Eastern reflector, 19 September 1913


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





m i i u
OUR BUYERS are in the
Northern markets
our FALL GOODS.
Keep your eyes on this space
and we will save you money
on your purchases.
J. R. J. G.
Furniture and its Makers
S. JEAN HENRI
LEARN ONE THING
A EVERY DAY , a.
by The Associated
Newspaper School, Ina
The John Flanagan Buggy Co
extends to each and every farmer
who visits the Greenville Tobacco
Market, a cordial invitation to visit
their plant and inspect their com-
line of Buggies,
Bicycles, Etc.
we want to serve you
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
Tho early years of the lire of Jean
Henri would seem to
that he was born under a lucky
star. Hut long his death, at
the age of in the Bret de-
of the nineteenth century, his
star had set. the outbreak of
the French Revolution he command-
ed enormous prices for his work
One small he constructed is
said to have been Bold for more than
a thousand dollars. Yet in his old
ago he was only saved from utter
ruin by his son, a portrait
famous and successful
furniture maker, under whom
served as an apprentice, died
and left, besides a young and hand-
some widow, one of the largest work-
shops In Paris and a largo fortune.
The young man promptly married
widow. and upon her death six years
later came into possession of both
the property and the fortune. Three
years later ho married the
of a citizen of Paris; but again his
marriage proved of short duration, for
after a few storm years of wedded
life he took refuge In the new divorce
laws of country and returned
again to the state of single blessed-
his master, had been
sioned by King XV of France
to make a bureau. King Until
the although
ho was really hated by the majority
of his subjects. This bureau
to fame; for
its construction took three years, and,
having In the meantime,
his pupil completed It
Tho massive bronze doors of this
royal bureau ornamented with
elaborate and modeled fig-
and the whole was fashioned
after a complete and miniature mod-
el. The degree of that
was brought to bear upon this his-
piece of was of such
a character that a second bureau,
built similarly, was begun and com-
by a competitor the orig-
was finished.
became a greater artist
than his teacher and was
as one of the leading
makers of his time. His great
activity is shown by the quantity and
detail of the furniture he
made.
At tho beginning of the French Rev-
evil days came upon
Those wealthy customers who did not
and who escaped the guillotine
were made bankrupt In 1793 he held
a sale of prized collection of
but he was forced to buy most
of It back himself. A later ho
tried again to realize some money on
the furniture; but this also was a
failure.
His son, who had Joined the army,
returned to Paris and saved the aged
furniture maker from starvation.
Every day a human
est ton will iii
tor. Yon can get a beautiful Intaglio
reproduction of the above picture, with
five others, equally attractive. Ill
1-2 Inches m size, with week's
In a well
known authority covers the subject
cf the pictures and stories the
week. Readers of The Reflector and
will know Art
History, Science and
and own exquisite picture. On sale
at the Reflector office and Ellington
Book Store. Price, Ten cents. Write
today to The Reflector for booklet ex-
The Associated Newspaper
School plan.
V LEADING BOARDING SCHOOL
far
for
tor Lit.
and
Pr-
attention. School
-NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue of contained In
a certain mortgage deed to
me by J. W. Sutton and Am. e Sutton,
on the 23rd day of November, 1906.
and duly recorded In the register's
in Pitt county In book page
to secure tho payment of a
bond, bearing even date there-
with and the stipulations in sail
mortgage not having been complied
LAND SALE.
By of tho power of sale con-
In two executed and
delivered by Henry Allen Smith to
Richard one date
1912, and recorded In Book E-10.
and the other dated Oct 1st, 1912,
and recorded In Book E-10.
In the register's office of Pitt county,
tho undersigned will sell for cash
the court house door In Green-
I shall expose to public sale,
for c Friday, tho 3rd day of 9th
October, 1913. at noon, in Greenville,
Pitt county, at the court house door,
the following
In township, on
the east side of the Sutton road, in
Edward line, running with
his line up the branch to Dix-
line, thence with his lino to Liz-
A. Sutton's line and with
her line to the Sutton's road,
thence with said road to the begin-
containing fifty acres, more
or
This Sept. 1913.
MILLS. Mortgagee.
HARDING AND PIERCE, Attorneys.
ltd w
Let us sell you a plug, a pound or
b of Black Eagle Sun Cured to-
Ina
W. T. PH. D.
and make you happy.
J.
J. R.
tho following described real estate,
situated in tho county of Pitt and in
township, being undivided
Interest of the said Henry Allen Smith
in tho lands of his mother
Smith, being tho share of land
lotted to the said Smith In the
division of the Jordan Cox land. ad-
Joining the lands of Ellen Garris.
Charlie Weather In others,
containing 1-3 acres more or less.
This Sept. 8th, 1913.
RICHARD WINGATE,
F G. JAMES and SON,
D ltd
Help For Young Lady.
young lady wishing to attend
good boarding school and pay her
entirely or in part with
trial work may secure aid by writing
once to RED, this office.
in Quality
in HARDWARE
and FARM
MACHINERY
That's the point
in Its
the quality of our goods
and Machines that has won for us thousands of satisfied customers.
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.
Attention TOBACCO Farmers
If you want the high-
est average for your
tobacco, sell it at THE STAR.
Did you ever see a real sorry break
of tobacco at THE STAR always
looks bright. It always sells.
The STAR is the best lighted ware-
house ever built for the sale of leaf
tobacco.
A good light and a
good warehouseman
guarantees the highest prices.
We have the light The best
light, and we know how to see it.
Watch us, and see if we
don't.
O. L. Joyner.
Sugg.
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
HA YE EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAY OF
LABOR, CAPITAL AND
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
JOB AND NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
Agriculture I. the Most t th, Healthful, the ft.,. K
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
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL THEM WHAT YOU
HA TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
ARE LOW AND CAN
BE HAD UPON
X. C, mum
a.
Business Men of State
Discuss Freight Rates
Great Gathering in Raleigh on Next
III
Mil ISSUED BY MR. HIE
Men of All of the
State Will Study for
the
On next Wednesday afternoon at
there will assemble In
the auditorium In the city of Raleigh
a great concourse of business men
from all parts of North Carolina
The purpose of the big gathering will
be to consider and to discuss ways
and means of reaching some sort of
an agreement with the railroads do-
this state whereby
the manufacturers and shippers of
North Carolina may have their freight
hauled to its destination at a rate that
is fair and Many of the
foremost men of the state will he it
the meeting, and all of the local
Freight Rate Association in every sec-
of the state are being called up-
on to send delegates and to take part
in the discussions and to aid In the
light that is to be made in the in-
of Justice to the people of the
state. Fred N. Tale has
sent out letters and notices to all
parts of North Carolina asking co-
operation among the business men.
and in Raleigh when the meeting Is
he expects to meet several thous-
called to order next
All of the members of the General
Assembly of North Carolina, which
will on that day, at the call of Gov-
Locke convene in ex-
session for tho specific
purpose of some of a remedy
outrageous discrimination now
being practiced by the railroads, will
be Invited to attend in a party the
mooting of the Just Freight Rate As-
In tho auditorium. It Is
expected that there will be a full at-
of both houses of tho leg-
at the time, and that the
and cooperation of the
may had.
The letter below, written by Mayor
F. N. Tate, of High Point, president
of the state organization, to Mr. E.
D. Higgs, president of the Pitt
association, explains itself, as well
as gives information as to the
and character of the meeting
Mr. Higgs expects a largo number
or the business men of Greenville to
attend the meeting in Raleigh, and
will be glad to communicate with any
and all who contemplate making the
trip. Mr. Tate's letter
counties will
bring many when the mass
meeting is called order, we hope
Very delegate be in his place
ready to do his full duty.
All of the members of the general
will he invited and Ex-
to participate as citizens, in
the meeting us. and we will be
addressed by the Governor and
who have made this question
their chief concern and who are In
position to lay the bare, cold facts of
outrageous discriminations before us.
The light will he turned on in a man-
to make us all realize the urgent
demands upon us this hour for
quick, certain and decisive relief.
Proper legislative bills be ready.
Mils which every honest and free
mm Supply
WASHINGTON, Sept ; , . .
Is now in its dew
Quarters
Washington is wondering just what
If the significance of the visit to this ,
county of Senor Manuel de
e former Mexican ambassador
to this country and supposed
of Provisional President
Huerta.
Though he has been In
the United
the past few
toe
ed into its new quarters just to the
rear of the Atlantic Coast Line pas-
station, and the firm is now I Individual families decide
occupying store rooms that will serve number of u, she Bay
its purposes much better, and which
is
citizen of the state can
, . . few
advocate and support, and there b Mr
should be no delay in deciding once
and for all time, the sovereignly of
our great state.
Please immediately get your en-
tire community prepared for the work
before us; have your senator and rep-
understand what will be
expected of them; get your delegates
appointed, from each county if
possible; have them pledged to at-
tend and let us meet at the
borough house, our headquarters, on
the morning of the 24th.
I am expecting each branch
to do Its full part in aiding;
this particular time and I know
I shall not be in of TOM TO BILL HIMSELF.
them.
Sincerely yours,
FRED N. TATE,
President.
States several days has not Greenville Supply has
revealed the purpose of his coming.
A the state department and at the
Mexican embassy no information can
be gleaned. It is believed, however,
that lie is commissioned by President
Huerta to negotiate a loan from New
York bankers if possible . He has
spent several days in New York.
In all likelihood is a
Huerta envoy, and he may attempt to
sec President Wilson before his re-,
turn to Mexico. The altitude of the I
president and of Secretary Bryan is
not to receive envoy who does not I
come to carry forward the
and who does
not proceed with tho understanding
that the points made by Mr. Lind
will enable them to do a much
and a more prosperous business.
In the old quarters on Dickinson
avenue, the store was not large
enough to accommodate the large and
growing business of the firm and it
was found necessary to build a new
j building.
The new home of the firm is two
i stories high, with a basement be-
i low. At the present time
made to lay a con-
have been settled chiefly, that Huerta floor the and when
is to be considered as eliminated Is additional
presidential race.
Senor
BERLIN, Sept. the party
convention of the socialists which
H in session here, the birth
Of socialist women is being discussed.
and Clara
two most famous women leaders
the Socialists, are strongly opposed
to the birth strike.
-Miss declares that re-
of cannon food for the gov-
would also effect a reduction
the number of it
limit the
it la b
Sunday School are to be
Built at Once
PHI II HEM.
room will be had for the storing of
tho groceries. The Coast Line
personal matter, but she is opposed
to make it a party policy.
Hr. Hoses out in n vigorous
of the birth strike. He de-
dares that it would be the quickest,
most effectual and most certain way
of raising the status of the working
classes. He tells of attending work-
mothers who had fifteen or
eighteen children, while ten or
twelve children In the family of i
woman were numerous. He
declared that leaving out of
the physical ruin
no workingman
Veneering Hill lie
on the Wall
Spend
tile
even by the opponents of the track
way rear, feed and educate such a
i umber of children in the present i
Contracts have been let and work
will immediately be started on
that are to be made at
the Christian church at the corner
Dickinson avenue and Pitt street.
Upwards of fifteen hundred dollars
be expended by tile church in
of moth- making Improvements and in adding
could oven half other conveniences.
government as a very shrewd man, of and
a-d his movements are comfortable has been
closely followed by every one con
In the Mexican situation.
claim that he Is in the United States
private is considered as
n diplomatic statement.
for loading drays. It
i en of the Uncut wholesale houses in
town, and is now prepared to grow
prosper as never before in it-
sum
RED BAKES ITEMS
Mr. K. Higgs, Pres.,
Greenville, N. C.
Dear
Our call for the great mass meet-
to be held in city auditorium
at Raleigh on Sept. 24th at p.
in. has been In the state
papers as you have doubtless seen.
It is the purpose of the Just Freight
Rate Association to bring to Raleigh
on that date, the largest body of rep-
citizens ever assembled
together, and each person Is expected
to come with a definite purpose, that
of showing by his argument,
and by his Interest in the para
mount question which now confronts
our people, that nothing of strong
our people, that nothing short of
strong and adequate measures will
be acceptable to the various
and farming Interests of our
state.
It la hoped each county branch as-
will bring at least one
m From n Lire
Neighborhood.
RED RANKS, Sept. G.
W. Stokes and G. M. Corbett filled
their regular appointment at Red
Hanks Sunday.
Misses Sallie and Willie Jackson
of Greenville spent last week with
Misses Lucy and Ruth Tuck-
Messrs. Durward Tucker and Walter
Cherry were pleasant callers in Win-
ti Sunday evening.
Messrs. Coy Forbes and Frank
age of Greenville, wore in our sec-
Sunday.
Miss Haggle of Greenville,
returned yesterday after spend-
a few days with Miss Martha
Cherry.
The choir met Saturday night at the
school wore very glad
to have such a large attendance and
many visitors.
Ida of Cross
Roads, spent last week with Miss
Tucker.
Mrs. Corey and Son, of
spent Saturday with Mrs
W. A. Cherry.
Mr. O. L. Tucker all smiles
Sunday. He went to see his best
girl.
Messrs. J. D. G. H, Cox and
Charlie of at-
tended church Sunday.
Mr. spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. Henry
Tucker.
Miss Buck, of is
spending a few days with relatives
In this
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tucker and
of spent Sunday at
Mr. J. W. Brook's.
Several of our young people at-
tended the revival at Reedy Branch
last week.
VITAL
GOVERNORS.
Has Since Changed His Mind and
Now Wants to Get Well.
GREENSBORO, Sept.
M. Reynolds, a young white man of
the Pomona mill village, is at St. Leo's
hospital here recovering from a self-
inflicted wound in an effort to com-
suicide Saturday night. The at-;
tempt of Reynolds on Ills life
kept quiet few knew of the man's
rash act Monday. Reynolds is about;
years of age and Saturday night
while in his room at a hoarding
In the mill village drew a
across ills The fact that
Reynolds is still living will prob-
ably recover, Is duo to the fact that
he didn't
he didn't sink sharp blade deep
enough in the throat. Reynold's act.
i. Is said was the result of
despondency from which he has
completely recovered and is now
to linger yet awhile.
0-
WINTERVILLE
WERE EVIDENCES
HIS
The women are gradually undress-
It seems.
of Schmidt's Rooms Leads to
Arrest of Dr. a Dentist.
New York, Sept. A plate
from which counterfeit ten-dollar
gold certificate may have been
found in the rooms of Hans Schmidt,
the confessed murderer of Anna Au-
muller, led to the arrest today of Dr.
Ernest Arthur a dentist on a
charge of counterfeiting, and Bertha
twenty-one years old house-
keeper, as a material witness.
Schmidt's rooms were later ran-
sacked by detectives who found a re-
bill for rent paid by
Miller for an apartment where the
detectives allege they found a com
outfit for the manufacture of
prints such as might be
used In making counterfeit bills, and
half-burned parts of
of ten-dollar gold certificates
Examination disclosed that pro-
were printed from the plate
found In Schmidt's room.
Is alleged to have told the
detectives after his arrest that he
had been In counterfeiting operations
with Schmidt. also
as
Ck., Sept . Son
regarding the gov-
who attended the recent con-
of governors at Colorado
Springs were published here today
A local wag, whose runs
to pen-
has classified some of the chief
executives and former chief executives
lie
Governors Dunne. Ammons,
Hodges, Carey, and are
bald.
Governors and
are getting bald.
Governors Baldwin, Mann, Carey,
and ornament their
with hirsute adornment.
Governors Miller,
Stewart, and Dunne, and
former Governors Adams and Gil-
wear ferocious mustaches.
Governors Trammel,
die Adams, and Hodges, and
former Governor
and elegant.
DEATH
Miss Body to be Exhumed
and Made
BALTIMORE, Sept. a
series of events preceding and
following the death of Miss
Warfield, at her farm near
ville several day ago, state's attorney
announced that he would make
a thorough Investigation at once and
ordered the body of Miss Warfield ex-
At the same time the
attorney announced that he had learn-
ed that Mies mother, to
whom she left all her property, has
become mentally unbalanced.
Despite the fact that a bottle said
to have contained of
slum was found in bed In which
Miss Warfield died and a mysterious
letter found beneath the bed,
Miller, of who was
Miss cousin, issued a bur-
certificate without ordering
autopsy or holding an inquest.
Dr who was called aft-
Miss Warfield was found dead In
bed, said he gave a of
death from at
request of Coroner Miller.
Sept,
entertainer and humorist,
Karl Jansen, is to here Tuesday
and will render a program the
High School auditorium Tuesday
night
Prof. F. C. Nye went to Goldsboro
A Sunday School room is to be erect-
ed, this having been found necessary
on account of the Increased attend-
upon the services of the Sunday
school. Additional classes will be
formed as rapidly as the attendance
will justify such a course, and it is
believed by the membership of the
church that with the completion
their new rooms more young people,
and adults as well, will be attracted
to the Sunday school.
A now, modern Steam heating plant
is to be Installed at once, this Is to
ready for us by the first of De-
It will cost nearly
today and will speak there tomorrow comber
When you want beef see R. W. In. A
He has just returned with a nice basement to make room for the in-
of the furnaces and storage
Mis. Joyner, of Greenville, apartment, for plant will be made
Thursday. underneath the church, and the plant
Mr. A. G. Cox is out again after ,, ,,,. , ,.
illness.
For cigars, cigarettes and tobacco
H Cox and
Get your rye from Harrington, Bar-
and Co. They have a large sup-
ply on hand.
Miss Street went to Kinston
yesterday to spend the week-end with
friends.
better prepared to serve
oysters than ever before. R. W.
When you are in need of horse, cat-
or hog food, see G. A. Kittrell Co.
Nails, cement, lime, windows and
doors A. W. and Co.
Hotel or sale. See Mrs.
The hotel is still
open for boarders.
Cox and for butter,
cheese, and fancy fruit.
Contracts have been let also for the
construction of a brick veneering
i the entire outer wall of the church,
this to cost in the neighborhood
three hundred dollars.
When all of these Improvements
and addition to the church have been
completed, the membership of the lo-
cal church will have a place of
ship of which they may Justly feel
proud, and which will compare
very favorably with the other edifice
in this
SPECIAL.
Arrives in Washington With Twelve
Couples lb at on
Sept. cu
Rev. T. II. Davis, of Cary. state B. from Richmond, Va under
V. P secretary, was hero a few of Conductor Mrs. J,
days ago spoke to tho school. U made run to tho
Harrington, Barber and Com- Monday with twelve pas
for your economy window shade
hanger.
Mr. S. has returned to
his homo at Rocky Mount, as he is
not able to be In school, It is hoped
that be will soon gain his health
to the land of Hyman as its
principle cargo. By nightfall five of
the Couplet bad cured licensee
had been married.
Mrs. runs the special
from to Washington three
conducted over five hundred
marriages in tho last ten years and
points with pride to fact that not
one of her couples have ever
release in the divorce courts.
ho can return and take up his work. or four
Come and got suited on n hat or cap.
Some of the finest are at A. W.
and Co.
Miss Louise Newton of Grifton has
been visiting Miss Cox .
Tho ladles are cordially invited to
call look over our new stock. B
F. Forest and Co,
Mr. D. J. Jr., of Green-
ville, here Friday.
If you want anything In
line G. A. Kittrell and Co.
Our work, repairing store Is now
complete. Just notice our show win-
B. D. Forrest and Co.
HIGH SCHOOLS
NOW
Huerta Is getting to be as much
a problem as ex-President
once Is yet.
RALEIGH. Sept. IT. Prof. N, W.
Walker, supervisor of rural high
schools In North Carolina, announces
that the number of these has now
and this will the
it for tho present. Last year It was
arranged that two schools should be
added to the list this year and these
have now been named. Is at
Alamance In the
at Mills River, county.
WT





MR. HOCK TELLS
ABOUT HIS TRIP
general resume of the entire trip, but
several weeks from this time. Mr.
will consume the time allotted
to him at his prayer meeting services
in telling of one special subject at
each service. He will take up the
towns and will talk on
one at each prayer meeting.
Gives General Resume of Vacation
of Three Months.
PREACHED TWICE OH SUNDAY
FOR A ACHE FAR
within two and half miles of Green-
adapted to all crops, two six
room tenant two
barns, thousand acre pasture. Terms
suit purchaser. J. W. Perkins.
REJOINDER THAT WAS BITING
New Member of Proved
elf Matter of the Art of
Verbal Flaying.
Silver Alec what
they call him out in the state of Wash-
though his
name, as given in the Congressional
Directory, is J. A.
into a debate in the house the other
Clunk i
at
Services Held Yes-
A sermon in the morning and a
talk at night on the trip that he
constituted the services con-
by Rev. C. M. Hock at the Hap
ti-t church yesterday on the first
that be has preached here day all out. mad and fight-
n turn from a three log. even though this is his term.
absence from Greenville.
Maryland Casualty Company
Leads Others Follow
Premiums received by various Casualty Companies In North
Carolina for year ending December 31st, 1912, as shown by State
Insurance
MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY
Fidelity and Casualty .
Life.
Travelers.
D. S. Fidelity and
. 67.730.29
. 62.368.69
. 60.817.84
. 36.974.61
During the
lime be baa been away from town. Mr.
k .;. many interesting and
wonderful thing, and his talks of.
the nip Instructive as well as
entertaining. Large congregations
greeted the preacher at both
service and be was given a cordial
we come hack to town.
ed from
Mr. of Alabama, the wit and
story teller of the house, had said
some unkind things about the
gists, as is his wont, lie had suggested
that all males who believe in woman
suffrage ought to be attired in skirts.
Now. Mr. Falconer, Progressive with
a large Is a representative at large
from a state which contains many
women voters.
want to said he. severe-
Fidelity and Deposit . 29.940.88
Indemnity . 26,299.27
General Accident. 21,294.7
Liability . 16.419.60
Ocean Accident . 13.633.7
New England Casualty. 12,787.63
Royal Indemnity . 10,178.82
Mass. Bonding Company . 8.440.41
C. S. Casualty. 6,873.13
Southwestern Surety . 4,047.12
Company maintaining de-
in Carolina.
H. A. WHITE
INSURANCE 1895
Mr. Hock started from
. ,. In reply to Mr. the
j,,.,. . After spending of the average
in Philadelphia, he set sad for man r
Europe on Fourteen days to the ossified brain opera-
UNHARMED BY j
Cow Gave Demonstration of Fact
That Animal Stomach Is Fear-
and Wonderful Thing.
Four cows of Watertown, N. Y.,
This it a prescription prepared especially
MALARIA or CHILLS A FEVER.
Five or six doses will break case, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver better than
v ere spent on the high seas, and in of the gentleman from Alabama, and one hen of Bayonne, N. J., re- . and does not gripe or sicken,
would make him look like a mangy vealed themselves as possessed of
kitten In a tiger which, for a most remarkable Interiors recently,
new member, is some flight of oratory. The cows strolling through a meadow
especially when directed at the golden- came to a fence near which some
tongued workmen had temporarily a doz-
average woman in the state of en sticks of dynamite. The cows con-
went on Mr. Falconer, the dynamite In the day's
more about social economics task and proceeded to swallow and
window open and of being awakened political economy in one minute prepare the stick for future cud chew-
by rain dashing upon his bed. than the gentleman from Alabama has The horrified workmen arrived
Mr. says hat Germany Is one demonstrated to the members of the on the scene Just as ten of the sticks
o- the prettiest countries that he has house that he knows In five had disappeared. They grabbed the
ever seen A magnificent system of And Mr. didn't have a word remaining two and fled. The cows
to say in Star. were watched by the angry and
owner for quite a time, but
i English channel, during which
time the company underwent many
trying experiences. Before landing
on the German coast, the local pas-
tor was an eye witness to a midnight
burial at sea. and bad the
misfortune to go t. bed with
OP TRAINS
goo roads threads the hills and val-
almost from one end to the
and all of them are well kept.
They are constructed and kept up by
the German government. During his
absence Mr. Rock saw the famous old
windmill that have been made
by the writer and the artist, and
el Arrival and Departure of
Train
ATLANTIC COAST LINK
Northbound
p. m. p. in.
A m. a. m
a. m. a. m.
p. m. p. m
PRAISED WORK OF CANNIBALS something that
u u i . c cm., made It gape and open and shut it
Henry M. Stanley Found Them . ,,. o,.
, . . a dozen times a second. She was
Followers, Intelligent and T . . v. .,. ,,, ,
t-i, B breed hen and the owner
a veterinarian. He slit open her
Henry If. Stanley among the o took a small of
agreed that they contain all the to negative the prevailing Idea
interest and beauty that has been
tared by these skilled writers.
A visit was paid to Berlin, the great
German and the university
bearing that name was inspected by
the local man. Views were had of
the famous art galleries of Dresden.
in Vienna Mr. Rock visited the royal
that cannibalism was the mark of a
pedal allotment of original sin
among aborigines. In fact he
cannibals because of their
greater intelligence and greater
Now we have the opinion of Mr.
who has Just returned from
the neighborhood of Lake in
equatorial Africa. He says that he
emery paper, sewed up the crop again
with silk thread and looked to see a
very sick hen stagger off to He down
and very likely die. Instead she went
to her nest box and promptly hatched
out ten chickens.
MOVED
to Street, front
I stable, handing
formerly occupied by Chinese
Phone M.
T. HICKS, The
the latter being of such a wide area
as to occupy nine hundred acres of
land.
The trip to Greece was made over
the Adriatic Sea. and a stop for din-
was made at Corinth. Several
APART FROM THE BUSY WORLD
Small Island, Only Forty Miles From
Largest City, a Most
Primitive Spot.
palace and the gardens of the king, was virtually unarmed, and
ed except by one friend and twenty
porters who were all can-
He says they were most
devoted and reliable I
could ever wish to have in a tight
The practice of cannibalism
was originally confined to the bodies
days were spent In Athene, the famous of relatives and was Intended as a
old of ancient Greece, the mark of respect. Enemies were eaten acres, and Is the property of Oxford
where were staged all of the In order to absorb their valor. Prob- university. Some time ago the Island
activities o, the writers of much of --J
one of England's oddest little
though only miles from
London, a parish where roads, shops,
lamps, telephones, motor cars, public
houses and are unknown.
The Island has an area of about 2.000
children. The Inhabitant are mostly
the classic literature Which Is d or of large flock.
M highly by the nations of of by of The oldest man of the
the world today. and But where the lags la In hi seventieth year. He has
A short trip was made in Ale-can- ease is of so loathsome a nature as yet to see a motor
. ii e of ancient repel natures scavengers the body and church are the two chief land-
Lg pt. the suit am KM on th ,, d they
Mr. Rock was on were .
a steamer that passed very close to the ed spot g in winter It Is almost
Island of Crete, and in the i impossible to leave the Island. The
could he seen the isle of the Albany
place where St. John was banished. and at , Al-
and where he wrote the book of Rev- b he
Cation. At Mr. Rock saw a -The Socialist, who abhors the
house said to be that of Simon, the racy and superiority and elegance, is ST of the white door of a
Tanner, referred to in the New Test- as misguided and wrong-headed as the g
miner who went through Glen t know open
Glen, between Glasgow and door , m f At
On S old, dirty train the trip Is one of the most MA u,,
to Jerusalem was made. This city, and rugged pieces of scenery I e of
more so than any other, was the
huh around which moved all of the
NOTICE.
Notice Is hereby given that an
plication will be made to the general
assembly to amend the charter of the
town of Ayden, N. C.
R. W. SMITH, Mayor.
Minister Praise This Laxative
Rev. H. of Allison, la,
In praising Dr. New Life Pills
for constipation,
New Life Pill are such perfect pill
no home should be without
No better regulator for the liver and
bowels. Every pill guaranteed. Try
them. Price at all druggist.
Summer
Furniture
The cool, comfortable porch
rocker, settee, cane or wick-
styles so
mock now be-
offered at lowest prices.
Closing out for a
stock now how well we can suit you In your wants
for furniture of exceptional merit at least cost.
TAFT VANDYKE
JO C an J always guaranteed; Stag and
Detroit Vapor Oil and Gasoline Stove and
Windsor Asbestos hard Wall Plaster.
j paints,
j O-Cedar polish Oil and Mops,
I CARR ATKINS
J EMPORIUM
Teachers Training School
t-i teachers for the public
of Mirth Every energy
t Tuition free to all who agree to
Fall term begins Sot. J. Far
logs and information,
address,
ROBT. H. WRIGHT, President,
N. C.
In all Scotland
a miner once drove through mm Worry.
Irate
time it has a population of about feature howled the
people, and is a place visited I of the miner yawned over , on
you like Hells Glen, M
by thousand t tourists every year.
The scenery Is most beautiful, yet It,
has about It that ancient and hallow-1 T I n
Its I and striking spot
appearance lent to it Its P q
And per-
me to inform you
It's all right, but I can't seen none of
the scenery for these darned
ed ,
with the events recorded in the
Old and New Testaments. Mr. Rock
flatted the Mount of Olives where
preached the famous Sermon on
the Mount, the Garden of
v M Idea of
ad the Mount The seems
the trip a visit was; able for this time. The witty
to Jericho, around whose walls De once asked XIV.
paid to of France. is England always o
the armies of we rued that country
times and which fell on the , the law not exist and
day. Mr. Rock says that lie Swam are lo I
the River Jordan at a point ruled, although only
where It was Just a little more than men are allowed to
hundred feet wide. He had the, said the king, the
that I have been to considerable ex-
well Mucking It with
exclaimed the angler,
with what fish, may I
ask, have you so liberally replenished
the
roach, sir; my favorite
well, then, In that bland-
observed the youth, no
need for you to worry further, for I
am Ashing for
Chemical Ce.
Fifty
Well
a long time to endure the aw-
burning, itching, smarting, skin-
disease known
name for Eczema. Seem good
realize, also that Dr. Eczema
Ointment has proven a perfect cure
Mr. D. L. Kenney can-
not sufficiently express my thank to
you for your Dr.
Ointment It ha cured my
which ha troubled me for over fifty
All druggist, or by mall
St Louis. Ho. Philadelphia, Pa
Coward woolen Drug Co.
Only the
in Out
Department
ICE
CREAM
to
All
Drink,
Fall Urn
Stationary,
Fountain
Pan,,
Kodak
Drug Co.
I'll I If I'll ANNUAL
From all North Carolina and Virgin-
la Points on Seaboard Air Line By. to
Norfolk Southern Railroad
Schedule la effect August 1913.
N. It. The fig-
published a information ONLY
and are not guaranteed.
GREENVILLE
East Bound
To War on Materialism.
To combat the materialism of the
present age In earnest a society
just been founded In Paris by Ed-
I Rostand, Maeterlinck and Ca-
strange experience of trying to dive women who reign In are and Is
in the Head S and of having him ; way. advised and , of
self thrown out before he could man- ,.
age to get control of himself. The under the
Is so thick that one cannot sink, the country la, there-
and, though the waters are very deep,, rued by women.
one can go out and walk with
his neck above the He tells i Com on In
the of in the month of July per-
a. m. dally,
a. m. dally, for Plymouth,
City and Oxford . 8.00
JACKSONVILLE AND TAMPA, FLA.
September 1913
Tickets will be on sale from all
points on Seaboard Air Line Railway
in North Carolina and Virginia,
Tickets returning will
be limited to return as to reach
starting point by midnight of
Regular train service should be
used to Hamlet from which point
special train will start section of
No. p. m. vestibule coaches
electrically lighted sleeping
cars.
ROUND TRIP RATES FROM
Jackson-
ville
Richmond
Petersburg. 9.00
. 9.25
Durham via Apex. 7.60
Water many lest and having
sons recruited from both exes, bathed
In water many test new y ocean
his picture made, head and limns, ,,,, of
and most of his holy, protruding water 2.827.426 said la
the while. Everybody's
The talk made list night a,
public. A large number of member
have already enrolled themselves,
among the being some
of the leading figures In French
t. The founders are calling
upon all who are willing to fight for
the Ideals of art, literature and
science, In the face of decadence,
now threatening French taste, to Join
their ranks.
Several It I announced,
are being formed In the province and
abroad.
Pullman sleeping car for Norfolk.
Car service Washington to Nor-
folk. Connects for all points
north and west.
p. m. daily, Sunday for
Washington.
West Bound
a. m. dally, for Wilson, Raleigh
and west Pullman sleeping car
service. Connects north, south
and west.
a. in. dally, except Sunday, tor
Wilson and Raleigh. Connects
for all point.
p. m. dally, for Wilson and
For information and
In ears, apply to J
L. Hassell, agent, N. C.
H. B.
General Passenger Agent.
W. A. WITT,
Superintendent.
NORFOLK. VA.
Tampa
on
11.00
10.26
11.75
11.26
10.60
9.50
10.00
9.60
THE BEAUTIFUL CHIMNEY
BOCK SAP BEACHED
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Chimney Rock been for
year famed for it beauty both In
song and story.
Why not your vacation at
one the comfortable hotel beau-
situated in this lovely valley.
Hotel rates remarkably cheap,
to per week. Homelike service.
Good roads, fine livery, good fish-
The SEABOARD'S NEW
make It EAST to get to
Rock, and
rounding mountains. Write today for
booklet
H. D. P. A
Raleigh, N. O.
JAMES Jr., T. P. A
Charlotte, N. a
9.60
9.50
9.00
Raleigh . 7.50
Wilmington to
burg Inclusive. 7.50
Monroe to Hamlet In-
.
0.1 to
inclusive. 7.60
Those desiring Pullman reservations
on special from Hamlet should write
at once to the undersigned. Any fur-
information will be cheerfully
furnished upon application to any
agent or
JOHN T. WEST,
Division Passenger Agent,
Raleigh, N. C.
M. LEVIN,
Raleigh, N. C.
Traveling Passenger Agent.
i a i i t s t i i
t n. BENTLEY S
i sun with
I OH
S The Mutual Life Ce.,
I of
t Yet.
To Prevent Blood
once the wonderful reliable DB.
ANTISEPTIC
teal that hull
time. Not liniment. He.
The killer
Salve when
ed to a cut, bruise, sprain, burn or
scald, or other injury the akin will
Immediately remove all pain. B. H.
Chamberlain of Clinton, He.,
robe out and other injuries of
terror. A a healing
It equal Will do
good for you. Only at all drug-
gists.
Into N.
Corner 2nd van Streets
SAM
Transfer If en
Express
Promptness
Phone No. Night or Day
Moots all Train
Foreman Was Brought to Greenville
Was Placed In the Jail
lien- to Await His
Death from a wound inflicted by a
gun in the hands of Charlie Foreman
was the verdict returned by the
Jury the case of Henry Nobles
In the Farmville section of the
Sunday. It appears that case
was one of first degree murder, as
the evidence taken at the coroner's
inquest seems to be to the effect the
murder was premeditated.
Before the coroner's Jury Mr. John
C. testified that he heard Char-
lie Foreman say that he was
to Henry Nobles before Saturday
night. In about an hour after that
lie saw Foreman coming up the road
with a gun. He Immediately got on
Ms wheel and went to meet Foreman
and asked him to carry the gun back,
whereupon the replied that he
would not do It went on a
little distance with Foreman and
again asked him to return the gun
to the place where he secured It, and
the refused. After this
on passed on by the and late.-
saw a mule and a buggy coming down
the road. Discovering that it was the
fellow wanted by Foreman he told
Nobles that he had better stop. Char-
lie Foreman said to Nobles have
been bulling around here, and I am
going to kill Nobles ran his
hand in his pocket but took nothing
out, and got out of the buggy,
the buggy whip with him. The
two were In the road, with the
mule between them. Foreman point-
ed the gun at Nobles, and Nobles said,
me, shoot In a second or
two the gun Ired, and Nobles fell.
Foreman then walked off to the side
of the road and into the field, where
he reloaded his gun, and came back
with the else wants to
take it but there was no reply
to his query.
testified that he was within
fifteen yards of Nobles when he fell,
but that he did not hear him say
one word.
Foreman was brought here this
morning and was placed the lo-
cal Jail, where be will await trial at
the next term of criminal court.
HEALTH
The man who Insures his life It
wise for his 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
which generally approaches
through the LIVER
feats Itself In Innumerable ways
TAKE
NOTICE OF SALE.
We, the undersigned commission-
having been appointed by n or-
of the superior court of Pitt
county, by order dated August 25th,
1913, a therein pending, en-
titled Daniel and vs
Georgia Ann and Hazel Dell
Infant, by her General
Cicero If, Dawson, and thereby
empowered to make sale the land
hereinafter described, we will offer
for sale to the highest bidder for
cash, on Monday, Sept. 29th, at
o'clock M., at the court house door
in Greenville, Pitt county, the fol-
lowing described tract of land, lying
and being In the court of Pitt and
the state aforesaid, and In
township, and more particularly de-
scribed as follows,
Beginning at an oak, at the to-
barn of R. C. Chapman corner,
and running south W. poles to
a steak in the said Chapman's line;
thence running south 1-2 E.
to the run of Clay Root Swamp;
thence down the said to the
of Creeping Swamp to Pol-
lard's corner; thence to the white oak
in the fork of Clay Root and Creep-
Swamp; thence north west
along the same, poles to a white
oak, the beginning, containing
acres more or less. It being the same
land conveyed by deed from .
to Daniel which said deed
Is recorded In register's office of
Pitt county book page .
This the 25th day of 1913.
E. A. DANIEL. Jr.,
B. B. NICHOLSON,
ltd
NO MILITARY DISPLAY.
And ave your
The North Carolina
STATE NORMAL AND
Julius I. Greensboro, N,
Maintained by State for the
en of North Carolina. Five regular
Course leading to degree. Special
Course for teachers. Free tuition
to those who agree to become teach-
NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
Jesse P. deceased, late
of Pitt county, North Carolina, this
is to certify all persons having claims
against the estate of the said
ed to exhibit them to the undersign-
ed within twelve months from this
date, or this notice will be pleaded
In bar of their recovery.
All persons Indebted to i
will please payment to
undersigned or to Nannie E.
widow to whom his estate was
conveyed prior to his death.
This July 25th, 1913.
J. P. JR.,
Administrator.
F. G. JAMES and Son, Atty.
ltd
Funeral William J. Will be
as the Mayor Wished It
NEW YORK. Sept. funeral
of William J. Gaynor on Monday,
will be without military
display. Mrs. Gaynor today said at
a conference at the Gaynor home
Brooklyn that the mayor would have
wished It so.
With Mayor Kline and other city of-
she approved the plans for the
obsequies as arranged. Ostentation
not to the mayor's liking. He
was a lover of simplicity and during
the public tribute to the dead exec-
of the city that will be begun
upon tho arrival of bis body here
the only escort of his coffin will be
mounted police.
Carrying out the idea of simplicity
St the funeral It has been decided that
the offers of many orchestras to
the music at Old Trinity shall
be declined and that musical part
of the service be carried out only by
tho Trinity choir and organ. Mrs.
Gaynor has chosen only one number,
the of
which the mayor was particularly
fend. Private services will be con-
ducted Friday evening at the Gay-
nor home by the Rev. Dr. Frank
Page of Culpepper, Va., formerly pas-
tor of St. John's church
in Brooklyn, near the late mayor's
residence.
Mayor Gaynor's will was filed with
the surrogate in Brooklyn this after-
noon. As It was after the official
closing hour the document was locked
up the safe without being
ed, to remain there until Monday,
that one crew can run a train that
formerly would have required more
cars and therefore more men.
MOVE INTO NEW
Atlantic Coast Realty Company Of-
fices In Sew Bank Building.
The offices of the Atlantic Coast
Realty Company have been moved In-
to the new bank building owned by
the Hanking and Trust
Company, and are now located in that
The new quarters were fit-
up especially for the realty com-
and are located In the second
story of building. Many more
can be had in the new-
offices, and the handling of the bus-
of the company Is greatly fa-
by the change that has been
made.
Cross Roads.
GALLOWAY'S CROSS ROADS, Sept
Lester Edwards of Richmond
came homo Saturday to spend some-
time with his parents.
Miss Mamie of
and Miss Bertha Johnson, of Ayden,
are the guest of Miss Lizzie Galloway
this week.
Mr. Willie went to Green-
Saturday.
since Wednesday morning.
Miss Annie Wooten left Wednesday
morning for Chase City where she
will attend school.
Mr. L. R. Buck made a flying trip
to Greenville Tuesday.
Mr. W. H. Galloway went to Green-
ville Tuesday.
Miss Mary Proctor, of
spent Saturday night Sunday with
Mks Lizzie Galloway.
Helen and Rosalie n
Simpson spent Wednesday after-
noon with Mrs. J. C. Galloway.
Mr. Edwards went to Green
rills Monday.
There was some class to the cards
received Tuesday.
Mr. and I,. C. of Shel-
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. J. Galloway.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power of sale con-
in two mortgages executed and
delivered by Henry Allen Smith to
Richard Wingate, one date
1512, and recorded In Book E-10, page
and the other dated Oct. 1st, 1912,
and recorded In Book E-10, page
in the registers office of Pitt county,
the undersigned will sell for cash
before the court house door in Green-
ville on Thursday, October 1913.
the following described estate
Situated in the county of Pitt and In
township, being
Interest of the said Henry Allen Smith
in the lands of hi mother
being the share of land
lotted to the said Smith in
division of tho Jordan Cox land, ad-
Joining lands of Ellen
Miss Lizzie cave a social Charlie mil others,
Saturday night In honor of her com- remaining 1-3 acres more or lees,
Misses Venters, Johnson and This Sept. 8th, 1913.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified administrator
of the estate of S. E. de-
ceased, late of Pitt county. North
Carolina, this Is to all person
having claims against the estate of
said deceased to exhibit them to tie
undersigned on or before the 19th
day of August, 1914, or this notice
will be pleased bar of their re-
All persons Indebted to said
estate will please make Immediate
payment.
This 19th day of August, 1913.
R. R. WHITEHURST,
of S. E.
ltd
Beware of Ointments for
Catarrh That Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the sense
of smell and completely derange
whole system when entering it through
the mucous surfaced. articles
never be used except on prescription.
from reputable physician, as the damage
they will do is ten fold to the good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall's
Cure, manufactured by J.
Co. Toledo. O., contains
mercury, and Is taken Internally,
directly upon the blood and
faces of tho system. In Hall's
Cure, be sure you gel
and much- In
HAN MAIMED ON RAILROADS
NINE MINUTES OF
It Is taken .
the state. Fall session begin Toledo, Ohio, by F. J.
September 17th, 1913. For per ,
and other Information, address . Take Bail's Pills for f the same ten years ago, and
And Member of Brotherhood of Train-
men is Killed Seven
Hours.
NEW YORK, Sept. member
of Brotherhood is killed every
en and fifteen minutes, and
every nine minutes a man Is
This was the testimony today of
William Lee, representing the Order
of Railway Trainmen at the meeting
of the Arbitration commission
controversy between forty-two East-
railroads and their conductors
trainmen over demand
for more pay and shorter hours.
When his statement was challenged
by lush a Lee, counsel for the rail-
rods, William Lee cited statistics
from the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission's report. This report on June
30th gave railroad
killed the United States during the
year.
A B. president of the
order of railroad conductors,
witness, complained of what be called
the evil dead head crews. These
crews, he said, were composed of men
who have run a loaded train to a
given point, have no more work to
do, and are not paid for tho time
they spend in traveling back borne.
He added that some of the work-
economics Introduced by railroads
increased the risk to life and limb
encountered by trainmen, and said
that the trainmen helped pay for such
economics In disability funds.
J. Warren, professor of
at tho University of
was a witness for the train-
men at tho afternoon session. By
means of statistics ho tried to show
that railroads steadily
old cars of light tonnage for
tho heavier cars. Tho discussion of
tonnages, the trainmen said, were In-
Co. to prove that a train today
can carry more freight than n train
Proctor.
your
The Bast Medicine In World
little girl had
bod. I thought she would die.
Colic, Cholera and
cured her, and I can truthful-
Rev. A. Burgess Is holding a that I think It Is the beat med-
val at Salem this week, are In the Mrs.
large crowds and good Clare, Mich. For sale by
Mr. Ben Buck Is looking very druggists.
RICHARD Mortgagee.
F G. JAMES and SON,
ltd
TAKEN ONE WHITE
hog, weight about lbs., mark
smooth crop In left ear and hole In
the right. Owner can get same
applying to me and paying charges.
JESSIE SMITH. N. C
Route Box
ltd
in Quality
and FARM
MACHINERY
That's the point
in Its
the quality of our goods
and Machines that has won for us thousands of satisfied customers.
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,
Bakes, Binders, Cultivators, Planters, Weeders, Harrows, Distributors,
ons, Cutters, etc., and we know you will become one of our satisfied customers
GREENVILLE, N. C, Phone No.
Attention TOBACCO Farmers
If you want the high-
est average for your
tobacco, sell it at THE STAR.
Did you ever see a real sorry break
of tobacco at THE STAR It always
looks bright. It always sells.
The STAR best lighted ware-
house ever built for the sale of leaf
tobacco.
A good light and a
good warehouseman
guarantees the highest prices.
We have the light The best
light, and we know how to see it.
Watch us, and see if we
don't.
L. Joyner.
BoB. Sugg.
mm





THE CAROLINA HOME
and FARM and EASTERN
REFLECTOR
Published by
tUX Hill inf.
D. J. Editor.
CAROLINA
our year, . .
tUx mouths., .
had
application at business
The .
All of resolutions
respect will be Or
per word.
Communications advertising
will bx charged for at three
per line, up to fifty
red as second class matter
August id. 1910, at the post a
North Carolina,
act of March 1879.
FRIDAY, 1913
THE POOL BOOM MATTER.
A bare quorum of the members of
the board of aldermen last night
advantage of the absence three
men and voted to grant license to pool
rooms in Greenville. Of course, the
same the meeting last
was one of politics, and it appears
to have tow well handled.
We do not believe that the
formerly passed refusing
to pool rooms could have been
n pealed had the other three members
of the board been on hand to cast
their ballot in the matter, and are
sorry that the four members present
favoring pool rooms saw their duty
to lake the that they did.
One member the board remarked
this morning that he would do all in
his power to repeal the
en last night, and that the very first
time his supporters were present at
the meeting of the board, he would
call the matter again, and demand
that some action he taken. If this
WOMAN A RE. SATISFIED
The coming to this of So far during the present tobacco
Mrs. the noted season, there has been but very little
militant suffragette will serve dissatisfaction among the farmers
U focus the attention of this country of the county as to the treatment
on the question of grant lg the ballot corded them the Greenville
to women. Of course, Mrs. warehouses and the prices paid them
tactics will have but little influence tor their tobacco. The prices have
on the h Her and more sensible exceeded the expectation of even the
Of the women of this country, as most optimistic forecasters, and the
the majority of the women of the weed is selling for what it appears to
are. we believe, too be worth. The of tobacco that
. permit themselves to he swept off Is being brought here by the farmers
their feet by a woman who seeks to is much above the average, and such
accomplish her goal by any such that the buyers do not mind paying
methods as those employed by this good prices to get it.
,, There is at the present time no in-
W J
However, there are women who will of a fall in the price of to-
hear this lady speak who will be or in the grade the staple
swept from their feet by her r
personality, and will rush madly into the local warehouses, and the market
an Issue which, by the closest ob never has been in better
servers, has been declared a failure ; than it is at the present time.
A large number of the western and
central states of the have grant-
ed tile ballot to women, and In many
cases scores of good women who
were during the campaign ardent
advocates of the cause have become
disgusted with the results and have
forsaken the ranks of the associations.
The old-time argument that women
would purify politics has. as was
at the time It was advanced,
proved a falsehood. In those state,
where women have been given the
ballot, they have not only failed to
condition
Big Tim Sullivan, politician and
Tammany man of national reputation,
is gone. For some time he was an
insane man, and, though under the
watch of three guards, he managed
to escape them, and finally wandered
away and was killed by a fast train.
He was a politician, backer of
fights, Wall street speculator, and
a congressman sent up by Tam-
Hall. His one redeeming as-
set was his liberality to the poor with
whom he came Into contact. It is
purify the political ranks of the men. I Broad
but have themselves become poll
clans of the most corrupt
a mile, that he would not have
A woman who is as anxious to vote as.
a man is a woman who will resort to
Another day done, and no new
welling houses started in Greenville.
By this time tomorrow will
have passed through the beginning
of the end.
The morning after the night before
has come and the follow-
afternoon.
o--------
Isn't it strange how some friends
always bobs up and says
murderer Is insane
o--------
Evidently there are not many
in this town who have any
scruples about going to a circus
that
means just as low and as trifling as t
man will, and there Is no truth In an
argument that a women with such
ideas will serve to purify the politics
o. the country.
If any laws for the good of the home day.
have been written upon the statute
books of the equal suffrage states that
would not have gone there without
the votes of the women legislators.
we have yet to hear of them. And.
cent by the time he reached his
A score of members of
House of Representatives, of which
Big Tim w-as a member, were detail
ed by Speaker Clark to attend the
funeral held in New York city
it does seem that Wilmington men
can't keep out of trouble when
get to New York city. One has Just
The South surely is a big place, but
really it has not as many entrances
as there are cities claiming to be gate
ways.
Now that the Frank trial Is a part of
history, Atlanta has sprung another
sensational murder case to occupy
boards for a while.
By actual count, exactly one half
of the editorials In Monday's Issue of
an afternoon contemporary that
reached this office last night
written about Harry Thaw.
It will be noticed that some of those
fellows who are accusing Governor
the most, are men who failed to
land government Jobs.
It is reported that officials think
Americans are safe in Mexico, yet if
we were there, we should not care to
risk our life upon any such
--------o
No set of business men in the state
should plunge the state government
Into doing anything that they them-
selves would not be willing to risk In
their own business affairs.
That Catholic priest in New York
declared that he killed Anna
Officials of the Suffrage League of
America are trying to arrange a dot ate
between Heflin, of Ala-
and some Congressman who
favors granting women the ballot. If
Heflin can cuss out suffrage as
well as he can make a political speech
then those other fellow's had better
stay they
Editor Home, of the Rock Mount
Telegram, seems to have experienced
a little trouble in getting by Barnum
and Bailey's advertising man for as
many press tickets as he wanted. But
If that advance man had seen all tin
editorial boosts that Home has given
him. he would almost have been ready
to admit the Rocky Mount public free
charge.
o---------
But what we want to know Is how
Mrs. ever got out of that
British Jail. The last we remember
hearing she was on a furlough for
the purpose of filling her stomach
to another long fasting spell.
o---------
Nine days more and the
will begin grinding
If the Wake county convict guards
are guilty, let them be given what
the law prescribes, for the men in
their keeping are also human beings.
o--------
Wonder what Dr. Carter would have
said had he visited some of the creeks
and ponds over the river, and had been
bitten by a dozen or more of those
full-grown
In spite of Thaw, Mexico, and
Gaynor, the big papers still find space
enough to remind us that Ty Cobb and
Jackson are lied for the batting hon-
ors in the American league.
is done with every member of the why should women want the .
at St. Cathedral. It of the opinion that there
board present at the meeting, and this purpose Their In-. . . . ,.,,,,
f i hag to be a thins very few girls who would cherish
of them vote as they did some time properly brought to bear upon
ago, the whole question will the men who make the laws will easily
be put up to the mayor to almost any measure desired,
everybody knows that, unless ha That man that claims that equal suit
has changed his views on the subject, rage is a success, and that it will do
he will rule that licenses be not so much in so many various ways,
granted. might do well to investigate the mat-
Tile member of the board who gave himself before he leaps Into a scientist has recently
out the information that he would the advocacy of any such measure. that there are no germs In kisses,
have the license revoked, stated that . No. Cowan, this Is no recent
he was not taking these steps as a
means of bluffing the would-be pool
room owners out of getting licenses.
been arrested for attacking a night because he loved her, but we are
are but
for those fellows to get pinched of that sort.
to be arrested, that we Imagine New
York policeman could guess right The same argument that was used
about half the time. when is was said that the ministry of
The Wilmington Dispatch pipes
the church could not be judged by the
acts of Pastor might also
apply with equal truthfulness to the
case of the New York Catholic priest.
The fact that a California court
for years ago some fellow who
to her employer are not
does not license the young la-
to go out and tell all they have
heard and seen.
THE COST. claimed to know what he was talking
Now that the schools of the state are about declared that all lovers were
but that If they wished to pay out a to open for their fall work, at liberty to practice all they cared
license dollars for every table report arc coming in from sec- to without fear of communicating ml-
Installed, might do with of the state that there Is not room
risk of losing all of It when the for the accommodation of the students.
of last night Is revoked, as is one of the results of the com- New York's mayor adds nothing to comP this week,
says it will be.
The majority of the members of the
hoard, including the mayor, have de-
that Greenville should not
pool rooms, and, since a majority
education law, and it means his fame because of the fact that the
the expenditure of more money by the first job he ever had paid him only
state, but the returns are far more four dollars a week. There are
worth the cost of it all. North of little fellows right around Green-
Carolina has been lagging in this good who work for less than that,
this board decides such questions as work long enough, and it Is high time, things are not as cheap now a.
that these things are coming about. they were when Mayor Kline was a
The fact that the schools arc so little boy.
crowded shows full well that the ,
of the state are ready and The Incident where a Catholic
Ion to learn, and that they have with- priest In New York married a girl
this, it would seem that the minor-
would find no consolation In their
continued persistence In the
of securing pool rooms for the
town. The better element of the
here, for the most part, do not
want pool rooms In the town, and
aldermen certainly have no right to
go against the will the people.
Nothing Is to be gained by the ac-
of the board last night, and we
that the ordinance will be re-
The here of
pool rooms will only mean the re-
establishment loafing Joints, and,
if there were no passing of money not
honestly earned, these places would
not be patronized by many who make
it their business to frequent them.
in their hearts a longing desire to be against the laws of his church, and
come educated and to know more of inter killed her, Is only another proof
the things of life. This desire for the fallacy of any church having
knowledge and culture is rapidly laws.
growing in this and unless the p
state does take advantage of these In-1 The bunch of scientists who de
born Ideas and conceptions so deeply
rooted In tho minds of the youth of
twelve hundred feet Into the
crater of Mt. Vesuvius would have
the commonwealth, society will be the had no one to blame save themselves
loser, and the state will one day slip
into the mire of Let every
dollar that can be spared be turned In-
to educational and let
If they had been blown sky-high be-
fore getting out
Baseball will soon give way to foot-
the officials of the state see to It that I ball, then football to basketball, ten-
Let the aldermen decide this thing every child Is given the running ail the while, and by the
Again we arc told that the crisis
It
has been on the way so many times
and then had a wreck before arriving
that we wonder if It will really get
here this time.
The United States government may
appropriate all the money It may
for the purpose of aiding in the con-
of good roads, yet those
counties which refuse to help them-
selves should receive none of the gov-
bounty.
The Clinton News Dispatch says,
Give us good roads all over
ion county and our people will be
And, b.-other, blessings and
prosperity will attend them the rest
of their days.
Rocky Mount la now after the
of The Ladles Aux-
to the Trainmen, an
that usually holds Its conventions
In cities the site Chattanooga.
Whew Where will egotism end
once for all. It has been decided
once in the manner it will be carried
every time a vote Is taken when there
la a full of the board, and
it seems that the matter be
allowed to rest where It Is, when
a majority of the board pass upon the
question.
Secretary la reported
saying that his favorite beverage Is
buttermilk. The same might be said
of some of tho rest of us. If we
could get all of It we wanted when-
ever we wanted It.
The Reflector's operator
unable to be at his machine today, and
we are getting out the Issue under
difficulties.
to secure some sort of an education.
We would be slow to believe that
a combination exists between life
savers on the Carolina coast to buy
wrecked vessels, yet the charges of
time of spring, all will again give
way to baseball. And so the world
goes on. But what would we do
without all these things
o--------
The weather bureau has announced
that the season for hurricanes is at
hand. Well, -if we are going to have
anything worse than that of two weeks
ago, most of us will feel like taking
the tall timbers.
The farmers need have no hope of
getting better and higher prices on
the products their farm until they
get together on Just what they want
to do.
While the aldermen are doing such
splendid work on the southern end
of street, it seems that they might
do a little missionary work up the
other way also.
--------o
Why should President Wilson
about the length of time Con-
Is in session when ho struts
off to Cornish every now and then to
spend the week end,
--------o
The scene shifts from
and now Harry Thaw
is doing publicity work for the little
village of New
shire.
Wonder if those same fellows who
cussed out Secretary Bryan for go-
on the lecture platform will jump
on Secretary Daniels for writing
books.
--------o
If acting Governor Glynn was after
the publicity he could get in the
fair, he might afford to step down
now.
No matter bow long the
Captain Joseph York should be In- h In session, nor what they with the
., . . . u v a . currency reform bill, the average man
and If he was forced to sell
, . ,. ,. will be but little Interested unless It
his vessel at a low price, the life
would receive their Just due. hatches up some way by which he may
get more money In his pocket o
down the high cost of living.
Now comes the Charlotte Observer .
and tells us that the merchants and think there Is any Justice
Jobbers are declaring that the cost of behind prison bar
A salesman announced that he
collected from various breweries In
New York state a sum of for
campaign fund, but who knows
but that Tammany bribed him Into
making that statement
Let us hope that the Democratic
congress will not put the currency
bill on Ice. and go home, leaving It
there. By George. It la hard enough
to get without having a freeze-up at
the source of supply,
Oscar Underwood Is a much bigger
the necessities of life are to be
to a still higher figure. If It
gets much worse, all of us will have
to Join the to the farm move-
for six months or a year awaiting
trial
The squeal the circus balloon
rill be with us tomorrow.
If Aunt Pankhurst wen
to come to Greenville and tarry very
long, our Jail would not likely bu
empty for a very long season,
Prisoners In our camps are there
as a punishment, but their staying
there Is enough without the
of stripes by the guards.
JUDGE TO BE.
SIGN FROM THE BENCH
RALEIGH, Sept Howard
A. Foushee of Durham will resign from
the superior court bench. It re-
ported here, on account of HI health.
The rumor first appeared Durham,
but the Bull City did
not see Judge Foushee to verify the
report
It stated here that friends of
Judge Foushee have been pleading
with him to resign for several weeks,
and that he la sure to comply with
their request soon. He not been
n well man since his collapse during
the trial of the Myrtle Hawkins case
at over a year ago
VALUABLE SALE.
The heirs at law of the late Fer-
Ward will offer for sale at
public auction for division before the
court house door In No-
3rd. 1913, at o'clock, M.
the following described lands situated
the county of Pitt and in
township, about seven miles east of
the town of Greenville, lying on both
sides of the main road leading from
Greenville to
Farm o.
A certain piece or parcel of land
situated In township, Pitt
County, N. C. and known as the Jolly
Place, and being Lot No. of the
division of lands among tho heirs of
Fernando Ward, deceased, as Is laid
down on the map of Fernando Ward's
farm surveyed and made by H. F.
Price,, surveyor, year 1886. bound-
ed and described as follows,
Beginning at a gum a corner between
Lot No. M. Spier's land, and the
Little Place, thence S. East
feet to a gum, corner, thence
S. 1-2 west feet to a stake. W.
G. corner, thence S. W.
feet to a stake, W. G. corner,
thence N. 1-2 W. 1762 feet to an
angle In ditch, W. G. corner,
and corner between Lots No. and
crossing the Greenville and Well-
road feet to run
a corner, thence down run to
a corner on the canal, thence down
the canal crossing the Greenville and
Washington road to the beginning.
Containing 19-100 acres. For
reference see the Map of
of the Fernando Ward farm made
H. F. Price in August, 1886.
Farm
A certain piece or parcel of land
situated In township, Pitt
county, N. C, and known as Lot No.
of the division of lands among the
heirs of Fernando Ward, deceased, as
l. laid down on the map of Fernando
Ward's Farm surveyed and made by
H. F. Price, surveyor, in year 1886,
hounded and described as follows, to-
Beginning at the angle of ditch
a corner No. and at
W. G. corner, thence S. 2-05
W. feet to a small pine, W. G.
corner, thence No. feet
to J. Fleming's corner, thence N.
1-2 W. feet, thence N. 1-4 W.
feet to a stake and pine stump.
Fleming's corner, and corner be-
tween Lots No. and No. thence
N. 2-05 E. with dividing line between
No. and feet to a ditch
or branch, down ditch or
branch S. 1-2 E. feet to angle
in ditch, thence down ditch or branch
east crossing Avenue feet
to another angle N. E.
feet, thence N. 1-2 E. feet,
thence N, E. feet to corner
on said ditch or branch between Lots
No. and thence S. 2-05 W. with
line between Lots No. and
No. feet to the beginning, con-
acres. For further ref-
see the map of survey of the
Fernando Ward farm, made by H.
F. Price August, 1886.
Farm He.
A certain piece or parcel land
situated In township, Pitt
county, N. C. and known as Lot No.
of the division lands among tho
heirs of Fernando Ward, deceased, as
is laid down on the map of Fernando
Ward's farm surveyed and made by
H. F. Price In the year 1886, bound-
ed and described as follows,
Beginning at a stake and pine stump.
L. Fleming's corner and the corner
between Lots No. and thence S.
1-2 W. 1535 to L. Fleming's
thence 1-4 W. to L.
Fleming's corner, thence N. 3-4
W. feet to a cypress, L. Fleming's
corner, thence S. 1-8 W. feet
to L. Fleming's corner, thence 1-2
W. to the line of the ten acre piece
that Nobles bought and acquired off
the west end of Lot No. thence with
the dividing line between said Nobles
and Lot No. to their corner, thence
N. E. to J. J. Nobles corner,
thence N. W. feet to J. J. No-
corner, S. 3-4 E.
feet, thence N. E. feet thence
N. E. feet thence 1-2 E.
feet to the corner between
No. and No. thence with the
line between lots No. S and
No. S. 2-06 W. feet to the be-
ginning. Containing acres more
or less. For further reference
the map of survey of the Fernando
Ward farm, made by H. F. Price
August 1886.
Said farms will be sold separately
and afterwards offered a whole.
Terms cash, but suitable time will
be given purchasers to make
upon application. The
right to reject or accept all bids Is
hereby reserved.
For further Information apply to
J. J. SATTERTHWAITE, Agent
N. C.
F. G. James and Son.
Greenville, N. C.
ltd
man floor leader of the Democratic often been , to
court.
house of representatives than he would
In five or ten years grow to be in the. one of the most
and he best remain where popular Judges on the bench. Is a
he Is. thorough lawyer and splendid man.
COTTON SUPPLY FOR
THE TEAR ANNOUNCED
WASHINGTON;
Census Bureau that the
cotton supply for the year ending
August was bales; con-
exports,
WAR'S ON STATURE
Achieved by Napoleon Low-
the Average Height of a
Frenchman.
It may be stated with confidence
that the average height of the men of
France began notably to with
the coming of age, j and after,
of the young men born the years of
the revolutionary ware
and that It to decrease in
the following years with the coming
of age of the youths born during the
wars of the empire, writes Vernon U,
Kellogg the Atlantic Monthly.
Soon after the cessation of these
man-draining wars, for the main-
of which a great part of the
able bodied male population of France
had been withdrawn from their
lies and the duties reproduction,
and much of this part actually
a new type of boys began to be
born. boys Indeed had them
an Inheritance of stature that carried
them by the time of their coming of
age the and to a height
one Inch greater than that of the ear-
lier generations born war time.
Mrs. Carr Entertains
New Trousers Every Week.
A new pair of trousers every week I
To think of that Is to think of B. Ber-
Wall, King Alfonso, Alfred Vander-
or old John D.
But a matter of fact, not even
Berry Wall, not even Alfonso, not even
John D. himself, la extravagant enough
to purchase, every week of life, a new
pair of trousers. No, there Is only one
class of men In the world who Indulge
In such luxury, and these men are or
unskilled laborers. They are,
in a word, bleach packers.
Bleaching powder Is worse than
moths for eating up clothes, and a
bleach packer's new trousers, the very
first day of wear, will reveal eight or
nine holes big as dimes. By the
of the week the trousers are all
Is, they are consumed
and the packer must either buy a new
pair or work a barrel.
Artificial Marble.
A citizen of Bohemia,
has Invented a process tor producing
a substitute for all classes of marble.
Including the most highly prized Ital-
Egyptian and marbles.
The claim Is made that this product Is
superior to genuine marble, being
stronger, more substantial, and less
liable to crack or damage, and that
especially working, boring, or In In-
work the danger of Injury
Is much less than with real marble,
while it costs only one-third as much.
This artificial marble Is made partly
by hand and partly by machine. The
cutting and polishing Is done by ma-
the being already
operation Vienna, Berlin, Mann-
and Hamburg. .
The beautiful homo of Mrs. Stuart
Carr was tho scene a few evenings
ago of a delightful at home party in
honor of Mrs. Robert L. Carr, who has
recently come to Greenville to make
I her home. The hours set for the party
were from to o'clock, and many
of the women of the town gathered at
home for the occasion, and to
welcome Mrs. Carr to Greenville. The
home was tastefully and artistically
with colors of white, green
and yellow, and presented a most
pleasing and attractive appearance.
Misses Francis and Ella
Moseley received the cards at the
door, and the guests were received in
the hall by Misses Ethel Skinner,
Mary and Lillian Carr. In
the library the guests passed through
the receiving line which was
ed of Mesdames Stuart Carr, Robert
L. Carr, Charles Skinner, E. B.
E. B. Ferguson and H. L. Carr.
In the punch room Mesdames F.
G. James and J. G. received the
guests and they were served with
punch and sandwiches by Mrs. R.
Jeffreys, Mrs. Biggs, of
and Mrs. R. J. Cobb.
Mesdames Geo. Cooper and A. It
Moseley were in the receiving line
I the dining room. After the guests
had passed through the receiving line
In the parlor and bad been served
with punch and sandwiches, and
they had been received by Mes-
dames Cooper and Moseley the
I room, they were served with Ice
cream almonds and mints.
Misses and Ruth Cobb, Flor-
Blow and Pattie Wooten, acted
as waitresses.
The afternoon was a most pleas-
ant and enjoyable one to every one
present All of those who attended
the party were loud their praise
of the genuine hospitality of the hos-
Lee Cray is Charged
Forgery
Lee Gray, a young man supposed
to be about twenty-two or twenty-
three old, was here this
the charge of forgery, and
was carried to Kinston where ho Is
wanted for the crime which he has
committed. Gray Is a Pitt county boy,
comes from the section about
Stokes. He Is known Greenville,
but has not lived here in a
while.
to last. Saturday
be came to town and went to th
Star warehouse to watch tho sales
tobacco. By his cunning and sharp
tactics he managed to get his hands
on the check book of Joyner and
Sugg which is kept at the warehouse.
Ho pulled several blank checks from
the book, filled them In and signed
Mr. B. B. name to them. At
tho bottom of the checks of the firm
are printed the names Joyner and
Sugg, with a blank line for the
nature of the person the check.
It was on this blank line that Gray
wrote Mr. name, and proceed-
ed to offer It at Its face value.
Sometime prier to last Saturday the
young man succeeded in getting two
checks cashed, one in
checks cashed, one In
and the other in both
being for the same amount a little
more than dollars. On Sat-
Gray went to Kinston and bad
a third check cashed for exactly tho
same amount and went on with his
careless, reckless way of beating his
way wherever he went
By this time, however, the checks
which formerly had been cashed In
and had
been received back at the banks in
Bethel Schools Opened On
Monday Morning
ATTENDANCE
PER LAST
AMI PROSPECTS ABE
With an attendance at least forty
per cent greater than last year, the
graded schools at opened their
1913-14 term Monday morning of this
Week. The bright prospects of the
opening of the season afford very-
much encouragement to who
have the work in charge, and the
teachers are all very much pleased
with work.
The school at Bethel has always
been one of the best In the county,
and the people of the little town are
always very proud of it. and are at
all times found to be standing by
their school. This year, more than
ever before, they have a right to feel
proud of their educational
because of the Increased attend-
and the Interest that Is being
taken In the work by both the teach-
and the pupils.
The faculty of the school Is com-
posed of the following
First grade, Miss G. Little.
Second third grade, Miss Jean
Gales Ward.
Fourth and fifth grades. Miss Flor-
M. Bright.
Sixth and seventh grades, Miss
Maude
Eighth and ninth grades. Mr. D. L.
Tenth and eleventh grades, Supt.
H. O. Craver.
Music teacher, Miss Margaret Lloyd.
and were very cordial the this town, and the proprietors of tho
welcome to the town extended warehouse were, notified of what
them to Mrs. Carr.
May Conduct Pool Rooms
Mr. Ellington Voted Against
Proposition, and Says That
it Hill Com
Again.
Any person desiring to run and
operate pool rooms In Greenville may
WANTED THE MARKET PRICE he pay to ls supposed that after the trial In
town clerk the license fee of fifty man then
per table, according to a ruling ,, to two towns to
made by the board of aldermen at answer for tile charges that have
had been going en. They Immediately
started an investigation, and, after an
all-night search las; night, Policeman
George Clark this morning found
Gray in Daniel King's restaurant on
Dickinson avenue. He was
arrested, and was taken back
the to Kinston this afternoon where he
will compelled to stand trial for
the forgery of the check that was pass-
ed in Kinston.
Gray has confessed to being guilty
the crime in Kinston, but has had
but very little to say regard to
the forgery of the other two checks
in and It
Cattle Dealer, Unfamiliar With
Put Only Question That
Occurred to Him.
Representative Phil Campbell of
Kansas ls the proud father of a young
daughter who likes unusual pets. In
her young life she lavished
on all sorts of queer pets, her
latest acquisition being a chameleon
one of those tiny reptiles which as-
the color of any article on
which they are placed. The
eon has a tiny gold chain about Its
neck, and at the other end of the
chain Is a pin, that It may be attach-
ed to one's waist.
Not long ago one of Campbell's con-
a cattle dealer, with scarce-
Interest the world outside of
live stock, came to Washington and
called at the Campbell home. Mrs.
Campbell was out, and Campbell him-
self in the tub at the time, so the
young daughter, with the chameleon
pinned to her waist marched into the
parlor to entertain the visitor.
Conversation went along fairly wall
for a moment Then the cattle-dealing
constituent noticed the chameleon,
and watched it with fascinated eyes.
a full minute he silent Then
he pointed a fat forefinger and de-
on earth did yon get that
The young daughter smiled and
stroked the chameleon's back with a,
finger.
aha replied.
The dealer was silent for an-
other minute. Then ha spoke again.
hi repeated, wonder-
Then ha leaned far over la
his said he earnestly.
tan me. How la Hearts a head,
She a good servant, Jen
ale, and Mrs. never
ad for better. But It the matter
Jennie weak. There
saw In particular, which the
Waning tower of Plea. day
Mrs. W. hang It and every
morning Jennie put It crooked.
So Mrs. W.
look here. she
-you've hung that of the tower
crooked again Just look at
-That's Just what I re
turned the dolefully.
at The only way yon get
tower to hang straight Is to hang
the picture
their special called meeting held last
night at the city hall.
Five members of the board, besides
the mayor, were present at the meet-
and this was the most
matter to be considered, and
the one taking much time of the aid-
been preferred against him there.
Later developments the case,
which have come to light since the
above was written early this morn-
show that in the various towns
visited Gray passed himself off as
one G. H. Jones, and the checks
OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue of authority contained in
a certain deed executed to
me by J. W. Sutton and Annie Sutton,
on the 23rd day of November, 1906,
and duly recorded in the register's
in Pitt county in book J-S, page
to secure the payment of a
bond, bearing even date there-
with and the stipulations in said
mortgage not having been complied
with, I shall expose to public sale,
for cash, on Friday, tho 3rd day of
October, at noon, Greenville,
Pitt county, at the court house door,
the following
In township, on
the east side of the Sutton road, in
Edward line, running with
his line up the branch to Bryant Dix-
line, thence with his line to Liz-
A. Sutton's line and thence with
her line to the Sutton's road,
thence with said road to tho begin-
containing fifty seres, more
or
This Sept. 1913.
MILLS. Mortgagee.
HARDING AND Attorneys.
ltd
The Lighting of
Public school Children's eyes are
often seriously damaged by poorly
lighted K This fact
should be remembered in building
school
its have worked out
tome definite plan- eye-
sight Which should not be forgotten.
For In Northern countries,
where sunlight is less prevalent than
in Southern countries, and where fog.
clouds and smoke are common, school
rooms have one-fourth as much win-
glass as there is floor space. In
southern countries, where the
Is clear, one-sixth window glass
space is sufficient. The bottom of the
windows should be four feet above the
floor, should be
as Is consistent with safe con-
They should be as far
in the room as possible, and to the
left of the pupils. The windows
II
Superintendent Tailor Says That He
Everything in
For
School will open in Greenville on
next Tuesday morning, September
and all students arc expected to be
there on time. Superintendent Hoy
Taylor has completed of teach-
and all of them will be here on
time for the opening day. There are
a number of changes this year over
the last term, and several new teach-
are included in the list given be-
should be contained between iron or,
steel mullions. and their edges should
Tho names of sixteen teachers are
be rounded, to permit the Ingress besides that of Superintendent
light and Its useful distribution,
to prevent shadows falling on the
desks. A best light comes from
above, the windows should extend to
the ceilings. If hills or tall
are close to the school prismatic, or
ribbed glass should be used in the
upper portions of the windows, but
not In the lower portions, as too much
glare Is produced. Sliding or slat
slat blinds should not be used. They
are expensive and Insufficient.
double shades, so large that chink
of light cannot enter. They should
be fastened In the center of the win-
and should roll up or down, so
that light can be admitted from
above or below. The curtains
should be light green In color. Black-
boards absorb much light, and should
be covered by light curtains on dark
days and when not in use.
HATS ONLY YEARS OLD
Taylor, and the list of teachers who
have been secured for the coming
term from a very able corps of In-
for the children of the
town who are to be in the graded
schools during the coming year. It
ls not at all unlikely that an
teacher will be added to the list
given herewith, the new one to be
secured probably in less than two
weeks after the opening.
dent Taylor states that he expects
such a large number of students for
the sixth and seventh grades that
another teacher may have to be
cured to assist Miss Burwell and Miss
It to be noticed that the music
department of the school will be con-
this year as usual, and It will
Le charge of Miss Lillian Carr, of
Greenville, and Miss Mary
of Nashville.
It Is the intention of
dent to begin his classes on
the day after school opens. He is a
man who does not believe in wasting
a whole week In getting down to
business, and says that he will In-
his teachers to begin their
class work on the very next day after
the opening. In this connection, be
The matter was called by to He passed two
Alderman Tyson who moved that the j checks for the same amount in MADE A PART OF ONE'S LIFE
license be granted. Alderman
seconded tho motion, and the
vote was taken, resulting In a vote
of four In favor of granting the
and one against the proposition.
Alderman Ellington was the only
present voting against the
proposition, and ho declares that at
alone, one on each of the
banks there. In Kinston ho bought
a suit of clothes, a hat and a pair of
shoes, and in payment offered one of,
his checks, and was given back the
difference In money. Since he has I
been apprehended, he has returned all
of the clothing bought and the
next meeting of the board he the Kinston firm.
Days.
have you been evading mar
the city official angrily a
man whom he met the street
replied the other
man. warmly. confound It, ITS
bean calling at your office every day
tile
Just It What were yon look
tor me In my
will see to It the measure of last
night Is rescinded.
It will be remembered that up
February of this year pool rooms
were permitted to run and operate
this town. At that time, however,
the aldermen passed a resolution pro-
the town clerk from grant-
license any sort to any per
son wishing to run and operate pool
rooms In Greenville. That settled the
matter until the new board
sworn In July of this year. Shortly
after the new board took charge of
the affairs of the town, an effort was
made by several members of board
to have an ordinance passed granting
license to all persons desiring to run
pool rooms. The question was
brought to a vote with the result that
the board tied, and the decision had
to be made by the mayor. Mayor
James decided that there should be
no pool rooms the town.
Other matters of small Importance
were brought up and disposed of at
the meeting last night It was or-
that water and sewer-
be extended to the model school
that Is now being erected by the
Training School on street.
A new filter for the water plant
was ordered purchased, and this will
be done Immediately. When It
the present filter will not be
ed of any way other than to
low it to remain where It now Is.
The new one, however, will be
used for the supply of water
for the town, and the old one will
be used only as a substitute or as
an additional power when more
la needed.
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Ionic,
TONIC. out
and A true
i . . .,. go.
Mr. O. L. Joyner, of tho firm of
Joyner and Sugg, stated this morn-
that within ten minutes after the
blank checks has been torn from
their books they discovered the fact,
and notified the banks here not to
any of them. So the Star ware-
house will not In any wise be the
loser, but the people who honored
Gray's checks.
While the young man was taken to
Kinston this afternoon to stand trial,
officials from will go to
Kinston to Identify their man, and
will testify that he s the same man
who forged the two checks In their
town.
It has developed that Gray some-
time passed a check In Green-
ville that was drawn on Messrs.
Rice and Spain at the
Brick warehouse for a little more
than 19.00, but the say
that they will not prosecute him for
this offense.
MINNEAPOLIS. Minn., Sept.
Twenty thousand members of the In-
dependent Order of Odd Fellows were
in Minneapolis today when the eighty-
ninth annual sovereign grand lodge
convened. Many more are coming,
Governor A. O. and Mayor
Wallace C. Nye, both members of the
order, welcomed the delegates and
visitors, C. A. Keller, of San Anton-
Tex., grand side, responded, ex-
trolling the principles of the order.
following the opening
meeting, the grand lodge con-
The most Important
to come before the gathering, it
Is announced, will be the age
a proposition having been In-
at a previous convention to
reduce the ago for admittance to the
order from to eighteen
years.
Man's House, First Consisting of Only
Four Walls, Rapidly an
Atmosphere of Its Own.
Houses are curious things. We take
a morsel of Illimitable space and wall
it In and roof It over. Suddenly It
to be part God's out of doors
and becomes an entity with an
of Its own. We warm it with
our fires, we animate It with our
we furnish It with such
things good our eyes. We
do this to shelter for our bodies,
but as well an Instrument
for our spirits that resets on us Its
turn.
In other words, as live our way
Into a home, adapting It to oar need,
the bricks and mortar, the paint and
plaster, to Inert matter and
alive. Superficial sociologists
have taunted women with being
or than man, but I
count It her second glory. Tb plant la
an that tarns Walesa
Into Bring and this ls the thing
that woman from the
with her shelter In our houses
we an
of our Atlantic.
Custom of Covering the Head, Except
In Battle, of Comparatively
Recent Origin,
Once In a while we do seem to come
across something which ancient people
did not possess. Hats apparently figure lat needed are
among this number. , . . , ,
For bats we are told, did not become .
a well-established until some that be for of
years ago. In the year 1449, when set their supply and have
Charles II. entered Rouen after la re- them ready for the opening so that
capture by the French from the Eng-; there may be no opening,
the people there had never before Below is given an official state-
set eyes on a hat Their from
therefore, can be pictured as they
upon their king riding past them
In pomp and on his head a gorgeous
hat lined with silk and
gaily bedecked with huge plumes.
course, every one followed his e-
Hats began to make their
shop windows and women
The Graded School will open Tues-
day Sept 23rd, at nine o'clock. Book
lists will be distributed and lessons
will be assigned. It is very import-
ant that every pupil be present the
and labored over the con-
of elaborate headpieces. The music department will be run
each one attempting to surpass his as heretofore. Those who wish to
neighbor, if possible. But they were take music can see Misses
expensive and It a long time be-1 and at the school building Sat-
fore they could be worn except by the between the hours of ten and
prosperous classes.
In the course of time, however, they
became a more commonplace thing and
people of all classes were able to
them.
Children at flay.
In Palestine, always, children's
play la meetly that
they are grown Ton may a
of Are or six a visit
to a or anally tester
years, exchanging- compliments
with I pray -May.
ha who sees yon la and fin-
ally banking out of his while
he gather of and
sprinkles It on his head. Holding a
law with melon to
sent the bribes, la a popular game, and
so is a raid of fierce men from
The of Joseph and
subsequent interviews with his
arm rendered with
also the affliction of the men
with details, such Job's
wife cutting off her hair and selling It
tor bread. Is naturally
the chief of the
gM. It Is one great event
her later Ufa
Let us sell you a plug, a pound or
a box Black Eagle Sun Cured to-
and make you happy. J. R A
J. O.
Mr. Maxim working on
the development of automobile
for some time before he thought
of a silencer connection with a
gun. In addition to this was the In-
desire to enjoy target
without creating a disturbance.
Experiment ensued, covering a couple
of years and all kinds of valves, rents,
by-passes, chambers, eta,
but without success. One morning
after his bath the Inventor noticed
the small whirlpool over drain
the action which retards tho
egress of the water. It not
It phenomenon la usu-
ally accompanied by a more or less
pronounced sucking but In
a gun the noise firing ls caused by
the sudden egress of the gases, and If
could the same way slow-
ad down the noise would proportion
be decreased. Acting on this
a little tube then made,
so as to a whirlpool
escaping gases from the gum.
tried, was a
American
Talk
a woman tell her husband
everything
la a New York newspaper.
not Into an ores
this did
anybody of anything Import-
Let's reds at that ft a
woman falls to tell her husband every-
thing he la likely to salsa a tot
that never gets Into tho news-
papers. And If men should fall to
their wires pretty much
they dare tall, the would miss
a lot And If both
adopt a policy of eon
may lag a tot unless one or
the other thinks of the happy
of using topics of
tor conversational purpose.
to a big subject ahead
talk about It for a week If you like
TAKEN WHITE SPOTTED
hog, weight about lbs., mark
smooth crop In left ear and hole In
the right Owner can get by
applying to me and paying charges.
SMITH. N. C,
Route Box
ltd
twelve. It is desired that all music
pupils register the time.
Below H a list of the
First Grade; Miss Annie L Irvine,
Milton. Miss Lillian Carr,
and Miss Miriam Clark-
ton.
Second Miss Elizabeth Gray,
Charlotte and Miss Bessie Bennett
Third Miss Etta Powell,
Greenville and Miss Lucille Pike,
Fourth Grade.; Miss Annie Mae
Hudson, and Miss Ivey
Taylor, Greensboro.
Fifth Miss lone
and Miss Elizabeth
Sixth Grade; Miss Burwell,
Oxford.
Seventh Grade; Miss Winnie
ton,
High School; Miss Virginia Leg-
Neck and Mr. J. C.
Jr., Greenville.
Music; Miss Lillian Carr. Greenville
and Mary Nashville.
HOY TAYLOR,
Superintendent
Capt T. H. has moved his
family to Kinston where he will con-
to buy cotton for Messrs. Sprunt
and Sons., this market being rather
high for an export agent to do much
with. Capt and family are fine
people and we are to see them
leave us and wish them well In their
new home.
Mr. G. W. Prescott, our postmaster.
Is sick at Ills home on Venters street.
We have a fine stock of belting, mill
fitting, pipes, cut and threaded, any
length. J. R. Smith and Bro.
Our tobacco market Is are
having good breaks at good prices.
Misses May Smith, May Can-
non and Irma May Cannon all left last
week for A C. College at Wilson.
books of all kinds at J. R.
Smith and Bro.
received a car of cook and
heating stoves and open coal grates,
let us show them to you. J. R. Smith
and Bro.
The next time yon want
come to my store and get Black
Eagle Sun Cured. It's a good one.
D. W.





OUR BUYERS are in the
Northern markets
our FALL GOODS.
Keep your eyes on this space
and we will save you money
on your purchases.
J. R. J. G.
THE GENRE
By PRANK M.
The John Flanagan Buggy Co
extends to each and every farmer
who visits the Greenville Tobacco
Market, a cordial invitation to visit
their plant and inspect their com-
line of Buggies,
Bicycles, Etc.
we want to serve you
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
When quarreled with
his cousin killed him In
the manner of the
Italians, and then
the barber
to tell the
news to Papa
And
came away In
fright when he
saw the blazing
eyes of old
they called
him, he
had a tender
heart He kept
a wine near
the Municipal
bridge, and was
know for his char-
As they came
from the funeral,
the people stole
glances after the
bent, white-haired
form of old
and
will die of grief. It Is
a great pity that he Is too old for
When they passed the shop and
found the shutters closed day after
day, with Nicola poppies
playing on the steps and the dust
blowing Into the corners, they
old his heart la
And all the while swaggered
and grew fat with glory.
But one day the shutters were
opened, the puppies sent away and
the door left ajar, so that one could
see the mirrors and the kegs of rum,
and more than all, Gentle
himself, with his towel on his arm,
and his fresh white apron. And the
word went from one to another, until
one by one all the
but one, and be was
And so It was for a week, when
himself came smiling and
and showing no fear. It then
that the old rum seller's lips grew
white, and as he glared he
now, so that yon may
look pleasant when your time
laughed, but his yea grew
white underneath and his hand shook
be drank.
Again came, laughing and
Jesting with his cronies, and winking
when Gentle was not looking.
But he grew silent when uncle
turned to him and said,
care, my nephew, God has
told me to kill you within two
And, on the night after two weeks.
was there again. And now,
when his uncle came toward he
draw back with and pot a
chair before him a shield.
no said the old man.
would hare killed yon night,
but came to me In a dream and
week longer,
All the evening sat with bis
thinking sick
thoughts, with sighs and furtive
glances at Gentle For he
was afraid. As he went home he said
to himself, Is not right that he
should bring Into this business.
Why does be not try to kill me,
any one else would do I could de-
fend myself
He did not appear at the wine shop
for a long time, but stayed In bis room
whittling the earrings that be sold on
the streets In the daytime. One day
he stopped, for he found that always
figures took the look of old
and leered and laughed at him
under the lamplight, and chilled his
limbs.
In time the shadows in the room
drove him to the wine shop. He
drew courage from thinking,
has forgotten. He lies when
he says that Is against
And when he came he grew bold,
laughing, and Jesting In the other
times. In M waited until
the others had gone, and then swag-
to the door. When old
tapped him on the shoulder be turned
In an Instant, knife In bis hand.
He thought, Is
But was looking upon him
with eyes soft a
he said, Is
merciful to you. On the night before
your doom, he came to me In my
sleep and said, the murderer
of your son must live until the day
of the Holy St Peter. Until then he
must
why do you not try
stammered the knife trembling
In bis hand. and be clutched
uncle's arm.
gentle flinging
from him. baa taken your
strength from you and I could
you now, as you stayed my poor
But God's will shall be done,
and you must live until the day of
St.
For a long time the did not
see
stats locked In his said
one. I him peering out
one day with the look of a mad
One day the barber, came
Into the shop and you
heard the news. Papa They
have sent to the Insane asylum;
you have lost your
What a blockhead yon
answered gentle
At the end of the week be sent
BOO francs to the orphanage of the
Holy Father.
the name of the
he said to himself.
by Dally Story Pub.
HIS FIRST PUBLISHED WORK
Lighting Plant Sails Away.
The people of the town of
Guatemala, have Just lost their light-
plant in a rather strange way, for
this lighting plant has borne away to
sea. Four years ago a steamer of the
line ran ashore on the shoals
near the town and remained aground
In the lagoon without, however,
any damage. The
the original Idea
of using the dynamos on board the
vessel for lighting the town. The
connections were made without
difficulty and the plant was a great
success. But an engineer employed
by a wrecking company arrived and
decided to float the steamer. This was
done; the electric plant put out to sea
and the people of were left to re-
turn to their discarded oil lamps.
Why Some Women Break Down.
The average woman Is a human
clock that never runs down. Even In
sleep dreams of unfinished
tasks, And she awakens to the real-
that hero Is another day of
Why
Partly because she has inherited her
temperament from many generations
of fussing, fuming, drudging women.
Partly because she is too convention-
too bound by traditions to system-
her work and to demand the la-
devices to which
In the home entitles her, and to
cultivate that particular brand of
which leads her husband and sons
to seek the easiest and quickest
of accomplishing the task.
Less Coal Used In Making Coke.
The quantity of coal required to
produce a ton of coke Is much less
than formerly. The average gain in
1912, compared ten years ago, is
probably at least pounds. It la
doubtful If In the earlier years the
actual yield of coal in coke exceeded
per cent, whereas In 1912 It was
per cent., according to the United
States geological survey. This gain Is
largely due to the Increase in the
production of by-product coke, In which
the yield of coke from a ton of coal if
very much higher than In making bee-
hive coke.
No Immediate Use for Them.
She the shall
send back your ring and other pres-
tomorrow.
there's no hurry. I don't
expect to be engaged again for a
wet; or two.
Probably Nothing He Old In After
Life Gave Benjamin Franklin
More Exquisite Pleasure.
My brother had. In 1720 or 1721, be-
gun to print a newspaper, relates Ben-
Franklin In bis autobiography.
It the second that appeared In
America and called the New Eng-
land The only one before
It the Boston News Letter. I
remember him being dissuaded by
some of his friends from the under-
taking as not likely to succeed, one
newspaper being In their Judgment
enough for America. At this time
there not leas than live and
twenty. He went on, however, with
the undertaking, and, after having
worked In composing the types and
printing off the sheets, I em-
ployed to carry the papers through
the streets to the customers.
He had some ingenious men among
his friends, who amused themselves
by little pieces for his paper,
which gained it credit and made It
more in demand, and these gentlemen
often visited us. Hearing their con-
and their accounts of the
approbation their papers were re-
with, I was excited to try my
hand among them, but being still a
boy and suspecting that my brother
would abject to printing anything of
mine In paper If be knew It to
be mine, I contrived to disguise my
hand and, writing an anonymous pa-
per, I put it at night under the door
of the printing house. It found
in the morning and communicated to
his writing friends when they called
In as usual. They read it, commented
on It In my hearing, and I had the
exquisite pleasure of finding it met
with their approbation, and that, In
their different guesses at the author,
none were named but men of some
character among us for learning and
Ingenuity. I suppose now that I
rather lucky In my Judges, and that
perhaps they were not really so very
good ones as I then esteemed them.
MANY AND STRANGE DIALECTS
In Standardizing Her Language China
la Facing a Problem England
Not Yet Solved.
China will have to on a kind
of standardization of her language,
we started, seriously. In the fourteenth
century. It Isn't only a matter of
words and grammar; more important
still are construction and
Our English dialects are prob-
ably as diverse any. Put a Cornish
miner and a Northumberland miner
together for the first time and each
would only have a faint glimmering
of the meaning of the other's speech.
What would the think of
o Is He would
express the same meaning In
be her like, then The ordinary Eng-
of la Is she like r I
have known a Londoner, fresh to the
fine dialect completely
by a farm laborer's talk; he
could only get a of meaning here
and Chronicle.
We, the undersigned, respectfully
request all stockholders In the
Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Com-
Interested In the proper
of the corporation and proper
distribution of the funds and prop-
belonging to said corporation,
regardless of or not you have
rendered your stock certificate, are
hereby requested to meet In the court
house in Greenville at two p. m.
o'clock on 27th day of September,
1913. This the 30th day of August.
1913.
J. J.
J. DIXON,
FRED EDWARDS.
H. J. WILLIAMS,
J. B. GALLOWAY,
W. P. BUCK,
l. A. ARNOLD,
E. E.
S. M. JONES,
J. MARSHALL COX,
W. M. SMITH,
JESSE CHERRY.
CHOICE CUT
AND IN ALL
COLORS A SPECIALTY
Our artistic arrangements
In Wedding outfits are equal
to the best Nothing finer In
offering than our
styles.
plants, palms feral
for house decoration
J. L. A CO, N. C
D. J. Jr., for Orson-
DR. J. C. GREENE
Physician and
Office on Dickinson
PHONE 336-L
ALBION DUNN
Attorney at Law
Office In Building, Third St
Practices his services are
desired
Greenville, North Carolina
F. C. Harding Chas. C. Piece
HARDING PIERCE
Lawyers
Practicing In all the Courts
Office in Wooten Building on Third
street, fronting Court House
H. W. CARTER, X. D.
Practice limited to diseases of the Eye,
Ear Nose and Throat
Washington, N. C. Greenville, N. C.
Office with Dr. D. L. James, Green-
ville, day every Monday, a m to pm
Right and
At first, It has been contended, men
used both indifferently, and those
when lighting pushed the right
side forward bad the advantage of
shielding their hearts and so lived to
produce descendants who Inherited
their tendencies. Be this as it may,
there is no doubt that the two sides
of the brain have different functions,
and right or left-handedness Is by no
means restricted to the arms alone.
One investigator was very often able
to recognize left-handedness by the ex-
of the eye. The center
of speech Is on the left side of the
brain of a right-handed person, and
on the right side of that of a left-hand-
ed person. Children show
able evidence of two centers,
though one atrophies owing to the
preference given to one band. Never-
experiments show that It can
be successfully
edge.
S. J. EVERETT
at Law
In Edwards Building, on the Court
House Square
Greenville, North Carolina
L I. Moore W. H. Long
MOORE LONG
Attorneys at Law
Greenville, North Carolina
N. W. OUTLAW
Attorney at
Office formerly occupied by J. L.
Fleming
B. F. TYSON
Life, Fire, Sick and Accident
Office on Fourth near Frank
Wilson's store
HARRY
Attorney at Law
Greenville, North Carolina
J. C. Lanier
AND
AND IRON
M -w
LOOK
What it takes to
SELL TOBACCO
HIGH we have it.
C. W. HUMBLE
Pounds. Price.
1-2
. 1-3
Average 24.27
DUDLEY
Average 26.87
H. M. STOKES
Pounds. Price.
Average 22.46
J. DIXON
Pounds. Price,
1-2
Average 23.06.
Bring US your next load and let us do YOU
likewise. . . . .
J. H. BOYD
Pounds. Price.
1-2
Average 26.63.
I. H. EDWARD
Pounds. Price.
Average 26.08.
Johnston Foxhall's
i If. Pr 1-2 C M M is Pounds. I 1-2
Average 26.63. A JOHNSON Average 28.76 NOAH HADDOCK Pounds. Price. is.
.
Average 29.66. TUCKER AND
Average 26.28 GALLOWAY AND I Price.
. .
FOR SALE
Eight room dwelling on
Evans Street
PRICE
Apply
W. H.
i autumn mo vis
MAY OCCUR TOMORROW
Weather Bureau Makes the Prediction
For Middle and New Eng-
land States.
WASHINGTON, Sept
autumn frosts in the lower region,
the middle Atlantic states, New
land and the extreme northwest are
by the weather bureau for
The weekly forecast tonight
week will open with rains con-
In the southern states, and ex-
tending the Ohio valley and the
middle Atlantic states, rainy weather
will prevail over all central and
northern sections east of the Mis-
river. There will also be lo-
cal showers early In the week over
the Rocky Mountain region and th
northwest, hut by Wednesday and
Thursday generally fair weather
should prevail over all districts.
are no present indications
of any unusually high or low temper-
during the week, but frosts will
occur Monday morning over the lower
lake region, the middle Atlantic
states, New England and the extreme
northwest; on Tuesday morning over
the northwest the middle
plateau and the central Rocky
region and by Wednesday or
Thursday morning probably over the
northern and western upper lake re-
will be rising over
northwest and west after the middle
of the week, by falling
pressure, and by the end of the week
the weather over those sections will
again be unsettled and somewhat
Water In River Nor-
Stage After the
Storm
Water in the Tar River is again at
its usual height; and all signs of the
storm, have passed away with the ex-
of the small puddles of water
remaining in the low places, and the
mud line on the shrubbery and trees.
During the time of tho high water
farmers living along the river suffered
from the lost of cattle and hogs,
though it believed this loss is
not as great as was at first thought
All along the river may he seen trash
and rubbish that was brought down
the stream by the high water, and
which was not washed away with
water.
INSURANCE
We are now in position to write Fire, Life,
Accident and Health Insurance and we would
appreciate a part of your business.
A Correction.
To the Editor of the
Some one has given you grossly
Inaccurate information or you would
never have printed in bold type the
words Superior Court Up-
held by Judge The
does me such gross injustice
that I feel called on to correct it
CARELESS HINDI OF
PISTOL CAUSES DEATH
HALL MOORE, Agents.
NOTICE.
The jurors summoned for the sec-
week of the September term of
court, beginning September need
not come. There will be no court on
account of a conflict with the
of the supreme court of North
Carolina.
D. C. MOORE, Clerk
CHARGE SUSTAINED.
CAPTAIN TO FILE CHARGES
AGAINST THE LIFE SAVERS
Norfolk, Va., Sept. Captain
Joseph York, of the six masted
George W. Wells, which was wreck-
ed off Ocracoke during the of
September arrived here today with
Mate Gus Green and three passengers.
Captain York declared he is going to
Washington to file charges against life
savers. He declares a ring, or com-
exists among the life savers
to buy wrecked vessels from insurance
people and prevent competitive
He says he was forced to sell the
Wells for when he should
received
He declares the natives of
boarded the doomed vessel after the
storm and took everything they
curry away. He says there were
boats containing Ocracoke residents
alongside the schooner at one time
and he was forced to drive them away
the point of a gun.
of President Believe Existence
buy Hem
Washington, Sept. first re-
of congressional of
the lobby, which President Wilson de
was and
will become apparent when the house
investigating committee makes its re-
port In about two weeks. Its work
probably will be finished within that
time.
Prominent in the house committee's
report will be the testimony taken on
Martin M. charges against
Representative of Illinois.
It is believed that the committee will
present only the facts it has develop-
ed and let the house Judge their value.
President Wilson's friends in Con-
declare the senate committee's
report on its Investigation of the
lobby In general will support the Pres-
charge that Influences were
working In Washington to defeat leg-
Hotel Men of Canada Meet
Man., Sept.
men from nearly all of the cities
of Canada gathered in Winnipeg to-
day for the first annual convention
of the Dominion Association. The
convention will in session
through the greater part of the week.
The license question is tho foremost
topic scheduled for consideration.
army under Lord Howe
took possession of New York,
following the evacuation of the
city by the Americans,
WANT ADS
The summer
time when the
air is fine Makes
the old young
for a while So
they can enjoy
PERRI
TEA,
COFFEE,
LISK FLOUR.
And
other goodies.
Call you
you will have the
personal
of
S M SCHULTZ
It is not true as stated in the
that I sued Capt. J. J. Laugh-
In for the possession of a tract
of land in the southern section of
county. It Is not true as stated that
at November term, 1910, it was de-
that I could make no claim on
the land. The truth is no decision
made at that or any other term
of court which affected my right to
the land. The simple facts are these
Mr. R. T. Wilson, my father, claim-
ed to own the parcel of land known
M the Mill Pond and for years he
occupied it and used it as his
Ir. 1899 he conveyed it with a lot of
other land to me, and I have
occupied it and used it as my own.
Some years ago Capt.
ho then owned the Avon farm, cut
some timber In the Mill Pond and I
sued him for trespass. At November
term of Pitt superior court the case
lame on for trial and after I had in-
my testimony and the judge
had intimated that I had not
out a case I took a non-suit. It Is
therefore absolutely true that
was decided in that case.
I have continued to work upon the
land and last week the present own-
of the Avon farm took out a
criminal warrant against me which
was heard by Mr. C. D. Rountree. a
Justice of the Peace. The Justice
found me guilty and I have appealed
to the superior court, where the case
will be heard in November, and then
we will see who Is sustained.
J. P. WILSON.
Greenville, Sept.
What is believed to be careless
handling of a pistol resulted last
Saturday afternoon in the death of
a boy
teen years old, living In the
section of the county. While it la
not known exactly whether the boy
was a suicide or if he came to his
death by accident, It Is believed that
the latter course is the more prob-
able.
With another boy, went
out about o'clock Saturday morn-
to look for cows in a pasture,
and both of the boys had guns. They
hunted for cows and roamed the
woods for the greater portion of the
I morning and far into the afternoon,
lit was about o'clock in the after-
noon when mounted a log
and began looking for a tick which
he had crawled on him. Theron
Daniel, the other boy who was with
him, stated that when he himself
j stepped from the log, he heard the
gun fire. Looking around he saw
Hardison fall, and heard him e-
I claim. He struggled
about two or three minutes and died,
I Daniel ran to the house
and told the boy's father.
To the coroner's Jury the father of
the dead boy said that the young
low was found lying with bis head
and his hands in mud. and that it was
in this position that the coroner's
jury found him.
Coroner J. C. Green held the In-
quest yesterday morning, and found
that came to his death at
the hands of a pistol in his own hands.
MYSTERY UNSOLVED.
MULLETS AT M. sell
FOB NICE
lots in South Greenville. Will
make terms to suit purchaser. A. AL
Moseley.
FOR SIX. HORSE FARM
near Greenville. Teams furnished.
Apply to Brick
FOB ACRES LAND,
cleared, three room dwelling,
tobacco barn, etc. Original growth
oak and pine. G. T. Tyson, R.
Greenville.
BLAME FOB LOSS.
Commission Meets Today.
Cincinnati Sept.
magnates, managers, players and re-
porters began arriving In this city to-
night to be in attendance at the annual
meeting of the National baseball com-
mission, which will meet tomorrow
and supervise the drafting of players
from the minor leagues. Chairman
August and National Lea-
President Thomas Lynch are here,
and Ban Johnson, President of the
American league, is expected early
tomorrow. Besides these three
of Commission nearly all the
presidents of the two major
are expected to be on hand.
Chinese lost 16.000 troops
in battle with the Japanese at
Ping Yang.
Directors of the Gaiety in London,
Sept. Gaiety
shareholders who met recent-
were not only disappointed at the
reduction of the dividend from per
cent but mystified by the explanation
of the decrease in profits voucher-
by the chairman of the board
of directors.
The falling off was attributed to
the war. This reminds one of what
Douglas Jerrold said to a playwright
who offered a similar
the war that's ruined the
said the author. no It
Jerrold. the
WANTED.
monthly and expenses. Advertise
or sell cigars. Co., New
York, N. Y. g
Mrs. J. H. Barnhill, of South Green-
ville, Twelfth St, wants a few board-
Deputy Sheriffs Give Bond.
CALUMET, Mich., Sept.
deputy sheriff's charged with the
of the strikers at near
the Champion mine, on August to-
day were bound over to the circuit
court for trial. They were admitted
to ball In the sum of each.
While cavalrymen were parading
the streets this morning, a flag In the
hands of a striker was torn from its
fastening and trampled In the street.
Tho strikers wired to Governor Fer-
In protest, demanding more respect
for the flag and a right to parade the
streets.
TO
eight to sixteen years old, board
and chance to attend graded
for cooking two meals each day an
helping with baby. T. E. Cannon,
Ayden, N. C,
FOB SALE OB EXCHANGE, ONE
farm of acres of fine farm land
known as Felix Braxton farm, also
another farm of acres known at
Henry place. For better
description see A. G. Cox,
N. C.
I have my residence a very
assortment of china, silver,
and brass for sale.
MRS. CHAS. SKINNER.
centenary of the
of the United States was
celebrated in Philadelphia.
NICE ROOM for BENT,
reasonable terms. Apply to Mrs
R. S. May, Chestnut street.
FOR THREE FURNISHED
rooms at Fourth street In form-
Methodist parsonage.
J. F. DAVENPORT
Cotton.
Office Evans street.
Representing Alexander Sprunt and
Sons, Wilmington.
Ladies
Cloaks
AND
Coat
Suits
We have on dis-
play the latest and
the best styles to be
obtained in the
Northern Markets,
style, quality and
prices are in
Prices rang-
from
to
Come to see
us
C. T.
Quality
Shop.
Massachusetts Labor Federation
FALL RIVER, Macs Sept
Representatives of the labor bodies
of Massachusetts, comprising a total
of about assembled in this city
today for the annual convention of
the state Federation of Labor. The
sessions will last through the week
and will be devoted to tho discussions
of legislative and other matters
the of the working
classes.
J. W. Little
Merchandise Broker
Office Residence 267-L
N. C.
AH Clues Hate Failed to Reveal the
Identity of Dismembered Girl.
NOW YORK, Sept. again
the mystery of the murdered girl, parts
of whose body was found in the
son river more than a week ago, is
a puzzle, all clues having failed to re-
veal her identity or the manner of
her death.
The body is not that of Annette Day,
the Brooklyn girl, who has been miss-
since August, as has been
ed. Day and his sister,
Mary Day, today went to the
Morgue and carefully viewed the
upper and lower portions of the dis-
membered body. They stated
that the fragments were not
those of Annette's body; the marks
were not Identical they said. Later
Francis Day admitted that the body
was not that of his sister.
The police of New York now have
no tangible clue in the case. They
have no idea as to the Identity of
the murdered, or her murderer.
NOTICE. NOTICE.
Application will be mad. to th. i hereby to
to feed my
of North Carolina for home on the night of Sunday, last
to hold an election tor th. or to any
pose of issuing bond. In th. town of m to h
h m mUCh by
sale of said bonds to be used tor
the Improvement of the Electric Light
plant and streets of said town.
This August 1918.
B. C. CHAPMAN, Mayor.
me.
This the 10th day of September,
1913.
GEORGE
Mothers I Hay. Children Worms
Are they feverish, nervous
Irritable, dizzy or constipated I Do
they constantly at no,
grind their teeth Have they cramp-
ins; pains, Irregular and ravenous
petite are all of worms.
Worm, not only cause your child
but stunt Its mind and growth.
Give Worm Killer at once
It kills and remove, th. worm.
prove, your appetite, regulates
stomach, liver and bowel. The
tom disappear and your child la made
happy and healthy, as
ed. All druggist, or by mall,
Indian Medicine Company
Kittrell
Have Purchase The Stock Of Stone-
wail Jackson Street And
Solicits the Patronage of
the Public Generally
to
JACKSONVILLE AND TAMPA. FLA,
via
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
On Tuesday, September the
Atlantic Coast Line will round
trip tickets from Greenville to Jack-
Fla, at 18.60, and to Tam-
pa, limited returning to reach
original starting point not later than
midnight of Tuesday, September 10th,
1913. Proportionate rate, will be
made from other point. In Virginia.
North and South Carolina.
Ample and coach
will be provided for all
passengers, and everything will be
done by the management of th. At-
Coast Line to make a first class
excursion.
For tickets. Pullman
and schedules see the nearest
agents or address T. C. White, Gen-
Passenger Agent, or W. J.
Passenger Traffic Manager,
ton, N. C. to XI
Our Bank Their Bank
THE NATIONAL BANK of GREENVILLE
Capital
ONLY BANK IN PITT COUNTY UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
Call and see us. Courteous treatment assured.
James L- President, F. J. Forbes, Cashier.





0-
-o,.
AYDEN
0-
-0
Sept Walter
EVERYBODY SAID SO ALWAYS OTHER FISHES
purchased the stock Mist.
Lyon and will m a fancy
grocery.
If Its a bicycle, gun. rifle,
or dynamite, we have i
J. K. Smith and Bro.
Mr. W. H. Harrington has
chased, the cottage of Mr. W. L.
Tucker on West avenue.
Rev. J. H. is holding a j
meeting at Spiny. N. C.
Mess. and Garris. of
1.1. have each purchased a f
Ford touring car.
Just received a of field fence,.
all heights, machines and
rakes. J. R and Bro.
The graded school opened Monday.
Prof. L. N. Johnson Wilmington,
a graduate of Wake Forest, is sup-
with a full corps of teach-
and a full turnout of pupils.
Mr. John Lewis came
from Robersonville Monday, bring-
his daughter here to enter school
By F. H. LANCASTER.
a That Is what
teacher said about her school
when she wrote to the. superintend-
smooth as a sum-
Bar tea- Sans She was rather
proud of the French she Lad picked
it was this way, Somebody
had been cutting logs oft the public
land. Old man said it was
and everybody said
old man ought to know.
Didn't he live right next to that piece
of land
It was who bad cut
the logs oft the land. Every-
body said so, everybody but the
that came stepping
to school over the pine straw.
Rain or shine, never late, never noisy.
Brown by the sun, healthy with hard
lean from light feeding.
Everybody. boy In the
I had been fought for that It
worth Just one bloody nose to
of the little
There will be a carnival here to one
week to the delight of the small boy
and their papas. Bat did not fight
Master La Stokes, son of Mr. J. was not even
J. Stokes returned Monday from toward who sat next
Kinston where he had to her In was always head
hospital at
undergone operation for
Miss Wayne of Durham is hen
shaking hands with her old friends.
Car of lime just received, also At-
las cement. J. R. Smith and Bro.
The many friends of Mr. I. L. Kit
id who worshiped her utterly from
Che sole of her slim bare foot to the
topmost of her tossing curls. Small
Joy did he get of his love affair.
Ha, the poor He wanted to
knock down every boy in the school,
to slap the face of every
Lode. lie wanted to tell Lucie that
will be glad to know his her
. , j ., , i i lose his pencil. And little found
is so much improved that he is
expected home the latter part of toll, . brother his
week. at the sight of that long, red
Mr. W J. has resigned .-pencil.
chief of police, and Mr W. H.
assistant, has been promoted
to chief.
Capt. Johnson returned from
the hospital much improved.
By F. H. LANCASTER.
TO BE SEEN IN A
Pierre had never been
drunk before. Had never done any-
thing that a
straight young
man should not
do until the
p e n n e
came out of the
bayou and said to
old man Etienne
that he would
give him three
dollars a hundred
for the turpentine
rights In his strip
of pine
trees. And that
very, same day
Pierre came to
ask old man
Etienne for bis
daughter.
But the
old man was
rough on Pierre,
and refused.
But It was Dot
because of what
The Best Medicine in the World
little girl had dysentery very
bad. I thought she would die.
Colic, Cholera and
cured her, and I can truthful-
say that I think It is the best med-
in the Mrs.
Clare, Mich. For sale by
all druggists.
the old man said; it was because he
saw Amanda walking to church with j
the and could not j
make Amanda see him that made
take a bottle of down
into the bend of the bayou and
get drunk. Yes, and stay drunk,
sleeping most of the time till the
bottle was empty.
It was the suck of the oars In their
locks that woke him. Then voices
came, and he
say Pierre ain't going win
race this
say going
run his fast boat; say Amanda
going sail
The suck of the oars died away.
Pierre plunged Into the bayou and
swam until sober.
more one girl In de
A a soon as be was
I went down
-May I asked and , and bought nap.
barely waiting the teacher's consent , ribbon
he was across the room and had , h d , f fl h,
robbed little of bis beautiful I away
find. And a pencil was on he was under
I y a la
Ah. out
And so thinking of the other fishes
. always in the sea, Pierre made his
yours. Keep It . I way through the woods to old man
The little fellow looked at his bIb- front gate. He surprised Ce-
tar, his lip quivering with the bitter, on the front Bat
MET AT pain of renunciation, but he returned down her And
I haughtily as a baby may. , thoughts came to the front
A Hear Secretary Talkie And went
to bis seat with pencil. Ha, ., been maybe you.
in the face by a baby-before; deB me on
the whole school. It made him mad. I of July. pa, make me
Be beaded off on the way
home. Cecelia was swept Into silence by
-What for you didn't let fake I of this
It Always Helps
says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., In
writing of her experience with the woman's
tonic. She says I began to use
my back and head would hurt so bad, I
thought the pain would kill me. was hardly able
to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles
of began to feel like a new woman. soon
gained pounds, and now, I do all my housework,
as well as run a big water mill.
I wish every suffering woman would give
The Woman's Tonic
a trial. I still use when feel a little bad,
and it always does me
Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness,
tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman-
trouble. Signs that you need the woman's
Ionic. You cannot make a mistake in trying
for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing
women for more than fifty years.
Get a Bottle Today
Nell, my broth-
be cried.
little Jumped up. He could
not English. He pointed help-
at the road. be
whimpered.
spoke up promptly. all ,
stood up hotly. I j mer
ha demanded, and before all the
school ho said to little
MOD ADVOCATES
About Freight Hate
Sept. large
gathering of business men and
sens from over the county who had
come here today to discuss good
roads heard Hubert organ-
secretary of the Just Freight
Rate Association, on the various dis-
the state and or-
the Harnett county branch,
electing Charles Ross, president; J.
F. and C. J. Smith,
dents; J. R. secretary; K. A.
Stewart, treasurer. Executive Com-
J. C. Byrd, Level; A. P.
P. F. Pope.
that be demanded,
her.
say be didn't want she
replied, without looking at
me say your papa cut those
-Nor
The blood ran up to the boy's hair
at the slur In voice.
know, me, he ain't cut
what I she cut In,
coldly.
I prove your pap didn't cut
Coats; E. L. Hassell, Duke; B. F. those logs, you going let keep
Williams. Angler; O. Bradley, Kip- that pencil he
The girl's tone changed wonderfully.
Strong resolutions were passed be I let keep that pencil-
pointing delegates to attend the mass
meeting in on September
and a number will lie present to as-
in the removal of the unequal ad-
vantage given the Virginia clUes
In the distribution of freight from the
west and north.
This has been a good day for
In and Harnett county.
The high school opened this morn-
with the. largest enrollment in its
and at a special called meet-
of the board of county
this afternoon, was
voted for good roads, conditioned up-
on the by private subscription
of an
School began lure this morning with
an enrollment of a considerable
gain over the opening day last year.
Rev. O. T. Page is again the principal
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power of sale con-
In two mortgages executed and
delivered by Henry Allen Smith to
Richard date 21st,
1912, and in Book E-10, page
and the other dated Oct. 1st, 1912,
and recorded in Book E-10,
In tho register's office of Pitt county,
the undersigned will sell for cash
before tho court house door In Green-
on Thursday, October 9th, 1913.
the following described real estate
In the county of Pitt and in
township, undivided
interest of the said Henry Allen Smith
the lands of his mother
being tho share of land
lotted to tho said Smith in the
division of the Jordan Cox land, ad
Joining the lands of Ellen Garris,
Charlie others,
containing 1-3 acres more or lees.
Sept. 8th, 1913.
f RICHARD Mortgagee
O. JAMES and SON,
ltd
yon give said, softly.
Ha But It would seem that all
the sweetness of that changed tone
was lost on He said, stolidly.
going be at the horse race
Sunday I prove it
want you to take this now. May-
be I won't see next
She took red pencil, looked
at him wistfully, and started up the
Sunday I A long, straight track
through the forest, and a crowd of
happy people hurrying to the start
or to the finish. Everybody bad been
to mass. Now for the horse race.
rode his own bay mare,
a little beauty, full of
and long of wind. It was her
Ant race. Dice rode the white horse,
and the white had already been three
times a winner.
There was a wild leap of excite-
a streak of red, and a cheer
that shook the Hal and
made herself look.
Dice was dismounting slowly from
the beaten white horse, and bard
and white at this proudest moment
at hit life, was pushing his winner a
little closer to the cheering crowd.
want to tell you all
tie said, harshly, and there was
even among the lucky betters.
all been saying It's M.
eat those logs. Des so. It me
eat those
Riding away in bis great loneliness,
Lucie
would let little keep that pencil
It was a cautious, broken
cell, of one half mad with fear. Lao
fell out of till at the sound of
It, and ran back to her.
what made you tell, what
ads you tell them
be
at her tears. true true.
Be took into his arms and com-
her. sell my mare,
and pay for these old logs She'll
good price now she's won
by Story Pub,
Needless Worry.
A patient young angler was diligent-
plying his rod and line.
you howled the Irate
owner, appearing on the scene,
you are fishing In forbidden water
Yes, sir; preserved water. And per
you will allow me to inform you
that I have been to considerable ex-
in well stocking It with
exclaimed the angler,
with what fish, may I
ask, have you so liberally replenished
the
roach, sir; my favorite
well, then, in that bland-
observed the youth, no
need for you to worry further, for I
am fishing for
All Kinds and Descriptions of Mis-
guided Persons There In Their
Last Resting Place.
Take a walk through the cemetery
alone and you will pass the resting
place of a man who blew Into the
of a gun to see If it was load-
ed. A little farther down the slope Is
a crank who tried to show how close
be could stand to a moving train
while it passed. In strolling about
you see the monument of the hired
girl who tried to start the fire with
i kerosene, and a grass-covered knoll
that the boy who put a cob
the mule's tall. That tall shaft
over a man who blew out the gas,
casts a shadow over the boy who
tried to get on a moving train. Side
by side the pretty creature who
had her corset laced on the last
hole and the Intelligent idiot who
rode a bicycle nine miles In ten min-
sleep unmolested. At repose Is
a doctor who took a dose of his own
medicine. There with a top of a shoe
box driven mt bis bead Is a rich old
man who married a young wife. Away
over there reposes a boy who went
fishing on Sunday, and the woman
who kept strychnine powders In the
cupboard. The man who stood In
front of the mowing machine to oil
the sickle is quiet now and rests be-
side the careless brakeman who fed
himself to the seventy-ton engine, and
near by may be seen the grave of the
man who tried to whip the editor.
Pike County Post.
DAINTIEST OF BIRD'S NESTS
Maple Leaf of Ordinary Size Will Con-
the Home of the Hum-
ming Bird.
War Losses In Macedonia.
Many villages in Macedonia have
been completely destroyed either by
retreating Turks or by the armies off
the allied Balkan States. Grain, for-
age and live stock have been heavily I
requisitioned by the warring
The heavy losses of everything
pertaining to agriculture and animal The most exquisitely dainty home
husbandry sustained by the villagers built by the bill and feet of birds is
will require a long time to recoup, that of the ruby throated bumming
Merchants throughout the whole of bird, Bays a writer in the Craftsman.
European y have suffered heavy when completed It Is scarcely larger
financial losses, and the greater part than an English walnut and Is usually
of the with the Interior Is on saddled on a small horizontal limb of a
credit. Trade between and tree or shrub frequently many feet
the Interior practically ceased during from the ground. It Is composed
the letter of September, 1911. It most entirely of soft plant fibers,
may be stated that through fragments of webs sometimes
emigration, and other causes being used to bold them In shape. The
Macedonia has been depopulated to sides are thickly studded with bits of
the of persona
To War on Materialism.
To combat the materialism of the
present age in earnest a society has
Just been founded in Paris by Ed-
Rostand, Maeterlinck and Ca-
and is receiving the
enthusiastic support of the thinking
public. A
have
among the being some
French Cosmos line ran ashore on the shoals however, not called
Lighting Plant Sails Away.
Tho people of the town of
Guatemala, have Just lost their light- Is exceedingly frail, there appears to
lichen, and practiced Indeed is the
eye of the man who can distinguish it
from a knot on the limb. The eggs
are the size of quinine pills.
Although the humming bird's nest
c support or the n B, e for be nothing on record to show that any
ti numbers of them come to
M. Four years ago a steamer of the grief during the summer rains. It is,
of the leading in
thought. The founders are calling
upon all who are willing to fight for
the higher ideals of art, literature and
science, in the face of the decadence,
now threatening French taste, to Join
their ranks.
Several branches, It is announced,
are being formed in the provinces and
abroad
prise. There was only the trembling
strong fingers pressing a tiny packet
into band, only the pleading of
that pleasant
my color, pink. going
wear
she murmured, wear
It was a hot day, that Fourth of
July, with a boat on the bay.
The regatta was to be run In three
classes. Schooners, sloops cat-
boats. Some there were In that
crowd who followed the flight
of the schooners, but upon wharf and
beach and bank every eye
was upon the cat-boat race, and every
sou of money was upon one
of the two racers. The
cat, the Kitten, that flew the
blue pennant, and
that flew tho pink. They were
well matched boats, and beauties,
gleaming white with their broad belts
of brilliant blue or pink; each with a
big new sail, each a lovely girl
In the bows frying the colors she fa-
They crossed the line at the
stand. Hearty cheering
them on their second course,
and after the cheer one single voice
like a dropping oat
he don't get your
For whom was that warning meant
What was It worth Perhaps one of
the young sailors knew. Tense,
ever an eye to the girl In bis bows,
the gave bis boat
every advantage his skill could com-
pass.
Already the Lily under her reef was
footing It after the Kitten, and
ready, but too late, the
had seen the white puff now be-
ginning to turn black. It too late
to shorten sail now If he meant to
leave himself a chance to win.
On they came, the Kitten and the
Lily, and the squall, half a mile,
eight; while the sky darkened and
the Lily, like one struck by a strong
hand, lay over. But there was a sure
grip upon her tiller and no flutters of
hope or fear the hand that held
the halyards. She righted gallantly
under her reef, and with the foam
curling along rail, flew away be-
fore the rising wind. And then the
watchers had eyes for the Kitten, and
as they turned their eyes upon her
the squall struck her. saw her
go over in the shivering water. Boats
shot out, children lifted up their
voices and wept.
looking back at the res-
and their rescued, watched mer-
most made some more
she laughed, Pierre laughed also
with tenderness.
bring me good he said.
He had fairly forgotten
that Cecilia was herself other
.,. i Dally Story Pub.
upon a long
near the town and remained aground tenure of occupancy. Within three
In the lagoon without, however, bus- weeks after the two little while eggs
mining any damage. The are laid the young have departed on
conceived the original Idea their tiny pinions.
of the dynamos on board
vessel for lighting the town. The Advice to Consumptives.
connections were made without for ft person
difficulty and the plant was a great I from consumption Is to
Hut an engineer employed ,,., B good and be guided
by a wrecking company and I Dy physicians ad-
If a new cure Is discovered during
decided to float the steamer. This was
done; the electric plant put out to sea
and the people of were left to re- your know
turn to their discarded oil lamps. , know
Needless Worry.
A patient young angler was diligent-
plying his rod and line.
you bowled the Irate
owner, appearing on the scene, , to on
you are fishing In forbidden i Why Some Women Break Down. j pin. the new remedy to your case.
Yes, sir; preserved water. And per- The average woman Is a human i cure is a take bis
haps you will allow me to Inform you that never runs down. Even In t you from val-
that I have been to considerable ex- her dreams of unfinished will-
tasks. And she awakens to the
Meantime, while waiting en new
In well stocking It with
the angler, Ian- Julian that here is another day of i
he w, keep you on the
. ., mi, ,.,.,.,. but effective
the Partly because she has Inherited her
roach, sir; my favorite temperament from many generations
well, then, in that bland-
observed tho youth, no
need for you to worry further, for I
am fishing for
of fuming, drudging women.
Partly because she Is too convention-
too bound by traditions to system-
her work and to demand the la-
devices to which her
in the entitles her, and to
To War on Materialism. i cultivate Hint particular brand of but
To combat the materialism of the ,,, which leads her husband and sons
present age In earnest a society has to easiest and quickest
of rests, plentiful diet, all
the fresh air there la. This regime
baa cured tens of thousands of
of tuberculosis, and will cure
of thousands more.
Just been founded In Paris by Ed
Rostand, Maeterlinck and Ca-
and Is receiving the
enthusiastic support of the thinking
public. A large number of members
have already enrolled themselves,
among the being some
of the leading figures in French
thought. The found, rs are calling
upon all who are willing to fight for
the higher Ideals of art, literature and
science. In the face of the decadence,
now threatening French taste, to Join
their ranks
Several branches, It Is announced,
are being formed In tho and
abroad.
of accomplishing the tusk.
Piles Cured in to
Your will refund if
I Mi fails to cure any cat. of Itching,
Wind. l-i n . .
The lint Hutu
Less Coal Used In Making
Tho quantity of coal required to
produce a ton of coke Is much less
formerly. The average In
compared with ten years ago, Is
probably at least pounds It Is
doubtful If in the earlier years the
yield of coal in coke exceeded
per cent., whereas In 1912 It was
per cent., according to the
States geological survey. This gain is
largely due to the increase In the
production of by-product coke, In which
the yield of coke from a ton of coal Is
very much higher than in bee
hive coke.
Eagle, the plug of
Sim Cured tobacco, I have U. D. W.
THE BEST HOT WEATHER TONIC,
GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
The Old Standard, General Drives out Malaria,
Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System.
FOR GROWN AND CHILDREN.
It is s combination IRON in a tasteless form that wonder-
fully strengthens and fortifies the system to withstand the depressing
the hot summer. chill TONIC has no equal Malaria,
Chills and Fever, Weakness, general debility and loss appetite. Gives life
vigor to Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Biliousness with-
out g. Relieves nervous depression low spirits. Arouses the liver to
action d purifies the blood. A Tonic sad Sure A Complete
Guaranteed by Druggist. We mean it. SO cents.
Jenny California Debut.
At Monterey, Cal., formerly a part
of Mexico, and coded to the United
States during the Mexican war, Is the
first public building built In California
and now a broken-down,
racked ruin of adobe, relates the
Health Magazine. In this building
Jenny made first California
debut, and when the gold the
miners had thrown upon the
Hugo after her performance was
up It was found to fill two five-
gallon oil twenty pounds
of gold, and equal In value to about
Another curious building Is a
police station which Is built within
the braces of an oil derrick, and for
unique buildings certainly establishes
a record.
In School Days.
The was a leading member
of the village club, and was
particularly Interested In the courses
of reading literary criticism,
which were the subjects of written
essays.
One day she had occasion to remind
her all-work of short-
coming. This led to a week's notice
from the latter, accompanied by the
and I won't take that
from the likes of you, hasn't fin-
her York
Evening Post
Pound His Titles Costly.
The Duke of Wellington Prince
of Waterloo, though he never called
himself so, and had many other ti-
for which be once bad to pay
dear. He told a map to order dinner
for him at a particular hotel, and the
man did so, mentioning all the duke's
titles. Presently the duke came and
waited a long time. the dinner
not he asked;
you bring the dinner are
replied the waiter, th
rest of the They pi
dinner about twenty
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 AND NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
Is the Meet the Met Healthful, the Host el
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-
I ACQUAINTED WITH
I THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL THEM WHAT YOU
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
ARE LOW AND CAN
BE HAD UPON
VOLUME
. SEPTEMBER
SCHOOLS NOW OPEN
They Have Aggregate attendance
Exceeding One thousand
s U Mil Us IN
THE LIBEL CASE
Teachers Are Employed
la the Schools Now Running.
More
to Open,
Fourteen graded schools in Pitt
county have up to the present time
opened their doors for the fall term
of 1913. In each case the outlook Is
bright for a prosperous year, and all
of the are working hard to
accomplish the greatest results with
their pupils.
Those schools which to date
opened for the new term Farm-
ville, Ayden, Bethel, Grimes-
land, Fountain, King's Cross Roads
Stokes. Some of
the schools In this list opened early
in the month, and the others have
been falling in line all the while
With this large number already run-
however, there arc still a large
number of the schools of the county
that have not started their terms for
the coming year. These will begin
on each Monday from this time to
and through October on which date
schools will open which will fill In
all the gaps, and which will
the entire list from the whole
By that time all of the
white in the county will
opened.
In all of the schools the attend-
has greatly Increased, This U
due, in some instances, to the In-
creased facilities of the various
schools to handle larger numbers
students, though most of It Is per-
haps due to the compulsory
law recently passed by the
When all of the schools of
tho county started there
will be, according to a conservative
estimate, between and
white children in attendance upon
the public schools of Pitt county.
The ten schools that have opened,
not Including the local graded school,
f employment to forty-three
Only one school has but a
single teacher, while tho number
as high us eleven, which Is In
County Superintendent
stated today that ho could very well
a largo number of additional
teachers If tho county was to
pay for them. Ho said that If the
school fund were at least
than it is, cent of It might
well spent to advantage, and with
greater and better results.
The graded school at
has not as yet opened. This Is due
to the fact that tho town has no ac-
for Us children. Prior
to last year, the children of the town
had been attending tho
High School, but tho four lowest
grades In that Institution been
cut out since the of the past
session. A two-room school building
is being erected at and
will be ready for use very shortly.
Judge Manning. His Counsel, Gets in
Evidence Detrimental to
And Keeps Out Some VI.-
Elizabeth City., Sept. State
did not fare so well today in the
of testimony in the case of State
against L. O. Saunders, editor of The
Independent upon the charge of
libel upon E. F.
The attorneys for the defense man-
aged to get before the Jury business
transactions which have appeared in
other trials for the purpose of
peaching the character of Mr.
the State's witness. They also
succeeded In having ruled out of the
testimony an affidavit of the late Clay
Foreman in regards to the transaction
between Mr. and the Browne
of New York and himself.
This testimony was considered by
the State of vital Importance, and
the defense scored a victory when It
was ruled out
Mr. spent the greater part
of the day on the stand In cross-ex-
which was conducted by
ex-Judge Manning and In re-direct ex-
The cross-examination will be con-
tomorrow morning when the
argument will begin. A mistrial or
an acquittal Is freely predicted by
those who have attended the trial
and heard the evidence.
Large Amount Tobacco Was Brought
Here Yesterday
SALES WERE BLOCKED
T STATE AID
TO
DIVORCE CASE
WAS REOPENED TODAY
Many Counties Are Requesting
Services
SPEAKERS AT UTAH SCHOOL.
National
PLANO. Sept.
thousand farmers experts In
gathered hero for the
thirty-third annual of the
National Congress which
opened here today for a session ex-
tending over four days. It Is
ed to he the largest national lath-
of ever held In
C. W. and C. J. Jack-
son Address Student.
Sept. C.
W. Blanchard, of Kinston, was a
come visitor at the High
School today. Ho conducted chapel
exercises and then made a short talk
to the
Mr. C. J. Jackson, state Y. M. C. A.
secretary of Tennessee, was also pres-
and responded to the call for a
speech in a most pleasing and help-
manner. Ho Is old Pitt
boy and former student of W. H. S.
and tho school and county may be
justly proud of him.
Both talks full of earnest
thoughtful endeavor to point
things that are worth in life
cannot fall to of value to all
who heard them.
There Is so much work to be done
hero that everybody, even father,
works. Merchants, manufacturers
contractors, farmers are all In
need of more labor, and Is not
a vacant house In town. Would It
not a good thing for one with
to invest to build some
ODD FELLOWS TO INITIATE.
Lodge Will Take Club of
Fifteen at Early Date.
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. O.
F., has Just received the application
of fifteen new candidates for
In the local lodge, eleven of
which proposed at a meeting
held -no week ago last night, and
live of which received last night.
Odd Fellow lodges all over North Car-
arc making a effort
the fall months to bring into the
order as many new members as they
can get and the local Is de-
to do its share In the work.
Committees are now at work on
the list of candidates that have been
received, and soon as men
elected to membership, tho de-
of the order will be Conferred
upon them.
Whether we get bout line or not,
our people should not allow mat-
to slip by unnoticed.
country. state of the Is
represented and from Illinois
there are thousand
In attendance.
Are Good and at the Present
Time Average Twenty Cents.
This Is Ear Above
Average.
Sales of tobacco on the Greenville
market during yesterday, and that
part of today which was occupied by
the sales that ran over from
day, have been record-breakers of
the season on this market. One
mate of the number of pounds that
were yesterday brought here for sale
placed the figure at This
may and it may not be accurate, but
some have expressed their belief that
the market contained about that much
yesterday.
Seven hundred thousand pounds of
tobacco Is the most that has been
on this market during the present
season, and yesterday's was one
of the only three that have been
blocked this year, thought It was much
the larger of tho number. Two ware-
houses In all failed to dispose of all
the weed on their during the
day, and their sales continued
until this morning. of the first
sale today beginning with the houses
scheduled, the two selling forces went
to the houses that failed to get through
yesterday.
While the sale today Is thought
to be a little above the overage, it
Is that all of the weed on
tho local market will be disposed of
before tho hour for the day's work
to be done.
It can stated that prices for
tobacco have scarcely ever been bet-
than they are the present
time. The average for the past few
days was given this afternoon at
nearly twenty cents, and this Is said
to be high and very good.
WANT MONEY'S WORTH
STILL COMING IN.
Training School Faculty Busy
Largo Students.
Tho second day of tho opening of
tho session of the Training School
finds a much large number of young
Indies in the roll than was the case
All day the officers of
the have been busy register-
students, and practically all
of the students who had previously
for rooms have now arrived.
Young ladies still coming to
town to tho coming session of
tho school, the attendance will be
considerably larger than the number
that can be at tho Train-
School, as It Is known that not n
few have secured rooms and board In
town. Tho formal opening exercises
will conducted tomorrow morning
In tho chapel of tho administration
BOSTON, Mass. Sept.
divorce case of vs. Ran-
which was heard In February last,
and in which the complaint, Mrs. Ran-
avowed her love for Chester C.
a wealthy society man of
Boston and New London, who had
been a classmate of her husband at
Harvard, was reopened today, when
the petition of Mrs. for a
modification of the divorce decree
up for hearing In the superior
divorce court at East Cambridge.
The proceedings In the divorce
were quite sensational and owing to
the social prominence of the parties
concerned, attracted considerable at-
Mrs. charged her
husband with cruel and abusive treat-
and was given a decree, giving
the custody of the children
the eight months of the school
year and alimony amounting to
a month. In her petition Mrs. Ran-
claims that Mr. has vi-
the terms of the decree In
respects and she demands more
alimony.
ANTI-TRUST
SUIT AGAINST
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
WASHINGTON, Sept Attorney
General will soon bring
a civil anti-trust suit to compel the
South Pacific Railroad to relinquish
the Pacific In accordance with
the announcement he made In
; with the Union Pacific-Southern
Pacific dissolution.
The entire of Central
stock Is owned by the South-
BUSINESS MEN GO
TO RALEIGH MEET
-large Delegation Greenville
at freight Rare Conference
State Appropriates Only An-
for the Work, and
This Amount Is too
Small.
North. Carolina
Survey
The legislature of 1913 at its reg-
session passed about road
bills of s local nature, practically
all of them providing for the
of funds for roads
by a bond Issue or special tax, and
one bill applying to all the counties
of the state, except four, by which
any can vote In
bonds. These enactments have made
it possible for the counties and town-
ships to vote bonds to the extent of
U Since
the adjournment of the legislature
about in bonds have been
voted. Absolutely no provision was
by the legislature for tho sys-1
and economic expenditure of
this money, and It WU left entirely
to local officials.
Pacific, Mr. has not
The present method of handling the yet determined where the suit will he
road problem and spending the road brought.
fund in most of the counties of North
Carolina Is that there Is spent, Dr. Hyatt Coming,
each year in actual cash and labor I Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be In Green-
an amount approximating at Hotel Proctor Monday, Oct.
practically nothing to show for it in 6th, to treat diseases of the eve end
the way of road construction or main- fit glasses,
so it is a well-recognized u
fact that methods of road m-mm
construction and maintenance We realize that to
are absolute and entirely inadequate. fall our to the
A great many of the counties and greatest possible outcome will hurt
townships realizing this, and further work very much,
turning to the state for help; and ls n chance to get from the
the highway department of the department surveying, or an
Survey receives almost or supervisor while the
requests for road engineers to assist work is being done
in building sometimes stretches Assuring you that will greatly
road which are to be paid for by sub-1 appreciate an early reply and any
of private who you may be in a position to of-
this In order to ob- for j
Jest lesson to fellow county cit-1 Tours very truly,
In building; other requests O. U CLARK. President,
from counties to assist them in the County Good Roads
construction, and ton
mice of their roads; and limited appropriation of
from many townships having limited makes It not only
bond Issue, and which wish to get for road en-
full value of tho money which but even to carry on the
they have strenuous effort educational work in the way of road
to obtain. In other words, the addresses, which are being called for
ties are now looking to the state the state. In every other
Resistance In public road building, ,,,,, whore highway work Is being
public roads arc no longer 10- carried on successfully, there ls a
cal matters and their proper build- highway commission, along
mid maintenance are of the lines of efficiency rather than
t- all of tho citizens of the state. and North Carolina is In
Below Is a letter recently received of ,,,. department
MISS MEETING LAST NIGHT
AT THE SCHOOL.
w Pupils I The
Classes Today, And Work Is
Regular class work was started at
the graded schools today, and by this
time everything Is In good running or-
The opening of tho this
morning found several new students
On hand to .-liter Home of the classes.
A few of then various reasons
could not It convenient to be
present on the opening day yesterday,
and that partially accounts for their
tardiness In entering.
from Mr. O. L, Clark, president of the
County Good Roads
which l a good sample of those
which constantly being received
by the Highway Department of the
N. C, Sept. 1913.
in-. Joseph Hyde Pratt,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Dear
The . of and Eliza-
have gotten up
to the amount of about
with which to connect the two towns
With sand-Clay road. ex-
anxious that every dollar of
this money does It.-, full duty, that the
results may show to tho best ad-
vantage, and further stimulate the
interest that we have drummed up
If this is not established, it is more
than likely that the major part of
the money now being raised for road
work will be foolishly expended. In
great many Instances, the engineers
are refusing to work for county
because their surveys are not
accepted; and mads continue, even In
this enlightened age. to be located by
local politics, and where such Is the
case, no competent engineers will
stay on the Job.
Those who have Studied road mat-
feel that the state has reached
a more or crucial point, and
less steps are taken In the right
In the matter of furnishing
aid. we are going to make a
big mistake, the of which on-
the will reveal.
I u Adopted the
Latest Proposal of the Ball-
roads In the Con.
j.
Gathered on the eve of the great-
est convention of Its kind ever held
in this state, the members of the
Pitt County Just Freight Rate
at the court house last
unanimously passed strong
condemning the latest
of the railroads In the matter
of the dispute over freight rates in
North Carolina. The association met
at the call of the president, and the
meeting was held as a sort of a dis-
of enthusiasm among the
tress men the great fight that is
this week being staged In the Capitol
of the state.
To a man the audience
bled In the court last
was ready to rise In arms against
tho discrimination of the railroads
toward North Carolina
and shippers. They were thorough-
aroused to the importance of the
meeting that Is today being held In
Raleigh, where, in the big city
many hundreds of the bus-
men of the state are discussing
this same proposition, and are plan-
Home method of crushing the
unjust treatment according this state
at the hands of the railroads doing
business in the state.
As a proof of their position In the
matter, about one dozen of the fore-
most business men of the town left
this morning and yesterday afternoon
for Raleigh to be present at the meet-
of the state organization of the
freight association. Those who
will be there from Greenville are,
aside from tho local representatives
the General E. D.
C. M. Warren, J. J.
It. R. Cotton, W. J. E. G.
Flanagan, H. Moore. C. II. West.
The following resolutions were
passed last night and will be
to the meeting in Raleigh to-
First, That we endorse the
that the legislature create a rail-
road commission composed of two
members to be appointed by the gov-
Second, That we strongly oppose
the acceptance of the terms com-
promise as submitted by the railroads,
Third, That we demand that the
state of North he dealt with
fairly and Justly in establishing
freight rates.
fourth, That we hereby request
our representatives in tho General
Assembly to exert every effort to this
end.
This September 1913.
PITT COUNTY FREIGHT RATE
ASSOCIATION,
E. . HIGGS, Pros.
C. M. WARREN, Sec.
To Rules.
NEW YORK,
between the
football rules committee, tho central
board of officials and tho and
managers of college football
for the purpose of deciding various
points in the, Interpretation of foot-
bull rules will be held at the Hotel
wee-


Title
Eastern reflector, 19 September 1913
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 19, 1913
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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