Eastern reflector, 3 October 1913


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





WINTERVILLE NOTES.
Attendance Steadily Increasing t the
High
WINTERVILLE, Sept
Lottie Ellis left this morning for.
Wake Forest where she will visit
See A. W. Ange and Company for
doors, window's, blinds and panes.
Mr. C. J. Jackson, state Y. M. C.
A. secretary of Tennessee has been
visiting friends and relatives here
recently.
If it is paints and oils you want.
see Harrington, Barber and Company.
Misses Lucy and Lula Tucker from
near Greenville have been visiting,
relatives here.
C. P. Cox offers his horse and bug-
for The horse is a good
roadster, young, gentle and kind
sound and solid. Will sell together
or separate.
Fresh butter and cheese at Cox
and House.
Rev. Robert Strange, bishop of
Eastern North Carolina, will preach
at St. Luke's Episcopal church Fri-
day the 26th, at p. m., also on
Saturday at o'clock a. m. Ev-
one cordially Invited.
goods, notions and shoes re-
to cost. Cox and House.
Go to A. W. Ange and Co. for
cook stoves, ranges, heaters, wood
and coal. Also for coal to burn.
Winterville Hotel for sale. See
Mrs. Malissia Vincent Price right
terms easy.
New goods coming in daily, dry
goods, groceries, hardware of all
guns, rifles, cartridges and
of different kinds and sizes.
us for prices. B. D. Forrest and Co.
If you want oysters, sausage or
beef, come to see us. We are better
to serve you than ever be-
fore. R. W.
We are continually opening up
fancy goods of all kinds. We
ally Invite you to come and look
et our stock. R. D. Forrest and Co.
Go to Kittrell and Co., for your bl-
cycle and repairs.
See Harrington, Barber and Co.,
for your work shoes and dress shoes.
They have Just received a large ship-
When you want beef, sausage, fish,
barbecue or meats of any kind, Bea
R. W.
The Odd Fellows of Winterville vis-
their sister lodge at Ayden Mon-
day night. They report a very
trip and an excellent time-
When you are in need of feed of
any kind go to Kittrell and Co. they
can supply your wants.
When you mention to
any farmer in the country they
know you are referring to the best
brand of cart or wagon. The A. G.
Cox Mfg., Co., are prepared to turn
out the best and more of their
wagons and carts the coming season
than any previous year. Be sure you
Inquire as to the reputation of the
Tar brand before you buy any
make of carts or wagon.
Every day Is bringing new students
to the Winterville High School which
Is now nearly filled to Its full capacity.
Only a very few more can be
ed for and enlargement to meet the
increasing need is imperative.
IT WAS SO PUZZLING
By JOHN NEWTON.
REAL ES-
TATE FOR SALE.
The or Anderson Farm, con-
of eighty-three acres, almost
within the city limits. Great
for investors to double their
money in short time
The offer for sale either as a
whole or subdivided to suit the
chaser, the or Anderson Farm
located about three-eights of a mile
from the corporate limits of the
thrifty, progressive city of Greenville,
and not more than twelve or fifteen
walk from the business
This property is probably the most
Mealy located for truck farming of
any land near Greenville. Two sand
clay roads lead from the property
Into Greenville and at the present
rate of in population
Greenville it will In a very few years
become valuable as building sites
This land in several feet higher than
the town and is most beautiful
and desirable for homes of
any property near the town. The
land Is a light gray underlaid
With subsoil and produces all
crops common to this Al-
though considered at tho time we
into possession rather In and
run down, we have averaged a little
more than a pound hale of cotton
to Hie acre during the last three year.
This Is In reality a great
i i in. boat town
In pastern C. It is conservative;
progressive rests on a
solid foundation in consequent
Value today seem high will
pear marvelously cheap almost be-
fore you are aware of It.
If you are Interested call on
write
j. s. Weldon, N. c.
O. L. Greenville K
and were sitting on
the divan In the smoking room talk-
of a fair haired lady. The still-
of the night, the red light of the
lamp on the armors, swords and
shields on the wall, the strong Turk-
tobacco wrapped everything In the
room in a blue fog and led their
Into the empire of mystery.
They talked of many things in the ab-
though the principal subject of
was a golden-haired
lady who was very real Indeed.
know that I am madly in love
with said the magnate.
I see her I have to use all my
self-control not to throw myself at her
feet But week we were
on our way towards the Turkish ruin
and it was getting dark as we return-
ed. She and I had walked a little
ahead of the others. We stopped on
a bridge to wait for them. Below us
the Danube was rushing and above
our heads the moon was shining.
Suddenly I felt her hand gripping my
arm and she can look into
your very soul as If it were made from
I can read every word writ-
ten there. Sorely you can also read
mine. No, please do not say any-
Strange words, you must
admit. I did not answer. The others
caught up with us. was unusual-
quiet all the rest of the evening.
Occasionally she looked at me and
smiled sadly.
what happened asked
the poet, very much interest-
ed.
arranged a new excursion to
and then we drove home.
The next day we started out In six
carriages. She sat opposite and until
we reached was bubbling
with good humor. There some
gypsies began singing their ugly
songs. Her face had turned
quite pale and she bit her lips nervous-
At last I did not dare say any-
thing more to her, for I felt her soul
was filled with bitterness. Suddenly
she arose and went away from the
rest of us to sit down alone on a
bench In the wood. I followed her
and noticed that her were foil
of tears and her was convulsed
with
do tell me what is the matter
with I asked.
stamped her foot angrily and
leave ma An
hoar later drove home alone with-
out laying to anybody. Bat
now comes the strangest part of all.
When we returned we passed her
villa. She stood on the balcony with
her slater waving her hand at us, and
when my carriage passed she threw
a red rose to me and cried
What do you think of this,
my friend How am I to explain the
sudden change in her treatment of
me She must have a secret But j
what can it
very interesting said
would be something to a
poet to look into her soul. Perhaps
he might be able to solve the
Now, here is the real explanation.
On the day of the excursion to Rock-
Irma had Just received a pair of
new shoes, which, of course, she must
put on right away. Until they reached
as long they were sitting
In the carriage, everything was well,
but when she put her foot on the
ground she might have screamed with
pain. She felt It she were sitting
on a crater of glowing lava bathing
her feet in It. The others who no-
her distorted face began to
question her and to put an end to
this she walked to the bench in the
wood and when did not leave
her alone even there she had an at-
tack of nervous crying. At last the
pain became so unendurable that she
drove home. As soon as she got rid
of the two instruments of torture she
felt as happy as ever before and her
happiness culminated when she saw
driving by and she threw him
the rose.
The next day the golden-haired girl,
beautiful and charming as ever, prom-
In the park.
In front of the bandstand she met
who at first felt rather em-
but Irma's bewitching smile
soon gave him back his courage.
An hour later called on his
friend, the poet In a button-
bole was a rose Irma had worn In
the morning. As soon as he saw An-
he burst
me, old boy, Irma has
promised to be my
But neither of the two ever mo
In solving the riddle of Mrs
Irma life.
SCHOOL
By John
Still sits the school-house by the road,
A rugged beggar sunning;
Around it still the sumacs grow,
And blackberry vines are running.
Within the masters desk is seen,
Deep scarred by raps official;
The warping floor, the battered seats,
The jack-knife carved initial,
The charcoal frescoes on the wall;
Its door's worn still betraying
The feet that, creeping slow to school.
Went storming out to playing.
Long ago a winter sun
Shone over it at setting;
Lit up the western window-panes,
And low eaves icy fretting.
It touched the tangled golden curls,
And brown eyes full of grieving,
Of one who still her steps delayed
When all the rest were leaving.
For near her stood little boy
His childish favor singled;
His cap pulled low upon a face
Where pride and shame were mingled.
Pushing with restless feet the snow
To right and left, he
As restlessly her tiny hands
The blue-checkered apron fingered.
He saw her lift her eyes, he felt
The soft light caressing,
And heard the tremble of her voice
As if a fault confessing.
sorry I spent the word;
I hate to go above you.
brown eyes lower fell
you see, I love
Still memory to a gray-haired man
That sweet child-face is showing,
Dear girl I the grasses on her grave
Have forty years been growing
He lived to learn in life's hard school,
How few who pass above him,
Lament their triumph and his loss,
Like they love him.
OLD-FASHIONED GIRL
By ROB
two Very Popular Greenville
People Wed
BEST HOT WEATHER TONIC,
GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
The Old Standard, General Tonic. Drives out Malaria,
Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System.
FOR GROWN PEOPLE AND CHILDREN.
It is a combination of QUININE and IRON in s tasteless form that wonder-
fully strengthens and fortifies the system to withstand the depressing effect of
the hot summer. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC for Malaria,
Fever, Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life
vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness with-
out purging. Relieves nervous depression low spirits. Arouses the liver to
action purifies the blood. A True Tonic Sure Appetizer. A Complete
Strengthener. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. cents.
C.
Black Eagle, the best plug of
Cured tobacco, have It D. W
Found Doctor Didn't Need Him.
Wedding cut In Clay Center have
a new form of diversion. The Times
tells about a Clay Center
young man was going to be married.
The day of the affair. In the morning a
friend pretending to be Dr. Olsen,
phoned him, telling him that under the
new law a man had undergo a phys-
examination by tho city health
officer before he could get married. I
He took It all In, In solemn earnest, j
and went to I office for the
examination. Olsen being city health
officer Reaching the office he told I
the doctor he was ready for the exam-
What asked
Olsen. examination you told me
would have to undergo. I am the
young who Is to be
one has been playing a Joke on
you, my was the doctor's an-
and man has about
come to that conclusion
he h pi -t -1 -n lay
City
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. I was hardly able
to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles
of I began to feel like a new woman. soon
gained pounds, and now, do all my housework,
as well as run a big water mill.
wish every suffering woman would give
The Woman's Tonic
a trial. I still use when I 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
tonic. 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
MOVED
Into N Stable.
Corner a Streets
HAM SHORT
Transfer Men
and
Promptness
Phone No. Night or Day
Meets ell Trains
The Medicine In the World
little girl had dysentery very
I thought she would die.
and
cured her, and I can truthful-
say that I think It Is the best mod-
In the Mrs.
limn Clare, Mich. For sale by
II druggists.
The eastern express rushed Into the
little western Junction and
abruptly. A
porter opened
the with
a clatter and a
bang and
set the lit-
box step on the
platform From
Inner
of the stuffy cars
tired travelers I
looked out on the
nondescript row Of
cheap saloons
standing In the
and
sank wearily on
the
seats. The train
stood an
empty church.
Oat of this torn-
atmosphere
came a young man
with a laded look
on his face. In
his hand he bore a heavy
bag and, without noticing the porter's
presence, he made his way across the
dusty street to the j
A heavy Mexican stirred In his sleep
on a bench by the doorway he en-;
and the barkeep mopped the
flies and stale beer from the counter.
Young Ellis walked to the sink, and,
setting his valise In the corner, turned
the faucet. No water came and he
walked indifferently to the front of
the saloon. The young man, nervous,
from dissipation, stood absently
his last silver dollar in bis
pocket
A sharp-eyed man, costless, entered
from the rear, and, a glance
at the well-dressed stranger, stepped
behind one of the gaming tables,
removing the faded cover, began toy-
with the stacks of chips with
feigned Ellis knew he
would play his last dollar. He was
but waiting with a gambler's instinct
for the propitious moment when he
found himself listening to a group
about one of the drinking tables. A
heavy jowled Mexican sat stupidly
a large beer glass with a
hand bearing a brass ring like a,
dog collar; next him sat a poor Mex-
dandy with a repulsive smile;
girl eat drinking at the table with
them, her back to Ellis.
He turned away. he
laying his dollar on the roulette table.
As he did so. a girl the
Window, and Ellis, startled,
followed her with eye.
Bo good, so pure, so noble a face
he had not seen for years; and the
contrast with the surroundings of the
saloon Impressed the young man with
a deep sense of shame for his
The croupier gathered In the chips
here and there and stacked the win-
on the lucky number. The ball
was flying over the wheel like some
caged thing when the youth moved
the stack to thirty-five. He won. He
played the black; he played the ends,
two for one. His winnings grew at
every play. The loungers gathered
about, envious, silent, Intent. Black
or was the same, and the
stack of his winnings grew steadily.
you wish to raise the price of
the game You are
Ellis raised his eyes at the
voice and was about to make
reply when, glancing through the open
; window again, he the young girl.
he said reverently.
said the gambler.
said Bills, shoving
the chips across the table.
called an angry voice.
I on, give me the two
But she was pushing through the
crowd toward Ellis and the Black of
bright silver he slowly pocketing.
She was at his elbow when he turned.
brought you she said.
let's have a
With a feeling of deep disgust, he
was about to press a coin Into her
palm, when something In her appear-
arrested With a heavy
hand he turned her face Into his, and
he looked wildly Into bis eyes.
I she gasped.
Trembling with agitation, he drew
her out through the door. The voice
of her Mexican lover, high In
floated after them, as, not know-
how, her new friend supported
the shrinking girl to a bench.
Prudence It be
They sat In silence, the girl dry-
eyed and rebellious.
he said, when he
able to speak, you see that little
girl pass the
hate her, I hate cried the
fallen girl.
reminded me strangely of you,
Prudence, when we were children to-
back there on the old Che-
pang. Have you forgotten how hap-
, you tripped about the quiet old
village; how demurely you sat In
church between your stern old undo
and your kind aunt Have you no
memory of the old scenes, the old
life, the old friends. They are longing
for you. Let mo send you
The girl was weeping silently. That
night, as the train that eastward
was carrying back to the fold one who
had strayed afar off, and as off to the
south with new purposes In his
Staunch Ellis turned his face, a little
maiden In the junction town,
Innocent as Is the way side flower
of the Influence of Its life, knelt by
her bed and thanked God that
; well with the world.
I by fort Pub.
Two well-known and popular Green
people were married last Thurs-
day at the home of the bride's sis-
Mrs. R. Williams, when the
was performed that made Mr.
J. Frank and Miss Sophie Bark-
tr Jarvis man and wife. The wedding
was a very quiet home affair, and
only members of the family and a
few of the friends of the
couple were present for the occasion.
The ceremony was performed at
o'clock by Rev. C. M. Rock, pas-
tor of the Baptist church.
after the marriage the happy
couple tarried at the home a few
moments to receive the
of their friends and then left
immediately for the station, where
they boarded the Atlantic Coast Line
train for the north. Mr. and Mrs.
will be out of town for
proximately three weeks, during
which time they will visit most of the
large cities of the north, Niagara
Falls, and Chicago.
Among the out of town people
were here for tho wedding were Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Jarvis of
Mexico, and Mr. R. B. Jarvis, of San-
ford Florida. Mr. J. B. Jarvis
ed In Greenville last night from New
York, where on last Monday he was
married to Miss Emily Green, and is
himself a married man of only a few
While coming primarily for the
marriage of Ms sister. Mr. Jarvis had
planned a vacation trip to Greenville
his wife, since it has been some
lime since be has been in this town.
Mr. and Mrs. are well known
in Greenville, where they have made
their home for many years. Both
come from distinguished and
families, and scores of friend
here and elsewhere will he Interested
in the news of the wedding and will
wish for the couple a long and hap-
life.
LADY DEAD.
Mrs. Sarah Ann Smith Passed Away
Monday Evening.
WINTERVILLE, N. C
Mrs. Sarah Ann Smith, who lived
near here, was struck with paralysis
Monday morning while she was la
her garden. It was soon found that
she was seriously She continued
to grow worse until about five
Monday evening when she
passed away. Mrs. Smith was a
good woman, loved and honored by all
who knew her. She leaves seven
children, four daughters and three
sons and many friends who mourn
her death. Her remains were taken
to the cemetery and gently laid to
rest, many friends being present.
NEGRO SLAYER SURRENDERS.
Hill, the who killed Charlotte
on the night of July 4th.
walked into the police headquarters
and gave himself up last night. He
fled after the killing, and finally beat
his way back up to Richmond, and
finally decided to come back hero and
give up. It Is said to have been a
pelf-defense murder.
DROPS
THE BEST
REMEDY
For all of
RHEUMATISM
Catarrh
STOP THE PAIN
Gives Quick Relief
I It stops the and pains, re-
swollen Joints and
acts almost magic Destroys
acid and Is Quick,
ears and sure In Its results. No
other remedy like n.
free on request.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS
One Dollar per or seat
I paid upon receipt of If not
In locality,
RHEUMATIC CUBE CO. ,
IN
SKIN SORES
SALT MM
MM H M
SALVE
QUICKLY HEALED
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 EVERYTHING TO
OFFER IN THE WAY OF
LABOR, CAPITAL AND
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES.
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE
JOB A N D NEWSPAPER
PLANT.
the Most the Most Healthful, the Enjoyment 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
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
ARE LOW AND CAN
BE HAD UPON
VOLUME
JEWS CELEBRATE
THEIR NEW YEAR
While Re Elaborate Program Has
Been Prepared Local Hebrews
Will Observe New Year's
Day
GREENVILLE, K. C, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. OCTOBER
NUMBER l.-i.
Small Boy Is Run Over by
Wheels of Dray This
Morning
TESTS OF
IS
Willie Slade, a small boy employed
by the Ricks Grocery Company, was
run over by a dray wagon this morn-
and very painfully hurt. Medical
Though no program nor any sort i attention was given him as soon as
of formal exercises will mark the
the Jewish people of
town will tomorrow observe their
New Year's Day. The holiday is
annual occurrence with the Hebrew
people all over the world, and it will
begin at ti o'clock this evening, and
last until that hour tomorrow even-
There are in Greenville not
enough members of the Hebrew con-
to have a synagogue here,
but the individuals will take
of the holiday.
This holiday, or New Year's day, Is
known to the Jewish people as
and in the Jewish reckon-
of time is known as the begin-
of the year The day is as
old as the race itself, and the year is
to be from the
creation of the world.
possible after the accident happen-
ed, and it is thought that the little
fellow will be out in a few days.
The boy was riding his bicycle at
the time of the accident, and was de-
livering groceries for the Arm. He
was run down by the big dray, and
thrown from the bicycle, the heavy
wheels passing over his abdomen
After making an examination of the
boy's Injuries, the doctor stated that
Ms bladder was affected by the great
pressure of the wheels, and that tho
little fellow would have to remain
If. his bed for several days.
Y. M. C. A.
The following Information as to
the holiday Is to be observed by
the Hebrew people to clipped form
the News and Observer of today, and
will afford interesting
meaning and purpose of this
festival of New Year's day by th
Jews Is not set forth explicitly In the
but Is Inferred from the Scrip-
titles of the day, Memo-
rial of Blowing of as found
In Leviticus and of Blow
found In Numbers
as well as from the fact that
Jewish New Year la the seventh new
moon of the Hebrew calendar. In
age every new moon was
regarded a solemn occasion, and
the seventh, tho number, was
especially so.
It became the day of the Blow-
of the excellence
reminding the Israelites that a now
period of time begins; and that no
occasion could be more appropriate
for the endeavor after a new life for
amendment and reconciliation with
God. It was tho day of memorial
when felt himself held by Go I
In merciful remembrance. But If
would have God of
him, he must mindful of his re-
to Him and to
higher nature. The symbolic act of
sounding the or man's horn,
which Is preformed In the synagogue
In obedience to tho Scriptural
Is intended to bring home to the
Israelites this aspect of the day's
Winterville High School Students go
State at Durham.
WINTERVILLE, Oct. Lou-
Recently Purchased for the Town
By the Board of Aldermen
IS TAKEN TRIAL
But It Is Very Likely That the Ma.
chine Will Be Bought Will
Cost the Town
WAS
Started Up Its Business on Last
Monday Morning
HAD ARM
Suffered Painful In-
jury Few Nights Ago.
Patrolman E. T. night man
the local police force. Is carrying
a broken arm as a result of a chase
that he and Policeman George Clark
had a few nights ago. Tho two
went to the of the Norfolk
Southern railroad to board the in-
coming early morning train. They
were on the lookout for a who
was supposed to get off in that vi-
Each man was riding on the
platform of the car, and when
train had reached that point where
they wished to get off, Mr.
Jumped, and fell on bis arm break-
It In two places. They failed to
get their man.
Dr. Hyatt Coming.
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will he In Green-
ville at Hotel Proctor Monday, Oct
to treat diseases of the eve
tit glasses.
Carroll, assistant music
of Winterville High School is at her
homo in Clinton, N. C, at the bed-
side of her mother, who is very sick.
Messrs. S. Robertson, S. D.
and R. H. Chaise left this
morning to attend the Y. M. C. A.
student conference which meets at
Trinity College, Durham, C., this
week.
Dr. of Ayden, spent Mon-
day here examining the teeth of the
students of Winterville High School.
For food talk to R. W.
Rev. Mr. of Ayden,
holding services at the Free Will
church this week.
Mr. Wiley Williams, of Greenville,
was here yesterday.
See our cook stoves, ranges and
heaters, we can the most
fastidious.
Mr. A. G. Cox went to Kinston Mon-
day to Bee wife who is in the
hospital. We are glad to know that
she can soon return home.
Stolen or one bicycle, single
tube tire on front and clincher
rear wheel. It has new crank hang-
era. Liberal reward offered for same
by returning to Kittrell and Co.
Mrs. F. C. Nye returned from En-
Held last night where spent th
with and Mrs. C. V.
When buy right can sell
right, therefore, we have the right
prices. Come to see me and con-
B. D. Forrest and Co.
Cold drinks, ice cream and candy
at Cox and House.
a hundred head beef
cattle and a hundred head of bar-
pigs. If you have any of
write R. W. Winterville.
See Harrington, Barber and Co for
your stuff and corn.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank James return-
ed from near Stokes where they had
been visiting bis sister.
Mr. at O. Bryan and family went
to Gum Swamp Sunday.
If you want guns, rifles, cartridges,
pistols or hardware of any kind come
to see A. W. Ange and Co.
Kittrell and Company wants to sell
you a wheel for cash or on
also do repair work.
Como to Bee us for floor
such matting, art squares, oilcloth
and foot mats. D. D. Forrest and
Co.
Messrs. M. B. Bryan and J. L.
went to Bethel Sunday.
Harrington, Barber and Company
will you money on the prices
of hay balers. It will pay you to see
them.
Test work of a new road machine
recently purchased by the town was
begun this morning when the new
machine was brought out and put on
the road. The trial work is being
done on Third street between Evans
and Pitt streets.
The work Is being done under the
supervision of the street commute.-
by the board of aldermen, and very
close attention is being given the
class of work that is being turned
out by the machine. Two
are driving the new road device, and
are of themselves learning how to
operate it. The services of two men
are needed, as one has to drive the
team and the other give his
to the surface of tho street, any
raise and lower the big scraper
levels the ground beneath.
By the use of the machine the
streets of the town can be kept In-
excellent condition, and it will In
time save the town much extra ex-
Tho work by the ma-
chine in one half a day is more than
a force of hands can do In
that length of time, and it Is believed
the machine will prove all that Is
claimed for it
At a recent meeting of the board
of aldermen a resolution was passed
instructing the street committee to
purchase the machine, and this war
done. It was secured from a Chicago
firm, and was shipped here on trial.
I will cost the town 9135.00 besides
the freight of a little more than
tut If it fails to give satisfaction. It
is to be placed back In tho depot in
this town and the firm notified that
the town will not purchase It.
Judging from the work that it
been doing this morning It is not
likely that the machine will at a
early date become the property
if the town.
Plant Is Modern in Re.
and Has a Capacity of
Sixty Bales Per
Day.
With a capacity of between sixty
and bales per day, the
now cotton gin that has recently been
constructed in this town began op-
last Monday morning. So far
the farmers are bringing much of
their cotton to this town to be gin-
in the new and bus
is enjoying a most liberal pat-
Tho plant is being operated en-
by electric current, and all of
the big gins are propelled in this way.
machinery in the plant is all
modern and up-to-date in every re-
and the plant is well and am-
ply equipped for bundling almost any
amount of cotton that will be brought
to it in any single day.
At the present time only four gins
are In operation, as only that
been installed. However,
four more will be put in as the de-
grows and as there is need
for additional facilities for handling
the cotton that is brought to the
When the wagon load of cotton is
brought in, the cotton is lifted through
a suction pipe into the gin, and when
the seeds have been removed and
the bale pressed, it is taken out and
loaded on the wagon by machinery
A market for the seeds Is found right
here in town, and the farmer has t.
only a block or two to And the
market for his bale of the fleecy
He can bring cotton
to Greenville, have It ginned, baled,
sold, and And B market for hie seed
right here.
Mr. Hardy Painfully Hurt on Las
Sunday By
Mr. H. Hardy, of the firm of
and on last Sunday
a very painful injury to right
while attempting to crank an auto-
mobile. When he had carried the
crank around several revolutions, and
the spark had been Ignited, the crane
flew back and struck his wrist
above the hand. Not thinking It to be
a very serious nature, he took but
little notice of the Injury, and went
on a long trip Sunday afternoon. On
Monday morning, however, he found
that hie hand was so sore that he
could not use it, and had to have It
attended by a physician. It is
thought that no bones were broken.
HE CASE TRIED THIS
TWO AC.
COOT ABSENCE OF
STORE CHANGES.
Pharmacy is Sold to Green-
rill Drug Company.
Beginning today the drug
known as Pharmacy will
be known as the Greenville Drug
Company. The business was sold
several weeks ago by Dr. T. G. Bas-
night to Messrs. J. K. Brown and
S. C. Gates, two capable and
young men who are well known
in this town, and who have the ex-
and the ability necessary to
make of the store a paying business
proposition.
Dr. has not announced
his plans for the future, but it is
that he will continue to live
Ir. Greenville and to practice his pro
in this town. He has built
up a very creditable practice here
and the people of the town have great
confidence in his as a physician.
The new Arm, under the name of
the Greenville Drug Company, will
open for business on next Saturday.
In the meantime the proprietors of
tho business will take inventory
the stock of goods now on hand in
the store.
ODER HEAVY
FOR SHOOTING WOMAN
ASK FOR RECORDER'S RT
Dakota Association
S. D Oct.
Today is the opening day of tho
day's annual convention of the South
Dakota Association and
several hundred members ore In at-
many of them accompanied
b their ladies. The business
will be held In the forenoons,
while tho afternoons and
be reserved for the entertainment
of the visitors.
going at cost Cox and House.
Kittrell and Company have just
purchased a gasoline They will
be In a position to supply you with
gasoline In a few days, also supply
you with cylinder oil. Give them n
trial.
For cigars, cigarettes and tobacco
Cox and House.
Mr. Ernest Langston Mies Al-
meta were married Sunday
They have gone to Washington, D
C. and other northern points on their
bridal tour.
F. C. Ailed Rev. N. H.
pulpit at Arlington street
church Rocky Mount Sunday morn
Wilson People Hold Mass Meeting
and Endorse Plan.
WILSON, Sept
with the opening of the Wilson
county superior court for the trial
criminal cases, with a heavy dock-
et and no possible chance of mater-
clearing it a mass meeting was
held In the court house yesterday
and resolutions adopted giving
endorsement to the proposed Wilson
county court, and a committee con-
of Messrs. W. A. Finch and
O. P. Dickinson appointed with
the request that they go Immediately
to Raleigh and urge tho passage of
the bill providing for the court which
will have jurisdiction in
ors and minor civil actions. In dis-
cussing the proposed bill Judge i;
W. Connor remarked that It would
ho practically Impossible to clear the
docket without additional court fa-
Holder, of
brook's Pistol Is In Hospital
Badly Injured.
Sept.
out Joy riding in a carriage last
Holder, a woman of questionable
character, was shot In tho shoulder
by DeWitt Holbrook, of Roanoke, Va.,
inflicting a serious wound. The man
and woman say they were drinking
claim that the shooting was
dental, Tho woman is In a
and it is thought will recover,
gave a thousand dollar bond
for his appearance at trial.
evening In the absence of
Dry goods, notions and the pastor.
BABY DIED YESTERDAY.
Infant of Mr. and Mr. I,. H.
tree Passed Away In Country.
Tho months old Infant of Mr.
and Mrs. L. H. Rountree died
day morning at the home of Its pa-
rents a short In the country.
The child was thought to be getting
along all right only a few days ago.
and Its death followed a very brief
Illness. The funeral services
held In Cherry Hill Cemetery this
at S o'clock.
SECOND EXTRA SESSION OF
TENNESSEE
Called by Got. Hooper to
Prohibition Law Enforcement
NASHVILLE, Sept
second extraordinary session of
Tennessee Legislature to consider pro-
law enforcement bills was
called today by Governor It. W. Hoop-
Tho session will open October
In his proclamation Governor Hoop-
declared tho sentiment of Ten-
voters not In
with tho action of tho legislature at
Its recent session when the law en-
measures were killed by a
Another session of the mayor
court was held this morning, and
several cases were set to come up
for trial. Two of the cases had to
be on account of the
being out of town.
The only case that was brought up
was that of an assault made upon a
by a white man. The
affray happened last night at Mun-
ford's Warehouse, and it appears that
the whole thing grew out of the in-
or stubbornness of a
man. The had been an em-
of the warehouse, and was
charged a day or two ago, and told
not to back again. This he
insisted upon doing, and put in
appearance last night. He was again
told to leave the warehouse and re-
fused to go, whereupon the white
man, also employed at place,
sought by force to relieve himself
of the undesirable man.
The mayor imposed a fine of
and costs upon the white man.
MACHINERY
AT THE STATE FAIR
RALEIGH, Oct. great inter-
est to the farmers of the state will
be the announcement that the Inter-
national Harvester Company has re-
served space for the exhibition of
several carloads of the latest and
i improved farm machinery and
agricultural implements, gasoline en-
motors and traction engines
it the state fair, October 20-25.
are th latest patterns an I
will be seen in actual operation plow-
harrowing, etc. In new
o grounds.
rt the r and Well
Company Richmond,
space for an extensive dis-
play of the most up-to-date well-drill-
and pumping machinery of
widely known southern firm.
Every day entries of agricultural
displays and livestock are being re-
at the state fair.
Attention Is especially called to
the fact that the big agricultural dis-
play of will not
compete for premiums, hut the ex-
of the agricultural products
this magnificent estate will be shown
a matter of patriotism by the own-
Gen, Julian S. Carr.
filibuster.
MEETING POSTPONED.
New Register of Treasury Sworn In.
WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct.
Gabe M. Parker, a descendant of the.
Choctaw of Indians, took the
oath of office this noon as the new
of tho Treasury o. the Unit-
ed He was born In Oklahoma
years ago, received a good
education and became superintend-
of the Armstrong Academy, an
Indian school In Oklahoma. He Is
the of Indian blood who
held so Important an office.
Rawly Organized W. C. T. C. Will Net
Tomorrow Afternoon,
On account of a conflict with
affair that It to be held tomorrow
afternoon, the regular meeting of the
newly organized local branch of the
Christian Temperance
ion has been postponed. When the
society was organized last Friday
night Immediately after the address
by Mrs. Armor, it was decided to bold
a second meeting on tomorrow after-
noon, but tho regular meeting has
been postponed until Friday.
Municipalities League at Portland.
Ore., Oct.
of twenty municipalities,
representing all the leading cities of
the northwest, met here today for
second annual conference of the lea-
of Pacific Northwest
ties. Tho league was organized
year and held Its first at
last fall.





mm
Calls Upon People to Aid Cause of
Good Roads
WANTS TAKE mm
Sentiment for I-
I and That
Man's Doti Is To
Help.
Being himself a thorough advocate
of good roads, and desiring to do
all that he can in the interest of the
movement to bring good roads to
every section of the state. Governor
Locke Craig has issued a
calling upon the people of th;
state to interest themselves in the
cause, and to aid in building up sen-
wherever this is needed and
can be done.
The proclamation is as
State of North Carolina,
Executive Department.
Raleigh.
Whereas the modern highway it-
essential to material prosperity, and
to the advancement of the social life
of every community; every people
aspires to Join the forward pro-
cession and that hopes for the op-
of our time is beginning
to realize the necessity of improve
all sections and all
citizens are demanding them
and determined to have the
whole country to their
Importance; everywhere there is a
generous rivalry to have the best, an-1
n lot them Is
apparent, and
Whereas the people of North Caro-
are losing, according to reliable
estimate, twelve million dollars an-
on account of bad
vast sum paid as a tribute to mud
Now. therefore, recognizing the
sentiment for road improve
and realizing the benefit which
must result therefrom to all the
pie. I. Locke Craig. Governor of North
Carolina, do set apart Wednesday, th
5th day of November, and Thursday
the day of November, 1913, as
GOOD ROADS DAYS, and do appoint
these days as holidays and days of
festival throughout the state, to
the beginning of an era wherein
improved highways shall be built in
every neighborhood, that all the
of farm and city may enjoy th-;
opportunities which they bring.
I call upon all patriotic
throughout the state to work upon
public roads and refrain from all
other occupations on these appoint-
ed days; and I call upon every able-
bodied man to shoulder his shovel and
march out and strike a blow for
Let the farmer, the merchant.
the lawyer, the doctor, the minister
of the Gospel, the rich and the poor,
and the men of all the walks of
enlist as volunteers in this mighty
army for grand accomplishment
Let no man be above this work, nor
forget his duty to himself and to his
neighbors. It will be an honor to
every man on these days to labor
with his fellow-man to banish from
country the curse of bad roads
and the evils that accompany them.
Let all the people of every
high or low, be moved by the same
patriotic impulse to work for the com-
weal. To all the benefit will
come. Let all participate.
I do appoint and set apart these
the 5th and 6th of November,
that the people may have an
to give substantial expression
to the universal desire and deter-
of the state, in action In-
spired by hope and rejoicing that
will resound in one unbroken chorus
from the mountains to the sea.
I call upon all the women to par-
In every hour of danger they
have Inspired the men of North Caro-
with faith and In this
day of realization, they with their
children will come to lend to this
noble cause the charm and the en-
of their presence. They
can provide good things to eat. and
decorate every worker with a badge
honor.
Let every citizen do his duty, and
will be long remembered for the
they gave to the cause
good roads and a finer civic spirit.
call upon the county commission-
of every county in the state to
issue a proclamation urging the
to go out on the 5th and 6th days
of November and labor for the
are of their respective communities
as well as for the whole state of
which they constitute a part
I call upon the president of tho.
Union to issue his
to the farmers of North Car-
and to their various local or-
that this great body of
our constituting as it
does the bone and sinew of the state, I
may with energy and enthusiasm
in this movement. More than any
other class of our people, they
dependent upon the country road.
More attractive homer-, better farm-
and a finer life will re-
from the building of modern
highways.
Let the work be completely organ-
so that it will reach to every
neighborhood, be conducted in
a systematic and business way, to the
end that at sunset of the second day
there will be no community in all the
state where the hand of progress and
toil has not left its mark in
road improvement, and the pro-
spirit its impression In the
hearts and minds of the people.
I call upon the ministers of the Gos-
the educators, and the press of
the state to use their mighty Influence
for this work, which means not only
material development, but moral and
intellectual development
I call upon all road overseers, good
roads associations, boards of trade,
chambers of and all as-
and organizations for the
public welfare and civic betterment
to give to movement the energy
of their influence.
I call upon the mayor of every
town and city of North Carolina
issue his proclamation that his people
may enlist in this organization, and
in the building of roads upon which
the prosperity of town and city de-
pends.
Let every North Carolinian show
by his work that he is for the
of his state. us la-
that we may enjoy the fruits to-
day, and our children a fuller
Done at our city of this
the 27th day of September, in the
year of our Lord, 1913, and in the
one hundred and thirty-eighth year
of our American independence.
LOCKE CRAIG. Governor.
By the
JOHN P. KERR.
Private Secretary.
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 Commissioner's
CASUALTY
Fidelity and Casualty.
Life. 62,358.69
Travelers. 60.817.84
S. Fidelity and Guaranty.
Fidelity and Deposit . 89.940.88
Indemnity . 26,299.27
General Accident .
Liability .
Ocean Accident. 13.533.71
New England Casualty. 12.787.63
Royal Indemnity . 10,178.82
Mass. Bonding Company . 8.440.41
O. Casualty .
Southwestern Surety . 4.047.12
only Company maintaining de-
In North Carolina.
R A. WHITE
INSURANCE 1895
NOW IS THE TIME TO
SHOP TO LOOK FOB
THAT NEW PARLOR SET,
BEDROOM OB DINING-
ROOM
Furniture
Furnish The Home For FALL and WINTER
BUT THE NEEDED FIRM l IKE AT PRESENT LOW PRICES.
SEE IN CHINA CLOSETS, BUFFETS, CHAIRS
COUCHES.
Taft Vandyke
mm
HOWE CHEAT LONDON
SHOWS HERE OCTOBER
Mil. HERE.
Meat Traveling Man Was in Green-
ville Last Saturday.
Mr. A. K. Hamilton, of Chicago, was
I caller at this office on last Saturday.
He came here In the interest of a
medicine which he Is selling, and
represents one of the big patent med-
firms of Chicago. While here
Mr. Hamilton arranged for the
cation in The Reflector of a number
of advertisements of Mayer's
Remedies, and stated that the
remedy would be on sale at the John
L. Wooten Drug Store in this town.
FOR A GOOD
farm dwelling, email store
room on place, In Martin county, six
miles from Robersonville, on
phone lino. R. F. D. No. For
particulars apply to J. S. Ross, Rob-
N. C. R. F. D. No.
Id
Will cure your Rheumatism
Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps,
Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and
Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects
Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in-
and externally. Price
The Howe Great London Show is
coming and will be here on
day, October The announcement
that a show Is coming here carries
but little weight with it, as the town
has had many of them, but the an-
that the Howe Great
London Show is to be here means a
whole lot to every body. It means
that the very best aggregation now
touring the country is to be here, and
Is good news to all lovers of
modem up-to-the-minute amusement.
The arrangements for its coming have
been completed, and all that there
is to do now is to wait for the great
of the own special cars
to arrive. There are many of the
younger folks on the anxious seat,
but they are not the only ones who
arc anxiously waiting. The grown-
up over since the first intimation
of the coming was made have
been looking for it, and
will not be appeased until the parade
is on and the performance
under way.
The reputation for merit and mag-
r that tills show enjoys, coupled
with the many successful years that
it has catered to the amusement loving
people, has made its name a house-
hold one. It Is a name that the show
is proud of, and one that the people
the world over have learned they can
during the past decade that has
depend on. There is no show organ-
the reputation of tented
as has tho Howe Great
London Show. There is now show
that gives such an per-
and extends to its patrons
the same care. Its while
extended. Is so varied that monotony
Is out of the question. The menagerie
is complete with the very rarest spec-
of the animal In Its
entirety the Howe Great London Show
is without an equal and a show that
all should see.
J. C. Lanier
AND
I It
I With
I -01
I The Life insurance Ce.,
of
I let.
NOTICE.
The undersigned having qualified
as administrator of G. W. Gardner
deceased, late of the county of Pitt,
state of North Carolina, this is to
give all parties or persons, having
claims against the estate of the said
deceased, notice to present them to
the undersigned on or before the 27th
day of September, 1914, or this no-
will be plead In bar of their re-
All persons indebted to said
estate will please make immediate
settlement.
This September 1913.
CHAS. E.
Administrator
HARDING and PIERCE. Attorneys.
ltd
FOR TAME PET RABBITS,
a pair. MORRILL,
Jr., Falkland, N. C.
d-w law
MEN
and
BOY'S
SUITS
In all the newest
shades,
and styles, I have
a very large as-
in Blues
Blacks and Fan-
See our clothes
and get our Prices
before buying.
C. T.
Quality
Shop.
Coward Drug Co.
Bat
Drugs
Used In Our
Prescription
Department
ICE
CREAM
Superior an
All
Drink.
Toilet Article,
Full
Fountain
P,
Kodak
Drug Co. W
Cantata
KEEN
tools guaranteed. Stag and
paints. Detroit Vapor Oil and Gasoline Stove and
Ranges. King Windsor Asbestos hard Wall Plaster.
Atlas O-Cedar polish Oil and Mops,
CARR ATKINS Hardware
RED CROSS SEALS.
Large Sale of Christmas Stickers I
Expected This Tear.
The state Red Cross Seal
of North Carolina Is planning
an extensive campaign tills year for
the sale of the Red Seal Christ-
mas stamp in every part of the state.
The committee In now writing to
specially selected persons In every
city and town above population.
Tills correspondent Is requested to
select a committee for his city or
community and report the names to
the Executive Secretary, L. B. Myers,
at Charlotte. Where no one Is known
in a city or town the editor or post-
master has been written his as-
requested in selecting a com-
Later, letters will be writ-
ten to all towns between and
so that It Is hoped to
get the seals on sale In every com-
of people or more.
The most encouraging replies are
being received all over the
state, and It Is confidentially believed
that seals will sold this
year in the state. were sold
last year which a great record
the first year's work.
The of these seals Is In Itself
of great value in stirring up a com-
to the great evil of
In addition to this all of the
money received goes Into the worn
of preventing the spread of this dis-
ease. Every stamp sold helps both
ways.
They sell for one cent each, and
are put on Christmas packages and
letters as a mark of the sender's In-
In the Anti-Tuberculosis Cam-
OREGON FAIR
OPENED AT SALEM TODAY
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthening; tonic,
chill TONIC, drivel out
Malaria and build up the A true tonic
and lure SOc-
SALEM, Ore., Sept
annual state fair, larger and better
than ever before, with u more In-
program of Instructive and
entertaining features, a finer display
of cattle, horses, sheep and fowls and
a more remarkable exhibition of
products and methods of
the state, opened here today under
the most favorable auspices. Today,
being the opening day. Is set aside
for children and there are many spec-
features of Interest to the young-
generation. A Eugenics and child
welfare exposition, to last all day,
has been arranged and there will be
lectures on child welfare and
The annual race meeting will
begin In the afternoon and will con-
every afternoon through the
fair week.
Suffered Eczema Fifty
a long time to endure the aw-
burning, Itching, smarting, skin-
disease known as
name tor Eczema. Seems good so
also that Dr. Eczema
Ointment has proven a perfect cure.
Mrs. D. L. Kenney can-
not sufficiently express my thanks to
you for your Dr.
Ointment It has cured my
which has troubled me for over fifty
All druggists, or by mall.
Chemical Co.
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa.
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.
THE NATIONAL BANK of GREENVILLE
Capital
The only bank in Pitt county under United States Government supervision. Deposit with us when you have money, borrow from us
when you need money. You will receive a cordial welcome and courteous treatment at this bank
Jas. L. Little, President, F. J. Forbes, Cashier, W. E. Proctor, V-Pres.
F. G. James, V-Pres. M. L. Turnage, Asst. Cashier.
COMFORT IN AMERICAN HOTEL
Caravansaries Surpass Those of Any
Other Nation of the Earth,
Opinion of One Writer.
I remember somebody once saying
to me a long time ago that the
cans had attained luxury by Jumping
over comfort. I think there Is a
amount of truth In this, and yet
It would be foolish to call American
hotels uncomfortable. They are not
uncomfortable. Only there is to
be That to some people all
hotel life Is uncomfortable. They hate
living In a crowd. They hate bustle,
confusion, noise, the arrival and de-
of people, etc. And there Is
certainly more hotel life In America
than In other countries. And yet what
a saving to the nerves, and to the
temper, are so many of the devices
and the arrangements in American
hotels. The telephone, for Instance.
It you want a nice test of temper, try
to get a number at the Hotel Cecil
In London; or, better still, spend a
happy morning In ringing up people
on the telephone In Paris. In America
It Is either done for you at once or
you know it cannot be done, and the
matter is settled. Hotel life In
ca seems to me infinitely better or-
than in any other country in
the world, with the possible exception
China. Because when you order
a room at a Chinese hotel, In a small
Chinese town, the room is built for
you while you wait; you choose the
style of room, and the paper, the car-
and all the furniture are put in
during the
PEOPLE OF CURIOUS CUSTOMS FIRST PARALYZE THEIR PREY, BELGIAN FARMS ARE SMALL
Laplanders Live in Primitive Style, Wasps and Beetles Known to
Following Their Own Ideas of I later Anesthetics to Their
Comfort and Recreation. time Killing Them.
STREWN WITH WAR MUNITIONS
Parts of Colon Found Liberally
With Ancient Make of
Bombs
If what engineers and others Inter-
In the additional reclamation
work on filled fields In Colon report
Is true, parts of the city are fairly
well salted with bombs and grapeshot
A number of these have been dug up
by a suction dredge, which Is now ex-
near the end of the slip, to
the west of the pier at Cristobal.
About half a dozen of the larger
projectiles and a peck of smaller balls
were found in the stone box of the
dredge recently, and it Is estimated
that a greater quantity went through
the discharge pipe Into the
fill of East street. Colon.
The projectiles were with a
kind of natural concrete, made up of
coral deposits, sand and shells, to the
thickness of two Inches. Below this
was a coating of rust; beneath the
steel was clean and well preserved.
The mark. R. D. D.
found In the Interior of some the
largest projectiles. One, when it was
opened, contained black powder In a
state fair the
West Coast Leader.
While civilized man suffers intense-
from cold feet every winter, the
Laplander, living In the far north of
Europe, has no such trouble. A
boots are also
; made of reindeer skin, and are worn
very large and the toes are pointed
and curve upward, so as to be easily
slipped Into their ski. The Lapp usu-
ally fills his boots half full with a
green grass. Into which he
thrusts his naked foot; he then packs
the boots full with more grass, tucks
the ends of his trousers inside and
binds them tightly round with many
turns of a brightly woven braid. With
these precautions they never suffer
from cold feet, and chilblains, corns
or such like civilized complaints are
an unknown horror to
Concerning other customs the same
writer Lapps are
a nomadic race, and spend most
of their lives wandering fancy free
among the wild and glorious scenery
of their home. However, at
times no doubt the stillness of the fro-
mountains becomes too still and
they turn their herds and start toward
their nearest meeting place. Twice
a year they hold these general
Easter and midsummer
when they congregate and hold a gen-
fair. It Is on these occasions
that they celebrate their weddings
and The revelries last only
about ten days, but many marriages
take place between couples who per-
haps have never met previously.
soon as a Lapp can afford to
buy enough reindeer for himself he
leaves the parental tent, takes a wife
and roams away wherever his heart
or reindeer dictates. There are
no social distinctions In Lapland.
Should a man have no reindeer, or
possibly have list what he had, he
travels with a rich man and helps
him tend the herd, but he lives and
feeds with them In the same tent, and
Is quite on a social equality, until he
can afford to start off with his own
That the sting of the wasp which
punctures the nerve centers of a cap-
caterpillar or spider usually
paralyzes the creature Into helpless-
rather than kills It, is well I
known. The victim remains alive In
the burrow or cell In which the wasp
stores It as food for the larva which
will emerge from the egg laid In the
same cell. Therefore the newly-
hatched grub finds ready for it a
provision of living meat Instead of
decayed carrion.
That among
gists, the venerable has dis-
covered a similar, yet even more ex-
fact. In the history of
glow-worm beetle name-,
that It anesthetizes the prey upon
which it itself feeds, so that It may
, consume It at leisure, and
, ed. This beetle, whose brilliant
, attracts the eye In the
dusk of summer evenings,
; hunts and seizes upon a certain small i
, snail In order to eat it. The curious
thing Is that the beetle anesthetizes
the mollusk at the first attack,
venting It from escaping by with-
drawing to safety deep within
shell. Upon finding the snail,
beetle dashes forward, and thrusting
out its sharp, curved mandibles,
stabs the side of the body of
its prey. After a few punctures
becomes Insensible and remains
In that state for three or
four time more than
for the beetle to complete Its
meal.
FELT HE WAS PASSED OVER
National Law There That Results In
Holdings Less Than an
Acre In Size.
An outstanding feature of the Bel-
farming is the small size of the
farms. More than half of the Belgian
farms are less than an acre In size.
One cause of small farms In Bel-
glum Is a law prohibiting the leaving
by any man of all his property to one
child, declares Farmer. It
is required that the property be
ed among bis children. Of course the
children can agree to hold the land
Intact, but In practice the result baa
been a great subdivision of the land.
The average acre of Belgian land
rents for a cash rent of about but
there Is some share renting, the agree-
being halt and half, and the
landlord to furnish half of the fer-
The average value of the Belgian
land Is now about an acre, pas-
land averaging a little more than
this and cultivated land a little less.
Eighty years ago Belgian land
worth Just this much.
Why is Belgian land so It is
not so fertile as much of the land of
England or Germany, yet Is more val-
because there are some half mil-
lion Belgians who have the ability
to make land bear Interest on
the Investment They are able to do
this because they work hard and are
satisfied with little. Another reason
for the high price of land Is the keen
competition for it. Because of the
small pieces Into which It Is divided
land is constantly on the market and
there are always farm hands and rent-
who are eager to own a piece of
land for themselves, and so the price
Is bid up to the limit
Curing Wood.
Wood has contagious A
stick of wood in a lumber yard may be
sick and Infect other timbers, which
later may develop the disease when
they are supporting weights in a new
building. Some of the diseases are so
contagious that in a building they will
Jump several feet across masonry or
brick to some stick of healthy wood.
Cures were recently discussed by the
American Society of Mechanical En-
Most of the diseases are varieties of
dry rot caused by a fungus, and most
of the varieties of dry rot fungus can-
not stand heat much over degrees;
so the most likely cure Is to close a
building up tight. If any beams are in-
and heat it up to or de-
Even this Is not always
for ends of beams are burled
In the outer brick walls and the heat
may not reach Eve-
Post.
or
Arrival and of the
Varies Passenger Trains
ATLANTIC LINE
Northbound Southbound
1.18
p. m. p. m.
Westbound
a m. a. m
a. m. a m.
p. m. p. m.
ALREADY HAD MAXIMUM LOAD
Golf Ballistics.
I do not see why all the Inventions
which have been applied to other pro-
should not be utilized for the
purpose persuading the golf ball to
go where It la wanted to go. There
ought to be a sight on every golf club
there Is on every rifle, so that one
might take aim properly. Every golf-
ought to carry a range finder,
which would enable him to calculate
the length of his approach shot, of
his chip shot on the edge of the
green, and of his approach putt I
think It would also be If the
goiter could be provided with a little
Instrument for measuring the strength
of the wind, the destiny of the air,
the stiffness of the blades of grass on
the green, and the gradient of its
slope. It would be well It some
great mathematician were to compile
a series of tables giving the amount
of borrow In the case of every
combination of slopes, wrinkles,
undulations and crow's feet What
want In golf is a stream of facts
Instead a stream of guesses. For In-
stance, we want to know whether the
green la fast or slow, and how fast
and how slow. Surely It would be
to Invent a speedometer for
Opinion.
Trooper Had Good Reason for Allow-
Horse to Go Without Reg-
Equipment.
There were few horses left In the
livery stable of a certain middle
town when the local cavalry com-
went out for maneuvers. In fact,
a number of had gone out of
business for the time being In order
that the cavalrymen might have
mounts.
Trooper Bright was on a steed
which readily captured the prize for
the most gaunt, and
moth-eaten creature ever seen on a
parade ground.
Say, said a companion,
he had recovered from the first
shock, Is that you're
That's a said Bright net
at all brightly.
take your word for
replied the other. yon know
that he'd east a
didn't yon atop off at the
garage and get him
have, but I didn't think be
could carry more than three
New Evening Poet
Somewhat Peculiar Idea That Gav
Youngster a Great Sense of
Personal Injury.
Mrs. Flint who always has an eye
and ear for childish troubles, stopped
one day on her way to a luncheon
her college class because she saw a
stout little boy who was standing
the curb and crying loudly. She
to comfort the distressed
youngster.
She bent down, patted the tow-col
head, gazed Into the tear-stained
face, and made as It to wipe away the
traces of grief.
what Is the matter, my
asked she solicitously.
b-brother's got a vacation
I he roared.
a said the woman
you don't go to the same
came from the little
boy. In a fresh burst of sorrow,
I d-don't go to school
Unmannerly Tourists.
The Laplander is annoyed with the
tourist who visits him. The nature of
his complaint may be gathered from
the notice posted In the districts of
Lapland most visited by travelers,
which in several languages runs
What would you
say If an unknown individual with-
out asking your permission or even
knocking st your door pushed his way
Into your home, made himself com-
on your sofa, peered at every-
thing, rummaged everywhere, laugh-
ed at your domestic arrangements,
asked how much money you
wished to interest himself In your
love affairs seized hold of your
children to photograph
would you do with such an
unmannerly
Interesting Origin.
In England money Is characterized
by the word because In
the time of Richard de Lion
money coined In the eastern part of
Germany became, on account of its
purity, in especial request In England,
and was money, as
all the Inhabitants of that part of
Germany were called
Soon after that time some of those
people who were skilled In coining
were sent for and went to London to
bring the coin to perfection.
That was the foundation of the
practice of designating English
amounts
Farmer.
In Persia one of the chief
is farming, but It Is carried on
In such a manner that It can hardly
be called such. If the Persian would
follow the example our western
farmer country might be very fer-
tile, but he pays little attention to
Irrigation and cultivates the soil In
the crudest Imaginable.
This crudity comes from two
Implements and natural
Indolence. The Persian plow is a
crooked beam of wood with a bit of
Iron at the end. It Is Just such a
plow, doubtless, as the ancestors of
Abraham used in the plains of
It stirs the soil to the
depth of only an Inch or two. Persian
Indolence is well Illustrated by the
tact that in hoeing one man holds the
hoe while another It up and
down by means of a rope.
Peg Farewell.
Sir Johnston
leave-taking of the
forms a strange contrast to the tragic
farewell of that popular stage favor-
relates the Lon-
don Chronicle. Peg; playing Ross,
at Covent Garden on the night of
May tor the benefit two
minor actors and a French dancer,
when she overcome with sudden
She struggled bravely on
until the end, when she staggered
the stage. Recovering after a few mo-
she came forward to speak the
epilogue, but had proceeded no far
than I were among you I
would many as had
beards that pleased me,
that liked me. and breaths that
when, exclaiming In agony,
O she collapsed In a upon
the floor. She never returned to the
stage.
Our Fairy Godmothers.
The world, out of fairy books. Is
chary in furnishing Its fairy
yet most of us have friends at
whose touch we become more truly
and happily ourselves than at other
times. They seem able to endow us,
through some magic of their own,
with the beauteous vestments and the
glass slippers that free the spirit.
These are our fairy godmothers. We
do well to love them and pay them
good heed, for through them we may
enter Into such possession of the
gifts that we need have no dread
of the striking hour. This, we must
suppose, is what did for his
beggar-maid. At his glance the queen
in her blossomed, which later all the
world could the Atlantic.
Fall Winter
EATABLES
Constantly arriving
New Buck-
wheat
Cream Hominy
Old Homestead Flap
jack Flour
New Honey in glass
Application will be made to the
called session of the General As-
of North Carolina for
to hold an election for the
pose of Issuing bonds In the town of
the proceeds from the
sale of said bonds to be used for
the Improvement of the Electric Light
plant and streets of said town.
This August 1913.
R, C. CHAPMAN, Mayor.
The Best sillier
Salve when
ed to a cut, bruise, sprain, burn or
scald, or other injury of the skin will
Immediately remove all pain. E. B.
Chamberlain of Clinton, Me,
robs cuts and other Injuries of
terrors. As a healing
Its equal Will do
good for you. Only at all drug-
gists.
to Fourth Street, treat el
H banding
by Chinese
Laundry. .
r. HI KM, The
Call yours.
to please
S M
DR. J. C. GREENE
and
Office on Dickinson Avenue
PHONE
Got His Answer.
When the Rev. John was
holding revival services at Cardiff a
young man one night, thinking to per-
the preacher, sent up a note to
the platform with the request that the
following question be publicly an-
Mr. If you are seek-
to enlighten young men kindly
tell me who Cain's
Mr. read the note, and then,
amid breathless silence,
love young for
truth should like to
give this young man a word of ad-
vice. It is Don't loBe your soul's
salvation looking after other people's
Poet Not Used to
James Hogg, poet knows as th
was never quit
happy sway from the fields. Sir
Scott made a friend him, but
he was not a social success. a
shepherd's writes a historian,
with hands fresh from sheep
shearing, he came to dine for the first
time with Scott In Castle street and,
finding Mrs. Scott lying on the sofa.
Immediately stretched himself at full
length on another sofa; for, he aft-
explained, T thought I could
not do better than Imitate the lady
the At dinner, as the wine
passed, he advanced from
to
and finally till at he
convulsed every one by
Mrs. Scott familiarly as
A Frontier of Peace.
With Its row of crumbling forts
musty guns the frontier between Can-
and the United States stands as
an object lesson to all nations. While
It Is the longest, It is the safest and
securest frontier In the world. Three
thousand miles and more it lie be-
tween bay and Puget
sound, and In all that distance not a
shotted gun points from
either country toward the other. A
few small and comparatively
fishery cruisers guard the water
front, none of which would be of much
use In time John
graph.
CHOICE CUT FLOWERS OS ALL
Rose, carnations and
mums are the seasonable flowers now.
Our art in wedding outfits equal
to the best. Nothing finer in floral
offerings than our styles.
BULBS
For winter and blooming
now ready.
Hyacinths, tulips and
in great varieties. Plant
early for best results.
Rose bushes, evergreens, shrubs,
hedge plants, shade trees and her-
plants.
Mall telephone and telegraph or-
promptly executed by
J. L. A CO.
Raleigh, N. C.
Store phone Greenhouse phone
Richmond, Return
STATE FAIR,
October Inclusive
On account of this occasion, the
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD
offers the above attractive round trip
rate to Richmond, thereby affording
the public an opportunity to take part
in one of the best fairs held in tho
country. Splendid attractions day
and night; 50,000.00 in prizes being
awarded.
Tickets on sale for all trains Oct
inclusive, limited returning
reach original starting point not
later than midnight of October, 13th.
Children between and
years, half fare.
Go and take your friends with you.
T. C. WHITE,
General Passenger Agent.
W. J. CRAIG,
Passenger Traffic Manager,
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Proving Daughter's
Ida Black had retired from the most
elect colored circles for a brief space
on account of a slight difficulty con-
with a gentleman's poultry
yard. mother was being consoled
by a white friend.
Aunt Esther, I mighty
sorry to hear about
John, Ida ain't
chickens. Ida wouldn't do a
thing I Ida wouldn't
to rob nobody's any-
way, old chickens nothing
t all but feathers when we picked
Fighting Grasshoppers.
Giant grasshoppers are prevalent In
the West Indies, where they are re-
as a serious sporting
These creatures are active, pow-
In proportion to their size and of
combative disposition.
they would rather fight than
eat up the crops and vegetation. They
have spiked legs provided with spurs
or gaffs, which they use as weapons
against one another alter the manner
of trained gamecocks. A favorite pas-
time of the Carib sports is to match a
pair of these Insect champions against
one another In a regulation contest,
which is fought on the fingers of a
man to his
discomfort. There Is liberal bet-
ting on the favorites.
Bad, Worse and Awful.
Within an Inch of in his latest
story, Bernard Capes treat us to
these three
face white a drained
gave a scream like a
staggered back with a sob that
was wrenched from aim Hie a hook
from a
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.





THE CAROLINA HOME
CITY DELIVERY. M.
a body people goes after j On last Friday a bill was
la b those ed in the House of Representatives
pie, and when they are to place in the hands of the Stale
REFLECTOR
in their desire to get what they want,
that thing usually comes. For many
months a majority of the people of
Greenville have been wanting free
by
III COMPANY,
D. J. WHICHARD.
CAROLINA, delivery of the mails in this town, but been rune and affording
people as a whole have not for those afflicted with this
Hoard the if
the State for Treat-
of Tuberculosis, at
some this ha
nut year,
months,
forested themselves in the matter to
. such extent that some active steps
may had upon
office in be taken toward getting the de-
Th Reflector corner Evans results.
and streets
All cards of thanks and resolutions We are not without delivery
f respect will be charged tr at because we are not entitled to it
sent per word.
For several years the receipts of the
Communications advertising local post office have been of
will be charged for at three sUe warrant the establish
per line, up to lines.
of the system in the town, but
as second class the people generally have not placed
august at the post themselves down behind the
North Carolina, and made con.
act of March 1879. . effort
for the town. The post of-
flee department Is ready for business
land it seems at the present time that
i the only hindrance lies with the
of the town.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER
1913
ROOSEVELT'S APPLAUSE.
In address before the
State Convention in Rochester
N, Y., on last Saturday, Colonel
dreaded malady, and several
ago. it will be remembered, a big con-
arose among the
ties in the state as to the manage-
of the institution. Now It is pro
posed to turn it over to the State
Board of Health, and we think that
every legislator In the General As-
should give his support to till
bill.
North Carolina suffers dreadfully
from this malady, and many of her
people go down to their graves as n
direct result of ravages of
The very name in itself carries
with it a terrible horror and to many
people the very sight of a sanitarium
or a place of refuge for the victims
of consumption Is but the shadow of
death itself. The state can
the proposition much better than any
set of private Individuals, we believe
If the streets are not in condition.
or if the sidewalks are muddy,
veil, in glowing terms and in I residents and the board of aldermen
language, applauded the course are jointly tor the state ought to be
had taken since his In-L, . ago board of I placed under the management of the
as governor of New York aldermen ordered that all of the
fellows who are raising such
a kick about Secretary Bryan
over the country seem to hare
forgotten that during the Taft
every member of the cabinet
romped over the country doing mis
work for the O. O. P. And
nothing was said about it.
--------o
Of course, it would be hard to And
the man who would shoulder the re-
the statement that
Governor Craig would be In the sen-
race, but you bet he will be
there If he thinks there is a
for him.
President Tate is in earnest about
the freight rate agreement between
the state and the railroads, and we
are of the opinion that if persistence
ran accomplish anything it will do
It here.
If all the people of the state will
pitch In and give two days good liar I
work on the roads as the people
Missouri did at the call of their gov-
Mr. proclamation will
not have been in vain.
You understand, of course, that
of the evidence In Mr. trial
has been offered by the prosecution
The governor's turn will begin to-
morrow.
state. It seems from the tendency of
the ex-president's remarks that what
ho sail was not so much in praise
of the chief executive as It was a
houses in town that are not number-
ed be properly designated, but so far
we have neither heard of nor
anything being done. We do no.
condemnation of the tactics practiced sort of an accUsation to
by the Tammany Hall organization
We believe, however, that
Roosevelt really thinks that Mr. Sui-
has made an honest effort to make
a satisfactory executive his
and that he believes in giving Mr.
credit for what he has done.
It Is very true, as Mr. Roosevelt
knows, that it has been an
fight for the governor ever since ha
was Inaugurated, and it seems that
that mighty political organization Is
about to succeed In Its efforts to get
Its enemy out of the way.
The Colonel argued that in the
election in New York state this fall
the concern of the people
should be to prevent Tammany from
Obtaining complete of the
and that this the lesser
must give Whatever be
the motives of the ex-president In
remarks that he has made, it cannot
be denied that he is on the right track
when ha opens up a fight on the
Democratic machine that has
the effect that this has not been
State Board or Health.
In commenting on bill lately in-
in the legislature, an am
In the Health Bulletin has this
to
action has been taken be-
cause it has been found that the
Sanatorium could best be operated
Wilmington Is again kicking on the
proposition of the railroads, but it
may be expected that she will do
this when a final settlement Is agreed
upon.
but If it has the matter has been as a part of a comprehensive state
allowed to stop right where it was
We are rather inclined to believe
that most of the blame for this de-
lay will have to be shouldered by
policy In the prevention of
It is planned to devote a bu-
In the State Board of Health
offices to the subject of the prevention
of tuberculosis. This bureau will
the board of aldermen. That form of a training school, or
. a it. j a correspondence school, In which
has charge of the streets and side-; , . ,. , .
the State Board of Health will en-
walks of the town, and they are large
to enroll every tubercular per-
son in the state. The Sanatorium
will be analogous to a central
around which will be built
responsible for the condition or
these things when taken as a whole.
Gentlemen of the hoard of aldermen,
It this duty Is yours, waste no time up a correspondence school
provision of the bill In-
la doing it. Get down to business ; Ur .
and let the people have what they case tuberculosis in the state
have been clamoring for so long.
Give us free delivery. The post of-
department is ready, and the
people want you to get ready.
be reported to this bureau at once I
in order that the Health Department I
can Immediately begin a course
instruction. It is estimated that there i
are approximately tubercular
persons In the state. While it can j
not be expected to have all the
people In the state entered
AN ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN.
Few- people who have ever
Used to any considerable extent fad in this school, yet the good that I
to believe in this method of only a part
. , , i these people how to cure their dis-
their goods. For many, many and how ,
the course of that party in New York the stores and commercial people will do much toward re-
state for many ears. None of us bat I have been putting their goods, our high tuberculosis death
any sort of a desire to see one flank j before the public by advertising, and with a little more
of the party defeated In any section I this method of telling tho world along line the
of the country, but there are few, the advantages of any particular sec-
I y be able to reduce our high death rate
good, true Democrats who would of the country Is a comparatively j from
rejoice at the complete annihilation new thing. It has been within the
of this Tammany machine. past few years that the Greater West-j u begins to look as though
The sooner It is put out of business era North Carolina Association of the congressmen going to;
the better It will be for the Demo- for the purpose of pro-; the currency bill to President
party, not only in New York I claiming to the world the many beau- Wilson, and that they are willing to
state, but throughout the country. II ties and attractions existing in i vote for whatever ho puts up. The
the party does not throw off this section of this state of Interest to fact of business is that they
hanger-on. most decent and respect- the traveler. I come to learn that Woodrow is
able people will throw off the Chambers of Commerce are not m Job, and that when h
In New York, and rightly so. There dent organizations, and the Idea his words have been precede
are right now many good Democrats advertising a city is not very oh deep and careful thought. Leave
in Vie Empire state who stand ready Wherever these methods have to Woodrow, and the country h
to support any sort of a movement employed for the purposes to which
that means the routing of Tammany, they are put. the result has been as-
and no matter how contemptible the The town or city ha
Bull Moose leader may be, many Dem- grown by leaps and bounds, and
would prefer him to the Tarn- scarcely one can be found where this
many machine. , advertising has not paid.
Tammany Hall U responsible for. Pitt county has natural resources
the condition of affairs right and advantages of which the
now In New York state, and no party, wold knows nothing. Her farming
can live with a leech sapping lands cannot be outclassed anywhere j service rendered by
its life bl.-d. All New York should In North Carolina, and but every few . , ,,
rise in its fury and anger and wipe people outside her borders know that I
from toe map any organization raises and sells on her own ware-
Is as corruptible and as ii house floors more bright leaf tobacco I if a resident North Carolinians
Tammany Hall. than any other county in the the same as J.
world. If outside people knew what
In th matter of the senatorial race.
Mr. Glenn ought not to hold off so
long that the rest of us will begin
to think that silence means consent.
It Is time to shed straw hats.
Governor-General Harrison, of the
Philippine Islands, has had an
with the Emperor of Japan, but
how much better off Is he now than
before that took place
The man that raised the question
of a constitutional amendment
the Bible in public schools
evidently must have had nothing else
to do.
--------o
Governor Is doubtless gull
of some things unbecoming to a
man In hie position, yet we do not
believe It Is half as bad as his pros
pretend.
---------o
Now that the corporation
has submitted the names of the
fellows who ride on passes, how
many of the number can you find
who voted for Mr. Clark's resolution
A movement has
been launched by the merchants
Durham, but, of course, the people
will expect them to sell as cheaply
as the foreign dealers do.
--------o
Had you ever thought of how much
real good could be accomplished by
the proper expenditure of the money
that exchange bands as wagers
on the World's Series next month
It is certainly surprising to see ho
many good lawyers In this state are
willing to sacrifice their splendid
for the sake of. a small slice
of federal pie.
A boy years old stole to
pay his way through Oxford
We greatly admire the boy's
ambition to get an education, but
way of going about it is to be con-
For the love of Mike, Cowan, if
you are going to run Mutt and Jeff,
give us some up-to-date numbers,
and not some that have been pick-
ed out. dusted off, and used over
again.
When Mr. Glenn told the business
men the other day to accept the rail-
proposition If It were all right
and reject It If It were wrong, he
threw no light on the subject. We
all knew that before.
Governor Craig will be due much
credit for his part In the
of the freight rate controversy, but
he will hardly receive enough mo-
to land him in Senator
seat
Greenville might be classed as u
water town, but If the railroads will
give us and the whole state the rates
asked for, we shall be satisfied.
Whether the legislature be
ed to do anything or not. If the
will get down behind those
lows they will deliver the goods.
The speed of all New Haven trains
will be reduced, but the trouble teems
not to be In the speed, but in the
way the schedules are handled.
Hearst's Sunday American Is plan-
to give to Its readers the auto-
biography Evelyn Thaw, but the
world would be better off without It.
Most of the big howl has been about
Intra-state rates, and not Interstate
rates, but It that the former
are hardest to get.
A big cigar concern in New York
has gone bankrupt. No wonder, con-
the number of ab-
during the past two months.
Mr. Bryan's lecture season Is over
and now they have started talking
about his new hat Wonder what Is
the color of his box
--------o
The greater the number that get
Into the senatorial race, the
will be Mr. chances for
a walkover.
The News and freight
rate edition of yesterday Is
the paper, and Is full of
information and good points regard
the great struggle now going on
between the state and the railroads
All cities of the commonwealth will
Of course, it is not lawful for It this county has to offer them, there
to be done that way. but a few would be such an of people
hers of the Just Freight Rate that there would not be room for all
elation settle that rate them, and tho value of the
Morgan were to die off. and the state
were to get two millions and a half
Inheritance tax, there would be no
in the state treat
Would It be unfair to say that
something is wrong with a druggist
who will sell a drug that wilt
two boys so crazy that they will
seven men and women, and
be lynched themselves
---------e
legislators who want to make
sure of their Jobs for another term
had better think twice before they
vote once, and be sure they
right.
--------o
Those families renting houses In
this town seem to think that it Is
their business to rent out their rooms
at a price sufficient to pay for .-
whole house.
One more day, and then October
the prettiest month of the entire
year.
AM nature will wear her finest
most beautiful dress this month.
Today the women buy;
the men will pay the bills.
---------o
The day of red lemonade comes
one week from tomorrow.
One month from tomorrow tho Pitt
county fair will open.
the
will
lands would Increase by leaps
bounds
Why not start an advertising cam
and tell the world what Green-
ville and Pitt county We have
commercial advantages that are the
o any In eastern North Carolina,
and the deepening of the channel on
Tar River means only Increased fa
Te governments good money will In water When
you coma to think of It.
a of opportunities
much better than the
can.
Those Americans now trapped In
Mexico who would like to get away,
doubtless fee that they made a mis-
take in not going while going was
cheap.
be wasted unless the people of this
section their opportunity and
make use of channel In
the Tar River.
that will draw anxious home seek-
And you can find some people who
are ready to say that they would not
be surprised if the legislature would
sit through the entire twenty days
and never accomplish what they
were calico together to do.
If Governor is innocent, as
he says he is. the prosecution can
do him no harm by allowing the In-
of testimony about his
campaign funds.
Denial Is made of the rumor that
Colonel Roosevelt would be boomed
for governor of New York state, but
the Colonel has recently fought an .
lost out so often that he Is
willing to take anything he can get.
Mr. Tate says that he Is confident
of legislature. Well, that Is a
little more than some of the rest of
ea can say
Guess those county con-
thought they would do a Harry
Thaw stunt.
NOTICE.
North Carolina, Pitt county.
In the superior court, before
Cloth.
S. H. vs. George
L. O. A.
and M. J. Whichard.
The defendants above named
lake
That an action entitled as above has
been commenced in the superior court
of Pitt county to sell for partition the
lands described in the complaint
ed In tills cause, which lands are
situated In South Greenville,
Carolina, and the defendants will fur-
take notice that they are
ed to appear before the clerk the
superior court of Pitt county, N. C,
on Monday, the 20th day of October,
1913, at the court house of said
In Greenville, N. C
in Greenville, N. C, and answer or
demur to the in said sec-
or the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief demanded In said
complaint.
This September 16th. 1913.
D. C.
Clerk Superior Court.
By A. T. Moore. D. C.
F. G and SON,
ltd
HAD RIGHT TO BE PRESENT
of Proposed Tariff Clause
Rather Good Story to
a Point.
A. L. Hamilton, the leading
expert of America, complained In
New York about the tariff clause pro-
the Importation for millinery
uses, of all wild bird leathers save
the ostrich
Mr. Hamilton pointed out that many
game birds are killed for sport and
food, and that many other birds are
killed because they are pasta, and he
asked why the Audubon societies
would have the feathers of all these
birds wasted.
represent the birds, Mr. Hamil-
said an Audubon devotee.
peak for the birds. Whom do you
represent, and what right have you to
represent the millinery
Mr. Hamilton answered. speak for
thousands who will be thrown out of
work If this foolish clause goes Into
effect As to my right to
I think I'm rather In the position of
the department store proprietor.
department store proprietor in-
In the basement a ten-cent;
three-course luncheon for his workers.
He thought one day he'd try the
luncheon himself, and accordingly he
hopped up on to a peg and called for
the But the waiter, not know-
him,
no, mister Ton ain't in
this. You don't belong to this
I'm quite aware of the pro-
answered, store belongs
to
FOR PRESERVATION OF FISH
Claims He Method Which
Far Superior to at
Present In
The preservation of fish la not a sub-
likely to be of intense to
the average men, and let it la one
considerable practical Importance to
Few foodstuffs are so prone to
rapid decay, and few are more
when In that condition.
and salting, while reasonably
effective, seriously Injure the natural
flavor of the fish, when they don't ac-
destroy It Hence a new method
preservation which the flab
fresh and and of unchanged
flavor -tor weeks or even la
something of a discovery. This la
what Prof. A. J. a
of the Imperial Academy of
claims for his new method. And
his claims have been considered
enough Importance to be given
official test by the board el agriculture
and fisheries in London, and also by
the Tall and Fish
association. A It-day test, controlled
by the latter la said to
have Justified the professor's claims,
and It la probable that he win be given
the opportunity for a more extended
demonstration his process. Its coat
la laid to vary from to cents
per pounds of York
Where Do the
What becomes the watches T The
average man not buy more than
about two or three watches In the
course of his whole life, and yet the
manufacturers keep on making new
watches by the thousands. Who buys
them all
No statistics can answer tho
What becomes of the old
watches What did you de with the
one you discarded when got your
present Where Is it now It
was a silver watch and It kept good
time for old watch, the
predecessor of the gold one that you
new possess. had a strong
for It You called It
and In the solitude of your
room, you may have caught yourself
saying a word or two to It aloud. The
watch certainly talked to you In the
middle of the night; Heine's watch
conjugated Hebrew by the hour. The
old watch had a kind of a ringing tick
like a riveting machine, and you could
hear it dear through the pillow. It
sung you to sleep more than once.
But In heaven's name
became of It
Single Walnut Tree.
A walnut tree sold In the mid-
west the other day tor SIM. Time
when there were thousands of
walnut trees In that county. At
one and the same time there was a
conviction In the minds of men that
no fence rail was good enough for a
except a rail split
from the very heart a walnut tree.
A worm fence, be It known. Is one of
those fences made up obtuse an-
glee and defined by a man who
had put up a good many a fence
that goes and then
goes But returning to
the Increased cost a walnut tree,
lite la not going to be really worth
until the economists discover some
way to get the high price tags affixed
while there are plenty of tree left to
hang them on.
Virus Rabbits.
Rabbits took of the
cemetery at Rouen, France, and ate
up all plants flower fast
they were placed upon the grave.
The keeper called In hunter with
ferrets, but the were almost
straight down, so the ferret could do
nothing. Then some the virus used
in Australia when the rabbit became
a peat obtained. Dr. of the
board of health inoculated
with It and turned them
la the cemetery. Bight
later there were no rabbit In
cemetery All had died In their bar-
.
Styles and Prices of Every
Shown in the Various
Store of the Tow
Morning.
has nothing on
That was the opinion of the ladles
the town who Tuesday morning tun;
WOULD ALL
THE CI I BILL
of De-
tailed to be
by
WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept. 29.-
ed out for the opening of the various General revision of the
millinery stores the town, and one j currency bill In detail, to insure
viewing these stores a half hour I the carrying out of Its purposes, to
the time set for the opening of J day was recommended to tho Sen-
the doors this morning were of Banking and Currency
that most of the women of tee by Samuel of New
the town were in the stores or try
to get into them.
It may be said without any fear
contradiction that the openings this
season were the best ever in this
town, and, while other towns and
may be ahead of Greenville In
the matter of the size of the stock
carried, it might be said that none
of them can outclass the local stores
iii the beauty and the attractiveness purchase or
of the styles that are being offered
here. The proprietors of the shops
in Greenville have spared no pains
and have sacrificed time and money
an effort to get here the best that
the market affords, and those view
the displays this morning wen
of the opinion that they succeeded
well.
Styles and prices of every
to be seen. Hats ranging
from a price that the poorest might
buy on up as high as one could wish,
were on display, and all of them wore
attractive and arranged In
the stores. The styles of some of tho
hats harmonized very well with the
tune, Trail of the Lonesome
York. Many of the changes proposed
by Mr. affected vital points
of the bill.
the bill's definition of
on which cur-
would be Issued and
Mr.
ed strict lines should be drawn to
low the the currency only on
commercial representing the
sale of a commodity
which would enter Into commerce.
Ha recommended allowing the pro-
posed regional reserve banks to re-
discount a wider range of paper than
would be eligible as a basis for cur-
Mr. also
mended alterations In the plan for or-
the proposed regional re-
serve banks.
The bill, as at present framed, Mr.
declared, gave the banks
too much power In the
and control of the proposed new sys-
ho recommended abolishing the
proposed council of bankers
as an adjunct to the Federal reserve
board and suggested the government
be given closer power of regulation
that was so well and delight-. and removal over regional reserve
fully played by the trio of musician j . rectors elected by the banks. He
that paraded the streets this morning. ed, however, that the banks be given
Others reminded one of the ice cream
cone, so popular with the little
and still other various makes had
different shapes and forms. But
whatever may be said, it still
after all the remarks that have
made every hat that was on the mar-
here today had in it its own
style of beauty, and there
not one that did not find some admirer
in the great crowds that gathered to
see the displays.
The clerks did not have to
themselves with showing the custom-
what they had to offer. The hath
were all placed out where they could
be seen and the prospective
went to the counter and helped her-
self with what she saw. Many scores
of women saw their figures in the
mirrors in the stores and as many
mired or detested the hats that
placed on their heads. It might be
said, however, that no woman visited
the stores this morning who could
find nothing anywhere to suit her
fancy. The woman who could not
find her choice here today would be
hard to please even in gay Paris, and
they all were greatly pleased with
what the market had to offer.
Special mention of the individual
stores might be made, but the
name of the milliners and their
can be given, and these are as
Laura C. Parks, o
Armstrong. and Company,
Baltimore; Mrs. M. D. and Miss
Mary Higgs. Mr. W. S. Wallace,
Cleveland, Ohio, was present to take
orders for coat suits, and had some
very neat and attractive styles to offer
During the morning the Trio
of musicians entertained the visitors
for a short while with some of their
finest selections.
Hurley, of Baltimore
Mrs. Georgia James, Miss Law-
A fine line of coat suits was
also shown here.
Mrs. I. F. I. F. Lee, Mrs.
Bernard Greene. Mrs.
Mrs. R. Greene, Miss Blanche
Stella Waller, of
Philadelphia, and Misses Joyner and
Cherry.
Mrs. L. Griffin and
her assistants.
Man, Pleas tor Low
CHICAGO, Oct.
Passenger Association met
today at the Transportation Building
to consider a large number of
for reduced fares to
and other gatherings in differ-
parts the country. Among the
meetings tor which low fares have
asked are those of the Nation-
Federation Musical Clubs in
Los Angeles, May, 1915; Grand Lode
the Theatrical Associations of the
United States and Canada, San Fran-
July, 1915, and General Grand
Chapter, Arch Masons, San
Francisco. August, 1915.
a flat of six per cent on
investment in the regional banks and
that the government be given all
profits above that figure.
The right of the regional banks to
enter the open market In competitions
was absolutely necessary, he
With the end of tariff legislation in
sight, the senate committee will con-
detailed hearings on the cur-
bill, which will cover several
weeks.
SEES Ml SIGN
OP CONFLICT
Change In Boundary Commission.
WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct.
resignation of Frank S. Streeter. of
Concord, N. H., as one of the
of the International Joint Com-
mission for the adjustment of
disputes between tho United
States and Canada became effective
today. Mr. place on the
commission was taken by Mr. Obadiah
Gardner, formerly United States sen-
from Maine. A salary of
a year Is connected with the position
Former Mexican President Will Not
Return Because Foreign
Is Unlikely.
. Spain, Sept.
who came here with
his wife to bid to his
Dona who sailed In the
for Vera Cruz, has given the
following statement to a New
World don't pro-
pose returning to Mexico unless
one condition, that Is, It. case
of foreign invasion. Then I should
feel compelled to do so, but unless
that even comes about I shall respect
all that the constituted government
may undertake to do.
might have stifled the
rebellion but retrained from doing
so because It would have meant that
civil war probably would be Infinitely
prolonged.
fear even now that order will not
be restored soon because most the
revolutionists simply are bandits in
disguise who take the field in the hop
of living by To
end this state things and bring
matters to a normal condition, it may
be necessary to pass a law such as
I made while president
do not consider that there exist
any likelihood of serious rupture be-
tween the United States and
Speaking subsequently at a banquet
In the tendered
him by the Mexican colony, re-
plying to a toast to his health pro-
posed by the Mexican vice consul, who
described bis as the best president who
ever governed the republic,
Not the best, for that would be
forgetting Juarez, my master. He was
the reformer, and I only carried out
his ideas. I have been an ardent pa-
and my greatest pride Is that
I shed my blood In defense of
Mexico and would gladly do so again
If Tendered it need-
stated he would remain In
Europe for the present, probably
France, though he will occasionally
visit Spain, where he has
friends.
Pensions to Confederate Veterans.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct.
The payment of pensions to
veterans under the law
by tho legislature Missouri last
winter was begun today by state
auditor Gordon. Thirty thousand
have been appropriated and Of
the applications for
only have been approved.
Noted Girl Swimmer Married.
BOSTON, Mass., Oct. Aisle
the noted swimmer, who two
years ago established the record of
being the first girl who ever swam
to Boston Lighthouse, was quietly
married here today to Daniel
a supervisor In the Boston park de-
la Good Bond Issue Campaign
Promised People They
Should be Freed From
Duty.
Carrying out the pledges made
the people of Greenville township
during the campaign for the Issuance
of worth of bonds for the con-
and Improvement of roads
In the township, Mr. D. M. Clark,
representative from this county, has
drawn and introduced in the House
a bill relieving the farmers of the
township of all free road duty under
the conditions specified In the bill.
During the campaign that closed
with the election on July much of
the attack of the opposition was mads
on the ground that the Issuance of
the bonds would not free the farm-
from road duty, and In order to
prove that it would, the advocates
of the Issue promised the people tint
if the bond issue carried they would
see to It that a bill was put through
the extra session of the legislature
that would guarantee freedom from
road duty.
Now the legislature has convened,
and the bill given below has been in-
by Mr. Clark. The bill
plies to all bond Issues or special
tax levies going into effect during
the present year of 1913, and repeals
all laws In conflict with the bill as
at present drawn. Immediately after
the bill passes Its third reading it
will be effective, and there will be
no more free road duty In this town-
ship.
Mr. Clark's bill Is as
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT
TO ABOLISH FREE LABOR ON
THE PUBLIC ROADS OF PITT
COUNTY UNDER CERTAIN CON-
The General Assembly of North
Carolina do
Section That whenever any
township In Pitt county shall,
the county commissioners, issue
for the improvement of Its
roads, such township shall be exempt
from all laws requiring the public
roads to be worked by free labor.
Section That whenever any
township In Pitt county shall, through
Its county commissioners, levy a spec-
road tax of twenty-live cents or
more, such township shall be exempt
from all law requiring the public
roads to be worked by free labor.
Section That this act shall
ply to all bond Issues or special tat
levies going Into effect during the
year nineteen hundred and thirteen.
Section That all laws or
of laws In conflict with this act arc
hereby repealed.
Section That this act shall be
in full force and effect from and
Its ratification.
May be hilled on and After Shall No
OFFICIAL WASHINGTON
IN
Can Find No Tangible Explanation
Back of for His Al-
Recall.
WASHINGTON, Sept.
Washington today the re-
ported recall to Mexico of Gen.
but no tangible
of the motive back of the sum-
mons was forthcoming here.
One theory advanced was that Pro-
President Huerta was en-
to demonstrate that
conditions had returned.
was that might throw his in-
into the campaign to secure
the election of as
Huerta's successor. It also was
that the return of
would Insure harmony among some
factions In Mexico City.
While preparations are being made
In the Mexican capital to hold the
election on October doubt Is ex-
pressed In various quarters here as
to the practicability of holding an
election at that time. The lack of
communication, on account of the
uprisings and disorders In
various parts of the republic leads to
the belief that liberals in the
can congress would succeed In block-
ratification of an election because
a majority of the total polling
would not be in operation.
OPENED
WITH ATTENDANCE
BOSTON. Mass., Sept an-
fair at always one of
the most notable fairs In New England
and particularly famous for the fine
horses, cattle, etc., entered by the
ti-millionaire farmers and owners of
estates in Massachusetts, Connecticut,
Island and New York, was
opened today with a
attendance. As usual the horse show
in connection with the fair is one
of the most Interesting and
features. More and finer horses
than ever before have been entered
this year. Among the most notable
exhibitors are Thomas W. Lawson, F.
Ames, Maurice Diamond, H.
K. Alfred and
other owners of fine horses. Members
of tho exclusive social sets New
York, Boston. Newport and other
cities within a radius of several
miles have come to Boston and
It is that they will visit the
fair grounds In their automobiles on
every of tho four days of the
show.
September But Not
I mil at Least Two
Months Later.
With the approach of the hunting
season, and with the rise of the
sportsman's ambition to get on the
trail of Rabbit and the
rel, the Register of Deeds of
county finds It his duty to give no
of a law that was passed at
last legislature regulating the game
laws in Pitt county. The old la
was changed and the dates were
with by the
of the bill that was passed and
which now regulates the hunting sea-
son In the county.
Changes in the squirrel law have
moved the date up one month. The
old ruling was that it was I
to shoot or to kill squirrels in Pitt
county before October of each year,
while the bill put through the last
legislature fixes the date at
The real length of the season
has not been changed, but the close
has been advanced a single month as
well as the opening of the season.
Formerly the law provided that
squirrels could be killed In the
later than March of each year,
and the new law changes tills date
to February
The bird law has also been
in the county. The old law fixed the
date for the opening of the season
at November and brought the close
on March Under the new ruling,
provided in the bill that passed the
last legislature, the bird season does
not come into effect until December
I, and lasts only until March The
change here shortens the season by
one month and a half.
Under these laws the squirrel sea-
son has been open for a month, where-
as under the former ruling it would
ushered in only tomorrow. Were
the old law now In effect the bird law-
would not be enforced after today
the close of the season, but ac-
cording to the new bill of the
the season will not be here
until the passing of another month.
THIRTY DAYS OR
SLIT SKIRT RULING
DENVER, Col., Sept I win
said Mrs. Dora who was
arrested for blocking street traffic.
will be a victory for modern dress.
True, my skirt is well slit, but it
fords me grace of
When arrested Mrs. was
wearing a double silt skirt, which ex-
posed limbs clad In white silk hose
surmounted at each knee with a red
rosette.
She faced Judge Stapleton this
m on a charge of an-i
was given the alternative of days
in Jail or leaving Denver.
Lord pity anybody who tries
to educate this town on up-to-date
she exclaimed as she de-
to leave the city.
According to the policeman
made the arrest, the sensational
wasn't to be compared
with the double slit one.
should worry about what a crab-
by policeman says concerning the tall
exclaimed Mrs.
be It was the rosette that caused so
many men to follow me yesterday
The policeman said I Interfered with
tho traffic. I didn't see any one fol-
lowing me that was rude about it.
Is freedom of movement for
women of Denver who wish to dress
comfortable that I want. And women
will win out They can't arrest up
for wearing silt skirts.
should like to wear skirts silt to
the hip. This one is Just slit to the
knee. The sergeant said that It was
going too far, but I disagree with him.
and I believe that all the women of
Denver will stand by mo in the
for sensible
WORK PROGRESSING
Hr. Vines New House on Filth Street
Going up
Work Is progressing rapidly on the
new three story brick Veneer build-
being erected on the c of
Fifth and Pitt streets by Mr. C. C.
Vines. Mr. Vines is proprietor of the
Hotel Bertha, and may close out Ml
business there when his new build
Other Than Benefit of the
Deposit of the
Funds.
A sensation in Pitt county is prom-
by the introduction the
House of representatives of a bill by
Dr. B. T. Cox, representative Iron,
this county. The bill provides for
abolition of the office of trans
and provides in the place
such that the funds and moneys
of the county shall bu deposited In
some bank or trust company. This
bank or trust company is to receive
no compensation for handling the
county's funds other than the inter-
est that will accrue from the use of
the money. Tho concern handling
the money is to be required to
a and to proceed in exactly the
same manner as the man now holding
the office of county treasurer.
The mapping out of the plan for
the change is left to tho county com-
missioners, with provision In the
bill that they shall give sixty days no-
of the action which they expect
to take, and that this action be taken
at least two months before the hold-
of any primary or election for
the filling of the office. It the bill
the legislature, it
have no effect upon the present In-
and will not put into
operation until after tho term
which the present county treasurer
was elected and Is bonded.
The introduction of the bill com
as somewhat a surprise to the
this town and county, and
to cause a groat deal of
discussion among people. The
bill. In Its complete form, as It
introduced In the House of
is as
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT-
TO ABOLISH THE OFFICE OF
THE COUNTY TREASURER OF
PITT COUNTY.
The General Assembly North
Carolina do
Section The Board of County
Commissioners Is empowered
in the discretion of the said
commissioners, to abolish the office
of County Treasurer In said county
and in lieu thereof to appoint
solvents bunks or trust companies,
located in the county Pitt as fin-
agent for said county, which
said bank or trust company shall per-
form the duties now performed by
the treasurer as treasurer
of said county; Provided, that such
bank or trust company shall not
charge nor any compensation
for Its service, other than such ad-
vantage and benefit may accrue
from the deposit of the county funds
In the regular course of banking.
That said bank or trust
company, appointing and acting at
the financial agent of Its county.
shall be appointed for a term of two
years, and shall be required to ex-
the same bond for the safe
keeping and proper accounting of
such funds as may come Into the
and belonging to such
county and for the faithful
its duties, as are now required b
law of the county treasurer.
That tho county com-
missioners shall before abolishing tho
office of treasurer, pass a resolution
that effect at least sixty days be-
fore any primary or convention Is
held for the purpose of
a candidate for county treasurer.
Provided that this act shall not
ply to term of office for which th
present treasurer is elected
Section All laws and clauses n
laws In conflict with this act are
hereby repealed.
Section That this act shall be
in force and effect from and after Its
ratification.
LAND SALE.
By virtue of a decree of tho super-
court made in special proceeding
entitled J. W. Crawford et
Crawford et sale for par-
the undersigned
will sell for cash before the court
house door In noon on
Monday, November 3rd, 1913, the fol-
lowing described estate,
tract of land In Beaver Dam
township, known as Place,
and being the farm upon which
said B. F. Crawford resided at
time of his the land
known as land on
the south, on west by W. C. Hem-
by, on the north by Noah
and others, on the east by J.
Nichols, being lands known
the Polly Hen. place, containing
acres more or
one other tract in town-
n us the Anderson place-,
adjoining the lands of Stanley Park-
George Hemby, Ben
and others, containing
acres more or less. This tract
Includes acres cleared land and
wood land, all of
la accurately described In a deed
from R. J. Cobb and B. F.
one other tract known as the
Place and adjoin-
lands J. W. Smith,
late J. F. Allen, R. L. Nichols I. A.
Nichols and others, containing
acres more or
This October 1st,
J. B. JAMES, Commissioner.
ltd
MORTGAGEE SALE.
By virtue of a mortgage executed
and delivered by R. L. Hill and wife,
V. B. Johnson and wife, to F. el.
James on the 6th day of March, 1909,
which mortgage appears record
in the office of the register of deeds
of Pitt county In book E. page
the undersigned will sell tor cash at
noon on Saturday, November 1st, 1912,
before court house door In Green-
ville, the following described lot or
parcel of land, situate in said town,
and on the south side of Fifth street.
Beginning at a stake on the south
of Fifth street and on the west side
Reed street extended, and running
with Fifth street a westerly
feet to a stake, thence a souther-
course across said lot feet to
a stake on Reed street extended,
thence a northerly course with Reed
street to the beginning. Being the
lot which old Ice plant for-
stood.
This Sept 30th, 1913.
F. O. JAMES, Mortgagee.
Id
SALE OF STOCK OF GOODS AND
Kit
By virtue of authority made by D.
C, Moore, clerk of the superior court
of Pitt county, In the above entitled
cause, the undersigned
will, on Wednesday, tho 15th
day October, 1913, at the hour
o'clock p. m. sell at public sale,
to tho highest bidder, for cash, at
the store recently occupied by the
late Montgomery T. Spier, In the
town of Winterville, North Carolina
wares and merchandise formerly own
ed by tho late Montgomery T. Spier,
Winterville, North Carolina, to-
with all store fixtures, book
accounts and one piano. Said stock
Is new and In splendid
condition and prospective purchaser
arc invited to the same be-
fore the day of sale.
the 24th day of September,
1913.
MRS. SPIER,
Administratrix of Montgomery T.
Spier.
HARDING PIERCE. J
ltd
WORKERS TO HATE ONE
DAY A WEEK FOR REST
NEW YORK. Oct. new
law passed by the legislature at its
last regular session and which re-
quires all employers to give to their
one day of rest a week, went
into effect today. Many big concerns
and corporations, which had hereto-
ore kept many of their at
work seven days In the week,
pated the going Into effect of the law
and made such changes as were
to give every one of their work-
is completed. The new structure
will be equipped with steam heat, j one free day
and all modern conveniences, and week without interfering with the
be one of the finest buildings of work on Sundays
kind in this town when It Is completed.
Mr. Vines expects to rent tho rooms
when the building Is completed with-
in the next few months.
LITTLE GIRL
to New Students at Training
School Saturday Night
The Y. W. C. A. of tho Training
School on Saturday evening enter-
the new students with lit-
Each new girl wan
the of an old girl. All were
dressed as girls, played little
girl games, and munched apple and
smacked their lips over day suck-
Informality of the evening
down all lines between new
and girls, seniors and all
thoroughly enjoyed the evening.
The street railway lines, tho hotels
and restaurants, cigar dealers, etc,
were In most cases compelled to en-
gage additional help to make It
to obey the law without inter-
with Sunday work.
West Virginia's Compensation Law.
GRAFTON. W. Va., Oct
new workmen's compensation law
passed by the last legislature, went
into effect today and after today all
corporations which have taken ad-
vantage of It within the prescribed
time will be Immune from suits for
damages on account of accidents to
their A large percentage
of the coal factories and
wholesale establishments In the state
have placed themselves under new
law.
NOTICE.
The undersigned having qualified
as administrator of G. W. Gardner,
deceased, late the county Pitt,
state of North Carolina, this Is to
give all parties or persons, having
claims against the estate of the said
deceased, notice to present them to
the undersigned on or the
day September, 1911. or this no-
will be plead in bar of their re-
All persons Indebted to said
will please make Immediate,
settlement.
This September 1913.
CHAS. E. GARDNER.
Administrator.
HARDING and PIERCE. Attorney.
ltd
WILL BACK TO LIMIT.
Baseball Fraternity Will
Who Write for
NEW YORK, Sept.
players who write for newspapers on
the coming world's series will have
tho support of the baseball
fraternity. It was announced today
by David L. president of the
organization.
do not pass upon the status
of tho said,
If our support should become
to enable one our member
carry out a contract, we would back
him up to the
. . . . .





J. R. J. G.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
We are receiving new style
Dress Goods, Ladies Coats
and Coat Suits, Rain Coats,
Silks, Trimmings, Notions,
Dry Goods. Shoes. We in-
your inspection of our
many lines.
If it is style we have it
We can supply your
needs
J. R. J. G.
Store
WEDNESDAY,
OCT.
d Km or
j Uh
Mir to
Ml -T WITH
ill COUNT HAN
KILLED WIFE
James Farmer, Man Wife
and a Man Talking la the
ad Opened Fire.
ASHEVILLE, Sept
well, a farmer living at
miles from shot
and fatally wounded his and
Moody,
so a farmer, about o'clock this
Caldwell was shot
twice In the breast, and Moody re-
a bullet in the mouth, the lat-
would not being considered fatal.
It is stated, disappeared In-
to mountains after the shooting
and had not been found at o'clock
but it Is stated the trouble, of a do-
nature, caused Caldwell U
Are on his wife and Moody
the two were talking in the road near
-The Marvelous
The Royal
And Other Omit Act.
DOUBLE MENAGERIE
Wat
-ROYAL ROMAN HIPPODROME.
.-, II. Mast . m.
. .- Mi MM
I,.
You Are Evidently Taking Your
Time About Purchasing that . .
buggy or but we cannot blame going
so slow Id the matter. It Is poor privilege to make
comparisons, get prices and take the best that Is offer-
ed for the money.
AH we ask is that you
consider us in the
transaction.
We have every style of Vehicle that this locality de-
we make every vehicle we sell and we
tee each one of them for twelve months. If we do
not satisfy yon we will gladly refund your money.
We want your patronage we can prove oar-
selves worthy It
I's A Show.
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
WANT ADS
Sc. Li
must accompany orders
for want ads, except from those
having regular advertising ac-
counts. The rate is cents per
line, six words to the line. Tel-
No.
YAM POTATOES
M. Schultz.
AT Sic A PECK.
SEW LINE COAT SUITS AH.
rived at B. J. Pulley's store. They
have all styles fashions.
It
ESTABLISHED
Greenville,
North Carolina.
the Caldwell home. Medical aid was
summoned from and the
doctors that Mrs. Caldwell can-
not recover.
WANTED. 1100.00
monthly and expenses. Advertise
or sell cigars. Co., New
York, N. Y.
Beware of Ointments for
Catarrh That Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the
of smell and completely ;
whole when entering It
the mucous surfaces. Such articles should
never be used except on prescriptions
from physicians, as the
they will do Is ten fold to the good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J
Co. Toledo, no
mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous
faces of Ens system. In buying Hull s
Catarrh Cure be sure you get the
It la taken Internally and made in
Toledo, Ohio, by J. Co.
free.
Bold by Druggists. Price per bottle.
. Family Pills for
Alabama State Exposition.
MONTGOMERY, Ala., Sept.
annual Alabama State Exposition
Opened here today with a large and
Interesting display and a large at-
Among the numerous
features of the exposition are
the exhibits arranged by the South-
railway, the Mobile and Ohio,
Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas
Pacific, the Alabama Great Southern
several other southern railroads.
These exhibits are made with a view
of bettering farming conditions In the
south and dally demonstrations will
given of the most scientific
for doing the work required on
n modern farm.
DON'T FORGET TO SEE THE NEW
line of millinery at B. J. Pulley's
store.
FOR ONE FARM, ACRES
cleared, remainder well Umber-
ed. worth buildings on main
road, four miles south of Ayden. For
further particulars apply to S. M.
Smith, Ayden.
Pastor Rock Describes His Trip
Through the Holy land
HAS
To Cure a Cold In One Day
LAXATIVE It
and Headache and works oil the Cold.
refund money if it fails to cure.
K. W. GROVE'S signature on
ABOUT
THOSE
CLOTHES
STOP LOOK LISTEN
When you see those three words on a
sign board at a railroad crossing, what do
you do You stop, don't you You look up
and down the track, don't you You listen
too, don't you. In other words, you obey the
admonition. Tod otherwise it would not
only be foolish but dangerous.
Hesitate before you buy that SUIT.
You should exercise the same care and
thought as you would at a railroad crossing;
go to the store that you know has the
reputation of carrying good clothes, and
at the price they should be sold.
Just take a peep at our
Your pattern is here. The very suit you've
been thinking about for the past thirty days is right
here among the plums we now have on display.
It may be a plaid, or a stripe or a plain color; brown or tan, gray
or blue. It doesn't matter what it is, it's right here.
C. S. FORBES
NEW LINE OF SILKS IN ALL COL.
ors and prices at B. J. Pulley's.
FOR SALE KENT SEVERAL
farms at Vanceboro, Cove City,
New Bern, and other parts of Craven
county. J. W. Stewart, New Bern,
N. C.
WANTED TO HIRE TWO GOOD
mules at Training School for few
days excavating, will pay good price
for good team. O. W. Ready.
Also Tells of
the KIter Jordon
and Bathing In the
Dead Sea.
A congregation filled
every available seat in the main
of the Baptist church
Sunday night to hear the story
by Rev. C. M. Hock, of his travel
In the Holy Land, it had been an-
that at the evening
subject to be discussed would
be Jerusalem to Jericho; the
River Jordan and the Dead Sea.
In his own delightful manner, Mr.
Rock ably and interestingly told
the rich experiences that he had
Ms visit to these places under
He said that much the
city of Jerusalem, as it was in the
time of Christ, had been destroyed,
but that at the present time it has
a population of nearly Ruins
all of the principal buildings that
were made famous by the Bible still
remain, and these can be seen by the
traveler, and attract much attention
from tourists who visit the city
year. Mr. Rock said that be stood
on the Mount of Olives, very near t
the exact spot where Jesus stood
when be made his prophecy the
terrible destruction of the city, a
destruction which was wrought at
precisely tho same time and exactly
as Jesus said that it would happen.
The road from Jerusalem to
i Is very rough, and are no
railroads. The Journey has to be
In hacks, or on camels, or by
foot In traveling In hacks a part
of the road near has to be
passed over by foot, because of the
great danger in remaining in the
hacks while passing over the big
rocks that stand up In the road.
Jericho Itself was described as be-
divided Into three parts, or three
Of the old city that was
marched around seven times by the
children of Israel before the walls
fell, nothing Is left but the ruins of
i temple and the residence of one of
Hie kings. Is much more than
this to see of the Jericho of the time
of Christ, and this holds a great deal
of Interest for the traveler. The city
of today Is situated many hundred
feet below the level of the
Sea, and Is one of the hottest
places on the earth.
Four miles below Jericho Is the
Dead Sea, the saltiest body of water
In the world. It Is a great Inland
sea that has never been explored but
one time. Its waters so sail
that a human cannot sink in
them and In many parts of It no bot-
tom has ever been found. Mr. Rock
had the experience of going In bath-
In these salt waters, and
that It was Impossible for one to sink
below tho shoulders. It Is forty-sever,
miles long, and at Its widest part
measures about ten with an
average width between five
seven miles.
On the Journey from Jerusalem to
Jericho the party passed the River
and saw what Is supposed
be the place where Julio the Baptist,
Jesus. Mr. Rock and several
members of the party swan across the
FOR LADIES COAT
suits taken by Paul Sam-
Just received.
I OR SIX ROOM HOUSE
with large lot In
ply N. W. Outlaw.
RIFLES AND PISTOLS,
see J. R. and J. Q-
LINE OF DRESS GOODS IS
complete. See us before baying.
Pulley.
NEW STYLES DRESS GOODS IN ALL
colors and weaves. J. R. and J.
G.
Ml
AMERICAN WIRE FENCING AT
lowest prices. See us before buy-
J. R. and J. O.
FOB SALE I A ACHE FAR
within two and halt of Green-
ville, adapted to all crops, two at
room tenant houses, two
barns, thousand acre pasture. Terms
to suit purchaser. J. W. Perkins.
CALL ON J. H. AND J. G. VOTE FOB
seed rye. Virginia and
Winter Oats, iron roof-
In all lengths, all perfect good.
TAKEN WHITE SPOTTED
hog, weight about lbs., mark
smooth crop in left ear and hole in
tho right Owner can get same by
applying to me and paying charges.
JESSIE SMITH. N. C,
Route Box
ltd
WANTED KAN WITH FAMILY TO
work on farm this fall. Will fur-
nice cottage, firewood free.
ply Reflector.
SEE LINE OF LADIES COATS
and coat suits. New styles In all
weaves and colors. J. R. and J. O.
Brotherhood Saint Andrew.
ST. JOHN, N. B,. Sept
several hundred delegates In attend-
ant the sixth Maritime
of the Brotherhood of Saint Andrew
of Canada opened here today to re-
main In session until Sunday even-
Tho opening session was held
In the afternoon and In the evening
the delegates will be formally
at a special meeting In St
Parish Hall.
Let us sell yon a plug, a or
a box of Eagle Sun Cared to-
and make you happy. J. R.
J. O.
river, which is very owing to the
very steep incline that It passes over.
It Is a little more than one hundred
in width.
ANTI-HOG CHOLERA
FOB HOG CHOLERA
The North Carolina Department of
Agriculture has for the past three
years prepared and distributed to
the farmers of this state anti-bog
cholera serum at cost of production.
This serum Is used as a
for hog cholera, and If Injected
before the hogs show any signs of
cholera, it will prevent them from
developing a case of cholera, even
if they are exposed. It is not claimed
for this serum that It will cure a
case of cholera, as It Is a
tire and not a curative measure.
We begun the preparation of this
serum In a very limited way and
have found that it met with mil-
formally good results. The demand
for It has continued to Increase
it was Impossible to meet the de-
at the plant where we first
begun the work. In order to be In
position to meet all demands made
by the farmers this state tor the
Serum, we have built and equipped
a large new serum plant which will
be used exclusively for preparing
cholera serum.
For full Informations for using this
serum, apply to the North Carolina
Department of Agriculture, Raleigh
N. C.
B. B.
Director, Veterinary Department.
H. W. CARTER, M. 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
Attorney at Law
Greenville,
North Carolina
ALBION DON
Attorney at Law
Office In Building, Third St
his services are
desired
Greenville, North Carolina
I. Moore W. H. Long
MOORE LONG
Attorneys at Law
Greenville, North Carolina
S. J. EVERETT
Attorney at Law
In Edwards Building, on the Court
House Square
Greenville, North Carolina
F. C. Harding Chas. C. Piece
HARDING A PIERCE
Lawyers
Practicing in all the Courts
Office in Wooten Building on Third
street, fronting Court House
Freckled Girls
is an absolute fact, that one cent
far of WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM
Will either remove your freckles or cause
them to fade and that two jars will even
in the most severe cases completely
cure them. We are willing to personally
guarantee to return your money
without argument if your complexion is
not fully restored to its natural beauty.
WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM is
line, and absolutely harmless.
Vi ill not make hair prow but will
remove TAN, PIMPLES and
Come in today and try it.
The jars are large and results absolute-
K certain. Sent by mail if desired,
ice Mammoth jars
SON'S FAIR SKIN SOAP
For sale by
J. W.
HO, L. WOOTEN DRUG CO.
N. W. OUTLAW
Attorney at Law
Office formerly occupied by J. L.
Fleming
Perry Centennial Regatta.
LOUISVILLE,, Ky., Sept.
day's great motor boat regatta, which
constitutes one of the features of tho
Perry Centennial celebration held
here this week, has attracted many
thousands of visitors to this city and
the greatest interest is manifested In
the outcome of the races In which
of the fastest motor boats of
the country are entered. Among the
boats to take part In the regatta are
Reliance, the champion of Amer-
with a record of 51.1 miles
hour; Hydro Bullet, Barnacle and
Tango, two Chicago boats which
at previous
trials. Oregon Kid, of Portland, Ore.
and a number of other boats.
Former Bankers on Trial.
COLUMBUS, Sept. case
against Elmer E. Galbreath and
Charles II. Davis, former presidents
of the Second National Bank of
who were Indicted on
counts In connection with the
troubles of that bank, was called
for trial today before Judge In
the Unit-id States District Court. A
of thirty Jurors was drawn
from which the Jury will be selected.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
apply at once the old reliable DR.
ANTISEPTIC HEALING
dressing that relieves and heals at
the same time. Not a liniment.
D. M. CLARK
Attorney at Law
Land and Damage Cases a Specialty.
Old Jarvis and Blow office.
J. F.
Cotton.
Office Evans street
Representing Alexander Sprunt and
Sons, Wilmington.
B. V. TYSON
Insurance
Life, Fire, Sick and Accident
Office on Fourth near Frank
store
Norfolk Southern Railroad
Schedule In effect August 1913.
N. B. The following fig-
published Information ONLY
and are not guaranteed.
TRAINS LEAVE GREENVILLE
East Bound
a. m. dally,
a. m. dally, for Plymouth,
City and
Pullman car for Norfolk.
Car service Washington w Nor-
folk. Connects for all points
north and west
Bound
a. m. dally, for Wilson, Raleigh
and west. Pullman sleeping car
Connects north, south
and
a. m. dally, except Sunday, for
Wilson and Raleigh. Connects
for all points.
p. m. dally, for Wilson and
p. m. dally, except Sunday for
Washington.
For Information and
In sleeping cars, apply to J.
L. Hassell, agent, Greenville, N. C.
H.
General Passenger Agent.
W. A. WITT,
General Superintendent.
NORFOLK. VA.
Greenville Banking
Trust
RESOURCES OVER
Three Quarter Million Dollars
United States Depository for Postal
Savings Funds.
Per Cent Paid On Time Deposits
E. G. Flanagan, Pres.
E. B. Higgs, Vice-Pres.
C. S. Carr, Cashier
When In
Stop at the
JOYCE
rooms elegantly furnished
Cuisine
Rooms with Bath end en Suite
Centrally Located
Opposite Camden Station
Main B. A O. B. B.
Rates 81.00 per Day and
Upwards
Send for Booklet
HOTEL JOYCE
Baltimore,
Kittrell
Bare Purchased The Stock Of Stone
wall Jackson On Evans Street And
Solicits the Patronage of
the Public Generally
Minister Praises This Laxative
Rev. H. of Allison, la.,
in praising Dr. King's New Lite Pills
for constipation, King's
New Life Pills are such perfect pills
no home should be without them.
No better regulator for the liver and
bowels. Every pill guaranteed. Try
them. Price at all
W. L. HALL
W. . ROOM
INSURANCE
We are now in position to write Fire, Life,
Accident and Health Insurance and we would
appreciate a part of your business.
HALL MOORE, Agents.
LOOK
What it takes to
SELL TOBACCO
HIGH we have it.
a W. HUMBLE
Pounds. Price.
1-2
. 1-2
Average 24.27
E. T. DUDLEY
Average 26.87
H. M.
Pounds.
STOKES
Average 22.45
J. DIXON
Price.
.
.
.
Pounds.
.
.
Average 23.05.
Price.
XI
1-2
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.
I. H. a
1-1
. M
V,
Average
A HADDOCK
Price.
1-2
Average 16.28
GALLOWAY AND BUCK Pounds.
Pounds. Price.
Average 19.61. i m
AND COOPER
1-2
Johnston
XI
JO
T- Average





SAUNDERS UTTER.
ED LIBEL
Laws Case Against i.
Dr. Desalted Like First
Two In
ELIZABETH CITY. Sept
Jury In the against Editor Sauna-
era for alleged which was de-
In the defendant's favor, ends
one of th longest trials and hardest
fought legal battles ever conducted
In this county.
Nine were consumed In trying
this case and some of the best law-
In the took part In it. W.
O. of tho
was on trial upon the of
criminal libel on E. P. one
eastern North Carolina's
est and most prominent lawyers.
The suit out of articles pub-
In Mr. paper In re-
to business transactions which
took place In Mr. and
the Browns of New York several
ego
This was the third libel trial Mr.
Saunders stood within tho
two months, and he was acquitted In
each trial, ill the cases against Mm
having been prosecuted by Lawyer
OLD DEAD.
Father of Mr. I, Wilkinson, of
Greenville, Die in Farmville,
After an illness of sometime Mr
W. H. Wilkinson, of died
at his home last week at the
old age of seventy-two years. He
was one of the oldest and most wide-
citizens of the county,
had lived in Pitt county for a great
part of his life.
He was In the Civil War and took
part In the battle of Gettysburg, and
was at Cold Harbor, and in the bat-
around Richmond. He was born
in county, near
Creek church. He leaves a wife, four
daughters, and two sons, one of whom
is Mr. C. L Wilkinson, of this town.
NUPTIALS.
steamer victim
OF SERIOUS ACCIDENT
of Apparently Is
Broken In With
Cotton.
WILMINGTON, Sept.
of a river steamer ply
flag between and
sank In tho harbor here
this morning at o'clock, apparently
breaking in two, though until she is
raised It cannot be ascertained what
really happened to her.
She was docked at the Sprunt cot-
ton wharves, and was loaded with
bales of cotton, one-half of which
been taken out slightly damaged,
but it is feared the remainder will
be a total loss. The steamer Is own-
ed by Merchants and Farmers Con
of this place and is valued at
without marine Insurance.
NEW RESIDENCE.
r. George Cooper Erecting Bungalow
Sear Skinner Residence.
What promises to be one of th.
most handsome and attractive bun
in the entire town is now being
constructed on the plot of ground ow-i-
ed by Colonel Harry Skinner on
Fourth street Just beyond the Inter-
section of Pitt street The new home
Is being erected by Mr. George Cooper
and will be modern in every respect.
Steam beating will be installed, low-
of the ground at the location
tho building furnishing a ready-made
basement for quarters for heating plant
home by the first of the coming year.
Popular Young Couple Married in
Wednesday
for Tho
A most charming event was the
wedding of Miss Anna Belle Kittrell
and Mr. Herbert Winstead, of
Wilson, on Wednesday afternoon at
o'clock In
The brightness of a cloudless sun
shone outside but evergreens and
trailing vines made twilight reign In
tho church, gleams trickling
through, casting becoming rosy shad-
over all.
Against the background of the
pit, great branches of the famous long
leaf pine, their graceful heads
nodding their approval, formed an
appropriate setting for the pure white
Altar of that from its
green nest, where myriads of can-
aglow with loves Arc, twinkled
and gleamed. Yellow and
Golden-glow lent their sunshine to
and white rose buds
peeped from among the greenery.
Cascades of ferns and potted plants
formed a screen of tropical beauty,
and profusion.
This Altar white of
holding the yellow,
flowers, typifying the gold of the
heart, with the steady burning. Flame I
of Love, all surrounded with the
changing evergreen, was in Itself
a prophesy of good omen, that these
two lives, joined in their youth and
purity by the God who is Love, would
keep through life the gold of their
hearts aglow, and love's light bright-,
burning.
Miss Louie Pittman,
presided at the piano. Miss
Daisy Winstead, sister of the groom,
in her lovely soprano charmingly
rendered To
Wedding March the ushers, Mr. Josh-
Tucker and Bland, entered,
followed by the groom and his best
man, Mr. Groves L. Herring, of
son. They took their places and
awaited the bride and her attendants.
Mrs. J. T. Herring, of Rocky Mount,
in white silk crepe de carry-
a shower of white
was Dame of Honor, followed
by the Maid of Honor, Miss Lilly
Tucker, cousin of the bride in white
brocade crepe de also carry-
carnations. The ring bearer,
j dainty Little Miss Jean Harvey, In
White chiffon over pink
carried a brass basket,
in the center of which a perfect
rose, held in its fragrant heart
the wedding ring; that golden cir-
symbol for ages of the marriage
vow. The bride never lovelier than
in her wedding gown of white
and real lace, enter-
ed on the arm of her father, Mr.
W. J. Kittrell. The bride carried a
magnificent of brides roses.
Dr. J. C. Caldwell, president of
the Atlantic College, per-
formed the ceremony in a clever and
convincing manner, making the
vice very Impressive.
Miss Kittrell was a well beloved
daughter of and Mr. Win-
stead a promising young man of
character and Integrity, and their
friends rest assured that God has
Joined them in His holy bonds and
blessings will go with them even
unto life's end.
Negro Man And Wife up Before May-
or Charged With Making At-
tack Upon Each Other
Saturday Night
Six citizens of Greenville were
brought up before Mayor James this
morning for violations of the law, and
all of them received fines with the ex-
of one who appealed
from the decision of the town's
executive.
Two were up for disorderly
conduct in Daniel King's restaurant
on last Saturday night, and both
to have been raising right
much of a disturbance at the in
the west section of the town. After
a rather lengthy examination of the
two offenders, the mayor lined each
13.00 and costs.
A man and his wife were in
the court charged with a mutual as
In other words, they agreed
that they would have a little scrap
and each, without giving the other
any chance to o t advantage In
the beginning, went for the other with
main strength. Neither seems to have
the best end of the fray, as both fought
best and appears to have been
pretty equally matched. The man was
fined and costs, and the woman
and costs.
Another man was brought up for
driving a horse through the streets at
c very reckless rate on Saturday
He was lined and costs.
A man was charged with Tun-
a dray without license, and the
mayor had decided to put him off with
no charges save the costs when he
pealed the case. The costs would
have been only had the
allowed the matter to drop where it
was. but when an appeal was taken,
the mayor was for led to put a fine
additional upon the The
appeal to the superior court was
en, and will be heard at the next term
to be held here in November.
RUMOR OF REMOVAL NORFOLK
SAW YARD UNWARRANTED
NORFOLK, Va., Sept.
of the Navy Josephus Daniels In
letter to Senator Martin and Con
K. K. Holland, today de-
the published report that the
department considering the re
of the Marino Recruiting
from Norfolk to
Secretary Daniels stated that tin
department had never
removing the station from Norfolk
On the contrary, he says, the depart
Is planning to erect new build-
hero which will Improve the
naval station generally.
Northern Minnesota M. E. Conference.
DETROIT, Minn., Sept.
two hundred delegates of the North-
Minnesota Methodist Church as-
In the Methodist church this
morning, to attend tho opening of the
nineteenth annual conference of that
church, which will remain in session
days, closing Its work next Sun-
day. Bishop W. A. Quayle of St
Paul, who will preside at the con-
opened tho session this morn-
and delivered his annual address.
Secretary C. R. Oaten, of Duluth
treasurer J. R. Davis, of
and the other officers read their re-
ports and several of tho committees
reported to the conference. The dis-
belonging to this conference are
Minneapolis, and
Fergus Falls.
DROPS
REMEDY
For all of
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago, Gout, Neural-
ate, Kidney Catarrh an.
asthma
STOP PAIN
Relief
D stops the aches and re-
swollen Joints and
like Destroys
the excess acid and la quick,
safe and sure In Its results. No
other remedy Ilka It. Sample
free on request.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS
One Dollar per bottle, or sent pr-
. paid upon receipt of price If not
obtainable In locality.
I SWAN ION RHEUMATIC CUM CO.
Shea
VALUABLE SUBURBAN REAL ES-
TATE FOR SALE.
The or Anderson Farm, con-
of eighty-three acres, almost
within the city limits. Great
for Investors to double their
money In short time.
Tho offer for sale either as a
whole or subdivided to suit the
chaser, the or Anderson Farm
located about three-eights of a mile
from tho corporate limits of the
thrifty, progressive city of Greenville,
and not more than twelve or fifteen
walk from the business
This property is probably the most
located for truck farming of
any land near Greenville. Two
clay roads lead from tho property
Into Greenville and at the present
rate of increase in population of
Greenville it will in a very few years
become valuable as building sites.
This land Is several feet higher than
the town and Is the most beautiful
and desirable for suburban homes of
any property near tho town. The
t land Is a light gray underlaid
with clay subsoil and produces all
crops common to this section. Al-
though considered at the time we
came into possession rather thin and
run down, we have averaged a little
more than a pound bale of cotton
to the acre during the last three years.
This Is in reality a great
Is the best town
in eastern N. C. It is conservatively
Its property rests on a
solid foundation and in consequence
j Values that today seem high will
pear marvelously cheap almost be-
. fore you are aware of it.
If you are interested call on or
write
J. S. BARR, N. C.
O. L. Greenville, N. C.
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
North Carolina, Pitt County.
In the superior court.
Before D. C. Moore. Clerk.
J. G. Thomas, E. B. Thomas, Delia
Whitehurst James H.
Virginia T. H. D. White-
Lula Barnhill. W. O.
Addle Manning and Edward D. Man-
vs. Thomas.
By order of a decree of the super-
court of Pitt made by D.
C. Moore, Clerk, in the above
cause, on the 23rd day of
1913, the undersigned com-
missioner, will on Saturday, the 25th
day of October, 1913, at o'clock p.
m. expose to public sale in front of
the post office In the town of Bethel,
N. C, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described real estate to
certain tract or parcel of
land situated in Bethel township, Pitt
county, North Carolina, known as the
Jesse Thomas home place, adjoining
the lands, J. I O. Man-
W. L.
Charlie Lewis and others, containing
about acres more or less. Upon
tract of land is situated one two-
story, six room dwelling house, two
tenant with necessary barns
and stables.
Also one other tract or parcel of
land in said township adjoining the
above tract and also adjoining lands
known as the lands, the R.
D. Whitehurst lands, the Cherry lands
the lands of J. G. Thomas, Charlie
Lewis and others and containing
acres more or less. On this tract of
land there are about acres cleared
and the remaining portion Is heavily
wooded. The above two tracts are
situated about 1-4 miles west of the
town of Bethel, N. C.
This land will be sold In separate
smaller lots and as a whole, to suit
the purchasers.
This the 23rd day of September.
1913.
F. C. HARDING, Commissioner.
NOTICE.
Notice Is hereby given that the drug
business known as
has been sold to Messrs. J. K.
j Brown, and S. E. Gates, who will
take charge of tame October 1st, 1913,
I All holding accounts against Bas-
night's Pharmacy will please present
them for collection; and oil
accounts requested to settle earn-
between now and the time mentioned
if it is not done the proper steps
I will be token to collect. The
j will immediately proceed to put
into Judgments accounts which arc
not paid by October 1st, 1913.
is also given that after to-
day no credit will be given
PHARMACY.
September 1913.
STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP.
MANAGEMENT,
ETC,
of The Carolina Home and Farm and
The Eastern Reflector, published
Friday at Greenville, N. C, re-
quired by the Act of August
Editor, Henry A. Dennis. Greenville.
Managing Editor, Same.
Business Manager, D. J.
Jr.
Publisher, The Reflector Co., Inc
Owners D. J. O. L. Joy-
C. B. C. W. Hearne.
R. J. Cobb, D. C. Moore. S. J. Ever
W. H. Ball. Jr., B. B. Sugg.
Bros. Greenville. N. C.; John H.
Small. Washington, N. C.
Known bondholders, mortgagees,
and other security holders, holding
per cent or more of total amount
of bonds, mortgages, or other
Linotype Co., New-
York. N. Y.; S. J. Everett, Trustee,
Greenville, N. C.
D. J. WHICHARD. Jr.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this the 1st day of October. 1913.
ANDREW J. MOORE.
Notary Public.
My commission expires March 1915
DRUGGISTS ENDORSE
DODSON'S LIVER TONE
SKIN SORES
eat. rut, teat ml
mm B
SALVE
LAND SALE.
By virtue of tho power of sale con-
in two mortgages executed and
delivered by Henry Allen Smith to
Richard one date 21st,
1912, and recorded in Book E-10, page
IT, and the other dated Oct. 1st, 1912,
and recorded In Book E-10,
in the register's of Pitt county,
the undersigned will sell for cash
before the court house door In
on Thursday, October 9th, 1913
the following described real estate
situated In the county of Pitt and in
township, being undivided
Interest of the said Henry Allen Smith
In tho lands of his mother
Smith, being the of land
lotted to the said Smith In the
division of the Jordan Cox land, ad
Joining tho lands of Ellen
Charlie end
containing 1-3 acres more or less.
This Sept. 8th, 1913.
RICHARD Mortgagee.
F G. and SON,
ltd
QUICKLY HEALED
TAKEN ONE WHITE SPOTTED
hog, weight about lbs., mark
crop In left ear and hole In
tho right Owner can get lame by
applying to me and paying charge.
JESSIE SMITH. N. C,
Route Box
ltd
Let us sell you a plug, a pound or
a box of Black Eagle Sun Cured to-
and make you happy. J. R ft
J. G.
MB, TUCKER IMPROVED.
Is Able To Be The Streets After
A Short
Ex-sheriff L. W. Tucker, who has
been confined to his bed for the past
few days with an Illness, is today able
to be up and down the street He
says that he feels a great deal better,
and that he thinks that he will be
completely well in a very few days.
His many friends will be glad to know
that he Is improved.
It Is a Guaranteed Harmless
table Remedy that Regulates the
Liter Without Stopping Your
Work or Play.
A dose of may knock you
completely out for a
two or three days. Dodson's Liver
Tone relieves of constipation,
biliousness and lazy liver headaches,
and you stay on your feet.
Pharmacy sells Bod-
son's Liver Tone and guarantees it
to give perfect satisfaction. If you
buy a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone
and do not find it most
pleasant and successful liver remedy
you ever too, this store will give yo l
back the cents you paid for It With-
out a question.
Tills guarantee that a trustworthy
druggist is glad to give on Dodson's
Liver Tone is as safe and reliable as
the medicine, and that Is saying a lot.
SOCIAL CLUB.
Met Saturday Afternoon at Home of
Mr. C. D. Smith.
SMITHTOWN, Sept
club met Saturday after-
noon at the home of Mr. C. D. Smith,
where the Misses Smith entertained
from to o'clock.
Tho were welcomed in th
hall by Misses and Lee
Smith and ushered into the parlor
where the monthly business
transacted. Afterwards a very In-
program was rendered. In
the dining room a dainty salad course
and ices were served by Misses Nan-
Amelia and Hilda Smith.
After Miss Nannie Smith sang a
solo, all departed to meet with the
president October 1913.
Those present were, Misses Alice
Fulford, Nannie Anna
and Robinson
Smith. Mable of
Hickory, N. C.
The next time you want tobacco
come to my store and get Black
Eagle Sun Cured. It's a good one.
D. W.
FOR SALE OR RENT SEVERAL
farms at Vanceboro, Cove City.
New Bern, and other parts of Craven
county. J. W. Stewart, New Born.
N. C.
FOR SALE FORTY ACRES LAND,
cleared, three room dwelling,
tobacco barn, etc. Original growth
oak and pine. G. T. Tyson, R
Greenville.
STOMACH TROUBLE
FOR FIVE YEARS
Majority of Friends Thought Mr.
Would Die, Bat
One Helped Him to
Recovery.
interesting ad-
vice from this place, Mr. A. J. Hughes
writes as was down with
stomach Double five years, and
would have sick headache so bad, at
times, that thought surely I would die.
I tried different treatment's, but they
did not seem to do me any good.
I got so bad, I could not eat or sleep,
and all my friends, except one, thought I
would die. He advised me to try
and quit
taking other medicines. I decided to
take his advice, although I did not have
any confidence in it.
I have now been taking
for three months, and it has cured me
haven't had those awful sick headache
since began using it.
I am so thankful for what Black-
has done for
has been
found a very valuable medicine for de-
of the stomach and liver. It
is composed pure, vegetable herbs,
contains no dangerous ingredients, and
acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely
used by young and old, and should be
kept in every family chest
a package today.
Only a quarter. j-ex
VALUABLE LAND 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
in 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 No.
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 the heirs of
Fernando Ward, deceased, as Is laid
down on the map of Fernando Ward's
farm surveyed and made by F.
Price,, surveyor. In 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, instill corner, thence
B. 1-2 west feet to a W.
O. 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 Wash-
road feet to run
a corner, 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
fit reference see the Map of
of the Fernando Ward farm made
H. F. Price in August, 1886.
Farm No.
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
Is laid down on the map of Fernando
Ward's Farm surveyed and made by
H. F. Price, surveyor, in year 1886,
bounded and described as follows, to-
w 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
Fleming's corner, and corner be-
tween Lots No. and No. thence
N. 2-05 E. with dividing line between
Lots 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 ditch or branch between Lots
No. and thence S. 2-05 W. with
dividing line between 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 in August, 1886.
Farm No.
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
I heirs of Fernando Ward, deceased, as
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
Sod Lot No. to their corner, thence
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, S. 1-2 E.
feet to the corner between Lots
No. and No. thence with the
line between lots No. and
No. S. 2-05 W. feet to the be-
ginning. Containing acres more
or less. For further reference see
the map of survey of the Fernando
Ward farm, made by H. F. Price in
August 1886.
Said farms will be sold separately
and afterwards offered as 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. O. James and Son.
Greenville, N. C.
ltd
FOR A
farm dwelling, email store
room on place, In Martin county, six
miles from on
phone Una R F. D. No. For
particulars apply to J. Ross, Rob-
N. C. R F. D. No.
o Id
GREENVILLE IS THE
HEART OF EASTERN
NORTH 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.
Agriculture Is the Most the Host Healthful, the Noble Employment of
WE HAVE A
OF TWELVE HUN-
AMONG THE BEST
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN
I PART OF NORTH CARO-
LIN A AND INVITE THOSE
WHO WISH TO GET BET-
ACQUAINTED WITH
I THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE
FEW INCHES SPACE AND
TELL EM WHAT YOU
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR
ATTENTION.
OUR ADVERTISING
ARE LOW AND CAN
BE HAD UPON
VOLUME
GREENVILLE, If. C, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 1913.
NUMBER Hi.
AT
SWEDISH LECTURER SPOKE TO
LARGE AND APPRECIATIVE
AUDIENCE MONDAY
NIGHT.
Expressions of gratification over
tho exercises of evening were
heard on every hand by those who at-
tended the lecture of Mr. Karl
at the Training School auditorium
Monday night Practically the en-
tire student body of tho school
present, and an large
of people from tho town went
out for tho exercises.
After a few words of Introduction
the speaker plunged Into the body of
his evening's lecture. He told In a
very Interesting manner of the kind
of people who were his ancestors,
and gave Interesting illustrations of
the character and nature of the ear-
sailors of Mr.
Jansen's home In
Norway, tho farthest north of any In
the world, a place where the Bun
never shines for months of the
year, and where the Christmas din-
Is eaten at darkest midnight
The speaker told of tho tests that
were made of tho young men In his
country, and showed how brave and
fearless they were in the face of
gravest danger.
Mr Jansen's Impersonation of the
character of character of Macbeth,
perhaps Shakespeare's most famous
and best known character, was all
that could asked for. The noted
Swede showed that he was equally
capable, whether acting the part of
some character, or In tell-
of his native home.
By special request the
and the was
repeated from last summer, and the
Immense audience greeted it with
fully as much enthusiasm as though
It had been entirely new to them.
Every one present was highly pleas-
ed with the evening's entertainment,
and was vividly Impressed with the
fact that Mr. Jansen is a master at
his trade. reception Monday
was by an audience almost, though
not by any means altogether, entire-
different from that which greeted
him on the occasion of his visit here
last July. Many of the town
who heard him last summer were
only too glad last night of
of being present for Mr.
Jansen's return engagement, and will
be glad to know of his at any
future time.
PERFECT ATTENDANCE RECORD,
Fifth Grade at Made Fine
Showing Last Week.
for The
GRIFTON, Oct. piece of bus-
can be carried on without reg-
this applies to every phase of
life, outside of the school room as
well as in. One of our grades had
a perfect record of attendance
the past week, September to
October
The fifth grade is the fortunate
one this week.
Addle Williams, teacher. Floyd
Brown, Carl Dunn, Gardner,
Hazel Patrick, Patrick.
Who will make the next successful
record
Rev. C. M. Hock la Speak
in Norfolk On the
the World in Fifty
is the subject of a lecture that Rev.
C M. Rock, of the local Baptist
church, la to give in the big Baptist
church In tho Ghent section of the city
of Norfolk on the night of October
Tho lecture will be much the
same as those delivered here by Mr.
Rock at his church services, though
It will be much more concise and will
not be in detail nearly so much as
those that he has given here.
Mr. Rock's services for these
were engaged even before he
reached home from trip, and tho
people to whom he goes will hear
him with a great deal of pleasure.
The Ghent section of Norfolk Is Mr,
Rock's former home, and the people
in that part of the big city will be
very glad to know that he Is to re-
turn.
FROM DAM.
Notes From One, Out From
Greenville.
Farmers have left grading
co and are picking cotton. Cotton
was blown about by the storm of
September so that the work Is slow.
Misses Tucker, Annie
and Margaret Edwards left on
early train Monday morning for Wash-
D. C and will return by way
of Richmond and take in the fair.
The series of meetings at Arthur
have resulted In the conversion
eight sinners who were baptized In
the rock hole at Ballard's Bridge by
Elder C. D. Smith.
J. H. Cobb Is Installing a system
gin which will soon be ready to turn
out the fleecy staple.
John J. Tyson, wife, and little son.
of Cumberland Furnace, Tennessee,
are spending some time at the home
of his father, Mr. G. T.
Farmers are saving lots of bright
hay. It is to be hoped that so much
will not have to be shipped In next
summer as formerly.
Some real estate Is changing hands
at lively prices.
HANKERS BEGIN CON.
IN NEW YORK
BOSTON, Mass., Oct.
two days of section meetings and
other preliminaries, the regular
of the thirty-ninth annual con-
of the American As-
were opened today with a
rt cord-breaking attendance of prom-
bankers and financiers from
section of the country. Mayor
John F. Fitzgerald and President
Thomas P. Beal of the Boston Clear-
House welcomed the visitors. Re
was made by First Vice
dent Arthur Reynolds of Des
Following tho exchange of greetings
brief exercises were held in memory
of the late Charles F. of St.
Louis, who was president of the as-
at the time of his death
some months ago. At
some months ago. At o'clock
Chairman A, B. Hepburn of New
York Introduced the report of the
Currency Commission, which was fol-
lowed by a spirited discussion.
TRY THE HALL WOVEN WIRE
STRETCHERS. SAVES TIME AND
LABOR. ONE MAN CAN PUT UP A
FENCE ALONE. CALL AND SEE IT.
J. R. J. G.
of Wife Murder.
DALLAS. Tex., Oct case of
Raymond Indicted on a
charge of murdering his wife, was
called In court today for trial. Mrs.
met her death In her home
on August last During a quarrel
it is alleged hit his wife
over the heart with his fist died
almost Instantly. The husband fled
the city and was arrested several
days later at Temple.
APPLICATION FOR
BE
For New Cotton Mill to fie Built
in Greenville
MEETING HELD LAST NIGHT
Charter Will be Signed by
and Hill be Sent to
of State Grimes
at Once.
Culmination of the movement for
a cotton mill in Greenville was put
one step nearer by the meeting of
the stockholders held last night in
the of Carolina Club. A big
of the stock so far
for the movement was represented
at the meting and never before has
more enthusiasm been manifested In
the project than was the case last
right Every man present was very
optimistic about mater, and de-
his opinion to be that
less than success could come out
of the plans that are now being work-
ed out.
Apt for a charter for the
cotton mill will be made to
of State J. Bryan Grimes within the
next few days. All of the
desired incorporated In the char-
were discussed and agreed an-
on last night, and as soon as all of
the stockholders can be seen and
their names secured for the
it will be to Raleigh to
be entered and formally recognized
by the secretary of state.
Only a very few thousand dollars
worth of the hundred thousand de-
sired remains to be subscribed, and
the promoters feel that they need have
no uneasiness about this matter. They
are not straining any efforts to have
taken Immediately, for they are
waiting for some person to show his
interest in the cotton mill and rum
up and manifest bis desire to have
a part Some of the stock has come
In this way, and It Is believed that
no trouble whatever will be
in securing the remainder.
Mr. Ming's Horse Meets
With Very Painful
Death
MAY BE BIG
LEAGUE PLAYER YET
NEW Oct. Thorpe
the Sac Indian, of Olympic
games and football fume, who has
spent the summer learning
baseball under the tutelage of
John J. is beginning
show signs of developing Into a big
league player. Although he has
done little toward aiding the Giants
In winning the National League pen
of 1913 he signed a New
York contract. Thorpe has not
wasted his time spent upon the play-
bench. According to other
of the club the Indian will be
ready to break Into fast company be-
fore the middle of the 1914 season
If he continues to Improve next
spring at the pace he has been main-
In the past few months.
Thorpe proved absolutely green,
so far as big league baseball was
concerned, when ho Joined the
Giants training squad at
Springs, Texas, early In the spring.
A- from his national athletic
prowess and the ability to drive out
tremendous hits when he could hit
tho ball, he was the veriest kind of
a He showed
however, that he was willing and
eager to learn, and he has been one
of the hardest workers during all
the practice sessions of the Giants
Death in a very manner
came Sunday night to a fine horse
owned by Mr. P. C. Harding. Mr.
Harding drove the horse Sunday
and was congratulating him-
self upon the acquisition of such a
fine specimen of the animal. The
bone was placed in the stable
returning to the home on Second
street, and later in the night
ed In some way to free himself from
his stall. Once free, the animal struck
out across the Held, and went in the
direction of House station. Just be-
getting to House he left tho
road and In some way and for some
reason took to the railroad. In cross-
a little trestle a short distance
this of the station tho horse
plunged his foot between two ties,
and a long spike protruding some
five or six Inches above the beam
stuck in the horse's abdomen.
able to himself from his position,
the horse scrambled and his
body about so much for a long
time that the big spike gouged a
hole in his body, and be
ed only a few minutes after Mr. Hard-
the next morning found him and
reached the spot where he WM held
fast on tho trestle.
Mr. Harding had purchased the
only or four days before he
was killed. The animal was one of
the best and the finest In town, and
cost a considerable sum of money.
TWO PARDONS GRANTED.
J. W. of and
Wall of Cabarrus.
RALEIGH, Oct
granted two pardons
John W.
serving four months on the roads
since the September term of court
for larceny, pardoned on
that for the future he remain
a law abiding and Industrious
He has been In jail three months
and on the roads about one month.
Judge Shaw and Solicitor Bower rec-
the pardon.
Wall, Cabarrus county,
since May, 1911, on a three
sentence In Jail for manslaughter, on
condition of future good behavior.
Wall has served nearly all of his
sentence. The principal witness
against him has admitted since the
trial that her testimony was not true
AYDEN, Oct. were
baptized at Little Creek Sunday
resulting from the revivals
at Bethany, and Delight churches.
Car of lime, cement and stock fence
at J. R. Smith and Bro.
Prof. Ernest Woolen and Miss
die Tripp were happily married Sun-
day afternoon. J. E. Sawyer
officiated.
Hardware of all sorts and kinds at
J. R. Smith and Bro.
Mr. Ernest Langston and Miss Al-
were married last Sunday
afternoon. Rev. R. F. Pittman of-
Seed. rye. rape and a few tons of
guano. J. R. Smith and Bro.
Mr. J. F. Smith left Sunday night
for Greenville and from there to Nor-
folk to spend some time.
Mr. Mark Manning left Monday
for to attend Lang s
carnival and wrestle with the female
champion.
Cook, heating oil stoves and grates
at J. R. Smith and Bro.
Mr. H. left Tuesday even-
for the northwest to buy horses,
mules and
Mr. T. G. has
chased tho house and lot of Mrs
Cora Moore In the part of
town.
Mr. Julian Lyons has returned from
tho of Washington and has a
position on the tobacco market here.
Rev. J. H. pastor of the
church, Mrs. Agnes Blount
and Miss Lee Nichols are attending
the national convention at Toronto
Canada.
Turk Chanted With Fraud.
NEW YORK, Oct.
who for some weeks has had the
distinction of being the only Turk
among the cosmopolitan population of
the Tombs prison, was arraigned be-
United States Commissioner
Shields today in extradition proceed-
on the complaint of the Ottoman
vice consul here. It Is charged that
last summer while employed
by the Departments of Posts and Tel-
at Constantinople, falsified a
number of and cable dis-
patches, and appropriated the
paid by the recipients of the bogus
messages.
Famous Woman Swimmer Weds.
BOSTON. Mass., Aisle
as a swimmer
today took her first plunge into the
matrimonial sea. In the church of
Our Lady of In
she became tho bride of Daniel L
of East London, who has
a wide reputation as an athlete. Two
years ago Miss accomplish-
ed the difficult feat of swimming from
Charlestown Bridge to Boston Light
a distance of more than miles. A
month later she made a 20-mile swim
in New York harbor and subsequently
she performed similar feats In the
River Thames and in the
Channel.
October
Hancock, first signer
the Declaration of
died In Boston. Born in
Quincy, Mass., Jan. 1737
CAR LOAD EDGE
I THE MILLS. NO BET.
MADE. TRY IT. J
It. it J.
ADVERTISE SALE
OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS HEADY
TO PLACE BONDS FOR THE
OF
ROADS.
Notices have been sent out by the
board of county ad-
the sale half of the
thousand dollars worth of bonds
voted by the people of Greenville
township on July The
have made all the arrange-
for the vale of these bonds
and are now notifying the public that
the bonds may be bought.
Advertisements will be placed
several of the big papers of the north,
and In one or two Instances In this
section of the country. It is believed
that no trouble will be experienced
in selling these bonds, the town-
ship is already bonded only to a very
small extent, and its credit Is good.
Fifty thousand dollars is said to be
a very small debt for a township the
size of Greenville to carry, and there
will probably be no trouble in paying
oft the bonds they become due.
Shortly after the election of July
an agitation was started for the is-
of portions of the issue at
time. This discussion seems to have
gained some support from the com-
missioners as they have ordered only-
half of the entire amount to be issue
at this time. By doing this, the com-
missioners will save the township
much interest that would have to
paid on the other half of the bonds.
Bids will be received until
1913, at ten o'clock in i.
morning, and all bids must be
by a certified check of
as a guarantee of good faith, and
this will be forfeited by the failure
of the bidder to comply with the bid
that he puts in. The commissioners
will reserve the right to reject any
and all bids that may be made for
any reason which they may have.
Northwestern Fire Underwriters.
CHICAGO, Oct. Dr. Frank
W. president of Armour
Institute, which has one of the
courses in the country on fire en-
delivered the address this
morning at the opening session of tho
annual meeting of the Under-
Association of the Northwest.
At the afternoon session rate making
and other subjects to
were discussed in addresses de-
livered by Edward R. Hardy of New
York. Frank G. Snyder of Louisville,
and A. of Lansing. Mich.
convention will conclude
row.
Undertakers in Convention.
MILWAUKEE. Wis. Oct.
most Improved methods in embalm-
and earring for the dead are to
be discussed by representatives
from all sections of the
country, who assembled here today
for tho annual convention of the
National
The sessions of the
will continue three days and will
Interspersed with several features
of for the visitors.
UNLOADING CAR OF
FENCING BARB WIRE.
TO BE SOLD AT REDUCED. SEE
US BEFORE BUYING . R. J. G.
of Police Hennessey of
New Orleans murdered by
of the Italian Mafia .
CASH IN ADVANCE SUB-
While it has already been an-
that The will
place its subscription list on the
rash in basis the first
of January, attention will be
railed to it from time to time
so that all subscribers may be
fully advised of the change. The
subscription list will be revised
during the month of December,
and after January 1st, the pa-
per will be sent only U those
who have paid for it in advance
and discontinued at the
of the time paid for unless
renewed.
A number who
have called in to pay since the
announcement was made, have
expressed approval of the
to the rash in advance
system. It prove better for
the subscribers and for the p-
per, as well as dispense with
the annoyance of to
dun them through printed o.
tiers. We hope every
make note of the change.
and pay in time to prevent his
name being dropped from the
The date printed after the
name on the paper will show
each one just how his
stands. Do not wait for a
statement to me mailed, but
look at the date after same
and make payment according-
before January.


Title
Eastern reflector, 3 October 1913
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 03, 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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