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STUDENT ATE RAW GOLDFISH
Challenged In Bantering Spirit He Per-
form. Feat Ha Needed
the Money.
hare Just heard of an Incident at
act of the New England
a correspondent, Illus-
an oddity In betting. Youths
working their way through college will
often do much and go far to win a
decree. Not long ago a
too challenged In a
bantering spirit to eat one of several
little swimming in a glass
globe on the table In a chum's room
give you a quarter to do
cried one of the boys.
As Boston boy needed ready
money, B promptly accepted the of-
fer. He put his hand Into the globe,
caught the little fish and In a
ling crushed It In his teeth and
lowed it in triumph.
he took the quarter, another
said. I'll give you half a
dollar to eat a second The grit-
youth Instantly accepted and
a somewhat larger fish.
hurriedly devoured it.
The boys now thoroughly aroused
kept on money for en-
cores until the fish supply gave out
and the Bostonian had won a total of
Th- .
dormitories, and next day when th
piscatorial prodigy entered the dining
hall at noon he was Instantly
and a great shout of applause
went up from the of of
his enthusiastic admirers
SHE WAS INTERESTED
By JOSIE
whispered the girl
with the high collar,
she at the table of
laid out for the entertainment of the
bright some
do have wouldn't waste my
time over Then she settled
back In an arm chair.
thank you
Good Road
Column
REASONS WHY
PITT
HAVE GOOD
county, like Pitt, Is
,. believe fl N of
she replied to her roads and Is considering a bond
who asked her to choose a j issue for that purpose. A of
passed the age for those j Tarboro wrote Stale Geologist
ten years With that she i pi, Hyde Pratt for an expression on
smiled superciliously that the hos- and he gave nine
flushed, but passed on to the should have
next guest without comment. roads. The reasons are so timely
remonstrated the young
r r . r, v
one is a mistake. It never was in- substituting this county Dr
tend d to come apart, and so It isn't Pratt used The reason-,
fair me that heart are as
So Tired
It may be from overwork, but
the chance are from an In-
active LIVER.--------a.
With a well conducted LIVER
one can do mountains of labor
without fatigue-
It adds a hundred per cent to
ones earning capacity.
t can be kept In healthful
by, and only by
TAKE NO
K . i .
foolish exclaimed the
girl with the high collar. ex-
Why, could
Because c-wry citizen of Till
county is or be interested in
and
EAST TEACH.
SCHOOL
The One-Year Class Conducts
Assembly May 1913.
The One-Year Class
I conducted assembly Tuesday morn-
Because the good roads bond The twenty-one members march
cited about I
work them all when I twelve i the wearing white with
replied the man with that will give the county good ,. and gray moss, to
The feat became the talk of the the carnation. take some roads at once and work no hardship class colors.
.--., when the to prove It, however. Here to any citizen. The exercises were as
take Jigger and see if you can Because a system of good Dy Thou Al-
the Inside out, without untying the put county is absolutely necessary; mighty
He handed her a puzzle. her to keep abreast of III chapter Pro-
laughed the girl with and develop her great verbs. By class,
the high collar, laying down the w
s tn and Song school is My Shep-
here's something to sit adopt and take advantage of modern Fable, which con-
and think exclaimed the girl and economical methods in good the class motto u
with the violets. mediate on building.
the fact that they say it's gospel truth Because the people of the rural
that you can get this dingus off this and the towns should be in
other dingus without breaking the wire and sympathy with each I
that It just slips off like a ring I'd
Don't Suffer
I had been troubled, a for
Mn. L la a letter from Ala, I was
not taken down, until March, when I went to bed and had
to have a doctor. He did all ht tor me, but got no
better. hurt all over, and I could not rest At last, I tried
and I began to improve. Now I am in
good health, and able to do all my
You may wonder why is so successful, after
other remedies have failed. The answer is that is
successful, because It is composed of scientific ingredients,
that act curatively on the womanly system. It is a medicine
for women, and for women only. It builds, strengthens, and
restores weak and ailing women, to health and happiness.
If you suffer like Mrs. Fincher did, take It
will surely do for you, what It did for her. At all druggists.
C.
sad Si-pan beak, teat aw. SO
BANDMASTER A REAL GENIUS
Clever Expedient Adopted to Keep Mu-
on Their Feet for
Reception.
At Cheyenne, Wyo., the band from
an army post had been engaged to play
In honor of the visit of Adelina
and many years ago.
Strange sounds came from the band,
and asked Colonel her
Impresario, to find out what the tune
He found the band standing a
circle, so close together that they
formed a solid bank, with the band-
master in the center. was
about to part them to reach the band-
master, when the latter begged him to
desist and explained that as the band
bad been on duty for thirty-six hours
awaiting the company-, arrival, and
were numerous Cheyenne,
none of the musicians could stand
alone and he had adopted the
of standing them a circle so
that each would be supported by his
fellows.
yon take one said the
bandmaster pathetically, whole
lot will fall
there is
Eunice Parker
Old Sweet
By Class
Greek View of the Unfit
In connection with the prevalent dis-
position of great corporations to ex-
drinking men from their employ-
consider this remark which
Xenophon credits to my
friends, when a war was coming upon
us, we should wish to a man
that It Just slips off like a ring. Id q fl work gr common d, R. Man's a Man For All
each class dependent upon the
other. Turner
Because the building of good
roads through Pitt county will mean I Eliza Branch
an immense increase value of land. The exercises closed with tho
and especially farm land, due to the song to the tune of
increased net Income that the farm -when Johnnie Comes Marching
land is able to earn; thereby greatly
increasing welfare and prosperity This ends the exercises by the
the county. classes. They have not only been
Because the farmer can haul by everyone, but have been
over good roads a full load with a L n showing what may be done
minimum wear and tear on his Dy schools, for opening exercises,
teams, and harness; while different communities which
roads, he can usually haul over
half a load.
, Because the good roads
Is so vital to both town and
country people that you cannot afford
to turn your backs on It. You owe
it not only to this generation, but
also to- the next to give good
roads
l Because as a tax payer you will
realize that what taxes you pay for
roads will bring back to you
greater returns than any Investment
can make; therefore, you can-
Story of Panama
NO. THE FRO
M BALBOA TO
1913, by The Associated
Newspaper School. Inc.
A EVERY DAY a.
Centuries ago, when Balboa, cross-, It Is in reality a new surface, raised
the Isthmus of Panama, stood to a height of from twenty feet
the crest of the mountains form- a hundred feet over several square
the great continental divide and of territory.
viewed for the first time the distant
of the Pacific, he never
The work on this sea level stretch
of canal was made even more
that some day man would bring cult by the constant floods, caused
the students may go as teachers.
Storm Hits Circus Tent Re-
In Death it
Henderson
the waters of this great ocean to the
foot of the mountains upon which he
stood. Yet this Is what has been
done by the Americans since 1905.
While the work of constructing the
Immense locks was going on the
Attend to Your Own
HENDERSON, May
,, . , a Bill's Wild West and Pawnee Bill's
by whose exertions we might ourselves showed It to me all apart. Another not afford to be without good roads. Far show here promptly
-j in h mo. of a second put it all r further Dr. Pratt Vance.
be preserved, and might gain the mas-
tery over our enemies, should we
one whom we knew to be
to resist gluttony, or wine or sensual-
or fatigue or sleep Or, If, being
at the close of life, we should wish
to commit to anyone the guardianship
at our sons or the care of our
daughters, or the preservation of
oar property, should we think an in
temperate man worthy of confidence
such
The Greeks were above all things
reasonable, to their dear
om at the
Killjoy.
Dr. referred the death
of in the memorable phrase
the of
for this he taken to task by the
accurate
why protested Be
his extend further
than own nation
replied Dr. Johnson,
must be allowed. Besides,
may be we allow the
Scotch to be a nation and to have
which they have
There will be widespread sympathy
with Dr. Johnson his protest
against the killjoy who would ruin the
freedom of conversation by Insisting
that every statement made be sue
of mathematical
tenth of a second put it all together
again I'm She sat
down grim earnest to pore over
her individual problem road work
S be done under the supervision of
got It, and It's Just as easy competent highway engineer. ram v
She took apart her and put K ; By the passage of the bond Issue blew away the tents, killing
together before the others with old compulsory labor tax should one Mr Robert Davis, of Bear
air of a
i. . . .-- people
In order that the expenditure of the Warren Mecklenburg counties
bond Issue shall be the best Interests city today, but It a
desperate show day.
Rain broke up the parade and a big
rain and wind storm, with thunder and
Queer Uses for the Crocus.
The crocus Is nowadays held to
Justify Its existence by its beauty,
but in bygone centuries it was
with an eye to saffron
being high demand both as an
aromatic and as a flavoring for cakes
and pies. A distinction of crocus
blossoms, also, held to be good
for strengthening the lungs and heart,
and as a preventive of plague.
of the flower's commercial
value survives the name of the
chief center of Its cultivation.
Walden. but saffron nowadays Is
only by the sparrows.
who wreck the crocuses to obtain It.
Motor Cars at Church.
did you go Sunday morn-
went to
mi Was the service welt at-
tended r
have
do you say It must have
been Don't you
there were fourteen different
snakes of motor cars standing out-
shoes the thing
la the the
with the I'll ex-
change, and then see who's the
said the meditative
slowly. any of you can
give me how to do this.
give a myself They
placed skeptical emphasis the
Ill give five to the
person who
do own
the young man with the carnation.
got our own reputation to live
up to, and If I get this one thing
solved before morning I shall be ever-
lastingly proud of
see said the girl with the
high collar, laughingly. The
man handed his puzzle to her and;
stood watching.
think you must turn this thing
around the murmured the girl
with the high collar, as she worked
at the puzzle. But
nothing came apart.
It the other suggested
some on, pausing to watch.
you Just attend to your own
flashed the girl with the
high collar. going to earn that
She worked silently some minutes.
I can't do this she ex-
claimed. idea of asking me to
solve a puzzle that a grown man had
to give She picked out another
from the box. one looks
your baby brother
advised tho girl with the
violets. so easy, he'll show
Hut the girl with tho high collar
was too to notice the re-
mark.
she whispered to her
hostess upon leaving, I take
this one home I think I've got an
Idea and I want to try to work It
How did you ever think up such a
clever plan as to have I've
had the moat exciting time. T
to leave without trying
Tho hostess opened her lips and
then closed them discreetly, without
Dally
mo m i man, jar.
done away with, the act pro- hurting a good many,
for the of a road j arm was broken
force which will add a great deal to. Jaw crushed, and Mrs.
the road work of the broken.
At the time the county j Mr p,, of near Durham ,
losing each year many thousand by
on of the bad roads of
the county. A of good roads tut
can be built the coat or for
same will be a very small proportion
of this amount.
by the torrents of rainfall during
the wet season from April to
The same spirit that made
Cut and the great
locks has prevailed on this work. Tho
men pushing ahead overcame the
MR. JAKES WINS
NOMINATION FOB
, .-, , l k Ions
by the
Oil. It
rm St lira.
PROGRAM
part of th. Isthmus, a hug. W It
force of labor-, It I. .
dredges, and other modern rd to imagine that this vast
-a. digging a channel from territory now healthy, dry. and clean
to. the entrance to th. canal, of dense tropical tree. W
after th. great discoverer, to was a few year, ago an almost
where th. Jungle the lurking place
of yellow fever and Many
thousand French and American la-
borers fell victim, to when
first locks located.
A. great problem confronted the en-
In the excavating of this six
miles of sea level canal; for the Pa-
working on this section, and were
burled In a cemetery close to where
Musical East Carolina Teachers Train.
School, May , HI.
Up to the close of the polls at sun-1 p. m.
set Monday, people kept coming to My
vote In the primary for mayor. The chorus
contest was warm and closely con-
or ,.,.,
Ocean has a tide of twenty-one the canal now runs that the white
feet. This meant that addition to stone, marking the grave, can be
the digging of a channel deep enough plainly seen from the canal. These
allow the largest ship to pass, a gravestones stand as a constant re-
bank had to be construct- minder of the tremendous human
to prevent the flooding of the sacrifice made, In order that the
rounding territory at high tide, world some day benefit by a
Standing upon the top of waterway across the Isthmus or
Hill a Just to the south of the Panama.
an excellent view Is obtained Every day a human
of tho work. From this point the est story will The
canal can seen from where It tor. Yon can get a Intaglio
emerges behind Hill, n high reproduction of the above picture, with
knoll about a mile Inland from tho five others, equally attractive, x
Pacific entrance, to within a short 1-2 Inches size, with this week,
distance of Tho entire In Mentor a
country for several miles to the south known authority covers he subject
the canal along this stretch Is cf the pictures and stories of
JAMES JAMES
Greenville's Next Mayor
but In the best of order and
fine spirit. There was such Interest
It that a largo vote was drawn
out. A total of voles were east,
Mr. J. B. James receiving and
Mr. N. W. Outlaw giving Mr.
James a of
My Song With Wings
soprano.
Ethel Moore
contralto.
Ruth Cobb
that We Two Were Maying
Duet.
Forbes and King
-To The soprano.
Critcher
Am Thy bar-
Charles James
mezzo-
soprano.
Ruth Tunstall
soprano.
Forbes
Taylor and Inez
soprano.
Branch
Homer-Banjo Song-For mezzo-so- and H. Semi-Mixed Heal
It's the very best quality paint. It
to Our wears best and looks best. It costs
for tenor and contralto. least money. Its use for
and Ruth Cobb years has proven these
Days-For soprano. White Lead-White Zinc and Lin-
Mary Corbel
comparatively low and flat.
fills are to protect it
from tidal overflow. Thousand, of
week. Renders of The Reflector and
will know Art,
History, Science and Travel,
of earth hauled from the and own exquisite
excavations at other places on the I at the Reflector office and
have been used In addition Book Store. Price. Ten cents. Write
was from the cut today to The Reflector for booklet ex-
section to build this embank-
Willie called a retaining
planting The Associated Newspaper
School plan.
For Weakness and Less of Appetite
The Standard
CR
and build. W the
son
Be Your
Far
Maud Leo
Long.
Glee Club of E. C. T. T. B.
Savage.
Percy Haswell will open her fourth
I seed Oil. Just mix quarts of Lin- season of stock performances
Dreams- seed with each of L. and r Toronto about the end of this
Semi-Mixed Real Paint and make month.
3-4 gallons of pi re paint ready
at n cost of per gallon. The
and M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint is
sold by J. R and J. G.
N. C.
Piles Cured In to Bays
Your
OINTMENT to cure cite Itching,
or in Bin
firM give, Keel,
GREENVILLE IS THE
HEART OF EASTERN
CAROLINA. IT HAS
A POPULATION OF FOUR
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED
AND ONE. AND IS
ROUNDED BY THE BEST
FARMING COUNTRY.
INDUSTRIES OF ALL
KINDS ARE INVITED TO
LOCATE HERE FOR WE
HAVE EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAY OF
LABOR, CAPITAL AND
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
JOB A N D NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
Agriculture Is the the Must Healthful, the Most of glen.
WE HAVE A
OF TWELVE HUN-
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
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL THEM WHAT YOU
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN
HE BAD UPON
X. C r.
Raleigh, Charlotte and
Falls
Through River Bridge
One Killed and Nearly a Dozen
Are Injured
I WAS H
Carrying Both Freight and
Wreck Occurred About
Six O'clock
A I'll I'll null
SANFORD, Juno No.
of the Raleigh, Charlotte and South-
was wrecked at Deep
river bridge, near this
about o'clock the entire
train going Into tho river. Train No.
Is a mixed passenger and
freight running between Mt.
and Colon.
The engine, three box cars and one
passenger coach fell into the river,
killing one man and injuring a
of others.
Tho
Stewart, of Hemp, N. C.
The Injured,
Fred Burns, Osgood, N. C, serious-
hurt.
R. C. engineer, bruised and
scalded on arms and back.
George Blalock, brother of
Blalock, seriously scalded.
Conductor of N.
C. seriously hurt in back and legs and
head.
Gus Johnson and Milt Johnson, pas
anger., hurt in back and legs; not
serious.
Colored
Arthur Leak, fireman, scalded on
head and severe gashes on head.
Spencer Tyson, arm broken and
hurt head, not fatal.
Fletcher leg hurt, not
The last three are trainmen.
As soon as Information of the
wreck reached here Dr. Charles L.
Scott left In an automobile for the
scene of the wreck and later a spec-
train over tho Southern Railway
carried aid.
It Is not known how tho wreck
happened and more complete details
are not obtainable at a late hour to-
night.
Special train over tho Southern
brought the Injured to Central Caro-
hospital at Sanford where every
attention was given.
Editor of Bryan's Paper Will
Govern Canal
Zone
Want University Students to
Pay Each a fear
For Athletics
CHAPEL HILL, June board
cf trustees of trustees of tho
of trustees of the University of North
Carolina, in annual session tonight,
went on record favor of the com-
athletic fee of the amount of
each college year student
matriculating. The adoption of the
compulsory fee. however, carried pro-
vision in case any student is
able financially to meet the fee, the
president of tho University is
to make omissions. The
of the system whereby all the
students with the few exceptions of
students unable to pay the
each year Is the result of a petition
circulated time ago and signed
by a majority of the students and
sanctioned by a large quota of the
faculty.
Another step toward tho ushering
In of a progressive system of
at Carolina was taken by the
tees tonight when they made the
that summer work in the
summer or law school will
count towards attendance upon the
live months ruling, thus loosening up
ion tho heretofore eligibility
rules.
No action was taken by the
tees relative to the October 12th
whereby tho resent status is
that a student not registering be-
fore that dale cannot participate
any athletic contest.
Tho session of he board of
tees adjourned at midnight.
WASHINGTON, Juno
L of Lincoln, Neb., editor
of The Commoner, was today select-
ed by President Wilson to be civil
governor of tho Panama Canal Zone.
This was announced by Secretary
Garrison after ho and Secretary
an and Daniels had conferred with
the President.
Although Mr. was first
by Secretary Bryan. Sec-
and Secretary
son Joined In urging tho appointment.
Mr. has been in tho news-
paper work -11 life and came into
political during
the campaign of 1896 as spokesman
for Mr. Bryan. Last year he ran in
the primaries on the Democratic tick-
et for governor of Nebraska but lost.
Want Norfolk Yard Equipped
For Construction First
Class Battleships
WASHINGTON, Juno
Daniels today declared he had been
with tho possibilities of
the New York navy yard. He said
he was convinced that provision should
lo for tho construction of an-
other great slip with the
necessary cranes and electing shops,
so that at least two battleships of
tho first order might be under con-
at the time.
That, he thinks, can be done with-
out enlarging tho limits of tho yard.
Tho secretary also intends to rec-
a substantial Increase in the
plant of the Norfolk navy yard, so
as to put It In condition for the con-
of first battleship.
Practically nothing of that kind
been done In the Norfolk yard since
tho old Texas, afterward known as
the San Marcos, was turned out nearly
twenty years ago.
must be a great enlargement
of the plant and launching slips to
out Secretary plans.
the Southern Writer Has
Never Been
In His Own land
HATFIELD
EXONERATE ON
Juno
address by Dr. Archibald
Henderson, of the University of
Carolina featured
this morning of the 111th an-
commencement of Salem Female
College. In a few remarks
President Howard K. of
the Salem Academy and College,
Dr. Henderson to his large
audience.
Cultural and Literal y Prospects of
the Present South formed the ground
work of Mr. Henderson's masterful
address.
Dr. Henderson declared that liter-
and art have been shamefully
neglected tho south, saying th
almost all of the literature of the
southern states had been exhibited by
the women who by tenacity of
post organizing literary clubs have
lulled the false national tradition that
the south Is a place of hospitality,
beauty and fascination but of useless
women.
Tho southern writer, tho speaker
said, has never been appreciated in his
own land. Ho has not heard
ears the ring of popular applause for
his works which moves men on to-
ward tho highest intellectual attain-
and the fullest
their creative powers.
are in no small measure re-
for this. Literature has
been thrust Into the background by j
the clamor of the The written
word has been subjugated to the
tho spoken.
Dr. stated that another
reason for the neglect of southern
was the absorption of the south-
mind with tho classics of Eng-
land and tho Continent. But the
declared Dr. Henderson, has
ready overcome its material
ties and today stands knocking at the
portals of a golden age In literary
culture.
said tho speaker, am
optimistic in the subject. I can make
tho lemons handed mo during the
refreshing beverages In the evening on
The speaker then made mention of
southern people who are win-
recognition.
He spoke first of President Wilson.
Then of Walter H. and William I
Sidney Porter at d paid a high
to the literary ability of Miss
Adelaide Fries of this city. Each
tho names, especially tho last, was.
greeted applause.
The program was opened by a beau-1
triumphal march played on
organ by Dean Shirley as the
marched down the aisles j
occupied seats on tho rostrum, fol-
lower by tho seniors Ion
chains cf should rs.
were presented to thirty-
eight Indies receiving the A. B.
degree and twelve In specials
vocal and
ii dimes-
lie science.
Rev. II. E, president
College, left this afternoon for
Bethlehem, Pa., to attend tho com-
of Hie Moravian
Seminary. Tomorrow his alma
mater will confer upon him the de-
of D. D.
Several Against West Virginia Ex-
Are
IS
Traveler
RUTLAND, Vt., Juno
have arrived here for the an-
meeting of tho New England
grand council of United
Travelers. Business of
tho convention will occupy
and Friday. Tho concluding feature
of tho gathering will tho annual
parade Saturday morning.
Meeting of Commercial Travelers
Ky Juno
Is entertaining during tho re-
of this week the annual grand
council session of tho United Com-
Travelers. Many members
the order in attendance from
Wes Kentucky and the Dis-
of Columbia.
Burden Of Resentment In Socialist
Committee Report Is Against
The Former Governor
Of The State
CHICAGO, June Hat-
Held of West Virginia, is exonerated
on a number of charges, cir-
against him in with
the West Virginia coal mine strike,
a report to the national commit-
tee of the socialist party made today
by Victor L. Adolph
Eugene V. Debs, who made a per-
investigation.
The burden of resentment the
report is directed against Governor
Hatfield's predecessor. Governor
It was Governor Glass-
cock. the report, who was re-
for martial law and many
which the alleges
during bis
Governor is censured for
repressing two socialist papers and
prisoning their editors but the report
quoted the governor as admitting this
action was unjust and declaring that
the papers might continue to issue
without molestation from the state
administration.
One portion of tho report, speak-
the present governor
further claimed that he had
abundant evidence with which to
convict sonic of the leading strikers
in the civil courts, hut that ho had not
felt disposed to press the eases against
Tho committee of three was
pointed by the national committee of
the socialist party and the report de-
the member, availed them-
selves of all so-called reliable
They declare that they were
shadowed from moment they
rived in West Virginia but nothing
of It. After several of In-
it was decided to visit
Governor but the latter de-
that he would see only Debs.
Debs reluctantly consented to go
alone but the Interview was so
satisfactory that on the following day
the entire committee was received. H
this Interview, the report says In
had inherited
martial law from Gov. and
the reason he permitted it to remain
effective was because he was request-
ed to do so by the union miners to
prevent them from being assaulted by
the employ of mine
The committee learned from the
governor that he had two mine guards
in Jail and that he had refused to lib-
them on ball. The day previous
to tho interview the governor
released all
then remaining in prison.
The governor referred to the fact
that not in a single instance had he
affirmed n conviction of the military
commission, the report says and con-
governor Unhesitatingly
working men had the right
to that the socialists had
the same right that Republicans and
Democrats that they were en-
titled to the right of free speech
Governor Opposed to
was under the administration
Honor the
Memory of
Jeff Davis
REVERSES
IN
June after-
noon at o'clock, in honor of the
of Jefferson birthday
diopter, Daughters Of
tho Confederacy, gave a
barbecue dinner cooked on the ground
and served in the op-n on the court-
house square.
Tho death of F. A. of Mt.
Olive, occurred at his home there
this morning after many weeks
slow decline. He was greatly es-
teemed and widely known and con-
Such is Work Senate finance
Sou-Committee
VIEW OF
Tomb Strewn With Flowers
LEXINGTON, June
Memorial day, tho birthday of
Jefferson Davis, was observed here
today. H. Young
Louisville, grand commander, Unit-
ed Confederate veterans, delivered an
address in Lee memorial chapel and
the tomb of General Robert E. Leo
was strewn with flowers.
of Officers
NASHVILLE, Tenn. June
oration day exercises at Franklin,
Tenn., especially commemorated the
execution there June of two
confederate officers, Colonel W. Orton
Williams, a cousin General Robert
E. Lee and Walter C.
Peters. They died declaring they
were not spies. Their real mission
continues a mystery. II. P.
who saw them hanged, an orator
today.
Observe at
COLUMBIA, S. C, June
under the auspices of the Unit
ed Daughters of the Confederacy, com-
tho anniversary of tho
birthday of Jefferson Davis, was held
hero today.
Crosses of honor were bestowed on
a number of confederate veterans.
George brother of Rudy, the
scrapper, Is coming to America
to try his hand In the boxing game,
of and not says
the report, martial law was de-
that the military commission
created, that Mother Jones, John
Brown, C. II. and numerous
others were court and con-
and it was also under the
administration that an
mored train in the name of the law,
and order shot up Hie cabins and tents
of the miners, dealing out death and
under cover of
The suppression of the two socialist
papers, both outside the martial law
zone, the report characterized as
without warrant and subject to
the severest Demolition of
the office of the Star and the seizure
of editor Thompson are termed
Gov. is
quoted as knowledge of
In the suppression of that pa-
per. The report continues in
of outrage up-
on defenseless miners and their
during the
have not been
Houses tents were shot lip
from the armored
men were assaulted and women In-
by the dastardly mine
and even little children were not
spared. As all these atrocities
the striking miners and their
will be brought nut fully the
senatorial investigation now under
way and placed before tho country
for Its as the
misrule of the criminal mine barons,
we refrain from tho attempt to
them In the report.
And Votes lo Place Live Stock,
Wheat And Oats On The Free
List. Statement
Simmons
WASHINGTON, June
its former action in voting to place
wheat, flour, oatmeal and fresh meats
cu the dutiable list, the senate finance
sub committee in charge the
schedule, voted late today
to place live stock, wheat and oats
on the free list.
This action, it was authoritatively
Stated, was taken to meet the views
of President Wilson, Senator Sim-
mons, chairman of the finance com-
and other administration lead-
who disapproved the decision an-
yesterday to tax meats ten
per cent, compensatory to a duty
on cattle In the Underwood bill, and
to access a compensatory duty on both
flour meal.
The vote to reconsider was taken
in tho sub committee on a motion
made by Senator Simmons
members of all the sub
handling the various schedules, when
he returned lo the from a con-
with the president.
in this enlargement of the free list
President Wilson is known to have
a leading part as he did in the
mutter or raw wool and sugar. As
ho still is standing uncompromising
for the wool sugar schedule-,
so. it is declared, he will stand firmly
for free cattle, sheep and hogs
free wheat and oats, now that this
has been determined upon as the
party policy.
Senator Simmons conferred with the
president last week about his views
the method Of equalizing the
bill with regard to these
raw materials and their products.
when sub tentative
action was announced this morning
the senator went immediately to tho
White House.
told the ho said,
later, members of the
committee in Informal conference had
agreed that there should not be a tax
on wheats am flour. It was true
the subcommittee had taken
action, but I informed tho
president that the majority of the
felt and said we
would vote instead to place cat 11--
and other live stock and wheat and
oats on the free list. This president
Wilson agreed lo. and said it would
be all
After leaving tho House
Senator Simmons called on Sena
Williams, chairman of tho sub com-
and told him of the
for free rattle and wheat.
the committee was called
its former action reversed.
mailer is settled said
Senator Simmons, that is
way the schedule will go to the .-
The Inquisitorial clause of tho P
bill which aroused i
been the
sub committee considerable
In trying to work out a
of Its provisions hove
the Secretary
Bryan and John Mn-
of the stale department
Jimmy Johnston la
arrangements to take his
of boxers to Australia.
ill
Militant Suffragettes ire
Victorious In Royal
Palace
LONDON
just achieved big triumph
in the immediate of Queen
Mary herself.
The queen's chief dresser, Miss
Florence Selby, who has been with
her for years, has been a member
of the organization for
some and has been active as
recruiting sergeant for the Women's
Social and Union among the
upper servants of the royal palaces.
Queen Mary, according to the
World's information is intensely op-
posed to in every shape
and there has been much bickering
not only among the upper servants,
but the ladies in waiting as well, on
the question.
Recently Miss Selby and some other
in the palace took to
wearing the badges, of
which the queen had expressed dis-
approval, and matters readied a
max just before the queen's
for Berlin, when she issued an
order absolutely the wear-
of these badges by any of the
servants.
Miss Selby thereupon tendered her
resignation, declaring that she moat
have liberty to wear the badge or
ha would leave the queen's service
forthwith. It was impossible to dis-
with a chief dresser's service
just as the queen was going to Ber-
for a royal wedding.
was given Miss Selby to do as
she chose.
Miss Selby has not since then worn
the badge in the palace, but the royal
suffragettes are proud of the victory
for the principle they have won.
When the Countess of
one of the ladles In waiting, shovel
sympathy with the militants, though
rot one herself, the queen spoke so
sharply that the countess resigned.
Put it is far easier to fill the place of
a merely ornamental lady in waiting
than that of a chief dresser who has
acquired useful knowledge of the
queen's taste and foibles about her
and is thoroughly acquainted
with the royal wardrobe, both social
and mufti.
Owing to there being a number of
suffragettes among tho palace
the belief became Current that
the queen must he a sympathizer
too. this has annoyed her more than
anything else.
WEEK END SUNDAY
EXCURSION FARES
CUT and
via
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD
Prom Week End Sunday
.
3.00 1.75
Greenville . 2.75 1.75
Washington . 1.25
Vanceboro . 1.50 1.25
Fares to Beaufort cents higher
to Morehead City.
Rates from Intermediate stations In
same proportion.
Week End tickets sold Friday.
day and Sunday morning trains good
to return until midnight Tuesday.
Sunday tickets sold each Sunday
until September 14th, limited to date
of sale only.
Get complete Information from any
ticket agent.
W. W. G. P. A.
Norfolk, Va
Double Launching Ceremony
BALTIMORE, Md. May
i passenger steamers built
by the Chesapeake Steamship Com-
for service between Baltimore
and West Point, Va. were launched
noon today from the shipyards at
Sparrows Point. The vessels were
named City of and City of
Richmond. Miss Ursula Harrison,
daughter of Fairfax Harrison,
dent of the railroad,
the City of Annapolis and Miss
Annie Carter Lee, a granddaughter of
Gen. Robert E. Lee, christened the
City of Richmond.
For Weakness and Less of Appetite
he Old Standard Ionic,
Malaria and builds up the A
. mm for children.
Piles Cored In to Days
Your druggist will refund money If
I'M fails to cure any case of Itching,
Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles H days.
Notes Our Hustling
Neighbor
AYDEN, May Guess
lost a nice cow from licking
a bucket in which green had
been used to spray potatoes.
Dr. James Dawson died at his home
near Thursday from
Mr. Dawson was a good farm
had reared a large family and
was brother to the late Council
son, who for many years was chair-
man of the county commissioners of
Pitt county.
Grain, galvanized roofing
for shelters. J. R. Smith and Bro.
Misses May Smith, Jennie Turnage,
May Cannon, Bet
Beulah and Irma Can-
non came home from the various
schools this week.
Mr. J. F. has resigned as
mayor and Mr. Joe S. Ross was elect-
ed by the board of aldermen to All
the same.
Messrs. Curtis Harrington and Will
H. Roberson have opened a fancy
grocery and fruit store next to Messrs.
R. C. Cannon and Sons.
Bicycles for men and boys; also
tires and other for same t
j. Smith and Bro.
j The colored graded school closed
week with fitting ceremonies.
There has been a lodge of
the Eastern Star organized here,
among our This is a noble
order and may well expect goad
results.
Mr. H. Manning of near St.
Johns was here Monday and tells us
the crops are very promising in his
section.
Mr. W. T. Hart, who has been at
a for some time returned
Thursday. He is looking much
proved.
Mrs. W. J. Boyd, who has been
her sister, Mrs. E. G. Cox,
of Greensboro, for a few weeks has
returned home.
We are expecting a very interesting
game of base ball between
Bloomer and the home team.
Of course we expect to win.
Mr. W. Ed Stocks, of Fork Swamp,
is quite sick at his home.
Mrs. Sam Burner, who has been
attending a hospital for quite
a while has returned home much
proved.
Miss Mattie Johnson has taken a
position with Worthington
and Co., as bookkeeper.
Mr. E. Hooks left yesterday
for a short trip to Washington. D. C.
The little child of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Britt died last Wednesday and
buried at the
This was their only child and much
is extended,
Miss Jesse Cannon attended the
at A. C. College at
son this week.
Worthington returned
from Chapel Hill Thursday. Our coin
ANNOUNCEMENT
INCREASED VALUES
in
ACCIDENT DISABILITY
POLICIES
Limits of for ordinary accidents
and for travel accidents, will be
given in all policies that were formerly
based on and limits issued
by the MARYLAND CASUALTY COM
Premium rates remain the same.
All renewals of policies now in force will
be given advantage of these increased val-
MARYLAND CASUALTY POLICIES
are not filled with evasive language and
vexatious clauses.
COMPARISONS with contracts issued
by any other CASUALTY COMPANY IN-
THE BEST COSTS NO MORE. GET
A MARYLAND POLICY.
H. A. WHITE
INSURANCE
1895
Evans St., Greenville, N. C.
Your Food I
is only as pure as the Refrigerator you keep it in. To be
sure you are not subjecting your family to the worst type
of Germ. Use a the most practical refrigerator
built. We have them in all sizes. Also a complete line of
porch chairs, rugs, art squares, etc.
Our Undertaking Department is complete in every re-
We carry a full line and guarantee sat-
service at moderate prices. Why pay more
Boyd Furniture and Undertaking Co.
The Store That Pleases.
Bros., and Lester Pianos
and Player Piano
None better made, none better
offered. Cuts prices and terms furnished upon
plication.
G. G.
Tarboro, N. C.
A postal addressed Greenville will reach me.
can well afford to feel proud
of her young men and women.
A beautiful line of parasols trim-
med hats, collars and cloves at J.
K. Smith and Bro.
Mr. Levy Cannon of Fort
and Miss Eva Hart were married last
Sunday. Rev. J. H. officiated.
Guaranteed Itemed;
The constant Itching, burning, red-
rash and disagreeable effects of
eczema salt rheum, Itch, piles
and Irritating skin can be
readily cured and the skin made clear
and smooth with Dr.
ma Ointment. Mr. J. C. Cleveland, of
Bath. had eczema
years and had tried everything.
All failed. When I found Dr. Hob-
son's Eczema Ointment I found a
This ointment is the formula
of a physician and has been In use
for an experiment. That
is why we can guarantee It. All drug
gists or by mall. Price
Chemical Company., Philadelphia and
St. Louis.
In Our
Furniture
You'll find designs that are
as beautiful and graceful as
they are useful.
Furniture-
That will decorate the home as well as be best of
all at prices that will surely suit your purse
We Invite your examination.
TAFT VANDYKE
TOBACCO FLUES
THAT FIT
For the consecutive season I solicit your orders. Ai
evidence the satisfactory fleet I make, my tales
hare frown from to material la n year.
Four Solid Cars
already bought for trade. Will make then
year at the Liberty To avoid dewy let me have
order at once.
J. J. JENKINS
Phone
Greenville, N. C.
Elegance in House Fur-
Without Ex-
Our Furniture the Tent of Time. It Is built of the Beat
material. True In wood an workmanship. Good enough to be
handed down to your as heirlooms. If your home Is not
as and comfortable as you like It, why not and
complete Its furnishings
You will And Just the thing to give your dwelling a touch of
luxury, without excessive J
HIGGS TAFT CO.
Greenville, N. C.
ARE YOU INSURED
If not let C. L. Wilkinson insure you in the Mutual
Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark, N. J.
INSURANCE THAT INSURES
The benefits which the Mutual Benefit offers is
surpassed. It is just one way but best all ways.
Back of it is a 68-year reputation for fair dealing with all
its policy-holders whether continuing, withdrawing or
dying. C. L. WILKINSON, Special Agent, Greenville, N. C.
-Deposit Your Money with a-
NATIONAL BANK
Where You Receive the Benefit of Supervision
Only one National Bank in Pitt County. There is a Reason.
Drop in and let us Explain the Advantages of a National Bank.
THE NATIONAL BANK OF GREENVILLE
Paid on Time Deposits Young, Active, Progressive
J. L. Little, Pres., F. J. Forbes, Supervisor
NOTICE
North Carolina, Pitt County.
In the Superior Court, Before the
Clerk.
J. F. and J. H.
vs. Anna Moore, A. J. Moore, Jerry
Moore. Hoy Moore, Herman Moore
and Jerome Moore.
The defendants above named, and
especially the defendants Anna Moore
and Moore, wilt take
that an action entitled as above has
teen commenced before the Clerk of
the superior court of Pitt county to
sell for partition a certain parcel of
land In township, In Pitt
county, adjoining the lands of Aaron
S. J. and
others, containing acres more W
and said defendants and each
of them will take further notice that
they are required to appear before the
clerk. of said court on the 30th day
of June, 1913, and answer or demur
to the complaint and petition filed In
said action, or the plaintiffs will
ply to the court for the relief de-
In said petition.
This the 16th day of May, 1913.
D. C. MOORE,
Clerk Superior Court.
F. G. JAMES and SON,
for plaintiff.
ltd
Lodges Social
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as administrator
of Eddie T. Powell, late of
Pitt county. N. this Is to notify
all persons having claims against the
estate of said deceased to exhibit them
to the undersigned within one year
from the date of this notice, or this
notice will be pleaded In bar of their
recovery. All persons Indebted to
estate will please make
payment
This the 16th day of May 1913.
JULIUS BROWN,
ltd Administrator.
Having qualified as administrator
of Major T. deceased, late
of Pitt county. N. C, this is to
all persons having claims against
the estate of the said deceased to ex-
them to the undersigned within
twelve months from the date of this
or this notice will be pleaded
In bar of their recovery. All persons
Indebted to said estate will please
make Immediate payment.
This the 29th day of April, 1913.
JULIUS BROWN, Administrator.
S. J. EVERETT, Attorney.
TO CREDITORS
Having duly qualified before tho
superior court clerk of Pitt county as
administratrix of the state of R. L.
Warren, deceased, notice la hereby
given to all persons Indebted to the
estate to make Immediate payment
to the undersigned; and all persons
Laving claims against said estate are
notified to present tho same to the
undersigned for payment on or be-
fore the 23rd day of May, 1914, or
this notice will plead In bar of
recovery.
This 23rd day of May, 1913.
MAUD E. WARREN,
of R. L. Warren.
ltd
COUNTY AND OFFICIAL
Reductions at
B. J. Pulley Is making special re-
prices for ten days on coat
suits, embroideries and shoes. It will
pay you to look at his advertisement
and advantage of these low
prices.
COUNTY
I. Dudley.
Clerk Superior a Moors
Register of Bell.
B. Wilson.
C.
L.
B. M. Lewis, W. E. Proctor, M. T.
Spier, J. G. Taylor.
TOWN
M.
C. Tyson.
L. Carr.
Chief of T. Smith.
B. Fie kiln, W.
A. Bow en. J. J.
F. Davenport, B. F. Z. P.
H. C. Edwards.
Water and Light
B. Spain, C.
W. Tucker.
L. Allen.
Fire D. Overton.
CHURCHES
Baptist, c. M. Rock,
pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; C. W.
Wilson, superintendent of Sunday
J. C. Tyson, secretary.
J. J. Walker, pas-
tor; U. A. Sr., superintendent
Sunday school.
Episcopal, St. Dallas
Tucker, W. A. Bowen, sup-
Sunday school.
Presbyterian- P U clerk
Methodist,
M. Hoyle. A. B. Ellington.
LODGES
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M
H. Bently W. M; L. H. Pen
Sec.
clerk; H. D. Bateman,
dent Sunday school; L. H.
secretary.
Chapel
Rev. W. O. pastor.
Sharon No. A. F. and A. M.
F. D. Foxhall, W. M.; E. E Griffin,
Sec.
Greenville Encampment No. I.
W. C. P.; L.
H. Pender, Scribe.
River No. K. of
M. Clark. C. at A. B. Ellington
K. of R. and S.
Greenville Chapter No R. A. M.
-J. N. Hart, H. P.; E. E. Griffin.
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. F.
Meets every Tuesday night, F. J.
Forbes N. G.; L. H. Pender, Sec.
Greenville Camp No. M. W.
f A., meets every 1st and Wed-
nights. Julius Brown, con-
J. F. Stokes, clerk.
Tribe No. I. R.
M. Meets every Friday night. J. J.
Jenkins. Sachem; J. W. Brown. C. of
CLUBS
B. James, president;
N. W. Outlaw, secretary.
Round S. J. Everett,
president; Miss Nellie Denny,
End of the M. K.
president; Mrs. B. W.
Icy, secretary.
Sans Skinner,
president; Mrs. J. L. Carper,
Lillian Carr, pres
dent; Miss Ward Moore, secretary
Daughters of T.
J. president; Mrs. J. L.
en, secretary.
The Kings A. L.
Blow, Mrs. J. Q.
ORGANIZATIONS
Kings Daughters and Daughters of
the
PITT COUNTY BOTS
CONTINUE TO DO
AT BINGHAM SCHOOL
We are glad to note that Messrs.
Hassell Gibson and Knott Proctor,
of who have been at-
tending the Bingham School, located
near Mebane, for the past two years,
have done exceedingly well.
Mr. Gibson's deportment for the year
good and he also obtained a
grade of good on his studies, for the
whole session. He was awarded a
certificate in Bible. His-
and Penmanship. Mr. Gibson
was prominent among cadets,
Laving held an office In the military
organization.
We understand that Mr. Gibson is
held In high esteem by Col. Gray and
the and that he will re
turn again to the Institution for an-
other year.
Mr. Proctor was distinguished in
studies and deportment for the
session. He obtained a certificate in
Science, Sr. Mathematics,
Mathematics, Bible. His-
and Penmanship. Mr. Proctor
was also prominent among the
and held an office in the military or-
Mr. Proctor came within the
possible margin of being
ii warded the handsome gold medal In
the Department of Mathematics, and
would have been successful in carry-
it off had it not been that
added another class of mathematics to
his already large course of studies.
We understand that he was one of
the most popular cadets at Bingham,
being much though of by the
and teachers alike and that he will
return again In the fall.
CLOSE OF THE COL-
SCHOOL
The final exercises In connection
with the closing of the colored grad-
ed school were held Friday night In
A. M. E. church.
There was a good program of songs
recitations by the with
speeches by three boys of the
class.
The commencement address was
delivered by Rev. C. M. Rock, and
he gave a practical talk on Aim
of emphasizing the necessity
for work as well as education.
The diplomas were presented by
Supt. H. B. Smith of the city schools.
Principal C. M. Epps, in behalf of
the school, presented Superintendent
Smith a handsome pair of gold cuff
buttons in appreciation of bis help-
to the school.
Prof. C. W. made the
speech of an umbrella to
girl who had baked the best loaf
of bread.
It can be said to the credit of
Epps and the school, that the
students are given practical
along domestic and Industrial
lines and good work Is being done.
SPECIAL LOW
DROPS
THE BEST
REMEDY
For all form,
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago, Gout,
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STOP THE PAIN
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It stops the aches and re-
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the excess acid
safe and la He result. No
other remedy like it. Sample
free on request.
BY DRUGGISTS
One Dollar per bottle, or sent
i paid upon of price If not
obtainable In your locality.
, SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. ,
Lake
Via Seaboard Air Line By.
To Following From All Sta-
In North Carolina
LOUIS, Mo. Southern Baptist
Convention, May 14th to 21st,
Tickets on sale May 9th to 14th,
incl. Final return limit May 27th.
ATLANTA, Ga. Meeting General
Assemblies Presbyterian churches.
May 14th, June 1st. Tickets on sale
May 12-13-14-15-19-20. Final return
limit June
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.
rate Veterans Reunion, May 27-20th.
Incl. Tickets on Bale May to 28th.
Incl. Final limit returning June 6th.
FOR FULL INFORMATION as lo
rates, schedules, etc, apply to any lo-
cal agent or address,
H. D. P. A
N. C.
SKIN SORES
rut.
mm, awns, tail
MM, II. Betas tee
SALVE
see Mr at
QUICKLY HEALED
This Kind Helps The Town
With tho removal of the old office
building from the lit adjoining the
present factory of The John
Buggy Company, opera-
will soon begin on their new
factory They going to
erect, as we understand, an addition
to equal the size of their
Tho enlarging of their plant will
mean a good deal to Greenville and
Pitt county, In that it will give em-
to from twenty to thirty
skilled laborers tho year
round. Besides the Flanagan buggy
I is known most and with
tho additional capacity they will be
In position to extend their territory
a great extent. Greenville and
I'm county naturally come In for .
good deal of the advertising that they
do.
We a great deal of Interest
a Greenville business such as this,
and we feel that they should have
tho good of all Pitt
NOTICE OF REGISTRATION AND
ELECTION UPON THE
TO ISSUE ROAD
BONDS BY GREENVILLE TOWN-
SHIP, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAR
North Carolina, Pitt County.
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Commissioners of Pitt
in adjourned session assembled on
20th day of May, 1913, it being
I an adjourned meeting from the reg-
meeting held on tho first Monday
of May, 1913. ordered an election to
be held In Greenville township, Pitt
county, N. G, on Tuesday, the 29th day
of July, 1913, at the regular polling
place at the court house on the
of of Issuing Fifty
thousand dollars worth of road bonds
to bear per cent Interest per annum,
and to run for
a period of forty years, the funds re-
from tho to used for
the purpose of laying out, establishing,
repairing, grading, constructing and
Improving In any way the public roads
in Greenville township as provided n
act of the legislature of North Car-
session of 1913 In House Hill
No. 1886 and Senate No. 1799.
And notice Is further hereby given
that an entirely now registration for
Mid election was ordered and called
and that Warren, Jr., was and
II appointed registrar for said election
and that tho books for registration
will opened on Thursday, June
1913. and closed at sun set on Sat-
July 1913. That on each
Saturday during said registration
period the registration books will be
open at the regular polling places at
the court house In Greenville, N. C,
and at all other times during said
period will be open at the office of
W. L. Hall and Co., at Points.
Greenville, N. C. And all citizens
desiring to vote In said bond election
to be held on July 1913, will
required to register
This the 23rd day of May, 1913.
W. L.
Chairman Board of Com. of Pitt Co.
BELL, Clerk.
MIS USUAL BAD LUCK
BY JULIA
of course, I bad a lovely
Julia shook the evening dress
that she lifted from her trunk a little
vindictively. may observe, sis-
dear, that this creation doesn't
show any signs of hard wear, nor do
any of my other dancing frocks. If
you'll pardon the trite remark. have
returned home a sadder but a wiser
girl. have learned a few wholesome
truths, though I must admit that I
found them rather unpleasant at first.
Just give you a little
of my visit to the city and then It
won't be necessary for me to point a
moral.
back now, I feel like
at the pitiful egotism which led
me to half expect a phalanx of young
men at the train to meet me. Some-
how, I got the idea from the flattering
remarks of at least a half dozen of
those who honored our porch with
their presence last summer and
summers that my advent in the
city would be to them a source of the
keenest delight. Strangely enough,
therefore, my arrival created not even
a ripple of excitement.
It hadn't been for dear old Mrs.
Gray, there wouldn't have been one
friendly face to greet me as I stepped
off the train. Even was fuller of
her own affairs than of mine. She
said had some errands to do, and
asked me If I would mind going with
her to the shopping district. Of
course. I said I'd like to go with her,
but after we had passed a whole
pricing toweling and kitchen-
ware In the basements of three de-
stores, I made up my mind
that when I wished to see the shops
I'd try to go without Mrs. Gray.
was glad when we got to
apartment finally, to find that my
trunk had come, for I was anxious to
put on something pretty for the eve-
In case there should be callers.
I might just as well have taken my
ease In the negligee that Mrs. Gray
suggested, for our evening together
was uninterrupted. I began to think
that maybe some of the cards I had
sent to my summer
friends such a good name, dear, for
those careless young men who grace
our tennis court and beach
and decorate our porch during tho
heated gone astray. So I
decided to call up Ted Harris and tell
him I was In town.
mother answered the shone.
She said Ted had told her that I
coming and she thought be expected
to see me the next week. He was so
busy socially, she Informed me, that
he had very little time. Indeed, he
was leading a cotillion at the Fort-
nightly assembly that very evening.
thought Ted's mother rather
line, but the cotillion sounded good to
me, and I had a fascinating mental
picture of myself moving through the
mazes of that delightful dance two
weeks later. I remembered how Ted
was always descanting upon the per-
of the floor and the beautiful
music at his club, and I was sure he
would want me to dance there once
at least. I was awfully glad my eve-
gowns weren't In the least bit
country.
to relieve your curiosity at
once, let me tell you that Ted called
me up the next day and was most
cordial. He told me how glad he
would be to see me and how sorry he
was that he had every evening taken
for weeks In advance. That was just
his usual bad luck, he declared. But
he said I must surely have luncheon
with 1.1 in downtown. I replied that
would if I could, but that my time was
very full. He said I simply must
squeeze the luncheon In and he'd call
me up In a day or two and arrange a
date.
my dear, was the last of Ted.
I heard from no more and prob-
ably will not again until he appears
upon our veranda bright and smiling
some morning next summer, amiably
ready to enjoy our boat or our auto-
mobile or even the early apples In
our orchard.
had been In town a week
Clayton Rogers called me up and
he'd been trying to get around to see
me, but that be was rushed to pieces
with business. like to get up a
theater party for ho told me. I
gasped with suppressed surprise and
pleasure. he added, going
east I thanked him warmly.
Todd boys called one evening
just before left. talked of the
delights of our Country home and told
me how eagerly they were
their next summer's vacation.
They Invited sister, don't
walk around the lake
with them some cool day next Au-
gust Of course, accepted with
alacrity.
actually took me to a
lecture and Mr. Slater gave me a
shock by Inviting me to the
But he chose the evening of the
day I was leaving the city. How-
ard and Mr. weren't beard
from at all.
had a good time, though, for Mrs.
Is active In all sorts of Interest-
things, and I went to her club and
her church and helped a little with
her numerous charities and learned a
lot. But I think the most Important
lesson learned was my true value as
a winter friend and as a summer
friend. Do you know, dear, I'm awfully
glad to get back to nice old Tom, who
really teems to like me all the year
Newt
HER MIDNIGHT APPEAL OF THE
By C. N. JONAS.
was startled from his
Bleep by a sharp, Imperative rap on
the door of bis bedroom window. He
sprang up. donned dressing-gown and
slippers and hurried out at once with
a lighted candle. As he threw open
the door, the flickering glare quavered
grotesquely across a woman's tense,
pallid features.
The name broke from
him involuntarily; bis tone was
almost to harshness.
my
Intrusion at such an hour, but the
telephone will not work, and
afraid my husband Is dying. He has
had three attacks with his heart be-
fore, but never so bad as this.
thought If could get a doctor right
away there might still be some
steeled himself he
looked at her and replied
go for the doctor Immediately.
Don't worry so much. Perhaps
aren't as bad as you
you, she breathed
earnestly.
Then she drew hood close, and
turning abruptly, disappeared Into the
darkness.
went back to Ills room
and exchanged his night clothes for a
riding-suit as quickly as possible.
Then he went out to the stables and
saddled fastest horse.
In less than five minutes he had
covered over a mile of the six that
must traversed.
Could It be possible that barely
three years had elapsed since Claver-
had come and robbed of
everything that made existence worth
while his love, bis
all
And Kathleen She bad
made her choice, and only God
and and herself could have
told the rest.
Hut something In her face, In the
very atmosphere of her tonight bad
stirred bis blood strangely.
A sudden wild thought flashed
through mind. What If
should die What if the
girl he had with the one
great of his life were to be
free once more All at once, be
conscious that his breath ceased; tin
blood pounded and surged In bis
heart leaped guiltily. What
if But he dashed away the thought
and dug his Into the horse's
sides almost viciously. If anything
happened. It must be by the will of
God. and not through bis volition.
The ride was over at last His
was drenched and as be dis-
mounted and ran quickly up the steps
to the front door to the big, dark-
house where the great doctor
lived.
come at at
he called excitedly through the
speaking tube. is no hysterical
nonsense, but a case of life and death.
Charles at the Heights, you
know. Has those attacks with bis
heart. Man's dying, I'm
When he bad elicited the doctor's
promise to follow Immediately, he
went back to his horse and flung him-
Belt wearily Into the saddle, almost
staggering under the whirl of
that held him In grip. He dared
not think, for to think meant to hope,
and hoping might mean almost any-
thing.
The return journey was made me-
To dazed brain
It might have been miles or It
might have been only one.
He rode through the darkness with
bowed head and deliberately vacant
The upon his self-
control left him physically weak, so
that when, by some Inexplicable
chance, be found himself in front of
the he reeled In his
saddle.
After all, it was only natural that
he should stop here to learn the re
suit. Kathleen would expect It, since
he it had been to whom had
pealed
Soon the doctor came out and stood
for a moment In the doorway talking
to Mrs. His was
than its won't and he shook bis
head from time to time as he talked.
could distinctly see the
look on Kathleen's face as the bright
light from the hall chandelier fell full
across It, and it told him better than
any words could have done what tho
outcome might be. In her eyes, there
were alarm, curious shrink-
Hut the heartbroken look of pas-
He backed cautiously Into a shadow
and waited till the doctor came out.
entered his runabout and drove away.
A minute later. touched
his horse and was gone, galloping on
and on and on, terrified by the
passion that swept through him.
When he had controlled himself, he
reversed his horse and down
to a steady, determined gait. In his
eyes a light that had never
them before.
Overhead, the sky with prodigal
splendor, seemed flung full of gold
by some giant hand. the pale
radiance covered everything like a
soft, yellow cloud.
An army of belated locusts broke
the with their plaintive
chorus, and In the distance, a dog's
bark echoed
But was conscious of none
of these things as he rode on through
the tense solitude.
by Story Pub.
BELLE
Through the Virginian lo the
lengthening shadows of a midsummer
day rode a man, stern-faced and gaunt.
Presently he came to a clearing where
upon a slope of green was set a house
more pretentious than one would ex-
to find In so primeval a time
. and place. This oasis of modernity
was encircled by a palisade. As he
drew near, the gate was unbarred by
a brawny servant, to whom the man
the bridle as be dismounted.
As be went toward this house, a
slender, girlish form w eyes of corn-
flower blue and a of snow and
roses came out to greet him His
features softened as he stooped
to kiss
my he murmured ten-
as they went up the steps to-
It was for bis motherless
his all, that he had built this
palace In the forest and had
guarded It so jealously from every in-
A nun-like life lived the fair
who wan known far and wide as the
Maid of the
Fate stepped In the very next day,
when the stern Master again
journeyed away on his red-brown
accompanied him to the
towering pine which marked the
boundary of her freedom. Then with
a good-bye, she turned and retraced
her steps. A road to the right lured
her. She strayed aimlessly from her
beaten path and wandered at will.
She soon paid the price. A lout of
a fellow stepped from behind a tree
so the Maid of the Palisade la
freed at he cried with a leer,
planting himself in
cried out In fright. The man
stepped nearer. And then came a
knight to the rescue In the person of
one Capt. Philip Darcy. who knocked
the fellow senseless. Then he turned
to and her eyes, admiring, trusts
met bis own. They walked to-
through the deep woods, and
she chatted to freely of her close-
guarded life.
you are content to live this
hermit he asked earnestly.
am very she assured
him, no danger bas ever corns
to me until today. I was well pun-
for my disobedience In not re-
turning directly
you the captain
in low, vibrant you turned
from your
she answered and shy-
am
He walked home with but aha
bade him leave her before they reach-
ed Bight of the stern warder at the
gate.
shall come Bald the
young captain gravely, your
father la
Hearts moved quickly In those days,
and the captain returned the next day
a wooer, but Master Gregory
ruthlessly repulsed his advances and
bade begone never to return.
It must be that my daughter wed
come day, when Is much older, I
will never give her to a be
declared.
Love would have laughed at
sades, but war claimed the young cap-
services and he must needs ride
away.
Faith and hope thrived In
heart, but when the war was ended
and a long time elapsed with no word
from the young soldier, began to
fade like a flower too much In the
Bun. When a fever contagion car-
by a servant to the palisaded for-
est-house, proved a ready victim.
A physician was summoned from
Jamestown, and the crisis was passed
successfully, but remained weak
and enervated.
have done all In my the
doctor frankly Informed tho agonized
father, this Is a condition that
baffles my knowledge. There Is a
young doctor lately come to James-
town whom I should like to bring here
In
Master consented, but ha
chanced to be asleep when the young
surgeon called. When he awoke, he
learned that the new doctor bad made
his visit and departed. He went to
the room. There was a look of
the old in the face upon the
i pillow. The nurse followed him Into
the hall.
new doctor seemed to put new
life and strength Into with the
, mere touch of his hand upon
she Informed
Tho father eagerly awaited the com-
. of the next morning.
I Ho met him at the door.
he thundered, looking into
the grave eyes of Philip Darcy.
. Intrigue is this How dare you
tend to be a
am a replied the
j man quietly. a surgeon In the.
army. I settled here In Jamestown tot
be near her. I can save her
In the father led him to
room looked up, her
full of life and joy.
she cried. has saved
my life and she told him of
their meeting.
Master bowed to fate.
have won he
edged with a
have not lost your
said Philip earnestly.
gained a
It's a wonderful thing to be a
whom everybody will
the grocer sad the
An axiom Is something that Is
ways so e-en If It Isn't
Home Companion.
Favorite
you suppose a father
eon ever compete for the Of
I've seen it done in musical
comedy and French
CAROLINA HOME
and FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
D. J.
year. el-W
BU mouths,. M
rate ma; be bad upon
application at the office
Building, corner
and Third
All cards cf thanks and resolutions
M respect will be charged Or at J
cent per word.
Induced to the petition for The colonel's suit against the
election already see the folly of editor is over. The editor
They that they have been mis- retracted the accusation of drunken-
led and that to rebuild the fence on and was let off with tie mini- I
the old line will cost thousands of mum penalty which was six cents
dollars and the source of almost end- And the colonel told the jury it was i
trouble and litigation. And many perfectly
are also coming around to believe was Just as good as being delighted.
that stock law is best for them.
doubt if the citizens of another
town the size of Greenville are put,
in
in HARDWARE
and FARM
MACHINERY
The board of county commissioners
to as much trouble in getting ice as
have called an election to be held on up
Communications advertising
will be charged for at three
cents per line, up to
Entered as second class matter
August 1910. at the post office
Greenville. Carolina, node
Ct of March 1879.
FRIDAY. H. 1913
Housekeepers especially are doing
much complaining about the
and delay In filling orders.
The editor of The has
just r reminder
long by gone days. H
tie paper called the
. i . . I I mag-
o amateur Journalism. TIM
front pace Of Um May of the
. j contains a group I
t some attendants upon
annual convention of the
C ling M
in June
i tat has since become of than. This
writer was one of the thirteen
Mood the camera U .
tars, U brought a smile to look
back war the thirty-live years and
see what a kid he then was.
recall many things that have tram-
since. We were all boys than.
this writer being the youngest in the
sixteen years of
age, and having already been an ed-
four months. Out of them all
but two have in the news-
paper business until
Daniels and the writer. And It is
a coincidence that these two, after
sticking to it thirty-five years, this
year lay aside the active part of
newspaper work to enter the service
of former
of the navy and the latter post-
master of his home town.
Cut bask o that bunch of boys
and to recall the names of some fa-
to our readers, Just as we
July 29th, next, to vote on the prop-
of Issuing not exceeding
of Greenville township bonds
with which to build and maintain
good roads in the township. To con-
duct the campaign, the advocates of. A Charlotte stole four pies
the measure should organize, and and got four months on the roads,
to effect this a meeting will be held In other words a month's work for
in the court house at noon next each pie. It would have been cheap-
day, June 7th, to organize a Green- to have bought the pies. But you
ville Township Good Roads cannot learn most the econ-
It is Important that every one of being
who signed the petition asking the
county commissioners to call the of the Caro-
That's the point
in Its
the quality of our goods
and Machines that has won for us thousands of satisfied customers.
election, as veil as all others who Health slates that the
favor issuing the bonds for between one thousand and
should attend the . next Sat- thousand babies this state,
in a and become , . with was due What
If you favor good roads is to our
he on band. canal
-ah ad no makes Jack June baa tat for j
a dull Business is all rig between the corporation ;
o,. not be so and railroad officials looking to an
in business as to give no of freight rates. In th
thought for recreation. Our boys and i . towns throughout the state
be educated and they that can show discrimination should
should trained in some be sending in the
cation. At the tame time they are
entitled to physical development and As saintly as John Wanamaker Is
recreation. The town needs for this represented to have been, he Is about
well equipped gymnasium, and a to fall into the hands of the Federal
park or public play ground. Roth grand jury in Philadelphia on the
can he provided with proper co-opera- charge of not paying the government
on goods he has imported
may give out some Senator Lee S. Overman Is chair-
aid in tin way of good road building, man of the committee appointed to
but those communities which start Investigate the lobby that is seeking
out to aid themselves will be change the rates In the Underwood-
first to get roads built. Simmons tariff bill. That means the
township is moving ahead on will be probed to the bottom,
proposition of issuing bonds to build
toads and every citizen who really
favors good roads will vote for
bond Issue. There Is every reason
for favoring the bond Issue, but no
reason for opposing it.
You can buy an inferior grade of seed, sow it and reap half a crop.
You can save a dollar or two on the purchase price of some Binders, Mow-
Rakes or Cultivators but you are running just as big a risk as when you
buy inferior seed. Why not buy the BEST at first
Nothing but in
We carry nothing but the in in Farm Machinery and
as well as Hardware, and we know our goods will give you absolute
satisfaction. We carry a stock of repairs for the machines we sell and our de-
sire is to give you the best service possible. Let us show you our Mowers,
Rakes, Binders, Cultivators, Planters, Weeders, Harrows, Distributors, Wag-
ons, Cutters, etc., and we know you will become one of our satisfied customers.
GREENVILLE, N. C, Phone No.
for your town is one thing.
Protect The
Congressman John II Small last
week delivered commencement ad-
dresses In Wilson and Tarboro. He
Is much sought after for speaking
for the people know there Is some-
thing good coming when they hear
but blowing your town Is another.
Which are you doing
la every Southern State the forests
next to the soil Itself, are the state's
greatest natural resources. And In
You can't shoot a cannon without not a single Southern state are there
without a quorum.
Get It pasted in your
will be held in the court house
The season had barely opened at
Reach before a drown-
was reported.
---------o
Governor recently had an at- are casting long-
at noon next Saturday, a meeting
called each other in those purpose of organizing a Green- of rheumatism and was
Among them were Jo Daniels, Owe., I ville Township Good Roads carP are wasting time.
Ed Oldham, George Carr, Doc
Jim Howard and
Vi i It was the first time we
ever left trip to Golds-
and if appeared a green
kid we felt all right among the boys.
After the amateur meeting In Golds-
six of us went on to Hickory
to work for the success of the
election to held July 20th on the
question of issuing bonds not exceed-
for good roads In
township.
. tack of rheumatism and was flooded a, senator seat
arc
from fellows who had rheumatic nos-
to fell. It la not said that School and college commencements
ho Is giving any of them testimonial, are having the right of way all over
The government is advertising for
sealed bids, to opened July
and out to Sparkling Catawba Springs . for the construction of the
to join the real North Carolina building In Greenville. This Is good
Association in n there, and news, and it is hoped work will
from that day until this the gin on the building before many
name has appeared among the roll months have passed. The building
of members. He has ever felt
pride in this and some of his most
a will occupy the site Just across the
street from the court house.
delightful days have with the
brethren at the annual meetings. It
may not interest the reader for us
speak of those things, but to us II
is a happy recollection.
The is never happier than
when It has something to tell of
Greenville's and we wish
the folks could keep us busy
tilling of some new
day.
foil a thing, It Is
easier to gal la
it That's why Tin It'll.
so many folks
Is the best town in state
and Carolina Club can't adequate laws for forest
Every year the south Is losing
literally millions of dollars because
of forest fires, reckless cutting, de-
of young forest growth and
deforestation of land that should be
allowed to remain In timber. The
supreme folly of continuing such a
state of affairs must be apparent to
any thinking but no action is
taken to remedy It Nor will any
be taken until the farmers of the
south realize that this loss falls up-
them with particular weight and
until they demand that their
have tho business sense to pro-
for state protection and, If need
be, state oversight of the forests.
We are wasting one of our richest
heritages with a recklessness and a
simple-mindedness almost
of grown-up men. Isn't It about
time for us to begin to think serious-
about the
Farmer.
I the slate.
TO
On next Tuesday, 10th an election
will held with Ayden and
tho voting on the
question of rebuilding the k
i sot that was by the law
of 1911. The brought about
by law was making a i
i ii, take the e of a odd roll
Commissioner Young has Issued an
Interesting report of the building and
loan associations In i.
The state has associations, their
receipts during the past year being
nearly seven million dollars. And
keep it in mind that Greenville
one of the be t associations
hunch.
Postmaster General is
up some Ugly figures on tin
administration of his predecessor.
From expressions heard
from some of the
when charge the
in Greenville ore going to have few-
privileges than heretofore.
If you cannot kill the tiles, you can
at least screen them out of your
home. That Is less expensive than
lighting disease they will bring If
lowed to infest the home.
HEALTH
INSURANCE
The man who Insures his Hie la
wise for family.
The man who Insures his health
is wise both for his family and
himself.
You may Insure health by guard-
It. It Is worth guarding.
At the first attack of disease,
which generally approaches
through the end
In Innumerable way
TAKE
And your health.
Itching, Fiery,
Raw Eczema
n a Fen Seconds
Yea. an itching, burning, raw,
skin relieved the moment
touches it. Is a clean, sooth-
healing wash, composed of Thy-
Witch Hazel,
Acid and other medicinal heal-
properties. relieves and
cures every form of skin and scalp
eruption and If you are not entirely
satisfied with results from the very
first cent bottle, druggists will re-
fund your money. Large size bottle
II. Endorsed and sold In
by Pharmacy.
Is prepared by E. W. Rose
Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and
their guarantee Is as good as gold.
Columbia
NEW YORK, June Columbia
University, which boasts of tho
est enrollment any educational In
in America, held its moth
commencement today. Nearly
has taken no
of the postal business of Fourth of July wore upon tho
with Corresponding being self sustaining and It strikes us n big miles of the lever departments of
maintenance. Of course the showing B profit, at claimed by Mr. ,. ,,, ,. ,;,,, ,,.,,. not do
; in, pal . an examination harm,
In the stock law district Who bad was a considerable
I i outside h.
ma id i By now tho people are I
king to lead In. Tho nominations made In the , election lo held o
. Friday ,,,,. ., ,
To Cure n In One
i i . i
Mrs. James M. Johnson
Invites you to be present
at the marriage of her daughter
Lena
to
Mr. James Cleveland Galloway
on the afternoon of Wednesday,
tho eighteenth of Juno
at half after two o'clock
Methodist church
North Carolina
AT THE
SCHOOL SUNDAY
Tho sermon the Training School
Sunday, Juno the 1913, will
preached by Bishop Collins Denny,
Richmond, Virginia. Den-
Is one of truly great
ors of this country and Is a
treat In store for all who at-
tend the services tit tho Training
school in o'clock Sunday, June
are sure the school authorities
will glad a large attend-
1.1 I'M- from the country
and the towns. They
Will be richly repaid for their at-
I.
Trinity University Commencement
Texas, Juno
An unusually largo class received
their diplomas at tho forty-
fourth annual commencement
at Trinity University. The ad-
dress to tho graduates was delivered
by Rev. John Shaw, D. D.,
of Chicago.
The Home Kitchen
Paint your kitchen walls and wood
work white above the wainscoting. It
keeps soiled hands away. Its cheer-
brightness Is always Inviting. One
quart of Turpentine added to one-
half gallon of I., and M. semi-mixed
real paint makes quarts of tho high-
est grade of pure and it is en-
to paint a and two more
rooms. For outside painting the
very highest grade of long life paint,
is made by adding quarts of pure
Oil to each one gallon of L.
If Real Paint. Sold
by J. R. and J. G.
I carried even I town I ., ;., . ,.
i lawlessness In r to e n,
LADY IX THE
county to writs us for
u, built. I This la In keeping with the choice for establish char- on Tho Imperial
This was done without the r had been made a ,.,,,,. for by the time th
I waiting to i how being primary, Tbs outlook even If cannot prow
the law was going to i conservative administration. himself temperate In speech.
Iron. n a household
Write now, to G. A. John-
son and N. C,
T,
This same leadership antagonism
m the order for an alee- should he taking contractor tells us of
to decide whether the la . j inter, in the light for just two
territory be changed back to, in North Carolina. Plenty of dwellings In town.
plan
more
Us old boundaries, or as Instances could be given of
by the 1911 law. As the
election draws near many who were
charges on freight shipped
point.
to this
appeared on the
market, but not homo grown.
A Poland china black with
a few white spots, two years old,
weight about pounds. Finder will
please notify me receive
J. J. MARTIN,
ltd It Stokes, N. C.
library
Red Pi PPr, by Grace
Polly of Lady Gay Cottage, Dowd.
Inside the Cup, Churchill.
V. Vs. Eyes, Harrison.
Miss Mystery, linker.
Stella Marls, Locke.
Training tho Roy,
Insert Gold Grey.
Mr. Patients, Lincoln.
After,
Library
days and Fridays from to p.
through the summer months.
Cum Old sores. Other Cure
worst no of long
by tin- old r, liable Dr.
Healing Oil, relieves
U II I . I
Schools
ROCKY FORD, Colo., Juno
Several hundred enthusiastic young
delegates attending tho annual
r of tho Colorado Sunday
School Association, which met here
today fur a day's session.
Sunday school experts of
reputation scheduled to
address the convention.
Had flew
Mr. J. n. James,
phi is he had new corn for din-
Tuesday, gathered from his gar-
den. to a good way
to his election.
A brother of
Wood, of tho Red has Joined
team of the little old New
England League.
P-
mm
GET READY TO SELL YOUR TOBACCO AT
Johnston
BIG BRICK WAREHOUSE
Greenville, N. C.
We will be ready to take care of you and protect your interests
WILL SELL IT
Johnston Foxhall
w. f.
Attorney at Law
In front room the Edwards
Just north of Court House.
Greenville, North Carolina.
Attorney at
Office in Building, Third St
Practice wherever service are
desired
North Carolina.
P. C. Harding C. Pierce
k PIERCE
Lawyers
Practicing la all the Courts
Office in Wooten Building on Third
street, Court House
M. ff. CARTER, M.
Practice limited to of the Eye
Bar, and Throat
Washington, N. U. N. O.
Office with Dr. D. L. James,
day every Monday, t a m to I pas
L.
Attorney at Law
in Edwards Building, fifth door
from street
North Carolina.
Bo nearly do the sapphire
and ruby resemble the gems which
nature requires to produce
that the expert alone can distinguish
the real stone from that of laboratory
origin. The average Jeweler, who
had little experience in
these me, cannot tell the
He must take the expert's
that the stones he buys are gen-
In Paris they are turned out
in the laboratories of chemists In
large quantities annually. In Ger-
many and France selling
sapphires and rubles as genuine
la so common that the
of Paris and Berlin have
asked their respective countries
stringent laws compelling the
to label their goods.
J. EVERETT
Attorney at Law
n Edwards on the Court
Worth
L. Moore W. H. Long
MOORE ft LONG
Attorneys at Law
Greenville. Carolina.
Where Do the Toads GoT
When a toad buries himself In the
garden over winter, does he bury him-
self so deep that he is below the frost
line If he does not. Is he able to
freeze up and thaw out again and live
on Just the same
It la safe to say that no animal with
a well-recognized circulatory system
can freeze up solidly and to
life afterward. The toad must
be free from frost somewhere. But
how deep does be go The writer of
these lines has himself turned up the
torpid bodies of living toads with a
plow In the early spring, and the
creatures were certainly not six
Inches deep In tho soil and they were
not frozen. Had they been there all
winter, and If so, how did they escape
the
YELLOW POWDER IN FASHION
F. M. WOOTEN
Lawyer
Office second floor in Wooten
on Third St., opposite court house
Greenville, North Carolina.
V. W. OUTLAW
Attorney at Law
formerly occupied by J L
Fleming
B. F.
Insurance
Fire, Sick and Accident
on Fourth street, rear Frank
Wilson's store.
SKINNER
Attorney at Law
Greenville, North Carolina
Norfolk Southern Railway
Schedule in Effect April
N. B. The following schedule figures
published Information only and
are not guaranteed.
I miss LEAVE GREENVILLE
East Bound
a. m. dally,
Pullman Bleeping car for Norfolk.
a. m. dally, for Plymouth,
City and Norfolk. Broiler par-
car service. Connects for all
point north and west.
p. m. dally, except Sunday, for
West Round
o, in. dally, for Wilson,
and west. Pullman sleeping car
service. Connects north south and
west.
a. m. dally, for Wilson and
Raleigh. Connects for all points.
p. m. daily, for Wilson
Raleigh. parlor car service.
For further Information and
In sleeping cars, apply to J
L. Agent. Greenville, N. C.
W.
General Passenger Agent,
W. A. WITT,
General Superintendent.
NORFOLK. VA.
Women of France Now Affect Com-
showing a
of Sunburn.
This Is the day of the yellow com-
In France. Gone is the fashion
of the pearl white powder with which
the French woman used to cover her
face, achieving a peaches and cream
effect or more often a chalky and in-
pallor. Now, to be really In
the mode, a woman must use a yellow
powder which gives the skin a slight
suggestion of sunburn, a good healthy
look which might have been brought
back from the Swiss mountains or the
Egyptian deserts.
One sees this yellow powder used
everywhere, at the opera and the
In the drawing room and in the
de while the
and the little ladies of Montmartre
and St. Michelle, quick to follow the
fashions, are also adopting it. There
Is much discussion as to how such a
fashion started. The favorite
nation is that a certain professional
beauty whoso skin refused the pearl
powder and delicate pink rouge final-
resigned herself to using the
tow powder and appearing healthy and
sunburned, and she looked so charm-
that she started the vogue of the
yellow skin, which all Paris Is follow-
American Birds
Beauty
NO. ORIOLE
LEARN ONE THING
A EVERY DAY A.
cheerily a
clear, rollicking whistle from the
elm, drooping over a roadway, along
which speeds a steady procession of
automobiles. There he goes, a flash-
streak of flame and black, and
soon returns with a long strip of
bark trailing behind his wide-
spread tail. A site for the new nest
has been selected in the same tree,
1913, by The Associated
Newspaper School, Inc.
J. R, J. G.
GENERAL STORE PAINTS OILS
When You Paint
long, thin, black thread, interwoven
with odd bits of string, stray horse-
hairs or any bit of suitable stuff that
strikes their fancy. They even at-
tack raveling ends of sheets or tow-
els hung out on washday to dry. An
interesting test of the oriole's eye for
color can be made by hanging within
their reach varicolored skeins of
wool. The bird always selects the
where hangs last year's pendent inconspicuous bright
and both birds are hard at work reds or yellows remain where they
home-building. The lady of the are hung. When their nest Is com-
house, In her demure dress of dull, man would find imitation
yellowish green, works steadily and. most impossible. Frail as they
JUST AROUND THE CORNER
From The
White House
HOTEL HIND
C.
On direct car lino to Union Sta-
and all of Washington.
to all leading
and business district
rooms Newly
Baths.
American plan per day and
up.
Write for Illustrated booklet
with map.
M. LEWIS, Prop.
quietly, while her resplendent lord,
bedecked in orange black, cannot re-
strain his joy, pausing between
of nesting material to voice his
happiness in song.
The Baltimore oriole has been quick
to realize the friendly attitude of man,
returning year after year to the
Nearly all parks of tho
try contain one or more pairs and
of the safe location of the
deep basket nest on the extreme end
of a pendulous branch it can-
not be despoiled by cat or squirrel,
they rear their young safely. Though
this is undoubtedly a factor in the
Struggle for survival of the
ii many individual Instances it would
not be necessary; for the oriole is
a bird of splendid courage. Red
Squirrels have been badly beaten
attempts to despoil an approachable
nest; and cats have been driven from
the tree by tho sharp thrusts of a
needle-like bill.
many of them the storms
of several winters before falling from
tho branches.
Along in July tho birds retire from
observation and undergo the annual
molt, to reappear early August.
At this time the males continue
sing; although much less blithely
than when they first come In the
spring. They attack and destroy cat-
of a kind that many other
birds refuse to touch. Tho Depart-
of Agriculture credits them with
thirty-four per cent caterpillar diet.
They do not eat the caterpillar,
but tear it apart and select a small
portion. An oriole been seen to
destroy seventeen of these pests In
exactly one minute. Had he
ed to cat tho entire anatomy, five or
six of the morsels would have sufficed
for a meal.
Every day a different human near-
est will he R
tor. You can get a beautiful Intaglio
Use PURE Paint and
Use Pure LINSEED OIL to add
to it at one-half the cost of Paint.
PURE PAINT Is made with WHITE LEAD, ZINC and
LINSEED OIL-that's the way the L. A M. SEMI-MIXED
PAINT Is made.
But ALL the OIL needful to make the L. M. PAINT
ready for use is NOT put into the Paint when it's
pared for the Consumer who buys it.
The of OIL is put into the Paint
by the CONSUMER, as by so doing he SAVES MONEY.
gallons of LINSEED OIL with every
gallons of L. M. PAINT
and MIX the OIL with the PAINT.
If the Paint thus made costs more than per gallon
If the Paint as you use it is not perfectly satisfactory
HP and Um
for the WHOLE of It; and besides, the money you paid to the Painter.
BASEBALL CHATTER .
Yale winning straight games Just
about proves that the Ells are the
class among nines of 1913.
Manager of the Giants,
signed Pitcher White and Catcher
tho star battery of the
Georgetown University nine.
Thrailkill, Womack, Stuck, Gm-
Killebrew and are a
few of the names found In the lineups
of the Kansas League teams.
Manager Charley of the
Phillies, took a mean slap at the
Pirates and Cubs, when he
said that tho Giants are the only team
ho feared.
Otto Jordan, tho old Brooklyn star,
and later pilot of the Atlanta Crack-
is managing tho
team of the Empire State League.
It is not safe to tell any American
League pitcher that Ty Cobb's eye-
sight Is on tho blink, when the bat-
ting averages show that Ty Cobb Is
hitting for or better.
The Filipino baseball team, which
is to perform in this country this
summer, has a pitcher by the name
of That's a nice name for
a shooter of the pill.
The Washington Infield has been In
a bad way this season.
and Morgan have all
been injured at different times and
forced to lay off tho
Two old-time big leaguers, Manager
Davis of the Winona team
and Manager Bob of the
Minneapolis team, are leading the
new Northwestern League in batting.
Boston seem to delight
in bawling out Bill Bill
is playing as fine an all-round game
as any man in the business, and yet
the bugs not satisfied.
Milan, of Washington, who is lead-
the American League in base
stealing has stolen twice the number
of bases as has Myers, of Boston,
Who la leading the National League
in pilfered sacks.
Leading tho American Association
in both batting and club fielding, has
not got the St. Paul team anything.
The team has rested in tho second
division nearly all summer.
Gunboat Smith, who looks to
the class among the the
present time, Jim Flynn will
clash In New in two weeks.
reproduction of the above picture, Witt
Watch a pair at work building, others, equally attractive, x f
the perfect adaptability of these two 1-2 Inches In size, with this week's
for weaving their curious nests will In a
i understood. In and authority covers tho subject j
Hi and stories of the
week. Readers of The Reflector and
will know Art,
History, Science and Travel,
own exquisite pictures. On sale
M the and Ellington's
Hook Price, Ten cents. Write
today lo Tho Reflector for booklet
The Associated Newspaper
School plan.
Cured
For nearly ten years, at different times, Mrs. Mary Jinks
of Tenn., suffered with womanly troubles. She
last, I took down and thought I would die. I
could not Sleep, I couldn't eat I had pains ail over. The
doctors cave me up. I read that had helped so
many, I to lake it, and it cured
saved my Now, I can do
Old
Bay
Hind
Steam Packet
Dully, Including Sunday, between
Mall steamers
Equipped with Unit-
ed Wireless Telegraphy and every
modern convenience. Cuisine
passed
Portsmouth, Sundays, .
Portsmouth, week days pm
Norfolk, dally . pm
Old Point . pm
Tickets sold to all points north.
1892-John Henry Barrows noted
and educator, died at
Oberlin, O. Born at Medina,
Mich., July 1847.
laid for the Penn-
at Harrisburg.
TAKE
Tho
Woman's Tonic
I you weak, tired, worn-out, or suffer from any of
the pains peculiar to weak women, such as headache,
backache, feelings, pains In arm, side, hip
or limbs, other symptoms of womanly trouble, you
should try the woman's tonic. Prepared from per-
harmless, vegetable ingredients, is the best
remedy for you to use, as It can do you but good.
It contains no dangerous drugs. It has no bad after-effects.
Ask sells recommends
Co.,
r boo. J
There
Ralston Shoes are unmistakably
stylish. They appeal to men who
pride themselves on being correctly
as well as becomingly dressed.
Our Spring models offer you a wide
choice, and yet all of them are well
within the limits of good of them
have the comfort for which alone
are famous. Try
J. R. J. G.
Automobile Insurance
WE ISSUE A POLICY COVERING Your
MACHINE A LOSS BY FIRE IN
OUR OWN OFFICE.
ALSO LIABILITY. COLLISION, PROP
DAMAGE AND FORMS.
COME TO CS.
Moseley Brothers
American Birds
Beauty
SO. BLUE JAY
1913. by The Associated
Newspaper School, Inc.
Summer
We hate rewired the
handsomest line of ready-made
dresses that has been shown In
through the entire
season
for Ladies,
Misses, and
Children
These suit the
most fastidious dresser, both
In style and
dresses are sold on a small
margin of profit, so every per.
son can afford one. A look is
all we ask and the dresses will
talk.
Bruce
Norfolk, Va. Goldsboro, N. C.
Bank Trust Examinations a
specialty.
County, City and Ac-
counts systematized.
Mercantile
Firms analytically examined.
Partnership Accounts accurately
determined.
Light. Heat and Power Plant Ac-
counts perfected.
Fire. Looses. Valuations and
adjusted.
Real Estate and Lumber Audits.
Trial Balance Sheet, Profit
Loss Accounts, Statement of Assets
Liabilities and Re-
port Thereon Professionally
and
LEARN ONE THING
A EVERY DAY A
When Mark Twain wrote his docs not until the night
of the Jay attempting to
Oil a in a cabin roof with
ho portrayed the bird with ac-
curacy. Few more humorous sketches
of bird life have ever been written,
and the Jay's curiosity and astonish-
at tho apparently
not tillable are remarkably true lo
life. One the Jay's strongest
pirate has slipped into hiding among
evergreens or a convenient in a
tree.
The Jay can trained by patience,
and makes a very Interesting pet,
though if given too much freedom ho
is likely to cause annoyance by steal-
any article that attracts his
An ever present and vociferous
If YOU do not feel
like paying cash for a
COME TO SEE US AND WE WILL AR-
RANGE TERMS TO SUIT YOUR
WE HAVE THE BEST LINE OF
MADE AND BY CARRYING A COM-
STOCK AT ALL CAN
GET WHAT YOU WANT AT A
NOTICE.
LET US TALK IT OVER WITH YOU.
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
CHOICE CUT FLOWERS ROSES.
AID SWEET
PEAS A SPECIALTY.
Our artistic arrangements
In wedding outfits are equal
to the beet. Nothing finer In
offerings than our
styles.
Blooming pot plants,
and ferns in great variety.
Bedding plants In all varieties
to beautify the yard.
Write for list
L. ft CO, Raleigh, H. t.
D. J. Jr., for
and vicinity.
Quality Shop
Before you own your borne you are
always worried about rents and other
bills; after yon own your home you
wear a happy and satisfied smile. We
can help yon toward owning your own
home and we will b glad to be of as-
Call and let us talk the
matter over with you. Do It
Shares in the 15th Series now on
ate.
building
ASSOCIATION
Mi St, a
S M
Established
Wholesale and retail grocer
dealer. Cash paid tor hides
Fur. Cotton Seed Oil barrels. Turkeys
Eggs.
Oak bedsteads, mattresses, etc
Suits, Baby carriages, go-carts, par
suits, tables, lounges, safes.
and Ax snuff,
Life tobacco, Key West Cheroots. Hen
George Cigars, canned cherries
peaches, apples, syrup, Jelly, meat
flour sugar, coffee, soap, lye. magic
food, oil, cotton seed
and seed oranges, hi
pies, nuts, candles, dried apples
peaches prunes, currants, raisins
glass and china ware, wooden ware
cakes and crackers, macaroni, cheese
best butter, new Royal Sewing ma
chines and numerous other goods
Quality and quantity cheap for cast
Come to me. U.
S M
traits is and he may be call-
ed away from gathering by
imply drawing a breath in sharply
against the back of the hand.
If this were his worse vice we could
admit his Jaunty manner and brilliant
shades of blue without misgivings;
but the crime nest robbing
la laid at his door. Yet in the spring
and summer he does much to atone
for his faults by destroying great
numbers of grubs and harmful in-
sects. And when ho conies boldly
the farmhouse In winter, his
azure coat giving a touch of alluring
color to the sunny background, we
his shortcomings.
Belonging to tho crow family, he
Joins in Its feud against owls, and
right royally does he uphold his end.
up tho next excited Jay con-
you hear in the and
you will probably find the Mood of
billingsgate directed at owl
excited at the attention ho is
The screech owl is their usual
victim and more rarely the great
horned owl. The tormentors seem to
understand their helpless-
in daylight. The larger owl appears
impassive; but the smaller
one Is goaded into attempts at
These attacks are easily eluded
by the active Jays, and their
of the during most of
the year, along in April the Jays
disappear. You no longer
I hear their clear over the trees
and fields. for them in the
and If your quest is success-
you will find the young cavalier
transformed Into a silent and
guardian of a rather bulky nest,
tucked away among the thick branch-
es of a cedar perhaps. Tho
eggs are carefully tended, and
tho parental Instinct la sufficiently
strong to eliminate temporarily any
inclination toward stealing and de-
Every day a different human
est story will The
tor. Yon can get a beautiful intaglio
reproduction of the above picture, with
five equally attractive, i
1-2 Inches In size, with this week's
In a well
authority covers the subject
ct the pictures and stories lb
week. Readers of The Reflector and
will know Art,
History, Science and Travel,
and own exquisite pictures. On sale
at the Reflector office and Ellington's
Book Store. Price, Ten cents. Write
today to The Reflector for booklet ex
The Associated
School plan.
MOVEMENT OP TRAINS
Time of Arrival and Departure of the
Various Passenger Trains
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
Northbound Southbound
a. m. p. m.
p. m. p. m.
NORFOLK-SOUTHERN
Eastbound Westbound
a. in a. m
a. m. a. m.
S-49 p. m p. m.
II
MOVE t MOVED
Into No Stables
Corner 2nd Evans Streets
SAM SHORT
Transfer Men
Baggage and Express
Promptness
Phone No. or Day
all Trains
J. C. Lanier
BEAD
and rates
NORTH CAROLINA
M i
For
Commencement
we are showing a beautiful line
White Lingerie Dresses and
Shirt Waists at
prices. WHITE AND
ED PARASOLS, CORSETS, Hon.
and In large
We hare made a cat Id
prices on all oar summer goods
Especially Low Cut Shoe; and
Clothing.
. . i. i
A NEW PARLOR CAR LINE
HAS BEEN
via
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Between
and Raleigh on the New
Seaboard Train
Raleigh a. m.; Arrive Char-
p. m.; Charlotte
a. m.; Ar. Raleigh p. m.
This train runs solid between
and Rutherfordton. Parlor Car
ll operated between Raleigh and
The Heart Of The
White for schedules, etc.
H. S. D. P. A.
Raleigh, N. C.
JAMES KER, Jr. T. P. A.
Charlotte, N. C.
Early Rush of June Brides
NEW YORK, Juno marriage
license bureau In city hall made a
new Saturday record by granting
to couples. Most of the
brides are to be Juno ones.
The bureau had to kept open
until 1.30 o'clock In the afternoon,
later than usual, to care of all
who applied.
of England petitioned
Parliament for an extension of
their civil rights.
Coward Drug Co.
Only the Best
Used In Our
Prescription
Department
ICE
CREAM
It
All Fountain
Toilet Article.
Full I An.
Stationery,
Fountain
Pans.
Kodak Supplies
Drug Co.
Sporting Goods
A NICE LINK OB BASEBALL GOODS, FISHING
TACKLE. EVER BEADY FLASHLIGHTS, SCREEN DOORS AND
WINDOWS, THE WONDER ICE CREAM FREEZER, KING Wild.
SOB WALL PLASTER AND ATLAS PORTLAND CEMENT.
CARR ATKINS Hardware
Goes to Atlantic Hotel
Mr. William J. Blow, for half doz-
en ears or longer a clerk at The
ton, this city, leaves tho early
morning train for Morehead City
he becomes chief clerk of tho
Atlantic Hotel, at that famous North
Carolina seashore resort. He carries
with him to his new position the best
wishes of a host of friends for his
and Star
This is another of our Greenville
beys who is making good. He Is one
of the best hotel clerks to be found.
and Skin Troubles
If are suffering with any old,
or fever sores, ulcers, bolls,
eczema or other skin troubles get a
box of Salve and
you will get relief promptly. Mrs.
Bruce, Jones, of Birmingham, Ala.,
suffered from an ugly ulcer for nine
months and Salve
cured her in two weeks. Will help
you. Only Recommended by all
druggists. adv
WEEK END AND SUNDAY
EXCURSION RATES
to
MOREHEAD CITY and BEAUFORT
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD
From Week End Sunday
.
Kinston . 2.00 1.50
New Bern . 1.50 1.00
Wilson . 3.50
. 3.00 1.76
Greenville . 2.75
Washington . 2.25 1.25
Rates to Beaufort cents higher
an to Morehead City.
from stations In
same proportion.
Week End tickets sold Friday, Sat-
and morning trains,
good to return until midnight Tues-
day.
Sunday tickets sold each Sunday
until September 14th, limited to date
of sale only.
For complete Information call any
ticket agent or
W. W. O. P. A.
Norfolk. Va
S. K T. P. A.
Raleigh, N. C.
THE BEAUTIFUL CHIMNEY
HOCK GAP BEACHED
-via
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Chimney Rock Gap has been for
years famed for its beauty both in
song and story.
Why not spend your vacation at
one of the comfortable hotels beau-
situated In this lovely valley.
Hotel rates remarkably cheap,
to per week. Homelike service.
Good roads, fine livery, good Ash-
The SEABOARD'S NEW
makes It EASY to get to
Rock, and
rounding mountains. Write today for
booklet
H. S. D. P. A.
Raleigh, N. C.
JAMES KER, Jr., T. P. A.
Charlotte, N. C.
I B. BENTLEY
I Still With
I S
The Mutual Lit Insurance Co.,
I of
New York.
DB. J. C. GREENE
Physician and
Phone No. 186-L.
N. a
I II
to Fourth Street, of
R. L. Smith's stables, building
formerly occupied by Chinese
Laundry. Phone
T. HICKS, The
8888888888888888888
F. A. MILLS .
Livery, Sales, Feed and Ex-
change Stables
I Washington street, Greenville
Call on him when you want a
good team for a trip. Can
save you money
8888888888888888888
Best Laxative For the
Old men and women feel need
a laxative more than young folks,
but It must be safe and harmless
one which will not cause pain. Dr.
Kings New Life Pills are especially
for the aged, for they act
and easily. Price Recommend-
ed by all druggists.
mail
PIN YOUR FAITH TO
A GROWING BANK
that led all other banks in this section in increase in business during the
just
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST CO.,
Started in 1901 and has been going forward ever since
AND THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA DEPOSIT WITH US-
WE BUSINESS
E. G. E. B. BIGGS, Y C. Cashier.
Portion of The Business
Section of Ayden Is
Wiped Out by Fire
Secured at an Early Hour Monday
NEWSPAPER BURNED
Also Several Together With
Boss Hotel. Citizens Fought
Bard But Faculties Were
Not Sufficient
A fire that started about one o'clock
Monday morning destroyed a considers
portion of the business section
Ayden. It originated from sonic
cause unknown in a building belong-
to Miss Clyde Cox, on the East
side of Railroad street, and occupied
by Mr. Jackson as a pressing
club and tailoring establishment. Tho
office of Dr. H. Johnson was In the
same building.
From this building the Are spread
to the Ross Hotel, owned by Mr. J.
S. Ross and occupied by Mr. E. L.
Brown. It being Sunday night
veer only a few guests In the hotel,
and while these and Mr. Brown's
family got out safely, some had
narrow escapes and saved only the
night clothes they had on.
From the hotel tho fire spread
the building occupied by the Free Will
Baptist Publishing Company and
Ayden Advance, wiping out the entire
plant. The company bad only re-
installed a new press and
equipment, and their loss Is the most
serious In the fire.
Next to the printing plant was a
trick office owned by Mr. L. L.
and occupied by Dr. M. T.
While this office was destroy-
ed. It being brick with metal roof
aided in saving the residence of Mr
Just a few feet distant. The
residence caught several times and
once was almost given up for lost, but
by renewed energy and hard work
the Are fighters it was saved.
Ayden has no Arc department, but
bucket brigades of citizens farmed
and they did heroic work,
standing the odds against them. AH
the buildings destroyed, with the ex-
of the brick office, were frame
structures and burned like tinder-
boxes. So rapid was the spread
the fire in such a frame range, that
they were all In ashes Inside an hour.
We could not get an accurate list
of the Individual losses and
The loss Is not less than
and all of the parties, with
the exception of Mr. Brown, prop-
of the hotel, bad some
Ayden is a town with the pluck
not to be held back by a fire, and we
expect it will not be long before sub-
brick buildings will take the
place of the frame structures destroy-
ed.
PROPOSED
AID FOB GOOD
It Looks Handsome.
Since the stone work has been com-
and the scaffolding taken down,
a good idea of the outside appearance
of the new building of the Greenville
Banking and Trust Company. It
shows up handsomely and Is a credit
both to the bank and the town.
Crops Hare Company
A farmer told The Reflector man
Saturday that crops have been doing
some rapid growing since the rains.
And he added that the crops have
plenty of company, for the grass Is
growing equally as fast.
Cushman made her
final on any stage
as s reader at Easton. Pa.
was dedicated at Gettys-
burg.
At the present time there seems to
be considerable excitement over the
which has been
allotted to North Carolina to aid In
building roads in certain sections of
the state. There have been a great
many applications made to the gov-
and reasons given why a certain
part of this should be spent
the construction a road in this
or that part of the state. Many who
have made these applications are not
at all familiar with the conditions
placed about the allotment of this
money. Tho conditions are as fol-
The local of the
state has to furnish double the amount
of money supplied by the government.
The money appropriated by tho
local is generally best
deposited in the hands of a local
tee to be disbursed on the order of
tho duly qualified representative of
tho U. S. office of public roads. It
probably would be convenient and sat
to make a national bank the
trustee. This bank may be in the
county in which the road is to be
built.
The engineering work Is to be
done by the U. S. office of public
roads, and one of their engineers
would be In immediate charge of it.
The laborers are only
ed to work eight hours a day on such
a road.
No convicts will be permitted
to be worked on the road.
The first three conditions are all
right and no one should take
to them. The last, two, however,
may affect decidedly tho road work
in the county. In the first place,
If is allotted to a certain
or township. It has to provide
making a total of to be
spent on that particular road. The
laborers working on this road who
will be paid out of this are
only permitted to work eight hours
per day; while the regular labor-
In the county or state work ten
hours per day. Therefore, we lose
one-fifth of the time of each laborer.
In recommending the as paid
for labor, would lose one-fifth of
it, or so that Instead of get-
ting we are. In reality, only
getting
The last condition might not be of
any serious moment in some localities,
but In others it may be found that the
convict force of the county or town-
ship can be used to the very best ad-
vantage on this particular road; and
yet, under these conditions, they can-
not be used.
For this reason the
ed to North Carolina for ail in road
building is not going to do as much
work as was at first expected; and,
while the county or township will
gain a certain amount from this
it will not be its full face
value.
JOSEPH HYDE PRATT,
State Geologist.
Mr. F. G. Smith Dead
received here Sunday an-
the death of Mr. F. G. Smith,
which occurred Saturday In Winter
Fla., where he had gone
the hope of Improving his health. A
few years ago Mr. Smith was man-
ager of the local telephone exchange
and was very much liked in Green-
ville. His remains will be taken to
New Bern for interment Tues-
day morning.
memorial dedicated at
Lake View Cemetery in Cleve-
land.
Can't Keep Negro Lawyer Out
Pa., June
Bobbin Bennett, years old, a
lawyer who has been practicing
In tho courts of Chester county, has
application for admission to the
county bar and has been so
far denied the privilege because he
can find no here who will move
for his admittance.
He is a graduate of the Dickinson
School, a member of the Supreme
court bar, and was admitted to the
Chester county bar In May, 1911.
Bennett was Informed that it was
for him to advertise his in-
for three weeks and then
be admitted on motion.
The learned today that a law-
admitted to tho supreme court
bar can be admitted to any bar in
the state without motion. He called
this to tho attention of the court and
will be admitted soon, despite any
protests.
BOX DOES
WELL AT Mi II AM SCHOOL
For And
The election will soon be
a thing of past, but some things
connected with it will be remember-
ed for sometime to come. We are
anxious to see what will
do for we have often thought of Con-
as the land of Goshen; but
we know cannot have free range
and good roads, too. If
and Greenville townships get good
roads would have to do
likewise or the tide would turn.
Let the fence go back and you will
have a tax as an endless chain. It
would build a road across your town-
ship twice. If you put the old fence
back, put a fence around Ayden and
and then pay the mail
carrier to open all the gates, when
will you get through paying tax
Under these conditions ask for a
road bond an will
go down there and take your big tax
and put you out of business, as he
tried to do Farmville. Farmville said
thee hence, and he did
so. X. Y. Z.
County People Barely
Escapes Death When
Auto Turns Over
We are glad to note that Mr. Rob-
Lee, of Greenville, who has been
attending tho Bingham School, lo-
near Mebane, for the past year,
has done well.
His deportment for entire year
was good and he also received a grade
of good on studies.
The beautiful handwriting of the
Pen Art College Is
at Bingham and besides winning a
certificate in penmanship for a year's
study Mr. Lee, we are advised, made
a marked Improvement along many
other lines.
We understand that he will return
again to this old institution
in the fall.
Marriage Licenses
Last week Register of Deeds Bell
Issued marriage licenses to the fol-
lowing
WHITE
Braxton, Jr., and Nettie
ton.
Troy Alice Boyce.
Wm. J. Spencer and Virginia Dare
Jones.
Geo. If, Watson and Jennie A.
Lloyd.
Adam and Celia A. Mills.
B. T. Overton and Nancy James.
COLORED
Edwards and Charlotte
Sugg.
Oscar May and Addle Dixon.
appropriated
to buy the unpublished papers
of James Madison.
Big Brick Warehouse.
Johnson Foxhall, proprietors of
the Big Brick Warehouse which they
are building and will have ready by
the opening of the tobacco season.
will have a large advertisement in this
paper advising the farmers to get
ready to sell at their house. Every-
body knows F. D. Foxhall. He has
been long connected with the Green-1
market, and In his new house
proposes to sustain his reputation for
high prices. You can keep your eye
en the Big Brick Warehouse the com-1
season.
Must Children Have Worms
Many mothers think their children j
are suffering from indigestion, head-
ache, nervousness weakness,
when they are victims of that
most common of all children's ail-
Peevish, Ill-tempered,
fretful children, who toss and grand
their teeth, with bad breath and col-1
pains have all the of
having worms and should be given
Worm Killer a pleasant
candy lozenge, which expels worms,
regulates tho bowels, tones up the
system and makes children well and
happy. KIckapoo Worm Killer Is
guaranteed. All druggists, or by mail.
Price KIckapoo Indian Medicine
Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis.
James found-
of Georgia, born In London.
Died July 1785.
admitted to the union.
issue of Canadian post,
cards.
Four people, two men
ladies, wore the victims of an auto-
mobile accident Friday afternoon
at Cherry's Run, four miles north of
this city.
The accident occurred at about
belt past three. The party consisted
or Miss Mayo, Miss John
and Mr. all of whom re-
side at or near House, Pitt county.
They had motored to Washing-
ton and when they set out
on the return trip, Fleming
started his car at top speed and shot
up Main like a rocket. Tho
machine from side to side
as the Joy riders tore on their way.
Everyone who happened to on
Main street at the time, remarked
upon the reckless manner in which it
was driven.
Exactly how tho accident happen-
ed, is not known. Evidently Flem-
must have lost control of the
wheel, the car shot Into a ditch
alongside of the road, turned com-
over and pinned three of
occupants underneath it.
A party of men, who were
at work near by ran to the scene of
the accident and assisted the party
In getting out from under the heavy
machine. It was found that no one
had been seriously injured. All were
scratched up and bruised consider-
ably and their torn, but out-
and two side of that, the party were fortunate
In escaping unscathed.
They continued on to Greenville,
leaving the at the roadside, where
Mr. Bell of this city had it righted
and repaired.
The escape that the party had is
considered miraculous. How
averted serious injury or even death
Is unknown, for the heavy car, as la
mentioned above turned completely
News.
Freckled Girls
It is an absolute fact, that one cent
jar of WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM
will either or cause
them to fade and that two jars will even
in the most severe cases completely
cure them. We are willing- to personally
guarantee to return your money
without argument if your complexion is
riot fully restored to its natural
WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM is
fragrant and absolutely
Will not make hair grow but will
remove TAN, PIMPLES and
FRECKLES. 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
JNO. L. WOOTEN Bill CO.
J. W. BETAS
North Carolina
WHY Not Enjoy the
Pleasure of Wear-
Shoes That Fit the
Feet
That's the Kind You
Find at Our Store at
Prices to Fit the Purse
KNOCK-DOWN PRICES
at B. J. PULLEYS
Everything Reduced in Coat Suits
Linen Suit, now.
Linen Suit, now.
Serge Suit, now.
Serge Suit, now.
These are great values, and supply will not last long
these low
Embroideries Also Reduced
Cent, 27-inch Embroideries, now. Cents
Cent, 27-inch Embroideries, now
Other widths and prices in proportion.
Great Reduction in Shoes
8.60 Oxford, Sandal, or Pump, nil colors,
94.00 Oxford, Sandal, or Pump, all colors,
These reduction prices arc for days, and you should
take advantage of them.
B. J. PULLEY
The Home of Fashions
SUMMER TIME is
SANDAL TIME
WE Have a Large As-
of Bare-
Foot Sandals and a
goes with each Pair.
SHOE COMPANY
. mm
Prospects For Training
School Summer Term
Is Brighter Than Ever
On the 17th of June the Summer
Term begins at the East Carolina
Teachers Training School. Every
summer since this school was
it has had its doors wide open
to those who are in the school
teaching during the regular term.
than a thousand teachers were
In the of North Carolina
the present school year who have
largely by those who teach. An
usually strong faculty has been
cured for the coining summer term.
The following compose faculty
and the officers for this
Robt. H. Wright.
Director of Summer C.
Wilson, Regular Faculty.
Educational and
Harold Barnes, Supervisor
received more or less training at this; Elementary Education, ,
splendid Institution. The prospects
for the coming term are brighter than
ever before. Every room in the
has been engaged with full
Philadelphia.
E. C. Brooks, Chair of
Education. Trinity College.
H. E. Austin, Regular
eight week since the 14th day
of April. One hundred and E. D. Pusey, Goldsboro
applications have been received since City Schools.
then and had to be turned down for
want of room. The town has
thrown open its homes and the
number of those attending this sum-
mer will be limited by the capacity
both of the school and the town.
These summer terms are in truth
Just one of the terms of the school.
They ere run Just as the regular terms
with same time for work and
The looks taught in II e public
schools are supplied to the tea
The Infirmary Is kepi open Just as In
the regular term. In fact the
class of work is done and the same
L. It. Meadows, Regular
Faculty.
School W. H. Rags-
dale, Regular Faculty.
Miss Mabel M, Com-
fort. Teachers College, X. Y.
Mathematics and Miss
Birdie Schools.
Miss Kate W. Lewis,
Faculty.
Primary May Bar-
Regular Faculty.
Miss Alice Wilson, F.
College, Greensboro.
May H. B, Reg-
rules and regulations apply as during Faculty.
regular term. Credit is given for Miss Daisy B.
work done during the summer courses lad Faculty.
and a student may by continuous at- Critic Miss Miriam Mac-
for sufficient time complete Regular Faculty,
these courses and get credit for the
same.
Certificates of attendance are given
to all who attend stating how long
they have been present and this at-
fulfills the requirements of
the law. Those certificates are re-
anywhere In the state.
The course in
bids fair
to be much more largely attended this
year than in previous years. The
school is to be congratulated that it
has brought such a course to our very
J.
Lady Mrs. Kate R. Beck-
Miss Emma It. Jones.
Librarian and Custodian of Rec-
Miss Ola S. Jones.
Superintendent of Miss
R.
Miss Mary
Dr. Chas. OH. Laugh
can for better
teachers In our schools since the doors
of our state institution are being
doors and thus saved the expense of thrown open to them each summer.
having to get it at a high cost some
where else far removed from us.
The work of a school Is measured
teacher can afford to lay behind.
to do so means to take the train-
now offered them.
Congregation of 1,200
Has Narrow Escape;
Storm Wrecks Tent
GREENSBORO, Juno after
the first song had been sung at the
Holiness tent meeting of Silver Run
avenue last night, the storm struck
the tent and leveled it to the ground.
Tho plate was crowded, some 1,200
people being inside, tint not a soul
so far as would be discovered
night was seriously hurt, though the
entire congregation received a
ducking from the rain, which
was pouring in torrents. There was
no warning of the accident, except
that tho lights went out again a
moment and then flared up again. Then
tho tents collapsed and the ensuing
excitement it was reported that several
had been killed, but the reports prov-
ed to be erroneous. The services
will be continued at this after-
neon and at tonight in the
of the Bible
The Injured, so far as was known,
last night, were Robt. Melvin, badly
bruised by falling across a pole,
Mr. Leonard, quite an old man, also
bruised and shaken up.
An unknown young man. elbow in-
The occupants of the tent had seen
tho cloud approaching and had lower-
ed the side curtains and strengthened
the guy ropes enough to stand any
ordinary gale. Indeed, the ropes
held as It was. but the middle section
c f the tent, which was about years
old, tore and when the wind got
It, ripped clear apart, letting in a
deluge of water.
There was an instant stampede for
the entrances, and shouts and screams
and rent the air as the great
tent slowly careened, the audience
spilling out of every crevice. The
paused momentarily in Its down-
ward course, and most of those inside
reached the open air. then suddenly
every light in the place went out and
the tent came to earth With a swoop,
burying the least nimble of the con-
in its folds. It
roved fortunate then that tho
wires had pulled apart before the
struck tho earth, else the mix-
of the and the wet can-
might have proved serious indeed
to those who had been unable to
cape. There was still light enough
for those outside to see how to
assistance to the ones pinned
the cloth, and they were soon ex-
from their uncomfortable
and toll of the Injured
The tent was feet and the
cost. new. What the injuries
will amount to could be ascertain-
ed definitely, but certainly the middle
section Is ruined and It Is feared that
one of ends Is also unfit for fur-
use.
PLAYS AD PLATERS.
May Irwin will Widow by
Proxy next season.
Margaret next season will
be In Shakespearean roles,
Godfrey Mathews is playing with
a stock company at Youngstown. O.
George M. Cowan will continue next
season with
Eddie Foy will appear in vaudeville
next season with bis seven children.
Clark Is to star in a
stock company in St. Louis this sum-
mer.
Arnold Daly going to play a
stock engagement In
Ohio.
Texas may be given as a
tabloid production with music next
season.
Among the plays which Arthur Hop
kins will produce next season is
Julia Dean, It is reported has obtain
el a divorce from her husband,
Louis Mann appear in
ville in a condensed version of
Elliott Dexter, who played the role
Is to produce a new play.
Helene the young daughter
of the famous is appearing
in London in light opera.
Vera the daughter of Full r
has Joined the stock
Company with her father,
An ordinance of the Chicago City
Council provides a fine for suggestive
and costumes that city.
David will have a number
of new plays and several new stars ti
exploit in next season of 1913-14.
W. A. Brady and George W.
will produce a play next August, in
Chicago, In which Thomas W. Ross
will star.
Brandon Tynan, who been play-
lug Joseph in and his
is to a starring engagement
in Salt Lake City.
Julian who closed her
most season, will travel
during the summer and prepare for his
new romantic play next season.
Madge Tyrone have the lead-
feminine role next season with
Fiske in a new- Irish play. In
which the singing comedian will
pear.
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree Is said
to be with David
for the appearance in London of Dav-
id Warfield In a of his chief
WHEN TACT WON OUT
By NELLIE GILMORE.
A Hank a Hank
is Squire C. D.
tree asked the reporter as he pointed
to a building.
sir, Is a was the re-
ply.
what is the squire again
asked to something
on the edge of the sidewalk.
that is a pile of sand,
that is another he re-
bank before a bank, to call
attention that this Is a hank.
And we've been fanning ever since.
Health Department
The of
Cheer up. season is here, and the
summer tight is on in earnest. The
man that hasn't his screens up by this
time eats at the second table to his
guest, tho manure pile fly. you
may not like to look at it that way.
but that is the truth Just the same.
If you like your guests, your
low boarders, or your
ion, a mighty good thing to do Is to
put up screens. the doors and
window's are well screened you can
easily get rid of the occasional In-
by means of sticky paper
and swatters.
In tho country a man's files are
of his own household. That Is.
each householder is largely
for his own crop of flies. But in
and
shows up the Board of Health. If
town has few files they have a live.
board of health, but if
tiles are thick you can set it down
that the board of health Is asleep, and
a town is usually Just about us dead
or as wide-awake as Its board of
health.
Tho whole thing narrows down,
therefore, so that you can Judge a
town by number of its Hies.
Do throw waste material on a
pile in the back yard to be blown In-
to tho street by the first wind, or to
lit there in a decaying heap to breed
files and give off foul odors.
Hid your premises of any rubbish,
old paper, tin cans, and refuse cf any-
kind that may have accumulated
the winter.
There was a man in our town,
He helped to keep the typhoid down
By swatting all the files.
A Chain of Taxes
Editor
I have enjoyed the different
written by Y. on stock
law and Can't help but believe he is
on side of progress. I have Just
read his last article in which he re-
to voting the fence back
a chain of taxes.
I had not heard of this kind of
taxes, so I began to think what he
meant by chain of taxes and this
answer came to
If it cost twenty thousand dollars
to put the fence back and pay the
suits and right of way, as many per-
sons think, the interest on the
thousand would be twelve
at the end of the first year. If
we value the of this money like
we value the money we use to buy
a home it would double itself In about
twelve years. And so this chain of
taxes would be forty thousand
at the end of twelve years, and
in twelve years it would be
double again and that would
eighty thousand dollars and at the
end of thirty-six years it would be one
hundred and sixty thousand dollars,
that would be saved or lost to the
generation of thirty-six years to
come.
Some young men have learned this
rule and when they think about
spending five cents for a cigar or
cold drink, they say to themselves
am going to save that five cents
and put It on interest and In thirty-
six years I will have forty cents.
This rule well kept Is the way some
young men grow wealthy in old age.
you only a few days to
decide this question, whether or not
to put the fence hack. Are you going
vote for or against progress Are
you going to vote for or against this
and the rising generation If you
can't vote to save money for this and
the coming generation don't vole at
Tell your neighbor about this.
A. FARMER
Hartley's pen raced furiously over
the paper. Then with resolute fingers
be folded and addressed the letter, lay-
it aside to be posted.
Afterwards, he arose, took one or
two impatient turns up and down the
room; then came back and sat down
again, thinking deeply. Some abrupt
whim prompted him to reopen the en-
and read it over before sending
It It
Dear I have know for a
long time that yon oared nothing for
me, and that you did care for that
man. The enclosed clipping may not
come as a direct
cation of my present course. This
much, let me say, in regard to your
latest hereafter It will not
be necessary that you exert yourself
toward further deception, since it is
my unalterable determination to put
nil thought of you forever out of my
life. As to he Is not worth
the sacrifice of powder and shot
to eliminate his vile existence.
I am making all preparation to dis-
pose of the home immediately; your
personal effects will be shipped to
whatever address you may wish to
indicate. Please spare mo the annoy-
once of any reply, and tho pain of a
future meeting. All can
arranged through our lawyers.
Hartley went over the with
scorching checks. Surely he bad not
been so great a fool to heap insults
like these upon a possibly Innocent
woman
With a gesture of disgust he tore
tho letter into and flung It into
the fire. Next morning ho bought a
ticket for tho
Elsie Hartley was in one of her
moods when the surrey drove up
and left her husband standing on the
sidewalk before the
A minute before she had believed
him hundreds of miles away, tugging
at the pile of briefs he bad declared
It Impossible for to leave under a
fortnight.
Then they both laughed, and after-
wards he went up to her suite to brush
up a little, as it was almost the hour
for dinner.
His wife's noncommittal attitude
had left him more in the dark than
ever. Two days ago he would have
sworn that was guilty; today he
would have taken an oath of Just the
reverse. Yet there were the damning
bits of evidence that no amount of
over-
come. Should he trust
The sudden appearance of a waiter
announcing dinner Interrupted his
reverie. He put aside all personal re-
and changed his clothes with
dispatch. A few moments later he had
started toward the door. On the way
out his eyes fell by accident upon a
crumpled sheet of closely written note
paper. The writing was in his wife's
hand, unmistakably. He read with a
suffocating
There was a time
when I believed that I had
given my heart to you, and that
I should never be able to live happily
away from you. But, thank heaven,
knowledge of my true feelings has
come to me before it was too lute. I
am sending this to you to stop you in
New York. Do not come here, for If
you do I shall decline to
you. My husband is an honest
and honorable man, and In every way
is far above the average. Should he
ever learn of my meanness, I fear that
It would the end of everything for
me. You see it has come to this that
I fully realize now how deep and
is the feeling I have always had
for him, notwithstanding this miser-
able affair between us. It was, I as-
sure you, entirely brought about by a
fancy on my part that he was begin-
to neglect me. I am repenting
most keenly this ridiculous folly, and
with the help of God I mean to be for-
ever true and honorable. Don't try to
dissuade me. for I was never
determined In my
When Hartley looked up from the
letter his eyes were blurred and
Her only had been her
weakness, and for that ho himself was
doubtless In part responsible.
He walked over to the mantel and
deliberately struck a match, applying
the flame to the crumpled sheet of
paper. When It had to black
bits over the hearth ho turned. For
reason he had not heard the
door open softly, and the blood flamed
over his face as ho encountered bis
wife's eyes fixed full upon him.
An awkward silence fell between
them. Hartley passed an arm about
her and bent swiftly to kiss
her.
Had she seen him destroy the letter,
and did she know that he had read
and knew it all Ho would have
the answer to that question, but the
warm touch of tho lips she lifted to
his caress solved all future problems
for them both.
by Dully Story Pub.
HEIGHT OF FORK OF TREES PETRIFIED FALLS IN ALGERIA
It Never Grows Higher Than the Point
Where First Noted, Declares
an Authority.
Some people through car. less ob-
believe that the fork cf a
forest tree will gradually higher
from the ground. If they would in
It would be found that the
forks and of fruit trees at at
exactly the same point where they
were when first noted.
The state forester in Inspecting lo-
and catalpa groves throughout the
state, says the Indiana Farmer, has
found owners who have not removed
one part of the fork of those trees
that have formed forks below the fence
post length, believing that in years
the fork would grow up and a fence
post could be cut below the fork. This
erroneous belief is the cause of much
of the delay and neglect of pruning in
early life of street and roadside trees-
It should be remembered that the
j base of a fork or a branch of a tree
will always remain at the same dis-
I above the ground. The side
branches of some trees, such as the
elm. usually continue to grow upward,
while those of other trees, such as
the maples, incline upward when
young and as the tree grows older
tho weight of the branches gradually
brings It to the horizontal. The latter
often makes the removal of large
branches necessary, which not only
spoils tho symmetry of the tree, but
usually starts decay, which soon kills
the tree.
No street or roadside tree should be
permitted to form a fork below ten
feet and all of the side branches to the
same height should be removed so that
they will the crop less.
If this Is done the tree in time will
grow a saw log below the branches.
Since he landed in Australia. Harry
ran inn Rn inn int
defeated Johnny Summers and Hock
Those Prolific Hens.
Angry Purchaser -Didn't you tell
me that you had got as many as
twelve eggs in one day from
sight hens that you sold met
Poultry ma'am.
Angry why is It
that I'm never able to get more than
two from them and sometime
not so many In one day
Poultry know,
ma'am, unless it's because look
eggs too often. If look
I. i n -i i quite
positive th you will get Just us
eggs in one d as I did.
Remarkable Mineral Formation Which
Called The
Bath of
With all the beauty of a cataract of
living water, there is in Algeria a re-
markable petrified waterfall which re-
has been engaging the attention
of scientists.
This is the
which means Bath of the
and Is located miles from
on the site of the ancient
town of This solidified cascade
Is the production of calcareous de-
posits from
mineral springs, issuing from the
depths of the earth at a temperature
of degrees Centigrade.
Bath of the even from
a near viewpoint, looks for all the
world like a great wall of water
Into a swirling pool at its foot, yet
Its gleaming, graceful curves and the
apparently swirling eddies at its base
are as fixed and Immovable as if
carved from the face of a granite
cliff.
Many centuries have, of course, gone
lo the making of the deposits, and the
springs were well known to the an-
Romans. The name
was given to the stone
cataract in an allusion to a legend
that tho waterfall was petrified by
Allah, punishing the Impiety of
i by turning all the members of
tribe into stone. At night, so tho
runs, its stone dwellers of the
past are freed from their
Strange fetters, come to life and re-
their normal shapes.
SECRET OF TRUE HAPPINESS
Make Up Your Mind That It Is Fun
to Live and Enjoyment Is
Yours.
Whether you are happy or not de-
pends upon whether you fling out
what Whitman calls flag of your
to the breeze, and arc
ready to be pleased by what repine
and be querulous whether in a palace
or a dungeon; others would And roses
growing in the middle of the Arabian
desert and behold the sunshine rather
than the back-yard squalor from the
garret window. eye sees what
It brings the means of Make
your mind that it Is fun to live
and you will find reasons sprouting
like mushrooms on every hand to con-
firm your theory. But If you decide
that tho game Isn't worth the candle,
every hour will provide you with a
fresh excuse for a gloomy face and a
bitter speech or still more bitter
The men and women
and the useful ones are those who re-
and our God for that
they served his
CAUSE OF TRAGEDY
Tramp Tells Philanthropist Harrow-
Tale Illustrating the Fatal
Effects of
you not from
your ow n personal experience recall
tragic deaths due directly to liquor
One time me me
partner, on a long weary
for work, ye know
found two big bottles of We
each took one, we strapped
about our necks for convenience in
Our pockets was worn
we come to a bridge with a
rotten plank, both went through,
me partner was drowned. Yes,
sir, that there big bottle
weighed so he Just Bank like a
stone. Poor He was as fine a
man
you had a bottle about your
neck,
emptied
Excusable at Times.
Those aging, bereft victims of thin-
locks may need to supplement
but there Is no need for girls to
spoil their beauty and become
This Is not caustic talk. Were that
being given, actual comment over-
heard In public would be quot-
ed. It is plain fact, and so Is this, that
the gaze which follows the girl or
woman Is more often of be-
wonder, disapproval, than
of admiration.
A few years ago tho woman or girl
who was as conspicuous as
a lone church against blue sky,
and people shied from her.
Now there pass scores, wearing
tints of roseate hue, the
rest of the world wonders at this
happy In tho belief that such
only It is, and that It has not come to
York Telegram.
One Black Sheep Needed,
A r of religion was in
In a town where Peter, Paul and
Join- were dealers. John was the
first In come under the influence of
very eloquent preaching. He
and sincere about it and joined
the church. A week later Paul was
influenced to abandon the world and
the th, and he, to, became an en-
of tho good work.
however, held aloof from the
meetings. None of the Invitations of
or brothers seemed to have
any effect. Finally the clergyman
called and made a personal appeal.
was rough and Ignorant and a
little inclined to profanity, but honest
and frank in speech if not in act.
He finally clinched his negative
with the when in
reply to a question he
has become a Christian and Paul has
become a Christian and if I join your
church who the, excuse me, par-
son, will weigh the
Prophetic Retort.
The governor of Virginia, at a time
when Washington as a mere youth
ventured to remonstrate against the
Injustice of a certain decree, turned
fiercely upon the young man and in-
who tho dickens are you,
With a cold but courteous bow, the
young Virginian drawing himself up
to his proud height, frigidly
In particular Just now, but
for the future, somebody in gen-
The haughty emphasis on the word
general. It is said, sent a cold chill
running up and down the governor's
spine, which it required seven mint
Juleps and six bottles of port to re-
Got In a Quiet Knock.
When Miller, the Poet of
tho Sierras, edited the Eugene Regis-
be ran a Joke column that is
remembered among Eugene vet-
said aged
to like to roast the coal man.
Thus, I remember how, in a
of a wedding, be once
presents offered the bride
were unusually sumptuous and
among them was
a ton of coal. This won general ad-
and approval by reason of Its
quaint, old-fashioned massiveness, it
being much heavier than the tons of
coal of the present
Crusoe's Problem.
Robinson Crusoe bent and looked
at the footprint In the sands.
said he to himself, in-
that Friday is somewhere
Then his brow knit in perplexity.
what In thunder am I going to
do to keep the reader's attention for
the next four
He began kicking Band into the
footprint.
ho murmured, Is
Monday, all
Lobsters That Do Not Boil Red.
Native French lobsters are growing
scarce as the result of a series of
and an attempt is being made
to introduce those from
Hungary and Russia. Hut these for
lobsters have little flesh on them
and turn a dull color when they are
boiled.
To give them If possible the attract-
scarlet tint, appetizing odor and
delicious taste of the native Professor
is making researches In his lab-
oratory of In the
of Grenoble, and he hopes, In
naturalizing the foreign species, to
give them some at least of tho French
characteristics.
Paradise for Grouches.
A new game for of grouches i
has been started up at
It is called Cave of
The proprietor has an endless supply
of crockery, and for cents you can
much china with three bolls
as your aim permits.
A crowd la about the booth all day,
and many sour-faced men go
wearing broad York Sun.
From Noah.
The smaller a nation the longer the
pedigree of the native. Thus every
Scotsman of decent lineage is de-
from the every Irish-
man from the Red Kings and every
Welshman from Noah. The last claim
has been made for the family of the
late Lord writing In
when touring in
wrote that de-
rived origin of the Morgans from
the third son but that there
.- a division of opinion in favor of
first.
HI
MM
GREENVILLE THE
HEART OF EASTERN
CAROLINA. IT HAS
A POPULATION OF FOUR
ONE HUNDRED
AND ONE. AND IS
ROUNDED BY THE BEST
FARMING COUNTRY.
INDUSTRIES OF ALL
KINDS ARE INVITED TO
LOCATE HERE FOR WE
HAVE EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAY OF
LABOR, CAPITAL AND
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
JOB AND NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
Agriculture Is the Most the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of
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
C,
Si
Simmons Denies Report
Circulated by Enemies
Wilson Administration
Senator Goes to the Defense of
President Wilson
HIS WAS ASKED
And President Expressed Strong
Views Regarding The Free
Listing Of Wool
And Sugar
WASHINGTON, June
Simmons tonight denied
the report freely circulated by
enemies of Wilson administration
that Mr. Wilson hod used bis influence
as to Democratic sen-
into line in voting for a tariff
bill In accordance with bis own views.
much has been said in the
said Senator Simmons,
the president's alleged con-
with certain amendments rec
o by certain subcommittees
of finance committee that is mis-
leading and in order that
the public understand the real
facts, I wish to say that while the
president has expressed to the
of finance committee as be
l reported to have expressed to
and means committee when the
Mil was In the house, strong views
and convictions with respect to
on the free list both wool and
sugar, he has not, so far as I know,
expressed any views as to the other
provisions of the bill except when bis
opinion has been asked, and has not
In any way attempted to dictate to the
committee.
view current in the
to the effect a subcommittee
of the finance committee had decided
to recommend that wheat and live
stock well as meat and flour should
go on the free list at the Instance
and dictation of the president not
correct. far as I know the
dent has no opinion with
respect to this matter except that
when told of the probable of
the subcommittee putting these
in the free list In response to
an Inquiry as to his opinion upon the
be approval.
Is It true that
tee adopted the countervailing proviso
with respect to wheat and flour at
the president's dictation much
discussion, as has been represented.
On contrary, be has expressed no
views so far I know on this sub-
and the subcommittee's action
with reference to the countervailing
on these articles was taken at
the same time It was decided to
mend that they be put on the free
W. M. GOODMAN,
Director General the National Con-
Exposition.
is killed
IN A RIOT
IPSWICH, Mass., June
woman was shot and killed,
others were wounded by bullets and
many others Including policemen, were
hurt by flying In a strike riot
outside the Ipswich Hosiery Mills
tonight Fifteen persons, Including
of the Industrial Workers of
world, were arrested.
Has Blood Poisoning
N. R., June
W. Gibson, who Is charged with the
murder of is under tho
care of a at the Jail
here. has blood poisoning In one
foot. No serious results are expect-
ed.
Mr. Goodman conceived the Idea of
a big national exposition tor the South,
exposition that typify the
progress South In making in all
lines of endeavor, and one that at the
same time should teach the lesson of
conservation. When gates of the
exposition are thrown open on
in Tenn., one of the
great dreams of Mr. Goodman's life
will have become a reality.
Nearly Five Thousand Hear
Secretary Bryan at
Drivers, Va.
Saves life of Girl When
Attacked by
Rattler
ROGERS, Ark., June
Graham, of Monte, Ne., here related
a remarkable escape of a girl from
being bitten by a large rattlesnake.
The girl stumbled over a stone
and fell headlong. Her face struck
only a short distance from rat-
with its mouth wide open, ready
to sink Its deadly fangs into her
cheeks.
The young woman was chewing
gum and her fall caused it to fall
out of her mouth, striking the snake
squarely In the mouth. The snake
quickly closed down on it and while
the reptile was In this position the
girl sprang to her feet and killed It.
The snake had sixteen rattles and
a button. A visitor at Ne
gave the girl for the rattles and
a doctor paid for the carcass.
P. Unfortunately the girl's name
la not mentioned, probably through
an oversight of the press agent
Commencement Marshals
marshals deserve highest
for their efficient service
throughout the commencement. Much
of the success of the occasion was duo
them. They were as Chief,
11.1-1 Everett, Society; Assist-
Poe
Mary Weston, Emma
Bessie
Margaret Ross, and
Adding More Room
To better take care of their growing
Insurance business, Bros,
have taken another room to their suite
In The Reflector building. A com-
door was to lead
from their former quarters to the add-
DRIVERS, Va., June
of State Bryan arrived here at
p. today and for forty-five
minutes before people. He en-
Joyed the occasion and people were
with his presence. Mr.
an stepped from the naval tug Mohawk
at Lee's wharf on tho
river at p. in. was driven rapidly
across the country In automobile
to Driver. escort consisted of
twenty boys of the Driver Corn
Club on horseback, a brass band
and twenty-two automobiles with a
citizen's reception committee.
Those who arrived on the Mohawk
with Secretary were Congress-
men E. E. Holland, Professor De-
principal of the Driver
school; J. G. A. G. Darden
and John Bond of the school board of
Sleep Hole district of
county which the Driver school
is located; former Mayor
Myers of Norfolk and Rev. Dr. W. V.
Savage of
Mr. Bryan began speaking at
clock. Lee superintendent of
schools of county,
e Rev. Dr. W. V. made the
opening prayer and introduced Col-
Holland who Introduced Mr.
an. The speaking occurred on an
especially erected platform. The
were attractive and every-
thing was in fine shape for the big
celebration . graduates of
Driver school received their diplomas
and medals from the hands of Mr.
Bryan.
The weather was clear but some-
what blustery. Mr. Bryan will reach
Old Point Comfort at S p. m. The
Brazilian battleship
will arrive there at p. m.
THE NATIONAL BANK
PATS SECOND DIVIDEND
In April the National Bank of
Greenville paid its stockholders a
semi-annual dividend of i per cent,
making per cent for the fiscal year.
This was Just before the consolidation
of that bank with the Bank Green-
ville. After the consolidation of the
two banks there was a surplus
with charged to
and fixtures. In the last few
days a further dividend of 1-2 per
cent has been paid out to the
to the National Bank stockholders.
This still leaves a good surplus and
puts the old and new stockholders,
the latter being those coming In from
the former Bank of Greenville, on
the same footing as to value of stock.
It Is also fitting to say that In the
last five and a half years, during
which time Mr. F. J. Forbes has been
cashier of the National Bank, that
the earnings of the bank have reach-
ed an amount almost equal to the cap-
ital stock
EXPECTS TO MEET PATE
OP LATE OF SPAIN
Showers of Visitors at
Plums For Finals of the
Tar Heels
latter
fitted up for a private office.
MADRID, June It became
known here today that King Alfonso
fully expects to be slain by an as-
When the news of the recent
of the King of was con-
to King Alfonso the latter
quietly remarked that he was not in
the least surprised and that In all
probability ho would be the next
arch to meet his death In similar
fashion.
He was then to
abroad only when attended by a strong
was thoroughly
characteristic.
If I am not to be allowed to go
about as I no said.
don't mind how soon my end
WASHINGTON, June
Wilson today appointed another North
Carolinian to a high and responsible
position in the Federal government
when he sent to the senate the
nation of Charles M. Galloway to be
civil service commissioner.
Though charged to South Carolina,
Galloway was born and lived the ear-
lier part of bis life in county .
When ah of Galloway studied
His first Job was at
where he was operator
and lineman. went from there
Wilmington, where he for the
A. C. L. Railway In the general office
and from there to Columbia, S. C, for
the Associated Press. Later he ac-
a place on the Columbia State
as reporter, and when Ellison Smith
was elected as United States Senator
Galloway was appointed bis private
secretary, a place which he now holds.
Other nominations sent to the sen-
ate today W. L. Res-
City; E. H. East Du-r
ham; W. F. Flowers, Fremont; A. H.
Hues, H. D. Lambeth,
Elon College; W. G. Rose
Hill; O. W. Hill, P. J.
dell, St. Paul; E. T.
A. N. Bulla, Randleman; J.
W. Noel I, Roxboro; D. J. Kerr, Can-
ton; Robert S. Chapel Hill;
H. Lane. J. H. Carter,
Mt. C. D. Osborne. Oxford; L
M. Sheffield, Spray; S. S. Lockhart,
Wadesboro; J, H. Bowen, West Dur-
ham.
Brazilian Premier Is
Welcomed By
Secretary
OLD POINT COMFORT, Va., June
by a division of Amer-
battleships and destroyers the
Brazilian dreadnought
with Dr. Laure Muller, Minister
Affairs of the South American
Republic, and a special commission
on board passed in the Virginia Capes
at o'clock this afternoon.
Dr. Muller, who Is coming to Amer-
to return a visit paid by Senator
Root when he was Secretory of
was met In the Roads and cordially
welcomed by Secretary William J.
Bryan and other members of
dent Wilson's cabinet and a
party of Washington officials
representing all branches of the gov-
Earlier in tho afternoon Mr. Bryan
went to Driver, where he ad-
dressed the pupils of the Second Dis-
Agricultural School.
After disembarking at Old Point
where the welcoming ceremonies
curred, Dr. Muller left for Washing-
ton, accompanied by Mr. and
party and will tomorrow be the guest
of President Wilson.
Virginia Pennant 1- liaised
ROANOKE, June bale-
ball championship; for the
season of 1912, won from Petersburg
by the narrow margin of two points
the last game of the season of
1912. was raised today
ceremonies and a short address
by Mayor who
winning pitcher in the final game
that decided the championship, war
presented with a pair of gold cuff but-
tons after Petersburg
to pound for four safeties, send-
him to the and scoring four
HIM III first Petersburg
The following is a partial list of
out of town people who attended E.
. T. T. S. Mesdames
G. T. Gardner, J. R. Harvey, R. J.
Day, Dora Mary E. Daniel, J.
Perry, S. M. Taylor. L. T. Smith,
j W. T. W. A. B. Branch,
I Its W. D. Croom and M. M.
Moore; Misses Estelle Davis,
rite Davis, Minnie Best Sara
Waller, Hunter, Emma Harden,
Mamie Williams, Mabel Jones, Agnes
I Smith, Ruth Lula
Lida Annie Belle
I White, Pauline Perry, Sadie Taylor
Better Taylor, Daisy Smith, Mary
Cotton and Maggie Murphy;
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Freeman; Messrs.
T. H, Pritchard, B. H. Stephens, C.
M. and J. R. Smith, R. E.
G. C. Weeks, Robt. Ev-
John Hooker, J. A. and An-
drew Whichard J. H. Vaughn, Clay
Vaughn, S. and F. R. T.
Fountain. Frank Savage, O. P. Shell,
Julian Hassell, Milton Sexton, Her-
H. M. Taylor, R. H.
Lucas, Hardy Thompson, O. W. Quinn
and Grady Coppedge; Mr. and Mrs.
J. T. and Mr. and Mrs. J.
VALIDITY
NEWSPAPER LAW
Supreme Court Decision Announced
By Chief Justice
Hi
won, to
Omitted Features
In the report o C. T. T. com-
In yesterday's Reflector
certain features connected with the
presentation of the portraits were ac-
omitted. Pres. Wright read
the resolutions by the two
Literary Societies. Miss
Weeks, president of Edgar Allan
Poe Literary Society for pres-
the portrait of Gov. and
Miss Willie Day, president of
the Sidney Lanier Literary Society for
1912-13, presented that of Mr. Rags-
dale, State Superintendent J. Y.
Joyner, Chairman of the Board
Trustees, accepted the portraits.
VIRGINIA BEACH
SWEPT FIRE
NORFOLK, June early this
morning swept all of the con-
cessions east the Casino at
Beach. wind was in favor
of the and the handsome
Casino structure was saved.
The buildings destroyed were as fol
The swimming pool, the merry-
go-round, Graces bath the
adjoining hotel and all of the
south of the pavilion.
The hotel was occupied by Mr. Ed
wards of and his family.
They had of
They and several of boarders are
reported to have had narrow escapes.
All of the destroyed structures are
understood to be the property of Mr.
Groves and associates and were leas-
ed Mr. Edwards and The
loss could not be ascertained
night.
The the Casino
and adjoining buildings by keeping
the Colonnade drenched, being fa-
by the winds.
Will Their Respects
WASHINGTON, June Congress
man Stedman has secured the
of the route from
to so as to Include
Major Madman and
of Internal Revenue Osborn have an
with President Wilson to-
morrow morning. They will call to
pay their respects to the chief
H. C and John Hampton
of Lansing, William Knight, of
Washington, are here.
The Law Requires AH Publications
to File Sworn Statement
Annually With Local
Postmaster.
WASHINGTON, June val-
of
law, enacted in 1912 as a provision
of the postal appropriation act, was
pIn Id today by unanimous
of the supreme court of the United
States. Chief Justice White
id the court's decision.
This law requires every newspaper,
magazine or other publication file
semi-; with gen-
and local postmaster, a
statement of the names of
editors, mangers, owners,
and bondholders and in case
dally newspapers of the average
dally circulation. Publication
these statements is required and for
failure to comply with any of
provisions the publication shall be
denied the of the
A second paragraph provides that
pair for editorial or reading matter
of any shall be
marked under pen-
of a fine or imprisonment.
About per cent of the newspapers
already have complied with law,
many under protest. The Lewis Pub-
Company and Journal of
Commerce and Commercial Bulletin, of
New York, led attack upon the
statute, bringing suits for
In the federal district court of south-
New York. When the law was up-
held there they appealed to the high-
est court. claimed that law
to and
to enforce a censorship of the press.
In reply former Solicitor General
contented a
of the provision Into two
typographical paragraphs by the sen-
ate, after the measure was passed by
the the law was only one para-
graph, Imposing conditions upon
tee of low second class mall rates
accorded newspapers and magazines.
supreme court today adopted
Mr. Interpretation. The
in tho act of tho word a
technical word employed only as to
second class mail matter, showed,
Chief Justice White held that con-
In passing the law, had in mind
only the second class mall and not
the right to use the mall as a whole.
The nae of the words st
the the chief justice took to
be a positive to second
class mail because the great ad-
vantages newspapers were granted
under the second class over other
classes of mail in order to
the of current
He said congress did not
Intend to exclude papers not comply-
with the provisions from the use
of tho mail, other than tho second
Kills
KINGSTON. June H.
Peters chief mechanical engineer of
Winston and Co., contractors
charge of the construction of the Ash-
reservoir, was killed
and his automobile demolished when
the Rip Van Winkle
at Brown's station this
afternoon.