONEY.
little faith on the side in our lo-
cal has Anally led us up
to the imaginary aisle of happiness
that Is with all newspaper men Promptly Refunded If
see their publication appreciated to the M it. Tone Fails f Take
extent of suggesting the advisability
of an extension. Pharmacy sells Dodson's
Today we present our first regular Liver-Tone as a perfect substitute for
8-page daily; and of course we feel if you try one bottle and
a little nervous. The villain may be is not sure in its
around the corner laying back for
innocent enough mistakes, but we
promise to be on time when the res-
cue scene comes up for attention.
In the meantime we want to tell our
The promoter who had of have
his own profession for years made our change ,,,,,,, m
while unsuccessfully seeking to in- chants We need them
capital In plan, had work- s much as they need us. and glory to
ed out a scheme which would cut powers that be, we have come to-
costs of transportation to the bone What business has put to-
and therefore the new company would let no visionary rate-cutter
be able to undersell the others to tear asunder,
such an extent that an absolute mo-1 p
would probably result. The THE ORIGIN OF THE
original producers and the
public would both be forced to ac-
of the combined land and
sea routes to the Indies.
action as and at the same
time gentler and without the bad
after-effects of please call
and get your money back. It will
he given you promptly. Dodson's
Liver-Tone is a vegetable liquid with
I pleasant taste, that livens up the
liver, mildly but surely, instead of
v hipping it into action as the strong
chemical does. It is used
by both children and grown-ups for
constipation and inactive liver.
That is why Pharmacy is
willing to guarantee it absolutely, not
with another bottle, but with your
money back. Isn't a medicine with a
guarantee like tills worth a trial
KILE.
The origin of the two-third rule
goes back to the first national Demo-
convention ever held. This con-
Pope, by selecting a Catholic priest i
The promoter was Christopher which was held in Baltimore
has not the opening prayer at the j i religious purpose, the j In 1832 out of the first seven
behind In race, having voted Republican national convention In expulsion of the Turks. conventions were held In the
half a million dollars for good roads. Chicago.
Some of these days Pitt county will
get her eyes open to things like that.
It is not worth while to advise be-
a vegetarian in order to reduce
As presiding officer of the recent of A vegetable
The busy Citizen has somehow come metropolis the eighth In
to believe that the trust or monopoly j held its adjourned sessions
is a modern Invention, He thinks was called for the purpose of
that It is a peculiar development of a candidate for vice president as
the last twenty years in the United Jackson's running mute, the Old Hero
great Democratic state convention, these days cost about as much he has a vague idea being without Democratic opposition
An advance poll of the States
senate Indicates that when
comes up for trial again he will likely
walk the plank.
THE LITE V. T. STEAD IN AMER-
Next week the Republicans will be
wanning up Chicago and the
after the Democrats will be doing the
same thing for Baltimore.
The way things are going now, T.
Tell the story to your friends the following
and see if they can guess the answer. I each be entitled, in the
Every step Is typical of modern nomination to be made of a candidate
R. may get the corporal's guard vote, in the twentieth the vice presidency, to a number
o Ideas and capital meet and of votes equal to the number to which
The presence of Sam's blue struggle for the advantage. An agree- they will be entitled in the electoral
jackets In Cuba Is having a reached and they combine College, under the new apportionment,
Mr. Stead had never the At- Cy to quell trouble on the Island. the Public which has not been In voting for president and vice
and yet go plodding along in judge Francis D. Winston proved to as any
their little clerkships, or other little De to the best ever. He was simply
places, because they lack immense.
power to force themselves out of pro-
rut. expect to
begin the struggle sometime, but the
time never comes.
Which of these two enemies of man-
kind is responsible for the greater
number of failures
Laziness, lack of will power. Is,
our opinion, man's most dangerous
enemy.
Vice in a man often only
gone wrong. If the man can
direct into channels of effort power
which he has been wasting in
to him and the monster of vice will
self indulgence, success will come
be passed and left behind.
procrastination,
are harder to get out of the
than vice.
They mean, unfortunately, very of-
ten an absolute lack of energy.
And that if a thing that should
t borne In mind by all of the good,
average, well-meaning, well
that something of the sort has the first place. The convention,
In Europe. Why did a which was more of a national mass
score of intelligent citizens to whom meeting than a convention in the
week story was told fail to Identify modern sense, very loosely or-
though all of them had read his- and on the second day
until, In the autumn of 1893, he;
accept an urgent Invitation from
American colleagues to come as his are putting the ban on rag
guest and see the great exposition at time music and dances In years old.
Chicago In Its closing days. Mr Stead It is time the was of ,,
at that time had been trying to start something good,
dally newspaper in London, which
he obliged to discontinue through
lack of financial support. This Charlotte will
to druggists after July of had considerably more than
moment one of the fatigue and de- Another step In the right direction. which was simply a the necessary two-thirds and was
combination of money and genius to on the first ballot. But the
exploit producer and consumer alike, adoption of the two-thirds rule in the
Greenville Is going to make such The producers suffered most. Their convention of 1835 produced a
bis visit to Chicago can be fully improvements this year that the town story In fact a tragedy. fight. General Romulus M.
elated. His fatigue was so great that will hardly know Itself. j Like so many pioneers in other Saunders of North Carolina, who made
consulted at all. This story of and that two thirds of the
suggests that some features j whole number of the votes in the
of trust practice are at least four convention shall be necessary to con-
This rule seems to have been
desire to devote it to certain religious with little or no discussion, due
and philanthropic purposes. His sub- doubtless to the fact that Van
no I 11- however, responded less to Jackson's choice for the vice
such as he had never
before. It Is only when this Is
understood that the circumstances of
A POEM
Down in C,
there resides a poetess who
bids fair to snatch the laurels
from the head of the fair poet-
of the Raleigh Times staff.
An ode South has
been going the rounds of the
South Carolina press. From
the standpoint of action, it is
unapproachable. Each line is
with that fire which
only the born poet can call
forth. It runs as
Grafters are the boldest
In South Carolina,
-Murders are the coldest
In South Carolina,
Blind tiger booze Is strongest
It's effect will lust the longest
And It will wrong wrongest
In South
Politicians are the slickest
In South Carolina,
Their handshakes the quickest
In South Carolina,
Old maids are the oldest.
Old feet the coldest
And leap year girls the boldest
In South Carolina.
But better time
In South Carolina,
Things will again be
In South Carolina,
Our great men are the blandest
Our legislature is the grandest
And our governor Is the
In South Carolina.
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF G. H COX
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity
Advertising Rates on Application
ding
FIRST NOTABLE EVENT
OF THE SEASON
Mrs. J. D. Cox left Monday for
Seven Springs, where she expects to
spend a few visiting friends and
relatives.
Lr. Parrot of Kinston was in town
yesterday.
For the best molasses and vinegar
see Harrington Barber.
Misses Esther Johnson and Sarah
Mitchell, left yesterday for the train-
where they will resume
their studies.
Mrs. J. H. C. is visiting rel-
at this week.
good beef cattle and
barbecue pigs or any thing else
you have to sell In my line. R. W.
Prof. F. C. Nye returned Saturday
from his mission campaign in the
eastern part of the Neuse Atlantic
association. He reports a pleasant
trip and good meetings.
Lime, salt, cement and plaster par-
at A. W. Ange and Company.
Another shipment of new North Car
cut herrings Just arrived at
Harrington, Barber and Company.
After spending a few days at home,
Mr. J. D. Cox for Fairmont Mon-
day morning.
Prof. F. C. Nye made a business
trip to Greenville Monday-
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox accompanied
by son F F. Cox were visiting
friends and relatives in
Sunday.
Harrington. Barber and Company
arc receiving a large shipment of pump
piping and points.
Rev. M. A. and Prof. Jno.
R. Carroll left Tuesday for Wilson.
Rev. G. C. of Ayden filled his
regular appointment in the Free Will
church Sunday morning.
R. T. Cox was visiting a friend in
Sunday afternoon
Remember R. W. Dall's market is
headquarters for fresh fish, sausage
beef and meat A fancy line of
always on band.
Miss Pearl Hester left Monday for
E. C. T. T. to be present at
the opening of the summer session.
Miss Lizzie Cox of Black Jack was
in town Sunday. We are always glad
to welcome Lizzie's pleasant smile and
hope she may avail herself of the
opportunity of coming
A car of cook stoves Just received
by A. W. Ange and Company. Come
and select your choice from this lot.
Messrs. Ernest Cox and Lit-
were visiting in South Ayden Sun-
day afternoon.
That rubber roofing at Harrington,
Barber and Company's is something
fine. Just come to see for yourself.
C. T. Cox was visiting in the
try on last evening.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S Rollins were vis-
Mrs Rollin's father. Mr. Taylor of
La Grange this week.
S. C. Carroll made a trip to Green-
ville yesterday.
This cool weather is causing cotton
to stop growing and wilt.
Rev. Mr. his
appointment in the Methodist church
Sunday night.
A New Work by Ike
Hark
The following letter accompanied a
musical manuscript sent by Marie
the distinguished composer, lo
the Whitney-Warner
Lakewood. N J., Dec. lull.
Whitney Warner Company,
West Forty first Street,
New York.
The Romantic month of June am sending you with
claimed its first Greenville bride June the last of the live teaching pieces
the when Miss Lottie Skinner, l have promised to write this
daughter of Col. and Mrs. year. have named it
Skinner was married at her parent's, Bel The theme, in fact, the whole
home on Fourth street, to Mr. George composition, came to me as an in-
Cooper, of Henderson. while through the
The social prominence of the of California for my health two
and groom and their extensive ago. I traveled most or the
throughout the state and in stage coaches, of which there
abroad to make this, k. San Diego
initial wedding of the season, one of the and San Francisco. saw the ruins
most important ceremonies ever wit-
in this part of the state.
From until the time the wed-
many of the old missions,
one hundred ago were B refuge
. . and a home to the worn who
ding took place Col. and Mrs. Skin- could stay as long as he wished and
lovely home on Fourth street pay what h could afford, and when he
went away look the blessings of the
Monks, those men of God, who
their lives for mankind a
in Bond
KINS ION BOY WILL BE
TRIED FOR KILLING
June body of
was stabbed to
death by Charlie Randolph, a boy of
. u the result of an
altercation Tuesday night, was taken
lo for The
father, mother, sister and brother
of the lad who was about IS
of age, accompanied the remains.
youthful slayer was held under
bond for his appearance at superior
court.
Tiff
popular fails to
cure
Spat ion.
Biliousness
And ALL DISEASED arising from a
Liver and Bad Digestion
natural result Is good appetite
d flesh. small; elegant-
l to swallow.
take Mo Substitute.
the mecca of numberless guests
and when the ceremony was perform-
ed approximately guests had as-
The home was beautifully which was inhabited
decorated with plants and flowers and by the lawless Spaniards and
the illumination throughout the house cans. While almost all of these old
was magnificent. Mr. and Mrs. E. buildings are in a ruined state now I
la Ferguson received the guests at , very mu. Ii impressed with the
the door and after taking charge of bells which in four or five
hats and wraps they were ushered -till remained. These belle were
into the main hall where Mrs. R. O. formerly rung at night to guide lost
and Miss Whedbee Intro- travelers. One day while making a
them to other guests. In on horseback to the foot of a
Bitting room, to the left of the hall, range cf mountains with my
the wedding presents were displayed
for exhibition. The quantity of gifts
and their magnificence begs de-
most of them being beau-
cut glass pieces and silverware.
ion and a guide we lost our way It
was late in the afternoon when we
discovered this fact. While ponder-
what to do we heard the chiming
of sweet bells, three in number, we
Black Jack Items
June having a rainy
spell and such a fine season the far-
are beginning to tell each other
about their fine crops.
The tobacco crop generally through
this is us fine as we could ask
for.
Some of the farmers will soon be
ready to top their tobacco.
The farmers are beginning to catch
tobacco worms, as they seem to be
feasting on their tobacco.
Messrs. J. R. and G. F.
Hudson went to Greenville Saturday.
J. H. Clark came home from Nor-
folk last week.
Elder J. T. Butler will preach at
Black Jack Saturday night and Sun-
day.
Next Sunday will be Children's Day-
out here. You are cordially invited
to attend.
A large crowd attended Sunday-
School Sunday evening.
Mr. G. C. Buck left for Chapel Hill
Monday where he will attend school.
Miss Dorothy Mae came home
last week from
Messrs. J. C. Galloway. I,. R.
Buck, Lester Edwards attended Sun-
day school here Sunday evening.
Robert Dixon. who has been sick
for several seems to be Improving
Borne.
We are having some cool weather
at this time.
The farmers will hold their
regular meeting Friday night, 14th.
The Happenings Around Standard.
STANDARD, June and Mrs.
Allen Bowen of near
visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Hem-
by Sunday.
Mr. J. J. Nobles, Jr., made u
trip to Saturday
We learn that about o'clock Sun-
day morning the roof of the kitchen
of Mr. John caught fire, but
was soon discovered and by the as-
of friends was hut little dam
age.
Mr. Royce Tucker came In from
Philadelphia Thursday where he has
been attending a medical college.
He will spend the summer with his
mother, Mrs. N. E. Tucker.
Mr. H. Bently of Green-
ville who represents the Mutual life
Insurance company of N. Y., was in
our town Tuesday talking Insurance
Mr. J. H. Cobb is on the sick list
this week; we hope he will soon be
able t be out in the open air again.
Mr. Charlie Tucker who has been
attending High School for
the last few months has returned
home to spend the summer with his
mother, Mrs. N. E. Tucker.
Mrs. W. H. Elks Is on the sick list
this we hope she will soon
be up can look after her house
affairs.
FROM MR. W.
AYDEN, N. c, June threw
down my hoe on the 26th of May and
i turned my face Greensboro to
perform my task there of checking
lap the books, etc., of the A. and M.
College for the colored race. This
is my 8th or year that I have
laid down my private affairs, for the
being, to attend to the state's
business without compensation. My
visit to Greensboro strikes the
of the Normal and Industrial
or the G. F. C, one or both
and the city is crowded with visitors.
j The is a well applied
as a great deal of the
el in and out of the state come and
go via Greensboro. Hotels prosper
as do banks and other like
By the way I had the good fortune
to see the fifth congressional
love pulled
off. This district boasts of more
Industries and more wealth than
any district in the state. It was a
great delight to sit and listen to the
great speeches In behalf of
i racy and In praise of the record and
service of that grand and pure
old Roman Charles Manly Stedman
who represented this district in this
present congress. Just here I will
say I was one of two from Greene
county who supported Major Stedman
for delegate to the state convention
Governor the time Fowle, Stedman,
and Alexander were I
was glad he won the nomination for
Congress two years ago and was
pleased to be present and see him
nominated by acclamation at the pres-
convention.
I was surprised to see
a lot of cotton still not up between
Farmville and Wilson and beyond
Wilson. This territory was suffering
for rain. In fact. It was dry clear
to Greensboro. I think a good rain
In Raleigh Thursday night as the
sign early Thursday morning showed.
It did not reach for out toward
son. Don't know whether it rained
west of Raleigh or not.
Crops In this belt are not good,
W. A. DARDEN.
Tastefully displayed in tables from the following
the room and Illuminated, j this, to us most welcome we
they filled the entire room. Lame upon .,
For the wedding ceremony, the a most beautiful natural park
dining room and the parlor, to the in the foothills of a long range of
right of the hall had been made As we came up close, we
room decorated with profusion could hear the soft of an organ
of natural flowers and plants. From the singing of the nuns. it was
hall door and through the room j vesper time and I was so deeply
to the altar occupying the farthest
end of the room, a lane had been
made of ribbons for the bridal party.
these ribbons the guests took
places shortly before the ceremony.
Miss Ada Cherry presided at the pi-
pressed with the beautiful scene that I
forgot the predicament we were in.
We reined our horses and
the chanting was over, and the
whole scene made such an Impression
upon me that I resolved to em bod v it
and as a prelude Miss Arlene as it then impressed me In a mus-
Joyner beautifully sang composition. This I have since
Serenade. Before Miss Joyner and am submitting the
concluded the song Messrs. Bennett script to you under the condition
H. Perry and Lewis Cooper, both from be named Mission Bells and that a
Henderson, and the latter a brother
of the groom slowly advanced toward
the altar, where Father Gallagher, of
New Bern had taken his place. Slow-
they came back unfolding a white
cloth which they laid on the floor for
the bridal party. To the strains of
Comes the
the bridal party entered the room,
Messrs. B. H. Perry and Lewie Coop-
it. Miss Fannie Cooper,
the Maid of Honor accompanied by
the bridesmaids Misses Genevieve
Cooper, Irma and Irma Al-
and followed by Mrs. Mose-
short description of this event in my
life be inscribed every copy.
Kindly send contracts and any
to my home in
Yours very sincerely.
MARIE
Musical critics who have heard the
Mission Bells have pronounced It a
masterpiece as descriptive work. The
sound of the three bells as produced
on the piano is remarkably perfect.
It Is not a very difficult composition,
the Dame of Honor. The groom doubtless take its place among
leaning on the arm of the best man.
Mr. John D. Cooper, Jr., his brother,
followed them and waited at the altar
for the bride, who was accompanied
by her father.
The wedding ceremony was a
one, this being the religion of the
bride, its simplicity yet the sol-
of the vows exchanged, held
the guests to a hush. Perhaps not
ten minutes were inverted at the
altar and the bride and groom kneel-
ed down on white satin cushions to
the teaching pieces, such
as monastery bells, cathedral chimes,
and The Whitney
Warner Company have a splendid cat-
and control all of Maria Lou-
latest compositions.
ho. j. h.
The following letter addressed to
Mayor F. M. Woolen self
and no doubt will answer sat-
any question that might
have arisen on the minds of Green-
ville citizens.
Washington. D. C, June
Hon. F. M. Woolen. Mayor,
Greenville, N. C.
My Dear The Sundry Civil
Appropriation Bill, which has just
been reported lo the House and is
now under consideration, contains an
appropriation of one toward the
construction of the Greenville post
office. In view of the fact that the
treasury department submitted an
estimate for for this purpose
and further view of the natural
anxiety of the citizens of Greenville
for the early construction of their
building, submit a brief
I called on the committee on
while this bill was under
consideration and also on the super-
vising architect of the treasury de-
and obtained the following
information.
The supervising architect states
II at he expects to begin the
of and plans for your
post office in October or November,
nest. After the plans are completed,
advertisement will be made for bid-
on the construction of the
ling the contract will probably be
lei by March, 1913. As the sum Of
will be amply sufficient for the
drawings and plans, and as no fur-
money will be required until
after the contractor begins the work
of construction and as there will be
another Sundry Civil Appropriation
In the next session, which will
probably pass In February and
before March it became
necessary to appropriate any
sum in this bill. If conditions
had been different. I would have In-
upon a larger appropriation.
I am writing this for the information
of yourself and the citizens of Green-
ville.
Very respectfully,
JOHN H. SMALL.
The final plans for the Proctor
hotel arrived in town on Saturday and
were accepted by the building com-
Bids from the contractors will be
opened and contracts allowed on
June 28th.
The set of plans can be seen at
Mr. W. H. Long's office.
Ends Hunt For Rich
Often the hunt for a rich wife ends
when the man meets a woman that
uses Electric Bittern. Her strong
nerves tell a bright brain and even I
receive the benediction from Father I. V,, V
temper. Her peach-bloom complex-
and ruby lips result from her
pure her bright eyes from rest-;
Move on Now.
says a policeman to a crowd,
and whacks head If It don't.
on says the big, harsh mineral
pills to bowel congestion and suffer-
follows. Dr. King's New Life
Pills don't bulldoze the bowels. They
gently persuade them to right action
and health follows, at all drug-
gists.
Hope Well Hems.
HOPE WELL, N. C, June
Grady on our streets Sun-
day afternoon
Messrs. J. and A. H. Cox went
to Cove City Saturday. Guess they
are not driving that distance for fun.
Mr. Ed Little and Miss Julia Smith
were visiting near Cross
Roads Sunday.
Mr. C. of Norfolk.
Is relatives In our town.
Better look out Luther, a Green-
ville boy's horse was tied at the gate
Sunday.
Listen out for the wedding bells
for they are soon to ring.
Mr. Hugh riding
on our streets Sunday; feeling good
we bet.
If you are thinking of moving, come
in Hope Well the garden spot of the
world, where the mocking birds sing
home sweet home to a Greenville
boy.
Crops are looking line in this sec-
now.
Gallagher,
Immediately after the bride and
groom and their parents took a
In lower end of the room and
received the earnest congratulations
of the gin-sis.
A reception was held immediately
after, refreshing punch being served
in the hall by J. G.
and W. H. Jr., whilst delicious
Ices and cakes were served In the din-
room by Misses Margaret and
Florence Blow and Myrtle Warren.
The bride and groom left on the one
o'clock train for an extended honey-
moon tour, many of the guests
bid
sleep; her step from firm
free muscles, all telling of the health j
and strength Bitters give
woman and the freedom from
backache, fainting and dizzy I
spells they promote. Everywhere they
woman's favorite remedy. If weak
ailing try them. at all drug-
gists.
CHICAGO, June Forty-eight a
the total number of delegates to the
Republican national convention turn-
ed into the Tail today by the
national committee's derision upon
contests from Arkansas. Florida and
Georgia. The Roosevelt contestants
loll every case as they did yesterday.
Ten of the Georgia
to Taft in one blanket
decision, both agreeing lo their
being decided upon the same
as had served in the case of
four delegates large which had
just been given to Taft. The two re-
Georgia districts with their
two apiece, soon went the same way.
With the from Al-
and from
on the temporary roll of the
as the result of yesterday's hear-
today's work runs up the total to
added to the list since the
national committee convened Thurs-
day. The cases passed upon today-
were those
fourth, fifth and
seventh congressional
delegates eight in all. The six-
th district was not
are listed as uninstructed.
six delegates at large
and all three entire
state in all.
four delegates at
large and all of the congressional
districts, each with its two delegates
in all.
Indiana Monday.
This clears the docket for the
up early next week of the cases
upon which the Roosevelt people are
laying far more stress than upon those
from the South, such eases, for ex-
ample, as those from Indiana; which
probably will be taken up when the
Committee convenes Monday morning.
There still remain, in alphabetical
order, the cases of the six delegates
at large from Arizona and of the
fourth congressional district of Cali-
They may be taken up on
Monday or may go over until later in
the week.
It was day of publicity for South-
Republican organizations. Start-
with the last three districts of
Arkansas, the committee went through
that state and Florida and Georgia,
in which all the Taft delegates had
been contested by Roosevelt. In each
instance decision was reached after
full hearings of the facts in the case;
and in only one instance did the
Roosevelt leaders ask for a full test
of strength.
In the fifth Arkansas district, where
charges of violence and fraud were
made by both sides. Committeeman
Barnaul of Kentucky asked that both
delegations be seated with half a vote
each. He secured ten votes for his
motion, those of Knight of California.
Barnaul of Kentucky. Wright of Lou-
of Minnesota.
of
Ward of New
Capers of South Carolina,
of South Dakota. Loose of
Utah. Rogers of Wisconsin.
On this roll call, of the others w-ho
hitherto have usually voted with the
Dupont of Del-
aware voted with the Taft people
and of Texas and of the
District of Columbia, were recorded
as present, but not voting.
them to the station to
them happiness.
While there were many magnificent
C. S. Forbes. Mr. and Mrs. F. j
J. Forbes, Mr. and Mrs. F. R.
Mr. and Mrs. E. B,
Mrs. L. C. Arthur, Mr. and Mrs. C. I
s. Carr, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Mose-
icy, Mr. and Mrs. A. If.
dresses exhibited at both wedding and . , . ., ,
. ,, . i Misses Carrie and Myrtle Warren, Mr.
reception It would not be fair to at-1. ,, . , , .
, , and Mrs. A. L. Blow, Misses Mar-1
tempt description, for should we . . , . . .,
. , , . and Florence Blow and Mr.
It, being mere men, we would ,,, . , .,
. , . Alec Blow, Mrs. J. G. Mrs. J.
know how to. All we can say, anal, ., ,, .
. . . , , . W. Farrell. Mrs. H. O. Mrs.
we any it honestly sincerely . . , . . . .
., . . . , . , , , ,, J. Miss Ada Cherry, Miss
the bride looked lovely In some kind,. , , .
.,. . ,. ., . Joyner, Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
of a beautiful white satin dress and ,,, .
. Turner Mr. and
that many were the site gowns ,, . ,, . ,, ,,. .
. , , . . J. C. Kittrell
we saw last night. . . ., ,
J. Moore and Miss Manning, Rev.
As far as we can we have tried to n. s. Huske Chas.
remember all those that were present Walter B. Wilson, Jr., Judge
and If by some Charles Whedbee
have forgotten somebody we plead In-1 Miss R. Whedbee
of meaning. Mr and G B w
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Cooper, Mrs. W. Hart. Mr and Mrs. T.
Mr. Allison Cooper, M. Meade. Mrs. Chas.
son; Mrs. Norfleet Pruden, Edenton; Mr. R. C. Flanagan, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hassell, Mr. and E. B. Ferguson, Mr. and L.
Mrs. W. A. Long. Mr. and Mrs. Al- C. Mrs. Chas. Skinner and
Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. Tom M. Skinner, Mr. Mrs.
Hooker, Mr. and Mrs. Sam T. White, W. H. Jr. Rev. Mrs.
Mr. Richard Williams, Mr. las Tucker. Miss Mary Mrs.
and Mrs. W. I. Skinner. Mr. and R. O, Apple
Pains All Over
are says Mrs. Nora of Broken
Arrow, Okla., use my letter in any way you want to,
if it will induce some suffering woman to try I had
pains all over, and suffered with an abscess. Three
failed to relieve me. Since taking I am in
better health than ever before, and that means much to me,
because I suffered many years with womanly troubles, of
different kinds. What other treatments tried, helped me
for a few days
Don't wait, until you are taken down sick, before
care of The small aches and pains, and other
symptoms of womanly weakness and disease, always mean
worse to follow, unless given quick treatment
You would always keep handy, if you knew
what quick and permanent relief it gives, where weakness
and disease of the womanly system makes life seem hard
to bear. has helped over a million women. Try ft
Id; Co., .
book. Mat tree Bl
The Frank Beasley
Combination of the Reversible Disc Cultivator
Horse Hoe and Plain Tooth Harrow
Works all kinds of crops, especially
Tobacco. Works deep throws dirt
to or from the Plants.
Goes between the rows,
Works a whole middle every trip.
One small horse pulls it with ease.
MOSELEY BROTHERS
Insurance Agents
Cotton Brokers Real Estate
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
In Session.
Va. June
hundred delegate and as many more
visitors are in this city attending the
annual state convention the
of Eagles. The initial
session was in the
this morning with President
John B. Graves of Clifton Forge in
the chair. This afternoon the visitors
were taken to the Norfolk navy yard
and other places of interest in the
vicinity. The parade will be
held tomorrow.
Want Ads
The Daily Reflector's
Bargain Column
J. E.
Hunsucker Buggies
Wagons
REFLECTOR OF.
flee takes orders for engraved cards.
wedding Invitations and announce-
Samples can bee seen at the
office. a
A North Carolina invention for North Carolina farmers. The best
and most complete cultivator ever made. Has patented
lever and quickly adjusted to suit of rows. Carries
either six or eight Discs as attachments will work on
any ordinary cultivators.
We sell them separately if so desired.
J. R. J. G.
Greenville, N. C.
WILMINGTON. June
are beginning lo arrive from all parts
of the state for the annual meeting
of the grand lodge, domain of North
which will be held at
Wrightsville beach, this week, begin-
tomorrow night and continuing
through Thursday. The visitors are
being met the union station by a
committee of local and ac-
companied through to Wrightsville
beach on suburban cars. The meet-
promises to be one of the largest
attended in a number of years and
many of the are
by members of their families.
Although just preceded by a few
days of cold weather, the usual large
number of people visited Wrightsville
beach yesterday and last night. The
usual number for this season of ex-
from nearby points spent the
day here and at the beach.
The Bank of Greenville
THE OLDEST BANK IN PITT COUNTY
With its of OVER
One of a Million Dollars
STANDS READY ITS OLD
AND INVITES NEW ONES.
Tel.
Just hold your lips firm, brethren
of sanity. Theodore Roosevelt lacks
a whole lot being president yet . There
are all sorts of presidents we could
rile to show that the colonel, though
he seems to be along
nicely now. will have the rudest
awakening of his life. even if he
should be
Advertiser.
R. L.
James L. Cashier.
S. T. HOOKER.
H. D. Batman.
DEMOCRATIC CONVEX.
BALTIMORE. Mil.
On account of the National Demo-
Convention meeting in a
Southern city, there will be a very
large attendance from this section. A
great many of our people IN anxious
to have this opportunity of witnessing
one o great national gatherings.
To till end the ATLANTIC COAST
LINK announced a rate of
DROP IN
And see us about those
LETTER HEADS
Work Perfect. Price Right
HOW YEAST,
man yeast, at S. M. Schultz.
FOR SALE-MO and
Unknown peas at per bushel;
bushels Beans at per
bushel; F. B. Grifton. N. C. G.
A. Johnson and Bro.
FOR GOOD
will sell reasonable. J. . J. an-
N. C.
Horses and Mules
Phone No.
GREENVILLE, North Carolina
as
Alfred G. Vanderbilt
His London to Brighton Coach
Meeting of the
County Commissioners
Patronize a
Home Industry
do not ask your patronage simply be.
cause we manufacture
though this is some recommendation to claim your
attention.
ask your custom because we are proud of
our product; the Buggies come out of
our factory have proved their worth in the past and
are proving it at present, and will continue to
keep up our standard of excellency in the future.
by American Association.
COACHING baa a strong hold upon society In England as
wall as In the United States. This spring Alfred Vanderbilt.
son of K. Vanderbilt, has resumed his regular trips be-
tween London and Brighton, a distance of sixty-four miles over
did English roads. Three relays of horses are used. The coach make the
trip places oat of London are one day and the next.
so that there are three round trips a week, the couch not running en Sunday
The start la made from Trafalgar which lies between the fashionable
and district of the west and the business and financial
section to the east. The tours are popular, and the coach Is usually wall filled.
Iowa Powwow,
la. June
large attendance marked the
opening here today of the con-
of the Iowa Liquor
Association, which is scheduled to
last until Thursday. The consider-
of business matters will occupy
only a few hours every day for the
rest of the time the local members of
the association have arranged an
elaborate program of entertainment
Including river excursions, sight-see-
drives and a big banquet.
Jim Starkey believes in carrying
the best and that's why so many
go to him for Pullman
which he receives fresh day.
At the June meeting of the hoard
of county commissioners, the follow-
sums were ordered paid
out of the For paupers
home super-
health count
and Jail transportation
postage tel-
bridges and ferries
prescriptions register of deeds
sheriff commissioners
and stationery
stenographer court crier
Jurors Janitor clock
painting
stock law stock law
county roads
roads roads
Falkland roads 29.35; roads
Swift creek roads
register deeds clerk court
auditor treasurer
sheriff advertising delinquent
tax list
Special orders were issued cover-
some corrections in tax list.
A free license was granted to J.
H. Jenkins, an ex-Confederate soldier
to sell medicines.
Four names were added to the
per list to receive monthly allowance.
A petition for a new road in Farm-
township was tilled.
There was a petition for a bridge
across creek on the Beau-
fort and Pitt county lines.
The collections reported for the
past month clerk of court
register deeds sher-
treasurer
The annual of the North
Carolina College of Agriculture and
Mechanical Arts, at Raleigh, has been
received. It shows an enrollment of
students for the year, divided aB
Agricultural
cal Engineering Electrical
Civil Engineering
Chemical and Textile Persons
interested in technical education will
do w-ell to read the of this
growing institution. Address the
Registrar, West Raleigh, N. C.
d re pa re j to do any repair work on
biles. We have class and guarantee;
our work. We also full line of
will be glad to order any parts to automobiles.
We carry a tanks for sale and ex-
Change. We are agents for the
and cars. We expect to keep new cars on hand
for sale all the time. People wanting work done
GateS.
WANTED Bad Debts to Collect
In all portions of the world-3
no lIMb wanted everywhere tn help U in spare lime
E. R. Bad Debt Agency
S Box RICHMOND, VA. II N. STREET
To Baltimore and Return
tickets being sold June 20th to 84th,
inclusive with final limit reach
starting point not later than midnight
July 3rd,
T i Atlantic coast
ates three through dinning car trains
South North.
.- too s s
For reservation, rates, schedules or
any informal ion.
II. WARD,
T c i den. Pas. Agent.
Wilmington. X. C.
HOW ONE
WOMAN WON
San.
San Antonio. Tex., June warm
welcome was extended by the city to
the hundreds of attending the
annual convention o Texas Post-
Association which opened
here today for a session extending
three days. Many Interesting and
Important questions are of interests lo
postmasters are on program for dis-
and for the hours of the
ling members the local commit-
tee has a program Including
many pleasing of entertain-
Manufacturers
of
BUGGIES
The John Flanagan
Buggy Co.
H Agents for f
H bicycles and tires Vine, IN. Ks.
and Barrels. some of the other funds which
The only democratic candidate have been disbursed in the
with no barrel, is Wood- interest of other candidates come
row Wilson. He could have had one from is not so easily settled. That the
lad he given the word in the famous dirty interests which ought to he
conference, lie could legislated are taking
have had another if he had been
faithful to Senator Marine and had
agreed for Smith to go Into
the senate. Where Wilson funds might News.
have come from and does not j
take any speculation to discover. Reflector Want Ads.
method of influencing the campaign
Is, however.
G. M. MOORING SON
General
Merchandise
Buyers of cotton and
duce. We now the former
Mercantile Co.
he to have our
on
Her Health and Strength Back
Again by The Use of
Tampa. a letter from
city, Mrs. K. C. Co rum wan
all weakened worn out with
manly troubles. My husband brought
me some as a tonic, from
the first day, It seemed to help,
had almost lost my reason, but,
thanks to I did not. Soon. I
felt and looked like a new woman. I
think the remedy Is wonderful. I
recommend It to my friends, for I have
received great benefit from
acts specif, ally on the weak-
womanly organs, strengthening
the muscles and nerves, building
them up to health.
It helps to refresh the worn-out
system and relieves the effects
overwork, both mental and physical.
Fifty successful use fully
prove the merit of this purely
table, tonic remedy for women.
In every community, there live some
Who have been benefited by
The beneficial effects of this time
tested woman's remedy, soon show
themselves In many different ways.
Try It
H, a. Write
Medicine Co. Twin.,
and 64-ms book. Home
to a ,, wrapper on
a.
Tobacco Flues
POUNDS MATERIAL
Three and one-half solid cars Tobacco Flue Iron for
this season's trade. I will make my flues this season in
the Canter Brick Warehouse, where I will be glad to fill
orders from my old and new friends, the fourth
season.
The demand will be heavy this season and to avoid
delay and confusion, I advise all those who are reason-
ably sure of needing flues to place their orders early, and
get their flues before the beginning of curing season.
J. J. JENKINS
Warehouse,
No.
GREENVILLE.
THE S E A SON'S LAT EST ES IN
CLOTHING
FOR MEN AND BOYS
Our goods will please the most
fastidious, and our prices will
compete with all other dealers.
A Word To The Wise Mother
Vacation time is at hand for and no doubt you arc
buying a suit for his every day knock-about use or one for
him to wear on bis to relatives tn other parts. If be your
Intentions allow us the pleasure of showing you our immense stock of
clothing for Boys.
Furnishings of Every
Description
We are prepared to show the trade as up-to-date
line of FURNISHINGS for men as can be obtain-
able at any store handling this class of goods.
OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT
Is complete in sense of the word and we can fit
you with comfort and ease.
For Ladies Wear
Including all the Newest designs In Dress Goods, and
wearing every description tor Womens and
Misses use.
Let us fit you with shoes that will FIT your feet
C. T.
OFFICIALS
Social
aliens.
SheriffS. I. Dudley.
Clerk Superior C. Moore
Register of M. Moore.
B. Wilson.
Chas. OH.
house.
C.
P. D
J. J. J. May. B. M. Lewis,
W. E. Proctor.
M. Wooten.
C. Tyson.
Treasurer -H L. Carr.
Chief of T. Smith.
E. Nobles. E. B.
W. A. Bowen. J. S. Tunstall J.
P. Davenport. B. F. Tyson. Z. P. Van-
Dyke, H. C. Edwards.
Water and Light
S. Spain. C. OH. L.
W. Tucker.
Superintendent H. L. Allen.
Fire D. Overton.
O. M.
Rock, pastor; C. C. clerk;
C. W. Wilson, superintendent of Sun-
day school; j. c. Tyson, secretary.
regular pastor.
Episcopal. St. Dallas
Tucker, rector. W. A. Bowen
superintendent of Sunday school.
R. V. Lancaster,
pastor; P II, Johnson, clerk.
Methodist.
E. M. Hoyle. pastor; A B. Ellington
Clark; H. D. Bateman, superintend-
of Sunday school; L. H. Ponder.
secretary.
Chapel
W. O. pastor.
g.
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M.
-R. Williams. W. M.; L. H. Pander.
Sec.
No. A F. and A M.
H. Harding. W. M.; B. E.
Greenville Encampment No. I.
O. W. C P.; L
H. Pender, Scribe.
Tar No. K. of J.
Woodward, C. C; A. B. El Una-ton,
K. R and S.
Greenville Chapter No. R. A. M.
J. N. Hart, H. P.; E. E. Sec.
Covenant No. I. a
every Tuesday night, E. O.
Flanagan, N. G,; L. H Pender, Sec.
Tribe No. I j.
a S. J. t.
C of R
Lillian Carr, pros
Miss Ward Moore, secretary.
Daughter a of T.
J. president; Mrs. J. L.
en, secretary.
The Kings A. L.
Blow, president; Mrs. J. O.
Secretary.
Sana Mrs.
Lewis Skinner; Secretary, Mrs. W.
L. Hall.
Dunn, president;
D. M. Clark, secretary.
End or R. O.
fries, president; Mrs. E. B.
Secretary.
Round V R.
president; Mrs. S. J
Mrs. T.
A. Person; Secretary, Mrs. T. B.
Meade.
Maggie saw a magazine displayed
amid a long array
Of fashion Journals as she tripped a-
on n summer day.
Upon Its cover posed a girl whose
was a thing of awe;
Vet seemed It most
magazine that Maggie saw.
She read Its various fashion hints
about new stuffs and styles and
such,
Then she hurried her away
to put her in her clutch
And still, as style to stuff they put
and stuff to style they tried to
mate,
She mourned because her curves re-
fused to shape them to the
Ion plate
For solace to the tales she turned
with which the styles were Inter-
Brave men maidens fair they
lined In clever affection versed.
The heroine of each of
artfully the tales were turned
A maid whose fortune was her face
to win the which the
Atlanta Journal.
LET US CONVINCE YOU THAT THIS IS
The Hume of The Best
. . . Job Printing . . .
Our Job Department is in charge
of competent people who have
had the supervision of such depart-
in the largest cities and the
very latest designs may be expect-
ed when such work is left with us.
Give us your work
today and we will
deliver tomorrow.
When work, quality of stock and
price is considered we can com-
with all others in this section.
Phone us your order or
ask our prices on any
thing in the line of
Printing. You
can be fur-
with
samples.
Our
the
Best Work at
Prices that
There is nothing
too large and
nothing too small
Give Us that Order Now
Job Department
The REFLECTOR
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
The Reflector Family a Wed-
Wednesday's
That brilliant luminary who sits at
the head of The Reflector table
thought he was wise enough for no
to steal a march on him, but
night he got left to such
I extent as to give his bump of con-
a jolt right. He knew some
courting was going on under the roof.
but did not dream that Cupid was
so fast that a wedding could
If you have not seen the NEW be done and over before he got on
Thursday with their usual barbecue. WASHINGTON it is to your to it. But that is just what happened
Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The ,,
Eastern for Ayden and Vicinity
Advertising rates on Application
N. C , June . The Masons these make
held their regular communication
and the officers wen- elect
J. H. Cheek, W. M.
T. t. Johnson. S W.
T. K. alien, J. W.
J. K. Smith, treasurer.
S. A. secretary.
Messrs, J. H. Smith and W. J. Boyd
are attending the state convention at
Raleigh
Master Larry Smith is spending a
few days visiting relatives at Middle-
sex.
interest to see. Made by George Tuesday night about o'clock.
Hackney, Jr., and sold in Ayden by at the home of the bride Pitt
us. E. Turnage and Sons Company, street, Mr. Clinton B. and
John Flanagan Buggy has stood Miss Nannie K. Johnston were hap-
test for years and its is married by Rev. C. M. Rock
only due to the fact that this bug-, Mrs. J. L. Carper played the wed-
has been made out of the best ding march.
material. Sold in Ayden by us.
Turnage and Sons Company.
E.
Tobacco Test Farm.
A very special effort is being made
The bride has been a member of
In Testimony Whereof, I have
hereto set my hand and affixed my
official sail, at Raleigh, this th day
of May. 1912.
J. BRYAN GRIMES,
Secretary of State.
OF SALE
North Carolina, Pitt county.
In the Superior court, before D. C.
Moore, Clerk.
E. E. Griffin and wife. Julia F.
fin, M. Cherry and wife Annie F.
Cherry E. H. Foley vs William
F Cherry.
By virtue of a decree of the super-
court of Pitt county made in the
above entitled cause by D. C. Moore,
clerk of the superior court of Pitt
on the 17th day of May, 1912,
the undersigned commissioner will on
Monday, the 17th day of June. 1912.
at o'clock noon, expose to public
sale, before the court house door In
The Reflector force for about years. Greenville, to the highest bidder for
starting as a typesetter at the
and working her way up to the
head of the mailing department of
the paper. In all her work she was
the best efficiency
and devotion to duty being her con-
Note the locals of E. Turnage and to secure the location of the
test farm Durham. This Is
If you want screen doors and farm that is to be established aim.
to fit or any other work, car- the state of North Carolina and Mr. the fortunate
your wants to L. L. Kittrell. I national government where special j groom, came from Blackstone. Va.
Ail kinds of hardware at J. R. Smith be made in the raising of early in the year to take the position
and Bro. tobacco.
Miss Dora who has been
lingering for some time after all
that kind friends and loving hands
could do for her. died Monday and
was buried in Ayden cemetery. Her
The special committee
I has to select the
R. W. Scott, A. T.
school males acted as pall bearers.
Mr. Richard Wingate and daughters
Roberta and who have
been visiting the family of Dr. Joe
Dixon at Va., returned
Thursday.
If you want a home-made light
running buggy, cart or wagon, see
me. L. L. Kittrell.
Mr. S. . Jenkins received a phone
message his daughter who is
visiting was taken sick
Suddenly He left on the evening
train to he with her.
as tan of The Reflector plant.
And an all-round good one he has
made, not only being skilled, but also
taking great pride and interest in his
work.
Whether or not The Reflector ever
anything else good, it has the
satisfaction of it has made
two young hearts very happy by be-
the means of bringing them to-
farm, only a few miles west of
Durham has offered the commit-
tee free by parties in Durham, and
the commute has the tarn under
very serious consideration. The
tor of the Sun was with
chairman another member of the I Immediately after the
committee yesterday in Raleigh and Mrs. went to the
the matter and we were assured that Smith house where they will make
Durham was being considered and home for present Both were
the committee appreciated the back at their places today and so
liberal offer that had been made by happy that they were promptly fer-
tile in Durham.
We believe that nothing would be
more benefit to our country at this
given for a on the
force
Fruit jars, caps and rubbers. J.
K. Smith and Bro.
Mr C. V. Cannon is giving his
farmers to raise more and better to-
Mid premises a new coat of paint
proving the general appearance
LEGAL NOTICE.
If you want bay, oats, corn, rape
or for feed or seed of any kind see
Ayden Feed Co.
and are trying to increase the
sales of tobacco on the Durham mar-
aid very
NOTICE TO
and this farm would aid Having duly qualified before the
much in this work. court clerk of Pitt county,
, Out people should unite in this s administrator of the estate of T.
work, and should leave no effort H. Blount, deceased, notice Is hereby
in great demand.
The little child of Mr. Joe Phillips
who has been sick at his
Mr. W. II. Phillips on Lee street, died
yesterday. The remains were taken
to the cemetery for Interment.
Mr. C. E. Spier, has a very sick
child.
Our tobacco warehouses all are
rented for the coining season to men
of both integrity and experience and
we hope to see our tobacco market
take on new life.
Car of lime, cement and plaster at
J R. Smith and Bro.
We learn that the family of Mr.
Ben Allen Jones are all improving.
The baby child of Mr. Willie B.
Tyson died Monday and was buried
in Ayden cemetery.
Mrs. Burroughs who has been
here on a visit to her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. D. G. Berry returned Thus-
day to her home in Scotland
Her sister. Miss Olivia Berry
her.
Lime. lime. lime, for brick or pea-
nuts at J. R. Smith and Bro.
We never saw crops looking more
promising, especially tobacco and
corn.
At the I. O. O. F. meeting Monday-
night the following officers were elect-
A. E. X. G.
J. R. Smith. V. G.
R. W. Smith, treasurer.
J. E. Cannon. Rec. Sec.
H. G. Burton. Fin. Sec.
We have recently unloaded two cars
of American wire fence, at
prices. E. Turnage and Sons
Company.
Have you seen that new steel post
that is being sold by us Requires
no staples and Is economical to any
one desiring a good post. K. Turnage
and Sons Co.
We have for sale lbs of
nitrate of soda, at prices guaranteed.
E. Turnage and Sons Company.
Don't forget that the original top
dresser, Is sold In
den by us. Other top dressers, but
none like Has been
clone that would go toward securing Persons indebted lo the
this test Sun.
slate to make immediate payment to
j the undersigned; and all persons
having claims against the estate are
The Necessary Worm. that they must present the
The discovery of a new species of same to the undersigned for payment
earthworm may awake only a languid on or before the 3rd day of May. 1913.
interest in the layman's mind, yet or this notice will be plead In bar
minute studies of the humbler of recovery.
works of nature that result in bring-
to light previously unrecognized
Inhabitants of the soil really possess
a very high degree of since
they often indicate unsuspected pro-
whereby the earth is kept in
o condition to be the home and
of man.
Darwin surprised the general read-
public by his revelations of the
indispensable role played by the hum-
earthworm in cultivating the soil.
He showed how the strength of a
pygmy was changed into that of a
giant by the virtue of numbers and of
industry, so that the richest soil was
turned over and over again by the
labors of earthworms and thus kept
a fertile condition.
When, however. Darwin, discovered
the importance of the work done by
worms, he was not aware of the ex-
of more than eight or
in Great Britain. Now-, ow-
to the labors of students who
have devoted their time to the study
of earthworms In that country, at
least different species are known,
and a vast amount of Interesting In-
formation has been gathered concern-
their character and
Weekly.
This 3rd day of May, 1912.
S. T. CARSON.
of T. H. Blount.
ltd
cash, the following described lot or
parcel of land
Lying and being in the town of
Greenville, slate of North Carolina,
situated on the north side of Third
street and west side of street,
adjoining Third street on the south,
street on the east and the
lot known as the W. H. Harrington
on the north and the lot of E.
H. on the west, containing
1-2 acre more or less and being the
same lot upon which Mrs. Mary
resided.
This sale will be made for the
of making partition among the
tenants in common.
This the 17th day of May, 1912.
F. C. Commissioner.
ltd
STATE OF II
Department of State
State of North Carolina. County of
Pitt.
In the court.
John Bynum vs Lula Bynum.
To the Defendant Lula
You will take notice that n ac-
entitled as above been com-
in the superior court of Pitt
county by the plaintiff to obtain from
you a divorce absolute for adultery
committed by you with Lump Bynum,
and you will further take notice that
you arc required to appear at the
next term of the Superior court of
Pitt county to be held on the 1st
Monday in September the court
house in said county and answer or
to the complaint in said ac-
or the plaintiff will to the
court for the relief demanded in said
complaint.
This th day of May. 1912.
D. C, MOORE,
Clerk Superior Court.
Id .
MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF HEAL
ESTATE.
By virtue of the power of sale con-
in a certain mortgage deed
executed and by Frank
to M. H. on the
10th day of August, 1906 and duly
recorded in the office of the register
of deeds of Pitt county, North Caro-
in Book at page the
will expose to public sale
before the court house door In Green-
ville, to the highest bidder, on Mon-
day the 17th day of June, 1912, at
in at certain lot or parcel of land
situated in the town of Greenville,
N. C. on First street, It being the
eastern part of lot No. the old
plat of the town of Greenville; being
the same lot or parcel conveyed to
Frank Hopkins by deed dated Aug.
10th. 1908. known as the Taft
lot. to satisfy said mortgage deed.
Terms of sale cash.
This 15th day of May, 1912.
J. E. NOBLES, Assignee.
DON. GILLIAM, Atty.
Millard Lambert of In
Hunting For ill- Wife.
that his wife
was lost or staying at some unknown
address in either Spencer or
bury. Lambert of
appealed to local police here today to
assist him in finding her. He states
that she left home last Friday to visit
a brother Isaac In this place,
that she telegraphed him Saturday
on the market for years and has for money, that he came here to as
stood the test. E. Turnage and Sons
Company,
Now Is the time to place your or-
for Mowers and rakes In order
to get deliveries. We have for
sale the celebrated and
make. None better. E.
Turnage and Sons Company.
If its a buggy or a harness, we
can suit in price, style and terms. E.
Turnage and Sons Company.
We have In stock buggies made
the following and defy
competition on a good buggy. Jno.
Flanagan Buggy Company, Greenville,
K, C. Washington Buggy Company,
Washington. N. C. Hackney Bros.,
Wilson. N. 0.1 Parker Bros., Suffolk,
. and Buggy Co. Kinston,
her but Is unable to locate either
his wife, Mrs. Maggie Lambert, or
her brother. Mr. Lambert has ad-
in the local papers for his
lost wife, stating that he will wait
two days for her in front of the pot-
office.
1341 Applicants.
state
board of examiners met here
today in annual session to
applicants for
to practice medicine.
will continue through Friday.
The state health officers association
will meet here June and the North
Medical Association June
TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified as executrix of
Fernando C. deceased, late of
Pitt county. North Carolina, this Is
to notify all persons having claims
against the estate of the said deceased
to exhibit them to the undersigned
on or before the 3rd day of May, 1913,
or bis notice will be plead In bar of
recovery. All persons Indebted to said
estate will please Immediate
payment
This May 3rd, 1912.
MABEL BARNHILL,
Executrix.
F. G. James Son. Attorneys.
ltd
K. C. Could we not suit you one of
of Dissolution
To all whom the present may come
Whereas, It appears to my
faction, by duly authenticated record
of the proceedings for the voluntary
dissolution thereof by the unanimous
consent of the stockholders,
In my office, that the Greenville
Lumber and Veneer Company, a
of this state, whose
pal office it in the town of
Greenville, county of Pitt, state of
North Carolina B. Minor being
the agent therein and in Charge there-
of, upon whom process may be
has complied with the require-
of Chapter of 1905,
entitled preliminary
to the Issuing of tins Certificate of
Now, Therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes,
Secretary of the State of North Car-
de hereby certify that said
did on the 9th day of
May, 1912, file in my office a duly
executed and attested consent In writ-
to the dissolution of said
ration, executed by all the stock-
holders thereof, which said consent
and record of the proceedings
aforesaid are now on file in my
office m provided by law.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified as administratrix
of Wiley G. deceased, late of
Pitt county, North Carolina, this is to
notify all persons having claims
against the said deceased to exhibit
them to the within one
year from the date of this notice, or
this notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons Indebted
to said estate will please make
payment.
This the 7th day of May, 1912.
JULIA F.
JULIUS BROWN, Administratrix,
Attorney.
New Century
No Levers. No Springs
Always in Balance.
.
Farmers want the
of its many distinctive features, which are
weight balances perfectly balanced pole
without even so much as a balance lever. Simplicity
a lever, spring, or other nuisance on
it. Light on draft, because it weighs less and has draft
closer to shovels. Evenness of cultivation, that is, move-
does not effect position of Six spring
break works perfectly in widest or narrowest rows cotton,
corn, beans, peanuts, tobacco, potatoes, etc.
Learn more about this cultivator. Fifty of the best far-
in Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let us
demonstrate to you its many distinctive features.
We also sell the celebrated New John Deere Walking
Cultivator, the best and most satisfactory walking
on the market. When in need of anything in the
hardware line be sure to see us.
Our Weeders cannot be excelled.
Hart Hadley
N. C.
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of a power of sale con-
In a certain mortgage deed ex-
and delivered by Nelson Hop-
kins to Geo. A. dated January
16th, 1910 and duly recorded In the
register's office In Pitt county In book
D-9. page
The undersigned will on Tuesday,
the 9th day of July, 1912. at o'clock
noon, expose to public sale before the
court house door in Greenville, to the
highest bidder for cash the follow-
described tract or parcel of land
to
Situate in the town of Greenville,
North Carolina and on the west side of
the A. C. L. railroad, adjoining the
lot of Mrs. J. L. Sugg on the north,
the lot of Henry Sheppard on the
west, the lot of Jane Forbes on the
east and Bower's lane on the south,
containing 1-4 of an acre more or
less and being the lot whereon the
said Nelson Hopkins now resides.
This the 9th day of June, 1912.
GEO. Mortgagee.
F. C. HARDING. Attorney,
ltd
Increased Yields Mean
Profits
For TOP
OATS. TRUCK and GENERAL
CROPS USE ONLY GENUINE
Top
BEARING OUR TRADE MARK
be misled by
less cost per ton than
using the same number of pounds per acre
gives equally as good, if not better,
results than
is packed in pound bags, in good
mechanical condition, docs not stiffen
the land, and does not Evaporate
The crop gets it all .
FOR AND FULL INFORMATION
REGARDING IT, APPLY TO
J. R. Harvey Company,
Grifton, North
E. Turnage Sons Company
North Carolina.
or
Home Fertilizer and Chemical Company.
Sole Owners and Manufacturers
Lord Northland Takes a Bride.
LONDON. June Lord North-
land, whoso name figured prominently
In the sensational trial two years ago
of the suit brought by Capt.
Sterling against his wife, an American
actress, married today to
Hilda Cooper, daughter of the late,
Sir Daniel Cooper, the noted English
sportsman. The wedding took place
at St. Margaret's, Westminster, and
was largely attended.
at Cornell.
ITHACA, N. Y., June con-
with the commencement week
exercises at Cornell University there
unveiled today a life sized bust of
former governor Alonzo H. Cornell, a
gift of the university from the widow
of the governor. Governor Cornell
was the first charter trustee of the
University, and the eldest son of Esra
Cornell, the founder of the university.
worth League Meet
League of
the North Carolina Conference. South-
Methodist church, will meet In
annual session here tomorrow and
will probably continue through to
Sunday. About delegates will be
In attendance from all sections of
the state embraced by the
GREENVILLE IS THE
HEART OF EASTERN
WORTH CAROLINA. IT HAS
A POPULATION OF FOUR
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED
AND ONE, AND IS
ROUNDED RY THE REST
FARM NO COUNTRY.
INDUSTRIES OF ALL
KINDS ARE INVITED TO
LOCATE HERE FOR WE
HA YE EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAY OF
CAPITAL AND
UTA R Y FA TIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
A N NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
fl-.
Is the Most I the Mutt Healthful, the Mast Noble of
we have a
of twelve
the he.-1
people in the eastern
part of north
and invite those
who wish to get bet-
ACQUAINTED WITH
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL THEM WHAT YOU
HAVE TO TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN
BE II AD UPON CA-
X. C, FRIDAY 1912.
I'M I Lit
TEDDY PREFERS IN
HAS HIRED HALE CHICAGO
With He Declares He Advises His Followers to
lave Courage and Indications Point
to A Bolt For A Second
Convention
Johnson, California's Fighting Governor Also
Is Far As
CALL POLICE IF DELEGATES ATTEMPT TO BOLT
Bulletin.
ROOSEVELT HAS
ED HIMSELF WILLING TO
HEAL ANOTHER PARTY AND
CUT LOOSE OP
DECLARATION
TO RANK
OF REPUBLICAN
PARTY AND THE HONEST
PEOPLE OF THE ENTIRE
Special to
CHICAGO, III. June
It is no longer a secret that ex-Pres-
Roosevelt, disgusted with
turn affairs are taking at the Coliseum
has rented a large hall and Is now
planning to bolt the convention. Ii
Is generally discussed and admitted by
even the most conservative that
followers will make a
second Convention possible. Root's
argues in learning the fact that the
GOVERNOR HIRAM W. JOHNSON.
CALIFORNIA.
Colonel had taken such steps,
that should Teddy's delegates bolt,
he will do his utmost to thwart the
move, he having hinted that tile
lice will be called In lo detain
said to his loyal delegates
FAR AS I AM CONCERNED I
AM THROUGH, HOPE THAT IF
ARK LOYAL AND RE-
MAIN SO TO PARTY. WILL
REALIZE TOUR STRENGTH
ACT was gen
taken as an Invitation to he
ready to follow the Colonel to his
new arena.
equally strong in expressing his dis-
gust the methods employed at
the convention by the Tall ring.
Johnson said this morning, AM
I TROUGH FIGHTING WITH
I FISTS AND WILL NOW TAKE A
Nothing but routine work is ex-
to come up before the com-
today. Many are
ticking to him through thick and
thin while others will not quit the
party for any consideration.
Chicago, III., June
committee of the Republican
convention broke up in a row
shortly before midnight.
Chicago. June Roosevelt
forces met their second defeat in the
Republican national convention to-
a session which had for its out-
standing feature a remarkable
of nearly an hours
in honor of Governor Herbert
S. Hadley, of Missouri.
All of the Roosevelt delegates join-
ed in this demonstration, while some
of the Taft states lent a voice. The
ovation lo the Missouri executive was
quickly Interrupted by many of the
delegates as the possible forerunner
of a boom for Hadley for president.
One enthusiastic Pennsylvania jump-
ed to the stage and
cheers Hadley, the President
of the United
Governor Hadley led the fight on
the convention Hour today to out H
contested Taft lo seat
Roosevelt men in their places.
convention finally refused lo en-
the motion a vote of
to
This transferred the light to
credentials, appointed
Just before the convention adjourned
until tomorrow noon.
The tent ion Story.
CHICAGO, ill., Jane M. At
o'clock an hour before the
time, less than spectators
were in Die hall and but eight of the
delegates Beats were occupied, James
Preston, charge of the press sec-
of convention hall, came in
a bundle of mail.
Coliseum postmaster
me to in-iii him get the newspaper-
men he said. all for one
reporter. William Jennings
Soon after Chairman Root had
rived on the platform he w Hanked
on one side Governor Hadley, the
Roosevelt leader and the other
side by James Watson, of the Taft
forces.
Chairman Root finally pounded the
table with his gavel at 111.1 a. in. and
ordered the at arms to clear
the aisles.
Then pounding the table. Root
mean the
of this day will be opened with
CONVENTION
St. Paul's in Kinston Scene
Ceremony
marriage
and one aroused Politicians Expect A Full week
in social Circle
fie Consumed
One of the most prominent
ceremonies
tin liveliest
different in the state, took
place last night Kinston. when Miss
Mitchell, daughter Mis.
A. Mitchell that became the
of Mr. K.
The ceremony Which was perhaps
Hie most brilliant wedding function
lever witnessed in tins part of the
took place In the Episcopal
church of Paul, E,
J. ii.
I The Ulterior the church
beautifully and lavishly decorated
palms and o of
Bowers, the erection of
floral directly before the altar
completing a scheme of floral deco-
ration as has seldom been seen. Al-
AS DID ST. LOUIS
el t
U for
in in mil-
BALTIMORE, June one is t
Judge from the gossip heard In the
lobbies among the pol-
and leading newspaper men of
the tic
ion is lo lie a long drawn affair,
though the time set aside for the probably until Sunday as
was guests began to
the
case in St. Louis in when
at the church long before that,,,,,, ,,.,, ,., ,,,
hear and when a few minutes
by Prince.
CHARLES EVANS HUGHES.
Postpone Meeting of Good
Roads Movement
Wants Contract With City For
the appointed time, bridal party
entered, the church was led to it
capacity.
Juno H.
It. Vainer, president of the North
Carolina God Roads Association all-1
today the annual con-
of the association will lie
held August and instead of July
and as announced from Chapel
Hill. This change is ordered by Col-
Varner because the July dales
conflicted with the meeting of
state press association. Among the
prominent speakers on the program
are Locke Craig. Senator Simmons.
John H. Small and K. Y. Webb. An
DURHAM. June consulting
engineer, Gilbert C. White, whom the
city employed to act in the ad-
capacity with the board of
in treating with the water
company In making contracts, has
rived In the city begun his
Investigations. The present contract
the water company with the city
expires in 1818 and It is the wish
the Durham Water Company. In
asking tor a new contract that in
consideration of an amount
of approximately In
the present system, the city ex-
tending their contrail for a period
of years, beyond the limit of the
present agreement. The new con-
tract provides for the same rate as
now exists. The new contract gives
the city the power to purchase lbs
Durham Water Company plant with
In every tell years.
until long alter midnight Sunday morn
lug.
can tie slated open god authority
that the Underwood forces are
At the organ, which was hid New Yolks ., in
den behind a miniature garden of the lime the third
palms and ferns, Miss Jessie Wilson ,,.,, Th. speaker
presided. As a prelude Mrs. L. and Governor Wilson have
Woolen the on
of her voice and happy prudential aspirant, and
of Hie song being most to both will lose strength after these
surroundings or ballots few people in
A few minutes after the lo Both
Messrs. Courtney Mitchell and Lloyd. ., Wilson supporters
extended the bridal carpet.,, dickering with for the
s delegation. That they
nave received encouragement
from the Tammany leader, is not dis-
even by so leader as
Hill stone. Clark's chief main-
stay in the campaign,
There is a well grounded rumor
afloat here that New York will
In its vote tor and
Underwood after Ii shall have cut
a complimentary vote for Mayor Gay-
nor, until something like a definite
idea respective strength of
candidates is obtained by tho
becomingly attired In white, long
and to the strains of
comes the party of
of Misses Lot-
tie Perry. Annie
and beautifully at-
tired in white dresses
with pink silk and gauze trains and
holding gorgeous bouquets of sweet
peas, slowly marched up the aisle
and their positions on the steps
fronting the altar. The maids of
honor. Miss Iris Mitchell and Mrs.
Courtney Mitchell as well as ma-
of honor. Mrs. S. C.
contingent. In oilier words
tram gowns and carrying magnificent Murphy's game is to feel out the con-
of while roses, followed.
in Leg.
Durham Herald.
When the police searched Tom
Little Miss Louise acted as
flower girl Master Mitchell
seriously undertook the task of ring
bearer.
The bride beautifully attired in
white and leaning on the arm of
her brother Mr. A. Mitchell, was
met at the by groom who
entered from the vestry accompanied
by Ins brother. Mr. J. W. Ferrell, the
best man.
The groomsmen were Messrs, n
Turner. Marshall A. Walk-
and Bailey.
The wedding ceremony
performed Rev. J. II.
Imposing as It was with Its
vows and promises exchanged, was
one of the prettiest ever witnessed and
tho hush followed the bridal
procession to the altar the answers
given by the contracting were
audible all over the church.
the church the bridal
by switching alternately
and wood.
party mid guests were driven
a one-legged man. who along , .,,,
with five other white men were u, home of the bride's
rested for gambling early mother on Mitchell avenue
morning, they found that the man reception was held until about II
Who had lost his limb was using Receiving guests wen
empty trouser leg as an bar sir. Mrs. S. C. who In-
Delightful punch served by
Miss Iris Mitchell assisted t Mr. I.
in the main hall, Mr. and
Mrs. Courtney Mitchell red
guests into the dining Where
were with delicious
and cake The dining loin was beau-
decorated with ferns and
streamers of green pending
from the to where
haded candles added o delightful
light.
Quests ere shown Into gift
b Mrs. I and Mrs, n.
C. Woolen. The presents displayed
there formed i collection
of articles, with much
out In Set
beautiful Jewels formed pan this
Imposing array of tills
During the Reception Coble's or-
nude delightful
Immediately the reception
bride groom left tor an extend-
where a SO -moon tour.
The out-of-town
Mrs On en, New Born;
Mrs. Percy Miss Masten.
WILLIAM JR.
room. The man mid his leg cut off them lo Col. and Mrs W. D lot Miss Annie Turner
just below the hip and had Hie Pollock. On the receiving line were land Mr. Herman Turner Durham;
empty half of his trousers ct the and Mrs. Vernon Pen-ell, and Mrs. w. j
and above this he Crammed quart and groom Mr. and Mrs. W. Messrs, Marshall and Marvin Fer-
bottle of whiskey and a number Ferrell. parents of the groom. of Mr. and Mrs.
emailed bottles. The police relieved Mitchell, the bride's mother, Mr. W. Farrell and
Gov. Johnson, of California, a stead
fast friend of the ex-president, was prayer by the Rev Joseph
effort will be made to secure
Oscar W. Underwood as the
speaker of the meeting.
him of this burden, and he. along with
Hon. his companions were placed In the
chief guard house to await a hearing on the
charge of gambling.
Mrs. J. W. Ferrell, Miss Annie
Mr. Marshall Ferrell. Miss
Ferrell, Mr. C. Walker. Miss
Susie Perry and Mr. Bailey.
William
Ferrell of Mr. c. A.
of Richmond; Mr. O. Bailey, of
Miss Ferrell of
mm