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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
ll <lb/>
foe Carolina home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
CHILDREN GOOD <lb/>
the Bonds, We'll Pay for <lb/>
Slogan of Delegation. <lb/>
The Richmond Times-Dispatch con- <lb/>
the following account of a <lb/>
good roads meeting recently held In <lb/>
the roads, we'll pay for <lb/>
the slogan of a large <lb/>
of school children and young <lb/>
folks who came to the road meeting <lb/>
today on a special train from <lb/>
and intermediate points. <lb/>
The crowds was augmented here by <lb/>
the addition of the pupils from the <lb/>
High School, who were dis- <lb/>
lessons engage <lb/>
He There were over <lb/>
in the parade. The fact was <lb/>
remarked upon that the educational <lb/>
advantages which are afforded these <lb/>
many of whom poor, wore <lb/>
only brought about through the <lb/>
of bonds for building the fine <lb/>
school houses at and the <lb/>
other points. It was very significant <lb/>
in view of the fact that battle is <lb/>
on in the county for a bond issue of <lb/>
i the election to occur next <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
the roads, and we will pay <lb/>
for the slogan of the children <lb/>
I who represent the posterity whom <lb/>
those against bonds are so afraid to <lb/>
burden with debt, was certainly a <lb/>
most striking feature of the meeting <lb/>
today. The teachers of the schools <lb/>
I and many others wore badges <lb/>
ed the issuing of bonds I <lb/>
j for road improvement being consider- I <lb/>
one strong arguments of <lb/>
civilized community. <lb/>
Able and strong bond issue speech- <lb/>
es were made in the tent of the i <lb/>
well Amusement Company by several <lb/>
men of the community, who are in <lb/>
favor of In the court- ; <lb/>
house a handful pf people listened to j <lb/>
those who are opposed to the bond <lb/>
issue. Among the speakers was <lb/>
Judge who stated that the <lb/>
proposed bond-issue was beyond the <lb/>
demand and need of the community. <lb/>
The people and sentiment of the com- <lb/>
in a large measure, were <lb/>
bond issuing people, and the general <lb/>
feeling was bond issue or no roads. <lb/>
CONSOLIDATED <lb/>
TOBACCO COMPANY <lb/>
STOCKHOLDERS AN. MEETING. <lb/>
the Boy. <lb/>
The announcement in The Reflector <lb/>
a few days ago inquiring for Herbert <lb/>
Owens, one of the prize winners in <lb/>
the boy's corn contest last year, <lb/>
brought him in today, and the State <lb/>
diploma and cash premium were de- <lb/>
livered to him. Herbert lives near <lb/>
Fountain, in the western end of the <lb/>
county. He made 97.1 bushels of <lb/>
on his acre last year, and says he <lb/>
is in the content to be a winner again <lb/>
this year. <lb/>
Earns Vent, <lb/>
Dividend, Making Total of <lb/>
Per Cent in Eight Years. <lb/>
The annual meeting of the stock- <lb/>
holders of the Consolidated <lb/>
Tobacco Company was held today in <lb/>
the Star warehouse, about two <lb/>
farmers being present. <lb/>
In calling the meeting to order <lb/>
President L. Joyner spoke of work <lb/>
of the company in the past, how it <lb/>
had overcome the difficulties and op- <lb/>
position encountered, and showed <lb/>
where -it had made money for the <lb/>
farmers of Eastern North Carolina. <lb/>
He gave the status of the tobacco <lb/>
farmers now as compared with the <lb/>
last few the attitude of the <lb/>
company In Urging reduction of ac- <lb/>
and Control of production as a <lb/>
of controlling prices, and <lb/>
what the farmers should do in this <lb/>
direction in future. He predicted <lb/>
that if the farmers use wise <lb/>
this season, they will get the <lb/>
best prices for the next crop they <lb/>
have ever received. As he always <lb/>
does, Mr. Joyner gave the farmer <lb/>
good advice, and the close attention <lb/>
they gave all he said showed their <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
Secretary W. H. Jr., then made <lb/>
his annual report. This in brief <lb/>
shows that the property of the com- <lb/>
located in Greenville, Roberson- <lb/>
ville, Kinston and Wilson, is valued <lb/>
at The stock issued Is <lb/>
and the indebtedness Of the <lb/>
company This the <lb/>
property of the company worth near- <lb/>
more than its entire out- <lb/>
standing stock and indebtedness com- <lb/>
which is a fine showing for <lb/>
the corporation. <lb/>
The earnings for the past year <lb/>
were a fraction over per cent, and <lb/>
of this directors ordered that a <lb/>
dividend of per cent be paid to the <lb/>
stockholders, the balance to be car- <lb/>
to the surplus. This makes a <lb/>
total of per cent the company <lb/>
paid in dividends during the eight <lb/>
years of its operation, an average of <lb/>
more than per cent. <lb/>
Taking into consideration that the <lb/>
crop in Eastern North Carolina last <lb/>
year was pounds short, <lb/>
that the company was able to make <lb/>
per cent is remarkable and shows <lb/>
how well its business is managed. <lb/>
An expression of opinion as to what <lb/>
date the markets should open next <lb/>
season was taken, and by almost <lb/>
unanimous vote the tobacco boards <lb/>
of trade of Eastern North Carolina <lb/>
were requested to open the markets <lb/>
on September <lb/>
The terms of Messrs. A. A. Forbes <lb/>
and S. V. Joyner as directors <lb/>
they were both re-elect- <lb/>
ed for five yea s. <lb/>
Before adjourning President Joyner <lb/>
e a few more, urging the <lb/>
to give the company their <lb/>
hearty co-operation, showing them <lb/>
the necessity of some organization <lb/>
based on business principles by <lb/>
which they can make their needs and <lb/>
requirements effectively felt, and best <lb/>
promote their own interests. <lb/>
Following the meeting of the stock- <lb/>
holders there was a meeting of the <lb/>
board of directors at which they re- <lb/>
elected L. Joyner, president; T. R. <lb/>
Hodges, vice, president, R. J. Cobb, <lb/>
treasurer and H. Jr., <lb/>
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 1911. <lb/>
Number <lb/>
Some Good Advice to Corn Contest Boys of Pitt <lb/>
Farmville, N. C, April 1911. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
It is a of pleasure to me <lb/>
to be able to truthfully say that Pitt <lb/>
county was ahead in the corn <lb/>
contest last year, inasmuch as Pitt <lb/>
had nine successful ones and no other <lb/>
county above five. It is true that <lb/>
several boys reported having made <lb/>
more corn than our boys, but this <lb/>
was due to the corn having been <lb/>
planted upon land which had <lb/>
ed previously an abundance of fer- <lb/>
for other crops. Nine out of <lb/>
forty is not a very large per cent., <lb/>
especially as we want eleven out of <lb/>
a total of forty-four this year. If <lb/>
you try and fail, do not be <lb/>
aged, but profit by your failure and <lb/>
try again. <lb/>
There is one thing that I wish all <lb/>
to know right now, and that is that <lb/>
guano, as usually put up, will not <lb/>
make a profitable crop of corn, no <lb/>
matter how much you may use; and <lb/>
also you must remember that poor <lb/>
land without excessive quantities of <lb/>
animal manure cannot produce as <lb/>
much as sixty-five bushels of corn. <lb/>
With these two facts well establish- <lb/>
ed, lets see if we can, what is <lb/>
for success in producing a <lb/>
large crop of corn. After the land <lb/>
has been well prepared and well <lb/>
planted to a good variety of corn, <lb/>
provided the seasons are normal, we <lb/>
should be able to forecast with <lb/>
accuracy how much corn we <lb/>
may expect. <lb/>
I learn it from good authority that <lb/>
a crop of thirty-five bushels will re- <lb/>
move from the land of <lb/>
nitrogen, pounds of phosphoric <lb/>
acid and pounds of potash. Now <lb/>
if you have planted land that without <lb/>
any fertilizer would produce thirty- <lb/>
five bushels of corn, in order to make <lb/>
thirty-five bushels more doesn't It <lb/>
seem reasonable that we should <lb/>
ply to the land in some form lbs. <lb/>
of nitrogen, pounds phosphoric <lb/>
acid and pounds of potash <lb/>
A ton of first rate horse or cow <lb/>
manure will contain approximately <lb/>
pounds of nitrogen and will be as <lb/>
valuable as pounds of nitrate of <lb/>
soda. If you use stable manure to <lb/>
furnish the nitrogen, you should <lb/>
ply three and six-tenths tons. If <lb/>
you prefer nitrate of soda you will <lb/>
need pounds, or if you prefer cot- <lb/>
ton seed meal it will take pounds. <lb/>
If you have used two tons of stable <lb/>
manure then you might use only <lb/>
pounds of nitrate of soda. <lb/>
Two hundred pounds of acid <lb/>
and three hundred of <lb/>
should supply the need, pounds of <lb/>
phosphoric acid and pounds of <lb/>
potash. <lb/>
Now, boys, do not expect seventy <lb/>
bushels of corn with any less <lb/>
and do not be too sure of <lb/>
the seventy bushels with even <lb/>
that much. <lb/>
In this contest not over ten dollars <lb/>
of bought fertilizer should be used, <lb/>
so continue every week to put on all <lb/>
the hen house manure and all the <lb/>
ashes raised upon the place. Stir <lb/>
your land about two inches deep <lb/>
week and keep all the weeds and <lb/>
grass out, and I believe you will make <lb/>
a fine crop of corn. <lb/>
Of course if your land, unaided by <lb/>
fertilizer, will make only fifteen bush- <lb/>
els of corn, then the amount <lb/>
by me should be doubled. <lb/>
You see it takes nearly one pound <lb/>
of nitrogen, one half pound of <lb/>
acid and three-fourths pound <lb/>
of potash to make a bushel of corn. <lb/>
If I am correct 8-2-2 or 8-4-4 goods <lb/>
are not properly balanced for corn, <lb/>
but we should have 4-8-6. <lb/>
Furthermore, I believe one hundred <lb/>
bushels of shell marl applied to an <lb/>
acre would supply sufficient <lb/>
acid, and one might cut out <lb/>
that much bought fertilizer. <lb/>
My son has not planted his corn <lb/>
yet, but he has put out about three <lb/>
tons of manure and is mixing it and <lb/>
grazing it with sheep, hogs and <lb/>
calves. <lb/>
JUDGE <lb/>
The Grand A Large Docket <lb/>
At This Term. <lb/>
The April criminal term of Pitt <lb/>
court convened in the city hall <lb/>
this morning with Judge E. B. Fur- <lb/>
presiding and Solicitor C. L. <lb/>
representing the state. <lb/>
The following were drawn as grand <lb/>
Jurors for the J. F. <lb/>
foreman; H. A. Gray, J. B. Carroll. <lb/>
Q. T. Evans, W. Harvey Allen. W. A. <lb/>
Pierce, W. W. Whitehurst, James H. <lb/>
Cox, Frank Lilly, J. H. Laughing- <lb/>
house, W. S. May, A. B. Congleton, <lb/>
B. O. Turnage, J. O. Johnson, G. G. <lb/>
Ward, J. E. Barnhill, C D. Smith, E. <lb/>
P. Stokes. <lb/>
In his charge to the grand jury <lb/>
Judge Furgerson said the <lb/>
assembling the court called all <lb/>
persons having complaints to come <lb/>
forward and they should be heard. <lb/>
It matters not how humble a citizen <lb/>
may be, he has a right to be heard <lb/>
before the tribunal of justice. An in- <lb/>
man has nothing to fear by <lb/>
the assembling of a court, but the <lb/>
guilty should have justice merited <lb/>
to them. To let the guilty escape <lb/>
may be merciful to them, but it is <lb/>
not justice to the body politic. The <lb/>
courts are for the protection of the <lb/>
rights of the citizens. It matters not <lb/>
how strong a man may be and able <lb/>
to protect there is a time <lb/>
in every twenty-four hours that he is <lb/>
absolutely helpless. He cannot stand <lb/>
around his property or his home to <lb/>
protect It, therefore he needs pro- <lb/>
of the law. The best <lb/>
We have is good citizenship. <lb/>
Every law has a penalty attached. <lb/>
Without a penalty the law is worth- <lb/>
less, and be that violates the law <lb/>
must pay the penalty. It is so in <lb/>
the laws of nature, it is so in the <lb/>
laws of property. But for this there <lb/>
would be no reward for industry. The <lb/>
man who would be happy must con- <lb/>
form to the rules of happiness. <lb/>
To have good citizenship every man <lb/>
should cheerfully obey the law, and <lb/>
those who fail to do so should have <lb/>
the penalty of the law enforced <lb/>
against them. It is for that purpose <lb/>
that we come together in courts of <lb/>
justice. <lb/>
There is no more important officer <lb/>
in any county than the justice of the <lb/>
peace or magistrate, and his duties <lb/>
should be performed justly and <lb/>
partially. To him the people of his <lb/>
community come for a protection of <lb/>
their rights and a redress of their <lb/>
wrongs so far as the magistrate may <lb/>
have jurisdiction. It is wrong for <lb/>
a magistrate to take jurisdiction be- <lb/>
his authority, but should send <lb/>
such matters to the higher courts. <lb/>
Judge Furgerson also made refer- <lb/>
to the importance of officers <lb/>
properly handling the public funds <lb/>
coming into their hands. <lb/>
As to the general list of crimes he <lb/>
deemed it useless to go Into these, <lb/>
as the attention of the grand jurors <lb/>
has been often called to them, so he <lb/>
laid down only a few general <lb/>
pals for their guidance. <lb/>
Generally speaking, Judge Fur- <lb/>
charge was an excellent <lb/>
on good citizenship and right <lb/>
living, things that make for the up- <lb/>
lift of the people in morality, home <lb/>
government, education and happiness. <lb/>
His words carried weight with them <lb/>
and all who heard them were helped <lb/>
by them. Two standards he laid <lb/>
down as the best deterrent of crime <lb/>
It's queer how much interest a <lb/>
dignified man can generate in a dog <lb/>
fight. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. . p<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern <lb/>
APRIL CRIMINAL <lb/>
SUPERIOR Ci <lb/>
JUDGE CHAR <lb/>
Gram Jury- A Large Docket <lb/>
At This <lb/>
The April criminal term of i- <lb/>
court convened In e city hall <lb/>
this morning with Judge E. B. Fur- <lb/>
presiding i Solicitor C. L. <lb/>
. g the <lb/>
The following were drawn as grand <lb/>
jurors for the P. <lb/>
foreman; H. A. Gray, J. B. Cam II. <lb/>
G. T. Evans, W. Han . a. W. A. <lb/>
Pierce, James H. <lb/>
Cox, Frank Lilly, J. H. Laughing- <lb/>
W. S. May, A. j;. Congleton, <lb/>
B. Turnage, J. O. Johnson, G. G. <lb/>
Ward, J. E. Barnhill, C D. Smith, E. <lb/>
P. Stokes. <lb/>
In his charge to the grand Jury <lb/>
Judge raid the <lb/>
assembling the court called all <lb/>
persons having complaints to come <lb/>
forward and they should be <lb/>
It matters not how humble a citizen <lb/>
may be, he has a right to be heard <lb/>
before the tribunal of justice. An in- <lb/>
man has nothing to fear by <lb/>
the assembling of a court, but the <lb/>
guilty should have justice merited <lb/>
to them. To let the guilty escape <lb/>
may be merciful to them, but it is <lb/>
not justice to the body politic. The <lb/>
courts are for the protection of the <lb/>
rights of the It matters not <lb/>
how strong a man may be and able <lb/>
to protect himself, there is a time <lb/>
in every twenty-four hours that be is <lb/>
absolutely helpless. He cannot stand <lb/>
around his property or his homo to <lb/>
protect it, therefore he needs pro- <lb/>
of the law. The- best <lb/>
we have is, good citizenship. <lb/>
Every law has a penalty attached. <lb/>
Without a penalty law is worth- <lb/>
less, and he that violates the law <lb/>
must pay the penalty. It is so in <lb/>
the laws of nature, it u so in the <lb/>
laws of But for this there <lb/>
would be no reward for Industry. The <lb/>
man who would be happy muse c in- <lb/>
form to the rules of happiness. <lb/>
To have good citizenship every man <lb/>
should cheerfully obey the law, and <lb/>
those who fail o do no should have <lb/>
the penalty of the law <lb/>
against them. Ii is for that purpose <lb/>
that we come together in courts of <lb/>
justice. <lb/>
There is no more important officer <lb/>
in any county than the justice of the <lb/>
peace or magistrate, arid his duties <lb/>
should be performed justly and <lb/>
partially. To him the people of his <lb/>
community come for a protection of <lb/>
their rights and a redress of their <lb/>
wrongs so far as the ma <lb/>
have Jurisdiction. It is wrong for <lb/>
a to take jurisdiction be- <lb/>
his authority, but should Bend <lb/>
such matters to the higher courts. <lb/>
Judge Furgerson also made n fer- <lb/>
to the importance of era <lb/>
properly handling the public funds <lb/>
coining Into their hands. <lb/>
As to the general list of be <lb/>
deemed it useless to go Into these, <lb/>
as the attention of the grand Jurors <lb/>
has been often called to them, so he <lb/>
laid down only a few general <lb/>
pals for their guidance. <lb/>
Generally Judge Fur- <lb/>
charge was an <lb/>
on good II hip and right <lb/>
living, things that make tor the up- <lb/>
lift of the people in morality, home <lb/>
government, education and <lb/>
His words carried weight with them <lb/>
and all who beard them were helped <lb/>
by them. Two standards he laid <lb/>
down as the best deterrent of crime <lb/>
of trial and pan- <lb/>
hi. and the stand- <lb/>
ard of r ability winch a com- <lb/>
bes for itself. The <lb/>
i a high i <lb/>
v. ill not give recognition to those <lb/>
co ill u . is going to <lb/>
have much crime. <lb/>
he . e term so re- <lb/>
ed e that at the begin- <lb/>
I m there is not a long <lb/>
cases trial, and what <lb/>
the grand jury will find to present <lb/>
Is only prospective. There are no <lb/>
capital cases. <lb/>
The Carolina and Pan<lb/>
. SEES BY <lb/>
mm<lb/>
Pleased With the In Baptist <lb/>
It was the pleasure of the editor <lb/>
to be present at one of the most <lb/>
. at the Baptist <lb/>
church in Greenville on Sunday night <lb/>
has ever been our pleasure to <lb/>
end. It was the rendering in <lb/>
d song of <lb/>
of the cross, depicting the <lb/>
scenes In Jerusalem during the last <lb/>
b of the life of our Saviour, in <lb/>
the life and suffering of a blind <lb/>
I gar boy, Tor, were depicted, and <lb/>
of I receiving his sight at the hands <lb/>
of the Master closing with the res- <lb/>
The reading was done <lb/>
by the pastor, Rev. C. M. Rock, whose <lb/>
full round baritone voice suited the <lb/>
story, and made it all the more <lb/>
The singing by the choir, <lb/>
Interspersing story was well done <lb/>
i made up solos, quartets and <lb/>
in fact they were all <lb/>
I smoothly, plainly and sweetly, <lb/>
the story perfectly. The <lb/>
thing about the whole <lb/>
service, reading and singing, there <lb/>
as no trills or frills to it, for one <lb/>
could understand every word of it. <lb/>
Often during the service one could <lb/>
hear the sob and see the heaving of <lb/>
the breast and tear-stained cheek <lb/>
as the proceeded. Mr. Rock <lb/>
has done the people of Greenville a <lb/>
cat kindness -i. giving this gospel <lb/>
service la story and song. Others <lb/>
will be given Enter- <lb/>
rise. <lb/>
World's Famous Dyspepsia Cure. <lb/>
If you anything the matter <lb/>
i your stomach you ought to know <lb/>
right now that stomach tab- <lb/>
lets are., guaranteed by Coward <lb/>
to cure indigestion, or any <lb/>
caused by indigestion, such <lb/>
as the following, or money <lb/>
headache, <lb/>
nervousness, sour stomach, fer- <lb/>
of food, belching of gas, <lb/>
pit of <lb/>
of pregnancy, or sickness caused <lb/>
by over Indulgence the night before <lb/>
If your meals don't digest but lie <lb/>
like a lump of lead in your stomach; <lb/>
If you have foul breath and loss of <lb/>
a few tablets will <lb/>
put your In line shape in <lb/>
short order. <lb/>
If you or any of your family <lb/>
fer from stomach trouble of any kind <lb/>
a cent box of <lb/>
a i tablets at once. Coward <lb/>
and everywhere sell MI-O- <lb/>
NA on money back plan.<lb/>
en Automobiles, <lb/>
Two now automobiles arrived In <lb/>
Greenville Wednesday Messrs. S. T. <lb/>
White and P. J. Forbes being the <lb/>
owners. They are handsome ma- <lb/>
chinos. <lb/>
beautiful thing in the world <lb/>
has been made by one who knows. <lb/>
A bank account not only gives a safe <lb/>
place to keep your money, but it is also a great <lb/>
convenience. Besides every check craw <lb/>
is a legal receipt the debt you pay. <lb/>
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank <lb/>
The <lb/>
Sank Greenville <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
.-.- .-i mm- <lb/>
poverty and want m this world <lb/>
I attributed not to the lack of in- <lb/>
but putting off the time of com- <lb/>
to save. Don't your <lb/>
bank account today.<lb/>
C CARR, Cashier <lb/>
III <lb/>
Horn C. <lb/>
Detailed Figured Announced <lb/>
Census <lb/>
town <lb/>
Gibsonville town . <lb/>
Township Morton----- <lb/>
Township <lb/>
I Township C, Graham. <lb/>
town . <lb/>
Township Albright . <lb/>
Township S, . <lb/>
I Township , on. <lb/>
Township Melville. <lb/>
Mebane town . <lb/>
Township Pleasant <lb/>
Grove . <lb/>
Township Burlington <lb/>
Burlington town .<lb/>
1779 <lb/>
Roxobel town . <lb/>
Snake Bite township <lb/>
Whites township . <lb/>
Windsor township . <lb/>
Windsor town . <lb/>
Woodville township . <lb/>
town . <lb/>
County . <lb/>
1847 <lb/>
1540 <lb/>
. <lb/>
Hudson township . <lb/>
Hudson town . <lb/>
Johns River township. <lb/>
Collettsville town .<lb/>
AND <lb/>
Alexander County <lb/>
, . township ., <lb/>
and Losses Shown In a Decade <lb/>
township <lb/>
by the Cities, Towns, River township. <lb/>
and Townships Throughout; Miller township . <lb/>
the Population Is Sharpe town-hip <lb/>
Ten <lb/>
Sugar Loaf township. <lb/>
town-hip <lb/>
Taylorsville town <lb/>
as Against <lb/>
Years Ago. <lb/>
North Carolina's position in township . <lb/>
front ranks of the southern states in <lb/>
regards to population has been Allegheny County <lb/>
strengthened during the decade from <lb/>
1900 to 1910. Cherry Lane township. <lb/>
Detailed population statistics of the Cranberry township . <lb/>
state has just been issued by Civil township----- <lb/>
Director E. Dana Durand at Washing- Sparta town . <lb/>
ton. They give the figures for every Glade Creek township. <lb/>
Piney Creek township. <lb/>
Creek township <lb/>
minor civil division and incorporated <lb/>
city. <lb/>
The total population of the state is Whitehead township <lb/>
for 1910, as against <lb/>
in 1900, an increase of Anson County. <lb/>
Unlike some of the northern an <lb/>
middle western states, the movement Ansonville township . <lb/>
from the farming districts to the cit- Ansonville town. <lb/>
is not nearly as pronounced in this Burnsville township . <lb/>
slate. Gulledge township <lb/>
The cities almost without township----- <lb/>
show decided increases, in some in- Peachland town . <lb/>
stances as high as per cent. Char- j town . <lb/>
with a population of In township <lb/>
1890 and in 1900, is returned j town . <lb/>
Morven township . <lb/>
town . <lb/>
town . <lb/>
Wadesboro township . <lb/>
South Wadesboro town. <lb/>
Wadesboro town . <lb/>
White Store township. <lb/>
1830 <lb/>
1545 <lb/>
1584 <lb/>
1391 <lb/>
1210 <lb/>
1254<lb/>
1271<lb/>
township . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Bethel township . <lb/>
Bladenboro township . <lb/>
Bladenboro village. <lb/>
Brown Marsh township. <lb/>
Clarkton village. <lb/>
Carver Ci township. <lb/>
Councils village . <lb/>
Central township . <lb/>
Colly township . <lb/>
Cypress Creek township <lb/>
township. <lb/>
town----- <lb/>
Creek township. <lb/>
Hollow township . <lb/>
Lake township. <lb/>
Turn bull township <lb/>
White Oak township----- <lb/>
Creek township <lb/>
Brunswick <lb/>
1301 <lb/>
1907 <lb/>
1387 <lb/>
1275 <lb/>
1770 <lb/>
1555 <lb/>
Kings Creek township. <lb/>
Lenoir township . <lb/>
Lenoir town . <lb/>
Little River township. <lb/>
township <lb/>
unite Falls village. <lb/>
Rhodhiss town . <lb/>
Lower Creek township <lb/>
North Catawba twp. <lb/>
Patterson township . <lb/>
Patterson town . <lb/>
Wilson Creek township. <lb/>
Mortimer town . <lb/>
Yadkin Valley twp. <lb/>
1378 <lb/>
1200 <lb/>
1521<lb/>
Lockwood Folly twp----- <lb/>
Shallotte town . <lb/>
township . <lb/>
SI township . <lb/>
i Smithville township----- <lb/>
, Southport city ., <lb/>
Town Creek township. <lb/>
Waccamaw township . <lb/>
Wm<lb/>
i m<lb/>
1484 <lb/>
1330 <lb/>
1382 <lb/>
Camden County . <lb/>
Court House township. <lb/>
Shiloh township . <lb/>
South Mills township.<lb/>
1622 <lb/>
1453 <lb/>
1901 <lb/>
Carteret County <lb/>
Buncombe <lb/>
township 20.944 <lb/>
city <lb/>
Biltmore . <lb/>
South Biltmore town. <lb/>
Avery Creek township. <lb/>
Black Mountain township <lb/>
Mountain town. <lb/>
Ashe County <lb/>
E. DANA DURAND. <lb/>
with in 1910, an increase In ten <lb/>
years of Wilmington had <lb/>
in 1900 and now has while <lb/>
Raleigh shows an increase of approx- <lb/>
per cent, having in <lb/>
1910, as compared with in 1900. <lb/>
is another city that pros- <lb/>
having a population of <lb/>
as against ten years ago. <lb/>
Durham, with people in 1900, <lb/>
Is returned with in 1910, an in- <lb/>
crease of nearly per cent. <lb/>
The census returns indicate I hat <lb/>
North Carolina is forging to the at <lb/>
as a manufacturing and mercantile <lb/>
state, while it is losing little as an <lb/>
agricultural state. <lb/>
state, while it is losing somewhat as <lb/>
an agricultural state. <lb/>
The detailed population by counties <lb/>
Is as <lb/>
Alamance County <lb/>
Chestnut Hill township <lb/>
Clifton township . 1614 <lb/>
township . <lb/>
Grassy Creek township <lb/>
Helton township . 1215 <lb/>
Horse Creek township. 1880 <lb/>
Jefferson township . <lb/>
Jefferson town . <lb/>
Laurel township . <lb/>
Fork township. 1651 <lb/>
township . <lb/>
township 1287 <lb/>
Peak Creek township. <lb/>
Pine Swamp township. <lb/>
Piney Creek township. <lb/>
Walnut Hill <lb/>
1737 <lb/>
1821 <lb/>
1360 <lb/>
. . <lb/>
Beaufort County<lb/>
Township Patterson. 1493 <lb/>
Township Coble. <lb/>
Township Boon Station 1851 <lb/>
1440 <lb/>
1714 <lb/>
Bath township . <lb/>
Bath town <lb/>
Chocowinity township . <lb/>
village <lb/>
Long Acre township <lb/>
town . <lb/>
i hip. <lb/>
Belhaven town . <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Pantego town . <lb/>
Richland township <lb/>
Aurora town . <lb/>
Edwards town . <lb/>
Washington township . <lb/>
Washington town . <lb/>
township . <lb/>
Flat Creek township----- <lb/>
French Broad township <lb/>
Ale town . <lb/>
Ivy township . <lb/>
Leicester township . <lb/>
Leicester town. <lb/>
Limestone township----- <lb/>
Arden town . <lb/>
Lower Hominy township <lb/>
Reems Creek township <lb/>
town . <lb/>
Sandy township. <lb/>
township . <lb/>
Upper Hominy township <lb/>
1885 <lb/>
Burke County <lb/>
card township . <lb/>
village . <lb/>
Linville township . <lb/>
township . <lb/>
Lower Creek township. <lb/>
Lover Fork township. <lb/>
; Morgan ton township . <lb/>
Morganton town . <lb/>
Quaker Meadow twp. <lb/>
Silver Creek township <lb/>
Glen Alpine town. <lb/>
Smoky Creek township. <lb/>
Upper Creek township. <lb/>
Upper Fork township. <lb/>
Township White Oak <lb/>
Township Morehead. <lb/>
forehead City town. <lb/>
Township Newport. <lb/>
Newport town . <lb/>
Township Beaufort. <lb/>
Beaufort town . <lb/>
Township Straits----- <lb/>
Township Smyrna. <lb/>
Township Hunting <lb/>
Quarter. <lb/>
Atlantic village . <lb/>
Township Portsmouth <lb/>
Township <lb/>
Caswell County <lb/>
Anderson township . <lb/>
Dan River township . <lb/>
i township <lb/>
Leasburg township . <lb/>
Locust Hill township. <lb/>
Milton township . <lb/>
Milton town . <lb/>
township . <lb/>
Stoney Creek township. <lb/>
Yanceyville township <lb/>
Yancey ville town .<lb/>
Catawba <lb/>
25-0 <lb/>
1900 <lb/>
1345 <lb/>
1553 <lb/>
Bandy township. 1621 <lb/>
Caldwell township 1402 <lb/>
Catawba township . <lb/>
Catawba town <lb/>
Cline township . <lb/>
Claremont town . <lb/>
Hickory township . <lb/>
, Brookford town . <lb/>
Hickory town . <lb/>
Highlands town . <lb/>
town. <lb/>
1356 West Hickory town <lb/>
Jacobs Fork township. 1827 <lb/>
Mountain Creek twp. <lb/>
Newton township . <lb/>
Conover town . <lb/>
Maiden town . <lb/>
Newton town . <lb/>
1240 <lb/>
1337<lb/>
. I <lb/>
Cabarrus County <lb/>
Township Rocky River <lb/>
Township Poplar Tent <lb/>
Township <lb/>
Cooks Cross <lb/>
Roads . <lb/>
Township r, Mt. <lb/>
Township o, <lb/>
i Township Reed <lb/>
. <lb/>
Township p. Mt. Pleasant <lb/>
i Mt. Pleasant village <lb/>
Bertie Township Smiths----- <lb/>
Township Bethel <lb/>
township. <lb/>
Colerain, town . <lb/>
town . <lb/>
Indian Woods 1533 <lb/>
. i Hill township----- 1714 <lb/>
township <lb/>
Aulander town . <lb/>
Roxobel township. <lb/>
Kelford town . <lb/>
h . <lb/>
Township Baptist <lb/>
Church . <lb/>
Town Concord, <lb/>
coextensive with Con- <lb/>
cord city . <lb/>
1902 <lb/>
1216 <lb/>
1693 <lb/>
1743 <lb/>
1827 <lb/>
Caldwell <lb/>
1778 <lb/>
1852 <lb/>
1329 <lb/>
1493 <lb/>
1566 <lb/>
1290 <lb/>
1410 <lb/>
1570 <lb/>
1861 <lb/>
1583 <lb/>
Chatham <lb/>
Albright township. 1257 <lb/>
Baldwin township. 1708 <lb/>
Bear Creek township. <lb/>
Cape Fear township 1586 <lb/>
Bonsai village . <lb/>
Merry Oaks town. <lb/>
Center township . <lb/>
Pittsboro town . <lb/>
Gulf township. <lb/>
Goldston town . <lb/>
Hadley township. <lb/>
Haw River township. <lb/>
Haywood town . <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Hickory Mountain twp. <lb/>
Matthews township <lb/>
Ore Hill town . <lb/>
Slier City town . <lb/>
New Hope township. <lb/>
Oakland township . <lb/>
William township. 1609 <lb/>
be <lb/>
1539 <lb/>
1771 <lb/>
JUST GRAPE <lb/>
Fruit and oranges, at S. M. Schultz.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern <lb/>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
N CHARGE OF PAUL N. <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and I he <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity <lb/>
Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
Winterville. . C. April If you need a summer lap duster. <lb/>
Vivian Roberson and Nets. Liles went <lb/>
to Greenville Friday evening. <lb/>
Mr. P. T. Anthony, of Greenville, <lb/>
was in town Saturday. <lb/>
The W. H. S. ball team played <lb/>
Greenville on their diamond <lb/>
day. The game was clean and full <lb/>
of interest all the way through, but <lb/>
the Greenville kids could not stand <lb/>
the twirl of our <lb/>
so they went down in defeat. The <lb/>
score was and B in favor of W. <lb/>
H. S. <lb/>
Miss Annie of Houston, <lb/>
was in town Friday evening. <lb/>
M. s is. II. R Manning and J. F. <lb/>
Harrington attended at the fish fry <lb/>
near Grimesland Thursday night. <lb/>
you will find a nice variety at A. <lb/>
Ange Company's. <lb/>
AS SEEK BY ZACK <lb/>
Pleased With the Services in Baptist <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
It was the pleasure of the editor <lb/>
to be present at one of the most <lb/>
services at the Baptist <lb/>
church in Greenville on Sunday night <lb/>
last it has ever been our pleasure to <lb/>
attend. It was the rendering in <lb/>
story and song of <lb/>
a story of the cross, depicting the <lb/>
scenes in Jerusalem during the last <lb/>
of the life of our Saviour, in <lb/>
Master Manly Jackson left this , , ., . , . , .,, <lb/>
which the life and suffering of a blind <lb/>
beggar boy, Tor, were depicted, and <lb/>
of his receiving his sight at the hands <lb/>
of the Master closing with the res- <lb/>
The reading was done <lb/>
by the pastor, Rev. C. M. Rock, whose <lb/>
fall round baritone voice suited the <lb/>
story, and made it the more <lb/>
The by the choir. <lb/>
Interspersing the story was well done <lb/>
being made up of quartets and <lb/>
choruses, in fact they were all <lb/>
smoothly, plainly and sweetly, <lb/>
fitting the story perfectly. The <lb/>
pleasant thing about the whole <lb/>
service, reading and singing, there <lb/>
was no trills or frills to it, for one <lb/>
could understand every word of it. <lb/>
Often during the service one could <lb/>
hear the sob and see the heaving of <lb/>
the breast and tear-stained cheek <lb/>
the story proceeded. Mr. Rock <lb/>
has done the people of Greenville a <lb/>
great kindness giving this gospel <lb/>
service in story and song. Others <lb/>
will be given Enter- <lb/>
prise. <lb/>
COOT. <lb/>
morning for Wake Forest to visit <lb/>
his grandmother, Mrs. W. J. Jackson. <lb/>
The citizens of Winterville held a <lb/>
primary Friday night and nominated <lb/>
the same officers except Mr. L. L. <lb/>
Kittrell who resigned, and was <lb/>
by Mr. H. T. <lb/>
Mrs. It A. Adams and Miss Helen <lb/>
Adams went to Greenville <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. W. II. Sharp went to Green- <lb/>
ville this morning. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. have a <lb/>
nice line of plaid ginghams for <lb/>
Mr. J. H. Stallings left for his <lb/>
home at Hill, near Tarboro, whore <lb/>
he will spend Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
The officers of Winterville are <lb/>
making a clean up in the town. They <lb/>
honor charged With selling whiskey <lb/>
have brought six or seven before his <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
Mr. S. O. Roberson left for his <lb/>
home near this morning. <lb/>
Mr. C. E. Langston went to Green- <lb/>
ville Friday evening. <lb/>
Get your pumps, piping and joints <lb/>
straight at Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Mrs. J. J. May is visiting in Ayden <lb/>
Mr. J, R. Smith, of Ayden, was in <lb/>
town Thursday evening. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C, April <lb/>
and Mrs. Guy Taylor, of Ayden, spent <lb/>
Sunday with Mr. L. L. Kittrell. <lb/>
Miss Liles spent Saturday and <lb/>
Sunday in Stantonsburg with Mrs. <lb/>
R. C. D. Beam on. <lb/>
Miss Vivian Roberson spent Sat- <lb/>
and Sunday in Ayden with rel- <lb/>
Miss Mamie Dudley spent Tuesday <lb/>
with her sister, Miss Dora Dudley in <lb/>
Winterville High School. <lb/>
Rev. Robert Caraway filled his <lb/>
regular appointment in the M. E. <lb/>
church Sunday and Sunday night. <lb/>
Mrs. W. J. Wyatt, of Morehead City <lb/>
is visiting friends and relatives here. <lb/>
Mr. C. E. Langston went Green- <lb/>
ville Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Prof. F. C. went to Green- <lb/>
ville Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Get your lime from Harrington <lb/>
Barber Co. Just received a car <lb/>
load. <lb/>
Flour right from the mills <lb/>
Harrington. Barber <lb/>
Let Harrington, Barber Company <lb/>
do your repair work and turned <lb/>
work. <lb/>
A car load of lime just arrived at <lb/>
A. W. Ange Company's. <lb/>
WALL STREET ITEMS. <lb/>
Person <lb/>
mid Other <lb/>
Items. <lb/>
Grifton, N. C, April C. <lb/>
W. Howard hilled his regular <lb/>
at the Christian church <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Messrs. G. G. Lancaster and George <lb/>
Spencer, of were on Wall <lb/>
street Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Causey is very sick <lb/>
with measles. <lb/>
Right many of our young people <lb/>
attended a fish fry at Maple Cypress <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Causey went to Green- <lb/>
ville Wednesday. <lb/>
Mr. II. A. Hart, of Ayden, was on <lb/>
the street awhile Friday. <lb/>
Mrs. W E. Stokes and daughter, <lb/>
Miss Annie, went to Ayden Thurs- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mrs. W. II. Causey went to Winter- <lb/>
ville Wednesday to spend a few days <lb/>
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. H. <lb/>
Kittrell. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Dixon made a <lb/>
trip to Ayden Wednesday. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. presiding elder <lb/>
of the Methodist church, will be at <lb/>
Wednesday, April 26th. Ev- <lb/>
is invited to hear him speak <lb/>
about his recent trip to the old <lb/>
country. <lb/>
Tin- Following Cases Have Been <lb/>
Deposed of. <lb/>
Haywood Moore and William At- <lb/>
assault with deadly weapon; <lb/>
Moore not guilty, Atkinson guilty; <lb/>
judgment suspended upon payment of <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Eddie Mills, larceny, pleads <lb/>
judgment suspended upon payment of <lb/>
cost and paying for chickens at <lb/>
cents each. <lb/>
Henry Forbes and Richard Teel, <lb/>
affray, both guilty; Forbes lined <lb/>
and half the cost, Teel and half <lb/>
the cost. <lb/>
Richard Mount, with dead- <lb/>
weapon, not guilty. <lb/>
Richard carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty; fined and <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Oscar Haley, pleads <lb/>
guilty; judgment suspended on pay- <lb/>
of costs and giving bond to <lb/>
pear at August term and show good <lb/>
behavior. <lb/>
Dan Mitchell, Edwards and <lb/>
Jim Rice, gambling, plead guilty; <lb/>
fined each and costs. <lb/>
John Carr, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty; fined and <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
John Carr, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty; judgment <lb/>
pended on payment of costs. <lb/>
Sam Cofield, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty; fined and <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Arthur Harris, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty; fined and <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
Lewis Williams and Frank Corey, <lb/>
affray, plead guilty; fined each <lb/>
and costs. <lb/>
J. W. Perkins, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, plead guilty; judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of costs. <lb/>
Anthony May, selling liquor, three <lb/>
cases, judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of costs and bond for <lb/>
good behavior. <lb/>
Bob Worthington, selling liquor, <lb/>
plead guilty; judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of costs and bond for <lb/>
good behavior. <lb/>
Walter Chance, selling liquor, two <lb/>
cases, guilty, judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of costs and bond for <lb/>
good behavior. <lb/>
Joseph Lang, selling plead <lb/>
guilty; judgment suspended upon <lb/>
payment of costs and bond for good <lb/>
behavior. <lb/>
Joe Lang and Norman Hawkins, <lb/>
gambling, plead guilty; judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of costs and <lb/>
bond for good behavior. <lb/>
John Smith, selling liquor, three <lb/>
cases, plead guilty; judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of costs and <lb/>
bond for good behavior. <lb/>
W. G. Long, larceny, plead guilty; <lb/>
sentenced to four months on the <lb/>
roads. <lb/>
J. A. Whitley, selling liquor, sen- <lb/>
to six months on the roads. <lb/>
Jim Tucker, Will Fleming and Bud- <lb/>
die Whichard, gambling, Tucker and <lb/>
Fleming plead guilty; fined each <lb/>
and costs. <lb/>
William Best, larceny, plead guilty; <lb/>
sentenced to six months on the roads. <lb/>
Jim Ward William Faircloth, <lb/>
assault with deadly weapon, plead <lb/>
guilty; judgment suspended upon <lb/>
payment of costs. <lb/>
Charlie Evens, abandonment, plead <lb/>
guilty; judgment suspended upon <lb/>
payment of costs and bond for good <lb/>
behavior. <lb/>
Less Anderson, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, plead guilty; judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of costs. <lb/>
Arthur Price and William Langley, <lb/>
burglary, guilty of house breaking; <lb/>
sentenced three years each on the <lb/>
roads. In other cases against the <lb/>
same defendants for carrying con- <lb/>
weapons, judgment was <lb/>
pended. <lb/>
Eddie Mills, selling liquor, two <lb/>
cases, sentenced forty days on the <lb/>
roads. <lb/>
Williams, vagrancy, guilty; <lb/>
judgment suspended upon payment <lb/>
of costs and bond for good behavior. <lb/>
Boston Boyd, larceny, guilty; sen- <lb/>
six months on the roads. <lb/>
John Ward, William Fair- <lb/>
cloth, carrying concealed weapon, <lb/>
guilty; fined and costs. <lb/>
William Grimes, larceny, not <lb/>
Less Anderson and Kittie Hines, <lb/>
disturbing religious worship, not <lb/>
guilty. <lb/>
Allen Tyson, resisting officer, guilty, <lb/>
sentenced four months on the roads. <lb/>
THE ARE <lb/>
Prepare The Land Well Before <lb/>
Planting. <lb/>
Sometimes we become impatient <lb/>
to get the seed in the ground and <lb/>
fancy we can not afford to take the <lb/>
time to more thoroughly prepare the <lb/>
land, but this is a mistake. It is not <lb/>
best to plant the crops too early, be- <lb/>
fore the soil is warm, although as a <lb/>
general rule, the earlier crops are <lb/>
planted after the soil and weather <lb/>
are fit, the better; but a crop plant- <lb/>
ed on a well-prepared soil will soon <lb/>
catch up with one planted much ear- <lb/>
lier on a soil not properly prepared. <lb/>
We can much better afford to be a <lb/>
late in planting than to plant <lb/>
the soil is in first class con- <lb/>
When the plants come up <lb/>
they are in the way of large <lb/>
and cultivation is expensive; <lb/>
therefore, as much cultivation as <lb/>
possible should be done before the <lb/>
plants come up and get in the way. <lb/>
It is astonishing how much <lb/>
of the crop can be saved by the <lb/>
thorough preparation of the land be- <lb/>
fore Progressive <lb/>
Farmer. <lb/>
Meeting of Stockholders. <lb/>
The annual meeting of the stock- <lb/>
holders of The Reflector Company <lb/>
will be held on Tuesday, May 2nd, <lb/>
1911, at o'clock a. m., in the <lb/>
office of the president. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, President. <lb/>
B. B. SUGG, Secretary. <lb/>
Send It In. <lb/>
Don't be afraid of overcrowding <lb/>
The Reflector with work. With our <lb/>
improved facilities we are ready for <lb/>
all the advertising and job printing <lb/>
that can come along. <lb/>
Sec The Collector. <lb/>
Next Monday will be tax sales day. <lb/>
If you are on the delinquent list and <lb/>
do not pay your taxes before that <lb/>
time, your property will be sold. <lb/>
FOR TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
A torpid liver deranges the whole <lb/>
system, and produces <lb/>
SICK HEADACHE, <lb/>
Dyspepsia Costiveness, <lb/>
Sallow Skin and Piles. <lb/>
There Is no better remedy for these <lb/>
common diseases than DR. <lb/>
LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and and The Eastern <lb/>
THE VAUDEVILLE <lb/>
LAST SATURDAY EVENING <lb/>
BY THE SECOND YEAR CLASS. <lb/>
A Splendid Entertainment That Was <lb/>
Much Enjoyed. <lb/>
The second year class of East Car- <lb/>
Teachers Training School gave <lb/>
a vaudeville Saturday evening, which <lb/>
was exceedingly clever. <lb/>
The white dresses and colored <lb/>
light added greatly to the pretty <lb/>
picture in the chorus in de <lb/>
Miss Hudson in a monologue gave <lb/>
an excellent representation of a <lb/>
garrulous in a game of <lb/>
bridge. <lb/>
In the gavotte the twelve girls with <lb/>
white dresses, pink ribbons and <lb/>
garlands of pink, made a charming <lb/>
scene and much laughter was caused <lb/>
by the hypnotic exhibition of Mr <lb/>
Rowe and class. <lb/>
All enjoyed the report of the <lb/>
ions for as seen in congress, <lb/>
given by Miss Day. <lb/>
Miss Carter sung for <lb/>
which was illustrated by Miss Bryan, <lb/>
a charming coquette, and Mr. Ross, <lb/>
her devoted suitor. <lb/>
Many envied Mr. Linton in his <lb/>
bachelor reveries as he gazed upon <lb/>
pictures of his old sweethearts, which <lb/>
were as <lb/>
A Summer Mattocks. <lb/>
The Pittman. <lb/>
The Trained Spivey. <lb/>
The Sporting <lb/>
The Moore. <lb/>
The College Clark. <lb/>
The Society Tillery. <lb/>
The Sutton. <lb/>
The monologue by Mr. Evans, a <lb/>
confident would-be bride groom, dis- <lb/>
appointed, was especially good. <lb/>
old Messrs Rowe and <lb/>
Linton, dressed as met after <lb/>
a long separation and swapped yarns. <lb/>
A short sketch, Dress Re- <lb/>
was well given by <lb/>
Wynne, Quinn, Herring, Hooker and <lb/>
Messrs. Ross and Rawls. <lb/>
The whole entertainment was a <lb/>
great success and a credit to the <lb/>
class and their instructors. <lb/>
The people of the community owe <lb/>
much to the school for giving them <lb/>
opportunity to attend such splendid <lb/>
entertainments. <lb/>
The Income Tax. <lb/>
Steady progress is being made by <lb/>
the income tax amendment A few <lb/>
months ago the supporters of the <lb/>
amendment feared it would not re- <lb/>
the necessary approval of three <lb/>
fourths of the legislature. Now they <lb/>
are rather confident that <lb/>
will approve. States that were at <lb/>
one time unfriendly are showing an <lb/>
inclination to favor the amendment. <lb/>
Last year, for instance, <lb/>
rejected it. Only this work the <lb/>
legislature in that state has taken up <lb/>
the subject again and the house of <lb/>
representatives by a vote of to <lb/>
has favored ratification. The <lb/>
State senate has not yet acted, but <lb/>
the information received here is that <lb/>
it will probably join the house in <lb/>
favoring the amendment. New York <lb/>
today showed a like intention. <lb/>
Arkansas has reconsidered its ac- <lb/>
of last year, when the amend- <lb/>
was rejected, and recently tIn- <lb/>
state senate voted to ratify the amend <lb/>
meat. The house had already taken <lb/>
favorable action. Florida, which had <lb/>
also been set down as against the <lb/>
amendment, is coming into line for <lb/>
it. house of representatives <lb/>
week, by a vote of to favor- <lb/>
ed ratification. The senate has not <lb/>
el acted, but according to reports <lb/>
from the legislature will follow the <lb/>
action of the house. Thirty states <lb/>
have now adopted joint resolutions <lb/>
to ratify, as <lb/>
Alabama, Indiana, Georgia, North <lb/>
Dakota, Colorado, Washington, <lb/>
Iowa, Oklahoma, California, <lb/>
Michigan, South Carolina, Wisconsin, <lb/>
Idaho. Arkansas, Maine, Maryland, <lb/>
Kansas, Nevada, Ohio. <lb/>
North Carolina, South Dakota, Mon- <lb/>
Tennessee, Oregon, Texas,. <lb/>
The votes of five more legislatures, <lb/>
if they can be Obtained before Ari- <lb/>
and New Mexico comes into the <lb/>
Union, will complete the ratification. <lb/>
If the ratification shall not have been <lb/>
accomplished when Arizona and New <lb/>
Mexico become states, six more votes <lb/>
will be required. That these live or <lb/>
six votes, as the case may be, will <lb/>
be obtained is confidently asserted by <lb/>
United States senators who are par- <lb/>
Interested in seeing the <lb/>
amendment Trans- <lb/>
CAROLINA REJOICING <lb/>
OVER HER VICTORS <lb/>
WON i OUT OF I VIRGINIA. <lb/>
How Hungry China is. <lb/>
Rev. E. E. writing to <lb/>
the Christian Herald from the <lb/>
Chinese famine district, <lb/>
of all has been the sale <lb/>
of women and children. Even in <lb/>
China it is generally considered dis- <lb/>
graceful for a man to sell his wife, <lb/>
and the sale cannot take place open- <lb/>
This year not only does the <lb/>
sale take place quite openly, but the <lb/>
purchaser is even regarded as a <lb/>
man, no matter how <lb/>
his object in the purchase may <lb/>
be. Those most in demand are <lb/>
girls from the ages of to most <lb/>
of these are bought as slaves for <lb/>
lives of degradation. One is con- <lb/>
seeing children offered for <lb/>
sale on the streets. A child under <lb/>
can be bought for anywhere from <lb/>
a dime to a quarter, and, of course <lb/>
many are given away, if the parents <lb/>
can find someone who will promise <lb/>
to support <lb/>
COME TO SEE US FOR MOST LAST- <lb/>
and satisfactory hosiery for la- <lb/>
dies, children, men and We <lb/>
guarantee our hosiery, Whit Leather <lb/>
Brand, per pair. Linen Wear <lb/>
Brand, per pair. J. R. J.<lb/>
Revived The Athletic Spirit The <lb/>
University. <lb/>
Chapel Hill. N. C. April <lb/>
the first time in a number of years. <lb/>
the student body of the University <lb/>
of North Carolina are tasting the <lb/>
wholesome joy of a decisive victory <lb/>
over the University of Virginia. In <lb/>
Charlottesville on Friday, after <lb/>
to the players from the Old <lb/>
Dominion in Greensboro and winning <lb/>
in Charlotte, the boys from <lb/>
waded in to their time hon- <lb/>
enemies on their own diamond, <lb/>
with men cheering for a <lb/>
victory, intent on repairing the <lb/>
discouragement that had come to the <lb/>
Carolina men during the barren <lb/>
years have gone by since <lb/>
questioned victory was, theirs. The <lb/>
game was won by Carolina to <lb/>
in the fiercest fought and fastest <lb/>
fielded contest seen between two col- <lb/>
during baseball season of <lb/>
1911. <lb/>
The unconditioned winning of these <lb/>
two games is an important event in <lb/>
the athletic history of the University. <lb/>
Great battles, whether on the <lb/>
Held or elsewhere, are fought <lb/>
when two forces of equal strength <lb/>
meet and are decided finally on the <lb/>
high level of courage. The support- <lb/>
of the white and blue have real- <lb/>
this and more than once during <lb/>
the last five or six years, seeing a <lb/>
team just as good as Virginia's go- <lb/>
down in defeat, Carolina man <lb/>
had begun to falter in his confidence <lb/>
In that high Carolina <lb/>
spirit. This victory will go a long <lb/>
way to cleanse college spirit from <lb/>
this strain of disloyalty. It will give <lb/>
a brighter confidence to every team <lb/>
of athletes that represents Carolina. <lb/>
It means that Carolina has safely <lb/>
weathered a critical period in her <lb/>
athletic history. <lb/>
The men who fought out the way <lb/>
to this victory Hasty, Edwards, <lb/>
Hackney, <lb/>
Hanes, Witherington and Lee who <lb/>
pitched both of the games that Caro- <lb/>
won. The man to whom goes <lb/>
more credit than to any one of the <lb/>
layers la Chan. A. the coach <lb/>
the man who by his fine ability to <lb/>
teach science of baseball and by <lb/>
his own lighting courage which he <lb/>
infused into every player was able <lb/>
put out the best team Carolina <lb/>
las had in the last eight years from <lb/>
a bunch of material that included only <lb/>
me old man. Captain Hackney. <lb/>
The past week been a pleasant <lb/>
in the hard work. <lb/>
Three dances which brought the <lb/>
largest crowd of beautiful girls to <lb/>
he Hill that has ever attended an <lb/>
dance; state <lb/>
tennis tournament, which was <lb/>
won by Carolina by heavy odds; and <lb/>
he class stunt of the graduating <lb/>
class, which was by all means the <lb/>
most successful thing of the kind <lb/>
pulled off in Chapel Hill, all <lb/>
combined to make a good time for <lb/>
Carolina students, and to cap it all <lb/>
came the victory over Virginia Fri- <lb/>
day, the telegraphic report of which <lb/>
was heard by about three hundred <lb/>
people in Gerrard hall. The student <lb/>
now have to settle down for a steady <lb/>
pull until commencement brings final <lb/>
release from the toils of the college <lb/>
year, 910-11. <lb/>
Girl and Pone-Cake. <lb/>
Some time ago, Georgia reported, <lb/>
with justifiable pride that it had a <lb/>
boy, years old, who has succeeded <lb/>
in raising bushels of corn to the <lb/>
acre. But now, the same <lb/>
state conies to the front with the <lb/>
record of a girl, who has placed <lb/>
on at the State Normal <lb/>
School varieties of corn-food <lb/>
dishes Every one of those dishes is <lb/>
described by the experts as not only <lb/>
absolutely delicious. Of <lb/>
course, the boy's success depended in <lb/>
no small degree on weather and soil <lb/>
conditions. But that girl Fifty-two <lb/>
varieties of corn-food dishes And <lb/>
all delicious <lb/>
In days de Virginia <lb/>
had a cake song, the <lb/>
refrain of which <lb/>
Ole tire <lb/>
Put de cake upon foot and hole <lb/>
it to de fire. <lb/>
It is a familiar saying that great <lb/>
changes have come upon the South <lb/>
since the days of that song. Few, how- <lb/>
ever, in the line of gastronomy have <lb/>
equaled the advancement in the art <lb/>
of pone-cake making. What a joy <lb/>
would have been added to the gas- <lb/>
experiences of Brilliant- <lb/>
could he have lived to know <lb/>
that Georgia Journal. <lb/>
BASE BALL MONDAY. <lb/>
Greenville Takes The <lb/>
Bethel. <lb/>
Game From. <lb/>
In an interesting game of ball <lb/>
played here Monday evening, Green- <lb/>
ville won over Bethel by the score <lb/>
of to Both teams went into the <lb/>
Held with the determination to <lb/>
and were encouraged by a large <lb/>
crowd of rooters. The most <lb/>
features of the game were Bowl- <lb/>
catching, Murphy's several safe <lb/>
hits and Burch's long drive to center <lb/>
for two bases. <lb/>
R. H. <lb/>
Bethel . <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
V; <lb/>
MACK'S CHICKEN POWDER <lb/>
Is Death to Hawks--Life to Chickens and Turkeys <lb/>
Cock of the Walk <lb/>
I Powder and <lb/>
feet I my children with it Look At <lb/>
mo observe <lb/>
The Barnyard <lb/>
after a chick of that <lb/>
oM which had been fed on <lb/>
Chicken Powder. Alas Alas <lb/>
trade mark U. S. Patent Office April 1910. No. Guaranteed <lb/>
by W. H. under the Food and Drug Act, June 1806. Serial No. 41.810 <lb/>
CHICKEN POWDER <lb/>
Kills Hawks, Crows, Owls and Minks. Best Remedy for Cholera, <lb/>
Gaps, Limber Neck, Indigestion and Leg Weakness. <lb/>
Keeps Them FREE From Vermin, Thereby Causing Them to pro- <lb/>
duce an Abundance of Eggs. <lb/>
Manufactured by <lb/>
W. H. Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
For sale by Merchants and Druggists<lb/>
Subscribe to the Reflector.<lb/>
e-r<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Carolina Home and and The Eastern <lb/>
TIME TO BE <lb/>
Suspicious of Hill for <lb/>
With Canada. <lb/>
Ayden, X. C, April 1911. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I have been gathering information <lb/>
as best I can on this reciprocity with <lb/>
Canada. I have seen pictures of <lb/>
Uncle Sam sitting right close up to <lb/>
Miss Canada a just opening and pour- <lb/>
out great love for her, telling <lb/>
of the great future for her if she <lb/>
will just wed him, etc. I'll not <lb/>
follow this strain further, but <lb/>
just say the boys up at Washington <lb/>
had better be careful about passing <lb/>
brought forward and <lb/>
legislation brought forward and <lb/>
fostered by a Republican president <lb/>
I'm kind of suspicious of it. It may <lb/>
prove to be a stuffed <lb/>
full of pitfalls for the Democratic <lb/>
party in the future. Mr. <lb/>
idea of hitching to the reciprocity <lb/>
bill, an amendment carrying con- <lb/>
reduction of the tariff on <lb/>
farm machinery, such as is largely <lb/>
used in the great North West, is not <lb/>
a bad one at all Then, too, it seems <lb/>
to be the very way to get this tariff <lb/>
reduction, the Democrats refusing <lb/>
to vote for reciprocity if the <lb/>
gents and Republicans refuse to <lb/>
vote for this tariff reduction. <lb/>
W. A. Darden. <lb/>
AX EASTER RECEPTION. <lb/>
MARRIAGE LICENSES. <lb/>
Only Two Were Issued During Last <lb/>
Week. <lb/>
During last week Register of Deeds <lb/>
Moore issued marriage licenses to <lb/>
only two couples, as <lb/>
James Ellison and Lillian Burch. <lb/>
Zeno Little and Lena Mooring. <lb/>
Canned Goods. <lb/>
Kentucky is a blue-grass country. <lb/>
This means principally the raising of <lb/>
horses and other live-stock. North <lb/>
Carolina is essentially a flower, fruit <lb/>
and vegetable country. It transpires <lb/>
that all these crops may, in our <lb/>
modern times, be much in <lb/>
value by processes of selection, <lb/>
age, canning and preserving. It has <lb/>
been frequently pointed out in this <lb/>
paper that provisions ought to be <lb/>
made for the proper selection and <lb/>
storage of the apple crop. Such care <lb/>
would materially extend the market <lb/>
season, and would much enhance the <lb/>
value of the crop. With proper <lb/>
for keeping flowers cool, the <lb/>
market for these could be very ma- <lb/>
extended, but perhaps the <lb/>
largest field of extending interest is <lb/>
in canned fruit and vegetables. The <lb/>
whole area of the state from the <lb/>
mountains to the sea, in both soil <lb/>
and climate, is adapted to the <lb/>
of one or more kinds of <lb/>
tables and fruits. With proper mod- <lb/>
facilities for preparing these for <lb/>
market, the crop could be enormously <lb/>
increased in amount and in the <lb/>
profits. The ordinary cook- <lb/>
stove in the is a good can- <lb/>
factory. For a few dollars <lb/>
equipment put would ma- <lb/>
extend the output and <lb/>
prove the economy of putting up <lb/>
fruits and vegetables. The capital <lb/>
stock for a really large canning <lb/>
is not largo, say It is <lb/>
mostly a question of knowledge, skill <lb/>
and energy yet values might <lb/>
be brought out of the business if once <lb/>
well developed throughout the state. <lb/>
Jesse Entertains Li <lb/>
of Mrs. Gold Ferrell. <lb/>
On Friday evening at her elegant <lb/>
home of Fifth street Mrs, Jesse R <lb/>
tree Move charmingly entertain I at <lb/>
an reception, that was one <lb/>
the most social gatherings <lb/>
Greenville has seen, in honor Mrs. <lb/>
Charles W. Gold, of Raleigh and Mrs. <lb/>
J. W. Ferrell, of Washington. <lb/>
Two hundred Invitations were is- <lb/>
sued for this reception and the at- <lb/>
was large. The guests be- <lb/>
arriving at a of <lb/>
brilliance and greeted <lb/>
The entire first floor of home <lb/>
five large rooms and a spacious hall <lb/>
had been thrown into 01.0, and the <lb/>
decorations were beautiful and <lb/>
orate. The color scheme through- <lb/>
out was pink and green, each electric <lb/>
chandelier being in pink <lb/>
and smilax, with <lb/>
carnations and potted plants hi <lb/>
room. <lb/>
Each guest was welcomed as she <lb/>
entered by Misses Mary and <lb/>
Novella Move, and shown to <lb/>
the cloak room by Misses H <lb/>
Laughinghouse and Jessie <lb/>
Returning from the cloak room <lb/>
they were received in the front hall <lb/>
by the hostess and two guests of <lb/>
honor; Mrs. pink crepe <lb/>
media with pearl trimmings; Mrs. <lb/>
Gold embroidered chiffon r pink <lb/>
satin and Mrs. Ferrell mar- <lb/>
over pink satin with crystal <lb/>
trimmings and diamonds. <lb/>
Miss Ruth Cobb invited the guests <lb/>
to the punch bowl, an object of <lb/>
unusual beauty and exquisite effect. <lb/>
The large table on which the bowl <lb/>
rested was festooned with clusters <lb/>
grapes and vines through which peep- <lb/>
ed numerous little electric lights In <lb/>
fruit-shaped bulbs. A large chi of <lb/>
lighted grapes and vines were <lb/>
pended from the ceiling and hung <lb/>
mediately over the bowl. Prom the <lb/>
beautifully cherry <lb/>
smash was served by Mrs. Joseph G. <lb/>
and Mrs. E. Higgs, Mrs, <lb/>
wearing old rose crepe chine and <lb/>
Mrs. Higgs white de over pink. <lb/>
Misses Lizzie Higgs and <lb/>
Jones presented each guest with p. <lb/>
basket, while a life white rabbit <lb/>
in a nest of green revealed that the <lb/>
game of the evening was <lb/>
The score were kept with Easter <lb/>
nests-, egg.-, <lb/>
Easter nests of cake filled with <lb/>
almond eggs and white rabbits, <lb/>
creams in fruit and flower shapes, and <lb/>
mints in Easter lily cases were served <lb/>
by Misses Mary and Lizzie Higgs In <lb/>
the drawing room, by Misses <lb/>
Deans and Mattie Lawrence In <lb/>
library, Misses Pattie Wooten and <lb/>
Ethel Moore in the east room, sea <lb/>
Higgs and Lizzie Jo in <lb/>
the parlor, Misses Lelia <lb/>
tine. Forbes and Brown in <lb/>
the dining room, and Misses Novella <lb/>
Move, Helen Laughinghouse, Jessie <lb/>
and Emily in the hall. <lb/>
The various tables for the games <lb/>
being divided among the several <lb/>
rooms made ample space for the <lb/>
large number of guests, and these <lb/>
mingling amid the artistic <lb/>
beneath the brilliant lights, <lb/>
made a scene of beauty seldom <lb/>
. M <lb/>
the spring begins and you want to do <lb/>
your spring shopping. <lb/>
Go See for Dress Goods in ail <lb/>
ties and and Misses Tailor- <lb/>
made Skirts, Ladies Shirt Waists, Muslin <lb/>
Underwear, Notions, Shoes and Oxfords, <lb/>
Household Goods, Traveling Bags and Grips <lb/>
Furniture, Chairs and Mattress. <lb/>
Go See for Crockery, <lb/>
Tinware, Wood and Willow Ware. <lb/>
Go Se for Cultivators, Plow s and <lb/>
all Farming Utensils <lb/>
We want your trade. We have the goods <lb/>
and will make prices <lb/>
It makes no difference what you want we <lb/>
can supply it. When you want it and want <lb/>
to buy it right, Go See <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
stock of merchandise ever carried in Green- <lb/>
ville. Don't think because you go and see <lb/>
that you must buy from him, but we <lb/>
want you to come and learn we have to of- <lb/>
fer you and see if we cannot make it to your <lb/>
interest to deal with us. We want to say <lb/>
once more no matter what you want, <lb/>
for personal use, home or farm, Go See <lb/>
--.--.-.- r <lb/>
I- <lb/>
S D'S<lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
Condensed Statement of <lb/>
National Bank of Greenville <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
at the close of business March 7th, 1911 <lb/>
.-. .-. . <lb/>
rift oil Graded School. <lb/>
The commencement of Grifton grad- <lb/>
ed school will be on Thursday <lb/>
April 27th and 25th. The ad- <lb/>
dress will be at o'clock on Friday, <lb/>
by Dr. Wm. I. Crawford, professor <lb/>
of Philosophy of Trinity college. Fri- <lb/>
day afternoon there will <lb/>
same between Grifton and <lb/>
Loans and discounts. <lb/>
Over drafts. <lb/>
IT. B. Bonds. <lb/>
and ids. <lb/>
furniture and fixtures. <lb/>
for clearing <lb/>
house. <lb/>
Cash and duo from banks. 47,686.041 Deposits. <lb/>
cent, redemption <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
180,407.131 Capital. <lb/>
2,408.90 Surplus. <lb/>
. 21,000.001 Undivided profits. <lb/>
Circulation. <lb/>
7,281.30 j Bond account. <lb/>
Dividends unpaid. <lb/>
8,019.07 ; Cashier's checks. <lb/>
per <lb/>
Fund. <lb/>
1,080.00 <lb/>
50,000.00 <lb/>
10,000.00 <lb/>
3,614.99 <lb/>
21,000.00 <lb/>
21,000.00. <lb/>
69.93 <lb/>
498.13 <lb/>
165,465.11 <lb/>
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations. Finns and <lb/>
air pleased meet or correspond with those <lb/>
changes or opening new accounts. <lb/>
want your <lb/>
F. J. FORBES, Cashier <lb/>
be Carolina Home and and The <lb/>
CATARRH <lb/>
EIGHTEEN THOUSAND CASES <lb/>
Also Coughs, Colds, Croup Sore <lb/>
Throat <lb/>
Coward and Wooten guarantees <lb/>
to cure catarrh, acute or <lb/>
chronic; to cure colds, coughs, croup <lb/>
and e throat, or money back. <lb/>
In cases of deafness caused by <lb/>
catarrh, there is no remedy so <lb/>
Is a liquid extracted from <lb/>
the eucalyptus trees of Australia, <lb/>
and is a healing, germ kill- <lb/>
antiseptic. <lb/>
A complete outfit consist- <lb/>
lag of a bottle of and an <lb/>
hard rubber pocket in- <lb/>
haler costs For treating <lb/>
catarrh or any throat or nose ailment <lb/>
pour a few drops into the Inhaler <lb/>
and breathe. <lb/>
That's all you have to do, and as <lb/>
the air passes through the inhaler <lb/>
it becomes Impregnated with an- <lb/>
and this soothing, <lb/>
healing air as passes Into the lungs <lb/>
reaches every particle of the inflamed <lb/>
membrane, kills the germs and heals <lb/>
the raw, core stops. <lb/>
If now own a l i <lb/>
you can buy an extra bottle of <lb/>
MEI for only at Cowards and <lb/>
or druggists everywhere. <lb/>
Free sample trial treatment, from <lb/>
Booths Co., Buffalo, N. Y. <lb/>
Apr. May G. <lb/>
WATCH FOR IT. <lb/>
The is Contest Coming <lb/>
It is the characteristic features that <lb/>
always cuts the big figures In the <lb/>
world. <lb/>
why the Is con- <lb/>
tort iv so Interesting, it's a great <lb/>
game that Sam's sailor <lb/>
toy's ail attention when it appear- <lb/>
ed in the San Francisco Examiner. <lb/>
You might know how interesting it <lb/>
was when the great admiral sat up <lb/>
and took notice of it. <lb/>
And one the very busy and sedate <lb/>
presidents of a Chicago bank- <lb/>
Institution was all up <lb/>
over is when it appeared <lb/>
in the Chicago American, and while <lb/>
he wasted his valuable time play- <lb/>
the great game household duties <lb/>
in many Chicago houses were forgot- <lb/>
ten, mistress and maid alike being <lb/>
en up with is <lb/>
Now it has come to Greenville and <lb/>
it will run In The Daily Reflector next <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Remember this, that there is money <lb/>
in the is contest for you. <lb/>
So just keep your eye on The Daily <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
Of Hookworm Treated In <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
The rapidity with which a <lb/>
knowledge of the cause, harm, cure <lb/>
and prevention of hookworm disease <lb/>
has spread among our people stands <lb/>
without a parallel in the history of <lb/>
preventable Only a year <lb/>
or two ago there was found quite <lb/>
commonly skepticism concerning the <lb/>
of such a disease; but <lb/>
all the doubters have now had <lb/>
opportunities for seeing the worms, <lb/>
the sufferers, their recoveries after <lb/>
treatment, and are now actively lend- <lb/>
their support to the <lb/>
of the disease. <lb/>
The quarterly report of Dr. Jno. <lb/>
A. Ferrell. the State director of the <lb/>
hookworm campaign for the three <lb/>
months ending March shows that <lb/>
up to date the physicians of the State <lb/>
have reported treating cases <lb/>
of hookworm disease, and that more <lb/>
than COO of the active physicians of <lb/>
the State arc treating the disease. <lb/>
Moreover, it shows that the <lb/>
of hygiene has examined since <lb/>
the work began specimens of <lb/>
for the eggs of the hookworm <lb/>
which indicate the infection. <lb/>
To lire vent the further spread of <lb/>
hookworm disease, typhoid fever and <lb/>
other disease similarly spread a <lb/>
waive for conditions <lb/>
is rapidly spreading. <lb/>
the compulsory use of <lb/>
toilets are measures being <lb/>
ed many towns and villages. Quite <lb/>
a number of county and city boards <lb/>
of education have ordered the <lb/>
of sanitary toilets at the <lb/>
schools. <lb/>
During the past twelve months <lb/>
there have been distributed <lb/>
pieces of stock <lb/>
on the subject which include a <lb/>
leaflet on hookworm disease, an <lb/>
on hookworm dis- <lb/>
ease, and an illustrated on <lb/>
plans specifications for <lb/>
toilets. These are sent free an re- <lb/>
quest to the Hookworm Commission, <lb/>
North Carolina Board of Health, <lb/>
Raleigh, X. C, <lb/>
The campaign in a broad sense, <lb/>
is One for better sanitary conditions <lb/>
in the South, an warfare <lb/>
not against one, but against many <lb/>
diseases. success of the cam- <lb/>
says Win. H. in the <lb/>
April South Atlantic Quarterly, <lb/>
lesson the heavy burden of <lb/>
sickness, bring new vigor to great <lb/>
numbers of people, and accomplish <lb/>
the saving of thousands of <lb/>
Professional Card <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith <lb/>
Stables, and next door to John Flan- <lb/>
Buggy Co's building <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office formerly occupied by J, L. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Greenville, . F. Carolina <lb/>
W. C. D. M. Clark <lb/>
GLARE <lb/>
Civil Engineers and Surveyors <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
S. J. EVERETT <lb/>
ATTORNEY LAW <lb/>
In Building <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
L. I. Moore, W. H. Long <lb/>
MOORE h LONG <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. <lb/>
CHARLES G. PIERCE <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Practice in all the courts. Office up <lb/>
stairs in Phoenix building, next to <lb/>
Dr. D. L. James <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
DR. R. L. <lb/>
DENTIST <lb/>
Greenville . . N. Carolina <lb/>
HARRY SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYER <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
Saved His Mother's Life. <lb/>
doctors given me <lb/>
writes Mrs. Laura Games, of <lb/>
La., my children and all my <lb/>
friends were looking for me to die, <lb/>
when my son Insisted that I use El- <lb/>
Bitters. I did so, and they <lb/>
have done me a world of good. <lb/>
will always praise Electric <lb/>
Bitters is a priceless blessing to <lb/>
men troubled with tainting and dizzy <lb/>
spells, backache, headache, weakness, <lb/>
debility, constipation kidney dis- <lb/>
orders. Use them and gain new health <lb/>
strength and vigor. They're <lb/>
teed to satisfy or money refunded. <lb/>
Only cents at all druggists. <lb/>
BIRTHDAY PARTY. <lb/>
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb/>
Practice limited to diseases cf the <lb/>
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat <lb/>
Washington, N. C. C- <lb/>
Greenville office with Dr. L. Tames. <lb/>
a. m. to i p. m., Mondays. <lb/>
ALBION DUNN <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office in building, Third St. <lb/>
Practices wherever his services arc <lb/>
desired <lb/>
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb/>
If people were compelled to say <lb/>
what they think they would think <lb/>
differently. <lb/>
If success consisted of wanting In- <lb/>
stead of getting failure would be <lb/>
Given By Little MUs Grace Warren <lb/>
Thursday Afternoon. <lb/>
On Thursday afternoon little Miss <lb/>
Grace was at home to her <lb/>
little friends to celebrate her eighth <lb/>
birthday. <lb/>
The home was beautifully <lb/>
and the little ones given free <lb/>
possession. They played games until <lb/>
invited Into the dining room which <lb/>
was decorated in keeping with Easter <lb/>
time. The children were delightful <lb/>
with the little rabbits and chickens, <lb/>
peeping at from the <lb/>
lier, and the old rabbits nest full of <lb/>
eggs and her little ones for a <lb/>
piece. Delicious ices and cakes <lb/>
were served. <lb/>
Then after bidding little host- <lb/>
good by, they wished she might <lb/>
live to enjoy many more happy birth- <lb/>
days like this. <lb/>
Choice Out Flowers <lb/>
and Violets <lb/>
2nd <lb/>
range at abort <lb/>
Mali, Telegraph <lb/>
I by <lb/>
J, CO., <lb/>
Stay at home <lb/>
and go to the <lb/>
Sounds funny, doesn't it <lb/>
Yet that's exactly what you <lb/>
can do when you own a <lb/>
at home and <lb/>
enjoy the finest kind of a per- <lb/>
The greatest <lb/>
singers, musicians and come- <lb/>
in the world are at <lb/>
your command, and you <lb/>
can arrange a program to <lb/>
suit yourself. <lb/>
Stop in today and get a Victor for <lb/>
your home. style Victor to <lb/>
or to <lb/>
you prefer on easy monthly payments. <lb/>
The cost of a few tickets a <lb/>
month will pay for the permanent <lb/>
enjoyment of the Victor. <lb/>
For Sale by <lb/>
A, B. <lb/>
Company <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J C. LANIER <lb/>
DEALER If <lb/>
Stones <lb/>
Iron Fencing <lb/>
Central Barbershop <lb/>
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb/>
Proprietor <lb/>
Located iv business of town. <lb/>
Poor chair in operation and <lb/>
one pro, by a <lb/>
waited en at their home. <lb/>
IS. J. <lb/>
BARBER SP <lb/>
N famished, everything n <lb/>
and attractive, working very j <lb/>
beat Second to none <lb/>
Opp. J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Learn Automobile <lb/>
Take a thirty days practical course <lb/>
; our well equipped Machine Shops <lb/>
learn the Automobile business <lb/>
and good positions. <lb/>
AUTO SCHOOL, <lb/>
if Charlotte, H. C.<lb/>
Sired In The Purple <lb/>
S. LEGHORNS <lb/>
The kind that lay <lb/>
Eggs for sale, 81.60 per Setting <lb/>
MRS, ft WASHINGTON, House. N. C. <lb/>
doing more than the average <lb/>
keeps the average doing. <lb/>
often below the level of his <lb/>
wire but seldom above her standard.<lb/>
ti<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
THE CAROLINA HOME and <lb/>
FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR COMPANY, Inc. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
one year, <lb/>
Six months, . <lb/>
rates may be had upon <lb/>
application at the business office in <lb/>
The Reflector 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/>
Communications advertising <lb/>
dates will be charged for at three <lb/>
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
Entered as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910, at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina, <lb/>
act of March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 1911. <lb/>
OUR NEW PRESS, <lb/>
On another page of this issue The <lb/>
Reflector gives a picture of the new <lb/>
press it has just installed. The sub- <lb/>
list of the paper has grown <lb/>
to such proportions in the last year <lb/>
that It was necessary to get a much <lb/>
faster press than the one already in <lb/>
use in order to print large <lb/>
and catch the mails promptly. <lb/>
In looking over the different presses <lb/>
on the market we decided upon the <lb/>
as best suited to our needs. <lb/>
It is an ideal machine of which any <lb/>
well equipped printing plant might <lb/>
feel proud. <lb/>
While to put in such a press as <lb/>
this requires a big outlay of money, <lb/>
we have made the investment with <lb/>
the faith we have always had in the <lb/>
people of Greenville and Pitt county <lb/>
that they will stand by us. It is in <lb/>
keeping with the policy of The Re- <lb/>
to keep ahead of the demands <lb/>
made upon it, and its desire to have <lb/>
a plant second to none in Eastern <lb/>
North Carolina in equipment. We <lb/>
are constantly getting nearer to this <lb/>
desire, and believe the people will <lb/>
show their appreciation in increased <lb/>
patronage. It is the ambition of the <lb/>
paper to serve its patrons well, and <lb/>
every improvement puts us in better <lb/>
position to do this. <lb/>
We do not believe any other paper <lb/>
in the State especially in a town no <lb/>
larger than Greenville, has made <lb/>
more improvements to its plant in <lb/>
the past year than has been made by <lb/>
The Reflector, and these better fa- <lb/>
have shown in a corresponding <lb/>
improvement in the paper itself. We <lb/>
now have a standard Linotype ma- <lb/>
chine, a perfect newspaper and book <lb/>
press, three job presses, a folding <lb/>
machine and other equipment ample <lb/>
to meet almost any demand made up- <lb/>
on ran <lb/>
large investments because of faith <lb/>
in the people and the patronage they <lb/>
have given us. The Reflector is their <lb/>
paper, they have supported it now <lb/>
for nearly thirty years, and we be- <lb/>
they will continue to do so. <lb/>
The more patronage they give the <lb/>
paper in subscriptions, advertising <lb/>
and job printing, the better position <lb/>
it is in to work for the advancement <lb/>
of the town, county and section. We <lb/>
have endeavored faithfully to merit <lb/>
all the patronage received and that <lb/>
will continue to be our aim. You <lb/>
can judge for yourself if The Re- <lb/>
and its well equipped plant, <lb/>
are worth anything to the community. <lb/>
If you think such an enterprise is <lb/>
helpful to your section, it is entitled <lb/>
to your patronage. <lb/>
Wilmington has long been the <lb/>
stronghold of the liquor interest in <lb/>
North Carolina. When saloons were <lb/>
legal, that city had more bar-rooms <lb/>
than any other place in the state. <lb/>
In the prohibition campaign a few <lb/>
years ago, Wilmington put up the <lb/>
hardest fight against it, and that city <lb/>
has been foremost in trying to thwart <lb/>
the operations of the And since <lb/>
by the prohibition vote bar-rooms all <lb/>
over the state were closed, <lb/>
has been the worst hot head of <lb/>
blind tigers that the state had. In <lb/>
the face of all this, it is gratifying <lb/>
to note such a change of sentiment <lb/>
has come about that in a recent city <lb/>
primary the tickets of the liquor <lb/>
forces were completely routed. This <lb/>
will no doubt be followed by an <lb/>
on the liquor question. <lb/>
In his charge to the grand jury- <lb/>
Monday, Judge Furgerson gave an <lb/>
opinion on dealing in cotton futures <lb/>
that should make people who enter <lb/>
into contracts for fall delivery of <lb/>
cotton careful how they go into court, <lb/>
when the contract price is against <lb/>
them, and plead the gambling act. <lb/>
Judge Furgerson said that if two <lb/>
men enter into agreement for cotton <lb/>
at a certain price, one to pay the <lb/>
other margins in accordance with <lb/>
the variation of the price, it is <lb/>
and indictable as such. There- <lb/>
fore the man who goes into court <lb/>
and pleads the gambling act on a <lb/>
cotton contract puts himself in <lb/>
for the grand jury to find a <lb/>
bill against him and has already con- <lb/>
himself by his confession. <lb/>
The Reflector is spending much <lb/>
money in the equipment of its plant <lb/>
so as to be in better position to work <lb/>
for the advancement of Greenville <lb/>
and Pitt county. The people have <lb/>
always stood by the paper in its <lb/>
forts and the more patronage they <lb/>
give us the more we can help to ad- <lb/>
their interests. We want <lb/>
every citizen to feel a pride in the <lb/>
paper and its plant. All that it <lb/>
amounts to is through your help. <lb/>
Now York city the authorities arc <lb/>
As said before, we have made three the bakeries, and from <lb/>
reports the majority of them are <lb/>
pools of filth a menace to health. <lb/>
It is a wonder they do not breed <lb/>
cholera and every other dangerous <lb/>
disease. If people generally could see <lb/>
prepared what they eat, they might <lb/>
do less eating. <lb/>
Neither the hobble nor the harem <lb/>
skirts are to have smooth sail- <lb/>
In Florida. A member of the <lb/>
of that state introduced a bill <lb/>
making it a misdemeanor for a <lb/>
woman to wear either of these garbs <lb/>
in public. It was referred to the com- <lb/>
on Indian affairs and war <lb/>
records. Very appropriate reference. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
Every enterprise in a community <lb/>
that improves or prospers helps <lb/>
every other enterprise in the <lb/>
And if an enterprise in a com- <lb/>
fails, every other enterprise <lb/>
is more or less affected by it. Hence <lb/>
the importance of standing by and <lb/>
supporting home industries. <lb/>
The Henderson Gold Leaf in its <lb/>
new appearance is almost <lb/>
The new folks in charge <lb/>
are making a mighty good paper of <lb/>
the Geld Leaf, but it is hard to lose <lb/>
sight, or at least recollection, of the <lb/>
way Thad Manning fixed it for years. <lb/>
We want to see Pitt the corn <lb/>
county of the state. The boys in the <lb/>
corn contest are going to help give <lb/>
the county that distinction. <lb/>
As all things come to him who <lb/>
waits, we may get spring after a <lb/>
while. <lb/>
Keep it in mind that the good roads <lb/>
sentiment is on, and after <lb/>
a while you will have an opportunity <lb/>
of voting on the question of issuing <lb/>
bonds to build good roads in Green- <lb/>
ville township. <lb/>
Congressman Webb has also taken <lb/>
a fall out of Congressman Kitchin <lb/>
for the latter's attack on his North <lb/>
Carolina in his recent <lb/>
speech. <lb/>
The Democrats, as is usually the <lb/>
case when good prospects of victory <lb/>
come up, have again gone to scrap- <lb/>
ping among themselves. <lb/>
Next Friday is the date of the meet- <lb/>
to take steps to hold a county <lb/>
fair next fall. Every one interested <lb/>
in this should be present. <lb/>
If you kick against your town, <lb/>
you kick against yourself, for you <lb/>
are a part of the town, even if a <lb/>
sorry part <lb/>
Dr. Cook, of North Pole notoriety, <lb/>
has and says he is going <lb/>
to figure in newspaper copy some <lb/>
more. That will not be hard for <lb/>
him to do. <lb/>
As you may need it to shut off <lb/>
either a shower or sunshine, or both, <lb/>
before get back, it is not a bad <lb/>
idea to take an umbrella along these <lb/>
days, if you hove one. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
There is some consolation in the <lb/>
Mexican names being a little easier <lb/>
to pronounce than were those that <lb/>
came from the seat of trouble be- <lb/>
tween Japan and Russia. <lb/>
The Reflector is printing a com- <lb/>
census report of North Caro- <lb/>
giving the population of every <lb/>
county and town, compared with the <lb/>
previous census. <lb/>
Governor Brown, of Georgia, de- <lb/>
a pardon to Stripling, the es- <lb/>
caped convict, who under an assumed <lb/>
name, served several years as chief <lb/>
police of Danville. <lb/>
We cannot help from thinking that <lb/>
the man who reads a newspaper and <lb/>
does not pay for it, has somewhat <lb/>
at a mean feeling every time he looks <lb/>
at it. <lb/>
Though Caruso had to lay off <lb/>
worth because of a cold, his songs <lb/>
preserved In the con- <lb/>
on tap. <lb/>
You can't tell much about the war <lb/>
news. One minute they are fight- <lb/>
or about to fight, and the next <lb/>
they are making overtures for peace. <lb/>
Even if it does look like summer <lb/>
is not going to come, summer re- <lb/>
sorts are going right ahead making <lb/>
preparations for the season visitors <lb/>
English experiments have proven <lb/>
that the breath can be held nine <lb/>
minutes. We had rather keep ours <lb/>
going. <lb/>
Uncle Sam is having trouble enough <lb/>
on the Mexican border for Hobson <lb/>
to afford to keep quiet with that <lb/>
Japan racket. <lb/>
Congressman Gudger borrowed <lb/>
fifteen minutes from Congressman <lb/>
Underwood and took a fall out of <lb/>
Congressman Kitchin. <lb/>
That bill in congress to put many <lb/>
articles in common use by farmers <lb/>
on the free list, is along the right <lb/>
line. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
The weather man does not run bis <lb/>
schedule two days alike, but we are <lb/>
about to believe that spring has really <lb/>
landed. <lb/>
The would-be suffragettes got an <lb/>
idea of running for office and voting <lb/>
In the D. A. R. convention. <lb/>
will hardly find serving <lb/>
a life sentence in the Georgia <lb/>
as pleasant a Job <lb/>
on the Danville police force. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
GIVE US SOMETHING NEW. <lb/>
Bitterly assailing the absentee <lb/>
landlords and <lb/>
Rev. Madison C. Peters to- <lb/>
day declared that New York City is <lb/>
an unchristian, uncivilized <lb/>
He city is one of <lb/>
and grafters, where many <lb/>
officials are more corrupt than law <lb/>
violators. Great estates are holding <lb/>
thousands of lots in the city's heart <lb/>
just for a raise in <lb/>
Who does not know that this is true <lb/>
in New York and that no sensation <lb/>
is sprung by telling us this Many <lb/>
small fish have said this for years. <lb/>
However, when a big fish jumps out <lb/>
of the water, people hollow. Dr. <lb/>
Peters told the truth. There are <lb/>
smaller New Yorks all over the <lb/>
try. Fellows who would rather make <lb/>
one dollar than sec a town move for- <lb/>
ward; what care they for the masses, <lb/>
so they are well fed and clothed. <lb/>
Such, with all their money, are no <lb/>
good to any community. Help, or get <lb/>
out. <lb/>
And the harem skirt is the <lb/>
final separation. <lb/>
Did you ever calculate that when <lb/>
you help your town, county or sec- <lb/>
you help yourself. <lb/>
It is time for the weather to quit <lb/>
its foolishness and stop this frost <lb/>
business. <lb/>
ABSENT-MINDED SUFFRAGETTE. <lb/>
One of the lost <lb/>
my last Lizzie. <lb/>
did you leave it <lb/>
last <lb/>
The I remember now I <lb/>
left it sticking in that policeman <lb/>
London Opinion. <lb/>
Poor old fellow. But this does not <lb/>
hurt much, compared to some of the <lb/>
jibes and kicks the fellow gets. He <lb/>
is expected to do all things single- <lb/>
handed while the people stand by <lb/>
and will not help, saying he is paid <lb/>
do it. Say, you kickers and hat- <lb/>
pin stickers, help him along with <lb/>
the keeping of the and don't cues <lb/>
him before he needs it. Then when <lb/>
you are compelled to do so, cuss him <lb/>
to his face, and not behind his blue <lb/>
back. <lb/>
The Greensboro Record <lb/>
not take off until July. Then <lb/>
it might not be <lb/>
If the advice is taken by the ad- <lb/>
. as doubtless it will, then a <lb/>
good soaking will be in order for a <lb/>
month or so. <lb/>
The Reflector is trying to do Its <lb/>
part to make Greenville grow. Are <lb/>
you helping <lb/>
It is easier to complain than it is <lb/>
to help, but the former does not ac- <lb/>
anything. <lb/>
Have you forgotten that a Reflect- <lb/>
or subscription statement was mailed <lb/>
The county that has good schools <lb/>
and good roads will make the most <lb/>
progress. <lb/>
Arc you looking longingly at your <lb/>
dog That dollar tax is coming on <lb/>
him. <lb/>
One Third of Farmers Endorse It. <lb/>
About farmers in the <lb/>
United States, or practically one- <lb/>
third of the entire number, heartily <lb/>
endorse the Watkins way of mer- <lb/>
for they know they can <lb/>
get better goods and more of them <lb/>
for the same money from the Wat- <lb/>
kins salesman, than they can else- <lb/>
where, and they are delivered right <lb/>
at their door. Besides vastly <lb/>
fitting their customers, Watkins sales- <lb/>
men make a good thing out of it for <lb/>
themselves. Right now we need a <lb/>
active, energetic, young salesman in <lb/>
Pitt county. Address, The J. R. Wat- <lb/>
kins Co., South Gay Street, <lb/>
Maryland. Established 1868. <lb/>
Capital over Plant con- <lb/>
acres floor space. <lb/>
They all Know How. <lb/>
There are plenty of fellows who <lb/>
really know just about as much about <lb/>
running a newspaper as a pig does <lb/>
about steering an airship, and yet <lb/>
they seem to think themselves fully <lb/>
qualified to give to a State <lb/>
press convention. Every well in- <lb/>
formed person knows that it requires <lb/>
some practical knowledge of any- <lb/>
thing before one is qualified to give <lb/>
advice on that particular subject. <lb/>
We wonder what a good lawyer would <lb/>
think if a half-dozen or more fellows <lb/>
having no practical knowledge of the <lb/>
law whatever would take the liberty <lb/>
to call around at his every day <lb/>
and tell him how he ought to manage <lb/>
his law practice What would the <lb/>
medical doctor think if everybody in <lb/>
the community felt at perfect liberty <lb/>
just any old time to insinuate to him <lb/>
that he is a dull scholar and a back <lb/>
number anyway, and if he would <lb/>
medicine thus and so he might <lb/>
amount to something after awhile <lb/>
What would the banker or the mer- <lb/>
chant think if people who do not <lb/>
know even the first principles of bank <lb/>
or the mercantile business were <lb/>
always butting In to give them advice <lb/>
on how to conduct a successful and <lb/>
up-to-date . bank or store They <lb/>
would all feel just like the newspaper <lb/>
man feels under similar <lb/>
stances. Just keep this one fact <lb/>
in It requires just about as <lb/>
much brains, careful training and <lb/>
long experience to be a successful <lb/>
newspaper man as it does to be <lb/>
in any other profession or <lb/>
calling in the world, and if a fellow <lb/>
want to find his name down <lb/>
on the newspaper man's list of <lb/>
he had better not get <lb/>
too gay in the matter of giving advice <lb/>
or making suggestions as to how a <lb/>
newspaper should be conducted. <lb/>
Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb/>
responsible for whatever view <lb/>
they may take of it. It simply involves <lb/>
a matter of judgment on a <lb/>
can measure and there is no Demo- <lb/>
principle involved in it what- <lb/>
not in President <lb/>
Taft's reciprocity treaty which con- <lb/>
is asked to enact into law. <lb/>
A close scrutiny of the treaty will <lb/>
show that protected interests will get <lb/>
more benefit from free raw mater- <lb/>
than consumers will get while <lb/>
putting some material on the free list <lb/>
will be injurious to the producers of <lb/>
raw material In some of our States. <lb/>
The bill now pending in con- <lb/>
is the same which President <lb/>
endorsed as a measure for car- <lb/>
out his reciprocity treaty with <lb/>
However, the Democrats <lb/>
have come forward with a bill for <lb/>
the relief of the farmers, but it is no <lb/>
part or parcel of the reciprocity bill. <lb/>
Indeed, there is no probability that <lb/>
Republicans In the house and senate <lb/>
are bent upon defeating. <lb/>
Under all the circumstances, we <lb/>
can see no use of Democratic dis- <lb/>
agreement over a purely <lb/>
measure. There is no sense in <lb/>
dividing on any such proposition, and <lb/>
for that reason. The Star deprecates <lb/>
the disturbance in the North Carolina <lb/>
delegation precipitated by Represent- <lb/>
Kitchin in his opening speech <lb/>
on reciprocity. It is doubtful, and at <lb/>
least problematic, whether we will <lb/>
get any benefit out of the Taft re- <lb/>
and certainly we not <lb/>
allow it to become a bone of con- <lb/>
in the North Carolina Demo- <lb/>
It's Taft's reciprocity. It's none <lb/>
of our Star. <lb/>
None of Our Fight. <lb/>
The Star took occasion some time <lb/>
ago to observe that there was <lb/>
in a Republican reciprocity prop- <lb/>
that would warrant a falling <lb/>
out of Democrats in North Carolina. <lb/>
We have said there was no use in <lb/>
holding any senator or <lb/>
THE DISTANT CLOUD. <lb/>
You hire a disagreeable duty to <lb/>
do at o'clock. Do not blacken <lb/>
and and I I and all between <lb/>
with the of Do work <lb/>
of each and reap your reward in <lb/>
peace, so when the dreaded mo- <lb/>
in the future becomes the <lb/>
present you shall meet it walking in <lb/>
the light, and that light will over- <lb/>
come its Mac- <lb/>
The Reflector's New Job and Magazine Press <lb/>
People are saying the peaches <lb/>
are all killed. Say, folks, just go <lb/>
with us to the beach this summer. <lb/>
You will see plenty. Some with the <lb/>
peeling on, some with peeling off, <lb/>
some Just peeling. Don't hollow be- <lb/>
fore you are hurt. <lb/>
A movement is being made in con- <lb/>
to cut down the mileage allow- <lb/>
of members in going to and <lb/>
from Washington. It remains to be <lb/>
seen if the allowance is cut, though <lb/>
it ought to be. <lb/>
Senator Overman has introduced a <lb/>
bill that congress appropriate <lb/>
to establish farm-life schools in <lb/>
North Carolina when the state <lb/>
a similar amount. <lb/>
separates a man from his <lb/>
alimony separates him from nil <lb/>
The above is a cut of the new press which The Reflector has just installed. It is a No. bu by <lb/>
the Printing Press Manufacturing Company, of Chicago, and was purchased through he Southern <lb/>
agency. Dodson Printers Supply Company, of Atlanta. It is one of the best flat bed two revolution presses <lb/>
on the market, and is adapted not only to newspaper work, but also to high grade circular, brief, <lb/>
magazine, book or other printing. The Reflector a pride in possessing a machine of such excellence. <lb/>
for this additional equipment to the already large plant puts it in position to turn out almost any class <lb/>
commercial printing. , , ,. . , . ,, <lb/>
While this press weighs ten tons, it is constructed along such perfect lines, and its parts fit with such <lb/>
accurateness, that it works as as a sewing machine and with very little The selling agents <lb/>
sent a special elector, Mi. J. A. Laney, from Atlanta, to install the press, and he has done his work well.<lb/>
.<lb/>
T-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
Tin- Home mid Form mid The Eastern <lb/>
The f Hum sad Pf <lb/>
Popular Were <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
A marriage of interest to <lb/>
friends this city, as well as <lb/>
throughout the State, occurred Thurs- <lb/>
day afternoon at St. church <lb/>
at a quarter to six o'clock, when Miss <lb/>
Ella Jacobs, the charming and at- <lb/>
tractive young daughter of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. B. J. Jacobs, became the bride <lb/>
of Mr. Thomas Jefferson Moore, <lb/>
formerly of Greenville. X. C, but for <lb/>
the past several years a resident of <lb/>
this city. before the appointed <lb/>
time fop the ceremony, the church <lb/>
was nearly filled with the many ad- <lb/>
miring friends of the young couple <lb/>
waiting to witness another of the <lb/>
beautiful spring weddings that have <lb/>
taken place this week. The church <lb/>
was very tastefully decorated for the <lb/>
occasion with palms, ferns and <lb/>
lax, the ceremony was by <lb/>
Rev. William II. Milton, D. D. rector <lb/>
of the church. <lb/>
The bride had as her maid of hon- <lb/>
or, her cousin, Miss Florrie Grant, of <lb/>
Wilmington, the first bridesmaid was <lb/>
Miss Helen Clark, of Wilmington. <lb/>
The other bridesmaids were. Miss <lb/>
Alice Davis, Miss Bessie Miss <lb/>
Anna Grant and Miss Julia Post, of <lb/>
Wilmington; Miss Parrish, <lb/>
of Rocky Mount; Miss Annie <lb/>
of Miss Nannie Walker, of <lb/>
and Miss Nannie <lb/>
Biggs, of N. C. The <lb/>
best man, a brother of the groom <lb/>
was Mr. Andrew J. Moore, and the <lb/>
groomsmen were, Messrs. Joe. N. <lb/>
cobs, a brother of the bride; J. Bur <lb/>
James, of Greenville, N. C.; Walter <lb/>
Wilson, of Greenville; A. M. <lb/>
W. it. Frank Holloway, <lb/>
W. B. Hooker, Herbert and <lb/>
R. H. Grant, Jr. Little Miss Carrie <lb/>
Taylor and Master <lb/>
Fetter were ribbon children. <lb/>
The bride was beautifully gowned <lb/>
in white satin crepe and carried a <lb/>
shower bouquet of of the val- <lb/>
and orchids. Several of the <lb/>
bridesmaids wore lilac <lb/>
over lilac and carried <lb/>
shower bouquets of lilacs, and others <lb/>
wore white chiffon over white <lb/>
and carried shower bouquets <lb/>
of ferns. <lb/>
After the wedding the bridal party <lb/>
repaired to the home of the bride <lb/>
where on informal reception was <lb/>
held. Mr. Moore and his bride de- <lb/>
parted on the evening train for a <lb/>
honeymoon trip to the northern cit- <lb/>
They will be absent for about <lb/>
ten days. <lb/>
The bride is one of the city's most <lb/>
attractive young ladies and a <lb/>
host of friends In Wilmington and <lb/>
throughout the state. Mr. Moore <lb/>
holds a responsible position with the <lb/>
National Bank and is held <lb/>
in the highest <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO <lb/>
Their Unceasing Work Keeps Us <lb/>
Strong Healthy. <lb/>
All the blood in the body passes <lb/>
through the kidneys once every three <lb/>
minutes. The kidneys filter the blood <lb/>
They work night and day. When <lb/>
healthy they remove about grains <lb/>
of impure matter daily, when <lb/>
healthy some part of this impure mat- <lb/>
is left in blood. This brings on <lb/>
many diseases and <lb/>
in the back, headache, nervousness, <lb/>
hot, dry skin, rheumatic pains, gout, <lb/>
gravel, disorders of the eyesight and <lb/>
hearing, dizziness, irregular heart <lb/>
debility, dropsy, deposits <lb/>
in the urine, etc. But if you keep the <lb/>
filters right you will have no trouble <lb/>
with your kidneys. <lb/>
T. R. Moore, Evans St., Green <lb/>
ville, N. C. can recommend <lb/>
Kidney Pills, tor I have used <lb/>
them with the greatest benefit. I was <lb/>
troubled by a lameness in my back <lb/>
and my kidneys did not do their work <lb/>
as they I got Kidney <lb/>
Pills from the John L. Wooten Drug <lb/>
Co. and I had not used them long be- <lb/>
fore received relief. I can say that <lb/>
this remedy acts just as <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Remember the <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
in i mi I j <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad <lb/>
SCHEDULES <lb/>
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green- <lb/>
ville, and Kinston. Effective November 1st, 1910. <lb/>
Norfolk Ar. <lb/>
Hobgood <lb/>
Hobgood Ar. <lb/>
Ar. Washington <lb/>
Ar. Williamston <lb/>
Ar. Plymouth <lb/>
Ar. Greenville <lb/>
Ar. Kinston <lb/>
For further information, address nearest ticket <lb/>
agent or W. IT. WARD, Ticket Agent Green- <lb/>
ville, N. C. <lb/>
W. P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A. <lb/>
WILMINGTON, N. C. <lb/>
Kicked By A Mad Horse. <lb/>
Samuel Birch, of Wis., <lb/>
had a most narrow escape from <lb/>
his leg, as no doctor could heal <lb/>
the frightful sore that developed, but <lb/>
at last Salve cured <lb/>
it completely. Its the greatest healer <lb/>
of ulcers, burns, boils, eczema, scalds, <lb/>
cuts, corns, cold sores, bruises and <lb/>
on earth. Try it. cents at <lb/>
ill druggists. <lb/>
in The <lb/>
Ami yet sleepless Hiram <lb/>
of Clay City, coughed and cough- <lb/>
ed. Me was in the mountains on the <lb/>
advice of five doctors, who said he <lb/>
had consumption, but found no help <lb/>
In the climate, and started borne, <lb/>
hearing of Dr. King's New Discovery, <lb/>
he began to use it. believe it caved <lb/>
my he writes, it made a <lb/>
new man of me, so that I can now <lb/>
do good work For all lung <lb/>
coughs, colds la grippe. <lb/>
asthma, croup, hay <lb/>
fever, hemorrhages, hoarseness or <lb/>
quinsy, the best known remedy. <lb/>
Price and . Trial bottle <lb/>
free. Guaranteed by all druggists. <lb/>
She <lb/>
An Oregon swain and his lady fair, <lb/>
after having been engaged for four <lb/>
years were on their way to the min- <lb/>
Saturday to get married, when <lb/>
the bride-to-be discovered a hole in <lb/>
her right stocking just above the <lb/>
shoe top. By the time the two <lb/>
reached the parsonage she had de- <lb/>
that the hole would show when <lb/>
she Before the minister. <lb/>
In spite of the protests of the <lb/>
she bade him and <lb/>
minister wait until she could go <lb/>
home and change her stockings. <lb/>
She hadn't been home more than five <lb/>
minutes before she telephoned- that <lb/>
he need not wait any longer. She <lb/>
said that while changing her stock- <lb/>
she also changed her mind and <lb/>
had determined not to marry. <lb/>
As we mortals fatuously say of <lb/>
mortal affairs, what a fortunate thing <lb/>
for this youth was the discovery of <lb/>
that hole in the bridal stocking. He <lb/>
need not expect to find a lady who <lb/>
does not now and then exercise <lb/>
woman's prerogative, to be sure; <lb/>
but this one is one of those violent <lb/>
ville Gazette-News <lb/>
A Distinguished Visitor. <lb/>
Pitt county at present has a dis- <lb/>
visitor in the person of <lb/>
Gen. W. G. of Hasting, Minn., <lb/>
who came In Friday evening to visit <lb/>
Senator R. E. Gotten, at <lb/>
Though now about years of age, <lb/>
Gen. is remarkably well <lb/>
served and a conversation- <lb/>
He was a general In the Fed- <lb/>
army, and was a member of <lb/>
President cabinet during the <lb/>
latter's term from lo <lb/>
mg is <lb/>
and you need New Carpets, <lb/>
Art Squares, Mattings, <lb/>
Rugs and Tapestries <lb/>
to replace the old ones. Or <lb/>
perhaps you are just fitting <lb/>
out your new home and need <lb/>
these things, as well some <lb/>
furniture. <lb/>
We have the prettiest and <lb/>
most up-to-date stock of <lb/>
these goods in the city. <lb/>
COME TO SEE US <lb/>
VanDyke, Furniture Dealers <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE LINE TO BALTIMORE <lb/>
Connecting with rail lines for all points <lb/>
and WEST <lb/>
JUST THE SEASON TO ENJOY A SHORT <lb/>
WATER TRIP. <lb/>
ELEGANT <lb/>
Dining Service Carte and Table <lb/>
Steamers leave Norfolk D m. from foot of Jackson street <lb/>
and arrive Baltimore 7.00 a. m. <lb/>
For full particulars and reservation, write <lb/>
W. II. PA KNELL, T. P. A., <lb/>
Street, <lb/>
Norfolk, Virginia <lb/>
Carolina to <lb/>
Greenville, G. <lb/>
Spring and Summer Courses for Teachers <lb/>
1911 Spring Term, March 14th to May weeks. Sum- <lb/>
mer Term, June 8th to July weeks. <lb/>
THE AIM OF COURSE TO BETTER EQUIP <lb/>
THE TEACHER FOB HIS WORK. <lb/>
Text Those used in the public schools of the State <lb/>
further information, address, <lb/>
H. Pres <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Smith, C. E. . <lb/>
Smith, Lot. W., . <lb/>
Smith, J. J. Briggs. H., <lb/>
Smith, J. J-. A. <lb/>
Smith, J. J. Lot, Ayden, . <lb/>
Smith, Martha, Jones. <lb/>
Tripp, J. W., Lot, <lb/>
Winterville. <lb/>
Williams, Marvin, Lots, A., <lb/>
12.67 <lb/>
33.14 <lb/>
6.30 <lb/>
PITT 1810 <lb/>
have this day, levied on the fol- <lb/>
ding described Real Estate to <lb/>
the taxes due to the State of <lb/>
Carolina, and County of Pitt, <lb/>
r the year 1910, and the said Real <lb/>
state so levied on will be sold at <lb/>
e Court House door in the Town of <lb/>
H. C on Monday, the 1st <lb/>
y of May, 1911, at o'clock, m. mi- <lb/>
said taxes and legal charges, and <lb/>
from the failure <lb/>
the same within the time re- <lb/>
by the law, are paid by that <lb/>
Q A <lb/>
L. W. TUCKER, Tax Collector. <lb/>
BEAVER DAM TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Acres ard Amount <lb/>
Site, J. L., M-g <lb/>
S. M., <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Acres and Amount <lb/>
Page, J. E. <lb/>
FALKLAND <lb/>
Name. Acres and Amount <lb/>
F. R., . <lb/>
Corbitt. A. J. May Hugh, . <lb/>
Dupree, W. R., Dupree. <lb/>
Dupree, W. B., Williams, . <lb/>
Dupree, Tinker, Lot. <lb/>
Edwards, J. F., Home <lb/>
Edwards. J. F. Hathaway, <lb/>
8.44 <lb/>
1.54 <lb/>
L., 2-3 <lb/>
W Lot, Falkland, <lb/>
Owens B. ft, <lb/>
C. C, Lots. F. . <lb/>
Savage, Alex, Lots. <lb/>
Vines, John, Lot, <lb/>
Williams, Jacob, Lots, . <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
17.85 <lb/>
2.14 <lb/>
23.70 <lb/>
3.20 <lb/>
2.33 <lb/>
1.74 <lb/>
1.51 <lb/>
1.79 <lb/>
Acres and Amount <lb/>
e, <lb/>
Acres and Amount <lb/>
12.21 <lb/>
4.21 <lb/>
7.51 <lb/>
9.93 <lb/>
4.70 <lb/>
2.15 <lb/>
4.97 <lb/>
hunting, T. ft. . <lb/>
Henry, . <lb/>
Noah, R-, . <lb/>
R. <lb/>
Frank, <lb/>
Moses, B. <lb/>
Mrs. Fannie, JO, <lb/>
Cain, Brown, . <lb/>
BETHEL TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Name, Acres and Amount <lb/>
Baker, W. R., 1-8, . <lb/>
Lot, . <lb/>
Sherrod. i <lb/>
OS J. F 3-4, Near Bethel, <lb/>
8.09 <lb/>
2.97 <lb/>
Edwards, Sam, <lb/>
Heath, Samuel, L., <lb/>
Howard, H. G, -1 Lot. <lb/>
James, M. A., Home, <lb/>
James, M. B., . <lb/>
Pitt, Lot. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Name, Acres and Amount <lb/>
2.97 <lb/>
12.96 <lb/>
16.41 <lb/>
3.50 <lb/>
32.08 <lb/>
Barrett, Mrs. C. L., Lot, . <lb/>
Belcher, H. B., Lot, <lb/>
Burnett, K. B., Lots, <lb/>
i Lot. <lb/>
Chestnut. Willie, Lot, . <lb/>
Cotton, C, Lot. <lb/>
Dixon, J. T., lots. <lb/>
Hanrahan, G. H,, Lot. <lb/>
Hopkins. Sam, l Let, <lb/>
Jones, C. W., acres, California <lb/>
i Lot. <lb/>
Joyner, Lot, <lb/>
Joyner, Ross Sister, Lot, . <lb/>
May, J. H., Lot. <lb/>
Lena, Lots. <lb/>
Sheppard, Lots, <lb/>
Shirley Swain Guard, M., . <lb/>
Henry, l Lot,. <lb/>
Dock, Lots, M. <lb/>
Tyson, Joel, Lot. . <lb/>
Mrs. Alice, Lot, <lb/>
7.94 <lb/>
3.19 <lb/>
7.25 <lb/>
3.09 <lb/>
4.84 <lb/>
2.88 <lb/>
1.51 <lb/>
1.94 <lb/>
6.09 <lb/>
6.60 <lb/>
7.55 <lb/>
Hopkins, Frank. Lot. Res. <lb/>
William and Wife <lb/>
T . <lb/>
Frank, Lot, 1st St., n <lb/>
. O.- I <lb/>
Lot. Perkins, <lb/>
William, i Lot, Arthur. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Hal Ed. Lot. Clark. . 7.10 <lb/>
Hardy. Jane. Lot Pitt St . <lb/>
Hardy, Henry. 3-4 Arthur, <lb/>
Hardy, Henry, Lot. Clark, . 8.46 <lb/>
E. L., 1-2, Arthur, . <lb/>
Hardy, W. H. C. B. Landing, . 2.3. <lb/>
James, Joseph, . 12.40 <lb/>
Jackson, Charlie, Lot, B. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Joyner, Samuel, Lot, Hodges. <lb/>
Jones, Arthur. 1.63 <lb/>
King. Robert, J- Lot 3.9 <lb/>
King. Bottle, 1-4. Arthur . 3.-0 <lb/>
Maggie, Lot, C. . 5.01 <lb/>
Little, Mack, Lot, Reed, . 3.30 <lb/>
Langley, Phoebe Lot, <lb/>
Pitt St. . <lb/>
Moore, Z. L., Lot, Home, . <lb/>
Move. W. II., Lot, Clark, . <lb/>
Matthew, Lot, <lb/>
. ., . <lb/>
Lot, Short <lb/>
gt . j <lb/>
Lots, . J-g <lb/>
Moore. Andrew. Lot. Pitt. . <lb/>
Nobles. Phoebe, Lot, Perkins, <lb/>
Lincoln, <lb/>
Perkins. J. W. Lot Dove, <lb/>
Perkins, J. W., Lot Lucas, <lb/>
Perkins,. W. I Lot <lb/>
E. J. Lot, Biggs, . <lb/>
Parham, B. E. Lot. Res., <lb/>
Parham, B. E., Warehouse, . 44.80 <lb/>
Peel.-, John H., Lots, . <lb/>
Redmond, l Lot, Reed<lb/>
Spell, Robert. Lot Perkins <lb/>
Tripp, John W, Patrick, <lb/>
Tripp. John W. Lot. I <lb/>
Mary, Lot,<lb/>
Perkins <lb/>
Wooten. Lot. B. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Williams, Thomas, Lot, Shep- <lb/>
laid. <lb/>
ENTRANCED THE STRANGER <lb/>
Women the Prettiest He <lb/>
Had Seen. <lb/>
On a recent afternoon a number of <lb/>
ladies who had been attending a <lb/>
function were passing a certain <lb/>
on the way to their respective <lb/>
homes. A stranger catching a view <lb/>
the procession, asked did <lb/>
those pretty women come <lb/>
When told that they all belonged <lb/>
here and were the kind Green- <lb/>
grows, he declared they were <lb/>
the handsomest bunch he had ever <lb/>
Been together, and he had seen lots <lb/>
of them. <lb/>
MB. KING ACCEPTS CALL. <lb/>
Co Pastorate of Greenville <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
Rev. Robert King, a graduate <lb/>
dent of Union Theological Seminary, <lb/>
Richmond. Va., has accepted the call <lb/>
of the Greenville Presbyterian church <lb/>
to serve as pastor during his vacation <lb/>
Mr. King conducted services in <lb/>
a short time ago. He <lb/>
reached two splendid sermons, and <lb/>
impressed all who heard him as be- <lb/>
unusually strong man. <lb/>
Presbyterians are greatly pleased to <lb/>
know that Mr. King is to serve them <lb/>
this summer. <lb/>
23.47 <lb/>
6.30 <lb/>
9.18 <lb/>
3.19 <lb/>
3.29 <lb/>
5.05 <lb/>
M., Lot. <lb/>
Webb, W. G., acres, . <lb/>
TOWNSHIP <lb/>
Name, Acres and Amount <lb/>
Adams, Samuel J. Moore, <lb/>
Burroughs, M. I., C. <lb/>
H. Bell, <lb/>
C.<lb/>
Dawson, Marcellus, Thorough- <lb/>
fare c -r, <lb/>
Dawson, Marcellus. . <lb/>
Faircloth, Richard, Lot. <lb/>
Mills, Adam, J-g <lb/>
Smith, John O.,<lb/>
Name, Acres and Amount <lb/>
Allen, Henry, Lot, Ayden, . <lb/>
Cox, G. C, l Lot, Ayden, . <lb/>
Carroll, Mrs. W. M, <lb/>
Cox, John D. Lot. <lb/>
Dew, W. H. Lots, W. <lb/>
Dupree, Alonzo, . <lb/>
Evans, Ed, Lot, A. <lb/>
Adam, Po. <lb/>
Jordan, W. J. Lot, Ayden, . <lb/>
Jones, Mary A., <lb/>
Johnson, R. M., i Lot, A. <lb/>
Kittrell, W. S Lot, A. <lb/>
Lewis, W. B., Lot, A, . <lb/>
Morrison, G. F., Lot, A.,<lb/>
Manning, B. P., Jr. <lb/>
Tom, Lot, <lb/>
Ayden. . <lb/>
Moore, Cris, Lot, <lb/>
Nelson, John <lb/>
J. C Dawson, <lb/>
Adams, Rosetta, <lb/>
Adam, John, i Lot, Perkins, . <lb/>
Adams, Ellis, 1- Lot, C. St., . <lb/>
Crown. Mrs. C. M., Brown, <lb/>
Brown, Mrs. M., Lot, White <lb/>
Brown Brown, <lb/>
O. Lot, Greene <lb/>
C- , ,. <lb/>
Bynum, Lot, Greene <lb/>
gt . <lb/>
Lot, Reed <lb/>
John, Jr., lot, Patrick, <lb/>
5.57 <lb/>
2.66 <lb/>
1.7.1 <lb/>
2.74 <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Acres and Amount <lb/>
New North Carolina Industries. <lb/>
For the week ending April 19th the <lb/>
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the <lb/>
tallowing new industries for North <lb/>
i company. <lb/>
hardware com- <lb/>
. <lb/>
Mount cotton mill. <lb/>
hotel company. <lb/>
Southern hotel com- <lb/>
factory. <lb/>
lumber company. <lb/>
4.25 <lb/>
40.10 <lb/>
10.00 <lb/>
7.33 <lb/>
5.96 <lb/>
4.49 <lb/>
8.10 <lb/>
7.22 <lb/>
7.93 <lb/>
5.25 <lb/>
2.23 <lb/>
5.90 <lb/>
8.75 <lb/>
5.95 <lb/>
7.80 <lb/>
5.90 <lb/>
9.00 <lb/>
4.07 <lb/>
2.01 <lb/>
7.59 <lb/>
33.27 <lb/>
Bunn Lot, . <lb/>
Cherry, G. E., Lot, College, <lb/>
13.40 <lb/>
9.01 <lb/>
3.74 <lb/>
4.64 <lb/>
5.41 <lb/>
15.70 <lb/>
11.59 <lb/>
Commercial Knitting Mill, <lb/>
Cherry Peter, Lacy, . <lb/>
Clark, J. Lot. Perkins, . <lb/>
Can- Isaac, Lot, Pitt St. <lb/>
Carr, Allen, Lot. <lb/>
C W S. <lb/>
Dill, A. T., lot, Gum lice,. <lb/>
Davis, Stephen, Lot Mill, . <lb/>
Davis, l Lot, Sheppard, <lb/>
i Lot, Res. <lb/>
Edwards, Washington, l Lot. <lb/>
Mill. ;. <lb/>
1-2. <lb/>
Fleming, Lot, Reed <lb/>
Sum. W., . . <lb/>
Moses, Lot, Perkins, <lb/>
27.44 <lb/>
4.25 <lb/>
7.00 <lb/>
3.41 <lb/>
1.74 <lb/>
Tom, Lots, <lb/>
Little, Moses, Stephens, . <lb/>
H. A. Wife, 1211, <lb/>
Perkins, Shade, R. <lb/>
Redding, l J-. D. <lb/>
B. B., Lots. <lb/>
J. R- Co., Lot, <lb/>
SWIFT CREEK TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Name, Acres and Amount <lb/>
Brooks, J. Z., Swamp. <lb/>
J. Z., Best, . <lb/>
Brooks, J. Z. <lb/>
Brooks, J. Z., Brooks, <lb/>
Brooks, J. Z., CO, Gardner, . <lb/>
Buck, J. R-, . <lb/>
Fleming. W. H., <lb/>
Poster, Sim, Lot. <lb/>
Louis, acres,. . <lb/>
Hardy, J- A., <lb/>
King, W. H., . <lb/>
Mrs. P. B., Laugh- <lb/>
. <lb/>
Mills, L. B., 1-6. <lb/>
Moore, C. G. Bro., timber <lb/>
cut.;. <lb/>
Perkins, J. W., <lb/>
J. C. Bro., . <lb/>
Smith. Lot. Grit- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
J. C <lb/>
J- W., Lot. <lb/>
Winterville. <lb/>
89.93 <lb/>
5.10 <lb/>
1.79 <lb/>
5.00 <lb/>
21.50 <lb/>
42.80 <lb/>
14.84 <lb/>
HE WAS A MASON. <lb/>
young lady wrote to her sweet- <lb/>
and asked him if he was a Ma- <lb/>
son, and this was his <lb/>
i am of a band, who will faithfully <lb/>
In bonds of affection and love. <lb/>
I have knocked at the door, once <lb/>
wretched and poor. <lb/>
And there for admission I strove. <lb/>
By the help of a friend who assistance <lb/>
lend, , <lb/>
i succeeded an entrance to gain. <lb/>
received In the West by com- <lb/>
from the East, <lb/>
But not without feeling and pain. <lb/>
Here m conscience was taught by a <lb/>
moral wrought <lb/>
With holy and true. <lb/>
onward I traveled to have it <lb/>
raveled <lb/>
What Hiram intended to do. <lb/>
waving thus stated, yet truly related, <lb/>
via; when I was made free, <lb/>
RUt I have passed since then, have <lb/>
been raised up again, <lb/>
To a more ancient and sublime de- <lb/>
3.83 <lb/>
Ayden, <lb/>
2.03 <lb/>
2.55 <lb/>
5.20 <lb/>
4.03 <lb/>
7.33 <lb/>
7.24 <lb/>
4.15 <lb/>
W. B Arthur, <lb/>
30.05 W. B., Lot. 14th St., <lb/>
4.79 W. B., Lot, 27.81 <lb/>
Rives, Joe, 2.60 Richard, Lot, <lb/>
Slaughter, John, <lb/>
Benjamin, <lb/>
8.79 <lb/>
A Happy Crowd. <lb/>
The Reflector force was a happy <lb/>
Saturday night. Erector J. <lb/>
A. I v. ho tor four days had been <lb/>
putting up the big new press, had <lb/>
got the last In place. When <lb/>
the final connecting belt was thrown <lb/>
in place he gave the-signal to turn <lb/>
on the electric current, and as the <lb/>
big moved off like a top <lb/>
I there was in the <lb/>
Through the vales I then went, and <lb/>
at length, <lb/>
sanctum to rind. <lb/>
toil I discovered rich soil, <lb/>
Employment that suited my mind. <lb/>
For the widow, distressed there a <lb/>
chord in my breast, <lb/>
For the helpless and orphan I feel. <lb/>
My sword I would draw to maintain <lb/>
the pure law, <lb/>
Which the duty of Masons reveal. <lb/>
Having thus revealed, yet. wisely con- <lb/>
free and accepted well <lb/>
of a band, who will faith- <lb/>
fully stand, <lb/>
IA brother wherever I go.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector.<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, X. C, April 1911. Bethany church, dressed himself and <lb/>
Mr. Bills was hitching up a jumped in a well in the yard this <lb/>
young ox, Monday. The ox broke morning. His wife made the alarm <lb/>
ranks and fettered up Mr. Ellis, and on finding his hat near by. Help <lb/>
in the fall broke his collar bone. and his body in the well. <lb/>
We were In error in last issue. He had been dead nearly half an hour <lb/>
The child died in Dr. Mark when taken out. His wife said she <lb/>
laudanum and thinks <lb/>
perhaps he drank it. He walked <lb/>
Mrs. Susan Hardy, wife of Mr. Mr. yes- <lb/>
Jesse Hardy, was in the field Monday Ml, was a <lb/>
with her husband, and was taken <lb/>
with something like vertigo. She <lb/>
had to carried to the house on , <lb/>
a ti, . most charmingly <lb/>
a vehicle. The doctor was sent for <lb/>
and before his arrival she expired. <lb/>
Mrs. Hardy was the daughter of the <lb/>
late Mr. Frank Harris, who was <lb/>
drowned a few years ago by jumping <lb/>
in a well. She and her <lb/>
were some of the most substantial <lb/>
citizens of Swift Creek township, and <lb/>
raised a large family of industrious <lb/>
children. We deeply <lb/>
with the bereaved. <lb/>
Mrs. Alfred Forbes, of Kings X <lb/>
Roads is visiting in town. <lb/>
Little Bet daughter of Dr. <lb/>
Dixon fell from her father's porch <lb/>
banister and broke her collar bone <lb/>
last Thursday. <lb/>
Owing to certain federal laws we <lb/>
will not open the clock any more, <lb/>
but have a plenty of bargains to give <lb/>
the people. J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
In a few more weeks it will be <lb/>
time for the annual election of <lb/>
and mayor, to rule and gov- <lb/>
the town for the ensuing year, <lb/>
and as a people whether in sympathy <lb/>
with the bond issue or not, we can- <lb/>
not afford to cherish a sentiment that <lb/>
would not be in accord with morality, <lb/>
education, and good government. The <lb/>
ensuing year will be one of even <lb/>
greater responsibility than ever be- <lb/>
fore, in the history of our town, and <lb/>
we hope that no one will allow pet- <lb/>
differences to control their act- <lb/>
ions, but elect men who, like our <lb/>
present board have done, will <lb/>
a good school of the people, by <lb/>
the people and for the people, that <lb/>
shall never perish from the earth. <lb/>
Messrs. W. F. Hart and Edward <lb/>
Garris left Wednesday for Morehead <lb/>
City on a prospecting tour. <lb/>
Miss Velma Harrington of Kinston, <lb/>
is in town working in the Wilson <lb/>
Times contest for a scholar ship at <lb/>
Atlantic Christian College. <lb/>
Prof. M. C. S. Nobles, of the State <lb/>
University, will deliver the address <lb/>
at the closing of the graded school <lb/>
Some of our farmers are through <lb/>
planting cotton, and ready to set to- <lb/>
Mr. Jesse T. Hart, sold several <lb/>
bales of cotton on this market Fri- <lb/>
day at the handsome price of -2 <lb/>
cents per pound, lot through. <lb/>
The skating rink closed for the sea- <lb/>
son Friday night with a pig chase. <lb/>
The town authorities are having <lb/>
some much needed work done and <lb/>
still there are some other repairs <lb/>
that would as great blessing. <lb/>
Mr. Roy Venters was a visitor hen- <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
Mr. j. f. made a trip to <lb/>
Maple Cypress Thursday an his wheel <lb/>
Mr. Jesse C. Wilson, who lived <lb/>
with Mr. Jerome near <lb/>
The young men Ayden enter- <lb/>
on Raster <lb/>
Monday by giving a launching party <lb/>
down the river. The follow- <lb/>
couples were fortunate enough <lb/>
to enjoy the <lb/>
Miss Davis with Mr. H. L. Koontz. <lb/>
Miss Dawson with Mr. V. L. lie- <lb/>
Call. <lb/>
Miss Powell with Mr. S. F. Noble. <lb/>
Miss Nichols with Mr. Allen Cannon <lb/>
Miss Richmond with Mr. Dixie Can- <lb/>
non. <lb/>
Miss Berry with Mr. L. E. Turnage <lb/>
Miss Lawrence with Mr. W. A. <lb/>
Miss Bessie Lawrence with Mr. E. <lb/>
J. Gardner. <lb/>
Miss Gaddy with Mr. R. L. Turn- <lb/>
age. <lb/>
Miss Edwards with Mr. D. R. <lb/>
Miss Bland with Mr. H. E. West. <lb/>
Dr. Mrs. M. M. Saul <lb/>
About nine o'clock the party left <lb/>
Ayden in buggies for a drive of eight <lb/>
miles to Grifton, where the launch <lb/>
awaited them. After a beautiful <lb/>
sail of fifteen miles down the river, <lb/>
the seine beach was reached and all <lb/>
landed to enjoy a fish fry. <lb/>
Rowing and fishing added much to <lb/>
the pleasure of the day. At a late <lb/>
hour the launch set sail for the home- <lb/>
ward trip, and tired but happy party <lb/>
voted the young men most delightful <lb/>
hosts. <lb/>
to 1-2 per cent on each dollar free. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Mrs. Tucker, of Kinston, is visit- <lb/>
her brother, Mr. W. S. Blount. <lb/>
Rev. Frances Joyner, of Littleton, <lb/>
was here to see his aunt, Mrs. <lb/>
Tucker. <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Bridgers, of Bath, wife <lb/>
of our former Methodist pastor, is <lb/>
spending a few days here. <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Jones has sold his inter- <lb/>
est in Pitch Kettle seine to Mr. W. B. <lb/>
Dennis, so the firm is now Humbler <lb/>
Dennis, who will continue to catch <lb/>
and sell fish as before. <lb/>
There will no doubt be lots of dogs <lb/>
in Pitt county after May the 1st with <lb/>
neither home nor master. <lb/>
Just received a car of building <lb/>
Lime and a car of R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
Program of the <lb/>
Union meeting to be held with the <lb/>
church at Ayden, N. C, April <lb/>
and <lb/>
Friday <lb/>
p. Conference. <lb/>
p. Service. <lb/>
p. E. Ste- <lb/>
Wake Forest, N. C. <lb/>
and adjournment. <lb/>
Saturday <lb/>
a. Meeting. <lb/>
a. Teaching of the <lb/>
Scriptures on Church H. <lb/>
E. Brinson, Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
a. in <lb/>
In the Local C. Nye, <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. In Missionary <lb/>
A. Adams, Winterville <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
a. Needs of Our <lb/>
A. G. Cox, Winterville; <lb/>
G. T. Watkins, Goldsboro; J. Abner <lb/>
Snow. C. E. Stephens, <lb/>
Wake Forest. <lb/>
p. of <lb/>
Miscellaneous Business and Ad- <lb/>
p. Service. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
Who is to Do C. New <lb/>
Bern; How is it to be <lb/>
A. Snow, LaGrange; Our <lb/>
G. T. Watkins, Goldsboro. <lb/>
p. Education. <lb/>
p. Service. <lb/>
p. Who we <lb/>
M. Parrott, Kinston; What <lb/>
we stand Upchurch, <lb/>
Kinston. <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
p. Service. <lb/>
a. m Sunday School Service. <lb/>
a. T. <lb/>
Watkins, Goldsboro. <lb/>
p. School Round Ta- <lb/>
W. <lb/>
p. Missions. <lb/>
C. Upchurch. The Speak- <lb/>
will use a <lb/>
Anyone who will take company <lb/>
please report to, <lb/>
MRS. M. M. SAULS <lb/>
MISS DAISY <lb/>
Committee on entertainment. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Machinists Strike. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New York, April of <lb/>
the Machinists Association announce <lb/>
that they will strike tonight at mid- <lb/>
night for an 8-hour day in Greater <lb/>
New York and Hudson county, New <lb/>
Jersey. men are affected. <lb/>
NEW LINE GOODS AND <lb/>
silks; new styles at J. R. J. o.<lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb/>
in the Slate of North Carolina, at the close of business, March 1911. <lb/>
Ayden, April B. D. For- <lb/>
rest and Theodore Cox, of Winterville, <lb/>
were in town Monday. <lb/>
Mrs. A. F. and children <lb/>
of Raleigh are visiting her brother, <lb/>
Mr. G. F. Cooper. <lb/>
Mrs. Arthur Anderson and child- <lb/>
of spent Saturday <lb/>
and Sunday visiting relatives and <lb/>
friends in Ghent and returned home <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Mr. Edwin Tripp, who left a few <lb/>
days ago for a tour through South <lb/>
Carolina, returning last week, is look- <lb/>
much refreshed after visiting the <lb/>
rice regions. <lb/>
Mr. Thomas I. Moore, who left <lb/>
here in February for Florida and <lb/>
other southern parts, returned last <lb/>
Friday. The boys know a good place <lb/>
when they have tried It. <lb/>
Mr. J. J. chief engineer of <lb/>
Spier Edwards, Ridge Spring, <lb/>
broke his arm in a way. <lb/>
While putting fuel in the furnace, <lb/>
upon closing the door his arm come <lb/>
in contact with the latch in such a <lb/>
manner as to break it near the <lb/>
wrist. <lb/>
We have discontinued the clock <lb/>
opening but we have all kinds of bar- <lb/>
gains and will give you a ticket with <lb/>
each purchase which will entitle you <lb/>
Loans and 70,097.28 <lb/>
Overdrafts. <lb/>
Banking house, furniture <lb/>
and fixtures. 831.09 <lb/>
Due from banks and <lb/>
hankers . 55,654.52 <lb/>
Cash items. 100.00 <lb/>
Gold coin. 20.00 <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin currency 2,373.18 <lb/>
National bank notes and <lb/>
other U. S. notes. 2,552.00 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid 25,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund. 15,625.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, less cur <lb/>
rent expenses and taxes <lb/>
4,736.94 <lb/>
Deposits subject to check. 57,417.90 <lb/>
Savings deposits. 28,859.32<lb/>
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, JR. Smith cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that- <lb/>
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
c, , J- R- SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before 14th day of January 1911 <lb/>
STANCILL HODGES, <lb/>
k. h. My commission expires March 1911 <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
notice <lb/>
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fail goods which <lb/>
we now have. We have taken great care In buying this year and we <lb/>
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Gingham, No- <lb/>
Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in <lb/>
Dry Store. <lb/>
Come let us show you. <lb/>
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
SOME FIGURES BAD ROADS. <lb/>
Showing What is Lost and <lb/>
Could be <lb/>
What <lb/>
Lecturing in recently, M. <lb/>
. Eldridge, of the United States <lb/>
of agriculture, gave the <lb/>
Tennesseans some surprising figures <lb/>
is to the cost of bad roads. He <lb/>
a macadam road one horse <lb/>
can draw three times as much as on <lb/>
is considered a good earthen <lb/>
It is estimated an average <lb/>
horse will exert a pressure <lb/>
his collar all day long <lb/>
to pounds. On the <lb/>
basis he will draw on a good <lb/>
clay road ton, gravel road 2-3 <lb/>
macadam 3-4, and brick <lb/>
Thus one horse on a good <lb/>
brick road may haul five times as <lb/>
much as on a good clay road. It is <lb/>
by the department that <lb/>
total cost of hauling the crops <lb/>
Tennessee during 1910 was, <lb/>
based on the average cost <lb/>
hauling on ordinary roads of <lb/>
from to cents per ton per mile. <lb/>
average cost of hauling in good <lb/>
sections is from to cents <lb/>
mile. Thus, if good roads had <lb/>
j predominated might have <lb/>
saved. <lb/>
is further estimated that <lb/>
Ito per cent of the roads in each <lb/>
carry from to per cent <lb/>
of; the traffic. Twenty per cent of <lb/>
roads in Tennessee amounts to <lb/>
miles. Of this number <lb/>
I miles are already improved, leaving <lb/>
miles yet to be worked on. <lb/>
This number at per mile <lb/>
would make an expenditure of <lb/>
and give the entire state ex- <lb/>
roads. Since it has been <lb/>
shown in one year would <lb/>
have been saved by good roads, a <lb/>
cf five <lb/>
would be sufficient to bring the mile- <lb/>
age of improved roads up to per <lb/>
I cent <lb/>
increased value of farm lands <lb/>
I due to improved roads is estimated <lb/>
at from to per acre. It is es- <lb/>
by the department that there <lb/>
are acres of farm lands <lb/>
in this state, and the estimated in- <lb/>
creased value at per acre would <lb/>
make <lb/>
census returns show that <lb/>
thirty-five counties in Tennessee de- <lb/>
creased in population Nine- <lb/>
i teen of these counties decreased <lb/>
and nineteen other counties in- <lb/>
creased It is interesting to <lb/>
note that in the counties which <lb/>
showed a decrease the percentage of <lb/>
roads-, improved was 1.3 per cent <lb/>
and in the counties which increased <lb/>
the percentage of improved roads <lb/>
was per cent. Twenty-seven <lb/>
counties in the state have no <lb/>
proved roads and thirty-five counties <lb/>
have less than per cent improved <lb/>
highways. <lb/>
These figures should be studied. <lb/>
The people should realize how mil- <lb/>
lions of dollars are being lost every <lb/>
year by bad roads. <lb/>
The weak, timorous beings who <lb/>
are frightened out of their wits at <lb/>
the cost of good roads should quietly <lb/>
study the figures given by Mr. <lb/>
Eldridge. The statements made by <lb/>
Mr. Eldridge are as applicable to <lb/>
North Carolina as to Tennessee. <lb/>
Asheboro Courier. <lb/>
The Important Peanut. <lb/>
For long centuries the symbol of <lb/>
insignificance, the peanut is finally <lb/>
coming into its own. Where once <lb/>
it was sold only by <lb/>
and eaten from bleachers, from lofts, <lb/>
it is now the basis of large <lb/>
interests and enters the market <lb/>
in a variety of substantial food pro- <lb/>
ducts. In commerce, as well as in <lb/>
agriculture, its importance is rapidly <lb/>
increasing. <lb/>
This subject, which is of particular <lb/>
interest to Georgia and other south- <lb/>
states has recently attracted the <lb/>
attention of the United States bureau <lb/>
of plant industry. Mr. William A. <lb/>
Taylor, who has distinguished, himself <lb/>
in that department of the government <lb/>
has prepared a special bulletin in <lb/>
which he points out the varied values <lb/>
of the peanut and the profits that <lb/>
lie in its cultivation. <lb/>
Among the values he notes are the <lb/>
enrichment of the pea vines to the <lb/>
soil where they grow, their numerous <lb/>
by-products, used in making feeds <lb/>
for farm and dairy and the <lb/>
of peanut oil. <lb/>
The recent invention of a machine <lb/>
for harvesting peanuts has made it <lb/>
possible to retain in the soil a. great <lb/>
portion of the nitrogen they <lb/>
thus increasing their value as <lb/>
a fertilizer. This one element, of <lb/>
which the plant is such a famous <lb/>
treasury, has a fertilizing value rang- <lb/>
from three to eight dollars an <lb/>
acre. <lb/>
When mixed with broken peas, the <lb/>
hulls of the peanut make an <lb/>
good feed for stock. Even <lb/>
the waste products may thus be <lb/>
utilized to advantage. <lb/>
The popularity of peanut butter is <lb/>
well known. It is in speaking of <lb/>
the oil, however, that Mr. Taylor's <lb/>
comment is most interesting. This <lb/>
he classes commercially with olive <lb/>
and cotton seed <lb/>
The greater portion of the peanut <lb/>
oil, he says, is now manufactured at <lb/>
Marseilles, France, from peanuts that <lb/>
are bought very cheaply along the <lb/>
coast regions of Africa and trans- <lb/>
ported by ships as return cargo. With <lb/>
a coming shortage of cotton seed <lb/>
from which to manufacture oil in this <lb/>
country, there is a great possibility <lb/>
of building up a peanut oil industry <lb/>
throughout the cotton belt of the <lb/>
southern states. There are thous- <lb/>
ands of acres of land now lying idle <lb/>
that will produce fairly good crops <lb/>
of cotton seed and peanuts for the <lb/>
of oil, it would be possible <lb/>
to keep the existing oil mills of the <lb/>
south running at a profit to both the <lb/>
farmer and mill owners. <lb/>
In these last remarks there is a <lb/>
wealth of practical suggestion that <lb/>
southern planters may well consider. <lb/>
a virtual nonentity, the peanut <lb/>
has become a product of real <lb/>
to industry and agriculture. <lb/>
The value of the crop in this country <lb/>
last year reached far into the mil- <lb/>
lions. Its cultivation is well worth <lb/>
the farmer's Journal <lb/>
TREE TO MARK HANGING. <lb/>
Germans Will Plant Oak in Memory <lb/>
of Colonial Governor. <lb/>
Near the statute of Nathan Hale, in <lb/>
City Hall Park, there will be planted <lb/>
next Sunday an oak tree that has <lb/>
been from t, Germany, j <lb/>
to commemorate the death of Jacob i <lb/>
a German, who declared him- <lb/>
self lieutenant governor of New Am- <lb/>
under William and Mary, <lb/>
and who was hanged as a traitor in <lb/>
by Governor the Eng- <lb/>
bearing orders to take con- <lb/>
of colonial New York. The <lb/>
exercises will be conducted by the <lb/>
United German Societies of this city. <lb/>
which have obtained permission from j <lb/>
the city authorities to plant the tree. <lb/>
Jacob has been lauded as a <lb/>
martyr and condemned as a tyrant <lb/>
by those who have made exhaustive <lb/>
studies of colonial history. He came <lb/>
to this country from Frankfort in <lb/>
1660 as a soldier in the service of the <lb/>
Dutch West India Company. He <lb/>
early took a leading part in the dis- <lb/>
of the time and was con- <lb/>
in the rebellion against the <lb/>
rule of Lieutenant Governor <lb/>
He took a prominent part in <lb/>
seizure of the government in the <lb/>
name of William and Mary in 1689 <lb/>
and was appointed captain of the <lb/>
fort here by the leading com- <lb/>
of safety. This was followed <lb/>
almost immediately by his appoint- <lb/>
as commander-in-chief, and <lb/>
within the year he declared himself <lb/>
lieutenant governor. <lb/>
He and his son-in-law, Jacob Mil- <lb/>
were tried for high treason <lb/>
and were found guilty by Governor <lb/>
They were hanged on <lb/>
May 1691, at what is now the in- <lb/>
of Park Row and Frank- <lb/>
fort York Herald. <lb/>
SEE J. R. J. G. FOR LA- <lb/>
and muslin under- <lb/>
wear; best grades at lowest prices. <lb/>
A young man never cultivates a <lb/>
Platonic affection for a girl if she <lb/>
has money. <lb/>
STYLES IN <lb/>
and oxfords; all <lb/>
leathers, just arrived. J. It. J. G.<lb/>
FOR RENT DWELLING HOUSE <lb/>
beyond the A. C. L. depot at 8.33 1-3 <lb/>
per month; and one near business <lb/>
section per month. Apply to W. <lb/>
F. Evans.<lb/>
DON'T SUFFER WITH <lb/>
Neuralgia <lb/>
when a cent bottle of Noah's <lb/>
Liniment is guaranteed to drive <lb/>
this terror money re- <lb/>
funded. At the first twinge, <lb/>
applied as directed, Noah's <lb/>
Liniment will give immediate <lb/>
and effectual relief. It quiets <lb/>
the nerves and scatters the con- <lb/>
penetrates and requires <lb/>
very little rubbing. <lb/>
THE MOTHER'S PROBLEM <lb/>
Of Raising Strong, Healthy Girls. <lb/>
A serious problem which presents it- <lb/>
self to every mother with girls to raise, <lb/>
in these days. of school <lb/>
life, the hurry and routine of every-day <lb/>
duties, the artificial environment of <lb/>
modern civilization, make it more <lb/>
difficult to raise strong, healthy girls <lb/>
than ever is the history of the world. <lb/>
Boys raise themselves. Give them <lb/>
give them liberty, and they will <lb/>
grow up healthy without much <lb/>
worrying. But the girls present a <lb/>
problem. <lb/>
How many mothers there are who are <lb/>
worrying about their daughters. <lb/>
puny girls, with poor, capricious <lb/>
appetites, bloodless, listless, a constant <lb/>
anxiety to the mother. How shall she <lb/>
solve her problem To whom shall she <lb/>
for help Each case is more or <lb/>
less a study by itself, and cannot be <lb/>
solved by any general rule. <lb/>
This is the way one mother solved the <lb/>
problem. Prescott <lb/>
St. Louis, Mo., in a letter to Dr. <lb/>
Hartman, daughter Alice, <lb/>
four years of age, was a puny, sickly, <lb/>
ailing child since was born. I was <lb/>
always doctoring her. When we com- <lb/>
to use grew strong <lb/>
and <lb/>
Another mother, Mrs. Martha Moss, <lb/>
It. F. D. Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, <lb/>
little eight-year-old girl <lb/>
had a bad cough, and was in a general <lb/>
run-down <lb/>
doctors, who could give the child no re- <lb/>
lief, and the mother no encouragement. <lb/>
Finally, she got a bottle of <lb/>
and commenced giving it to the child, <lb/>
and it proved to be Just what she <lb/>
needed. When she commenced taking <lb/>
the child had to be carried. <lb/>
Now the mother says she is playing <lb/>
around all the time. <lb/>
Her closing words have <lb/>
done a great deal for her. She is the <lb/>
only girl we have, and It meant lots to <lb/>
us to have her <lb/>
are samples of many letters <lb/>
which Dr. Hartman Is receiving, com- <lb/>
straight from the hearts of loving <lb/>
mothers. While the different schools <lb/>
of medicine are bickering and differing <lb/>
as to theories and remedies, <lb/>
goes right steadily on giving permanent <lb/>
relief. After all, it is cures that the <lb/>
people want. Theories are little <lb/>
account. <lb/>
FARM FOR SALE LOCATED BE- <lb/>
tween Ayden and Winterville, con- <lb/>
acres, acres cleared; has <lb/>
room dwelling house, room ten- <lb/>
ant house, tobacco barns and pack <lb/>
house, stables and all necessary out <lb/>
buildings. Good farming land. Terms <lb/>
reasonable. J. S. James, Winter- <lb/>
ville, N. C, R. F. D. <lb/>
Liniment la the best remedy for <lb/>
Rheumatism, Sciatica, Back, Still <lb/>
Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, <lb/>
Strains, Sprains, Cuts, <lb/>
Braises, Colic, Cramps, <lb/>
Neuralgia, Toothache, <lb/>
and all Nerve, and <lb/>
Muscle Aches and Pains. <lb/>
Tho genuine has Noah's <lb/>
Ark on every <lb/>
and looks like cut, <lb/>
but has RED band on <lb/>
front of and <lb/>
ways in RED ink. Bo- <lb/>
of Imitations. <lb/>
Largo bottle, cents, <lb/>
and sold by all dealers In <lb/>
medicine. Guaranteed <lb/>
or money refunded by <lb/>
Noah Remedy Co., Inc., <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
Animal Husbandry and Soil Fertility. <lb/>
When these soil-improving crops <lb/>
are grown, or any other kind of for- <lb/>
age, they may he either turned down <lb/>
or fed to farm animals, and the ma- <lb/>
returned to the land in lieu <lb/>
thereof. Expediency must decide <lb/>
which is the better plan, in each case <lb/>
but a good general rule <lb/>
plow under any crops that can be <lb/>
led <lb/>
The soil-improving crops grown <lb/>
OH a very poor, land, may per- <lb/>
haps be turned under to <lb/>
and when not enough stock is kept <lb/>
to consume the forage, they might <lb/>
better be turned under than cut and <lb/>
sold away from the farm. But it is <lb/>
Impossible to escape the logic that <lb/>
some type of animal husbandry is <lb/>
an indispensable adjunct to the most <lb/>
economical and successful improve- <lb/>
of most soils, at least in gen- <lb/>
oral farming. There are special lines <lb/>
of farming, as the truck and fruit <lb/>
Industries, In connection with which <lb/>
the keeping of stock may be <lb/>
even though fruit and truck <lb/>
soils greatly by ma- <lb/>
but the great majority of the <lb/>
farms should keep a sufficient <lb/>
of some kind of stock to consume <lb/>
the roughage grown. There is the <lb/>
concentrated wisdom of centuries of <lb/>
in the old Flemish <lb/>
grass, more cattle; more cat- <lb/>
more manure; more manure, <lb/>
more W. Fletcher, in Pro- <lb/>
Farmer.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0008" n="8"/>
<p>
Home and The <lb/>
raising <lb/>
Farmers Should More Gen <lb/>
in it <lb/>
A movement has been started <lb/>
western North Carolina which should <lb/>
become statewide. It has for its ob- <lb/>
the promotion of poultry <lb/>
particularly among farmers. <lb/>
Special effort is being made to in- <lb/>
young ladies on the farm in <lb/>
poultry culture, and not with- <lb/>
out success, if we may judge from <lb/>
reports from various sections of the <lb/>
mountains. From Asheville we hear <lb/>
that many girls in that territory are <lb/>
today making neat turns each month <lb/>
from poultry culture, and there <lb/>
pears to be an increasing Interest in <lb/>
the subject. <lb/>
This is a subject, or rather a <lb/>
source of revenue, which his, for <lb/>
some reason, know not what, re- <lb/>
too little attention la North <lb/>
Carolina. Other states have <lb/>
ed the value of poultry raising and <lb/>
are making millions of dollars annual- <lb/>
from this source. Especially is <lb/>
Georgia stirred up, and each of the <lb/>
three big daily papers in Atlanta <lb/>
have special departments, edited by <lb/>
experts, which are highly successful. <lb/>
The numerous big poultry shows <lb/>
held throughout that state in the fall <lb/>
have done much to accentuate inter- <lb/>
est in the subject, and the constant <lb/>
preachments by the daily papers have <lb/>
had their influence. The result is that <lb/>
the chick farm; is unusual <lb/>
in the empire state, and on almost <lb/>
every farm may be found a healthy <lb/>
lot of fancy chicks. <lb/>
Not alone is field open to the <lb/>
farmer's daughter, but to city folks <lb/>
as well. The fact has been demon- <lb/>
time and again that ever. In <lb/>
the crowded city, with proper care <lb/>
and attention poultry may be raised <lb/>
with profit. <lb/>
The business is no longer looked <lb/>
upon as a sort of pastime, but is now <lb/>
recognized as a means of large profit. <lb/>
During the winter months eggs run <lb/>
up as high as cents the down, <lb/>
and chickens bring double that <lb/>
amount at times of the year. The <lb/>
tendency is to raise fancy stock <lb/>
the kind that will lay during the <lb/>
winter months when eggs and chicks <lb/>
are high. <lb/>
The News would love to sec more <lb/>
interest taken in the subject hi <lb/>
county and in the city. <lb/>
Mr. Drown, who edits the <lb/>
poultry department of the Atlanta <lb/>
Journal, offered an article yesterday <lb/>
which should read carefully. In <lb/>
a small California town over one <lb/>
and one half million dollars are de- <lb/>
rived annually from egg production. <lb/>
Mr. Brown thinks that what was done <lb/>
in California can be repeated in <lb/>
and we may add that North <lb/>
Carolina has an equally good chance <lb/>
with the western state. Read this and <lb/>
substitute the name North Carolina <lb/>
where he mentions <lb/>
is a plan on foot now to <lb/>
establish an incubator factory at <lb/>
Smyrna the coming winter, which <lb/>
will keep thousands of dollars in <lb/>
Georgia, and make employment for <lb/>
many high class laborers, especially <lb/>
good cabinet makers. This will, of <lb/>
course, eventually advertise this lo- <lb/>
more than anything that could <lb/>
possibly be in the poultry line, <lb/>
as the machines will be scattered <lb/>
over the entire world. <lb/>
land is, at present, cheap <lb/>
but is fast increasing In value. It <lb/>
takes only a small amount to keep a <lb/>
large number of fowls, and many <lb/>
a workingman can add much to his <lb/>
income, by the efforts of his family <lb/>
assistance, by <lb/>
on bis home lot. <lb/>
; , of every kind, es- <lb/>
and eggs are becoming <lb/>
her and every year and <lb/>
we never see these products <lb/>
. gain that could easily be <lb/>
at home, so predict for <lb/>
B . In the course of th u I <lb/>
few years, a great future. It will only <lb/>
take to d p Its <lb/>
as it did <lb/>
one and a quarter million <lb/>
dollars per year Is brought into the <lb/>
small town of Cal., for eggs <lb/>
alone to say nothing of the poultry <lb/>
that is marketed. Most of the <lb/>
ants there have from one to five <lb/>
acres of land. They have nice <lb/>
and good gardens. They live <lb/>
at home and board at the place, <lb/>
and arc perfectly satisfied with the <lb/>
results they are now obtaining from <lb/>
their egg output, and hope soon <lb/>
to see the day come Smyrna <lb/>
can be placed i-i the same class with <lb/>
as to products and rank <lb/>
as a <lb/>
is no reason why we should <lb/>
not have a good packing plant for <lb/>
cold storage located In <lb/>
all of small could send <lb/>
their output, or carry even a small <lb/>
amount and know that they can <lb/>
readily turn it into cash. This plant, <lb/>
y having a great number get- <lb/>
ting a few from various <lb/>
could assort, classify and pack the <lb/>
best products In such a way as they <lb/>
could be shipped to the best market <lb/>
that would pay the fanciest prices for <lb/>
the goods as classed. We are not de- <lb/>
pendent upon alone, as the <lb/>
Florida markets and also eastern <lb/>
markets are eager and arc willing to <lb/>
pay profitable prices for anything In <lb/>
this line that can possibly be <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
do not believe that, today, on a <lb/>
week's notice any customer in <lb/>
could possibly buy from a <lb/>
one thousand table eggs, or one <lb/>
hundred dressed <lb/>
broilers fryers. These orders are <lb/>
now going to Tenn., and <lb/>
some of the western packers. The <lb/>
Held is open In Georgia, and <lb/>
Why should let <lb/>
this good opportunity pass out of our <lb/>
hands If others can make it profit- <lb/>
able, there are men in Georgia who <lb/>
certainly can do as well, and I hope <lb/>
that Smyrna or some other live town <lb/>
near Atlanta will get busy on the <lb/>
linen above <lb/>
Hi<lb/>
SI <lb/>
Hill <lb/>
have cm agent in Green- <lb/>
ville to do a kinds of <lb/>
in making and cleaning <lb/>
work <lb/>
Mat- <lb/>
en <lb/>
space <lb/>
you <lb/>
learn something to your will <lb/>
interest. <lb/>
The <lb/>
stress an <lb/>
leaning Company<lb/>
V. . t-. ct <lb/>
A Sherlock Holmes Thriller, <lb/>
The Adventure of the Solitary Cy- <lb/>
is the title of a New Sherlock <lb/>
Holmes Detective story by Sir A. <lb/>
Conan Doyle, which will be given <lb/>
free in booklet form with next Sun- <lb/>
day's New York World. These are <lb/>
the Stories entitled Return of <lb/>
Sherlock which recently set <lb/>
all Europe agog. No one since Ga- <lb/>
and Poe, has Conan <lb/>
Doyle. These are great stories. A <lb/>
new one each Sunday. <lb/>
Never Got of Work. <lb/>
The busiest little things ever made <lb/>
arc Dr. New Life Pills. Every <lb/>
is a sugar coated of <lb/>
health, that changes weakness into <lb/>
strength, languor into energy, brain <lb/>
fag Into mental power; curing <lb/>
headache, chills, <lb/>
malaria. cents at all drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
Every time a boy is born, two new <lb/>
ways of having fun are mention- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Rea <lb/>
Estate<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.<lb/>
Genera Merchandise <lb/>
Buyer of am Produce <lb/>
FIVE POINTS, GREENVILLE, N <lb/>
Ear <lb/>
Tin She Work, ad <lb/>
Flues in Season, <lb/>
I V- If bY <lb/>
It <lb/>
H. d <lb/>
i.-<lb/>
T. M FORD'S <lb/>
STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY<lb/>
V. , <lb/>
The Crop and The Soil. <lb/>
I believe that there are more fail- <lb/>
crops on the farms of <lb/>
the South due to failure of the <lb/>
farmer to adapt the crop to the soil <lb/>
best fitted for it than to any other <lb/>
direct cause. It is Inviting certain <lb/>
failure to plant corn on land that <lb/>
you will not produce more <lb/>
than or bushels, when this same <lb/>
land would easily produce over a <lb/>
ton of pea hay. Lands that have re- <lb/>
had heavy manuring, or that <lb/>
have had a crop of peas turned <lb/>
will really produce better <lb/>
the first year than cotton. So a l <lb/>
tie planning this way will pay <lb/>
D. Barrow, in Progress <lb/>
Farmer. <lb/>
Dr. Hyatt <lb/>
Dr. II. O. Hyatt will be in <lb/>
ville at Hotel Bertha May 1st <lb/>
2nd, Monday and Tuesday for t; <lb/>
purpose of treating diseases of t- <lb/>
eye and fitting glasses. <lb/>
INGENIOUS WORK. <lb/>
the Slate <lb/>
ATTEMPTS TO REPAY DEBT. <lb/>
on <lb/>
in <lb/>
Done J A Convict on <lb/>
Fan. <lb/>
Today Mr. J. E. Nichols, who is <lb/>
one of the guards at the Caledonia <lb/>
farm, here on a brief visit to <lb/>
his old home, showed us a bit of in- <lb/>
work that was done by one <lb/>
of the convicts on the farm. It is a <lb/>
miniature spade and <lb/>
all put together inside of a <lb/>
bottle, and then a stopper put in the <lb/>
bottle and The tools inside <lb/>
the bottle are representative of those <lb/>
the convicts use in building the dikes <lb/>
on the The work was done by <lb/>
George a convict who has <lb/>
served terms in Georgia for safe <lb/>
cracking and post office robberies and <lb/>
who was caught committing similar <lb/>
offenses in this state. <lb/>
Old <lb/>
Rescue. <lb/>
DISCUSSED. <lb/>
I'm <lb/>
The Subject Next Sunday Will <lb/>
Business Honesty. <lb/>
The meeting of the Men's Prayer <lb/>
League in the Christian church, Sun- <lb/>
day afternoon, had for <lb/>
discussion, and the leaders Messrs. <lb/>
D. C. Beach, W. A. and A. B. <lb/>
Ellington made good talks on the sub- <lb/>
The talebearer stirs up mis- <lb/>
chief, and he who peddles it is as <lb/>
guilty as the one who starts it. <lb/>
others beside the leaders also <lb/>
made short talks. <lb/>
Another practical subject will be <lb/>
discussed next Sunday afternoon <lb/>
when the meeting will be held in the <lb/>
Baptist church. The topic then will <lb/>
be Text, part of <lb/>
Rom. and Leaders, <lb/>
Messrs. G. E. Harris, T. R. Moore and <lb/>
F. M. Wooten. There are plenty of <lb/>
mo who ought to hear this subject <lb/>
discussed, but some will not go out <lb/>
next Sunday through fear that their <lb/>
will be stepped <lb/>
Hunting <lb/>
There are too many able bodied <lb/>
young men in this age who are going <lb/>
about the country looking for <lb/>
They regard honest labor <lb/>
With scorn and it unworthy of <lb/>
a What they want is an <lb/>
easy way to gain a support and live <lb/>
in high style by the sweat of the other <lb/>
fellow's brow. One of the first things <lb/>
they want to know when applying for <lb/>
a position is the very least amount <lb/>
of the work can possibly turn off and <lb/>
at the same time manage to hold the <lb/>
job. All lines of business and work <lb/>
are move or less encumbered with <lb/>
such fellows, and earnest, honest <lb/>
young men who are looking for places <lb/>
in which they may find an <lb/>
to prove their real worth are <lb/>
crowded out by them. There <lb/>
la not much good of any sort in the <lb/>
fellow who scorns or looks down up- <lb/>
on honest work or who is seeking <lb/>
an easy Cold Leaf. <lb/>
New York, April <lb/>
Osborne today kept his promise to <lb/>
Osborne, a centenarian, <lb/>
to defend boy, <lb/>
trial for his life charged with <lb/>
Osborne is a <lb/>
and was a slave for young <lb/>
Jim's father on a plantation near <lb/>
Charlotte, N. C. <lb/>
Forty-one years ago <lb/>
staying with his old master through <lb/>
the turmoil of reconstruction, jump- <lb/>
ed into a stream and saved 11-year- <lb/>
old from drowning, and <lb/>
after a span of years, <lb/>
grown to be a prominent New York <lb/>
lawyer and former assistant district <lb/>
attorney of New York, took up task <lb/>
of trying to save bis son. <lb/>
Mr. Osborne recounted some of this <lb/>
story before Judge in court to- <lb/>
when he appeared to defend Ed- <lb/>
ward Osborne, on trial for the murder <lb/>
of Louis Spicer, another Be- <lb/>
side the lawyer sat white- <lb/>
haired and venerable listening with <lb/>
perfect confidence to the white law- <lb/>
who feelingly told of the debt he <lb/>
owed the old man. <lb/>
had seventeen children. <lb/>
is the baby. He is years <lb/>
old now. Some years ago the old man <lb/>
came North with him. Edward Os- <lb/>
borne fell in with a bad crowd. <lb/>
One night half a year ago he became <lb/>
involved in a fight in a restaurant <lb/>
at Carmine and Bedford streets. <lb/>
Some one stuck a knife in his back <lb/>
and Edward Osborne drew a <lb/>
Louis Spier was shot and killed. <lb/>
client shot in said <lb/>
Mr. James W. Osborne today. <lb/>
as peacemaker, was stabbed <lb/>
and drew his revolver to defend him- <lb/>
self. I owe a debt of gratitude to <lb/>
his father and am here to repay <lb/>
The day was taken up <lb/>
ling a Observer. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
North County. <lb/>
In the Superior the <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
Ange Forest, Town of Win- <lb/>
Joseph Worthington, <lb/>
A G. Cox, W. B. Wing its, <lb/>
L. L. Kittrell, B. Nobles, <lb/>
Louis Cannon. C. L. I <lb/>
v. W. and B. <lb/>
T. Cox, <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
B. W. Tucker, W. L. House, <lb/>
and the Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
Railroad Company. <lb/>
The defendant, W. L. House, above <lb/>
named, will take notice that a <lb/>
proceeding, entitled as above, has <lb/>
been commenced before the clerk <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county, <lb/>
for the purpose of proportioning the <lb/>
cost of opening and maintaining a <lb/>
ditch running through the lands o <lb/>
the above named parties, and drain- <lb/>
same as is provided for in sec- <lb/>
of the of 1905; and <lb/>
the said defendant will further take <lb/>
notice, that he is required to appear <lb/>
at the office of the clerk of the <lb/>
court of Pitt county, in the <lb/>
court house In Greenville, North Car- <lb/>
on the 18th day of April, 1911, <lb/>
and answer or demur to the complaint <lb/>
in said special proceeding, or the <lb/>
will apply to the court for <lb/>
the relief demanded in said com- <lb/>
plaint. <lb/>
This the day of March. 1911. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court <lb/>
or this notice will pi <lb/>
bar of recovery. <lb/>
T. day of March. 1911. <lb/>
MART BL WHITFIELD, <lb/>
Administratrix is George B. <lb/>
. <lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. <lb/>
Under and by virtue of the author- <lb/>
contained In an order of the clerk <lb/>
the court of county <lb/>
I shall expose to public sale to the <lb/>
highest bidder cash.-on Tuesday, <lb/>
April 1911, at o'clock, a. m. in <lb/>
the town of Bethel, N. C, in front of <lb/>
the store door of Robinson, Andrews, <lb/>
. Co., one share of the capital stock <lb/>
of the Bethel Banking ft Trust Co., <lb/>
, i five shares of the capital stock <lb/>
of the Farmers Consolidated Tobacco <lb/>
Company of Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
This the 4th day of April 1911. <lb/>
JOHN MAYO, <lb/>
of E. A. Cherry deceased. <lb/>
f ltd <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having qualified as administrator <lb/>
of Ida Eugene Daniel, late of Pitt <lb/>
county. N. C this is to notify all <lb/>
persons having claims against the <lb/>
of the said deceased to ex- <lb/>
them to the undersigned <lb/>
twelve months from the date of <lb/>
notice, or this notice will he pleaded <lb/>
In bar of their All persons <lb/>
to said estate will please <lb/>
make Immediate payment <lb/>
This the 8th day of April, 1911. <lb/>
T. J. DANIEL, Administrator. <lb/>
F. G. James Son,<lb/>
NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE <lb/>
North County. <lb/>
In the Superior Court. <lb/>
R. L. Smith Co. <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Samuel Edwards. <lb/>
By virtue of an execution directed <lb/>
to the undersigned from the Superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county, in the above en- <lb/>
titled action, I will, on the first <lb/>
Monday in May, 1911, at o'clock, <lb/>
noon, at the court house door, in the <lb/>
county of Pitt, sell to the highest bid- <lb/>
for cash, to satisfy said <lb/>
all the right, title and interest, <lb/>
which the Bald Samuel Edwards, the <lb/>
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND <lb/>
State of North Carolina. <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
K. It. Whitehurst enters and claims <lb/>
the piece or pared of land <lb/>
situated in the county Pitt, Bethel <lb/>
town <lb/>
Beginning at a pine stump on the <lb/>
road near Taylor's mill, running <lb/>
nearly north to the canal, thence with <lb/>
the canal to the big bridge on the <lb/>
road, With the road <lb/>
containing five <lb/>
BOYS HAVE GOOD DEBATE <lb/>
which or less <lb/>
defendant, has in the following de- acres more eM. <lb/>
scribed real estate, Any and all claiming title <lb/>
Situate in the county of Pitt, State to or interest in the above described <lb/>
VISITS Y. W. C. A. <lb/>
And Service Sunday Ev- <lb/>
Miss Clarissa L. Crane, secretary <lb/>
of the Young Woman's Christian As- <lb/>
for the <lb/>
territory, spent Sunday at the Train- <lb/>
School. <lb/>
Her visit and instructive talks were <lb/>
greatly enjoyed and much good will <lb/>
doubtless result from timely ad- <lb/>
vice. She conducted the Sunday <lb/>
services, talking on the <lb/>
of the Individual <lb/>
A solo by Mrs. Parham added great- <lb/>
to the service. <lb/>
Decision of in of the <lb/>
Negative.- <lb/>
Friday night in the graded school <lb/>
auditorium the Henry Grady <lb/>
society had its last debate of the <lb/>
present school term. The query <lb/>
for discussion was That <lb/>
the United States should enter upon <lb/>
the policy of gradually reducing the <lb/>
army and <lb/>
The affirmative was represented by <lb/>
Ferrall Lurch, Ben Taylor, David <lb/>
Moore and Spruill Spain, and the <lb/>
negative by Walter Bruce Warren, <lb/>
Milton Pugh, Adrian Brown and <lb/>
Whichard. <lb/>
The boys all made excellent <lb/>
speeches that did them great credit, <lb/>
and while the judges, Rev. C. M. <lb/>
Rock, Mayor F. If. Wooten and Mr. <lb/>
A. B. Ellington, declared the contest <lb/>
a close one, their decision was in <lb/>
favor of the negative. <lb/>
Four members of the society are <lb/>
in the senior class this year, and as <lb/>
they will graduate from the school <lb/>
at the close of the session, they select- <lb/>
ed Ben Taylor as their spokesman, <lb/>
Who In behalf of the society, present- <lb/>
ed superintendent Smith a handsome <lb/>
shaving set. The presentation <lb/>
speech was truly a splendid one, and <lb/>
superintendent reply in ac- <lb/>
showed much feeling and <lb/>
appreciation. <lb/>
of North Carolina, beginning at a <lb/>
large pine stump, corner of Samuel <lb/>
homestead, and running a <lb/>
southwestern course with the line <lb/>
Samuel Edwards homestead to the <lb/>
run of Creek; thence down <lb/>
the to J. J. Jones line; thence <lb/>
with J. J. line to the road; <lb/>
thence with the road to the beginning, <lb/>
containing by estimation about <lb/>
acres. . <lb/>
One other tract on the east <lb/>
the road, and being all of the land <lb/>
that Samuel Edwards owns on the <lb/>
east side of the road, bounded by the <lb/>
lands of J. J. Jones, homestead <lb/>
Samuel Edwards and others, contain- <lb/>
acres, more or less. <lb/>
This the 30th day of March, 1911. <lb/>
S. I. DUDLEY, <lb/>
Sheriff, Pitt County. <lb/>
and must file with mo their protest <lb/>
In wilting within the next days <lb/>
or they will be barred by law. <lb/>
This April 18th, 1911. <lb/>
K. R. WHITEHURST <lb/>
This 13th, day of April, 1911. <lb/>
W. M. MOORE, <lb/>
Entry taker. <lb/>
4-14 <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county, <lb/>
as administrator of the estate of <lb/>
T. House, deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment to <lb/>
the undersigned; and all persons <lb/>
any claims against said estate <lb/>
are notified to present the same to <lb/>
the undersigned for payment on or <lb/>
before the 1st day of April, or <lb/>
this notice will be pleaded in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This 1st day of April, <lb/>
WILLIAM HOUSE, <lb/>
Administrator of D. T. House. <lb/>
If business and religion will not <lb/>
mix, there may be something wrong <lb/>
with the mixer. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as administratrix of the estate <lb/>
George B. deceased, notice <lb/>
is hereby given to all persons Inch <lb/>
ed to the estate to make Immediate <lb/>
payment to the undersigned; and all <lb/>
persons having claims against the <lb/>
estate are notified to present the <lb/>
same for payment to the undersigned<lb/>
a I <lb/>
Wholesale sad retail Grocer and <lb/>
furniture dealer. Cash paid for <lb/>
Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Barrel, <lb/>
Oak Bedsteads. Mat- <lb/>
etc. Suits, Baby Carriages, <lb/>
Parlor Suits, Tables, <lb/>
lounges Safes, P. and Gall <lb/>
k Ax High Life Tobacco, Key <lb/>
West Cheroots, Henry George CI- <lb/>
Canned Cherries, Peaches, <lb/>
Syrup. Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar <lb/>
Soap, Lye. Magic Food, Mat- <lb/>
Oil Cotton Seed and Hulls, <lb/>
Seeds Oranges, Apples, Nuts. <lb/>
Candles, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb/>
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass. <lb/>
.; d Cakes <lb/>
aid Crackers, Cheese, <lb/>
best Butler, Royal Sewing Mn- <lb/>
numerous goods. <lb/>
and Quantify for cash. <lb/>
hi to pee <lb/>
Phone M.<lb/>
The easiest way of getting even <lb/>
with people is by making them good <lb/>
friends.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018145_0009" n="9"/>
<p>
ft<lb/>
GOD'S PITY FOR THE HEATHEN <lb/>
Jonah to <lb/>
ye. therefore, and all <lb/>
Matt. <lb/>
have long been in- <lb/>
to treat the story of <lb/>
Jonah's experiences in the <lb/>
of the great fish as n sea- <lb/>
man's yarn. Many even <lb/>
laugh at the account of Jonah's <lb/>
as suitable only for the <lb/>
and not for wise, <lb/>
. the Great Teacher <lb/>
refers to Jonah and his experiences in <lb/>
the belly of the great fish, and those <lb/>
who believe the Scriptures will sock <lb/>
no better ground for their faith In the <lb/>
story than this. Nor is Jonah's ac- <lb/>
count without a considerable parallel <lb/>
One of the York journals recent- <lb/>
gave n detailed account, profusely <lb/>
Illustrated, showing how a sailor, <lb/>
overboard, was swallowed by great <lb/>
hut after several <lb/>
hours escaped, his skin made purplish <lb/>
from the action <lb/>
of the digestive <lb/>
fluids of the <lb/>
stomach. <lb/>
So far we <lb/>
know, Jonah's <lb/>
case was the <lb/>
only one in <lb/>
which any one <lb/>
spent parts of <lb/>
three days and <lb/>
nights in the <lb/>
of a fish. <lb/>
True, the throats <lb/>
of the majority shall be <lb/>
of whales seem <lb/>
too small to admit a man. We re- <lb/>
member, however, that they are quite <lb/>
elastic. The great variety is <lb/>
of enormous size and is said to have <lb/>
a throat capable of swallowing a skiff, <lb/>
much larger than n man and less flex- <lb/>
Preaching to the <lb/>
Our special lesson, however, is con- <lb/>
with Jonah's mission to the <lb/>
Jonah's preaching was that <lb/>
within forty days God would destroy <lb/>
Nineveh. But the people, impressed <lb/>
by his message, repented of their sinful <lb/>
course and sought Divine forgiveness. <lb/>
We are, of course, to understand that <lb/>
God knew the end from the beginning <lb/>
that He knew that the <lb/>
would repent and that He would not <lb/>
blot them out within forty days, in ac- <lb/>
with Jonah's preaching. <lb/>
Nineveh did pass away utterly, great <lb/>
city that It was, but not within forty <lb/>
literal days. Possibly the time meant <lb/>
by the Almighty was what is some- <lb/>
times prophetic or symbolical time, a <lb/>
day for a days, forty years. <lb/>
The lesson shows us how much <lb/>
greater Is the compassion of the Al- <lb/>
mighty than that of His sen- <lb/>
uses it only In respect to a or <lb/>
purpose. But, as modern dictionaries <lb/>
show, the word may mean either a <lb/>
ants of human kind. God was pleas- word may mean either a <lb/>
ed to have the turn from of action or a change of <lb/>
sins to hearty repentance. lie pose or God's purposes do not <lb/>
their sins to hearty repentance. He <lb/>
was pleased to grant them an <lb/>
of earthly life. But Jonah was <lb/>
displeased. His argument was. There, <lb/>
God did make a fool of me. He told <lb/>
me that this great city would de- <lb/>
within forty days, and I <lb/>
preached it. But all the while must <lb/>
have known that it would not be de- <lb/>
within forty days. God has <lb/>
brought discredit upon me, and I am <lb/>
now to be regarded as a false prophet. <lb/>
Jonah was more interested in him- <lb/>
self and his own reputation than in <lb/>
the and their interests. The <lb/>
Lord's servants must not do so <lb/>
God Repented of the Evil <lb/>
The query arises in some minds, <lb/>
How can God repent and change Ills <lb/>
mind if He knows the end from the <lb/>
beginning The answer is that the <lb/>
word repent has a wider meaning than <lb/>
la generally appreciated. <lb/>
change. He never repents of them. <lb/>
But He does change His conduct. <lb/>
Thus Israel, His favored people for <lb/>
centuries, was cut off, and God's deal- <lb/>
toward them changed. But God's <lb/>
purposes never changed toward Israel. <lb/>
He foreknew and foretold their <lb/>
of Jesus and his rejection of them, <lb/>
and how later they would be <lb/>
to their own laud and be forgiven <lb/>
and blessed by Messiah. <lb/>
The Lord taught Jonah a re- <lb/>
his sympathy for a gourd, an <lb/>
inanimate thing, and his lack of <lb/>
for the So it Is with <lb/>
many preachers and other. They have <lb/>
sympathy for the flowers, for the birds, <lb/>
for the lower animals, for children and. <lb/>
to some extent, fer all mankind under <lb/>
Men may be brighter than <lb/>
look, but they seldom look it. <lb/>
distresses w <lb/>
the present time. <lb/>
N o v e r t h e less <lb/>
such people <lb/>
sometimes be- <lb/>
come angry at <lb/>
the bare <lb/>
that God <lb/>
does not intend <lb/>
to roast the Nine- <lb/>
Sodomites, <lb/>
or <lb/>
anybody else, to <lb/>
all eternity and <lb/>
that gracious <lb/>
purposes for the <lb/>
world in general <lb/>
will manifested In giving all an op- <lb/>
to attain to human <lb/>
a world-wide Eden and <lb/>
life, if they will hear and obey the <lb/>
Great Head is Jesus <lb/>
and whose members, the elect Church, <lb/>
have been in process of selection and <lb/>
preparation throughout this Gospel Age. <lb/>
THERE ARE TWO CONTESTS. <lb/>
With <lb/>
The repentant of <lb/>
Nineveh. <lb/>
they <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Can Compete In Both <lb/>
Same Acre of Corn. <lb/>
The Reflector has been advised <lb/>
that several of the boys who are in <lb/>
the corn contest in this county have <lb/>
failed to send their names in for <lb/>
the state contest as well as for the <lb/>
county contest. The two contests <lb/>
are entirely separate, but the rules <lb/>
of each are such that the boys can <lb/>
belong to both and compete for the <lb/>
prizes offered, with the same acre <lb/>
of corn, provided they have filled out <lb/>
and returned their application for <lb/>
membership. Application blanks for <lb/>
the state contest, together with a <lb/>
leaflet of rules governing the con- <lb/>
test, can be obtained by writing to <lb/>
Mr. T. B. Parker, Raleigh. N. C. Every <lb/>
boy who has not yet done so, should <lb/>
send his name and one of <lb/>
these blanks. <lb/>
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY ., 1911. <lb/>
Number <lb/>
Pitt County Fair Association-Meeting Held Here <lb/>
A representative meeting of citizens <lb/>
of all sections of the county was held <lb/>
here today, in response to the recent <lb/>
call sent out, to consider the mat- <lb/>
of organizing a county fair as- <lb/>
and hold a county fair next <lb/>
fall. A. J. called the meeting to <lb/>
order and elected chairman, and <lb/>
D. J. Whichard secretary. <lb/>
After some discussion of the <lb/>
fits of holding a county fair and plans <lb/>
for inaugurating it, the chairman on <lb/>
motion, appointed a committee con- <lb/>
of R. L. Little, J. F. Evans, <lb/>
B. M. Lewis, A. G. Cox, L. Joyner, <lb/>
and J. B. Tucker, to retire and for- <lb/>
some plan for organizing, and <lb/>
report back to the meeting <lb/>
While this was out there <lb/>
were several other talks about the <lb/>
fair in which pledges of hearty sup- <lb/>
port were given. Upon returning the <lb/>
committee submitted the following, <lb/>
which was <lb/>
We, your committee, recommend <lb/>
the <lb/>
1st. That we organize a Pitt county <lb/>
Fair with a president, <lb/>
vice-president, secretary, treasurer, <lb/>
and a board of governors, consisting <lb/>
of one from each township and <lb/>
vision of townships in the county, <lb/>
and, that the mayor of each <lb/>
town be requested to <lb/>
point one additional man from his <lb/>
respective town to act as one of the <lb/>
board of governors. <lb/>
That the secretary of the <lb/>
ask the mayors of the different <lb/>
towns to make his appointment at <lb/>
once, and notify the secretary of <lb/>
said appointment. <lb/>
We further recommend the <lb/>
of the officers and board of <lb/>
governors in the city hall on May <lb/>
the 12th, at o'clock, a. m., for <lb/>
the purpose of advising ways and <lb/>
means of promoting a successful ex- <lb/>
of agricultural and live stock <lb/>
products of Pitt county in Greenville <lb/>
in the fall of 1911. Time and place <lb/>
to be arranged by the officers and <lb/>
board of governors of the <lb/>
In order to the work of <lb/>
the association, we suggest the <lb/>
mediate appointment by the president <lb/>
of a committee of three to petition <lb/>
the Greenville Tobacco Board of <lb/>
Trade, to suspend the tobacco sales <lb/>
during two and Fri- <lb/>
ask them to co-operate with <lb/>
the association to assist bringing <lb/>
about a successful exhibit. <lb/>
In compliance with the report of <lb/>
the committee the following officers <lb/>
were <lb/>
President, J. L. Wooten. <lb/>
Vice-President, A. J. <lb/>
Secretary, D. J. Whichard. <lb/>
Treasurer, J. B. Tucker. <lb/>
Board of Governors for Townships, <lb/>
J. H. Cobb, W. W. Bullock, C. J. <lb/>
Whitehurst, C. G. Little, J. C. Gal- <lb/>
J. Dixon, H. G. Mumford, <lb/>
W. H. Moore, B. M. Lewis, R. L. Lit- <lb/>
S. I. Fleming, H. A. White, M. <lb/>
T. Spear and J P. The <lb/>
members of the board to be appointed <lb/>
from the towns by the mayors will <lb/>
be announced as soon as they are <lb/>
sent in. <lb/>
The meeting was a very <lb/>
one for the fair, and it means <lb/>
that great good to Pitt county will <lb/>
come out of it. <lb/>
The officers and board of <lb/>
will meet here on the 12th of <lb/>
May, as above suggested, to suggest <lb/>
the date and location for holding the <lb/>
fair and make other arrangements <lb/>
for starting off the Every <lb/>
citizen of the county should give his <lb/>
co-operation to this movement <lb/>
THE LEGISLATIVE MILL <lb/>
Of The Making of Laws There Is No <lb/>
End. <lb/>
In a document recently prepared by <lb/>
Herbert librarian of con- <lb/>
is included an illuminative <lb/>
table showing the number of laws <lb/>
and resolutions passed by the con- <lb/>
and the state legislatures in <lb/>
two periods. In Washington the <lb/>
of bills introduced has risen from <lb/>
in the Fifty-sixth congress to <lb/>
in the Sixty-first. Fortunately <lb/>
this proportion of Increase did not <lb/>
obtain in the number of enacted. <lb/>
In the Fifty-sixth congress this was <lb/>
including 1505 private acts and <lb/>
resolutions, and in the Sixty-first <lb/>
including private measures. Thus <lb/>
In the earlier congress public <lb/>
measures were passed, and in the <lb/>
later In private measures the <lb/>
Fifty-ninth congress exceeded all <lb/>
others in this group; it took favor- <lb/>
able action on <lb/>
In the state legislatures the years <lb/>
1906 and 1907 have been par- <lb/>
productive. The table <lb/>
pared by Mr. shows the out- <lb/>
put to have <lb/>
1906-07. 1907-08. <lb/>
Alabama <lb/>
Arizona . <lb/>
Arkansas . <lb/>
California . <lb/>
Colorado . <lb/>
Connecticut . <lb/>
Delaware . <lb/>
Florida . <lb/>
Georgia . <lb/>
Idaho . <lb/>
Illinois . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Iowa . <lb/>
Kansas . <lb/>
Kentucky . <lb/>
Louisiana . <lb/>
Maine . <lb/>
Maryland . <lb/>
Massachusetts . <lb/>
Michigan . <lb/>
Minnesota . <lb/>
Mississippi . <lb/>
Missouri . <lb/>
Montana . <lb/>
Nebraska . <lb/>
Nevada . <lb/>
New Hampshire. <lb/>
New Jersey . <lb/>
New Mexico . <lb/>
New York . <lb/>
North Carolina . 1572 <lb/>
North Dakota . . <lb/>
Ohio . <lb/>
Oklahoma . <lb/>
Oregon . <lb/>
Pennsylvania . <lb/>
Island . <lb/>
South Carolina . <lb/>
South Dakota. <lb/>
Tennessee . <lb/>
Texas . <lb/>
Utah . . <lb/>
Vermont . <lb/>
Virginia . <lb/>
Washington . . <lb/>
West Virginia . <lb/>
Wisconsin . <lb/>
Wyoming . <lb/>
United States Congress <lb/>
Public . <lb/>
Private . <lb/>
The in the number of <lb/>
bills adopted by congress can <lb/>
be explained in large measure by ex- <lb/>
extension of the pension sys- <lb/>
although this has apparently had <lb/>
little if any effect on the number of <lb/>
bills introduced. A great proportion <lb/>
of acts of state legislatures are of <lb/>
merely local interest and need cause <lb/>
nobody not directly affected any con- <lb/>
There are numbers of state laws <lb/>
men and travelers, however, and to <lb/>
keep track of these is a well-nigh <lb/>
hopeless task. <lb/>
Mr. contribution to the <lb/>
statistics of statute making is <lb/>
dental to a review of the practices of <lb/>
various members in the different task <lb/>
of bill drawing. The absurdities and <lb/>
contradictions into which members <lb/>
fall in preparing measures the no- <lb/>
There Is a movement in con- <lb/>
in favor of the creation of a <lb/>
bill drafting bureau, manned by ex- <lb/>
perts, and the examples of muddled <lb/>
English and inexact phraseology that <lb/>
abound in the measures submitted in <lb/>
senate and house may be thought to <lb/>
indicate the desirability of such an <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
STRIKE THREATENED. <lb/>
Unless Railroad Grants Increase in <lb/>
Wages. <lb/>
Boston, May the New <lb/>
Haven railroad grants a per cent, <lb/>
increase in wages in clerical and <lb/>
mechanical departments, a strike in- <lb/>
is threatened <lb/>
by the allied trades organizations.<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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