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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
It. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
UNIVERSITY DAY <lb/>
v of Hundred Seventeenth <lb/>
at Chapel Hill. <lb/>
Chapel Hill, Oct 117th <lb/>
anniversary of the founding of the <lb/>
University of North Carolina <lb/>
celebrated in chapel and throughout <lb/>
the state last Wednesday the ex- <lb/>
of university day. In <lb/>
Hill the day was a holiday for the <lb/>
students. The alumni associations <lb/>
all over North Carolina and in many <lb/>
of the largest cities of the country <lb/>
celebrated the fittingly. <lb/>
grams were received from the <lb/>
in New York Birmingham and <lb/>
various other places. <lb/>
The principal address of the day <lb/>
in Hill delivered by Pres- <lb/>
He declared that the <lb/>
university faces a crisis, just as real <lb/>
and just as pressing as that brought <lb/>
on by the civil war, which resulted <lb/>
in the closing of the institution. The <lb/>
college is overcrowded in every way. <lb/>
is bound to set in <lb/>
less from some source, expectedly <lb/>
and naturally from the State, a more <lb/>
ample provision is made for the sup- <lb/>
port of the college. He quoted fig- <lb/>
to show that North Carolina, <lb/>
although possessing an amount of <lb/>
taxable property great- <lb/>
than Virginia, was appropriating <lb/>
for the support of its state university <lb/>
a sum that hardly exceeds half of <lb/>
the yearly Virginia appropriation. <lb/>
In his remarks at the chapel <lb/>
Thursday the fine <lb/>
celebration of university day, Dean <lb/>
Graham, of the academic department, <lb/>
after expressing the appreciation of <lb/>
the university at the wonderfully in- <lb/>
spiring support that the alumni <lb/>
all over the country brought, <lb/>
called the attention of the students <lb/>
to what he considered the most <lb/>
fact of the celebration Just <lb/>
This was the civic strength <lb/>
of the young alumni who chiefly made <lb/>
up the local program. The greatest <lb/>
glory of the university is the <lb/>
renaissance in North <lb/>
so wide reaching in splendid results, <lb/>
was led by a group of <lb/>
statesmen trained in the university <lb/>
Alderman, Aycock <lb/>
and their helpers were men be- <lb/>
longed to practically the same col- <lb/>
generation. The <lb/>
that the re-opened university offered <lb/>
to the State. The group on <lb/>
the stage university day the <lb/>
point of view of educational leader- <lb/>
ship a part of the second crop. <lb/>
Dean W. C. Smith. r <lb/>
State Normal college <lb/>
Foust was also an <lb/>
R. H. Wright, of the East Carolina <lb/>
Training School; I <lb/>
Howard of Fe- <lb/>
male college, and President Walter <lb/>
Thompson, of the <lb/>
Training School, were the <lb/>
All of these men are of <lb/>
one college generation; all of them <lb/>
are leaders in the application of ideas <lb/>
that promise great things for e <lb/>
State; all of them are men <lb/>
sort of strength, including the fine <lb/>
strength of youth; all of them are <lb/>
men of healthy constructive thought; <lb/>
and better till all of them are <lb/>
to the service of North Car- <lb/>
Let Us Put this Beautiful Range in Your <lb/>
Home Next Week, and Present You With <lb/>
a Valuable Set of Kitchen Utensils, FREE. <lb/>
Remember, <lb/>
Next <lb/>
Week <lb/>
We <lb/>
Expect <lb/>
to See You <lb/>
An Expert Demonstrator from South Bend, will be at our store <lb/>
all next week. Come, and you will hear some In- <lb/>
formation. You will also be served with Hot Biscuits and Coffee. <lb/>
Carr Atkins Hardware Company <lb/>
Don't you think you have put up with that old cast iron cook stove, or <lb/>
poor steel range long enough When you see South Bend Malleable Range <lb/>
we are sure you will decide that you have. YOU Want the best and you deserve <lb/>
to have it. <lb/>
Woodland Items. <lb/>
Woodland, Oct. are glad to <lb/>
see Mr. Madison Smith out again <lb/>
being confined to his bed with <lb/>
fever. <lb/>
Mr. Ben. Craft, near Falkland, <lb/>
spent Saturday night and Sunday in <lb/>
our section. His daughter, Miss <lb/>
Jane, accompanied him. <lb/>
One day last week Mr. Joshua <lb/>
Tripp got one finger cut off and an- <lb/>
other nearly off in a cotton gin. <lb/>
Mr. Ernest Baker spent Sunday at <lb/>
Mr. A. W. Barber's. <lb/>
Mr. Barber and two little <lb/>
sons spent Sunday at Mr. A. W. Bar- <lb/>
We are sorry to hear of the Illness <lb/>
of Mrs. H. B. Smith. Hope she will <lb/>
soon recover. <lb/>
Miss Pearly Barber Is spending <lb/>
sometime at Mr. A. W. Barber's. <lb/>
The Woodland baseball team <lb/>
for the first time last Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. W. L. Nobles, of Ayden, spent <lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday with her <lb/>
parents, Mr. and Mis. W. R. W. No- <lb/>
of the Confederacy <lb/>
The Chapter Daughters <lb/>
of the Confederacy will meet at <lb/>
o'clock, Wednesday afternoon, with <lb/>
Mrs. Jarvis. Every member Is urged <lb/>
to be present at this meeting. <lb/>
Slightly Paralyzed. <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Perkins, one of our oldest <lb/>
citizens, suffered a slight stroke of <lb/>
paralysis Monday evening. He Is re- <lb/>
ported as getting along fairly well <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Happiest Woman In Smart Set. <lb/>
Do you want to know the happiest <lb/>
woman in the smart set of New York <lb/>
Well, it is Mrs. Harry Payne Whit- <lb/>
And do you want to now why she <lb/>
is so happy <lb/>
Well, it's work; hard work. <lb/>
She was saved by something very <lb/>
wonderful and very <lb/>
And her work is along the lines of <lb/>
beauty. The gods gave her genius. She <lb/>
a sculptor busy day day in <lb/>
her studio, In a narrow alley miles j <lb/>
away from her beautiful home, among <lb/>
the studios of other artists who <lb/>
haven't the smallest fraction of even <lb/>
one million to their name. She wears <lb/>
a clay-stained apron and a straight <lb/>
frock, and is as busy as a bee over <lb/>
her modeling. It is not <lb/>
either, I will have you to know, but <lb/>
genuine sculpture that stands the test <lb/>
of the most relentless critic and has <lb/>
won praise from no less a person than <lb/>
great Rodin himself. It's big, strong <lb/>
work, not delicate and finicky like that <lb/>
of Sarah Bernhardt, but executed in <lb/>
bold masses. Her <lb/>
has Rodin's bigness about it, and <lb/>
is not a mere thing, like <lb/>
those groups of the divine Sarah's. <lb/>
Designer. <lb/>
Four Train Loads in One Month. <lb/>
In a large advertisement on thud <lb/>
page today J. Benjamin Higgs calls at <lb/>
tendon to the demonstration of Dun- <lb/>
op that he will make In <lb/>
ion with the Malleable range <lb/>
at the store of Carr Atkins <lb/>
Hardware Co. all of next week. He <lb/>
is sole agent for this famous flour In <lb/>
this territory and sold four train <lb/>
loads in four months to his customers <lb/>
a record for selling flour that no <lb/>
broker has approached. <lb/>
Mrs. Hooker Entertains <lb/>
Mrs. Lawrence Hooker, of 1311 <lb/>
Main street, entertained a few of her <lb/>
friends Thursday evening at cards <lb/>
a late hour, when delicious refresh <lb/>
were The parlors were <lb/>
very prettily decorated with cut <lb/>
flowers potted plants. Among the <lb/>
guests were Miss Moore, of Peters- <lb/>
burg; Mrs. Smith, Misses Ida and E. <lb/>
Smith, Miss Rosa Hooker; Messrs. <lb/>
W. M. White, J. A. Kruse, Lee Todd, <lb/>
R. H. Davis, Grove and <lb/>
Evening Journal. <lb/>
NOTICE IF INTERESTED IN <lb/>
learning to play Piano Organ, Gui- <lb/>
tar or Violin, address J. N. ALLEN, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Do all the work you The man who right <lb/>
lazy associates will do the rest. wrong. <lb/>
Vi- <lb/>
is the Useful, the Most the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1910.<lb/>
HAITIAN GUNBOAT LOST. <lb/>
Seventy Persons Lost or <lb/>
Including Ten Generals. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Port Au Prince, Oct. <lb/>
Seventy persons were killed o. <lb/>
drowned when the gunboat <lb/>
was lost at sea off Port de <lb/>
following an explosion on board <lb/>
Twenty were rescued. A storm <lb/>
raging off the coast at the time of <lb/>
the accident and those who put off <lb/>
from the boat reached shore with <lb/>
the greatest difficulty. The gun- <lb/>
boat was badly torn by the explosion <lb/>
and was left at the mercy of the bat- <lb/>
seas. She was settling when <lb/>
the men deserted her. The accident <lb/>
occurred news reaching <lb/>
the today. those <lb/>
drowned were ten generals, <lb/>
who were oil their way to take com- <lb/>
of several army divisions in <lb/>
the North. <lb/>
STATE BOARD FAVORS TOWNS. <lb/>
Hearing Before Health <lb/>
Sewerage. <lb/>
FUNERAL OF MR. ZENO BROWN. <lb/>
Hill <lb/>
PARIS KILLED. <lb/>
Falls Feet and Is Terribly Crush- <lb/>
ed to <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Paris, Oct. <lb/>
fell feat today at Issy, and was <lb/>
instantly killed. His body was <lb/>
crushed. He was attempting to <lb/>
alight This is the man <lb/>
killed within a year in aviation. <lb/>
Another Starts for London. <lb/>
Paris, Oct. Morrison <lb/>
started from aviation field at Issy to- <lb/>
to make the flight to London, <lb/>
to duplicate the flight <lb/>
of John B. American <lb/>
Raleigh, Oct. State Board <lb/>
of Health, after hearing lengthy and <lb/>
Seated discussions by State Engineer <lb/>
Ludlow and delegations from Rocky <lb/>
Mount and Tarboro as to the sewer- <lb/>
age disposal plants for those towns <lb/>
for the protection of the Greenville <lb/>
water supply, adopts a resolution <lb/>
the authorities of Rocky <lb/>
Mount and Tarboro to proceed with <lb/>
the installation of plants to cost about <lb/>
each Instead of filtration plants <lb/>
that the State engineer Insisted on <lb/>
that would cost over each. The <lb/>
resolution specified that the State <lb/>
Board of Health should have close <lb/>
supervision over the plants install- <lb/>
ed and operated. is miles <lb/>
below Rocky Mount on Tar river and <lb/>
Greenville Is miles below Tarboro. <lb/>
Greenville is especially concerned. <lb/>
three have to get their water sup- <lb/>
ply from the river and also turn their <lb/>
Sewerage into it. Here tor Tarboro <lb/>
making the fight for the lower priced <lb/>
were Mayor Paul Jones, T. T. <lb/>
W. Clark and J. W. Wed- <lb/>
dell. For Mount there were <lb/>
T. H. Battle, Senator Bassett and Mr. <lb/>
Gay. Officers of both Tarboro and <lb/>
Rocky Mount declared they just <lb/>
would not undertake to install the <lb/>
higher priced plants demanded by the <lb/>
engineer Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
IN TOBACCO. <lb/>
Body Bests in Cherry <lb/>
On the afternoon of Monday, <lb/>
24th, at half past three o'clock, <lb/>
the funeral services of the late Mr. <lb/>
Zeno Brown, were conducted in St. <lb/>
Paul's Episcopal church, Greenville, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
The remains of Mr. Brown reached <lb/>
home Sunday evening, being <lb/>
from Florida, the place of his <lb/>
death, by his friend, Mr. Lester <lb/>
LABOR UNIONS ORDERED OUT <lb/>
Will Act With In <lb/>
Election. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Oct. Penn- <lb/>
State Federation of <lb/>
has issued an official circular order- <lb/>
all workmen affiliated with it to <lb/>
on election day and unite i. <lb/>
independent action at polls. <lb/>
means a complete suspension of la- <lb/>
on that day labor forces <lb/>
rayed with the independents in the <lb/>
state contest. <lb/>
Another Flight Across <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
London, Oct. English Chan <lb/>
was again successfully <lb/>
by an on the Morning <lb/>
Post airship, which started from <lb/>
France, at this <lb/>
morning and passed Brighton at 2.13 <lb/>
this afternoon for <lb/>
age. <lb/>
The burial services were conducted <lb/>
by the Rev. B. F. Huske, former rec- <lb/>
tor of St. Paul's church. <lb/>
During the service the choir sang <lb/>
Kindly and of <lb/>
With was sung <lb/>
at the grave after the body was laid <lb/>
to rest. <lb/>
The with which the grave <lb/>
was covered were beautiful and in <lb/>
great abundance, and were express- <lb/>
of the deep sympathy of a great <lb/>
number of friends. A largo con- <lb/>
course of people attended the funeral, <lb/>
and It was evident that the heart of <lb/>
the entire community was deeply <lb/>
touched by the sad death of this es- <lb/>
young man. <lb/>
Zeno Brown was Industrious and <lb/>
faithful, highly esteemed by the firm <lb/>
for which he worked, and beloved by <lb/>
a large circle of friends. <lb/>
The following were the pall bearers <lb/>
Messrs. John Bascom <lb/>
son Walter Norman War- <lb/>
A. L. Blow, Jr., James Anderson, <lb/>
and L. L. Savage. <lb/>
The relatives who had come from <lb/>
a distance on account of the death of <lb/>
Mr. Brown were Mr. and Mrs. W. L. <lb/>
Jenkins, Charlotte; Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
John Pender and Mr. Cotton, of Tar- <lb/>
Good Quality, Well Handled, Brings <lb/>
Best Price. <lb/>
An ignorant man, so far as tobacco <lb/>
is concerned, asks the question, why, <lb/>
If one farmer received an average of <lb/>
cents per pound for bis tobacco, the <lb/>
general market average does not show <lb/>
cents And the funny part of the <lb/>
thing is that, such men pretend to ad- <lb/>
vise farmers as to what is for <lb/>
etc. Now, we know of a man <lb/>
who received an average of nearly <lb/>
cents per pound for his on the <lb/>
market last week. We <lb/>
know of another man who received an <lb/>
average less than cents. Now, what's <lb/>
the difference In prices One man <lb/>
had good tobacco, marketed in good <lb/>
condition. The other fellow had <lb/>
poor tobacco, some of it being wet <lb/>
and damaged. That's <lb/>
Salem Tobacco Journal. <lb/>
DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. <lb/>
Will Speak at Parmele, Wednesday, <lb/>
November 2nd. <lb/>
Wizard of will <lb/>
speak at Parmele, N. C., on <lb/>
day, November 2nd, at 5.30 p. m. <lb/>
All the evening trains will arrive <lb/>
in time for the occasion and as the <lb/>
speech will be delivered at the rail- <lb/>
road station, those who come to hear <lb/>
him will have time to return on out- <lb/>
going trains. <lb/>
This will be Dr. Washington's first <lb/>
visit to this section of North Carolina <lb/>
and the arrangement to have him <lb/>
speak at Parmele is merely to give <lb/>
many their first opportunity to <lb/>
and hear him. It is hoped that the <lb/>
citizens will turn out en to <lb/>
hear the distinguished <lb/>
Former Georgia Go Dead. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Atlanta, Oct Gov- <lb/>
Alien D. Candler, died early <lb/>
today. He bad Georgia in <lb/>
capacities and was well known <lb/>
the south. <lb/>
Mr. Roy of Richmond, <lb/>
is his uncle, Mr. W. H. Ward. <lb/>
A Bale to The Acre. <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Turnage brought a <lb/>
of bales of cotton here today to sell. <lb/>
He has eleven acres in <lb/>
staple and has sold nine bales and will <lb/>
sell two more. Mr. Jim Davenport <lb/>
lays it all the farmers would do <lb/>
well and cotton continued to sell at <lb/>
tho present price they could tell J. <lb/>
D. Rockefeller to go to H------ with <lb/>
all his money <lb/>
Bumper Tobacco Sale. <lb/>
The tobacco warehouses had one <lb/>
of the of the season on <lb/>
Tuesday. There was about <lb/>
pounds on tho floors, and even with <lb/>
such a large break, prices were so <lb/>
good that the farmers were nil pleas- <lb/>
ed. Greenville all tao time on <lb/>
selling tobacco. <lb/>
Very butter cunts per pound <lb/>
at J. R. J. G. <lb/>
. <lb/>
r f <lb/>
-.-<lb/>
w.<lb/>
s ; i<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
i. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and Tie Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
LECTURES TO PUPILS <lb/>
OF TRAINING SCHOOL <lb/>
PRESIDENT WRIGHT GIVES THEM <lb/>
TIMELY COUNSEL <lb/>
Series of Lectures in Which Highest <lb/>
are Emphasized and <lb/>
for Better Life. <lb/>
No one can visit the Training <lb/>
school here without being sensibly <lb/>
impressed with the splendid <lb/>
the students of this <lb/>
are having in every department <lb/>
of the work and in every phase of <lb/>
development that gees for strength <lb/>
and culture of character and <lb/>
for a successful life's work. <lb/>
The of the faculty and of the <lb/>
student body are such as to create <lb/>
an atmosphere in which it is safe for <lb/>
the young to live. This is in part <lb/>
brought about by the morning <lb/>
when all the students are <lb/>
together and in addition to <lb/>
the usual program observed at such <lb/>
times, President Wright in short <lb/>
talks holds up to the student body <lb/>
such high ideals of both life and <lb/>
work that impressions are made <lb/>
which, in a large measure, will en- <lb/>
into the formation of the <lb/>
of each pupil. There is always <lb/>
in these talks that which will pro- <lb/>
duce thought and inspire lofty ideals <lb/>
to permanent in their nature that <lb/>
they must bring forth fruit both in <lb/>
the private and public life of every <lb/>
student. Thursday morning <lb/>
dent Wright spoke in reference to <lb/>
the choice of companion and among <lb/>
other <lb/>
I spoke to you of the <lb/>
obligations and responsibilities that <lb/>
rest upon you as prospective teach- <lb/>
Of your future relations with <lb/>
state and the state's obligation to- <lb/>
ward you and concluded with the <lb/>
thought of your position in the re-or- <lb/>
and adjustment of our so- <lb/>
life. <lb/>
in the selection of your inti- <lb/>
mate associates, family or wealth <lb/>
not to be your guide, then what is <lb/>
to assist you in your choice of com- <lb/>
Let me give you a few <lb/>
points that will serve you not only <lb/>
while here, but you get out in- <lb/>
to the world. <lb/>
Avoid the kicker. Have you <lb/>
Beau him The person for whom <lb/>
enough cannot be done. The person <lb/>
who finds fault with everything done. <lb/>
lessons are too long, his tasks <lb/>
are greater than he can do, every <lb/>
for the common good meets <lb/>
with his hearty disapproval. He <lb/>
like someone said the Irishman is. <lb/>
Avoid the person whose mind <lb/>
runs to evil. person with vile <lb/>
stories who delights in smut and <lb/>
filth. what he talks about, <lb/>
for from abundance of the heart <lb/>
the mouth their fruits <lb/>
ye know <lb/>
Avoid the person who is not <lb/>
honest, If he will take a mean ad <lb/>
vantage in a game of tennis, he will <lb/>
take a mean advantage In the game <lb/>
of life. If he will cheat on an <lb/>
in he will cheat la <lb/>
business. he will try to deceive <lb/>
Ms teacher on class, he will try to <lb/>
deceive in affairs of <lb/>
life. If ho not honest herein <lb/>
school-ho will be dishonest there- <lb/>
in life. <lb/>
Avoid the talebearer. <lb/>
dog that will bring a bone <lb/>
will carry The person who <lb/>
comes to you with gossip, will gossip <lb/>
about you; that is the who <lb/>
tells you evil about your neighbor <lb/>
will tell your neighbor evil about you. <lb/>
is not clothes, family, money <lb/>
or chow that makes a man The <lb/>
honest man, though ever so poor it <lb/>
king of men. In this school real <lb/>
worth, and that alone, should count; <lb/>
for the great battle of life it is real <lb/>
worth only that really counts. Se <lb/>
your companions from those who <lb/>
have nobility and stability of <lb/>
Those who have a clear vision of <lb/>
right and wrong and ring true every <lb/>
time. <lb/>
cannot put your standard too <lb/>
The danger lies not in having <lb/>
standards, not in selecting as <lb/>
our companions people with right <lb/>
people with noble purposes, <lb/>
in the feeling of that <lb/>
comes to one from hold- <lb/>
these standards. He lowers his <lb/>
to put himself in touch <lb/>
the masses of mankind. is <lb/>
weakness. This is the tempter to <lb/>
you should say, thee be- <lb/>
me Or he puts himself <lb/>
cut of touch with his <lb/>
v. a vivid self-consciousness of <lb/>
is own superiority. This, too, is a <lb/>
that smacks of the <lb/>
plutocrat I may divert the <lb/>
of this <lb/>
our political life today too <lb/>
many of our sane, sensible, right <lb/>
thinking men steer clear of politics <lb/>
or tear they will become polluted. <lb/>
as teacher or citizen cannot <lb/>
your community by holding your <lb/>
standards away from them. You must <lb/>
yourself in touch with them, but <lb/>
hold to your high ideals until they <lb/>
the good therein, and then, and <lb/>
lot until then, will they come to you. <lb/>
Remember that you will not teach <lb/>
he children alone, but that through <lb/>
the children and in person you will <lb/>
the people of the community, <lb/>
four usefulness as a teacher will de- <lb/>
fend in part upon your service as a <lb/>
teaching because of its <lb/>
mall pay, has drawn into the pro- <lb/>
many a weakling. We need <lb/>
men and women in the <lb/>
with red corpuscles in their <lb/>
more men with <lb/>
backbones, men and women are <lb/>
for the work, who know what <lb/>
do and dare do it. Indeed <lb/>
A time like this demands <lb/>
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, <lb/>
and ready hands; <lb/>
whom the lust of office does not <lb/>
kill; <lb/>
Men whom the spoils of office cannot <lb/>
buy; <lb/>
Men who possess opinions and a will; <lb/>
who have who will <lb/>
not lie; <lb/>
Men who can stand before a <lb/>
And scorn his treacherous flatteries <lb/>
without winking; <lb/>
Tall men, semi-crowned, who live <lb/>
above fog <lb/>
In public duty, and in private think- <lb/>
For while many with their thumb- <lb/>
worn creeds. <lb/>
large profession their little <lb/>
deeds <lb/>
Mingle in strife, lo Freedom <lb/>
weeps, <lb/>
Wrong rules the land, waiting <lb/>
justice <lb/>
your ear to the ground, your <lb/>
standard high in the air, your heart <lb/>
in work your lite with ., our <lb/>
. la. and justice <lb/>
to Bleep. In conclusion let mo <lb/>
this from <lb/>
Life is a leaf of paper white, <lb/>
Whereon each one of us may write <lb/>
ills word or two, then comes <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Greatly begin Though thou have <lb/>
Future <lb/>
The hole in the ground, the crevice in the <lb/>
wall, a friend's or your own, is <lb/>
not as safe a place to keep your money as is <lb/>
our bank. <lb/>
We pay interest at per cent, on time <lb/>
OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
Capital Stock, <lb/>
175,000.00 <lb/>
It. L. DAVIS, President <lb/>
J. A. ANDREWS, Vice-president <lb/>
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier H. D. Assistant Cashier <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
NOR. CAR. <lb/>
time <lb/>
But for a line, be that sublime <lb/>
Net failure, but low aim, is <lb/>
give a partial report of this <lb/>
talk because we believe that the pub- <lb/>
Will be gratified to know their <lb/>
children are brought under such <lb/>
influences at this critical <lb/>
period of life, they are <lb/>
their ideals and forming the habits <lb/>
that will largely determine their <lb/>
life. <lb/>
PHILADELPHIA IS CHAMPION. <lb/>
KILL CHILLS, DOSES WILL <lb/>
do it. Hoods Chill aw <lb/>
Fever Tonic is the Sold by <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
WHY HAVE CHILLS HOODS AN- <lb/>
Chill and Fever Tonic <lb/>
will cure you. No cure no pay. Sold <lb/>
by druggists. <lb/>
KING WINDSOR CEMENT PIASTER <lb/>
lime and cement at <lb/>
Pennsylvania Closes. <lb/>
Lebanon, Pa., Oct. <lb/>
National Bank was closed today by <lb/>
Comptroller of currency pending <lb/>
adjustment and voluntary <lb/>
of the bank's accounts. It is <lb/>
claimed that depositors will <lb/>
every dollar. The liquidation became <lb/>
necessary of the affairs of the <lb/>
thirty thousand dollar estate of the <lb/>
late A. C. Daily, former president and <lb/>
principal owner of the bank. <lb/>
SEED RYE, CLOVER, <lb/>
vetch and rape seed at F. V. John-<lb/>
Three Ont of Four Games With <lb/>
Chicago. <lb/>
Chicago, Oct. <lb/>
athletics now reign supreme in <lb/>
the baseball world. By defeating <lb/>
Chicago yesterday won for them- <lb/>
selves the coveted honor of the <lb/>
of the world. Managers Chance, <lb/>
of the Cubs, declares the defeat was <lb/>
a fair one and admits reluctantly <lb/>
that the Philadelphia team was bet <lb/>
than Chicago. <lb/>
the five game. The receipt were <lb/>
Chicago received <lb/>
i Philadelphia <lb/>
players i More than <lb/>
Ive hundred dollars is <lb/>
own to b en i. in Chicago. <lb/>
the of ; a <lb/>
won three out the in i games <lb/>
TRAVELING MAN ROBBED. <lb/>
Loses n Grip Containing Worth <lb/>
of Jewelry. <lb/>
Chicago, Oct. C. <lb/>
salesman from Columbus, O., <lb/>
was robbed of ten dollars <lb/>
worth of in the lobby of <lb/>
Great Northern hotel hero today. <lb/>
He declared had the valuables in <lb/>
a suit case when he entered the hotel <lb/>
and set grip on the floor to register <lb/>
When he turned to get grip it was <lb/>
gone. Detectives are working on <lb/>
the case. <lb/>
A girl understands men so well <lb/>
she pretends to. <lb/>
The man who does things has that <lb/>
much more time left to do other <lb/>
things. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.<lb/>
TO <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Schools. <lb/>
by American Press <lb/>
IN the past the per cent of <lb/>
rural boys girls who never <lb/>
attended college have scarcely <lb/>
received their share of attention. <lb/>
The college has been developing lend- <lb/>
but the rank and file have been <lb/>
neglected. Only recently has the need <lb/>
of industrial education for great <lb/>
mass of people been recognized. <lb/>
Now that the necessity is seen steps <lb/>
are being taken to meet it It was <lb/>
thought at first that the country boy <lb/>
con Id obtain all education need- <lb/>
ed in a city high school. That Idea Is <lb/>
fast being outgrown. city high <lb/>
school was not created to meet the <lb/>
needs of the country boy, and it con- <lb/>
little that appeals to High <lb/>
AT <lb/>
A DOMESTIC SCHOOL <lb/>
school principals have too long <lb/>
ranged their courses of study for the <lb/>
S per cent of their pupils who will go <lb/>
to college, ignoring the needs of the <lb/>
other per cent <lb/>
Hard as this system was on boy <lb/>
in town, It was harder still on the <lb/>
country boy. There was nothing In <lb/>
high school course that was con- <lb/>
even remotely with bis life on <lb/>
the farm. Most of his time was given <lb/>
to mathematics, Latin, German, etc. <lb/>
with perhaps a little music and art <lb/>
thrown In. The mathematics were o <lb/>
help in developing bis mind and teach- <lb/>
him to think. Latin and Ger- <lb/>
man were of little value except to the <lb/>
per cent who expected to enter col- <lb/>
The music probably was given <lb/>
by a teacher who couldn't sing half <lb/>
so well as the meadow larks at homo <lb/>
and the art by one who couldn't draw <lb/>
a cow or a pig to save his life. <lb/>
The worst part of the high school <lb/>
from the farm boy's standpoint was <lb/>
attitude toward work In general <lb/>
and farm work In particular. The <lb/>
boys and girls were encouraged to <lb/>
pare for college In order that they <lb/>
might get through life more easily, <lb/>
though perhaps they were not told ho <lb/>
In many words. The teachers talk- <lb/>
ed of the farm as a good place to <lb/>
come from perhaps, but carried the <lb/>
idea that farming was not a worthy <lb/>
calling for a boy with ambition. <lb/>
at- of <lb/>
away from farm toward the <lb/>
city. Not only was the farm boy de- <lb/>
any knowledge of the farm, but <lb/>
be was taught to see the bright side <lb/>
of every other calling and dark <lb/>
side of his own. It was little wonder <lb/>
that be left the farm at the end of his <lb/>
high school course. <lb/>
The high schools are coming to pay <lb/>
vastly more respect to the percent <lb/>
of their pupils. They are realizing the <lb/>
truth of the statement that the <lb/>
Increased a boy's wants <lb/>
without increasing his earning <lb/>
is a failure. Courses in carpentry, <lb/>
shop work and mechanics have been <lb/>
put in. The whole attitude of the <lb/>
high school is changing, and more at- <lb/>
Is being paid preparing <lb/>
dents for life than to preparing them <lb/>
for college. The students are being <lb/>
taught that It la an honor to work <lb/>
with their hands. The girls are being <lb/>
taught domestic science and home <lb/>
In high school has <lb/>
seen Its opportunity and is grasping it. <lb/>
In all this development the country <lb/>
boy has been left out The <lb/>
of the high school Is still that <lb/>
of the city. A few have attempted to <lb/>
teach agriculture, some have <lb/>
It has become plain, however, <lb/>
that a school located on a block of <lb/>
land In the heart of a city hope <lb/>
to teach agriculture with the greatest <lb/>
degree of success. With that <lb/>
has come the secondary <lb/>
school. Such schools are all too <lb/>
few as yet, but their numbers are in- <lb/>
creasing rapidly as the demand for <lb/>
them grows. Some are supported by <lb/>
the counties, some by the suites and <lb/>
some privately. Some of the <lb/>
national and preparatory schools have <lb/>
been very successful In teaching <lb/>
culture. Georgia has eleven district <lb/>
agricultural schools that ore doing <lb/>
a great work In the rank <lb/>
and file of the future of the <lb/>
state. Minnesota and Nebraska have <lb/>
schools of agriculture connection <lb/>
with their agricultural colleges. These <lb/>
are doing good work, but they are <lb/>
reaching only a small proportion of <lb/>
the farm boys and girls. One such <lb/>
school to a state Is not enough. <lb/>
The ideal school Is located <lb/>
away from heart of city. It <lb/>
has a liberal piece of land In <lb/>
with it To be successful It must <lb/>
be surrounded by enough of a farm <lb/>
to give It a flavor. As a rule <lb/>
these secondary schools are doing <lb/>
their work well; They have <lb/>
cut out the classics and the dead <lb/>
languages. They have substituted <lb/>
studies that help to fit the boys and <lb/>
girls for life on the farm. A large <lb/>
share of the study of books Is done <lb/>
with and study of living <lb/>
things substituted. The schools are <lb/>
well equipped with laboratories. The <lb/>
student works with corn, scoring, <lb/>
placing and testing. Judging corn la <lb/>
its fascinating a game as ever a boy <lb/>
engaged in. Even more Interesting Is <lb/>
the stock Judging. <lb/>
Few of the schools can afford to <lb/>
keep a complete line of live stock, <lb/>
but neighboring farmers are always <lb/>
ready to supply the deficiency. Then <lb/>
there are the machinery laboratories, <lb/>
where the boys learn some of the <lb/>
simpler principles of mechanics as <lb/>
plied to farm machinery. It puts a <lb/>
boy on his mettle to be loose <lb/>
on a pile of castings and told to put <lb/>
them together to form n binder. The <lb/>
of a gasoline engine keep <lb/>
him working after The study <lb/>
of the growth of plants i the place <lb/>
of the study of classified botany. <lb/>
boy learns the mimes of the different <lb/>
weeds and how to tell their seeds <lb/>
apart. He learns their habits and the <lb/>
best ways of combating them. He <lb/>
makes a collection of Insects and <lb/>
learns which ones are harmful and <lb/>
which innocent <lb/>
He Is dealing with life, the kind of <lb/>
life that be has known ever since he <lb/>
was old enough to know anything. <lb/>
At lost he U learning the answers to <lb/>
that big that has bothered him <lb/>
ever since could walk. He has <lb/>
found the education to <lb/>
ms needs and It <lb/>
an education in the ways of nature <lb/>
rather than In the ways of man. it is <lb/>
an education that is fating to live <lb/>
best the life that he knows most <lb/>
about <lb/>
He may not care much about col- <lb/>
His mind may falter at <lb/>
metrical propositions and quadratic <lb/>
equations. But be can understand the <lb/>
proposition of soil fertility and crop <lb/>
rotation. He can work out the <lb/>
of profit and loss in raising calves. <lb/>
The greatest mission of any form of <lb/>
education is to teach people how to <lb/>
live. Not only must It teach them how <lb/>
to live well, but It will be successful <lb/>
directly In proportion to the number U <lb/>
reaches. The professional colleges have <lb/>
had to encompass themselves with <lb/>
restrictions In order that their <lb/>
professions might not become over- <lb/>
crowded. With agricultural education <lb/>
there Is no such fear. <lb/>
The danger Is In getting too <lb/>
much. The problem Is to get enough. <lb/>
Secondary agricultural education has <lb/>
been phenomenally successful because <lb/>
It teaches people the things they want <lb/>
to know. They do not take such <lb/>
cation on the general theory that it <lb/>
Is good for them. They can see for <lb/>
themselves that It Is good. They <lb/>
see It in the Increased corn yields <lb/>
grown by the boys who have been <lb/>
graduated from such a school to the <lb/>
farm. They can see it from the <lb/>
proved stock that takes the place of <lb/>
the bony specimens with which be <lb/>
once would have been satisfied. They <lb/>
can see it in the pride with which he <lb/>
keeps up bis fences K <lb/>
The girl is given all. as large a <lb/>
place in the secondary school as the <lb/>
boy. She is taught the art the <lb/>
science of homemaking. She gets a <lb/>
Professional Cards <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith <lb/>
stables, and next door to John Flan- <lb/>
Buggy new building. <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
Elf AT LAW <lb/>
office formerly occupied by. J. L <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
W. C. D. M. Clark. <lb/>
CLARK <lb/>
Civil Engineers and Surveyors <lb/>
Greenville, S. <lb/>
S. J. EVERETT <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Dr. Office <lb/>
Greenville, . . M. Carolina <lb/>
L. I. Moore. W. H. Long. <lb/>
MOORE LONG <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
Greenville, . . . Carolina <lb/>
CHARLES C. PIERCE <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
in all the courts. Office up <lb/>
in Phoenix building, next to <lb/>
Dr. D. h. James <lb/>
Greenville, . . I. Carolina. <lb/>
DR. R. L. CARR <lb/>
DENTIST <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
Harry Skinner. H. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
SKINNER WHEDBEE <lb/>
LAWYERS <lb/>
Greenville. . N. Carolina <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
N. Carolina <lb/>
ALBION DUNN <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office in building, on Third <lb/>
street <lb/>
Practices wherever Ills services are <lb/>
desired. <lb/>
Greenville, N. Carolina <lb/>
IN A <lb/>
truer and saner view of life <lb/>
would be possible In a city school. <lb/>
She a greater sense of Its <lb/>
and a fuller appreciation of <lb/>
Its pleasures. <lb/>
While first aim of the secondary <lb/>
agricultural school Is to teach the boy <lb/>
to wring Increased profits from the <lb/>
and the girl to use these profits In <lb/>
building up a better home, its <lb/>
does not end there. The cultural <lb/>
side of the student's education Is not <lb/>
neglected. He Is given something of <lb/>
English, for an understanding of his <lb/>
native tongue and an ability to use it <lb/>
well are essential to a farmer who <lb/>
would be considered educated. He Is <lb/>
given something of history, for no <lb/>
study can so broaden and deepen the <lb/>
springs of human thought as history. <lb/>
He Is given public speaking and learns <lb/>
to talk well. Dame Fortune holds <lb/>
many good things in reserve for the <lb/>
man who can talk. <lb/>
DR. PAUL JONES <lb/>
DENTIST. <lb/>
Office up stairs in Masonic Building. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
OWEN N. <lb/>
W. B. RODMAN GUiON <lb/>
GUION GUION <lb/>
Attorneys at Law <lb/>
Practices where <lb/>
vices required, <lb/>
ally in the counties of <lb/>
Craven, Carte Jones <lb/>
Pamlico, and State and <lb/>
Federal Courts. <lb/>
Office Bread Street <lb/>
Phone NEW N. C. <lb/>
October 16th a Dry Day. <lb/>
Not a minute should be lost when a .-- <lb/>
child shows symptoms of croup. A lady who has kept a weather rec- <lb/>
Cough Remedy given for the past fifty years, Informs <lb/>
as soon as the child becomes hoarse, that in all that time it has never <lb/>
or even after the croupy cough , on l;. <lb/>
pears, will prevent the attack. Sold <lb/>
, Fayetteville Observer, <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
r-<lb/>
j- <lb/>
.;<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern <lb/>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX. <lb/>
Thursday, October 2.30 <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com- <lb/>
says that orders for cotton <lb/>
point to a large cotton crop <lb/>
brings Infirmities, such as Slue <lb/>
girt kidneys and Has <lb/>
and LIVER. <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for vicinity <lb/>
Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
i , i i i i i I <lb/>
High School, returned Mon- <lb/>
Jay morning. <lb/>
The Pitt County Oil Company can <lb/>
meal and in any <lb/>
wholesale and retail. <lb/>
Misses Magdalene Cox and Miriam <lb/>
Oct. Lena <lb/>
Cobb and Magdalene Cox, who have <lb/>
been visiting at Seven Spring <lb/>
returned home Wednesday <lb/>
Tho man who ha a ac <lb/>
count pay any at Bl <lb/>
time or place. No trouble <lb/>
The crock is lo- <lb/>
exact amount. The account <lb/>
every paid and gives you an -i. <lb/>
receipt An account <lb/>
the of will Le a. <lb/>
advantage to your business. <lb/>
J. B. Carroll, W. W. For <lb/>
rest, Kick Fountain <lb/>
and all left Wed <lb/>
evening for Raleigh to <lb/>
the fair. <lb/>
Harrington, Baiter Co. arc <lb/>
their entire stock of dross goo <lb/>
very cheap now. Time for you to g <lb/>
a bargain if you. want a nice dress. <lb/>
Miss who has been <lb/>
friends In Ayden for <lb/>
days, returned -home Wednesday eve. <lb/>
The men and clothing Q <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co's are re;, <lb/>
bargains at the prices they <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Cox, who has been hon <lb/>
for a few days, returned to his w <lb/>
at Fail mount Wednesday. <lb/>
A special baptismal service <lb/>
hold In the Baptist church <lb/>
evening. Four candidates were <lb/>
into the fellowship with the <lb/>
den Baptist church as a result of ; <lb/>
meeting there. Rev. M. A. Adam <lb/>
made the service very impressive am <lb/>
we learn his meeting at Ayden was i <lb/>
most excellent one. <lb/>
Go to A. for meat, mer <lb/>
and corn. <lb/>
Prof. H. F. left <lb/>
evening to attend the Raleigh fair. <lb/>
Pants, pants, pants, get your fit a <lb/>
A. W. Co's. <lb/>
Miss Lena Cobb, of <lb/>
has been visiting Miss Magdalene <lb/>
Cox, left Friday morning for <lb/>
villa to spend several days with he. <lb/>
Sister, Mrs. J. L. Jackson. <lb/>
When in need of new made <lb/>
hulls, call the Pitt County <lb/>
Co. They have them. <lb/>
Mrs. J. n. and Cox mad. <lb/>
a trip to Greenville yesterday. <lb/>
you need goods, <lb/>
A. W. Ange stock before <lb/>
buy. They will please you. <lb/>
Miss Vivian music teach <lb/>
of the Winterville High School <lb/>
went lo Friday evening <lb/>
N. C, Oct. ark <lb/>
Mrs. V. A. of <lb/>
burg, in Saturday night. Mrs <lb/>
will spend a week her. <lb/>
Mr. Edmondson Mon- <lb/>
day morning. <lb/>
While the price of cotton seed <lb/>
declined from the high level, The Pit <lb/>
County Company will yet. make <lb/>
attractive prices. <lb/>
Dawson, of <lb/>
don, spent Saturday Sunday with <lb/>
her little here. <lb/>
Barber Company are <lb/>
milking new box rail <lb/>
Ci J dirt bodies every day, are <lb/>
all right and quality good. <lb/>
Miss Blanche Ferebee, of Bel <lb/>
who has been spending a few days <lb/>
with Miss at <lb/>
son went to Greenville Monday. <lb/>
Carry your lumber to Harrington, <lb/>
Company's mill to be dress- <lb/>
d, turned and grooved, also <lb/>
all sorts and sizes. <lb/>
Mr. A. D. left Monday <lb/>
for Greenville, to accept a <lb/>
the Greenville Supply <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
Cattle must be faring good, judging <lb/>
om the amount or meal and hulls <lb/>
ling sold by the Pitt County Oil <lb/>
Miss Kate Chapman spent several <lb/>
with Miss Lela of Cox- <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Mrs. Shaw, of Is visiting <lb/>
M. A. Adams this week. <lb/>
You keep your horse in a good <lb/>
table, why not keep your money in <lb/>
Bank of where fire <lb/>
or burglars cannot harm it and you <lb/>
an have it when needed. <lb/>
Misses Elizabeth Adams and Olivia <lb/>
spent Sunday evening in the <lb/>
with friends <lb/>
has a young man who <lb/>
j very anxious to know the number <lb/>
cross between and Win- <lb/>
he counts them nearly every <lb/>
night. <lb/>
A. keeps a supply of <lb/>
real and corn on hand at all times <lb/>
Mr. J. F. King, of spent <lb/>
with his daughter at <lb/>
High School last week <lb/>
id returned Monday. <lb/>
Bishop Strange, will hold <lb/>
at the Episcopal church Fri- <lb/>
lay night and Saturday morning. <lb/>
is invited. <lb/>
Mr. J. F. Stokes, of Greenville, was <lb/>
n town Monday. <lb/>
A. W; A Company have stoves <lb/>
heaters at the right prices. <lb/>
Shoes to fit everybody's feet at A. <lb/>
V. Ange Company's. <lb/>
Dr. C. F. of <lb/>
ill lecture In the auditorium Win- <lb/>
High Tuesday even- <lb/>
November 1st, at 7.30 p. m., on <lb/>
Le disease. The public <lb/>
s cordially invited. <lb/>
Heavy u; of all kinds at <lb/>
V. Ange Company's. <lb/>
Rev. C. W. of Wilson, <lb/>
here Monday to enter his two <lb/>
in High School. He <lb/>
accompanied by his two <lb/>
Misses Blanche and Paul. <lb/>
P. D. Gold, of Wilson, will <lb/>
in the auditorium of <lb/>
High School next Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock. Everybody is invited to go <lb/>
hear him. <lb/>
Mr. T. E. Cannon, the clever book- <lb/>
for A. G. Manufacturing <lb/>
Company spent Saturday night <lb/>
Sunday at his home at <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com <lb/>
are having quite a <lb/>
the factory to suppl their orders <lb/>
school desks, and could give em- <lb/>
to more hands of suitable <lb/>
kind. <lb/>
The school at. Antioch will begin <lb/>
Monday, October 31st. Parents and <lb/>
children asked to meet there on <lb/>
Loyal to Football Team <lb/>
Lecture. <lb/>
Chapel Hill, X. C, Oct. big <lb/>
mass meeting <lb/>
student in attendance was <lb/>
in hall Monday night <lb/>
the purpose of letting the foot- <lb/>
ail team Know that, In the face of <lb/>
he defeat by Davidson in Charlotte <lb/>
last Saturday, it still retained the <lb/>
and loyalty of the <lb/>
body. The speakers, among when <lb/>
Dr. and Rev. Mr. Hog. <lb/>
had seen the game, seriously e. <lb/>
pressed confidence in the ability c I <lb/>
the team to develop a strong scoring <lb/>
strength yet. The opinion was <lb/>
that the squad handicapped by <lb/>
superior weight and a <lb/>
of material had not yet found <lb/>
The game in Washington <lb/>
with Georgetown Saturday will <lb/>
give the players a chance to demon- <lb/>
the reality of their ability to <lb/>
Rev. John Little, of Louisville, Ky., <lb/>
gave an illustrated lecture, under <lb/>
the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. <lb/>
night on the condition of the <lb/>
in the south. He described the <lb/>
poverty and disease-stricken <lb/>
of Atlanta and Louisville and <lb/>
attributed to these conditions the low <lb/>
of morality that exists in the <lb/>
race. He made a strong plea for the <lb/>
industrial and moral uplift <lb/>
of the race in the south. <lb/>
The Elisha Mitchell Scientific So- <lb/>
met Wednesday night for the <lb/>
election of officers. Professor Stacy <lb/>
was chosen president and Professors <lb/>
and Hall vice-president and <lb/>
secretary and treasurer. The object <lb/>
of this society is to encourage <lb/>
research and to record matters <lb/>
pertaining to the natural history of <lb/>
he state. The journal issued by the <lb/>
is in a measure the bulletin <lb/>
laboratories of the university. <lb/>
It is now In its twenty-sixth year. It <lb/>
exchanges with over scientific <lb/>
and by this exchanging more <lb/>
than ten thousand books and <lb/>
have been collected for the <lb/>
library. Dr. W. C. Coke <lb/>
editor-in-chief of the Journal this <lb/>
year. <lb/>
have a specific effect on these organs <lb/>
stimulating th bowels, g them <lb/>
to perform their natural functions <lb/>
in youth and <lb/>
IMPARTING VIGOR .- <lb/>
to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER <lb/>
They are adapted to old and young. <lb/>
Lucy Joyner Dead <lb/>
Lucy Joyner, of <lb/>
r. <lb/>
Tuesday afternoon at the home <lb/>
f sister, Mrs. Bessie in <lb/>
net town. She had been quite sick <lb/>
or time and the end was not <lb/>
unexpected. <lb/>
Miss Joyner was a sister of <lb/>
Joyner, of Gates county; Mr, <lb/>
Joyner, Rev Fran els Joyner, <lb/>
of Littleton; Rev. Edmond Joyner, of <lb/>
Biltmore; Mr. Andrew Joyner, m <lb/>
Greensboro; and a Mr. Joyner j <lb/>
Mrs. Bessie Malone Mrs. <lb/>
Phelps, all of whom survive Her, <lb/>
was well throughout eastern <lb/>
Worth Carolina, and had <lb/>
and admirers in Greenville and Pitt <lb/>
county, where she taught school a <lb/>
number of years ago before she vent <lb/>
to Chocowinity to teach in a <lb/>
school. She was a lovable character, <lb/>
a of a a <lb/>
of the Protestant <lb/>
church, and her old aid As <lb/>
will be to et <lb/>
her death. <lb/>
An Owl Attacked Mr. <lb/>
Mr. Pink Lynn, a citizen Of the <lb/>
section, had an experience <lb/>
with an owl the other night which he <lb/>
will not forget. He heard hi <lb/>
chickens making quite a noise. Going <lb/>
out to investigate, he found that a big <lb/>
owl had killed two or three of them. <lb/>
Obtaining a good view of -l he <lb/>
shot at it but missed bis mark. He <lb/>
picked up one of the chickens and sat <lb/>
down to investigate its wounds, when <lb/>
the came back and pounced down <lb/>
upon Mr. Lynn's head, clutching its <lb/>
claws in Mr. Lynn's hair and using its <lb/>
beak to pound him several vs. Mr. <lb/>
Lynn was by the assault, <lb/>
but finally regained his equilibrium <lb/>
and reacted up arid caught owl <lb/>
by the neck and choked it to death, <lb/>
Review. <lb/>
Some men can cook up excuses <lb/>
themselves even for being in <lb/>
I More Crop Apples. <lb/>
Today Mr. J. R. Tucker, who lives <lb/>
on Greenville R. F. D. No. brought <lb/>
The Reflector a twig containing two <lb/>
apples of crop growth this year <lb/>
on the same tree. <lb/>
METAL SHINGLES <lb/>
Laid years ago are as good as to-day and have never needed <lb/>
repairs. Think of it <lb/>
What other roofing will last as long and look as well <lb/>
They're fireproof, and very easily laid. <lb/>
They can be right over wood shingles, if necessary, without <lb/>
dirt or inc <lb/>
For prices and other detailed information apply to <lb/>
s. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Young Men's Day, October <lb/>
Democratic Chairman <lb/>
has appointed October 29th as young <lb/>
men's day. On that day all of the <lb/>
Democratic speakers over the teats <lb/>
will give special attention to <lb/>
men. In response to ex-Gov. <lb/>
recent letter asking that the young <lb/>
men of the State to take their proper <lb/>
place in public service, many <lb/>
men throughout the State have <lb/>
ten letters of These ex- <lb/>
have been so full of <lb/>
and patriotism that Chairman <lb/>
has decided to make Men's <lb/>
a State-wide event. In every <lb/>
county In the State some young man <lb/>
of high character and useful purpose <lb/>
is being appointed to lead the <lb/>
voters in their work for the Skate <lb/>
and for the Democratic party, whose <lb/>
mission it is to serve the State. Hun- <lb/>
of young men will cast their <lb/>
vole this year. The object of the <lb/>
movement is to so fix the minds of <lb/>
upon the duties of citizenship <lb/>
that they will become citizens always <lb/>
ready to study public questions and <lb/>
to vote intelligently for <lb/>
Young men have <lb/>
standard bearers in the <lb/>
from the day of Jefferson down <lb/>
to Bryan. <lb/>
The fathers of this country poured <lb/>
out their blood and treasure to free <lb/>
the new land from the tyranny of <lb/>
monarchy and aristocracy. They <lb/>
but to-day a new and dead- <lb/>
lier form of tyranny is fastening its <lb/>
fangs upon our country, and threat- <lb/>
ens to turn a government dedicated to <lb/>
liberty and human rights into a land <lb/>
of oppression with all power <lb/>
into the hands of a few men. <lb/>
Taking their cue from Alexander Ham <lb/>
who believed that the people <lb/>
were not fit to rule themselves, Re- <lb/>
publican leaders are to-day virtually <lb/>
denying the fundamental truths <lb/>
of equality upon which this govern- <lb/>
was founded. Under their rule <lb/>
a few men are acquiring all power <lb/>
and the masses are being reduced to <lb/>
a condition that abolishes the equality <lb/>
of opportunity. Unless tho present <lb/>
movement is checked, the upward road <lb/>
that has always been open to our <lb/>
young men will be blocked, both in <lb/>
business and politics. The natural <lb/>
place for young men is in the Demo- <lb/>
party, whose purpose is to <lb/>
keep the road to opportunity open. <lb/>
The Republican party, standing for <lb/>
trusts, monopolies and narrowing op- <lb/>
is not the natural home of <lb/>
tho vigorous, manly young men who <lb/>
ask only a free hand and a fair chance <lb/>
Turn the country over to the <lb/>
ed wishes of the Republican party, <lb/>
mid the average man can only <lb/>
hope to be a clerk in ranks of <lb/>
the monopolies, and if he be on ex- <lb/>
able man, be may hope to <lb/>
rise to be head clerk. But that is all. <lb/>
organization and wealth <lb/>
ore clutching into their deadly grip <lb/>
the opportunities of a free land. <lb/>
If tho men of to-day would bequeath <lb/>
u heritage of freedom and of <lb/>
to their sons. must light <lb/>
HOW, The Democratic party stands <lb/>
for the open road. It believes that <lb/>
people can and should govern <lb/>
themselves. It believes that America <lb/>
only a field and an even <lb/>
and for that k will in the <lb/>
last ditch. It is the for the <lb/>
young to it de- <lb/>
pends upon them to take their places <lb/>
and lo duty. <lb/>
ISSUING BONUS. <lb/>
l Direct Tax- <lb/>
MONEY IS <lb/>
Fountain. N. C, Oct. 1910. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I often see sketches in your paper <lb/>
on good roads. Some have one idea <lb/>
and some another. I would like to <lb/>
give my views on the subject. <lb/>
If we could have our <lb/>
proved without bonds, which I think <lb/>
could be done, it would save us from <lb/>
a bonded debt. Just suppose that we <lb/>
were to issue of bonds. The <lb/>
interest at per cent, would be <lb/>
per year. Why not tax the <lb/>
for that amount and spend it on <lb/>
the Then in the course of <lb/>
five or ten years, with the help of <lb/>
the convicts and the road overseers, <lb/>
the roads could be made good. Then <lb/>
we would have the with- <lb/>
out the great debt lo tax the people <lb/>
on as long as the world stands, which <lb/>
we could not hope to get rid of before. <lb/>
We already have too much bonds, <lb/>
and I am against bonding our county <lb/>
and taxing the people for no use. It <lb/>
seems to me that come people never <lb/>
think what it will cost nor how much <lb/>
will be thrown away if we should is- <lb/>
sue these bonds that so much has <lb/>
been said about. I am afraid they <lb/>
and their children both will be sorry <lb/>
some day that they ever heard of <lb/>
bonds if we should get them. <lb/>
G. M. SMITH. <lb/>
and Girls be Taught the <lb/>
Wise of Dollars. <lb/>
Much is said about the evil of <lb/>
money worship; and it US <lb/>
there is a that greet <lb/>
evil is lack of true reverence for , <lb/>
money. If every boy and every <lb/>
especially every educated <lb/>
right, he and she would be aught <lb/>
reverence stored-up toil I <lb/>
of human beings; the concrete <lb/>
of brain and brawn expanded in <lb/>
work. <lb/>
We go long journeys to see vast <lb/>
monuments the past that are <lb/>
only as evidences of astound- <lb/>
human effort. Yet every one <lb/>
us carries and uses more or less <lb/>
carelessly more imposing monuments <lb/>
of human effort. <lb/>
Ii the boy, the spend- <lb/>
a dollar, thought. <lb/>
the sweat, perhaps the blood, of <lb/>
sonic or many of my fellow beings <lb/>
laboring on hours; I <lb/>
that it is worthily, that I do not <lb/>
give it up for less than its full <lb/>
if some such thought as this wen <lb/>
iii his or mind, <lb/>
perhaps many things, including lower <lb/>
prices for food and <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
And Provisions <lb/>
Cotton<lb/>
Fresh Goods kept con- <lb/>
in stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and <lb/>
The Peculiarities of Mr. Hill. <lb/>
Hard <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
h n u <lb/>
The newspapers are having a good <lb/>
deal to say about the late David B. <lb/>
Hill. The public is familiar to a <lb/>
great extent with his political career. <lb/>
His private life was even more <lb/>
liar. The biographical sketch con- <lb/>
by The Baltimore Sun brings <lb/>
out some traits of Mr. Hill's <lb/>
which were not generally known. <lb/>
It says he has been described as <lb/>
man without a human <lb/>
and as cold chisel politician, <lb/>
through whose veins runs ice water- <lb/>
instead of Probably both de- <lb/>
were but. in <lb/>
the main, they were He <lb/>
had no recreations; work was his <lb/>
life theme, and there were no <lb/>
He had no irregular habits, <lb/>
cared nothing for accumulating <lb/>
wealth, cultivated no friendships, was <lb/>
never known after he reached man's <lb/>
estate, to Ho never married- <lb/>
two reasons for which have been ad- <lb/>
When he was a young man <lb/>
his favorite sister died, and it was <lb/>
long before his health recovered flora <lb/>
the shock. It is also said that he <lb/>
had a romance as a youth, but that <lb/>
the girl's death soured him against <lb/>
woman and life. He was always <lb/>
and at home tho society of <lb/>
women, but he never sought them. <lb/>
With men he was and distant, <lb/>
save where interest made closer <lb/>
as soon as the <lb/>
Business was over he retired to his <lb/>
shell again. This latter peculiarity <lb/>
in evidence Mr Hill's visit to <lb/>
Charlotte. He was utterly <lb/>
to Of courtesy and to efforts <lb/>
at hospitality. One might just as well <lb/>
hare endeavored to draw respond .-e- <lb/>
from the man. He was <lb/>
net restrained, rather Indifferent, <lb/>
v.; made perhaps the 20th Of <lb/>
May hag ever been <lb/>
in <lb/>
be depended is an ex- <lb/>
we all like hear, and when <lb/>
it is in connection with <lb/>
Remedy it means <lb/>
that It never fails to cure <lb/>
dysentery or bowel complaints. It is <lb/>
pleasant to take and valuable <lb/>
for children and adults. by all <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
SAM FLAKE <lb/>
Harness Repair Shop <lb/>
and dealer u odd parts of and <lb/>
findings. <lb/>
EXT TO OFFICE. Greenville. U. C. <lb/>
When a woman can keep from talk <lb/>
in a card game it's a sign that be <lb/>
will never play. <lb/>
I BAKER HART <lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
Your <lb/>
Is o <lb/>
stomach. By taking Chamber- <lb/>
Stomach and Liver you <lb/>
can Improve, both Sold by drug- <lb/>
gists.<lb/>
The Up-to-date Hardware <lb/>
Store <lb/>
IT is place to buy y. a Paint, Varnish, <lb/>
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook <lb/>
Stoves, Fina Cutlery, <lb/>
Handsome Chafing Dishes. <lb/>
We Carry a full Line of Wall Paints <lb/>
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place <lb/>
your orders with them and you will be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
Special attention to our line of <lb/>
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders, <lb/>
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and <lb/>
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the <lb/>
very bast quality. <lb/>
Don't fail to sea before buying, they <lb/>
can supply your its. Give them a call.<lb/>
the as-; <lb/>
per <lb/>
Baker <lb/>
Evans , <lb/>
. . <lb/>
.-.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Carolina Hoe Farm and The Eastern Reflector.<lb/>
We are Receiving Our <lb/>
NEW STYLE <lb/>
Dress Goods <lb/>
Coat Suits and <lb/>
JACKETS, <lb/>
and Children's SWEATERS; <lb/>
large variety of styles SHOES j <lb/>
in ail leathers for men, boys, j <lb/>
ladies and children. <lb/>
Our shoes are sold on their <lb/>
merit and if you want <lb/>
and your money's worth <lb/>
come to see us. <lb/>
Our stock embraces nearly <lb/>
every article you will need in <lb/>
you home, Farm, or personal <lb/>
requirements. We have our <lb/>
store filled with goods and <lb/>
cordially invite you to come to <lb/>
see us. <lb/>
Doings. <lb/>
A suit for of a divorce <lb/>
which is now being hoard in a New <lb/>
York court presents t feature or two <lb/>
rather out of the ordinary. The <lb/>
divorced couple were married in 1801 <lb/>
and lived peacefully together some <lb/>
six years. Friction arose, however, <lb/>
and a reparation was agreed upon. <lb/>
Both wanted a divorce but neither <lb/>
was willing to furnish grounds of <lb/>
In this predicament they <lb/>
agreed that the husband should com- <lb/>
assault and battery upon his wife <lb/>
in the presence of carefully selected <lb/>
witnesses and thereafter she should <lb/>
sue on the ground of extreme cruelty. <lb/>
In order that there should be no <lb/>
bungling of the rather delicate <lb/>
ingenious pair proceeded to <lb/>
the quarrel, blows included, <lb/>
until they were able produce just <lb/>
the effect they desired. This point <lb/>
of Skill gained, the witnesses were <lb/>
proceed, tit Quarrel staged, the suit <lb/>
and the divorce secured. <lb/>
is unusual enough, to say the <lb/>
least, but stranger still is the de- <lb/>
The husband has wearied <lb/>
of single loneliness and desires his <lb/>
quondam wife back. He requests an- <lb/>
of the divorce on the ground <lb/>
that It was obtained through fraud. <lb/>
you mean to tell inquired <lb/>
the perplexed judge, after hearing <lb/>
the evidence, after all that has <lb/>
passed between you, you believe that <lb/>
you two could live together <lb/>
do not know my respond- <lb/>
ed the bringer of the suit. We con- <lb/>
fess that the reply contains an <lb/>
doubted truth even if its vagueness <lb/>
wish the husband had <lb/>
been more garrulous and explained <lb/>
to the court a little more clearly the <lb/>
grounds upon which he is expecting <lb/>
future bliss. Charlotte <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
J. R. J. G <lb/>
Style Leaders <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
TO MY LADY FRIENDS IX <lb/>
drop in and rest yourself when <lb/>
in Greenville. You will find a lady <lb/>
to entertain you and show you all <lb/>
the latest styles of machines <lb/>
ginger Sewing Machine Co <lb/>
J. S. Prop. <lb/>
CHOICE. <lb/>
AND HOLLAND BULBS <lb/>
, Hyacinths, Tulips, <lb/>
and Call, <lb/>
PI f r best results <lb/>
All Seasonable Cut Flowers <lb/>
at Short Notice <lb/>
Pals., Ferns an. all Hot- <lb/>
For Decoration <lb/>
I. L CO., <lb/>
Phone No. <lb/>
i STOCKINGS. FOB MEN, <lb/>
man, s girls, reinforced with <lb/>
pair guaranteed, <lb/>
w Pulley <lb/>
NEW LINE OF BED ROOM SLIP. <lb/>
in black, and red, at <lb/>
Pulley Bowen's <lb/>
Dead. <lb/>
Little Maggie, the six year old <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mar- <lb/>
tin departed this life October She <lb/>
had been sick for some time with dip- <lb/>
and the little death was <lb/>
not unexpected. She a bright <lb/>
little gill and loved by all that <lb/>
knew her. She was laid to rest in <lb/>
the family burying ground to await <lb/>
the morn. Much <lb/>
la extended to the parents and <lb/>
lends. <lb/>
A Won. Hg Haling <lb/>
We have Scriptural authority for <lb/>
the expediency of the upon line, <lb/>
precept upon method of em- <lb/>
the truth, which is <lb/>
arrant for calling attention to a <lb/>
recent bulletin of the United States <lb/>
Department of Agriculture, prepared <lb/>
by Pro. D. T. Gray of the Alabama <lb/>
Polytechnic Institute dealing with <lb/>
the advisability of increased raising <lb/>
of hogs in the South. can be <lb/>
raised as cheaply in the South as <lb/>
any where says Professor Gray <lb/>
and proceeds to this opinion <lb/>
with the fact that in a single year <lb/>
the city of Birmingham, Ala., sent in- <lb/>
to distant states for pork more than <lb/>
a million dollars The inference is so <lb/>
plain that he who runs may read. <lb/>
The bulletin goes into the effect <lb/>
which increased pork raising would <lb/>
have upon the volume and price of <lb/>
cotton, concluding that the best way <lb/>
to remedy the evils incident upon <lb/>
the farmer's being compelled to rush <lb/>
his crop to the market would be <lb/>
fount In supplementing cotton by <lb/>
other products. Of these supplement- <lb/>
products Professor Gray <lb/>
hogs one of the best <lb/>
he thinks, is especially adapted to <lb/>
the farmer with small capital, as only <lb/>
a small amount of money is required <lb/>
with which to begin the business and <lb/>
returns begin to come in a few <lb/>
months after it is started. The sow <lb/>
is a rapid producer. Money is turn- <lb/>
ed over rapidly. With invested <lb/>
in one boar and five to eight sows. It <lb/>
is easily possible to have for sale <lb/>
from to pounds of pork, <lb/>
live weight, in a year. In other word <lb/>
the yearly sale should be from two to <lb/>
four times the amount of the invest- <lb/>
A striking commentary on the val- <lb/>
set upon this advice by a corpora- <lb/>
whose interests are intimately <lb/>
connected with those of this section <lb/>
is to be found in the arrangements <lb/>
made by the Southern Railway to <lb/>
supplement the government <lb/>
of this bulletin by a special dis- <lb/>
conducted from the rail- <lb/>
road's Washington headquarters. <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF <lb/>
and children's shoes, at the <lb/>
lowest Bowen <lb/>
He Went Fox Hunting. <lb/>
The editor of Tho Journal went fox <lb/>
hunting yesterday morning. Having <lb/>
been largely a dweller in offices, it <lb/>
was his first experience. He got his <lb/>
legs wet to the knee, cut his finger, <lb/>
snagged his trousers, gouged a piece <lb/>
out of his leg with a barbed wire <lb/>
fence, broke his glasses and has a <lb/>
terrible stiffness. legs are <lb/>
already dry, the finger will heal, the <lb/>
trousers were no good, the hole in his <lb/>
leg has been plugged up with putty, <lb/>
the glasses have been repaired, and <lb/>
ho hopes the stiffness will wear away <lb/>
He's glad he If the dogs <lb/>
didn't a Journal <lb/>
KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL. <lb/>
If you n man, don't suspect <lb/>
till you man, don't <lb/>
i Joy <lb/>
AN it TO DATE LINE OF <lb/>
tailor-made Pulley <lb/>
10-28 <lb/>
READY MADE BLACK <lb/>
silk waists, Just received at Pulley <lb/>
ft Bowen's <lb/>
WE ABE AGENTS FOR FAY <lb/>
Bowen <lb/>
Don't you see how is <lb/>
joining Already tho h has <lb/>
cached tho dignity of in Minted <lb/>
Policeman Clark Ills <lb/>
rounds on a bicycle. And ho goes <lb/>
he down on the pedals, <lb/>
gels there before you can t <lb/>
about It. <lb/>
Health is Worth Saving, and Some <lb/>
Greenville People Know How <lb/>
to Save It <lb/>
Many people take their <lb/>
lives In their hands by neglecting the <lb/>
kidneys when they know these or- <lb/>
need help. Sick kidneys are re- <lb/>
for a vast amount of suffer- <lb/>
and ill health, but there Is no <lb/>
need to suffer nor to remain in <lb/>
when all diseases and aches and <lb/>
pains due to weak kidneys can be <lb/>
quickly and permanently cured by the <lb/>
use of Kidney Pills. The fol- <lb/>
lowing statement leaves no ground <lb/>
for doubt. <lb/>
Mrs S. A. Simmons. Heritage <lb/>
St., N. C, found <lb/>
Kidney Pills to an effective <lb/>
remedy for kidney trouble and head- <lb/>
ache. My back pained me for a long <lb/>
time and my kidneys were much dis- <lb/>
ordered. I happened to read about <lb/>
Kidney Pills, and procuring a <lb/>
box, I began using them. They <lb/>
fitted me in every way and I am now <lb/>
free from backache and am able to <lb/>
rest well; in fact, I feel better In <lb/>
way. I am glad to give <lb/>
Kidney Pills my <lb/>
For sale by till dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo. N. <lb/>
Y., sole agents for the United States. <lb/>
Remember the <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
WE HAVE A DIG LINE OF <lb/>
ready-made skirts In chiffon <lb/>
ma, serges and<lb/>
mm <lb/>
The Carolina Hemp aid Farm and The Eastern Reflect r. <lb/>
Get Your Copy Today <lb/>
The new Art showing <lb/>
Color Drawings of attractive Library <lb/>
Interiors, announced in The Saturday <lb/>
Evening Post of October to be <lb/>
distributed by agents for <lb/>
Elastic Bookcases <lb/>
can be obtained only at our store, <lb/>
as we are the exclusive agents in this <lb/>
city, for this and other trade-marked <lb/>
lines of high-grade furniture. <lb/>
GOSPEL <lb/>
Called for Sunday After- <lb/>
noon. <lb/>
In the proposed series of evangelistic <lb/>
meetings that the churches of Green- <lb/>
ville are to hold under the leadership <lb/>
of Dr. Black, good inspiring music is <lb/>
a necessity. Br. Black has especial- <lb/>
requested that a good, loyal, <lb/>
chorus be organized and <lb/>
ed to assist him in this campaign. <lb/>
Here is an opportunity and a call for <lb/>
personal service If you are inter- <lb/>
in the success of these meetings <lb/>
and are accustomed to have a share <lb/>
In the song service of your church. <lb/>
or Sunday school, or in the musical <lb/>
life of your home and community, you <lb/>
are cordially invited to join this <lb/>
This chorus will meet promptly <lb/>
Sunday afternoon at o'clock in the <lb/>
chapel of the Jarvis Memorial church <lb/>
organization and practice. <lb/>
Miss director of public <lb/>
school music and chorus work at the <lb/>
training school, and Gaston will <lb/>
be present and assist. Will <lb/>
H. i;. Austin, Chm. Mus Com. <lb/>
Hi FOR <lb/>
Now Open for <lb/>
Business <lb/>
We have located in the building formerly known as the <lb/>
The Building and Lumber Company, on the A. C. L. rail- <lb/>
road, which has been remodeled, and have just installed a <lb/>
complete COTTON GINNING SYSTEM, AND A GRIST <lb/>
MILL, and can gin your cotton and grind your corn. We <lb/>
will also handle all kinds of Feed Stuffs, Grain, Cotton-Seed <lb/>
Meal and Hulls, Grass and Seeds, Seed Oats and <lb/>
Wheat. Call on us for any of these. Telephone No. <lb/>
CAROLINA SEED AND FEED CO. <lb/>
w T B. E. Mgr., C. A. D. Asst. Mgr. B. K. <lb/>
sane ebb <lb/>
EAST CAROLINA TRAINING SCHOOL <lb/>
A school organized and maintained for one de- <lb/>
finite young men and women <lb/>
The regular session opens Tues- <lb/>
day, September 1910. <lb/>
For and information, address <lb/>
ROBT. H. ARIGHT. President, <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina. <lb/>
J . MOORING <lb/>
Now in Sara White on Points room and larger Cone to tee me. <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Roofing and Sheet <lb/>
Tin Shop Wait, and <lb/>
In Season, <lb/>
HOUSE UPSETS BUGGY. <lb/>
3.143 <lb/>
For Slate <lb/>
or Tin <lb/>
One of a Narrow <lb/>
Escape. <lb/>
Friday two men, whoso <lb/>
names we not learn, were <lb/>
along in a buggy, leading <lb/>
horse behind them. An <lb/>
bile coming up in the rear frighten- <lb/>
ed the horse that was being led, and <lb/>
this horse jumped into one of the <lb/>
rear wheels of the buggy, breaking <lb/>
the vehicle down and throwing out <lb/>
the man who was holding the lead <lb/>
line. The horse came near stepping <lb/>
on the man's head, knocking his hat <lb/>
off and cutting two holes through <lb/>
it with the heel of the horse shoe <lb/>
The horse that was hitched to the <lb/>
buggy also became frightened and <lb/>
a few minutes a general mix-up <lb/>
was threatened. <lb/>
Thief Returns Diamond Ring. <lb/>
About eight weeks ago Mrs. W. W. <lb/>
Phifer missed a handsome <lb/>
diamond cluster ring which had <lb/>
been her mother's. Mrs. Laura David- <lb/>
con, engagement ring and which she <lb/>
been wearing for some time. As <lb/>
no other had been in the house <lb/>
months she had the cook arrested <lb/>
and kept in jail for several days, but <lb/>
nothing definite could proved one <lb/>
way other, and the was re- <lb/>
leased and tire ring continued miss- <lb/>
Yesterday morning just as the <lb/>
family was about to go to breakfast, <lb/>
Davidson happened to go into <lb/>
the butler's pantry, and there <lb/>
pended from a string tied to win- <lb/>
shutters was the ring. Mrs. Phi- <lb/>
fer and Mrs. Davidson are of course <lb/>
delighted to recover the ring, and the <lb/>
supposition is that the thief had be- <lb/>
come alarmed and decided to return <lb/>
property before was <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Tribute to What the Farmers Con- <lb/>
Tobacco Co. is Doing <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I feel like taking off my hat to you <lb/>
that article telling the good of <lb/>
i he Farmers Consolidated <lb/>
Co. in trying to let the people know <lb/>
is doing in the tobacco world, <lb/>
etc. Also am glad you said some <lb/>
good thing of Mr. O. L. who I <lb/>
believe is trying to Inform the <lb/>
co farmer of the fact that it is to <lb/>
their advantage not to over produce <lb/>
if they expect fair prices. I have <lb/>
been at times right lonesome, as there <lb/>
is no one out near me that to <lb/>
the Consolidated Co. As I would look <lb/>
out early in the morning in the first <lb/>
part of the tobacco selling season <lb/>
and see dozens of loads going by <lb/>
headed for Farmville, it was enough <lb/>
to make a fellow lonesome, but it is <lb/>
DOt so now. The tide has turned <lb/>
toward Greenville and all is lovely <lb/>
and bright. The Greenville ware <lb/>
housemen and buyers too, must have <lb/>
realized that Greenville would drop <lb/>
to about sixth place if something was <lb/>
not done, and they have gone to work <lb/>
and are selling tobacco in the <lb/>
and are setting a pace for <lb/>
and Wilson, and leaving <lb/>
Farmville far behind. She is not <lb/>
even in the race. for the <lb/>
Greenville market. It is a humming. <lb/>
A strong pall, a long pull and a pull <lb/>
all together will keep Greenville In <lb/>
the lead. <lb/>
The Farmville union is raging now <lb/>
out our way, but so far as I see things <lb/>
the Farmers Consolidated Tobacco <lb/>
Co. is a farmers union and is as good <lb/>
as any farmer's organization, if men <lb/>
were loyal, as they will have to be if <lb/>
the union ever accomplishes any- <lb/>
thing. <lb/>
W, A. DARDEN. <lb/>
It Saved Ills Leg. <lb/>
thought I'd lose my writes <lb/>
J. A. of Watertown Wis. <lb/>
years of eczema, that doctors <lb/>
could not cure, had at last laid me up. <lb/>
Then n's Salve cured it, <lb/>
sound and Infallible for Skin <lb/>
Eruptions, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Boils; <lb/>
Fever Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts and <lb/>
Piles. it all druggists. <lb/>
Mil. KILLED <lb/>
A Kile of Pennies <lb/>
Put a penny one the slip's <lb/>
being hang up in behalf <lb/>
Confederate fund T i <lb/>
Daughters of Confederacy <lb/>
to collect a mile of pennies in this <lb/>
way, and your penny will help. <lb/>
j. j. <lb/>
H. C. <lb/>
WILL TREAT <lb/>
Something when a <lb/>
afraid of himself. <lb/>
Meets Tragic <lb/>
Electrical Connections. <lb/>
In a delayed telegram due to south- <lb/>
communication being broken by <lb/>
the severe Mr. W. L. Brown <lb/>
received information this morning <lb/>
that his son, Mi. Brown, was <lb/>
killed Tuesday afternoon in <lb/>
Fla. The only particulars given <lb/>
in the message was in effect that a <lb/>
severe storm was prevailing there, <lb/>
and while Mr. Brown was making <lb/>
electrical connections he was killed. <lb/>
Mr. Brown was an electrician and <lb/>
worked for a large phosphate com- <lb/>
in Mulberry. His father wired <lb/>
instructions for tho body to sent <lb/>
home, but up to this writing no fur- <lb/>
information has been received. <lb/>
The news of the tragic death of this <lb/>
young man has filled many <lb/>
here at his home with Badness. He <lb/>
had a host of friends and was held In <lb/>
high esteem. He was years of <lb/>
and is survived by his father, Mr. W. <lb/>
Brown, one sister, Mrs. W. L. <lb/>
of Charlotte, and one brother, Mr. <lb/>
Whit Brown. All hearts out in <lb/>
sympathy to these in their sorrow. <lb/>
Honesty a bettor capital than a <lb/>
cunning.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
. . .- . <lb/>
The . mt . <lb/>
The Horn. firm m <lb/>
THE CAROLINA HOME and <lb/>
FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
REFLECTOR COMPANY, Inc. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Subscription, one year, . . <lb/>
Six <lb/>
rates may be had upon <lb/>
application at the business office in <lb/>
The Building, corner Evans <lb/>
and Third streets. <lb/>
All cards of thanks and resolutions <lb/>
of respect will be charged for at <lb/>
cent per word. <lb/>
The country lost a great man in the <lb/>
death of David B. Hill, of New York, <lb/>
which occurred Thursday. <lb/>
going is the way <lb/>
the Wilmington Star puts k. We <lb/>
thought Charlotte was already ahead. <lb/>
Statistics say that there are <lb/>
people in the jails the United <lb/>
States. If all who ought to be were <lb/>
in Jail they would be overrun. <lb/>
When they make a successful trip <lb/>
across the Atlantic ocean in an air- <lb/>
ship, then somebody will be sailing <lb/>
away for the North Pole. <lb/>
Communications advertising <lb/>
dates will be charged for at three <lb/>
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
Now we will hear that the state fair <lb/>
went in a financial hole this time, <lb/>
but the cause will be the weather <lb/>
and not the circus. <lb/>
Entered as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910, at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina, under <lb/>
act of March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1910. <lb/>
The pumpkin is getting ready for <lb/>
The Reflector believes that Pitt <lb/>
county could have a good county fair <lb/>
all right. <lb/>
They have got to quit killing so <lb/>
many before we invest in either an <lb/>
automobile or an air machine. <lb/>
o- <lb/>
Greensboro does not put a stop <lb/>
to so much pocket picking there her <lb/>
population may be cut down. <lb/>
Greenville is not worrying much <lb/>
over what the census will give her. <lb/>
We are all here, whether counted or <lb/>
not. <lb/>
Next Saturday, 29th, will be the <lb/>
last day on which you can register, <lb/>
unless you become of age <lb/>
that day and the election. <lb/>
If you have a neighbor who has not <lb/>
registered for the coming election, <lb/>
impress him with the fact that next <lb/>
Saturday is the last day upon which <lb/>
he can get his name on the register <lb/>
book. <lb/>
There hardly a doubt that Dr. <lb/>
murdered his wife, and the <lb/>
sentence the English court gave him <lb/>
is what he deserves. <lb/>
Duller might be termed the <lb/>
to the Republican ticket in <lb/>
North Carolina. He will pull it down <lb/>
into the sea of defeat all right. <lb/>
President proposed <lb/>
trip to Panama immediately after the <lb/>
election is to find a hole big enough <lb/>
-o bury himself until the Democrats <lb/>
get through shouting the result. <lb/>
Republicans themselves give about <lb/>
Dull business can usually be at- <lb/>
to the fact that the business <lb/>
men themselves permit it to be dull <lb/>
Trade comes to town when a strong <lb/>
and united effort is made to get it. <lb/>
If Butler is so anxious to <lb/>
with somebody, why not take It up <lb/>
with the editor o f the G <lb/>
News and discuss what latter <lb/>
said about him before the <lb/>
If Raleigh could take a census this <lb/>
week the population of the state cap- <lb/>
ital would head the list of North Car- <lb/>
towns. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
The recent state fair, according to <lb/>
the Raleigh papers, is marked up as <lb/>
the greatest in the fifty years that <lb/>
the annual fairs have been held. <lb/>
Newspaper headline says a man <lb/>
Our coast country is great, but <lb/>
when a sure enough storm strikes it <lb/>
something happens. <lb/>
was troubled with the <lb/>
same thing that afflicts many other <lb/>
people, had too much gas aboard. <lb/>
sounds like the name of a <lb/>
patent medicine, but it <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
It also sounds like the name of a <lb/>
fellow who once led an army of <lb/>
tramps In a march on Washington <lb/>
City. <lb/>
From the list of announcements <lb/>
made by the Democratic executive <lb/>
committee it will be seen that the <lb/>
of Pitt county are going to hear <lb/>
some good speaking between now <lb/>
and the el action. <lb/>
Philadelphia took the world's <lb/>
championship in baseball, beating <lb/>
Chicago all three of the games play- <lb/>
ed this week. Ball enthusiasts all <lb/>
over the country felt much interest <lb/>
in the championship games. <lb/>
-------c <lb/>
RETURN TO <lb/>
The Republicans of Wilmington had <lb/>
a speaker of national fame there for <lb/>
a speech, but could get only an <lb/>
of sixty out to hear him. Guess <lb/>
the speaker felt like he had run into <lb/>
a frost <lb/>
The business folks getting together <lb/>
and pulling together is one of the <lb/>
greatest needs for more <lb/>
business to Greenville. The <lb/>
tor may talk day after day to that <lb/>
end, but unless the business men <lb/>
themselves show that they want bus- <lb/>
they are not going to get much <lb/>
of it. <lb/>
The Wilmington Star is asking <lb/>
what has become of perpetual mo- <lb/>
was hit by a telephone pole while <lb/>
going to a fire. The pole should be <lb/>
arrested on two charges, both for <lb/>
assault and battery, and for <lb/>
with a fireman in the discharge of <lb/>
his duty. <lb/>
Again we emphasize the fact that <lb/>
Saturday 29th, is the last day of reg- <lb/>
for the coming election <lb/>
See that your own name and the <lb/>
names of your neighbors arc on the <lb/>
books. <lb/>
some <lb/>
of the hardest knocks <lb/>
at <lb/>
and show Its to again <lb/>
come in power In North <lb/>
Sherman going to <lb/>
come to North Carolina to make a <lb/>
speeches. Wonder if he will <lb/>
have as poor opinion of his party in <lb/>
this state President Taft had. <lb/>
People might lay more stress on <lb/>
what Mr. Roosevelt says if it had not <lb/>
already been proven that he a man <lb/>
who very little regard for truth. <lb/>
Surely he is the right man to head <lb/>
an Ananias club. <lb/>
. --------o. <lb/>
if every Democrat and <lb/>
then the and votes, <lb/>
there to be e. big majority on <lb/>
election day. <lb/>
in this age of excitement over <lb/>
new discoveries. Politics is <lb/>
the nearest thing to perpetual motion. <lb/>
That don't keep still long enough to <lb/>
let a large number of people attend <lb/>
to any other business. <lb/>
A Raleigh colored man was asked <lb/>
the question, when would the colored <lb/>
state fair be held and replied that <lb/>
it usually came the rainy week right <lb/>
after tho white folks held their fair. <lb/>
The colored state fair is being held <lb/>
this week, and it looks like they are <lb/>
going to have oven better <lb/>
than the white folks had last week. <lb/>
The are bringing <lb/>
reproach upon the prohibition law in <lb/>
this state and unless something is <lb/>
done to stop them a disgusted public <lb/>
will demand a return to the old sys- <lb/>
There is very little difference <lb/>
between the near-beer stand and the <lb/>
saloon and besides every honest man <lb/>
knows within himself whether he say <lb/>
so or not, it is only a ruse to get <lb/>
around the prohibition law. If we <lb/>
believe in prohibition and want it, we <lb/>
must be honest with ourselves on this <lb/>
near-beer Point En- <lb/>
It little short of ridiculous that <lb/>
the prohibition law of the state <lb/>
should brought into reproach in <lb/>
this way; and the talk of the people <lb/>
becoming so disgusted as to prefer <lb/>
a return to barrooms is even more <lb/>
Prohibition was carried <lb/>
in this state by a majority of over <lb/>
votes. Can it be said that the <lb/>
great number of people in North Car- <lb/>
voted for prohibition have <lb/>
become weak, or have so little in- <lb/>
that they will be ruled by the <lb/>
few who near-beer saloons <lb/>
and the whiskey advocates who are <lb/>
backing them We do not believe it. <lb/>
The legislature made the mistake of <lb/>
opening the gap to the near-beer <lb/>
and the liquor crowd were quick <lb/>
to grasp the opportunity for making <lb/>
the near-beer joint a blind behind <lb/>
which to violate the law by selling <lb/>
whiskey. They want to make the <lb/>
prohibition law a reproach and dis- <lb/>
gust the people with it, but the <lb/>
themselves will be to blame if <lb/>
this is done. Instead of submitting <lb/>
to such violation of the law, the <lb/>
should make such a demand on <lb/>
the coming legislature that will bring <lb/>
the of a law wiping out <lb/>
every near-beer saloon In the state. <lb/>
It is a shame on the manhood of the <lb/>
state that the few liquor advocates <lb/>
are allowed to set at naught a law <lb/>
voted for by so large a majority. <lb/>
That Virginia mob the other day, <lb/>
was somewhat different -from tho or- <lb/>
kind. Ordinarily they go <lb/>
some fellow who has committed <lb/>
a crime and lynch him, but in the <lb/>
Virginia instance mentioned the mob <lb/>
broke open the prison and spirited <lb/>
away a man who had been convicted <lb/>
of murder and sentenced to death <lb/>
The mob after liberating, not <lb/>
lynching this man. And really this <lb/>
kind of mob was no more lawless <lb/>
than the other kind. But it shows <lb/>
what mob violence can lead to. <lb/>
The big corn yields being reported <lb/>
in various parts of the State are <lb/>
enough to almost make you shout. <lb/>
It means good times ahead for North <lb/>
Carolina, and that our people are go- <lb/>
to to the dignity of <lb/>
having their barns at home instead <lb/>
of in the West . Every time we <lb/>
think of what Mr. John F. Evans, <lb/>
leader of the local farm <lb/>
work, is doing for the farmers <lb/>
of Pitt county in getting them to <lb/>
strike out for larger and better crops, <lb/>
it makes us feel good. And those <lb/>
boys in the corn growing contest who <lb/>
are showing a yield of to bush- <lb/>
els to the acre, we feel like taking <lb/>
off our hat and for every <lb/>
one of them. <lb/>
When the Now York Herald makes <lb/>
a prediction everybody takes notice, <lb/>
that paper is a wise forecaster of <lb/>
elections. It says the Democrats are. <lb/>
going to elect a governor of New York <lb/>
make large gains all over the <lb/>
The Republicans are pro- <lb/>
paring to take their medicine. <lb/>
The Charlotte News has got up <lb/>
an aviation for Charlotte at an early <lb/>
day. Here's hoping Patton will not <lb/>
venture up in one of the things but <lb/>
will make all his observations either <lb/>
from the ground or the top of <lb/>
the sky scraper. <lb/>
Will the Greenville R; kindly <lb/>
tell us what is a <lb/>
Charlotte News. <lb/>
Yep It's one of those kind that <lb/>
the wearer just winds around with <lb/>
or yards of ribbon, when there <lb/>
is not a masculine right arm handy <lb/>
to go around it. <lb/>
From the places where fairs are <lb/>
held come reports of people getting <lb/>
their pockets picked of good sums <lb/>
The roan who goes to a fair or a cir- <lb/>
or in any jostling crowd, with <lb/>
a wad of money In his pocket and <lb/>
loses it, pays the penalty of won <lb/>
carelessness. <lb/>
The Democratic candidates of <lb/>
county are making a good record in <lb/>
their canvass, and the prospects for <lb/>
an increased majority for the entire <lb/>
ticket grows brighter every day. <lb/>
They have large gatherings at their <lb/>
speakings. <lb/>
The Greenville Reflector deplores <lb/>
the loss of the supply of rations Well- <lb/>
man had provided for his across the <lb/>
ocean flight those times of high <lb/>
priced No need to worry <lb/>
about that, old man; the farmers are <lb/>
raising plenty more stuff all the time. <lb/>
Greensboro News. <lb/>
Yes. the farmers are raising it all <lb/>
right, but how about It when a fellow <lb/>
has not got the price <lb/>
The Greenville Reflector publicity <lb/>
invites The Wilmington Dispatch to <lb/>
visit Pitt county for the purpose of <lb/>
Inspecting the bewitching array which <lb/>
gives that section of North Carolina <lb/>
such Just cause for pride. <lb/>
What makes The Reflector think that <lb/>
The Dispatch is qualified as a judge <lb/>
of feminine loveliness Had it been <lb/>
The Hendersonville Herald, <lb/>
have been another <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
No, sir; Cowan is the man for that <lb/>
Job. Cause why Hes head- <lb/>
ed, and has already shown his good <lb/>
Judgment in making a selection. <lb/>
A Chicago young lady is soon to <lb/>
make her debut In society. The re- <lb/>
markable thing about her is that <lb/>
is twenty years old, has never been <lb/>
permitted to go to a party, has never <lb/>
had a young man caller and has <lb/>
ventured from home unless under <lb/>
the eyes of a careful chaperon. What <lb/>
a lot of fun that girl has missed, but <lb/>
bet she makes up for it when she <lb/>
does start. <lb/>
Tails. <lb/>
Ye, who delight to angle in the <lb/>
secrets of creation and garner high <lb/>
philosophy from humble fields, who <lb/>
perceive that nature's trifles are <lb/>
in and that every tad- <lb/>
pole may fulfill some cosmic aim- <lb/>
attend to this tale of a <lb/>
Through immemorial years the <lb/>
hog's tail has been considered a mere <lb/>
bagatelle. Indeed, all tails, save the <lb/>
beaver's, the kangaroos the monkey's <lb/>
and that of the fox In Aesop's fable <lb/>
have accounted of little use to <lb/>
the owners they adorn and of less <lb/>
value to civilization. Some savants, <lb/>
to be sure, have held that the rat <lb/>
utilizes his tail in extracting from <lb/>
those unguents <lb/>
so toothsome to the crafty rodent. <lb/>
scientist from Sir Fran- <lb/>
Bacon to Sir Oliver Lodge had <lb/>
ever Intimated that the swine's <lb/>
served any particular purpose, either <lb/>
to that animal itself or to mankind <lb/>
at large. <lb/>
Yet, inquisitive human mind could <lb/>
not rest upon a conclusion so <lb/>
Some hidden efficacy there <lb/>
must be even to the tail of a pig. So <lb/>
reasoned one Dr. Blossom, an earnest <lb/>
student of nature down in Louisiana. <lb/>
As Watt, night after night, observed <lb/>
his mother's tea kettle lid bobbing <lb/>
up from the steam, as Sir Isaac New- <lb/>
ton, day after day, eyed the apples <lb/>
falling In his orchard, so did Dr. <lb/>
Blossom gaze upon the tail of the <lb/>
hog, profoundly meditating upon the <lb/>
secrets he suspected it to harbor. <lb/>
And, now, like all honest seekers <lb/>
the truth, he has been rewarded. <lb/>
Yes, the value of hog tails has <lb/>
been discovered. The news dispatches <lb/>
are disappointingly in their <lb/>
treatment of this important event, <lb/>
but they show beyond a doubt what i <lb/>
a as well as interesting I <lb/>
result attends the doctor's triumph <lb/>
By long and careful experiment he <lb/>
has found that in the tail of the hog <lb/>
exists that, peculiar brand of blood <lb/>
from which hog-cholera scrum may <lb/>
be made. How simple it all seems, <lb/>
now that we know about It. All these <lb/>
centuries the hog has been carrying <lb/>
his drug store neatly hoisted above <lb/>
his hams. <lb/>
Of course, the longer the tail, the <lb/>
more serum to be had and the more <lb/>
cholera can be cured. Wherefore <lb/>
wise farmers in Louisiana are mus- <lb/>
all the zeal and cunning at <lb/>
their command to raise long-tailed <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
Mies <lb/>
The whole may be bro- <lb/>
ken in the making of a necktie. <lb/>
Certainly when a necktie or any other <lb/>
article is manufactured amid con- <lb/>
unsanitary and unfair to the <lb/>
workers, a moral as well as an <lb/>
wrong has been done, and in the <lb/>
end we all pay for it. <lb/>
Atlanta and the south have reasons <lb/>
to be proud of the rapid growth of <lb/>
their industries, but they <lb/>
have a higher reason to be <lb/>
of the consideration which these in- <lb/>
show toward human rights. <lb/>
It is a gratifying fact that within a <lb/>
few years ten prosperous <lb/>
factories have sprung up in the <lb/>
south, and that three of the most <lb/>
of them are in Atlanta. But <lb/>
it is a fact even more gratifying that <lb/>
these factories are not sweatshops, <lb/>
and that the people who work in <lb/>
them are accorded the treatment to <lb/>
which honest and capable labor is <lb/>
entitled. <lb/>
What a contrast is this to <lb/>
in certain quarters of the east <lb/>
The recently battled <lb/>
for their rights and won them. Now <lb/>
the makers are having to <lb/>
go through a similar trial. It will <lb/>
cost them much; it will cost their <lb/>
employers and the public. A sense <lb/>
of human justice would have averted <lb/>
it all. <lb/>
An article that is produced under <lb/>
conditions and conditions <lb/>
that are fair to labor must be a bet- <lb/>
article than that which comes <lb/>
from a and is stained, <lb/>
though Invisibly, with suffering and <lb/>
hardship. The south Is just entering <lb/>
upon a great manufacturing era. It <lb/>
is to be hoped, and from the example <lb/>
of our industries it may be <lb/>
expected, that the folly and shame <lb/>
of certain quarters of New England <lb/>
I will not find <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
An automobile manufacturer gives <lb/>
as one of many reasons why a man <lb/>
should provide himself with a ma- <lb/>
chine that It will give him and his <lb/>
family That Is the strong- <lb/>
est pull we have seen. That <lb/>
knows his business. Some men <lb/>
will give all they have and more for <lb/>
That for the <lb/>
mortgages on so many homes to raise <lb/>
money to buy automobiles. But <lb/>
Joshua Levering is big enough and <lb/>
strong enough and rich enough to <lb/>
get along without <lb/>
and Children. <lb/>
is the first duty of the <lb/>
tor who expects to be re- <lb/>
marks the Journal III <lb/>
an interesting address to the South <lb/>
Carolina lawmakers, get all the <lb/>
information he can on the Torrens <lb/>
system of land titles and on the sub- <lb/>
of city government by <lb/>
This is but earn- <lb/>
referred to the gentlemen who <lb/>
expect to gather in Raleigh next <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Power of he Press <lb/>
In an able sermon a Chicago minis- <lb/>
recently called attention to the <lb/>
present and Its power. <lb/>
power of a he <lb/>
says greater than that of the <lb/>
and even greater than that wield- <lb/>
ed by legislative <lb/>
The gentleman is perfectly right In <lb/>
this. Newspapers not egotistical. <lb/>
They realize they possess faults as <lb/>
well as virtues. <lb/>
Some newspapers do a great deal <lb/>
more harm than good when their col- <lb/>
are abused. <lb/>
The newspaper, however, is the <lb/>
great national educator. It brings the <lb/>
happenings of the world before its <lb/>
readers. It is liberal. It educates <lb/>
the people. It stands for religious <lb/>
liberty. It appeals to the masses. <lb/>
A minister, In addressing his con- <lb/>
reaches only those in hear- <lb/>
of his voice. The newspaper <lb/>
reaches into remote homes, into seem- <lb/>
districts, into <lb/>
places that are far removed from the <lb/>
church. <lb/>
The next legislature will not weak- <lb/>
en the prohibition law, but make it <lb/>
stronger. One of the things <lb/>
necessary to be done is to <lb/>
paralyze the near-beer business. We <lb/>
have been be-deviled enough with <lb/>
this painted harlot. The strong arm <lb/>
of the law must wipe it <lb/>
and Children. <lb/>
An Error of Judgment <lb/>
Every now and then a school <lb/>
teacher is confronted with the deli- <lb/>
situation evolved from the fact <lb/>
that a pupil has knowledge of the <lb/>
misdeeds of a fellow-pupil of which <lb/>
the teacher himself is in ignorance. <lb/>
The information is desired in the in- <lb/>
of sound but to com- <lb/>
the pupil to divulge it savors <lb/>
suspiciously of fostering the bearing <lb/>
of tales, a habit which no pupil can <lb/>
detest with more heartiness than the <lb/>
teacher, such <lb/>
circumstances, it is usually expedient <lb/>
except in the gravest cases, to allow <lb/>
the matter to pass. Precisely an <lb/>
analogous situation confronted the <lb/>
board of police commissioners of Au- <lb/>
Ga., and their method of <lb/>
handling it differed widely from the <lb/>
one just suggested, possibly because <lb/>
this board is not so fortunate as to <lb/>
number any school men in its <lb/>
J. Hamilton, a <lb/>
for The Daily says The Co- <lb/>
State, summarizing the <lb/>
assigned to a murder <lb/>
story. He applied for information to <lb/>
headquarters f the police depart- <lb/>
getting nothing that was <lb/>
and finding the atmosphere there- <lb/>
abouts anything but encouraging, <lb/>
Hamilton went elsewhere for his story <lb/>
and got it. He did not call his <lb/>
imagination but got details known <lb/>
only to the police. Some policeman <lb/>
had His punishment was <lb/>
sought and Hamilton was summoned <lb/>
before a meeting of the police com- <lb/>
mission and asked to name the <lb/>
man who gave him the tip. Naturally <lb/>
he declined Then the board <lb/>
ed him guilty of contempt, imposing <lb/>
a fine of or a jail term. Likewise, <lb/>
of course, Hamilton refused to pay <lb/>
the <lb/>
The Augusta authorities have <lb/>
en hold of a rather live wire In <lb/>
contempt proceedings. The know- <lb/>
school boy referred to above is <lb/>
subordinate to the inquiring <lb/>
teacher and thus In some sort under <lb/>
pressure to obey his commands, but It <lb/>
is difficult to see the equity in a news- <lb/>
paper man's being punished simply <lb/>
for the purpose of maintaining dis- <lb/>
in the police department. <lb/>
action will prove a boomerang, in <lb/>
that it gives very undesirable <lb/>
to difficulties existing in the <lb/>
administration of a department which <lb/>
is not the most manageable in any <lb/>
community. In the meantime, we do <lb/>
not suppose that The Daily Herald <lb/>
losing any sleep over the free <lb/>
it is receiving, or that it will <lb/>
allow the sufferings its reporter may <lb/>
have to undergo at the hands of the <lb/>
law to pass without suitable <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
The estimate that 717.000 acres in <lb/>
the South are this year devoted to <lb/>
lice-growing furnishes reasonable <lb/>
ground for on the part pf <lb/>
those who approve of the good old <lb/>
marriage custom handed down by our <lb/>
ancestors. The supply of the cereal <lb/>
is likely to be amply sufficient to <lb/>
meet all hymeneal <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
may says tho <lb/>
Columbia State, they are never <lb/>
such gamblers as to bet each other <lb/>
Which really, after all makes <lb/>
something the men who have to buy <lb/>
the hats should be thankful for. <lb/>
Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
Agricultural Curiosities <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Pierce, who lives near <lb/>
Thomasville, informs The Dispatch, <lb/>
that be has on his place the follow- <lb/>
agricultural A <lb/>
stalk of corn that measures 1-2 <lb/>
feet high and has two fine ears of <lb/>
corn on it eight feet from the ground; <lb/>
a pumpkin that weighs pounds <lb/>
and measures five feet and 1-4 inch <lb/>
in circumference; an apple that is <lb/>
four inches in diameter and weighs <lb/>
one and one-half pounds and is one <lb/>
toot In circumference; a grape vine <lb/>
that is three years old and this year <lb/>
bore one bushel of fine grapes; a to- <lb/>
vine that has grown to be <lb/>
teen and one-half feet long and has <lb/>
a good crop of tomatoes on It yet and <lb/>
is still blooming; a lot of fine old- <lb/>
fashioned that have <lb/>
handles twenty-four inches long. <lb/>
Lexington Dispatch.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
raw <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
DEATH OF MRS. I SE <lb/>
a load of HORSES <lb/>
and MULES direct <lb/>
from the Western <lb/>
stock farms. <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW, <lb/>
Dealer in Horses and Mules <lb/>
Fifth street, -2 block west of Five Points<lb/>
THE IN <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
and House Furnishings <lb/>
is not too good for you. When you want the <lb/>
best, and prices that arc in reach of your pocket <lb/>
book we can supply wants. <lb/>
She Was the Wife of a Pit <lb/>
Home Oak City <lb/>
The Raleigh News and Observer <lb/>
has the <lb/>
many friends <lb/>
regret of the death of Mrs J. <lb/>
House, which occurred at the home of <lb/>
husband's mother, Mrs. M W. <lb/>
louse, near Oak City, N. C. at <lb/>
p. m., October 8th, 1910. She was <lb/>
buried at the family burying <lb/>
at four o'clock Sunday <lb/>
Services were conducted at the grave <lb/>
by the Rev. Mr. pastor of the <lb/>
Presbyterian church, Tarboro, N. C <lb/>
She was the daughter of the late <lb/>
H. A. of Wade, N. C, <lb/>
land was, for many years prior to her <lb/>
death, a consistent member of the <lb/>
Presbyterian church. She is <lb/>
ed by her husband; one brother, Dr. <lb/>
T. G. of S. C; <lb/>
sisters, Mrs. Waiter S. Johnson, <lb/>
f Fresno, Gal. Mrs. J. M. Griffin, of <lb/>
Rocky Mount, N. C, and Miss Annie <lb/>
P. of Washington, D. C. <lb/>
was an ideal wife, a tender <lb/>
daughter and sister, a de- <lb/>
Her life was as to <lb/>
enable her sorely afflicted husband <lb/>
and relatives to feel, that all is well <lb/>
with her, her soul is with her <lb/>
Father in <lb/>
If r trade with us both make money <lb/>
See That Your Ticket Reads <lb/>
via <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb/>
to Baltimore <lb/>
ELEGANTLY APPOINTED <lb/>
PERFECT DINING ALL OUTSIDE <lb/>
homers leave Norfolk daily 6.15 p. m. from foot <lb/>
of J street, arrive Baltimore at 7.00 a. m. Direct connection <lb/>
with rail lines for all points. For further particulars call <lb/>
-i- write <lb/>
F. R. T. P. A., st., Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
Bros. Co. <lb/>
Cotton Brokers in <lb/>
Stock, Cotton, Grain and <lb/>
Provisions. <lb/>
PRIVATE WIRE <lb/>
to New York, Chicago and <lb/>
New Orleans. <lb/>
S. J. Nobles <lb/>
MODERN BARBER SHOP <lb/>
f everything n <lb/>
and working the <lb/>
best b Second to <lb/>
Opp. J. R. J. g. <lb/>
Why He Located at <lb/>
There are little uncertified stories <lb/>
I have met with several times, <lb/>
one of them runs about as fol- <lb/>
When George Vanderbilt <lb/>
upon creating an estate in Amer- <lb/>
similar to of the French <lb/>
estates in Europe, his first move was <lb/>
to engage a scientific commission to <lb/>
determine the location of such an <lb/>
estate. He de-ired to have a home <lb/>
where it would be possible to live all <lb/>
the year, or in any part of the year. <lb/>
He desired to have soil and climate <lb/>
favorable to the best development of <lb/>
a dairy business. Ho desired a <lb/>
for trees plants, and an op- <lb/>
to demonstrate what could <lb/>
done in these Ho desired <lb/>
to provide the facilities to develop a <lb/>
sh and game preserve of large pro- <lb/>
portions, and, generally speaking, to <lb/>
make an estate whoso various feat- <lb/>
would stand as a model for the <lb/>
surrounding country. He wished It <lb/>
to be east of river, <lb/>
and naturally expected it might be <lb/>
In the Adirondacks the <lb/>
White mountains, or the Green <lb/>
mountains. <lb/>
His commission, after a careful <lb/>
investigation, reported in favor of <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
The unverified story goes on to say, <lb/>
that Mr. Vanderbilt was rather start- <lb/>
led at the idea of going South, but, <lb/>
his commission exhibited facts and <lb/>
figures that could be compared, he <lb/>
promptly accepted the result of their <lb/>
A. Tompkins in <lb/>
Charlotte Observer. <lb/>
One May Poor <lb/>
This discussion going the round of <lb/>
the daily papers as to whether the <lb/>
the report that Andrew Carnegie or <lb/>
John D. Rockefeller propose to <lb/>
an endowed newspaper is true <lb/>
or not suggests that they might study <lb/>
the old story about the contract made <lb/>
between the devil and a man who <lb/>
anxious to have an ample supply <lb/>
of money for all his needs. <lb/>
In order to secure the money de- <lb/>
sired he made a contract to sell his <lb/>
to Devil, with the stipulation <lb/>
hat be was to be supplied <lb/>
linked for any wild <lb/>
or any purpose of any kind for <lb/>
which be desired to use it. He and <lb/>
the were to meet, occasionally, <lb/>
ind at such meetings he was to report <lb/>
amount expended and get a new <lb/>
for future extravagance <lb/>
made the contract, the Devil sup- <lb/>
plied him with money in abundance, <lb/>
he endeavored to the best of <lb/>
ability to spend. He indulged <lb/>
i yachts and fast horses and high <lb/>
and owning of many homes in <lb/>
lands, but he could not <lb/>
get rid of all the money that the Devil <lb/>
furnished in return for the <lb/>
of his soul. At last, how- <lb/>
ever, it entered into his head to pub- <lb/>
a newspaper. He undertook tin <lb/>
establishment of such an enterprise, <lb/>
into this he poured the money <lb/>
which the Devil had furnished him <lb/>
SO freely, satisfied that there was no <lb/>
to the amount of money that <lb/>
could be furnished. But in less than <lb/>
x year the devil sought a conference <lb/>
ind told him that while ho had been <lb/>
able in fulfilling the contract for the <lb/>
purchase of his soul to furnish the <lb/>
unlimited amount of money <lb/>
that he had been spending, he would <lb/>
be compelled to cancel the contract <lb/>
and let take back his soul, as he <lb/>
could not provide money enough to <lb/>
run a newspaper, and he would <lb/>
the contract and give back <lb/>
the man's soul than the <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
J. W. Perry <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
Cotton Factors and handlers of <lb/>
Ties and Bags. <lb/>
so- <lb/>
Barbershop <lb/>
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb/>
Proprietor <lb/>
Located in m business town. <lb/>
Pour chair in aid . <lb/>
one id d by n led b r- <lb/>
L mat their home, <lb/>
Third Crop Apples, <lb/>
Saturday Mr. J. A. Tyson, who <lb/>
lives on R F. D. No. <lb/>
brought us some apples that the <lb/>
third grown on the same <lb/>
this year. Of course they <lb/>
are small, bat they arc apples all <lb/>
right and what this climate <lb/>
can do. <lb/>
Postage In Sight. <lb/>
So assiduously has Postmaster <lb/>
General Hitchcock applied o <lb/>
the task of cutting down the <lb/>
of his department, without impairing <lb/>
its efficiency, that he is now able to <lb/>
declare that penny postage is <lb/>
of accomplishment in the corn- <lb/>
near future. <lb/>
The man who brings about penny <lb/>
postage will go down in the history <lb/>
of the United States as one of its <lb/>
greatest postmasters. In wiping our. <lb/>
the deficit of the post depart- <lb/>
Mr. Hitchcock will <lb/>
a real reform. Moreover, he <lb/>
will accomplish it without the aid of <lb/>
a brass band. he be able, <lb/>
before the end of his to put <lb/>
penny postage on the way to <lb/>
an actual fact, his administration <lb/>
will stand out from amongst all the <lb/>
ethers by virtue of a great achieve- <lb/>
affecting the entire country. <lb/>
Washington Post. <lb/>
Hack to Normal <lb/>
Now that the fair is over maybe <lb/>
trains will g-t bade on regular <lb/>
schedule. They were certainly <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Don't waste your money buying <lb/>
plasters when can get a bottle of <lb/>
Chamberlain's Liniment for cents <lb/>
A piece of with this <lb/>
liniment is superior to any plaster for <lb/>
lame back, pains in aide and chest, <lb/>
and much cheaper. Sold by all drug- <lb/>
Mr T. Smith <lb/>
Sunday night Mrs. Mary Smith, wife <lb/>
at Chief of J. T. Smith, suffer- <lb/>
ed a stroke of her right side <lb/>
She is resting com- <lb/>
today, Is of <lb/>
bar recovery.<lb/>
The Torrens System. <lb/>
That observant North Carolinian, I <lb/>
Editor Clarence Poe, of the <lb/>
Farmer, is an enthusiastic <lb/>
of the Torrens system of land <lb/>
registration and is trying to get it <lb/>
adopted in his own State. Writing of <lb/>
a recent visit to the Islands <lb/>
he <lb/>
found the system of <lb/>
registering land titles in force in the i <lb/>
islands, although our highly civilized j <lb/>
states on the mainland still get along <lb/>
with an antiquated wasteful system <lb/>
which is an enormous loss and <lb/>
cap in America real estate dealers, j <lb/>
preventing the farmer from realizing <lb/>
on and using his capital and hold- <lb/>
back progress, while <lb/>
no one save sue a scrubbier lawyers j <lb/>
as could not survive competition with <lb/>
lawyer of the better sort in regular <lb/>
and legitimate <lb/>
Some years ago there wan a power- <lb/>
movement in Virginia for the <lb/>
Torrens system, which provides <lb/>
transfer and insures of land titles, <lb/>
and the of the state bar <lb/>
association was obtained for the <lb/>
Mr. Eugene C. Massie, of Rich- <lb/>
was elected to the general as- <lb/>
chiefly by virtue of his <lb/>
with this movement. but <lb/>
when he got in the legislature he <lb/>
found the opposition too strong to be <lb/>
overcome. He may find that the Tor- <lb/>
system has life in it yet in the <lb/>
Old Dominion, in spite of his <lb/>
aging experience. Norfolk Landmark <lb/>
MIL TODAY. <lb/>
Particulars of How Ills Death <lb/>
curred <lb/>
Owing to some of <lb/>
trains the body of Mr. Zeno Brown, <lb/>
was sent from Mulberry. Fla., Fri- <lb/>
day morning, did not reach Green- <lb/>
ville until Sunday evening, and the <lb/>
funeral took place this afternoon at <lb/>
o'clock. Mr. Lester Savage, who <lb/>
worked for the same company as Mr. <lb/>
Brown and who accompanied the re- <lb/>
mains home, says that the accident <lb/>
occurred last Tuesday afternoon. <lb/>
The storm had played havoc with <lb/>
electrical wires and Mr. Brown was <lb/>
out at work on these to get <lb/>
restored as fast as possible. <lb/>
He was up a pole making <lb/>
when a live wire struck him <lb/>
across the breast, and it was so <lb/>
charged that the shock killed him <lb/>
instantly. <lb/>
It was due to the storm that he <lb/>
particulars of the tragedy and the <lb/>
body were so long reaching <lb/>
MEETINGS. <lb/>
SEE PULLET BOWES FOB LA- <lb/>
black silk underskirts,, also a <lb/>
nice line of black heather-bloom<lb/>
Move Out When Mores In. <lb/>
No stomach dosing. <lb/>
it is made from <lb/>
the highest of eucalyptus, <lb/>
from the eucalyptus forest of <lb/>
and combined with the excellent <lb/>
antiseptics employed in the <lb/>
In inland Australia the atmosphere <lb/>
is so impregnated with balsam thrown <lb/>
out by the eucalyptus trees that germs <lb/>
cannot live, In consequence ca- <lb/>
and consumption are unknown. <lb/>
Breathe and get the very <lb/>
same pleasant, healing, germ-killing, <lb/>
air as you would get in the eucalyptus <lb/>
forests and kill tie germs. <lb/>
is sold by Coward <lb/>
en and druggists at <lb/>
a complete outfit. <lb/>
An outfit consists of a of HY- <lb/>
a hard rubber pocket inhaler <lb/>
simple for use. The <lb/>
inhaler will last a lifetime, but bear in <lb/>
mind if you need another bottle of <lb/>
you can get it at druggists <lb/>
for only at any time. Guaranteed <lb/>
to cure catarrh, coup and throat <lb/>
troubles, or money Trial <lb/>
of free to readers of The <lb/>
Reflector. Address Booth's <lb/>
Co., N, Y. <lb/>
Song Services and Men's Prayer <lb/>
Meetings Both Well Attended <lb/>
The first rehearsal of the chorus <lb/>
in preparation for the meeting to be <lb/>
conducted by Dr. Black here in Nov- <lb/>
ember, was held in the Methodist <lb/>
church Sunday afternoon. Miss <lb/>
directed the singing and ex- <lb/>
pressed pleasure at the readiness <lb/>
with which those taking part began <lb/>
their work. The next rehearsal will <lb/>
be held in the Christian church Wed- <lb/>
night immediately following <lb/>
the union prayer meeting. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. T. J. Jarvis conducted the <lb/>
men's prayer meeting that was also <lb/>
held Sunday afternoon in the <lb/>
church, and made a splendid <lb/>
talk. <lb/>
Our people of all denominations, <lb/>
and even those of no church, are <lb/>
manifesting much interest in the <lb/>
for the meeting which is <lb/>
be held by Dr. Black. <lb/>
New Pastor. <lb/>
Rev. Charles C. Ware, formerly of <lb/>
Kentucky, the new pastor of the <lb/>
Christian church here, held his first <lb/>
services with this church Sunday <lb/>
morning and night. He preached ex- <lb/>
sermons and made a splendid <lb/>
impression on the congregation. <lb/>
OUR STUCK OF MILLINERY IS <lb/>
complete in all lines, and we can <lb/>
furnish any style hat wanted. Be <lb/>
sure you see us for <lb/>
Pulley Bowen. <lb/>
Keep it in mind that if you are not <lb/>
already registered, you must register <lb/>
before you can vote in the coming <lb/>
election. <lb/>
SEE BOWEN FOR LA- <lb/>
dies fine shoes. We have them in <lb/>
cloth top patent button, Suede and <lb/>
gun metal leathers, also all styles of <lb/>
lace shoes. <lb/>
SEE PULLEY BOWEN FOR LA- <lb/>
silk dresses. <lb/>
The post of honor is the post of duty. <lb/>
Small profits, little risk; large <lb/>
profits, great risks. <lb/>
A few Reasons <lb/>
Why It Is Best <lb/>
Gives relief for all Nerve, Bone and Muscle <lb/>
Aches and Fains more quickly than any <lb/>
other remedy known. <lb/>
Its peculiar penetrating properties are <lb/>
most LINIMENT. <lb/>
May be used with absolute confidence in its <lb/>
purity for Internal and External Uses. <lb/>
It is Triple Strength. A powerful, speedy <lb/>
and sure Pain Remedy, therefore most <lb/>
in producing results. <lb/>
Not only contains the old-fashioned <lb/>
but also the latest and up-to- <lb/>
date LINIMENT. <lb/>
Recommended and sold under a guarantee <lb/>
for the Rheumatism in all <lb/>
forms, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints <lb/>
and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, <lb/>
Sprains, Outs, Burns, Bruises, Cramps, <lb/>
Colic, Toothache, and all Nerve, Bone <lb/>
and Muscle Aches and Pains. <lb/>
ill <lb/>
Proof Positive <lb/>
Cured of Done <lb/>
had been Suffering with bone <lb/>
for three years. I been <lb/>
Noah's Liniment, and can say <lb/>
that It cured me completely. Can walk <lb/>
I have In two years. Noah's <lb/>
Liniment will do all you claim. Rev <lb/>
B. Cyrus, Donald, S. <lb/>
Drug stores in cities and towns, general <lb/>
stores in the country, and <lb/>
the bottle, and money back if not sat- <lb/>
Isn't this fair <lb/>
LINIMENT <lb/>
AND <lb/>
AND IN <lb/>
MAN AND BEAST <lb/>
NO. 1460. <lb/>
THE FOOD <lb/>
ACT, JUNE <lb/>
PRICE, THIS SIZE, CENTS <lb/>
SIMS. BOG, AND <lb/>
NOAH REMEDY CO, <lb/>
Va Boston, Mi <lb/>
important Notice <lb/>
The Noah's Liniment looks exactly like the <lb/>
above. Look for Noah's Ark on every package, our <lb/>
trade mark, registered in tho U. S. Patent Office, for <lb/>
your protection. Noah's Liniment always appears In <lb/>
red Ink on the original, both on tho label and on out- <lb/>
side container. Accept nothing but Noah's Liniment. <lb/>
It Is Pain Remedy sold under a positive <lb/>
guarantee. If dealer will not supply you, send <lb/>
in stamps and we will mull you a and re- <lb/>
fund money If not perfectly satisfied. Beware or <lb/>
fraud; accept no substitute. <lb/>
Pain In Side Neuralgia. <lb/>
five years I suffered with <lb/>
and pain In side. Could not <lb/>
sleep. I tried Noah's Liniment, and <lb/>
the first application made me feel bet- <lb/>
Mrs. Martha A. See, Richmond,<lb/>
Couldn't liaise Right Arm. <lb/>
caught cold and had a severe at- <lb/>
tack of rheumatism In my right <lb/>
and could not raise my arm with- <lb/>
out much pain. I tried Noah's <lb/>
and In less than a week was en- <lb/>
free from pain. A <lb/>
chester, <lb/>
Stiff Joints and Backache. <lb/>
have used Noah's Liniment for <lb/>
rheumatism, stiff Joints and backache, <lb/>
and I can say it did me more good than <lb/>
any pain remedy. Rev. George W.- <lb/>
Smith, S. <lb/>
Sprained Ankle. <lb/>
have been benefited greatly <lb/>
Noah's Liniment, using It for a sprained <lb/>
ankle. Mrs. W. D. Robertson, west <lb/>
G . <lb/>
Pains In the <lb/>
suffered ten years with a dread- <lb/>
fully sore pain In my back, and tried <lb/>
different remedies. Less than half a <lb/>
bottle of Noah's Liniment made a per- <lb/>
cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D. <lb/>
Point Eastern, <lb/>
Neuralgia and <lb/>
wife suffered for several years <lb/>
with neuralgia and toothache. She used <lb/>
about half a bottle of Noah's Liniment <lb/>
and got Immediate relief. J. S. Fisher, <lb/>
Policeman, Hodges, S. <lb/>
Rheumatism In the Neck. <lb/>
received the bottle of Noah's <lb/>
and think It has helped me great- <lb/>
I have rheumatism In my <lb/>
It relieved It right much. Mrs. Martha <lb/>
A. Lambert, Beaver Dam, <lb/>
For Horses. <lb/>
have never used a liniment we <lb/>
consider the equal to Noah's Liniment <lb/>
for bruises, sprains, strained tendons <lb/>
and to use on throat, sides and chest <lb/>
for distemper, colds, etc. Richmond <lb/>
Transfer Co., Richmond, <lb/>
Better Than it cm oil I on. <lb/>
cheerfully recommend all stable <lb/>
men to give Noah's Liniment a trial <lb/>
and be convinced of Its wonderful <lb/>
properties. obtained as <lb/>
good if not better results from Its use <lb/>
than we did from remedies costing <lb/>
per bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth <lb/>
Transfer Co., Norfolk, <lb/>
m t<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
it. <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb/>
Advertising rates furnished <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, a <lb/>
of our people attended the state <lb/>
fair at Raleigh. <lb/>
Gov. W. W. stepped off the <lb/>
north bound train Thursday morning <lb/>
and shook the hands of all in reach. <lb/>
He was to Williamston, where <lb/>
he and Hon. Tom Settle, Assistant <lb/>
United States District Attorney had <lb/>
a joint debate on the issues of the <lb/>
day, and the best methods of drain- <lb/>
Swift Creek and Clay Root <lb/>
swamps, all in Pitt. <lb/>
F. Lilly's for ladies and gen- <lb/>
fresh select oysters <lb/>
1230 <lb/>
Fannie of <lb/>
Is visiting Misses Anna and Cora <lb/>
angel visited our town <lb/>
Tuesday morning and laid <lb/>
-.--; upon the wife of Mr. James A. <lb/>
Newell, who for some time had been <lb/>
in the valley of the shadow of death. <lb/>
was years old, and a devoted <lb/>
member cf the M. E. church. Her re- <lb/>
mains were laid at rest In the Ayden <lb/>
cemetery Thursday evening. Rev. J. <lb/>
C. conducting the funeral. <lb/>
Mr. Lee Humble, who lived near <lb/>
Spring, who for some time has <lb/>
In feeble came over to <lb/>
Ayden Monday and . the <lb/>
night with his sitter, J. O. Win- <lb/>
While there taken de- <lb/>
worse, and while loving <lb/>
did all they could he died before day. <lb/>
was burled Wednesday near <lb/>
as he was known <lb/>
was Just entering young manhood, was <lb/>
quiet, and industrious, and his <lb/>
death Is quite a shock to the family, <lb/>
though not very much unexpected. <lb/>
Miss Mimic Cos, who had been at- <lb/>
tending the meeting at the Baptist <lb/>
church, to her home in Win- <lb/>
Wednesday evening. <lb/>
Mr. W. H. the champion <lb/>
cotton buyer, of Grifton, was here <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
Rev. . . T. Phillips is attending the <lb/>
Free Baptist conference in South <lb/>
. this week. <lb/>
The clock at J. R. Smith was <lb/>
opened Thursday amid a throng of j <lb/>
of you R. Smith <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
Mr. Abner Faulkner has purchased <lb/>
the house and lot of J. J. Edwards <lb/>
and son, on the height, or <lb/>
Venters property, and has moved <lb/>
there. <lb/>
Mr. Jesse Cannon car. be found at <lb/>
the office of the Ayden Loan and In- <lb/>
Company, with the <lb/>
books. <lb/>
A complete line of and <lb/>
children's cloaks and trimmed hats <lb/>
dress shoes, and shoes, to lit any foot, <lb/>
books, tablets, ink. crayons, <lb/>
and school supplies.-J. R Smith <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
Dr. K. L. St. Claire, the old Apostle <lb/>
of education, In our town. He tells <lb/>
us he is still working away for the <lb/>
Seminary with wonderful <lb/>
Mr. C. C. who is one of <lb/>
the old land marks of Ayden and <lb/>
has moved to his more quiet <lb/>
ad pleasant country home in South <lb/>
Ayden. he moved to Ayden <lb/>
that portion of the town that is known <lb/>
a tobacco farm, lie <lb/>
purchased a piece of farm and <lb/>
erected him a small house <lb/>
cut on what was then his farm. Now <lb/>
is entirely surrounded by <lb/>
residences, paved walks, stone <lb/>
tens, lovely lawns and exquisite <lb/>
homes, that are calculated to <lb/>
make an alien write Sweet <lb/>
Mr. will be to <lb/>
South Ayden what he has been to <lb/>
To the friends and neighbors who <lb/>
were Had and attentive to me and <lb/>
my wife, in our sickness, her death <lb/>
and burial, I wish to express my most <lb/>
sincere and heart felt thanks, and <lb/>
that Cod may reward them for <lb/>
their kindness to me. <lb/>
James A. Nov oil. <lb/>
Break <lb/>
Severe strains on the vita organs, <lb/>
like strains on machinery, cause <lb/>
break down. You cant over-tax <lb/>
liver kidneys, bowels or <lb/>
nerves without serious danger to <lb/>
yourself. you are weak or run- <lb/>
down, or under strain of any kind, <lb/>
take Electric Bitters, the matchless <lb/>
ionic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van <lb/>
of Kirkland, <lb/>
did not break down, while enduring <lb/>
a most severe strain, for three <lb/>
months, is due wholly to Electric Bit- <lb/>
Use them and enjoy health <lb/>
strength. Satisfaction positively <lb/>
at all druggists <lb/>
Special Low to Norfolk. <lb/>
i The Norfolk Southern railroad will <lb/>
. sell special low rate round trip <lb/>
to Norfolk October 31st to No- <lb/>
3rd, return limit No- <lb/>
on account of the great <lb/>
exhibition of flying machines in that <lb/>
city. Call -on ticket agents for full <lb/>
information. <lb/>
BAUD. <lb/>
By virtue power contained <lb/>
in mortgages given by <lb/>
and wile one lo <lb/>
i-. Cox, appears rec- <lb/>
in the Office of register <lb/>
Pitt county in Book v-b page <lb/>
dated December 80th, <lb/>
oilier to George which <lb/>
appears of record in page <lb/>
dated April the Under- <lb/>
signed sell for cash before the <lb/>
court house door la Greenville on <lb/>
Monday, November the <lb/>
described tract of land <lb/>
and being in the county of Pitt <lb/>
and in township; bound- <lb/>
ed on the east by the lauds of Sam <lb/>
Nine, on the south by the lands of <lb/>
Amos Shivers, on the west by the <lb/>
lands of L. L. and on the <lb/>
north by the dower of Elizabeth <lb/>
Lawhorn, containing two hundred <lb/>
acres more or less and being all the <lb/>
land of the late Fred <lb/>
not included in the dower. <lb/>
This October 14th, <lb/>
NANCY E. COX, <lb/>
GEORGE <lb/>
P. G. James Son, Mort. <lb/>
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
North county. <lb/>
Janette Pitt, <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Josh Pitt. <lb/>
The defendant above named will <lb/>
take notice that an action entitled as <lb/>
above has been commenced in the <lb/>
court of Pitt county, to obtain <lb/>
absolute decree of divorce upon stat- <lb/>
grounds, and the said <lb/>
further take notice that he is re- <lb/>
to appear at the next term of <lb/>
the Superior court of Pitt county to <lb/>
be held on the 2nd Monday in No- <lb/>
1910, it being the 14th day of <lb/>
November, 1910, at the court house of <lb/>
county, in Greenville, N. C. and <lb/>
answer or demur to the complaint In <lb/>
action, or the plaintiff will apply <lb/>
the court for the relief demanded <lb/>
in said <lb/>
day of October, 1310. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Court. <lb/>
F. G. James Son, <lb/>
Staggers Skeptics. <lb/>
That a clean, nice, fragrant com- <lb/>
pound like Salve <lb/>
will Instantly relieve a bad burn, cut, <lb/>
scald, wound or piles, staggers <lb/>
tics. But great cures prove it's a won- <lb/>
healer of the worst sores, <lb/>
boils, felons, eczema, akin <lb/>
as also chapped hands, sprains <lb/>
and corns. Try it. at all Drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb/>
At the Close of Business September 1910. <lb/>
merry shoppers, and stood at 10.33-26. <lb/>
Mr. Everett won the <lb/>
set of Mr. Edward <lb/>
the second, a hand-knit, all wool <lb/>
Miss won <lb/>
third, a china cake place. You get <lb/>
r with each dollars purchase <lb/>
end is a busy place. <lb/>
Mr. John Lewis wife <lb/>
daughter, mother and brother, were <lb/>
till on our dry Thurs- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Let us gin your cotton, give you <lb/>
bagging and ties, and pay you cash <lb/>
for your J. R. Smith Com- <lb/>
There was over worth of <lb/>
cotton sold on Ayden market last <lb/>
This is enough to make New <lb/>
York and Liverpool set up and take <lb/>
notice. Our buyers are still rampant <lb/>
and their orders are for no limited <lb/>
amount. <lb/>
In time of peace prepare war. <lb/>
Supply with a good cook <lb/>
stove tor either wood or <lb/>
coal, also heaters and Re- <lb/>
member we can furnish you <lb/>
The Lash of a Fiend. <lb/>
would have been about as welcome to <lb/>
A. Cooper, of N. Y., as a mer- <lb/>
lung-racking cough that defied <lb/>
all remedies for years. was most <lb/>
troublesome at he writes; <lb/>
helped me till I used Dr. <lb/>
New Discovery, which cured <lb/>
me completely. I never cough at <lb/>
night Millions know its match- <lb/>
less merit for stubborn colds, <lb/>
coughs, sore lungs, <lb/>
asthma, hemorrhage, croup, whooping <lb/>
cough, or It relieves quick- <lb/>
and fails to satisfy. A trial <lb/>
convinces. Trial bottle <lb/>
free. It's positively guaranteed by all <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured, <lb/>
unsecured. 21.76 <lb/>
Furniture and fix lures 610.59 <lb/>
Demand loans 6,400.00 <lb/>
Due from banks and <lb/>
Bunkers <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin cur. 1,450.80 <lb/>
National bank and other <lb/>
U. Notes 4,880.00 <lb/>
10.75 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund 15,025.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, less . <lb/>
cur. exp. and taxes pd. <lb/>
Deposits sub. to check 34,776.87 <lb/>
Savings Deposits 84,359.08 <lb/>
Cashier's checks <lb/>
outstanding 8.40 <lb/>
Certified Checks 42.07 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Could <lb/>
Could wife write A letter like <lb/>
if not, take n Disability policy <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
Mr. IT. A. White, Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, N C. <lb/>
Dear <lb/>
My has had <lb/>
for He so you i. <lb/>
sickness about months <lb/>
go. Won't you please attend to the <lb/>
natter for me, you will oblige me to <lb/>
Very truly, <lb/>
MRS. J. M. C. <lb/>
STATE OP NORTH CARO. <lb/>
COUNT <lb/>
I, J. R. Cashier named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb/>
the above statement s true to best of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. It. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
an sworn to <lb/>
before me, this 10th day of Sept. <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
HODGEs, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH. <lb/>
ELI AS TURNAGE, <lb/>
JOSEPH DIXON. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
Tie greatest f mistakes think- <lb/>
you cant make <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
We wish to oil your Attention t our line fall goods which <lb/>
we now have. We have great care In this year and we <lb/>
think we can supply you wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Ginghams, No- <lb/>
Laces and Embroideries and in Let anything that is carried mi a <lb/>
Goods <lb/>
Come let us you <lb/>
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C.<lb/>
Several Prominent Men to Speak la <lb/>
Count. <lb/>
Hon. J Bryan Grimes arc Dem- <lb/>
of county Will <lb/>
Speak at J. M. Cox's mill <lb/>
October fit o'clock a. m. <lb/>
At x roads on Thursday <lb/>
o'clock n. m A <lb/>
barbecue dinner will be served on the <lb/>
grounds for all. <lb/>
Democratic candidates other <lb/>
speakers at Jack. <lb/>
Friday, October 28th, at p. <lb/>
m. <lb/>
Hon. the <lb/>
candidate, and other prominent speak <lb/>
at Saturday. October 29th, <lb/>
o'clock p. m. <lb/>
Democratic Candida other <lb/>
Democratic speakers will be at <lb/>
on Tuesday, Nov. 1st, at t <lb/>
o'clock a. m. <lb/>
Winterville, on Wednesday, Nov. <lb/>
2nd, at o'clock p. m. <lb/>
John's Mill, on Thursday, Nov. <lb/>
at p. <lb/>
Hon. F. M. Simmons and T. W. <lb/>
at Greenville, Friday, Nov <lb/>
4th, at o'clock p. m. <lb/>
At Stokes, on Saturday, Nov. 5th at <lb/>
a. m, <lb/>
There will a <lb/>
rally and and lion. W. <lb/>
Bickett and other prominent speakers <lb/>
Will address the citizens of the county <lb/>
on the political issues of the day. <lb/>
ARIZONA ROAD RUNNER. <lb/>
A Sociable Bird That Is Said to Hat <lb/>
a Rattlesnake. <lb/>
The road runner is one of Arizona's <lb/>
distinctive ornithological <lb/>
It is a long legged, long billed bird, <lb/>
slender of build and standing some <lb/>
ten inches high. It is not often <lb/>
the farming districts, but is u fa, <lb/>
sight on the desert. <lb/>
It has gained the name of road run- <lb/>
from Its habit of taking the road <lb/>
front of travelers be they on bone- <lb/>
back or wheeled and run- <lb/>
swiftly or slowly, as occasion re- <lb/>
quires, showing off its neighborly <lb/>
it and running qualities. It not <lb/>
common for it to keep In company of <lb/>
the traveler for several hundred yards. <lb/>
No resident of Arizona would kill a <lb/>
road runner. It is firmly believed <lb/>
the bird Is the deadly enemy of <lb/>
monster of the desert, the rattlesnake <lb/>
We don't know whether any of <lb/>
readers ever saw n road runner n <lb/>
rattlesnake. If there is authentic <lb/>
of such a thing we would be <lb/>
Bind to it. Hut the accepted <lb/>
tradition Is that the road runner and <lb/>
the rattlesnake are deadly enemies <lb/>
that I lie rattlesnake fears the <lb/>
road runner beyond anything else. <lb/>
It UM that the bird drives the <lb/>
snake Into a and then, <lb/>
around the serpent like lightning. <lb/>
pecks It to death. Whatever truth <lb/>
there be in the stories of the <lb/>
road runner's accomplishments as a <lb/>
st- deserves the <lb/>
friendly protecting it receives Its <lb/>
sociability Is a diver <lb/>
for the lonesome desert traveler. <lb/>
Republican. <lb/>
Are Drugs Necessary <lb/>
Do Drugs Cure Disease <lb/>
Can Nature foe A <lb/>
Building k And Corporation Tax <lb/>
National Association of <lb/>
sends out a fortnightly re- <lb/>
Of notes of in- <lb/>
among them we find <lb/>
of interest in regard to the <lb/>
liability of building and loan <lb/>
to the tax, now <lb/>
review by the Supreme court of <lb/>
the. United The specific <lb/>
of the liability cf these <lb/>
has been raised in the case of <lb/>
Washing- <lb/>
ton has advised the Baltimore <lb/>
tor that their liability can be deter- <lb/>
mined, by the application of a test, <lb/>
is thus set out in a <lb/>
to the Baltimore collector. <lb/>
has been held that building and loan <lb/>
associations are not exempt if they <lb/>
loan money to others than <lb/>
members, thus doing a business <lb/>
to that engaged by banks or <lb/>
companies. It is also held that <lb/>
building and loan associations, which <lb/>
receive of on deposit <lb/>
is not In payment of <lb/>
fend On which the depositor receives <lb/>
A fixed rate of interest regardless or <lb/>
the earnings of association, are <lb/>
Conducting a business similar to a <lb/>
banking business, and are therefore <lb/>
to the special excise tax on <lb/>
corporations and should be <lb/>
to make a return showing their not <lb/>
Our understanding is that <lb/>
the North Carolina building loan <lb/>
associations do not lend to any other <lb/>
than stockholders, nor do they receive <lb/>
money except in payment, on stock. <lb/>
They do a strictly building and loan <lb/>
business, and are therefore in no fear <lb/>
of the corporation <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Camels That Ride. <lb/>
The Bedouins decorate their baggage <lb/>
camels in the most fantastic manner. <lb/>
A huge pack saddle is surmounted by <lb/>
a still pannier. Above this <lb/>
again is a soft of chair in Which the <lb/>
ruler nit. The long of leather <lb/>
banging down the aides are simply <lb/>
for decorative purposes. I have <lb/>
Camels when too young to go on <lb/>
treks being carried In these panniers, <lb/>
find are used for the <lb/>
children. <lb/>
tribe has many quaint and cm <lb/>
customs. Perhaps the most cur <lb/>
of these Is the manner In which <lb/>
they show their esteem for certain <lb/>
stronger. One evening when n young <lb/>
camel had been for the meal I <lb/>
noticed the women collecting the <lb/>
blood In A bowl. Then, to my <lb/>
they started painting my <lb/>
camels on the necks and flanks with <lb/>
the blood. Unknowingly I was the <lb/>
recipient of the greatest honor hat <lb/>
can be paid a stranger. The blood <lb/>
dried on and remained for a long <lb/>
time, as a talisman among all <lb/>
the <lb/>
in Wide World Magazine. <lb/>
If were born right and after- <lb/>
wards lived right, there would no <lb/>
use for medicine. Every doctor knows <lb/>
this. Bo do other well-informed people. <lb/>
Cue thing more. When a person lives <lb/>
or acquires bodily weakness by <lb/>
heredity, medicine can do only <lb/>
cure him. Only <lb/>
charlatans claim that medicines will <lb/>
Medicines may <lb/>
Medicines may urge the <lb/>
cowers of disease, <lb/>
sines mes arouse the efforts of the <lb/>
human body to right against <lb/>
This is the most that med- <lb/>
mo can do. <lb/>
A man accidentally puts his <lb/>
Instinctively he wets bis <lb/>
finger in his mouth, then blows on it <lb/>
for the cooling effect. This is no cure. <lb/>
He knows it very well. But it makes it <lb/>
Joel bet for the time being. <lb/>
People eat unwisely. This produces <lb/>
or indigestion. The only <lb/>
rations cure U to cat correctly. <lb/>
a is at hand the pains of <lb/>
mitigated, the throes of <lb/>
assuaged. The medicine can- <lb/>
said to have cured. It <lb/>
palliates disagreeable symptoms, l-m <lb/>
cure must come through right living. <lb/>
Take for instance. ITo one <lb/>
a cure for dyspepsia. <lb/>
stimulate the stomach <lb/>
to perform Its function properly. Peru- <lb/>
will increase tho flow of digestive <lb/>
without which <lb/>
be carried on at all. It will increase the <lb/>
relish of food, the appetite <lb/>
It is admitted that all this can be <lb/>
by right living, but there <lb/>
re so many people who either will not <lb/>
or do not know how to oat correctly that <lb/>
ft tremendous amount cf good can be <lb/>
done by the of <lb/>
A stomach that has been frequently <lb/>
performs tho function of <lb/>
Such a stomach allows <lb/>
he food to remain undigested for some <lb/>
me after it is swallowed. This leads <lb/>
to fermentation of the food. Sour <lb/>
is tho result. This goes on week <lb/>
alter week, until the blood ed <lb/>
With the products of fermentation. .- <lb/>
rendition is very apt to produce <lb/>
IS not claimed that will <lb/>
rheumatism. Nothing will cure rheum- <lb/>
but correct living. But it i. <lb/>
will assist a badly <lb/>
to perform U work. <lb/>
If a person would correct his habits, <lb/>
persist in right eating and <lb/>
ways, undoubtedly tho would <lb/>
right itself, tho blood would rid Itself of <lb/>
tho poison, and everything would <lb/>
right. But as said before there are a <lb/>
multitude of people who will not or can- <lb/>
not adopt right methods of living. To <lb/>
such people a boon. A dose <lb/>
before meals will assist the stomach to <lb/>
do its work. This prevents <lb/>
of the food, brings about normal <lb/>
digestion, and all the train of <lb/>
follow indigestion disappear. <lb/>
In other words, helpful to <lb/>
those who live badly, or those who <lb/>
have acquired some chronic weakness. <lb/>
not cure, but it assists the <lb/>
powers of to bring about a cure. <lb/>
Tho whip does not the- power <lb/>
of tho horse to pull a I a, bat <lb/>
used it stimulates the horse to <lb/>
use his powers at the I ht time, with- <lb/>
out which ho could no; pulled the <lb/>
load. . <lb/>
This illustrates tho effect of <lb/>
or any other good remedy tho sys- <lb/>
Taken at the right calls <lb/>
forth the powers of tho human system <lb/>
to meet the en of disease, <lb/>
and thus cuts short, if not rely ends, <lb/>
tho diseased action. <lb/>
No one should ever attempt to <lb/>
medicine in tho place of right <lb/>
In the end such an attempt will <lb/>
prove a disaster. But an occasional <lb/>
of tho right medicine at tho right time <lb/>
is a godsend, and no reasonable <lb/>
will undertake to deny it. <lb/>
Those who know bow to use <lb/>
find it of untold value. By and by the <lb/>
world will get Wise enough so <lb/>
through correct living no medicine <lb/>
all will be needed. But that <lb/>
not arrived. In the meantime, <lb/>
tho world is approaching that <lb/>
in which all medicine will ho v <lb/>
is a handy <lb/>
have in tho house. <lb/>
Slight derangements of tho <lb/>
alight attacks of <lb/>
throat, bronchial tubes, lungs or b <lb/>
these attacks sure to <lb/>
diseases, and can be <lb/>
the Judicious of <lb/>
Wouldn't you like to read a few <lb/>
solicited from people v-ho <lb/>
have used and who stand ready <lb/>
to confirm tho above e-. <lb/>
coming it. If BO, address tho Per-mi <lb/>
Drug Manufacturing Co., <lb/>
Ohio, will <lb/>
to <lb/>
Quit the Business. <lb/>
One of the near-beer here <lb/>
has become disgusted with it and quit <lb/>
business. That is what they all <lb/>
might to do, and not wait until they <lb/>
forced to quit. The latter alter- <lb/>
native is coming to those who persist <lb/>
In on. <lb/>
tor Tb Reflector. <lb/>
A of Instinct. <lb/>
The are rather strange <lb/>
caterpillars. A single string of them <lb/>
five or six yards long has just climbed <lb/>
down from my parasol pines and is at <lb/>
this moment itself in the <lb/>
walls of my garden, carpeting the <lb/>
ground traversed with transparent silk. <lb/>
according to the custom of the <lb/>
To say nothing of the <lb/>
apparatus of unparalleled <lb/>
which they carry on their i <lb/>
caterpillars, as everybody M <lb/>
this remarkable <lb/>
travel only in a troop, one after the <lb/>
other, like the blind of or <lb/>
those in the parable, each <lb/>
her <lb/>
leader- so much so that our author <lb/>
having one morning disposed the file <lb/>
on edge of a large stone vase, thus <lb/>
closing circuit, for seven whole <lb/>
days, during an atrocious week, <lb/>
through cold, hunger and unspeakable <lb/>
weariness, the unhappy troop on Its <lb/>
tragic round without rest, respite or <lb/>
mercy, pursued the pitiless circle <lb/>
death <lb/>
Press is Powerful. , <lb/>
The press sways the world. It is Every year as to <lb/>
J great lever by which human approach some <lb/>
Ids are moved; the moulder <lb/>
opinion; the elevating and This has been repeated yea et <lb/>
lifts since our. earliest <lb/>
worn and weary we may and again weather <lb/>
of the Z rust, eon- have seen their <lb/>
m, and Places us fairly and of But., are plucky <lb/>
They never give up. <lb/>
squarely <lb/>
Ci<lb/>
the even and upward <lb/>
thought feel- <lb/>
persistence is to be <lb/>
even if their do i <lb/>
than they hit. The public <lb/>
that has well, it Just likes to be fooled and it <lb/>
growth and prosperity of a sticks to the weather <lb/>
Pity and helped place cause they fool them more than <lb/>
Unions else. Nobody takes a <lb/>
mL among Z chief cities cf a distance prophet <lb/>
subject of pride to her he la good to have <lb/>
and of interest not only to, tor amusement If nothing <lb/>
them, but also to the groat multitude I Times. <lb/>
who are connected with her by social j <lb/>
ties or business relations. And among <lb/>
agencies that have brought An Alabama <lb/>
result, none has been more. <lb/>
powerful than her press. This is the <lb/>
WILL THE AT <lb/>
golden age of the press. Long live the <lb/>
newspapers; verily, they sway the <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Jury awarded a lady <lb/>
damages a man who had <lb/>
attempted to kiss her. Will <lb/>
contemporary calculate what the <lb/>
amount would have been if he had <lb/>
succeeded.- Charlotte Observer.<lb/>
.-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0008" n="8"/>
<p>
AS TO <lb/>
Facts for Information of Voters Who <lb/>
Desire to Participate in Election <lb/>
The following information is for <lb/>
the benefit of voters who desire to <lb/>
participate in the general election in <lb/>
No new registration is required. <lb/>
All persons who were registered in <lb/>
the last election can vote now with- <lb/>
out registering again. However, <lb/>
minors becoming of age must <lb/>
and persons who have moved <lb/>
their residence must register, if they <lb/>
moved from the precinct in which <lb/>
they were registered more than four <lb/>
months prior to the election, other- <lb/>
wise they vote in the precinct in <lb/>
which they are registered. <lb/>
No person liable to poll tax can <lb/>
vote in this election unless he paid <lb/>
his poll tax by May of this year, and <lb/>
he must exhibit his receipt or take <lb/>
the oath required of him before <lb/>
In order to vote he must be <lb/>
years old, must have been a resident <lb/>
of the state two years, of the county <lb/>
six months, of the precinct four <lb/>
months. If any person moves into a <lb/>
new precinct within four months of <lb/>
the election, he must go back to the <lb/>
precinct he moved from in order to <lb/>
vote. <lb/>
The residence of a married man <lb/>
Is where his family resides; a single <lb/>
man where he sleeps. No person <lb/>
convicted of crime and sentenced to <lb/>
state's prison can vote, unless his <lb/>
disability be removed. <lb/>
A voter must be able to read <lb/>
and write any section of the <lb/>
in the English language to the <lb/>
satisfaction of the registrar. <lb/>
B. The registration books opened <lb/>
Saturday, October and will close <lb/>
at sunset on October No <lb/>
will be allowed on the day of <lb/>
election unless a voter becomes <lb/>
years old after the closing of the <lb/>
books. <lb/>
The registrars will keep the <lb/>
registration books open at the voting <lb/>
place at the several on each <lb/>
Saturday during this period until the <lb/>
evening of the 29th of October. <lb/>
On any other day except Sat- <lb/>
all persons desiring to <lb/>
must go to the registrar at his <lb/>
home or place of business. On <lb/>
day he will be at the voting precincts <lb/>
from o'clock in the morning until <lb/>
sunset. <lb/>
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di- <lb/>
Remedy is the best- <lb/>
known medicine in use for the relief <lb/>
and cure of bowel complaints. It <lb/>
cures griping, <lb/>
and should be taken at the first <lb/>
natural of the bowels. It <lb/>
is equally valuable for children and <lb/>
adults. It cures. Sold by all <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
AND LOAN. <lb/>
Tenth Series Opens on Saturday, <lb/>
November 5th <lb/>
That building and loan <lb/>
do the most good for the most <lb/>
people is evidenced in every <lb/>
where such an association exists. <lb/>
Greenville has a good one, and it is <lb/>
doing much good. The Home Build- <lb/>
and Loan Association will open <lb/>
its b series on Saturday, <lb/>
and you should see the sec- <lb/>
and treasurer and take some <lb/>
shares. It works for you while you <lb/>
are d something else and helps <lb/>
you to up for a rainy See <lb/>
the advertisement in this Issue of The <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
UNION PRAYER MEETING <lb/>
Large Attendance at the First <lb/>
vice, Wednesday night <lb/>
Coming in such inclement weather, <lb/>
the large attendance at the first <lb/>
ion prayer meeting, held in the Pres- <lb/>
church Wednesday night, in <lb/>
preparation for the meeting to be <lb/>
held here by Dr. William Black, be- <lb/>
ginning the 13th of November, was a <lb/>
strong indication of the interest our <lb/>
people of all denominations feel in <lb/>
the approaching revival. This first <lb/>
service was conducted by Rev. J. H. <lb/>
Shore, and he made an Interesting <lb/>
talk on of the church <lb/>
for a He emphasized the <lb/>
need of church members first getting <lb/>
right and in the proper attitude to- <lb/>
ward God before any great work <lb/>
could be accomplished through their <lb/>
efforts. <lb/>
The prayer meeting in the <lb/>
Methodist church at o'clock, Sun- <lb/>
day afternoon, will be conducted by <lb/>
ex-Gov. T. J. Jarvis, and the union <lb/>
prayer meeting next Wednesday night <lb/>
will be held in the Christian church <lb/>
and be conducted by the pastor of <lb/>
that church. <lb/>
The first song rehearsal for the <lb/>
meeting will be held in the Methodist <lb/>
church Sunday afternoon at o'clock. <lb/>
A Fortune Awaits Him <lb/>
Women who wear all the surplus <lb/>
hair to be found are not the whole <lb/>
thing by upwards of a good deal <lb/>
Over in Bradford, England, a com- <lb/>
is making a lining for clothes <lb/>
men's human hair. It <lb/>
is said that it is the finest thing for <lb/>
the purpose ever known, being <lb/>
breakable, and <lb/>
able. However, you would never sell <lb/>
a dude a pair of lined <lb/>
with It; he could never crease his <lb/>
if he could have it done <lb/>
the crease would be gone before he <lb/>
could get Into them. If some man will <lb/>
invent a cloth that will stand the <lb/>
strain and not wear out in a certain <lb/>
place when worn as trousers, he will <lb/>
make a fortune. Of course the man <lb/>
who is always on the go is not both- <lb/>
with this wearing out, but the <lb/>
other man who had rather sit around <lb/>
and the than to keep on <lb/>
his feet, gets when he is <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
At a meeting of the Executive <lb/>
committee of the Bryan Grimes <lb/>
Confederate Veterans held October <lb/>
10th, 1910, the following gentlemen <lb/>
were appointed a monument commit- <lb/>
tee to co-operate with the <lb/>
of the Confederacy In making <lb/>
arrangements for the erection of a <lb/>
monument to the memory of the <lb/>
Confederate veterans of Pitt <lb/>
R. W. King, chairman; W. B. <lb/>
Wilson, Treasurer; H. Harding, Sec- <lb/>
W. L. Brown, Dr. R. L. Carr, <lb/>
A. L. Blow, R. Williams, J. G. <lb/>
Dr. C. Laughinghouse, D. C. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
By order of the committee. <lb/>
H. Harding, Sec. <lb/>
A Man of Iron Nerve. <lb/>
Indomitable will and tremendous en- <lb/>
arc never found where Stomach, <lb/>
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels out of <lb/>
order. If you want these qualities and <lb/>
I he success they bring, Dr. King's <lb/>
New Life the matchless <lb/>
tors, -for and strong body. <lb/>
at all <lb/>
Whoso credit Is suspected not safe <lb/>
to be trusted. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
IS. <lb/>
Buggies, Harness <lb/>
and Sundries <lb/>
In addition to our regular business of man- <lb/>
BUGGIES <lb/>
on the market and doing all kinds of vehicles <lb/>
repairing, we are carrying a complete line of <lb/>
double and single harness, in full sets or pieces <lb/>
of any kind; Lap Robes, of all grades; Whips, <lb/>
Riding Bridles and Blankets, Pads for Breast <lb/>
Collars and Saddles, Horse Blankets, Tie Reins, <lb/>
Halters, Etc. We can supply any of your needs <lb/>
in these articles at lowest prices. <lb/>
THE JOHN FLANAGAN <lb/>
COMPANY <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
Nor. Car. <lb/>
DOING THE MOST GOOD <lb/>
FOR THE MOST PEOPLE <lb/>
The Home Building and Loan Asst. <lb/>
Opens Its Series <lb/>
Saturday, November 5th,<lb/>
Our method is employed by the rich and poor <lb/>
man alike. The same rate charged everybody <lb/>
We can show you how to build A HOME with <lb/>
rent money. <lb/>
Others are taking advantage of this easy plan, <lb/>
why not you <lb/>
How About Your Home <lb/>
Is it comfortably If not you <lb/>
would find it interesting to visit our store and <lb/>
look over our stock of FURNITURE and <lb/>
needed <lb/>
from Parlor to Kitchen at prices that will make <lb/>
you sit up and take notice. <lb/>
J. H. BOYD, JR. <lb/>
BIG SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST<lb/>
The Reflector Will Start One About <lb/>
November 1st <lb/>
The Reflector la planning to be- <lb/>
gin a subscription contest about the <lb/>
first of November that is going to be <lb/>
something getting in De- <lb/>
tails are not all completed yet, but <lb/>
have progressed far enough for us <lb/>
to advance mention of it, so <lb/>
as to let those likely to enter the <lb/>
contest be getting ready for it. This <lb/>
contest will be different from the one <lb/>
The Reflector had a year ago, in that <lb/>
instead of being only one prize there <lb/>
will be several, ranging in value <lb/>
from to the aggregate be- <lb/>
Doesn't that good <lb/>
Five hundred dollars in prizes to be <lb/>
given away in a short while, and <lb/>
they are going to be easy to win. <lb/>
When the announcement is made <lb/>
of what the leading prizes are to be, <lb/>
there are going to be some very an- <lb/>
people to win them, and they <lb/>
will be worth doing some earnest <lb/>
hustling to win. <lb/>
is enough to cay this time, <lb/>
but Just keep your eye open for the <lb/>
beginning of the contest and be <lb/>
ready to start with It and be a win- <lb/>
VISIT OF FORMER PASTOR. <lb/>
J. E. Delights Large <lb/>
Congregation <lb/>
Rev. J. E. who has been in <lb/>
the west for the last two years and <lb/>
is now back in North Carolina for a <lb/>
time, spent Sunday here and <lb/>
ed the pulpit of the Memorial <lb/>
church both morning and even- <lb/>
Mr. was formerly pastor <lb/>
this church, and the esteem in which <lb/>
he Is held here was shown in the <lb/>
large congregations that attended the <lb/>
services Sunday. At the night <lb/>
vices many members of the local <lb/>
lodge f Red Men attended in a <lb/>
Mr. having been a member of <lb/>
the lodge here. He expressed him- <lb/>
self as being more than glad to make <lb/>
this visit to Greenville. <lb/>
HUNT FOR MISSING BALLOON <lb/>
Hundred Thousand People Engaged <lb/>
In Search. <lb/>
Canada, Oct. most <lb/>
gigantic organized search in the his- <lb/>
of North America is in full swing <lb/>
throughout northeastern Canada for <lb/>
Allen Hawley and Augustus Post, <lb/>
of the missing balloon, Amer- <lb/>
II. A hundred thousand persons <lb/>
are in the hunt for the balloon, <lb/>
which left St. Louis last Monday and <lb/>
has not been heard from <lb/>
since. America II. is the only <lb/>
loon now missing, the Swiss balloon <lb/>
having been landed near Bis- <lb/>
Ontario <lb/>
felon, especially if there is <lb/>
plenty of money behind him. The <lb/>
case of Charlton is taking a long <lb/>
course. There is no <lb/>
question to be solved, though it is <lb/>
a serious one, being of just as much <lb/>
importance to society as to Charlton <lb/>
and his family, however. Yet weeks <lb/>
have already and there is no <lb/>
final decision. This case has not <lb/>
been settled in this country, and the <lb/>
trial of Dr. case is <lb/>
little older than the Charlton crime, <lb/>
is well under way in London The <lb/>
quickness and the sureness with <lb/>
which England moved in capturing <lb/>
and his companion and the <lb/>
rapidity with which he has been <lb/>
brought to trial is indeed whole- <lb/>
some. The conduct of the case has <lb/>
not been sufficiently developed <lb/>
yet to draw a comparison, but in the <lb/>
quickness with which a jury was ob- <lb/>
one being selected in a few <lb/>
hours, the trial is far ahead of any <lb/>
big murder trial ever held in this <lb/>
country. It generally takes days to <lb/>
get a jury in the United States. So, <lb/>
as far as it has progressed, the con- <lb/>
duct of the case teaches a <lb/>
wholesome lesson to this country. It <lb/>
allows up much better for justice. <lb/>
The only apparent similarity in this <lb/>
trial and some in the United States <lb/>
wild curiosity, especially on the part <lb/>
of those who rush to the court room. <lb/>
Wilmington Dispatch <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as administrator of the estate of Mat- <lb/>
thew Hodges, deceased, notice is here <lb/>
by given to all persons indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make immediate pay- <lb/>
to the undersigned; and any <lb/>
persons having claims against the es- <lb/>
are notified that they must <lb/>
sent the for payment, to the <lb/>
on or before the 1st day <lb/>
of October, 1911, or this notice will <lb/>
be pleaded bar of recovery. <lb/>
This October 1st, 1910. <lb/>
. JOSEPH A. HODGES, <lb/>
Administrator of Matthew Hodges. <lb/>
Legal Notices <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
Under and by virtue of an order of <lb/>
the Superior court of Pitt county, <lb/>
made in a special proceeding entitled <lb/>
Nashville administrator, vs. <lb/>
J. H. and G. the under- <lb/>
signed will, on the 16th day of Nov., <lb/>
1910, at o'clock m. at the court <lb/>
in Greenville, N. C, offer <lb/>
for sale to the highest bidder for <lb/>
cash, that certain tract or parcel of <lb/>
land lying and being in <lb/>
township and in the town of Winter- <lb/>
and described as On <lb/>
west side of Atlantic Coast Line rail- <lb/>
road near Lewis mill, being <lb/>
a lot purchased of J. I. Smith by <lb/>
Nashville Sr., the de-d for <lb/>
which is recorded in Book S-8, page <lb/>
in register of deeds office of Pitt <lb/>
county, and to which reference is <lb/>
for further description. <lb/>
NASHVILLE Jr. <lb/>
Administrator of Nashville <lb/>
W. F. Evans, Attorney. 11-11 <lb/>
Interesting for <lb/>
It is interesting to compare the <lb/>
workings of English Justice with <lb/>
that of American, or the progress <lb/>
made in the courts of England as <lb/>
compared with the courts of United <lb/>
States. With this idea in view it <lb/>
then to note the <lb/>
in bringing to trial Dr. <lb/>
pen and the conduct of the case. For <lb/>
a speedy trial England passes and <lb/>
surpasses this country, where trials <lb/>
are delayed not only often, but long. <lb/>
All kinds of twists are resorted to <lb/>
and technicalities taken advantage <lb/>
of in order to delay the trial of an <lb/>
AND SALE. <lb/>
Dy virtue of the power of sale con- <lb/>
in five several mortgages <lb/>
and delivered by Wiley Brown <lb/>
wife, one to W. H. White <lb/>
April 17th, 1905, and recorder <lb/>
Book X-7 page one to F. G. <lb/>
James dated June 28th, 1905, and rec- <lb/>
in Look X-7 page to <lb/>
The National Bank of Greenville <lb/>
ed July 8th, 1907, and recorded In <lb/>
Book T-8 page one to T. M. <lb/>
dated January 4th, 1808, and record- <lb/>
ed in Book J-8 page and one to <lb/>
Ernul dated August 15th, 1903, <lb/>
land recorded in Book Q-8 page <lb/>
the registers office of Pitt county, <lb/>
the undersigned will sell for cash be- <lb/>
fore the court house door in Green- <lb/>
en Saturday, November 19th, <lb/>
the following described real es- <lb/>
situate In the county of Pitt and <lb/>
in Greenville township on the south <lb/>
side of Tar <lb/>
That tract of land known as the <lb/>
Tucker place formerly owned by Mr. <lb/>
W. M. B. Brown, adjoining the lands <lb/>
James Brown Ernul, S. i. <lb/>
C. A. Tucker and D. H. Al- <lb/>
containing 1-2 acres more or <lb/>
less; said land being sold to satisfy <lb/>
said mortgages. <lb/>
This 19th, 1310. <lb/>
F. G. JAMES SON, <lb/>
Attorneys for Mortgagees <lb/>
SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION. <lb/>
North county. <lb/>
A. O. C. C. et <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Lola Grace et <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the <lb/>
or court of Pitt county, made by D. <lb/>
C. Moore, clerk of said court, in the <lb/>
above entitled special proceeding, on <lb/>
30th day of September, 1910, the <lb/>
undersigned loner, will, on <lb/>
Monday, the 31st day of October 1910, <lb/>
at o'clock, M., expose to public sale <lb/>
before the court house door in Green- <lb/>
ville, to the highest bidder, for cash, <lb/>
the following described tract or par- <lb/>
of land, to <lb/>
and being in Carolina town- <lb/>
ship, Pitt county, North Carolina, ad- <lb/>
joining the lands of W. C. Dr. <lb/>
J. E. Nobles, D. N. Nobles and others, <lb/>
containing thirty-nine acres, <lb/>
more or <lb/>
This sale will be made for <lb/>
among the tenants in common. <lb/>
This the 30th day of September, 1910 <lb/>
F C. HARDING, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the <lb/>
court of Pitt county, made at the <lb/>
August term, 1910, by His Honor. G. <lb/>
W. Ward, judge presiding in the case <lb/>
of F. G. James against J. A. Gardner, <lb/>
et the undersigned commissioner <lb/>
will sell for cash before the court <lb/>
house in Greenville, at noon, on lion- <lb/>
day, November 1910, the following <lb/>
described lands, situate in the county <lb/>
of Pitt and in Swift Creek township, <lb/>
to <lb/>
One tract adjoining the lands of M. <lb/>
O. Gardner. Chas. and the <lb/>
ether lands of the said J. A. Gardner, <lb/>
bounded on the north by the Green- <lb/>
ville and Clay Root road; on the east <lb/>
by the other land of J. A. Gardner. M. <lb/>
O. Gardner and Chas Gardner; on <lb/>
the south by M. O. Gardner, and on <lb/>
the west by J. W. Cannon et <lb/>
containing acres more or less; <lb/>
being fully described by the division <lb/>
deeds one to Laura A. E. Causey, and <lb/>
one to N. A. Purser, known as part <lb/>
of the Wyatt Gardner lards. <lb/>
Also one other tract adjoining the <lb/>
hinds of Laura Dawson, W. H. Clark. <lb/>
H. C. Dixon and J. J. Moore, con- <lb/>
acres more or less, and <lb/>
being the same land deeded to J. H. <lb/>
Gardner by Samuel Corey, reference <lb/>
to which deed is hereby made for an <lb/>
accurate description. <lb/>
This 1910. <lb/>
J. B. JAMES, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
PERSONAL SALE. <lb/>
On Thursday, October 20th, I will <lb/>
sell to the highest bidder for cash, <lb/>
at the home place of the late H. W. <lb/>
. at Bethel, N. C the following <lb/>
personal belonging to his <lb/>
Farming such as <lb/>
plows, hoes, etc., including <lb/>
wagon and buggy. <lb/>
and kitchen furniture. Sale begins at <lb/>
o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
ALICE V. MARTIN, <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb/>
Having duly qualified the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as executor of the last will and <lb/>
of Alfred Smith, deceased, no- <lb/>
is hereby given to all persons i. <lb/>
dented to the estate to make <lb/>
ate payment to the undersigned; and <lb/>
persons having any claims against <lb/>
the estate are notified that they must <lb/>
present the same to the undersigned <lb/>
for payment on or before the <lb/>
day of October, 1911, or this notice <lb/>
be plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This October G, 1910. <lb/>
W. G. CHAPMAN, <lb/>
Executor of Alfred Smith. <lb/>
Minutes are to hours what the pen- <lb/>
are to he wins who <lb/>
saves both. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
By virtue of a mortgage executed <lb/>
and delivered by A. B. Daniel and <lb/>
wife, Nellie Daniel, to Oscar Hooker <lb/>
on the 10th day of June, which <lb/>
mortgage appears of record in the <lb/>
of the register of deeds of Pitt <lb/>
i in Book Z-8 page the <lb/>
will sell for cash to the <lb/>
bidder at public auction be- <lb/>
re house door in Green- <lb/>
on Saturday, November 12th, <lb/>
the following described lot sit- <lb/>
l In the town of Greenville and <lb/>
the east side of Reads street <lb/>
First and Second streets ad- <lb/>
the lands formerly belonging <lb/>
o Dr. W. M. B. Brown, Bettie <lb/>
end others and being a part of <lb/>
No. in the plat of said town, <lb/>
one-sixth of an <lb/>
the same and lot <lb/>
was conveyed by Oscar Hooker to A. <lb/>
E. Daniel and wife by deed dated Jan- <lb/>
24th, 1906, and recorded in Book <lb/>
H-8 said deed is hereby re- <lb/>
erred to for more accurate <lb/>
Said lot be sold subject to <lb/>
r prior mortgage held by the Home <lb/>
Building and Loan Association or <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
This the day of Oct. 1910. <lb/>
OSCAR HOOKER, <lb/>
F. G. James Son, <lb/>
MORTGAGEE'S SALE. <lb/>
By virtue of authority of a <lb/>
gage executed to us by Miles Grimes <lb/>
and Sarah Grimes, on the 31st day <lb/>
of July, 1909, and duly recorded in <lb/>
the register's office in Pitt county, in <lb/>
Book D-9, page to secure the pay- <lb/>
of a certain bond bearing even <lb/>
date therewith, and the stipulations <lb/>
in said mortgage not having been <lb/>
complied with, we will expose at pub- <lb/>
auction, for cash, at o'clock, m., <lb/>
Wednesday, the 9th day of <lb/>
1910, at the court house in Pitt <lb/>
county, the following <lb/>
Known as the plat of the town of <lb/>
Greenville, as part of lot begin- <lb/>
on Second street at C. C. <lb/>
line and running east feet to <lb/>
line; thence south feet <lb/>
to Annie line; thence north <lb/>
along Annie line SO feet; <lb/>
thence along the C. C. Forbes line <lb/>
feet; thence to the beginning. <lb/>
HIGGS BROS., Mortgagees. <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
For the purpose of making a vol- <lb/>
partition among -the heirs at <lb/>
law, the undersigned will offer for <lb/>
to the highest bidder for <lb/>
at the court house door in Greenville <lb/>
of Pitt county on the 7th day of Nov. <lb/>
1910, at o'clock m., the lands of <lb/>
Elizabeth Johnston, deceased, de- <lb/>
scribed as On Tar river <lb/>
and in Greenville township. One <lb/>
tract, beginning at a stake centered <lb/>
by a cedar and small sweet gum on <lb/>
the road and running with said road <lb/>
to the fork of the road below where <lb/>
John formerly resided, <lb/>
thence north with i -1 road to Mrs. <lb/>
S. A. House's line at or near <lb/>
swamp, thence with line to a <lb/>
stake, the 3rd corner of lot No. in <lb/>
division of the lands of Jarrett House, <lb/>
line of said lot 1-2 de- <lb/>
west to beginning, containing <lb/>
3-7 acres, more or less. One other <lb/>
tract, bounded on north by W. H. <lb/>
Harrington, on east by Israel Adams <lb/>
and Pennie Buck, on south by Mrs. <lb/>
G. A. Whitehurst and Pennie Buck, <lb/>
and on west by Mrs. G. A. Whitehurst, <lb/>
containing 3-4 acres, more or <lb/>
W. F. EVANS, Attorney <lb/>
FOB SMALL FARM, WITH <lb/>
in a quarter a mile of the town <lb/>
of Winterville. N. C. Land in high <lb/>
state of cultivation. For particulars <lb/>
address, W. J. Braxton, Greenville, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
IF YOU BE HAPPY AND <lb/>
have your neighbors think well of <lb/>
you, don't borrow, a loan <lb/>
loses both itself and Sub- <lb/>
scribe your own telephone. <lb/>
Men speak as long as they <lb/>
generally speak longer than <lb/>
they please. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018119_0009" n="9"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
FROM AGAIN. <lb/>
BALLOON STILL MISSING. <lb/>
Returns From Long <lb/>
and Resumes Work. <lb/>
de S. L. P., Mexico. <lb/>
October 1910. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Quite a time has elapsed since I <lb/>
wrote. I left Texas, respectfully the <lb/>
United States, and am once more back <lb/>
the Sierra mountains, and at <lb/>
home in mountain retreat. <lb/>
When I came back, I found a great <lb/>
change. The whole country from <lb/>
to this place and to San Di- <lb/>
i. e., the whole Valley, <lb/>
miles long and from to miles <lb/>
and more wide is in the hands of <lb/>
partly settlers and partly <lb/>
peculators. Here in this little city <lb/>
of about inhabitants there are a <lb/>
dozen land offices of of differ- <lb/>
companies. Nearly every train <lb/>
brings people here from Texas, Okla- <lb/>
Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, even <lb/>
Minnesota, with the intention of buy- <lb/>
land. A great many have bought <lb/>
When one walks through the streets <lb/>
of this antique little city he hears the <lb/>
English language spoken everywhere. <lb/>
In one of my letters I mentioned <lb/>
that when people from the United <lb/>
States want to come here to buy lands, <lb/>
they ought to be on their lookout and <lb/>
beware of the land agents, and to buy <lb/>
from original owners or <lb/>
One can see here at present corn <lb/>
fields with ripe corn, corn in tassels <lb/>
in and corn knee high, <lb/>
planted three or four weeks ago. <lb/>
Bananas, oranges, lemons, <lb/>
and, in fact, all tropical fruits, are <lb/>
grown here in abundance and to per- <lb/>
Also pears, apples, plums. <lb/>
The woods are full of huckleberry <lb/>
shrubs, six to eight feet high. One <lb/>
will find bananas and oranges grow- <lb/>
wild; every day I get my bananas <lb/>
about a quarter of a mile from my <lb/>
house, out in the woods. <lb/>
The rainy season is <lb/>
season means that it rains In show- <lb/>
every hour or two, then <lb/>
the skies clear up. the sun shines <lb/>
clear and bright. Now we have the <lb/>
finest weather. We live under a deep <lb/>
blue Italian or Spanish sky. The <lb/>
heat is far less than in Texas; the <lb/>
nights are cool and pleasant; one <lb/>
needs a blanket to cover oneself. <lb/>
I missed The Reflector ever so <lb/>
much. Since I left I did not <lb/>
get it any more. <lb/>
I must close, for I am very busy <lb/>
now setting everything in order, <lb/>
planting and sowing garden seeds, <lb/>
in short turning the wilderness again <lb/>
into a paradise. One has no <lb/>
idea of the luxurious growth of <lb/>
weeds bushes when one was <lb/>
months away. I wish success to <lb/>
Tie Reflector. <lb/>
Lorenzo De <lb/>
Searches Baffled in Efforts, to Lo- <lb/>
Lost Men. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Oct. for <lb/>
missing balloon. America and <lb/>
occupants, Hawley and <lb/>
Post, were still baffled today in their <lb/>
search. Absolutely nothing has been <lb/>
found to indicate the locality in which <lb/>
they may be found. An <lb/>
will soon start from Quebec to search <lb/>
for the men. About the only hope is <lb/>
that when they came down they fell <lb/>
in with Canadian hunters, there be- <lb/>
lots of these in the woods at this <lb/>
season. <lb/>
CANDIDATE FOR <lb/>
Items. <lb/>
N. C, Oct. <lb/>
Leon and Johnnie Tyson, of <lb/>
were in our section Thursday night, <lb/>
visiting relatives. <lb/>
The Democratic candidates had their <lb/>
public speaking at Arthur last Tues- <lb/>
day evening and had a barbecue din- <lb/>
Messrs. Lloyd Smith and Haywood <lb/>
Smith went to the fair at Raleigh <lb/>
Thursday and returned Friday night. <lb/>
Misses Agnes Trilby, Nannie and <lb/>
Carrie Belle Smith, and Messrs. <lb/>
Mark Smith and J. R. Smith went to <lb/>
the State fair at Raleigh Thursday <lb/>
morning, and Miss Evans <lb/>
went Saturday morning. All re- <lb/>
turned Saturday night. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Smith attended <lb/>
the yearly meeting at Marlboro Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Tyson, of <lb/>
were visiting his Mr. <lb/>
Joel Tyson, Saturday. <lb/>
Rev. S. W. attended his <lb/>
regular appointment at Smith's <lb/>
school house Sunday and preached <lb/>
good sermons morning and at night. <lb/>
He is helping to work on the Chris- <lb/>
church at Arthur this week. <lb/>
Mrs. C. E. and son, <lb/>
Melton, went to visit her sister, Mrs. <lb/>
C. L. Tyson, Monday. <lb/>
Our section was represented at three <lb/>
Sunday schools Sunday evening. <lb/>
Some went to the Allen school house, <lb/>
some to the Nichols school house, and <lb/>
some to Arthur. <lb/>
Mr. A. J. Flanagan, of Farmville, <lb/>
came over Monday morning and took <lb/>
Misses Martha Belle and Jessie Smith <lb/>
over here to visit relatives for a few <lb/>
days. <lb/>
Miss Myrtle Flanagan, of Farmville, <lb/>
is visiting at Mr. Mills Smith's this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
We want everybody to remember <lb/>
the bazaar at Smith's school house, <lb/>
Friday night, and come and help a <lb/>
good cause. It is to help build the <lb/>
Christian church at Arthur. <lb/>
Is Found Guilty of Improper Con- <lb/>
duct <lb/>
Walser is the Republican <lb/>
candidate for Superior court judge. <lb/>
This is the same who tool- <lb/>
money from E. E Teague of Davidson <lb/>
county, to procure a position as <lb/>
rural delivery carrier. At the time <lb/>
said Teague agreed to pay Walser <lb/>
to get him a job as mail <lb/>
carrier. brother, Joseph, <lb/>
was postmaster -et Lexington, and his <lb/>
brother Zeb big-bug <lb/>
in Republican politics. rays <lb/>
he induced to sign a note to pay <lb/>
this improper service <lb/>
of <lb/>
and his V. <lb/>
Walter, and Joseph G. Waler, post- <lb/>
master at Lexington, in that they rep- <lb/>
resented to him that the <lb/>
said law firm could secure him said <lb/>
office delivery by their <lb/>
political pull with the government <lb/>
the United <lb/>
Teague paid Walser in cash <lb/>
and gave him a note for Later <lb/>
he got this job, but he came to the <lb/>
conclusion that he got it through tho <lb/>
civil service examination and not be- <lb/>
cause of with the gov- <lb/>
of the United In <lb/>
fact, to pay an attorney money to get <lb/>
a civil service job is contrary to pub <lb/>
lie policy. When this note became <lb/>
due Teague refused to pay the note. <lb/>
Walser met Teague The went <lb/>
into the Justice's court and <lb/>
won. When all the facts came out <lb/>
that Walser, a big Republican, <lb/>
charged an applicant for rural <lb/>
to get him a job and that he <lb/>
was aided by Postmaster W. and <lb/>
Brother the i got <lb/>
these facts, Zebulon dropped the case <lb/>
against Teague like a hot potato. <lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb/>
TO PRISON. <lb/>
One Man Kills Another At <lb/>
Farmville. <lb/>
Chief of Police T. H. Smith, of <lb/>
today Claude <lb/>
colored, here and turned him <lb/>
over to the sheriff, under a commit- <lb/>
without bail from th of <lb/>
Farmville, on the charge of murder. <lb/>
Vii c v. ill be sent on to the Jail In <lb/>
to be held there until the <lb/>
next tern of Pitt Superior court. <lb/>
Ca Saturday night several <lb/>
in a building together in Farm- <lb/>
ville. asked Vines to <lb/>
rive him a cigarette. Vines asked <lb/>
another to him a pistol. <lb/>
pointing the weapon r <lb/>
and pulled the trig- <lb/>
The ball struck in the <lb/>
and he died morning <lb/>
HAD TO <lb/>
Policeman Clark Polled a Bud Negro. <lb/>
Monday Night. <lb/>
Monday night Policeman George <lb/>
Clark captured a named Silas <lb/>
in the mill section beyond the <lb/>
Norfolk Southern railroad. <lb/>
came here from Danville recently, <lb/>
and was not long in opening his <lb/>
trade of stealing a gun and <lb/>
ionic other things that belonged to <lb/>
another The officer took -i <lb/>
pistol off the when making the <lb/>
arrest, but on his way down to <lb/>
lock up the resistance <lb/>
and to be clubbed. <lb/>
IN THE CONTESTS. <lb/>
Winning in Their Own Class- <lb/>
Also Beat the Men <lb/>
Back at Work. <lb/>
Mr. C. F. the Linotype <lb/>
on The Reflector, who has been <lb/>
off for a week with a bone felon on <lb/>
his index ringer, was able to get <lb/>
hack at the machine today. His <lb/>
finger is yet game and stiff, but he <lb/>
hopes it will not interfere with his <lb/>
work any longer. <lb/>
CATARRH <lb/>
Death of Mrs. W, H. <lb/>
On Friday, October 1910, the <lb/>
blessed Lord removed from our midst <lb/>
our dear beloved sister, Mrs. <lb/>
Gould, wife of Mr. W. H. Gould, who <lb/>
died with heart trouble. Our neigh- <lb/>
has lost a dear friend. Reedy <lb/>
Branch church has lost a faithful <lb/>
member. But the Lord all <lb/>
things best. She leaves a husband <lb/>
and children, mother, brother, <lb/>
i friends to mourn for her. <lb/>
V , the family and help them <lb/>
to to Thee, so as to meet <lb/>
their mother and wife in heaven. <lb/>
A FRIEND. <lb/>
Mr. W. E. Hooker has returned from <lb/>
a trip Id Georgia. <lb/>
N. C, Oct. <lb/>
Bessie Barnhill spent last week with <lb/>
her sister, Mrs. Chas. <lb/>
Mr. C. H. Langston returned from <lb/>
Durham and Raleigh last night. <lb/>
Miss Rosalie spent Saturday <lb/>
with friends in Ayden <lb/>
Miss Pearl Dixon, of <lb/>
is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Fannie <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
Messrs. Herman and Dennis <lb/>
Misses Eva Langston, Annie <lb/>
and Norma attended the <lb/>
fair in Raleigh last week. <lb/>
There will be a party <lb/>
at Pierce's school Monday night <lb/>
October 31st. The public is invited. <lb/>
Dennis acre of corn <lb/>
measured 1-2 bushels. Who can <lb/>
beat that <lb/>
The boys of North Carolina are the <lb/>
real articles. They have not alone <lb/>
won bog prizes for themselves In corn <lb/>
contests, but have beaten out the <lb/>
of the state. <lb/>
The department of Agriculture of- <lb/>
some nice cash premiums to the <lb/>
boys for the best twenty ears of corn <lb/>
and six stalks with of corn, those <lb/>
to be shown at the state fair, and <lb/>
there were three prize winners. <lb/>
J. P. Lewis, of Reedy Branch, <lb/>
county, won the first prize of <lb/>
The second prize, was <lb/>
won by Blalock, of Norwood, <lb/>
Stanley county, and the third prize <lb/>
of by Raymond Hill, of <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
For the best ten ears of corn a boy <lb/>
beat out the men, with whom he en- <lb/>
into competition. In this con- <lb/>
test, with a prize of the prize <lb/>
went to Shirley <lb/>
ford, and the winner of the prize for <lb/>
the best single ear of corn raised In <lb/>
the state was awarded to Good- <lb/>
man, of Apex, R. F. D. This <lb/>
shows that the older farm-is will <lb/>
have to get a move on themselves. <lb/>
News and Observer. <lb/>
Move Ont When Moves Tn. <lb/>
No stomach dosing; <lb/>
it is made from <lb/>
highest of taken <lb/>
from the eucalyptus forest of <lb/>
and combined the excellent <lb/>
antiseptics employed in the <lb/>
In inland Australia the atmosphere <lb/>
is so impregnated with balsam thrown <lb/>
out by the eucalyptus trees that germs <lb/>
cannot live, and in consequence ca- <lb/>
and consumption are unknown. <lb/>
Breathe and get the very <lb/>
same pleasant, healing, germ-killing, <lb/>
air as would get in the eucalyptus <lb/>
and kill tie <lb/>
is said by Coward <lb/>
c-n and druggists where, at <lb/>
a complete outfit. <lb/>
An outfit consists of a <lb/>
a hard rubber pocket inhaler <lb/>
and simple for use. The <lb/>
inhaler will last n lifetime, but bear in <lb/>
mind if you need another bottle of <lb/>
you get it at druggists <lb/>
for only at any time. Guaranteed <lb/>
to cure catarrh, COUP and throat <lb/>
or money Trial <lb/>
of to readers of The <lb/>
Reflector. Booth's <lb/>
Co. N. V <lb/>
Dr Hyatt Coming. <lb/>
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be Green- <lb/>
ville at Hotel Bertha Monday and <lb/>
day, November 7th and for the <lb/>
purpose of treating diseases of the <lb/>
eye and fitting glasses. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having before <lb/>
Superior clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
r of estate of Herbert <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons Indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
the undersigned; and all persona <lb/>
claims against Wild estate are <lb/>
notified to the same to the <lb/>
undersigned for payment on or before <lb/>
24th of October, 1911, or this <lb/>
notice will ho plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This of October. 1910. <lb/>
HENRY T. KING, <lb/>
Administrator of Herbert<lb/>
Agriculture I, Most the Most Health the Most Noble of Washington. <lb/>
N. C FRIDAY, NOVEMBER <lb/>
Number <lb/>
MISS LAURA COX WRITES <lb/>
WORK THERE <lb/>
MISSIONARY SCHOOL AT <lb/>
This Wat Women Sends Greet- <lb/>
to Her Friends at <lb/>
Notes on and Habits <lb/>
Across The Borders The Mexican <lb/>
Country. <lb/>
Mexico, Oct. 1910. <lb/>
Dear <lb/>
times have my thoughts gone <lb/>
back to dear old Pitt I left its <lb/>
borders. is no place like <lb/>
has been so truly said. <lb/>
have been trying to get time to <lb/>
to for more than a week, but <lb/>
has its place on a mis- <lb/>
field. <lb/>
I have found the Mexican people <lb/>
in a very progressive <lb/>
They live here very much like <lb/>
they do in the States. I'll say for <lb/>
the benefit of the ladies, that they, <lb/>
too, wear puffs, rats, etc., in their <lb/>
hair. That was one of the first <lb/>
things I noticed with the women. They <lb/>
do not wear hats very much. Some <lb/>
of the girls do. but most all the older <lb/>
women wear silk scarfs of bright <lb/>
colors and black. Their clothing is <lb/>
very much like our own. <lb/>
Now for the benefit of the men. let <lb/>
me say that we have a goodly <lb/>
of while are <lb/>
who dress like most American <lb/>
men Very few wear the Sombrero <lb/>
large spiral shaped that <lb/>
have ho common in the interior. <lb/>
The natives as a whole seem to be <lb/>
what we would call the second class, <lb/>
however we have some very <lb/>
gent families. One patron of our <lb/>
school is a doctor and teems to know <lb/>
bis profession very well indeed. We <lb/>
have other wealthy families <lb/>
The line between the rich <lb/>
and poor is very distinctly drawn, <lb/>
which of course is very unfortunate <lb/>
We opened school October 3rd, with <lb/>
forty-one pupils, we now have seventy <lb/>
lug. We have many bright hopes for <lb/>
. , <lb/>
Our home is on the gulf of <lb/>
California, so you we get the <lb/>
gulf breezes all the time. For once <lb/>
in my career I am sleeping with the <lb/>
starry heavens as my blanket. A <lb/>
goodly number of the Mexicans sleep <lb/>
on the top of their houses, but I <lb/>
thought may be it would be a little <lb/>
risky for me to do that, so I am <lb/>
sleeping in the upper <lb/>
are oppressive at times, but <lb/>
most of the nights are delightful, <lb/>
just think of seeing flowers all the <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Some of my friends have asked me <lb/>
about the fruit. No, we are not in <lb/>
the midst of the fruit belt, but w; <lb/>
are close enough to get it when we <lb/>
want it. That is one of the blessing <lb/>
we have. I said one. but not tho <lb/>
only one, no, not by any means, for <lb/>
they are numberless. <lb/>
Oh, I must tell you about <lb/>
on the Pacific. There is a mis- <lb/>
and his wife by the name o <lb/>
living in with <lb/>
us is one of the greatest bless- <lb/>
I have, they are lovely to <lb/>
and on October they char- <lb/>
a boat and took us out for a <lb/>
sail. What a treat My, it <lb/>
perfectly glorious to sail on th; <lb/>
bosom of such a mighty body of <lb/>
We crossed the bay, went out <lb/>
I to a rock cave and while there <lb/>
star fish. After spending about <lb/>
an hour there we sailed around the <lb/>
point and went ever to a bank and <lb/>
gathered some of the most beautiful <lb/>
coral and shells I have ever seen. <lb/>
The time came all too soon to re- <lb/>
turn, so we very reluctantly sailed <lb/>
homeward. On our way home Mr. <lb/>
and I fished. He and I made <lb/>
a bargain which was. he was to <lb/>
catch the fish and I was to cook it <lb/>
and his wife to be the guest. The <lb/>
bargain was all there was to it tho. <lb/>
we did nU get a bite. I had <lb/>
the pleasure of seeing him try, just <lb/>
the same. On the whole we enjoyed <lb/>
the afternoon immensely. <lb/>
The people here are very anxious <lb/>
to have their children learn English, <lb/>
so I am trying to teach that while I <lb/>
am learning their language <lb/>
Its a difficult task at times <lb/>
for the dear little boys and girls <lb/>
know only their native tongue, and I <lb/>
I in turn know only mine. However, <lb/>
HALLOWEEN AT THE TRAINING <lb/>
SCHOOL <lb/>
Y. W. C A'S BRILLIANT SUCCESS <lb/>
Attractive Features In <lb/>
Ghosts, Witches <lb/>
Amusement- Artistic Decorations <lb/>
and Elaborate Banquet Followed <lb/>
With Appropriate Speeches <lb/>
Greenville has never had a more <lb/>
and interesting entertain- <lb/>
of any kind than the <lb/>
party given Monday night under <lb/>
the auspices of the Young <lb/>
Christian association of East Caro- <lb/>
Training school That <lb/>
of the administration build- <lb/>
apart for the entertainment <lb/>
was transformed into a veritable <lb/>
abode of witches, ghosts and spooks. <lb/>
The color scheme decorations <lb/>
were yellow and black, and there were <lb/>
features of these everywhere, with a <lb/>
mingling of autumn leaves, all kinds <lb/>
of lanterns, pumpkin heads, black <lb/>
cats, bats and owls. A In the <lb/>
society hall was a bank of cotton <lb/>
plants with open bolls, stalks of <lb/>
and pumpkin heads through whose <lb/>
grinning faces lights shone. <lb/>
When th-; ghosts appeared about <lb/>
o'clock there was a ring of mer- <lb/>
throughout the building, <lb/>
and the fun of the evening <lb/>
began In earnest There were ghosts <lb/>
witches, red devils, black cats, <lb/>
we talk by signs and pictures and in <lb/>
that way learn a few things. I <lb/>
one boy who did not know word <lb/>
if English and before the close of <lb/>
the third day was saying. I get <lb/>
I get etc. Now <lb/>
what do you think of <lb/>
Well, I hope I nave not wearied <lb/>
you for the first time and I shall try <lb/>
to give you something more Interest- <lb/>
next time. <lb/>
Your missionary, <lb/>
k LAURA COX. <lb/>
winged bats, the big fat man and <lb/>
mother goose, all most appropriately <lb/>
costumed. These afforded immense <lb/>
amusement to the of <lb/>
dents and faculty. <lb/>
There were numerous booths, that <lb/>
were liberally patronized. In a <lb/>
corner of the society room was a <lb/>
handsomely decorated candy booth <lb/>
presided by Misses Ellie Brown <lb/>
and Mary Rawls. the fa- <lb/>
candy man. made a donation <lb/>
for this booth. <lb/>
In the HUM room were the <lb/>
cakes, three in number, in charge of <lb/>
Miss Minnie Best Each cake <lb/>
contained a ring, a thimble, a dime. <lb/>
a penny and a collar button, each <lb/>
having a significance to whom should <lb/>
find it in their slice of cake. <lb/>
There was also in this room the <lb/>
wonderful Jack Homer pie just teem- <lb/>
with all kinds of novelties. This <lb/>
was in charge of Miss Ethel Out- <lb/>
law and Miss Lillie Bunting. <lb/>
In one end of the hall was a flower <lb/>
booth, presided over by Miss <lb/>
Tucker. <lb/>
In a nook at the head of a stair- <lb/>
way was a den where Misses <lb/>
Mary Cotton Johnson, Rosa Ontario, <lb/>
and Savage told fortunes. <lb/>
A very amusing feature was a <lb/>
race which took place in the hall, <lb/>
and there were many contestants <lb/>
the prizes. The first was won <lb/>
by Miss Margaret Blow who made <lb/>
and i in 3-5 of a <lb/>
At o'clock the dining room was <lb/>
thrown open and here was the most <lb/>
entrancing scene of the entertainment <lb/>
The decorations here carried out the <lb/>
Idea both in color and <lb/>
design. Each table with places for <lb/>
six, was covered with black and <lb/>
low runners, ornamented with <lb/>
and witches and owls, while the nap- <lb/>
kins had pumpkins and bats In <lb/>
the of each from a <lb/>
tripod of miniature brooms hung a <lb/>
witches pot in which were nut con- <lb/>
for each occupant of the <lb/>
table. A tiny yellow ribbon fasten- <lb/>
ed to the nut extended to the edge <lb/>
of the table and on the other end was <lb/>
the place card designating who was <lb/>
to occupy each seat. The place cards <lb/>
were hand painted and work of <lb/>
Miss Mamie Williams, who showed <lb/>
wonderful skill in decorating them <lb/>
with all manner of de- <lb/>
signs. <lb/>
on <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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