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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 5 May 1911</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19110505</dc:date>
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                <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 /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
-mm<lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
NECK HAPPENINGS. <lb />
Graded <lb />
SCOTLAND <lb />
for Handsome <lb />
School <lb />
Scotland Neck, C, April <lb />
As I failed to do so in my last let- <lb />
will now say. notwithstanding <lb />
the loss of the graded school build- <lb />
they did not miss but one day <lb />
of school. They took some of the <lb />
grades in the residence of Prof. Aiken <lb />
and others in other residences, the <lb />
citizens held a meeting a short time <lb />
afterwards and decided to rebuild at <lb />
an early day and they pledged seven <lb />
thousand dollars at that meeting, <lb />
making sixteen thousand with what <lb />
they had on hand. They appointed a <lb />
committee to get up subscriptions to <lb />
the amount of four thousand dollars <lb />
more. They want a twenty-five thou- <lb />
sand dollar building. <lb />
I think I can safely say that <lb />
among the many good sermons that <lb />
I have heard since I came to Scot- <lb />
laud Neck, that the two last Sunday <lb />
by Rev. Mr. Powers, pastor of the <lb />
Baptist church, were the best. At <lb />
the morning service he announced his <lb />
subject for the evening service which <lb />
was <lb />
The old soldiers will have a <lb />
ion here the tenth of May, but J ex- <lb />
to try to be in Greenville on that <lb />
day for don't want to fail to be <lb />
there to see my old comrades once <lb />
a year. I don't see some of them <lb />
only at our yearly re-union. <lb />
Last Sunday a week ago, Mrs. Rob- <lb />
went to church and on her way <lb />
home was stricken with paralysis and <lb />
died before night. <lb />
Mr. Price, a citizen out in <lb />
the country, died suddenly yesterday, <lb />
heart failure being the cause. <lb />
We had another novel marriage in <lb />
our city a short time ago. The bride- <lb />
to-be came from her town and went <lb />
to the house of the groom-to-be, and <lb />
they were married there in the pres- <lb />
of a large crowd of spectators. <lb />
We have heard that the bride was <lb />
only about sixty and the groom sixty- <lb />
five. They are living happily <lb />
and we hope for them a happy <lb />
and a long life. We think they <lb />
are old enough o know how <lb />
house all right. <lb />
There came very near being a <lb />
accident yesterday on Main <lb />
street. A horse some distance up the <lb />
street run away and run over a <lb />
child without hurting it, and run in <lb />
the passage of the livery stables and <lb />
came very near running over a man <lb />
and some horses, and did damage a <lb />
mule some and tore up a buggy con- <lb />
We are still having cold weather, <lb />
though it is the 25th of April, the <lb />
time of year for warm weather. We <lb />
have had frost for several days. <lb />
MUST RUN B <lb />
IF I AM <lb />
SO BATS AYCOCK <lb />
Wakes Ne Statement m U <lb />
His Position on <lb />
I am to be  candidate for the <lb />
United States senate the people must <lb />
run is the way ex-Governor <lb />
Aycock expressed himself today in <lb />
conversation with a close friend. <lb />
The ex-Governor is known to be <lb />
averse to a long-draw n-out and <lb />
strenuous campaign. He don't mind <lb />
the it said, but he <lb />
don't want such a long of it, as <lb />
would be the case should he come out <lb />
at this time with the primary to be <lb />
way next summer or fall. How- <lb />
ever, there are many of his friends <lb />
who believe the people of the state <lb />
under the circumstances should <lb />
advised as to whether or not he will <lb />
undertake the race. <lb />
That Senator Simmons is standing <lb />
for re-election is officially known and <lb />
that Governor Kitchin is in the race <lb />
against him is settled to the extent <lb />
that he has so stated to numerous <lb />
friends, with his definite public an- <lb />
only awaiting whatever <lb />
he may consider the most opportune <lb />
moment to take the whole people into <lb />
Id's confidence. Then there is the <lb />
of some others getting into <lb />
the race and friends want <lb />
him to get in on the ground floor. <lb />
Tins may bring from him some def- <lb />
statement of the possibility <lb />
his making the race, although it is <lb />
not expected that he will come <lb />
in a formal announcement of <lb />
for a great while yet. <lb />
Along with other senatorial talk <lb />
there come persistent expressions <lb />
from the that Chief <lb />
Justice Clark not only proposes to <lb />
stand for the but that he <lb />
is now busy with the of <lb />
his indeed, that he is ac- <lb />
running for the senate so far <lb />
is steady work among the people as <lb />
he can reach them in a quiet way <lb />
is concerned. <lb />
Many believe that whether ex-Gov. <lb />
Aycock gets in the race or not, <lb />
Judge Clark will be in the running <lb />
and up a strenuous campaign <lb />
Thus far he has not expressed him- <lb />
self in such way as would bring about <lb />
the newspaper presentation of his real <lb />
attitude- Charlotte Observer. <lb />
THE COMFORTS Or LIFE <lb />
ENJOYED BY <lb />
WHO BEGAN <lb />
PUTTING <lb />
Y IN <lb />
THE BANK<lb />
HENRY H. ROGERS was a poor boy. He worked in <lb />
a grocery. He saved his money and put it in the bank. He <lb />
left an estate of million dollars. <lb />
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank. <lb />
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb />
C. L. Wilkinson, Nothing but Insurance <lb />
Fire, Accident, Health, Steam Boiler, Plate Glass, <lb />
Burglary, Fidelity and Court Bonds. <lb />
The Only Exclusive Insurance Agent in Greenville <lb />
Evans-Tucker. <lb />
On Wednesday at o'clock, at the <lb />
home of Mr. C. A. Tucker, three miles <lb />
from Greenville, his Miss <lb />
Novella, and Mr. James L. Evans, <lb />
were married, the ceremony being <lb />
performed by Rev. W. M. of <lb />
Greensboro. <lb />
After the ceremony a supper and <lb />
reception were held at the home of <lb />
Mr. James Brans, uncle of the groom. <lb />
For Three Years. <lb />
Restaurant you were <lb />
in your last place <lb />
Why did you leave <lb />
New <lb />
News. <lb />
three years. <lb />
This land is now valued on the tax <lb />
lists at only an <lb />
Record. <lb />
Chips off the old block are very <lb />
often splinters. <lb />
Dangerous Aliens. <lb />
Moved by the recent affray in Lon- <lb />
don between foreign anarchists and <lb />
the police and soldiery, the British <lb />
Parliament is taking measures to re- <lb />
from all refuges from other <lb />
counties guarantees of good <lb />
The Washington Post sees in <lb />
this action a noble contrast with the <lb />
weakness of congress in dealing with <lb />
dangerous aliens that come to our <lb />
shores. Outbreaks of foreign criminals <lb />
such as that which London <lb />
ed, are not infrequent in this country, <lb />
says the Post; New York, Chicago and <lb />
San Francisco having been the scene <lb />
of such occurrences, without congress <lb />
paying the slightest heed, whereas in <lb />
England one is enough to bring about <lb />
vigorous action by Parliament. Our <lb />
Washington contemporary thinks it <lb />
advisable that aliens subject to <lb />
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb />
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb />
Work, and Flues in Season. See <lb />
J. J. JENKINS <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb />
Pulley <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
North Carolina <lb />
J. S. MOORING <lb />
General Merchandise <lb />
Buyer of Cotton and Country Produce <lb />
FIVE N. C. <lb />
PAYMENT <lb />
should be compelled to give <lb />
was for their good behavior. This, <lb />
of course, would amount to practical <lb />
exclusion, for what kind of a bond <lb />
could the average immigrant of this <lb />
type furnish Probably not one of a <lb />
thousand immigrants, good, bad or In- <lb />
different, could find means of furn- <lb />
a bond of any <lb />
Of Policy That Had Keen in Force <lb />
Hours. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, April 1911. <lb />
Mr. C. L. Wilkinson, Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Dear <lb />
I acknowledge receipt of check for <lb />
by the Fidelity Casualty <lb />
Co., of New York, covering claim for <lb />
loss of my left hand on the evening <lb />
of February the 11th. I wish to thank <lb />
you for the prompt manner in which <lb />
you handled this claim. <lb />
This policy was issued to me on <lb />
the 10th day of February, and on the <lb />
evening of the 11th of February, just <lb />
the next day I had the misfortune <lb />
l-o lose my hand and under the policy <lb />
contract the Fidelity Casualty <lb />
Company paid me without any <lb />
the above amount. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
M. W. MOORE. <lb />
The biggest Mars are not those who <lb />
tell stories, <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
A PLEASANT EVENING <lb />
AT TRAINING SCHOOL <lb />
ORIGINAL PROGRAM PRESENTED. <lb />
Makes Decided Hit and Much <lb />
Saturday evening the E class of <lb />
the E. C. T. T. S. gave an entertain- <lb />
in the auditorium of the school. <lb />
This was the last of a series of pleas- <lb />
ant evenings that have been given <lb />
by the various classes of the <lb />
These occasions have been <lb />
delightful, both to the student body <lb />
and their friends who have been for- <lb />
enough to be present. The <lb />
following thrown upon a canvass by <lb />
the lantern of the school, <lb />
gave the first information as to what <lb />
the elegant lantern of the school, <lb />
would <lb />
Ladies Home Journal. E <lb />
class presents a sample <lb />
Then came upon the same canvass <lb />
immediately preceding the rendering <lb />
of each number the following <lb />
of <lb />
De Moon, <lb />
That Reminds Me <lb />
Spring Styles. <lb />
Mrs. with her Class. <lb />
The Lady from Philadelphia. <lb />
The Most Active Actors, Part I and <lb />
Part II. <lb />
Sweet Miss Mary. <lb />
The Country Distributor of Com- <lb />
Sense. <lb />
The Advertising Department. <lb />
From the beginning to the end of <lb />
the entertainment there was not a <lb />
dull moment. Each piece was fol- <lb />
lowed by prolonged applause and en- <lb />
cores were the fashion of the evening. <lb />
Colored lights thrown upon the <lb />
added much to the <lb />
It would take more space than <lb />
we have today to note what richly <lb />
deserves to be mentioned about each <lb />
number presented. To be <lb />
it had to be seen. We must say, <lb />
however, for originality of conception <lb />
and preparation, and unique <lb />
presentation, the program commend- <lb />
ed itself and gave a number of <lb />
prises to everyone present. <lb />
The in many of the pieces <lb />
were much enjoyed by. the entire <lb />
audience. To Miss Jenkins, the class <lb />
advisor, and Miss the music <lb />
director, is largely due the pleasure <lb />
of this most delightful evening. <lb />
their direction and training the <lb />
class surpassed the most sanguine <lb />
expectations of their most ardent <lb />
friends. <lb />
These entertainments have already <lb />
become an interesting feature in the <lb />
work of this, the state's youngest in- <lb />
and are looked forward to <lb />
with real joy, both by the students <lb />
and the people of the town. <lb />
ROOSTING A PITY. <lb />
Scotch Humor. <lb />
Mr. A. C. sends us a copy <lb />
of The Evening Dispatch <lb />
with the following item <lb />
A Scotch farmer one day called to a <lb />
farm lad, Tarn and <lb />
give the coos a cabbage each, but <lb />
ye the biggest to the coo that <lb />
the The boy de- <lb />
parted to do his bidding, and on his <lb />
return the farmer asked him if he had <lb />
done as he was told. <lb />
replied the lad. a cab- <lb />
each, and hung the biggest on <lb />
the pump Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
An idle scandal-manager is a busy <lb />
body. <lb />
When you put your foot in it, don't <lb />
kick. <lb />
Six Men From St Joe Show How It <lb />
Can Re Done. <lb />
Six men from St. Joe, Mo., were <lb />
gracefully disposed on the sofas in <lb />
the lobby of the Holland House yes- <lb />
morning, but mystery hangs <lb />
about why they suddenly left home <lb />
the other day and headed for New <lb />
York. News may come out of it yet, <lb />
according to two of the party, but the <lb />
cat was not let out of the bag yes- <lb />
morning. the two, <lb />
when asked for a line about St. Joe <lb />
itself chanted a paean of praise about <lb />
the place and told why the last <lb />
made it out that St. Joe had <lb />
The party consisted of F. P. Snow- <lb />
den, B. C. Donnell, Geo. D. Bright, <lb />
M. H. Alderman, C. Knight and C. <lb />
Rea, but only two talked. These <lb />
firmed that out there the inhabitants <lb />
refer to the town as Joseph and <lb />
it is only outsiders who abbreviate it. <lb />
And as for the town's apparently not <lb />
having grown in the ten years <lb />
ceding the last census, why somebody <lb />
padded the figures in 1900. said <lb />
one, to the school <lb />
we have grown in ten years per <lb />
said the other, a great <lb />
jobbing It has a population <lb />
of about <lb />
has a big candy <lb />
that employs said the <lb />
the largest overall <lb />
industry in the whole <lb />
added the other. <lb />
are five such factories, and <lb />
they employ between and <lb />
came from the right. <lb />
have one of the best woolen <lb />
mills in the United was heard <lb />
from the right. And from the left <lb />
came of the antiphonal. it sells <lb />
some of its products in this <lb />
St. Joe is a packing for all <lb />
the big canneries. We have built a <lb />
new high school and three ward <lb />
schools. There is an interurban rail- <lb />
way running twelve miles, and half <lb />
of it was financed by local <lb />
we have a fine 10-story hotel, <lb />
which is as good as any you could <lb />
want to find And then, <lb />
in final chorus, Joe is a great <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
THE MEN DISCUSS THE <lb />
SUBJECT. BUSINESS HONESTY <lb />
SUNDAY'S MEETING A GOOD ONE <lb />
You Always Miss Something If You <lb />
Are Absent. <lb />
The Men's Prayer League had a <lb />
discussion of a practical topic at the <lb />
meeting in the Baptist church, Sun- <lb />
day afternoon, the leaders, Messrs. G. <lb />
E. Harris, T. R. Moore and F. M. <lb />
Wooten, making most timely and in- <lb />
talks on <lb />
followed by short talks from some <lb />
of the others present. Honesty as it <lb />
relates to various phrases of life was <lb />
business, in home, In <lb />
the church, in social life and in meet- <lb />
engagements with others. Those <lb />
who heard gained a better idea of <lb />
what real honesty is, the teaching to <lb />
thy neighbor as and <lb />
have charity for all were prominently <lb />
impressed. <lb />
The league had a pleasant surprise <lb />
at this meeting in a <lb />
by Messrs. Warren, Dupree, <lb />
Whichard and Pugh. Such surprises <lb />
as this are likely to occur frequently <lb />
in these meetings, and you never <lb />
know when you will miss them. In <lb />
fact, you miss something interesting <lb />
and good every time you miss one of <lb />
these meetings. <lb />
Next Sunday afternoon the meeting <lb />
will be held in the Methodist church <lb />
when the subject will be Think <lb />
Ye of Text, Matt. and <lb />
Matt. 15-16. Leaders, Messrs. O. <lb />
E. Warren, M. W. Wallace and R. L. <lb />
Jones. <lb />
NEW SERIES OF STOCK. <lb />
In Home Building Loan <lb />
The eleventh series of stock in the <lb />
Home Building and Loan Association <lb />
will open on Saturday, May 6th, and <lb />
the secretary is ready to take your <lb />
name for shares. The large advertise- <lb />
in this paper gives an idea <lb />
what the association is doing. The <lb />
association is now six years old, and <lb />
in that time ten series have been <lb />
opened. The table printed in the ad- <lb />
shows the number of <lb />
shares in each of these series and <lb />
what they are now worth. The total <lb />
number of shares is and their <lb />
value is now which is loan- <lb />
ed to persons to help them own their <lb />
home. <lb />
The new series to open next <lb />
day should have a large number of <lb />
shares, for there is no institution in <lb />
the community helping it as much as <lb />
The Home Building and Loan As- <lb />
The larger the number of <lb />
shares in it the more good it can do. <lb />
It also helps to acquire the saving <lb />
habit which is an advantage. Any <lb />
boy can carry a share on cents a <lb />
week and have saved up in a few <lb />
years. <lb />
DESTROYS SLEEP. <lb />
Many Greenville People Testify To <lb />
This. <lb />
You can't sleep at night. <lb />
With aches and pains of a bad <lb />
back <lb />
When you have to get up from <lb />
urinary troubles. <lb />
All on account of the kidneys. <lb />
Set weak kidneys working aright <lb />
with Kidney Pills. <lb />
Here is proof of their <lb />
Mrs. James Garris, Twelfth St., <lb />
Greenville, N. C, am pleas- <lb />
ed to add my endorsement to the <lb />
already given in praise of <lb />
Kidney Pills. For a long <lb />
time I was troubled by. my kidneys <lb />
and I suffered intensely from back- <lb />
ache and pains in my shoulders. <lb />
Headache and dizzy spells bothered <lb />
me and I rested so poorly that when <lb />
I got up in the morning, I was in no <lb />
fit condition to begin my work. When <lb />
I read of Kidney Pills, I <lb />
mediately got a supply from the John <lb />
L. Wooten Drug Co., and to my de- <lb />
light, they did me a world of good. <lb />
I can now rest much better at night <lb />
and my back and kidneys do not <lb />
bother <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 />
Not Responsible. <lb />
are late every morn- <lb />
it isn't my that <lb />
you didn't build your blamed old <lb />
school house nearer my home. <lb />
A man who breaks into politics <lb />
isn't necessarily a burglar, he <lb />
may be just as good. <lb />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
S M <lb />
Wholesale and retail Grocer and <lb />
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for <lb />
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Barrels, <lb />
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat- <lb />
tresses, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages, <lb />
Parlor Suits, Tables. <lb />
Lounges Safes, P. and Gall <lb />
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key <lb />
West Cheroots, Henry George Cl- <lb />
ears, Canned Cherries, Peaches, <lb />
Syrup. Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar <lb />
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Food, Mat- <lb />
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, <lb />
Garden Seeds, Oranges, Apples, Nuts. <lb />
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches, <lb />
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass, <lb />
and Wooden ware, Cakes <lb />
and Crackers, Cheese, <lb />
best Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines, sad numerous Other goods. <lb />
Quality and quantity cheap for cash. <lb />
Come to see me. <lb />
Phone Number . <lb />
S M SCHULTZ <lb />
Choice Cut Flowers <lb />
Roses, Carnations and Violet <lb />
Wedding and Funeral <lb />
Flowers artistically <lb />
ranged at short notice. <lb />
Mail, Telegraph and <lb />
Telephone orders fill- <lb />
ed by <lb />
Phone Raleigh, <lb />
S. J. Nobles <lb />
MODERN BARBER SHOP <lb />
Nicely furnished, everything clean <lb />
and attractive, working the very <lb />
best barbers. Second to none. <lb />
Opp. J. R. J. G. <lb />
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb />
Proprietor <lb />
Located in main business of town. <lb />
Four chairs in operation and each <lb />
one presided over by a skilled <lb />
Ladies waited at their home. <lb />
Learn Automobile Business <lb />
Take a thirty days practical course <lb />
our well equipped Machine Shops <lb />
an learn the Automobile business <lb />
and accept good positions. <lb />
CHARLOTTE AUTO SCHOOL, <lb />
Charlotte, N. C. <lb />
It Startled The World. <lb />
When the astounding claims were <lb />
first made for Salve, <lb />
but forty years of wonderful cures <lb />
have proved them true, and every- <lb />
where it is now known as the best <lb />
salve on earth for burns, boils, scalds, <lb />
sores, cuts, bruises, sprains, swell- <lb />
eczema, chapped hands, fever <lb />
sores and piles. Only cents at all <lb />
druggists. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
y i <lb />
The 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 The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
if n n <lb />
Winterville, N. April Messrs. Hugh and <lb />
Louise loft for bar Tucker were in town Sunday <lb />
home in where she will <lb />
spend Saturday and Sunday. She was Nell and <lb />
Carl Williams were in town visiting <lb />
accompanied by her friend, Miss Saturday. <lb />
Myrtle <lb />
Messrs. C. B. and H. T. <lb />
Causey spent Friday in Grifton. <lb />
Bring your timber to Harrington, <lb />
Barber Company for dressing, <lb />
matching and <lb />
Mrs. J. H. C. is visiting her <lb />
father, who while visiting relatives <lb />
near Vanceboro was taken very sick. <lb />
Miss Dora Cox attended the union <lb />
meeting at Friday night. <lb />
Mr. Robert left Friday <lb />
evening for his home near Arthur, <lb />
where he will spend Saturday and <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Messrs. Z. V. Perry, Jesse Rollins, <lb />
H. Brinson, P, i. Groom, Royal <lb />
Adams, Wingate Blanchard, Henry <lb />
Pope, Robert and Wilbur <lb />
Kittrell went over to Ayden to at- <lb />
tend the union meeting last night <lb />
Rev. M. A. Adams, who has been <lb />
assisting in a meeting at Swansboro, <lb />
returned home Thursday. <lb />
Messrs. Roy Causey and S. C. Car- j <lb />
roll attended the commencement at <lb />
Grifton Friday night. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co., sell the <lb />
best rubber roofing and best Hour. <lb />
Miss Cox, who has been <lb />
teaching school at Alliance, returned <lb />
home Friday evening. <lb />
Mr. E. A. of Greenville, <lb />
came down Thursday evening and <lb />
took the picture of the Winterville <lb />
Hight School. <lb />
A car of lime just received, at <lb />
A. W. Ange Co. <lb />
Winterville, X. C, May <lb />
Mr. W. H. Moore, of the state ex- <lb />
committee, will meet with <lb />
the Farmers Union in Winterville, <lb />
Saturday May G, at o'clock <lb />
p. in. All the members of the union <lb />
are cordially invited to be present. <lb />
Miss Mimic Cox, who has been <lb />
teaching in Ahoskie, returned home <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. are sell- <lb />
the thing in frog-tooth and fine <lb />
plow cultivators. <lb />
Mrs. Battle of Oak City, was <lb />
in town yesterday visiting her sister, <lb />
Miss Lizzie Harrell. <lb />
The class of Winterville <lb />
went over to Ayden Sunday night to <lb />
the union meeting and gave the same <lb />
program they gave here a few weeks <lb />
ago. <lb />
Mr. C. L, went to Green- <lb />
ville Monday. <lb />
Two wagon loads of the Winter- <lb />
ville High school girls wont over to <lb />
Ayden to attend the union meeting <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Misses Elizabeth Boushall, Helen <lb />
Adams, and Dora Cox, spent Sunday <lb />
night in Ayden. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. have <lb />
fifty thousand good red heart cypress <lb />
shingles for sale. <lb />
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS <lb />
TRAINING SCHOOL NOTES <lb />
HAS ENTERTAINMENTS <lb />
Members <lb />
of Faculty <lb />
Schools, <lb />
Visit Other <lb />
President Wright attended the <lb />
fourteenth meeting of the Education- <lb />
Conference of the South recently <lb />
held at Jacksonville, Fla. <lb />
President Wright has delivered the <lb />
literary address at the closing of the <lb />
following Mt. Olive, April <lb />
Stantonsburg, April and Jack- <lb />
May <lb />
Mr. W. II. attended the <lb />
closing exercises of the Grifton Grad- <lb />
ed school April 27th and 28th. <lb />
Mr. C. W. Wilson well attend a <lb />
picnic and educational rally this <lb />
week at the closing of the Saratoga <lb />
school. <lb />
Miss Crane, secretary of the <lb />
territory of the Y. W. <lb />
C. A., spent two days at the school <lb />
Her visit was a great help <lb />
to the organization. <lb />
On Sunday evening Miss Jenkins <lb />
showed a number of interesting <lb />
of Korea that her mission study <lb />
has collected. She used the <lb />
magic lantern. The lantern is a <lb />
source of much pleasure and profit. <lb />
The second year class gave a most <lb />
delightful vaudeville performance on <lb />
the evening of April 22nd. There were <lb />
some very amusing original features, <lb />
a hypnotic show and a minstrel <lb />
tableaux, an illustrated song, a <lb />
beautiful gavotte and a clever play. <lb />
The senior class served a delicious <lb />
luncheon to the faculty and Ex-Gov. <lb />
and Mrs Jarvis on the afternoon of <lb />
April 29th. The luncheon of four <lb />
prepared and served by the <lb />
class, reflected great credit upon both <lb />
the class and the instructor, Miss <lb />
Pugh. <lb />
The one year class gave on Sat- <lb />
evening, an unique entertain- <lb />
presenting a sample copy of <lb />
the Home Journal. The mag- <lb />
lantern was used for throwing <lb />
poster headlines. The cover picture <lb />
pages and advertising department <lb />
were shown in tableaux; the other <lb />
departments were dramatized. <lb />
teacher of primary <lb />
methods, has visited several schools <lb />
near by. By observing the actual <lb />
work in the school room she is <lb />
brought in much closer contact with <lb />
the teachers. <lb />
Every indication is that the sum- <lb />
mer school this year will be much <lb />
larger than last year. The school <lb />
has received at present one hundred <lb />
per cent, more applications for at- <lb />
than at this time last year. <lb />
Many county and city superintend- <lb />
and high school principals will <lb />
avail themselves of the opportunity <lb />
of attending the course in school ad- <lb />
just . <lb />
WORD <lb />
It refers to Dr. Liver Pills and <lb />
HEALTH. <lb />
Are you constipated <lb />
Troubled with indication <lb />
Sick headache <lb />
Bilious <lb />
Insomnia <lb />
ANY of these symptoms and many <lb />
indicate inaction of the LIVER. <lb />
Pills <lb />
Take No Substitute. <lb />
ministration to be conducted by Dr. <lb />
George D. Strayer, of Columbia <lb />
The school has been forced to re- <lb />
twenty-one applicants to <lb />
spring course for lack of room. <lb />
ADJOURNED. <lb />
Ferguson's Brother Died This <lb />
Morning; <lb />
While in court this morning, Judge <lb />
G. S. Ferguson received a telegram <lb />
announcing the sudden death from <lb />
paralysis of his brother, Mr. W. B. <lb />
Ferguson, at Franklin. As soon as <lb />
the bar learned of the contents of <lb />
the message, there was a common <lb />
consent to a continuance of all cases <lb />
so that the judge could leave to at- <lb />
tend the funeral. He left on the <lb />
train for Waynesville. <lb />
HAPPENINGS ABOUND <lb />
Union Persona Mention mid <lb />
Other Notes. <lb />
N. C, May union <lb />
meeting at was largely at- <lb />
tended at every service. There <lb />
many visitors from Wilson, Farm- <lb />
ville, Greenville, Grimesland and <lb />
Grifton, also from other places. <lb />
Misses Mattie Little and Virginia <lb />
Mayo, of Wilson, came Saturday <lb />
to visit friends and returned <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Liss. of <lb />
Ayden, spent several days at Mr. F. <lb />
M. Smith's. They returned to Ayden <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Mrs. of Farmville, is visiting <lb />
her sister, Mrs. Smith. <lb />
Miss Janie Tyson, of is <lb />
visiting Mrs. C. E. <lb />
Mrs. Mary Smith, of Farmville, is <lb />
visiting Mrs. L. w. Smith. <lb />
Miss Agnes Smith, of E. C. T. T. <lb />
came home Sunday and re- <lb />
turned to Greenville Monday. <lb />
There will be regular services at <lb />
the new Christian church at Arthur, <lb />
every third Lord's day and <lb />
Every one is extended a cordial <lb />
come to attend. <lb />
CROSS ROADS. <lb />
News and Personal <lb />
Notes. <lb />
Galloway's Cross Roads, May <lb />
The farmers in this section are <lb />
busy setting out tobacco. <lb />
Mr. R. D. Edwards and nephew, <lb />
Macon, spent Sunday in Ayden. <lb />
Mr. W. P. Buck and son, L. R. <lb />
Buck, went to Greenville today and <lb />
took in the game of ball. <lb />
We have several people attending <lb />
the Mason meeting at Grimesland <lb />
tonight. <lb />
There was a large crowd at Sun- <lb />
day school at Salem Sunday, glad <lb />
to see them out. <lb />
We heard that Mr. J. C. Galloway <lb />
was to go to Hookerton Saturday. <lb />
Hope he had a nice trip. <lb />
Miss Mamie Hudson, who has been <lb />
. Maggie Hudson re- <lb />
turned home Wednesday. <lb />
We are very sorry to hear that <lb />
Mrs. Johnson Mills is quite ill. Hope <lb />
she will soon improve. <lb />
People down this way believe in <lb />
getting married. We had a couple <lb />
to get married twice. The man said <lb />
this made his fourth time. <lb />
Mr. John Galloway's horse got <lb />
frightened at an automobile Sunday <lb />
and run in the wire fence and got <lb />
cut very <lb />
Mr. J. A. Hudson attended the <lb />
union meeting in Greene last <lb />
week and returned home Sunday. <lb />
Mr. H. J. Stokes went to Washing- <lb />
ton today. <lb />
Miss Porter spent Sunday <lb />
with Miss Myrtle Stokes. <lb />
Mr. B. F. Buck was all smiles Sun- <lb />
day. He was with his girl. Guess <lb />
they will change about the fifth of <lb />
May. <lb />
Mr. Lester Edwards and mother <lb />
spent Saturday and Sunday near <lb />
Vanceboro. <lb />
Messrs. J. C. Galloway and G. S. <lb />
Porter went to Greenville yesterday. <lb />
Dwelling Burned. <lb />
Sunday night between and <lb />
o'clock fire destroyed the dwelling <lb />
house on the J. R. farm Just be- <lb />
the old race track, about one <lb />
mile above town on the Farmville <lb />
road. The house was occupied by <lb />
Mr. Walter Jones, who lost all of his <lb />
household and kitchen furniture. <lb />
The origin of the fire is unknown. <lb />
When Mr. family was awaken- <lb />
ed the had just collapsed <lb />
and there is no means of telling how <lb />
it caught afire. <lb />
DON'T SUFFER WITH <lb />
Cuts, Bruises <lb />
Strains and Sprains, but apply <lb />
Liniment. It is anti- <lb />
septic and will take the poison <lb />
and soreness out quickly, when <lb />
all else fails. <lb />
Noah's Li will save <lb />
any amount of pain and can <lb />
be taken internally for Colic, <lb />
Cramps, etc Nothing better <lb />
for Toothache. <lb />
Liniment Is the best remedy for <lb />
Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff <lb />
Joints and Muscles, Sore <lb />
Strains, Sprains, Cuts, <lb />
Colic, Cramps, <lb />
Neuralgia, Toothache, <lb />
and all Nerve, Bone <lb />
and Aches and <lb />
The g has <lb />
Noah's Ark on every <lb />
package like <lb />
this cut, but has RED <lb />
band on trout of pack- <lb />
and No. Vi <lb />
always in RED <lb />
Ink. Beware <lb />
Large bottle, <lb />
cents, and sold by all <lb />
In medicine. <lb />
Guaranteed or money <lb />
refunded by Noah <lb />
Remedy Co., inc., <lb />
Va.<lb />
POPULATION OF <lb />
Detailed Figured Announced by <lb />
Census Director Durand. <lb />
1310 AND 1900 COMPARED <lb />
Murphy town . <lb />
township . 1798 <lb />
Shoal Creek township. 1833 <lb />
Valley Town township. <lb />
Andrews town . .<lb />
Edenton township. <lb />
Edenton town . ; <lb />
Middle township . <lb />
Upper township. 1556 <lb />
township . 1377 <lb />
Beautiful Spanish Dancer <lb />
Gives Praise to <lb />
Clay County<lb />
Gains and Losses Shown In a <lb />
by the Various Cities, Towns, <lb />
and Townships Throughout <lb />
the Population Is <lb />
as Against Ten <lb />
Years Ago. <lb />
North Carolina's position In the <lb />
front ranks of the southern states in <lb />
regards to population has been greatly <lb />
strengthened during the decade from <lb />
1900 to 1910. <lb />
Detailed population statistics of the <lb />
state has just been issued by Census <lb />
Director E. Dana Durand at Washing- <lb />
ton. They give the figures for every <lb />
minor civil division and incorporated <lb />
city. <lb />
The total population of the state is <lb />
for 1910, as against <lb />
in 1900, an increase of <lb />
Unlike some of the northern and <lb />
middle western states, the movement <lb />
from the farming districts to the cit- <lb />
is not nearly as pronounced In this <lb />
state. <lb />
The cities almost without exception <lb />
show decided Increases, in in- <lb />
stances as high as per cent. Char- <lb />
with a population of in <lb />
1890 and in 1900, is returned <lb />
township . <lb />
township . 1511 <lb />
Hayesville town. <lb />
township . <lb />
Shooting Creek township <lb />
township----- <lb />
1655 <lb />
NERVOUS prostration is usually the <lb />
result of a vocation which require <lb />
a continual strain on the nervous <lb />
system. <lb />
In such cases it would wise if a <lb />
of vocation could made. <lb />
But this is not always possible and a <lb />
tonic becomes a necessity. <lb />
is a tonic that <lb />
Without producing a drug habit. <lb />
is net a beverage nor a bitters, <lb />
but an honest, straightforward <lb />
that Increases the appetite and <lb />
ages digestion. <lb />
There is a great demand for tonics <lb />
during the depressing heat of summer, <lb />
and especially in countries where hot <lb />
weather is very prevalent. <lb />
Such a is exactly met by <lb />
Cleveland County <lb />
Township River . <lb />
Township Boiling <lb />
Springs . <lb />
Township <lb />
Township Kings <lb />
. <lb />
Grover . <lb />
Kings Mountain town. . <lb />
Township Warlick. <lb />
Waco village . <lb />
Township . <lb />
Shelby town . 1874 <lb />
Township Sandy Run <lb />
Lattimore village . <lb />
Mooresboro village <lb />
Township . <lb />
Township Double <lb />
Shoals . <lb />
Township Creek 1285 <lb />
I Township . 1333 1242 <lb />
I Columbus 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 />
1810, 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 that <lb />
North Carolina is forging to the front <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 />
Bogue township . 1649 <lb />
Bolton township. <lb />
Bug Hill township . 1380 <lb />
Chadbourn township . <lb />
Chadbourn town . 1242 <lb />
township <lb />
Cerro Gordo village. <lb />
village . <lb />
Lee township . 1874 <lb />
Ransom township. <lb />
town . <lb />
South Williams twp. 1574 <lb />
Mount Tabor town . <lb />
township . <lb />
Boardman town . <lb />
Evergreen town . <lb />
Waccamaw township . <lb />
Welch Creek township . <lb />
Western Prong twp. <lb />
Whiteville township . <lb />
Whiteville town. <lb />
Williams township . <lb />
Clarendon village . <lb />
Craven County . <lb />
Township . <lb />
Vanceboro town . <lb />
Township . 1478 <lb />
Bridgeton town . <lb />
Township . <lb />
Cove City town . <lb />
Dover town . <lb />
Township 1694 <lb />
Township <lb />
Township . <lb />
Township . 11.405 <lb />
city. <lb />
Township . 1248 <lb />
1707 <lb />
1491 <lb />
1563 <lb />
1822 <lb />
1235<lb />
1272 <lb />
1477 <lb />
1691 <lb />
Cumberland County <lb />
township . 1222 <lb />
Black River township. <lb />
Godwin town . <lb />
Carvers Creek township <lb />
Cedar Creek township. <lb />
Cross Creek township. <lb />
town . <lb />
Flea Hill township. <lb />
Grays Creek township. <lb />
River township. <lb />
Mill township. <lb />
township----- <lb />
Raeford town . <lb />
township. <lb />
Cumberland town. <lb />
Hone Mills village No. <lb />
on page <lb />
1903 <lb />
Miss Pilot Praises as a Tunic. <lb />
A letter sent to the Drug Mfg. Co., from the popular Spanish dancer, <lb />
Miss is as <lb />
Principal, City of Mexico, Nov. 1905. <lb />
The Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio, U. S. A. <lb />
Gentlemen. Having used remedy, <lb />
for some time, I have the pleasure of informing you that I consider it the <lb />
best tonic I have ever used. ,.,. m <lb />
It Is a wonderful fortifier of the nerves after exhaustion and It in- <lb />
creases the vitality of the whole body, and my own case has produced <lb />
the most complete and permanent restoration. It Is also pleasant to the <lb />
S not hesitate, therefore, to recommend this remedy to all women <lb />
as the best and most pleasant tonic that they can possibly take. <lb />
Yours very truly, P. <lb />
MAR NAIR'S CHICKEN POWDER <lb />
Is Death to Hawks Life to Chickens and Turkeys <lb />
Cock of the Walk <lb />
The Barnyard Robber <lb />
I take Chicken Powder and <lb />
feed my children with it too. Look at <lb />
me and observe the Hawk. Cock-a- <lb />
Died after eating a chick of that <lb />
old Rooster, which had been fed on <lb />
Chicken Powder. Alas <lb />
Registered trade mark U. S. Patent Office 1910. No. 77.890. <lb />
by W. II. under the Food and Drag Ac;, June 1906. Serial No. <lb />
CHICKEN POWDER <lb />
Kills Hawks, Crows, 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 Eggs. <lb />
Manufactured by <lb />
W. H. Tarboro, N. C. <lb />
For sale by Merchants and Druggists <lb />
i i in ,.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
COMMEMORATING THE <lb />
PANAMA CANAL <lb />
NEW ORLEANS WILL CELEBRATE <lb />
JURY REPORT. <lb />
i u . f <lb />
Southern Commercial Congress Will <lb />
Hold Series of Conventions. <lb />
Washington, April <lb />
Director of the Southern Com- <lb />
Congress, returned today <lb />
from a two weeks trip that our committees, have visited <lb />
Of the April Term of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court. <lb />
To the Hon. Garland S. Ferguson, <lb />
Judge presiding at the April term of <lb />
Pitt county Superior <lb />
As foreman of the grand Jury of <lb />
Pitt county, and in behalf of such <lb />
grand jurors, I beg to report that we, <lb />
ed New Orleans and ten South- <lb />
cities. It resulted in a national <lb />
movement to commemorate the trans- <lb />
formation of the Panama ditch into <lb />
the Panama canal. <lb />
In an interview today, Mr. <lb />
explained the connected details of the <lb />
idea. He <lb />
will be turned into the <lb />
Panama ditch between September and <lb />
November, 1913. <lb />
That there will be the time for the <lb />
nation to celebrate the existence of <lb />
the Panama canal. <lb />
The logical point for such a com- <lb />
is the nearest great city <lb />
to the thing commemorated, so that <lb />
the canal itself may be visited as <lb />
part of the commemoration. <lb />
Louisiana, having gone in and <lb />
failed to secure the 1915 exposition, <lb />
is by that fact unable to move in <lb />
the matter of a national celebration. <lb />
The Southern Commercial Con- <lb />
being in extent will <lb />
move to give to the celebration a <lb />
national significance with the South- <lb />
States acting unitedly as hosts. <lb />
The region affected by the Panama <lb />
canal is the entire nation and the <lb />
congress will, therefore, invite to <lb />
New Orleans the leaders of the nation <lb />
along various lines. <lb />
Under the guidance of President <lb />
Fletcher and the executive commit- <lb />
tee of the Southern Commercial Con- <lb />
there will be held a series <lb />
of conventions in New Orleans <lb />
exposition of 1905. <lb />
each chief commercial inter- <lb />
est of the nation, and running through <lb />
out the month of November. Concur- <lb />
with the convention, Louisiana <lb />
will arrange a series of land and <lb />
water pageants, historical and <lb />
setting forth the progress of <lb />
the nation from the time of the <lb />
age to the date of the wedding of the <lb />
Atlantic and Pacific. At certain <lb />
arranged dates in the month, or <lb />
daily, throughout the month, <lb />
one or more excursions will leave <lb />
New Orleans to carry the nation's <lb />
business leaders to see the canal on <lb />
which so much of the nation's money <lb />
has been used. The plan will en- <lb />
to make it possible for men <lb />
living within one thousand miles of <lb />
the gulf to spend not more than <lb />
in traveling expenses to the canal <lb />
and home again. <lb />
The Southern Commercial Con- <lb />
the various institutions of the county, <lb />
and that we have visited the sheriffs <lb />
office, the clerk of superior court's <lb />
office and the register of of- <lb />
and find their offices and books <lb />
in as good condition as could be ex- <lb />
taking into consideration <lb />
their temporary quarters. <lb />
We find the treasurer's books well <lb />
kept, and commend him upon the ex- <lb />
and simple system of keeping <lb />
same. We recommend that the com- <lb />
missioners purchase at once the <lb />
necessary books for the keeping of <lb />
the accounts for the county by the <lb />
treasurer, as the books now used are <lb />
BASE BALL <lb />
Tarboro Vs. Greenville Monday After- <lb />
noon. <lb />
The Greenville juniors will cross <lb />
bats with a similar team from the <lb />
city on the upper Tar Monday after- <lb />
noon. Tarboro puts out a good team <lb />
every year, nevertheless the locals <lb />
will go into the game with the de- <lb />
termination to win and will stick to <lb />
the finish. The boys have been <lb />
this week and have shown some <lb />
classy fielding. The line-up is yet <lb />
uncertain, but will be picked from <lb />
the following Bowling, Bryan, <lb />
Kittrell, Moore, <lb />
Burch, Phillips and <lb />
Fleming. <lb />
The Tarboro team will come down <lb />
on the boat and bring a number of <lb />
rooters and fannies. Come out and <lb />
root for the home team. The game <lb />
will be played at new park, <lb />
the future home of the Greenville <lb />
team in the Coast Line League. The <lb />
time of the. game will be announced <lb />
later on the hand-bills. Watch for <lb />
them. <lb />
TOOL HOUSE BURNED. <lb />
Mr. B. F. Patrick Sustains Loss on <lb />
His Farm. <lb />
Southern <lb />
and the Louisiana leaders are <lb />
emphatically of the opinion that as <lb />
this celebration will have no ex- <lb />
position feature, it will aid rather <lb />
than hinder the work of the victor- <lb />
Pacific coast during the Panama- <lb />
The Way They do Now. <lb />
Sunday-school he <lb />
heard the people shouting has <lb />
slain his thousands, but David has <lb />
slain his tens of what <lb />
did Saul do then <lb />
Willie father I <lb />
suppose he got right up and <lb />
for a <lb />
Classification. <lb />
said a little blustering man <lb />
to a religious opponent; say, sir, <lb />
do you know to what sect I <lb />
I don't exactly was <lb />
the answer; to <lb />
It polite to ask a guest how make, shape, and size Z <lb />
long he is to stay, yet every you belonged to a class <lb />
hostess is anxious to know. i m m- <lb />
About one o'clock this morning, a <lb />
two-story building and shelters on <lb />
the farm of Mr. B. F. Patrick, about <lb />
three miles from town, was destroyed <lb />
by fire. The upper story of the build- <lb />
was used as a hay loft and a <lb />
large quantity of hay was in it at <lb />
the time. The fire started in this <lb />
hay in some unaccountable way. The <lb />
first floor and the shelters attached <lb />
were used for storing farm <lb />
and tools, and a quantity of <lb />
these, including a peanut planter, <lb />
were burned with the building. <lb />
The loss is about with <lb />
insurance on the building. There was <lb />
no insurance on any of the farm <lb />
Go See <lb />
As the begins want to do <lb />
your spring shopping. <lb />
Go See for Dress Goods in all <lb />
ties 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, Glassware, <lb />
Tinware, Wood and Willow Ware. <lb />
Go See for Cultivators, Plows and <lb />
all Farming Utensils <lb />
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 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 />
We Cannot make 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 />
J. R. J. G. <lb />
Greenville, North Carolina<lb />
Condensed Statement of <lb />
The National Bank of Greenville <lb />
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
at the close of business March 7th, 1911 <lb />
RESOURCES. <lb />
Loans and 180,407.19 <lb />
Overdrafts. 2,403.96 <lb />
U. S. Bonds. <lb />
Stocks and 3,000.00 <lb />
Furniture and fixtures. 7,281.30 <lb />
Exchange for clearing <lb />
house. 8,919.67 <lb />
Cash and due from banks. 47,586.04 <lb />
per cent, redemption <lb />
fund-- . 1,050.00 <lb />
LIABILITIES. <lb />
. 10.000.00 <lb />
Undivided profits. <lb />
Circulation. <lb />
Bond account. 21,000.00 <lb />
Dividends unpaid. <lb />
Cashier's checks.<lb />
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations. Firms and <lb />
Individuals, and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those <lb />
contemplating changes or opening new accounts. <lb />
We want your business <lb />
F. J. FORBES, Cashier <lb />
OKLAHOMA <lb />
This Also Hits Conditions In Pitt <lb />
County. <lb />
If you say good roads mean an <lb />
increase in is a fact <lb />
the anti-bond people, or some of <lb />
them, will answer that an increase <lb />
in land valuations simply means more <lb />
taxes and they don't want that <lb />
kind of don't want <lb />
their property increased in value. <lb />
strange that one should <lb />
not want his property enhanced <lb />
in value, but there are folks who <lb />
honestly take that position. <lb />
But there is one other thing <lb />
that good roads mean, in this same <lb />
connection, which it seems <lb />
be generally advantageous, but that <lb />
is more population. Just as a <lb />
town which has modern improve- <lb />
and advantages attracts cap- <lb />
ital and population, so will a <lb />
that has good roads, good <lb />
schools, etc., attract population and <lb />
capital. People looking for new <lb />
locations prefer to go where these <lb />
improvements have been made. There <lb />
is plenty of land for sale in Ire- <lb />
dell, there is an abundance of room <lb />
for more people. More people, more <lb />
workers, means more property; and <lb />
an increase in population and <lb />
wealth will help to pay the taxes. <lb />
The more people who come in and <lb />
create more wealth, more taxable <lb />
property, the more taxes we will <lb />
have and the less the tax rate <lb />
will be. <lb />
The Stony Point correspondent <lb />
of the Taylorsville Scout, whose <lb />
articles appears in another col- <lb />
makes a strong point when <lb />
he asks why it is that people in <lb />
Mecklenburg and other counties <lb />
where bonds have been issued and <lb />
large sums for road build- <lb />
do not sell out and move to <lb />
Iredell and Alexander, where land <lb />
is cheap and taxes lower. If bonds <lb />
for road improvement are such a <lb />
calamity as some people profess to <lb />
think, it is surprising that this <lb />
sort of exodus does not take place, <lb />
but it doesn't and we all know why. <lb />
People do not as a rule voluntarily <lb />
locate in a backward, undeveloped <lb />
and community. There <lb />
are exceptions of course, for <lb />
sometimes, in an undeveloped and <lb />
community, where <lb />
land is cheap, a shrewd business man <lb />
may see a chance to make money. <lb />
But people who want permanent <lb />
homes will as naturally drift to <lb />
a community that has churches and <lb />
schools and good roads as a duck <lb />
will take to water; and they will <lb />
gladly pay two, three and four <lb />
times as much for property in a <lb />
community that offers such ad- <lb />
vantages as -they will pay for the <lb />
same property in a community that <lb />
lacks these advantages. Statesville <lb />
Landmark. <lb />
Do Ghosts Haunt <lb />
No, never. Its foolish to fear a <lb />
fancied evil, when there are real and <lb />
deadly perils to guard against in <lb />
swamps and marshes, bayous, and <lb />
lowlands. These are the malaria <lb />
germs that cause ague, chills and <lb />
fever, weakness, aches in the bones <lb />
and muscles and may induce deadly <lb />
typhoid. But Bitters de- <lb />
and casts out these vicious <lb />
germs from the blood. bot- <lb />
drove all the malaria from my <lb />
wrote Win, Fretwell, of Lu- <lb />
N. C, I've had fine health <lb />
ever Use this safe, sure rem- <lb />
only at all druggists. <lb />
They Find Poor Results of the Bank <lb />
Guarantee Plan. <lb />
Reports of the banking situation <lb />
in Oklahoma indicate that the <lb />
plan that has been followed <lb />
in that state since February, 1908, is <lb />
meeting with many of the troubles <lb />
its critics predicted. Under the law <lb />
the state banks and trust companies <lb />
contribute to the guarantee fund <lb />
per cent, of their average deposits, <lb />
new institutions adding to the fund <lb />
per cent, of their capital stock. <lb />
When a bank or trust company fails. <lb />
the depositors are immediately paid <lb />
from this fund, the state then <lb />
a first lien on the assets of the <lb />
vent corporation. A great increase <lb />
in the number of state banks came <lb />
after the plan was put into opera- <lb />
It is said that in one village <lb />
of inhabitants two banks were <lb />
started, with aggregate deposits of <lb />
only Irresponsible promo- <lb />
rushed into the banking <lb />
and, too. the national bank <lb />
themselves were forced in many in <lb />
stances to become state institution <lb />
by the advantage the latter held in <lb />
bidding for deposits. But the cost <lb />
of the guarantee system has been <lb />
found too burdensome, chiefly owing <lb />
to the assessments which, by the <lb />
law, had to be made Alien the <lb />
fund was drawn too low. Now <lb />
the rush is the other way. Not only <lb />
are the former national banks, which <lb />
had, under pressure of the guarantee <lb />
plan, become state institutions, re- <lb />
incorporated under the Federal law, <lb />
but many original state banks are do- <lb />
the same thing. The process re- <lb />
calls the experiences of three other <lb />
state, York, Vermont and <lb />
over three-quarters of a century <lb />
Review of Reviews.<lb />
MM <lb />
Professional Can <lb />
The Booster. <lb />
I'd rather be a booster than a knock- <lb />
any day. <lb />
I'd rather with hope than <lb />
doubt the words I have to say. <lb />
I'd rather miss my guess <lb />
On another man's success <lb />
Than to view his bitter struggle and <lb />
to prophesy fall. <lb />
I would rather say, <lb />
Than when I'm sum- <lb />
ming. <lb />
Up the labors of my brothers; <lb />
would rather boost them all. <lb />
I would rather speak the kind things <lb />
than the mean things any day. <lb />
I'd rather swing a baton than a <lb />
hammer, let mo say. <lb />
I would rather sing my rhyme <lb />
In a sort of two-step time <lb />
Then to let it drag in dirges in a <lb />
gloomy, heavy style. <lb />
I would rather say bless <lb />
And with words of cheer impress <lb />
you, <lb />
Than to preach about your follies all <lb />
the while. <lb />
I would rather be a booster than a <lb />
knocker any day. <lb />
I'd rather praise than in <lb />
what I have to say. <lb />
I'd rather not be wise. <lb />
At the cost of other's sighs. <lb />
I would rather see the good things <lb />
than the evil that men do; <lb />
When I boost a man along <lb />
Than be perfect in my judgment, but <lb />
make everybody blue. <lb />
what is ennui <lb />
Tommy's my son, is <lb />
B disease that attacks the people <lb />
who are so lazy that they get tired <lb />
of Record. <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. Ellington <lb />
Company <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <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 new building <lb />
Greenville, N. Carolina <lb />
N. W. OUTLAW <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
Office formerly occupied by J. L. <lb />
Fleming. <lb />
Greenville, . N. Carolina <lb />
COURT. <lb />
Cases Disposed of Since Yesterday's <lb />
Report, <lb />
Eddie Mills, larceny, former <lb />
stricken out and suspended on <lb />
payment of costs. In a case of sell- <lb />
liquor he Mas sentenced to the <lb />
roads for three months. <lb />
Allen Tyson, resisting officer, guilty, <lb />
sentenced four months on the roads. <lb />
Arthur Price and Win. Langley, <lb />
larceny, plead guilty; Judgment <lb />
pended upon payment of costs. <lb />
Kin Edward., assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, plead guilty; fined and <lb />
costs. <lb />
Arthur Price, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, in three cases, plead guilty; <lb />
judgment suspended. <lb />
Win. Langley, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon and assault with deadly <lb />
weapon in three cases, plead guilty; <lb />
judgment suspended. <lb />
Will resisting officer, <lb />
Herman Johnson and Leslie <lb />
affray, Johnson guilty; Judgment <lb />
pended upon payment of costs. <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
Henry Powell, larceny, guilty; sen- <lb />
five months on the roads. <lb />
Frank Hopkins, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, not guilty. <lb />
W. B. Smith, false pretense, guilty; <lb />
sentenced to six months on the roads. <lb />
Jolly Atkinson, Win. Atkinson, <lb />
Atkinson and Claude Atkinson, <lb />
forcible trespass, not guilty. <lb />
James Wright Daniel, house break- <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
W. C. D. M. Clark <lb />
CLARK <lb />
Engineers and Surveyors <lb />
. N. Carolina <lb />
S. J. EVERETT <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
In Building <lb />
Greenville, N. Carolina <lb />
L. I. Moore, W. H. Long <lb />
MOORE LONG <lb />
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb />
. . N. Carolina <lb />
CHARLES C. 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. CARR <lb />
. Carolina <lb />
HARRY SKINNER <lb />
LAWYER <lb />
. . N. Carolina <lb />
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb />
Practice limited to diseases of the <lb />
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat <lb />
Washington, V. C. Greenville, iT. C. <lb />
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. James. <lb />
a. m. to p. m., Mondays. <lb />
ALBION DUNN <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
Office in building, Third St. <lb />
Practices wherever his services are <lb />
desired <lb />
Greenville, . . X. Carolina <lb />
More Slander. <lb />
notice, at a woman's gather- <lb />
how guilty the other women look <lb />
when a fresh arrival comes <lb />
right; whether they have <lb />
been talking about her or <lb />
burg Post. <lb />
Microbes and Cats. <lb />
A Chicago man has organized to <lb />
kill off the cats. He Is a doctor and <lb />
gives as a reason for his murderous <lb />
intent that the cat's whiskers are the <lb />
roosting places of numerous unsightly <lb />
and terrifying microbes, ready to <lb />
pounce their victim at the first <lb />
chance. In order to the <lb />
of the felines the doctor has <lb />
invented a sort of gibbet trap, which <lb />
is said to terminate the cat in the <lb />
most painless manner. The doctor <lb />
is now being assailed on every side, <lb />
especially by the women who have <lb />
taken the cat tribe to heart. <lb />
We do not expect this man's mi- <lb />
scare will result in the death <lb />
of a single cat. People are getting <lb />
tired of microbe scares. There are <lb />
too many of them. If they run from <lb />
all the microbes discovered they will <lb />
keep on the run. A person should <lb />
know how to to keep clean <lb />
pure, temperate, brave, hopeful, and <lb />
then snap his fingers at the microbes, <lb />
especially those in the cat's <lb />
State Journal. <lb />
You can't insult a suffragette more <lb />
than telling her that she is no <lb />
gentleman.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
Boat van, , <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 />
Subscription, 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 />
wants to be, but is doing its best to <lb />
serve its patrons well and be of use <lb />
to the public. We feel grateful to <lb />
every one who has given us any pat- <lb />
whatever, and hope to merit <lb />
their confidence and support at all <lb />
times. <lb />
Now, won't you just look at this. <lb />
One E. L. Andrews, of New York, <lb />
counsel for foreign bondholders, has <lb />
written to the New York Stock Ex- <lb />
change protesting against proposed <lb />
Congressman of Indiana, <lb />
gives as a reason for the government <lb />
postal deficit, that the post office de- <lb />
devotes too much attention <lb />
to politics and too little to business. <lb />
He says post office department <lb />
is the greatest political machine ever <lb />
constructed in this or any other <lb />
country, and it is openly administered <lb />
as a political <lb />
It is two months away, but per- <lb />
too far to suggest that <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, MAY 1911. <lb />
THE COUNTY FAIR. <lb />
The fair which the Pitt County As- <lb />
is going to hold next fall <lb />
should appeal to every farmer in the <lb />
county. We want to tell you that it <lb />
is going to be something worth while. <lb />
Right now is the time that the farm- <lb />
should begin preparation for it. <lb />
Cultivate your crops with the view <lb />
of having something good to put on <lb />
exhibition for flour fellow farmers <lb />
to see how well you have done. If <lb />
you are a raiser of fine stock, or a <lb />
poultry fancier, have an eye to <lb />
bringing some of the best of these <lb />
to the county fair. And the good <lb />
housewife, let her give heed to the <lb />
dairy and poultry supplies and have <lb />
some of these to exhibit. The boys <lb />
in the corn contest also can select <lb />
the ten best ears out of their crop <lb />
and bring them along to compete for <lb />
prizes. All have these things in mind <lb />
during the cropping and harvesting <lb />
seasons, and when the exhibits are <lb />
brought together on the day of the <lb />
fair it will be shown that Pitt county <lb />
is the greatest in the state. <lb />
Carolina and being listed <lb />
on the exchange. It strikes us the <lb />
name of this same Andrews was not <lb />
long ago figuring with the name of <lb />
Marion Butler in a certain advertise- <lb />
trying to collect some <lb />
lent bonds out of Carolina. <lb />
Andrews says that his clients are op- <lb />
posed to extending further credit to <lb />
Somebody ought <lb />
to send him a basket of North Caro- <lb />
strawberries to cheer him up. <lb />
You people of Greenville, when the <lb />
appeal conies for room to help pro- <lb />
for the large number of teach- <lb />
who want to take the summer <lb />
course at East Carolina <lb />
Training School, it is your duty <lb />
respond. Even if it puts you to a <lb />
little inconvenience for a few weeks, <lb />
the school should have the it <lb />
asks for. We should fill Greenville <lb />
as full of teachers as possible this <lb />
summer, and show the people every- <lb />
where what a great school we have <lb />
here. . <lb />
The Reflector is gratified at its <lb />
record for the fiscal year ended April <lb />
80th. In that year the subscription <lb />
list of the daily increased about 1-3 <lb />
per cent., and weekly about <lb />
per cent., and the business was much <lb />
larger than in any previous year. At <lb />
the same time the equipment of the <lb />
plant has been increased more than <lb />
per cent, and it is now in <lb />
to handle much more work than <lb />
formerly. We believe the people will <lb />
appreciate having such a well equipped <lb />
printing plant here, and will give us <lb />
work to support it. The ambition <lb />
of The Reflector is to be of all the <lb />
service possible to the community <lb />
and to give the people a paper in <lb />
which they will feel a pride as their <lb />
home paper. It is not yet what it <lb />
The term of criminal court that <lb />
began last Monday with Judge G. S. <lb />
Ferguson presiding, and Solicitor C. <lb />
L. representing the state, <lb />
made a record in the disposition of <lb />
cases. At the beginning of the term <lb />
there were about cases on the <lb />
docket. The grand jury added seventy <lb />
odd cases more, and by noon on <lb />
Thursday, less than four days, ninety <lb />
nine cases were disposed of and the <lb />
term adjourned. An average of <lb />
twenty-five cases a day is certainly <lb />
going some in court. <lb />
having a Fourth of July celebration <lb />
of some kind. It would not be bad <lb />
to bring a large crowd of people here <lb />
on that day and have something to <lb />
amuse them when they come. <lb />
The subject for discussion by the <lb />
Men's Prayer League of Greenville, <lb />
in their meeting next Sunday after- <lb />
noon, is Every <lb />
man in the community ought to be <lb />
at that meeting, but there are some <lb />
who will stay away through fear that <lb />
their consciences might betray them. <lb />
A gentleman who notices things <lb />
was heard to remark that if every- <lb />
thing around Greenville kept pace <lb />
with The Reflector in making <lb />
the town would not be <lb />
long going to population. <lb />
So many people fail to recognize <lb />
their duty to pay for their news- <lb />
paper, we believe that, sooner or later <lb />
every newspaper will be driven to the <lb />
cash in advance policy. Many have <lb />
already adopted it and others are <lb />
following. <lb />
It is not every man who should <lb />
dare to act in accordance with the <lb />
decision of the Island judge <lb />
that a man is justified in slapping <lb />
his wife for going through his <lb />
pockets. It would not be safe for <lb />
some men to try it. <lb />
Pitt county took a forward step <lb />
Friday, in the organization of a <lb />
county fair association. There is no <lb />
question but what Pitt can hold a <lb />
fair that will be a credit to the <lb />
county. She raises as fine crops as <lb />
are grown anywhere, and her live <lb />
stock takes high rank. Bringing the <lb />
best specimens of these, as well as <lb />
dairy products, pantry s and <lb />
poultry together in an exhibit, will <lb />
be something worth looking at. A <lb />
good fair will greatly help the <lb />
cultural interests of the county. <lb />
The man who sacrifices his time, <lb />
pleasure and even comfort, in work- <lb />
to help others and advance the <lb />
community, is worth far more to his <lb />
town than the man who is so selfish <lb />
that he takes no interest in anything <lb />
except what he does for himself. <lb />
Greenville has some of both kinds. <lb />
Utah wants to present a silver <lb />
service designed with a likeness of <lb />
Brigham Young to the battleship <lb />
Utah. And the Daughters of the <lb />
American Revolution spoke right out <lb />
against it. <lb />
Five years ago the government <lb />
seized of <lb />
in this state, and to stop the heavy <lb />
cost of guarding it has ordered it <lb />
sold. Liquor of that age will find <lb />
many bidders. <lb />
There are not any but poor folks <lb />
now, as tax listing time has come. <lb />
One man got so poor that he had <lb />
to stop his subscription to the pa- <lb />
per. <lb />
The latest electric achievement is <lb />
the car that runs by a storage bat- <lb />
tery. Edison, the inventor, came to <lb />
Concord, this state, to make a test <lb />
Of new car, and it proved a <lb />
success. <lb />
The Republicans want the Demo- <lb />
to support their reciprocity bill <lb />
in congress, yet they in turn call the <lb />
Democratic free list bill <lb />
soothing <lb />
You girls who were planning to <lb />
wear hobble skirts to the coronation <lb />
should make a note that they have <lb />
been barred by the committee on <lb />
ceremonies. <lb />
Congratulations to the Greenville <lb />
Reflector. That paper is so prosper- <lb />
it had to install a new and faster <lb />
press to serve its <lb />
News. <lb />
As large and as great a county as <lb />
is Pitt, and as much cotton as she <lb />
raises, she has not a single cotton <lb />
mill within her borders. <lb />
things ought not so to <lb />
Trying to think is harder work than <lb />
News. <lb />
It is sometimes worse than that, <lb />
for trying to think when you can't <lb />
think is no think at all. <lb />
Cowan, of the Wilmington Dispatch, <lb />
is all right, even when it comes to <lb />
saving a Chinaman's queue. Maybe <lb />
he can borrow some of it when his <lb />
own sorrel top gets thin.<lb />
An exchange noting the death of <lb />
a lady says she was between <lb />
forty and sixty The readers <lb />
have plenty of latitude to guess in. <lb />
If Jack Johnson keeps up his home <lb />
capers when he goes to the <lb />
nation, there will likely be a cell <lb />
waiting for him in London jail. <lb />
The town that makes money hard <lb />
to get is hindering Its own progress <lb />
by driving away those who would <lb />
make investments or establish en- <lb />
There is going to be over <lb />
put in new buildings in Greenville <lb />
this year. Watch and see if It does <lb />
not come out that way. <lb />
Ex-Governor Aycock says I am <lb />
to a candidate for the United <lb />
States senate the people must run <lb />
It's up to the people. <lb />
They used to write about man <lb />
with the Now it is the man <lb />
with the improved farm machinery <lb />
who counts for most <lb />
So many people being bitten <lb />
by mad dogs and mad cats that it <lb />
is time to be thinking about <lb />
both. <lb />
It is better to aim high and not <lb />
quite reach the mark than it is to <lb />
never see above a low plane. <lb />
Winter gives up very grudgingly, <lb />
but it has got to go. <lb />
BUILDING AND LOAN. <lb />
The Reflector will not say that it <lb />
is given to hobbies, but it does have <lb />
pets, and prominent among these pets <lb />
Home Building and Loan As- <lb />
It is one thing that we <lb />
do not think too much can be said in <lb />
praise of, for the good it is doing <lb />
the community grows more and more <lb />
apparent. There are numerous <lb />
in Greenville living in homes of <lb />
their own which they could not <lb />
but for the aid derived from the <lb />
association, and even people in <lb />
have been helped by it. The <lb />
good the association is doing in this <lb />
direction is limited only by its in- <lb />
come. True it has a creditable <lb />
of stockholders, but if the <lb />
was larger the benefit to the com- <lb />
would be correspondingly <lb />
greater. Another good the <lb />
does is the saving habit it in- <lb />
This putting aside of a <lb />
little every week and having it <lb />
invested counts for much <lb />
in the long run. Every boy and every <lb />
young man, even though he has a <lb />
small income, could with only a little <lb />
self denial carry a share or two in <lb />
the association and in a few years <lb />
have a neat sum accumulated to his <lb />
credit. A new series of shares will <lb />
open next Saturday and it is a good <lb />
time to make a start in this direction. <lb />
If you want to hear factory <lb />
in Greenville, first build the <lb />
and then the whistles. <lb />
If a man makes his living in a <lb />
town, it is certainly his duty to do <lb />
something for the town. <lb />
The dispatches say that Jack <lb />
Johnson is out of jail. It is not for <lb />
long we expect. <lb />
---------o <lb />
When a man comes among us and <lb />
joins the we feel at OLe <lb />
like he is the right kind. <lb />
o--------- <lb />
Greenville can do what it under- <lb />
takes to do, but one draw back is <lb />
not in undertaking enough. <lb />
The incubators can do it all but <lb />
lay the eggs. There is where the <lb />
hen is indispensable. <lb />
When a man won't pay his debts <lb />
and then lies about it, he breaks two <lb />
of the ten commandments. <lb />
THE PRINTER'S OFF DAY. <lb />
The following item appeared in a <lb />
Peru <lb />
on invitation from the <lb />
Sunday of the <lb />
at Granville, to there inter- <lb />
to night; the of the <lb />
Ev. church Zions church at La Salle <lb />
left late, this afternoon to a fed <lb />
there. A party wish con- <lb />
of members were met by a <lb />
farmer of the Granville church on the <lb />
corner of and <lb />
whit a large sleigh,; by this <lb />
wetter it is certainly an enjoyable <lb />
ride. The choir is the leader- <lb />
ship of Rev., who is a <lb />
in Europa and this is surely <lb />
a excellent opportunity for young <lb />
people for development of there <lb />
This is a reminder of what the <lb />
proof reader after a machine <lb />
often has to deal with. <lb />
Several towns in the state held <lb />
their municipal elections Monday. <lb />
Greenville's will come a month <lb />
hence. <lb />
The commencement season is draw- <lb />
near and the next few weeks will <lb />
be full of them. <lb />
The New Bern citizen who has made <lb />
three attempts to commit suicide <lb />
may succeed if he keeps trying. <lb />
If men were run out of town be- <lb />
cause they are worth practically <lb />
nothing to it, Greenville would lose <lb />
some citizens. <lb />
Millions For <lb />
Wilmington's banking <lb />
resources make an extraordinary <lb />
showing for a city with a population <lb />
of according to the 1910 <lb />
Of course, Wilmington is going <lb />
right on gaining population and is go- <lb />
to keep on attracting people who <lb />
are seeking the best place in which to <lb />
start industrial and business enter- <lb />
prises, so we can assume that last <lb />
year's census is a back number so far <lb />
as the size of this city is now con- <lb />
However, we have to take the <lb />
figures when we divide up our <lb />
banking resources, and when we do <lb />
that we see that we have a banking <lb />
capital amounting to between <lb />
and for every man, woman and <lb />
child in the That is our com- <lb />
cash assets, not to mention <lb />
our other assets, and that asset is <lb />
back of the business and <lb />
enterprises of Wilmington. Our <lb />
banks, however, are not only supply- <lb />
the home demand for money, but <lb />
their financial operations extend into <lb />
the Carolinas and other states. This <lb />
shows that Wilmington is able to <lb />
take care of new-comers who desire <lb />
to come here to establish <lb />
plants or to go into business of <lb />
any kind. We are willing to divide <lb />
our capital with all coiners, and if it <lb />
is not enough to do the business we <lb />
will increase our banking resources <lb />
to meet all demands. <lb />
What we want to do in Wilmington <lb />
s to get enough manufacturing en- <lb />
here to keep our banking <lb />
resources employed at home. At any <lb />
rate, a large amount of it should be <lb />
invested in Wilmington instead of be- <lb />
sent abroad to develop other cit- <lb />
We don't know but that it would <lb />
be a better idea for Wilmington to <lb />
become a borrowing city instead of a <lb />
lending city, but at the same time <lb />
the fortunate fact that Wilmington <lb />
has ample capital should be an in- <lb />
for investors and promoters <lb />
to come here to do We want <lb />
to keep our capital at home to build <lb />
up Star. <lb />
primaries has been personal and <lb />
a family fight is always the fiercest. <lb />
The May election, to carry out the <lb />
primary nominations, will settle who <lb />
is who. as office holders, but it will <lb />
not settle the bitterness that has <lb />
been and still Burn- <lb />
Journal. <lb />
Press Comments. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector has In- <lb />
stalled a new and improved printing <lb />
press. While congratulating our <lb />
contemporary, we cannot repress a <lb />
shudder at the thought of what its <lb />
particular crony The Wilmington <lb />
Dispatch may think tit to <lb />
touching the Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
Whichard, of The Greenville <lb />
Reflector has treated himself to a <lb />
new press. subscription list of <lb />
the paper has grown to such <lb />
in the last year that it was <lb />
to get a much faster press <lb />
than the one already in use in order <lb />
to print the large and catch <lb />
the mails It is always <lb />
a good sign when editors are forced <lb />
to put in faster presses. We are <lb />
glad Tie Reflector tit f-It the pres- <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
London claims to have a man with <lb />
three lungs, but nowhere except In <lb />
China do they have Lung. <lb />
So Caesar did not lose his head. <lb />
He will the next joke <lb />
A young woman was choked to <lb />
death the other day in New York by <lb />
wearing one of those high, tight col- <lb />
Wonder why some women don't <lb />
get concussion of the brain from <lb />
wearing those wash-tub size hats <lb />
N. chance for a daring chap <lb />
like Whichard to rush in where an- <lb />
gels fear to Dis- <lb />
patch. <lb />
Cowan, we're too busy writ- <lb />
history to stop and play with you <lb />
now. <lb />
Better be sure that you are right <lb />
before you start out to convince the <lb />
other fellow that he is wrong. <lb />
Some counties not as large as Pitt <lb />
have delinquent tax lists many times <lb />
larger. <lb />
The hobble and the harem have <lb />
both been advertised enough to be <lb />
known. <lb />
It has to be done, so you had <lb />
just list your taxes. <lb />
Now and then a straw hat is brave <lb />
enough to face it. <lb />
You must keep an eye on the cold <lb />
spell in May before taking off. <lb />
You can hear the feet fairly <lb />
clatter on the sand clay surface. <lb />
Grass is growing so fast you will <lb />
soon have to keep off. <lb />
The is making his last round <lb />
until another season. <lb />
On with the county fair. Let's <lb />
have it. <lb />
The reports from those North <lb />
Carolina cities that have had <lb />
this spring, have shown an <lb />
usual spirit of local discontent. The <lb />
era have merely indicated this <lb />
discontent, probably the full story <lb />
would not prove edifying, for there <lb />
have been bitter animosities <lb />
that the decision at the polls <lb />
has not settled. <lb />
Why this unusual rancor among <lb />
those who have hitherto been <lb />
cal friends, each community must de- <lb />
for itself. But that the <lb />
have been bitterly contested <lb />
is no secret in any city. Perhaps <lb />
Raleigh has shown the most remark- <lb />
able primary exhibit, in the <lb />
of and the taking of <lb />
the Democratic oath by white Re- <lb />
publicans. The fact that Republicans <lb />
have no voice in way of nominating <lb />
and voting in municipal elections in <lb />
this State, because their party at- <lb />
tempts no the reason for <lb />
Republicans taking part in so many <lb />
cities this spring in Democratic <lb />
primaries. It is doubtful if a single <lb />
city can prove an exception in this, <lb />
tho few it might be said only Raleigh <lb />
has made a full confession of it. That <lb />
Republicans thus taking part in <lb />
municipal primaries, hitherto <lb />
for Democrats, indicates the <lb />
gradual elimination of politics on <lb />
strict party lines. This is not <lb />
healthy, where good tax paying Re- <lb />
publicans can have a say in their own <lb />
business, as tax payers of a city. <lb />
But the fight this spring in Demo- <lb />
The Greenville Daily Reflector has <lb />
been greatly improved in its print <lb />
and typography, but we hardly think <lb />
D. J. Whichard could Improve <lb />
on himself. That would be B hard <lb />
task, for he is always doing his best <lb />
according to his opportunity to do, <lb />
and we know he does even better <lb />
than his opportunity warrants. Dave <lb />
is always ahead of the game. The <lb />
improved appearance of the Reflector <lb />
is because Editor Whichard has in- <lb />
stalled a new power press and <lb />
naturally that will enable him to get <lb />
out a better paper. Better facilities <lb />
always mean a better paper, and by <lb />
increasing his facilities and bettering <lb />
his paper he is doing splendid work <lb />
for Greenville. He is one of Green- <lb />
valuable assets, and that is the <lb />
way the business men of his town <lb />
ought to look upon him. Editor <lb />
Whichard has invested more money <lb />
to get o it a better paper, and the <lb />
people of his town and county should <lb />
invest more money in their <lb />
editor. When a newspaper <lb />
maker is doing his best to make good, <lb />
stand by him and see it well done. <lb />
Wilmington Star. <lb />
Facts About Tobacco. <lb />
The historical iconoclast is a busy <lb />
man. He keeps men occupied in <lb />
learning history they have learned. <lb />
Now comes a French writer in a <lb />
French paper who says that tobacco <lb />
was used in Europe before the dis- <lb />
of America, that the <lb />
and Persians smoked tobacco in <lb />
ages before the sprouting of <lb />
the trees from which the Nina, the <lb />
and the Maria Teresa were con- <lb />
that tobacco reek was fa- <lb />
in the colonies of the Greeks <lb />
and Romans, and that cigars and <lb />
were in common by <lb />
and aliens in the before <lb />
Columbus thought of getting there by <lb />
sailing west. The word cigar is now <lb />
said to come from an Arab word, <lb />
meaning <lb />
Adding to His Vocabulary. <lb />
That same little boy was going over <lb />
his reading lesson to his mother. <lb />
Coming to the word thoroughly he <lb />
pronounced it tho-roughly. Upon be- <lb />
corrected he said, know t-h-o <lb />
spells tho and r-o-u-g-h-l-y spells <lb />
And there you have it. <lb />
-T <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
,.,. . <lb />
DORMITORIES WILL <lb />
BE OVERCROWDED <lb />
APPEAL TO CITIZENS OF TOWN- <lb />
Who Our- <lb />
The Summer School. <lb />
At present the indications are that <lb />
we will have many more applicants <lb />
for admission to the summer school <lb />
term than we can accommodate in <lb />
our dormitories. Many of these will <lb />
be men. If these people can get <lb />
rooms and board in Greenville it will <lb />
be an accommodation to them and <lb />
we will appreciate it very much. <lb />
Some of them will wish <lb />
for four weeks only, and <lb />
for eight. <lb />
If you will take some of these <lb />
teachers summer, please write <lb />
me a note the note even if <lb />
you have told us over the <lb />
stating your street address, the <lb />
of people you can room and board, <lb />
whether you prefer men or women, <lb />
or if you can accommodate both <lb />
men and women, and what you w ill <lb />
charge per week for room and board. <lb />
If you can furnish rooms but not <lb />
table board let us us know this, or <lb />
if you can Furnish table board but <lb />
not rooms, let us know. In either <lb />
event give your charges per week. <lb />
We are not taking men into our <lb />
dormitories for the summer term. <lb />
Several men have requested that I <lb />
provide a place for them to board. I <lb />
hope you will let me hear from you <lb />
by Saturday of this week. <lb />
April 1911. <lb />
ROBT. H. WRIGHT. <lb />
MONEY BACK. <lb />
Had Headaches Quickly Disappear. <lb />
Mrs. Chas. Hartley, Franklin <lb />
St., Jackson, Mich., had <lb />
all kinds of pain and agony <lb />
from stomachs complaint for several <lb />
months. The pains in my <lb />
were very bad, the gas forced the <lb />
food up into my throat, my food did <lb />
not digest, headaches of the worst <lb />
kind attended, I became weak, <lb />
and in a condition so I could not <lb />
sleep. <lb />
Was alarmed at my condition as <lb />
doctoring did not benefit me, finally <lb />
I was induced to try and <lb />
after using for about two weeks, I <lb />
found a cure. <lb />
If you have a sallow complexion, <lb />
pimples, blotches, or dull eyes, your <lb />
digestion is all wrong, and you should <lb />
take stomach tablets <lb />
mediately, and put your stomach <lb />
right. <lb />
instantly stops belching <lb />
of gas, sour stomach, heartburn and <lb />
foul breath and gives complete re- <lb />
lief in five minutes. <lb />
guaranteed to cure <lb />
sea sickness, vomiting of <lb />
or money back <lb />
Don't hesitate to try It <lb />
is for sale by Coward Wooten and <lb />
leading druggists everywhere at <lb />
cents a large box. <lb />
Apr. 18,27, May <lb />
Paid m Duly Harem <lb />
Catherine Cameron, who boasted <lb />
when she Stopped ashore from the <lb />
steamer yesterday that <lb />
she was the first woman to wear a <lb />
harem skirt in the streets of London, <lb />
earned for herself the farther dis- <lb />
of being the first woman to <lb />
be held up by the customs inspectors <lb />
and asked to pay duty on three <lb />
em skirts she had brought with her <lb />
After a little objection, she paid <lb />
the duty and the skirts came in. <lb />
New York American. <lb />
Cures Catarrh Without <lb />
Rosing, or Money Hack. <lb />
Yes, dear reader, catarrh can be <lb />
cured; but not by pouring vile, <lb />
nauseating drugs into the stomach. <lb />
And catarrh germs thrive, flourish <lb />
and multiply in the nose and throat. <lb />
Can you kill these tough and per- <lb />
little health destroyers by <lb />
swallowing pills or nostrum Any <lb />
physician will tell you it cannot be <lb />
done. <lb />
is a germ killing vaporized air which, <lb />
when breathed either through the <lb />
mouth or nose, will kill catarrh germs <lb />
and soothe and heal the inflamed and <lb />
mutilated membrane promptly. It <lb />
gives relief in two minutes. <lb />
is such a powerful germ <lb />
destroyer that it penetrates every <lb />
fold and crevice of the <lb />
of the nose and throat. <lb />
A complete outfit, which includes <lb />
inhaler, a bottle of and <lb />
sample instructions for use, costs <lb />
Should you need a second bottle of <lb />
the price is only at <lb />
Coward and leading drug- <lb />
ids ts everywhere sell <lb />
April May <lb />
FOB A BIBLE. <lb />
First Book Printed From Mumble <lb />
Price Ever Paid. <lb />
The first book ever printed from <lb />
movable type brought the highest <lb />
price ever paid for any book. The <lb />
prize was the Bible, the <lb />
purchaser, Henry E. Huntington, of <lb />
Los Angeles, and the price <lb />
The purchase was made at the <lb />
opening session of the sale of the <lb />
library of the late Robert Hoe, the <lb />
largest public auction sale of books <lb />
ever attempted. Experts have es- <lb />
the collection to be worth <lb />
more than a million dollars, and <lb />
wealthy amateurs and dealers from <lb />
I'm rope have come to vie with the <lb />
American collectors in the bidding. <lb />
It was evident from the progress of <lb />
the sale that American bidders would <lb />
take in the cream of the offerings at <lb />
prices averaging higher than any ever <lb />
offered at a public book auction. <lb />
The highest price previously paid <lb />
the Bible was <lb />
at which Bernard <lb />
purchased at in England fourteen <lb />
years ago. At a private sale he dis- <lb />
posed of it shortly afterward to Mr. <lb />
Hoe at a profit of and it has <lb />
remained in the Hoe collection ever <lb />
since. <lb />
The copy was printed some time <lb />
between 1450 and 1455. <lb />
Bidding for the treasured book was <lb />
spirited, with Bernard son <lb />
of the former owner, participating <lb />
until the bids passed the <lb />
mark. From there it jumped by thou- <lb />
sands at a clip to At <lb />
P. A. B. Widener, of <lb />
who had been the most deter- <lb />
mined of the runners up, dropped <lb />
out of the race and the even <lb />
was bid by Mr. Huntington. The <lb />
winner is a son of the late Collis <lb />
P. York World. <lb />
A Burglar's Awful Deed. <lb />
May not paralyze a home so com- <lb />
plenty as a mother's long illness. <lb />
But Dr. King's New Life Pills are a <lb />
splendid remedy for women. <lb />
gave me wonderful benefit in <lb />
and female wrote <lb />
Mrs. M. C. Dunlap, of Tenn. <lb />
If ailing, try them. cents all drug- <lb />
gists. <lb />
Announcement <lb />
We wish to announce to the merchants <lb />
and business men of Greenville that our <lb />
plant is now first class and workmanship <lb />
the same, so now is the time to turn over <lb />
a new leaf and bring in that ad. and let <lb />
us get it up in the most up-to-date style. <lb />
The Reflector Co., Printers <lb />
Spring is Here <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 STEAMER'S <lb />
Dining Service Carte and Table <lb />
Steamers leave Norfolk p. in. from foot of Jackson street <lb />
and arrive Baltimore 7.00 a. m. <lb />
For full particulars and reservation, write .; <lb />
W. H. PARNELL, T. P. A., <lb />
Street, <lb />
Norfolk, Virginia<lb />
Jr. S <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 THE COURSE S TO BETTER EQUIP <lb />
THE TEACHER FOR HIS WORE. <lb />
Text Those used in the public schools of the State <lb />
For further Information, <lb />
ROBT. H. WRIGHT, Pres <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
GRADED SCHOOL <lb />
PROGRAM <lb />
WILL CLOSE MAY 14-15. <lb />
By Dr. Massey, Address by <lb />
Dr. Brewer. <lb />
. The annual commencement <lb />
of the graded schools of Green- <lb />
will be held May 14th and 15th <lb />
I On the evening of the 14th, winch <lb />
s Sunday evening, the annual <lb />
will be preached before the <lb />
class by Dr. L. S. Massey, <lb />
of Raleigh. Dr. Massey is said to be <lb />
i strong preacher, and we believe all <lb />
hear him will be pleased with <lb />
discourse. The service will be a <lb />
service, the pastors of all the <lb />
Lurches having very kindly agreed <lb />
to Join with it. The sermon will be <lb />
preached to the Methodist church <lb />
On Monday evening, the 15th the <lb />
graduating exercises will be held, at <lb />
I which time the annual literary ad- <lb />
dress will be by Dr. Chas. <lb />
E Brewer, of Wake Forest. Dr. <lb />
Brewer is one of the strongest <lb />
I of the faculty at Wake Forest <lb />
and the management of the school <lb />
congratulates itself on being able to <lb />
secure so eminent a scholar and <lb />
speaker. <lb />
The class of 1911 numbers four- <lb />
teen, the by two that the <lb />
school has yet had to complete the <lb />
course at one time. There will also <lb />
be four or five to graduate in music. <lb />
Some weeks ago the seniors elected <lb />
three of their members to represent <lb />
them as essayists on the night <lb />
their graduation. These were Misses <lb />
Marguerite Higgs. Bottle <lb />
and Mr. David C. Moore, Jr. The <lb />
essays are nearly completed. The <lb />
L class will not be disappointed in the <lb />
work of its representatives, as these <lb />
are of a high order. <lb />
The undergraduates in the music <lb />
class above the sixth grade will give <lb />
a recital on Tuesday evening, May <lb />
16th In connection with this recital, <lb />
the usual exhibit of the children's <lb />
work in drawing will be given <lb />
One more week of school, and then <lb />
the examinations begin. These latter <lb />
days are very important ones, and <lb />
the pupils who make good use of the <lb />
next few days will find the results <lb />
in their grades. Most of the <lb />
have studied well this year, and <lb />
the percentage of pupils promoted <lb />
will be fully as good, as heretofore. <lb />
There is no season that teachers <lb />
dread quite so much as the one just <lb />
ahead of the graded school teachers. <lb />
Review work is hard, giving <lb />
nations is trying, and the reading of <lb />
the large bundle of papers each <lb />
and night that was collected <lb />
from the test of the day, is the most <lb />
exhausting work a teacher has to <lb />
do. . . <lb />
A large number of parents have <lb />
ready enrolled their children for the <lb />
summer session of school. The plan <lb />
to lengthen the term seems to meet <lb />
the hearty approval of the people; <lb />
the school authorities are gratified <lb />
with the ready response of their pro- <lb />
for extending the session. Al- <lb />
ready enough pupils have registered <lb />
to continue four of the grades. The <lb />
term is now a certainty. <lb />
Air often. <lb />
Hatched With Four Feet and Three <lb />
Wings. <lb />
Mrs. Charlie Dudley, of Grifton, <lb />
writes The Reflector that on Thurs- <lb />
day one of her hens came off with <lb />
little chicks and left eggs in <lb />
OF GRADED <lb />
WILL BE HELPFUL TO <lb />
Superintendent Smith Outlines Plan <lb />
For This Work. <lb />
Vt little chicks and left eggs in people Served by the Graded <lb />
the nest. While making her rounds <lb />
in the afternoon to gather eggs from <lb />
a long row of nests. Mrs. Dudley <lb />
saw a little chick, not even dry, in <lb />
the recently deserted nest. This <lb />
particular chick which was hatched <lb />
out alone had four feet and three <lb />
wings, and seemed perfectly <lb />
otherwise. The chicken died. <lb />
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. <lb />
Please Hand in Your Copy As <lb />
As Possible. <lb />
Advertisers frequently hand In <lb />
their copy so late as to delay us in <lb />
getting out the paper promptly. Copy <lb />
for. display advertising should be in <lb />
the office not later than noon, and for <lb />
notices not later <lb />
than o'clock, p. m. If <lb />
will kindly make a note of this, <lb />
they will help us do their work more <lb />
promptly and satisfactorily. We de- <lb />
sire to extend them every <lb />
possible, but do not like to <lb />
miss mails while holding back the <lb />
paper to get in advertisements. The <lb />
last half hour before going to press <lb />
is a rush time in the shop. <lb />
A session of eight months is too <lb />
short a term to do the work required <lb />
of the modern-day graded school. <lb />
has not seemed wise to make our <lb />
term longer than eight months on the <lb />
public fund, because it is not largo <lb />
enough. In order to overcome in <lb />
some measure the defects arising <lb />
from our shortened term, we wish <lb />
to propose to the people the main- <lb />
of an extra month of school, <lb />
to begin May 17th. and close June <lb />
The tuition fee will be two dollars <lb />
and twenty-five cents. <lb />
I schools with eight month terms, <lb />
the children get further <lb />
arithmetic and English than in any <lb />
other subjects. These are the chief <lb />
subjects in which we offer <lb />
and in these we propose to <lb />
some very careful and drill. <lb />
Our work in English will include in- <lb />
in composition, reading, <lb />
writing and spelling. <lb />
A large number of the pupils in <lb />
the graded school need some extra <lb />
drill work in and English. <lb />
Few of them would fail to be help- <lb />
A Story To Appear In the June <lb />
Magazine. <lb />
-Now for North will em- <lb />
body the wonderful story of the <lb />
progress and enterprise of the Old <lb />
North State, and appear in Na- <lb />
Magazine for June. So great <lb />
and so radical have been the changes <lb />
during the last generation that it <lb />
requires sixty-four pages to do <lb />
to its enterprise and prosperity <lb />
of today. The saying of Christ, that <lb />
a prophet is not without honor save <lb />
in his own might be para- <lb />
phrased today to the effect, that <lb />
glories of a state are not without <lb />
admiration and honor abroad while <lb />
not duly appreciated at <lb />
North Carolina is indeed an empire <lb />
in itself. The coastal district, with <lb />
its canals and lumber interests, has <lb />
always been associated in Northern <lb />
minds with the old school boy phrase <lb />
pitch and and too <lb />
little with the fisheries of the great <lb />
sounds and diversified productions <lb />
of a light but generous sort. West- <lb />
ward the great plateau district and <lb />
the mineral-bearing ranges support <lb />
prosperous towns and agricultural <lb />
valley hamlets, from which many <lb />
swift and clear rivers afford water- <lb />
ways to the sea. <lb />
Many a European nation, great in <lb />
the annals of antiquity, has no proud- <lb />
record man's bravery, woman's <lb />
diversified resources and <lb />
Bethel Commencement. <lb />
The commencement exercises of <lb />
Bethel high school will take place <lb />
from May 5th to 9th. The program <lb />
is as <lb />
Friday, 5th, p. m.-Entertainment <lb />
by grades <lb />
Sunday, 7th, p. m.-Sermon by <lb />
Rev L P. Howard, of Rocky Mount, <lb />
Monday, 8th, p. m.-Class day <lb />
exercises. <lb />
Monday, 8th, p. m.-Concert by <lb />
music class. <lb />
Tuesday, a. m-Declamation <lb />
and recitation contest, by 10th grade. <lb />
Tuesday, p. m.-Graduating ex- <lb />
Address by Mr. J. <lb />
of Raleigh. <lb />
Tuesday, to P- m.-Reception. <lb />
mt State. Th. MM . <lb />
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb />
Excellent Rolls. <lb />
Friday evening Principal C. M. <lb />
EpPs, of the colored graded school <lb />
lit at the editor's home a plate of <lb />
rolls made by the students in the in- <lb />
department of the schooL <lb />
The rolls were excellent and gave <lb />
of the good work the students <lb />
are doing. <lb />
Other Moons Than Ours. <lb />
There are to all twenty-five moons <lb />
besides our queen of night; Mars <lb />
having two, Jupiter eight, Saturn ten <lb />
Uranus four and one. Of <lb />
course, new lunar additions are like- <lb />
to be discovered at any time, <lb />
though it is improbable that Mercury <lb />
and Venus have any satellites or that <lb />
Mars has more than two. The two <lb />
known moons of Mars are, indeed <lb />
very minute, neither being over fifty <lb />
miles in diameter. On the other hand <lb />
Jupiter's first four satellites, as well <lb />
as Ganymede, are each larger than <lb />
Queen Lunar, Ganymede having a <lb />
diameter of about 3.500 miles. Titan, <lb />
of Saturn, possesses a diameter <lb />
miles, while that <lb />
of Neptune's sole satellite is about <lb />
miles. <lb />
As respects our own moon, Queen <lb />
Luna has one-forty-ninth the size and <lb />
the weight of our <lb />
earth. Luna's distance from us varies <lb />
a good deal, from miles to <lb />
miles. Her mean or average <lb />
distance is about <lb />
Philadelphia Public Ledger. <lb />
deepen their knowledge of the sub- <lb />
to be taught. And this is what <lb />
ls needed. All pupils who have been <lb />
to section B of the <lb />
grades this year will profit very <lb />
greatly by attending the school. <lb />
Section A pupils will be strength- <lb />
and improved by the course <lb />
A number of the who fail of <lb />
promotion in May can be advanced <lb />
later if they will take the course <lb />
The daily sessions will begin at <lb />
These hours are the best in the day <lb />
for study. Plenty of time is also <lb />
forded for <lb />
We shall not let any of the grade <lb />
become crowded. No teacher will <lb />
have more than twenty-six pupils. <lb />
As many of the present corps of <lb />
teachers will be engaged for the <lb />
term as the registration will justify. <lb />
No new books will be <lb />
Persons who have not been attend- <lb />
the graded school this year may <lb />
register. This is a good opportunity <lb />
for a large number of young people <lb />
in the community. <lb />
If enough pupils in the first and <lb />
second grades are registered to <lb />
her remaining, Miss Irvine will <lb />
teach a class of pupils in these <lb />
proposed extra month of school <lb />
he taught if the registration by <lb />
; where many thousands go to <lb />
a new lease of life, the minerals <lb />
and quarries of the mountain lands, <lb />
the deposits of gold, sapphire, mica <lb />
and iron, and the historical interests <lb />
associated with the early settlement <lb />
of a state where the first white child <lb />
on the American continent was born, <lb />
blend in the story of the old <lb />
and new triumphs. From <lb />
to from Elizabeth <lb />
City to Wilmington, in every section <lb />
and every direction, the older towns <lb />
are thriving, and new centers of <lb />
population are carrying diversified <lb />
business and industries into hitherto <lb />
purely agricultural sections. <lb />
The farmers and farm population <lb />
of North Carolina are increasing, and <lb />
the comparative isolation of <lb />
days is passing away. With in- <lb />
tensive farming and the progressive <lb />
manufacturing and municipal enter- <lb />
prise almost everywhere dominating, <lb />
the story, for North Carolina, <lb />
cannot fail to be of great interest to <lb />
every American. The cover design, <lb />
embodying an antique caravel, such <lb />
as that in which Sir Walter Raleigh s <lb />
first adventurers entered Croatan <lb />
Sound, makes a spirited and <lb />
ally appropriate setting for the title <lb />
for North No one <lb />
who has ever lived or been interested <lb />
to North Carolina, can fall to find in <lb />
be taught if the , be <lb />
the fifteenth of May . history and <lb />
I urge upon our people the import- <lb />
of the term. For eight years <lb />
we have been having thirty two weeks <lb />
school per year; the other twenty <lb />
weeks the children have been doing <lb />
but little save losing time. There <lb />
seems to be no practical way for <lb />
us to lengthen the term except to <lb />
maintain a subscription <lb />
all of the children in the <lb />
grades need more drill in Eng- <lb />
and especially in arithmetic than <lb />
we can possibly give them in eight <lb />
months. Twenty weeks of a <lb />
life every year is too long to spend <lb />
in vacation. I sincerely hope we <lb />
served as an up-to-date history and <lb />
appreciation of the great North <lb />
A man can be made worse off than in before <lb />
he is by changing his job, so he gen- may have <lb />
does. <lb />
The Change. <lb />
Mrs White former <lb />
Where are you living now, Gladys <lb />
Gladys Lorena <lb />
I isn't <lb />
now. I's <lb />
opportunity to do some specializing <lb />
on English and arithmetic. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
H. B. SMITH, <lb />
Superintendent of Schools. <lb />
Greenville, N. C April 1911. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0007" n="7" />
                <p>
I Jg <lb />
WINS CUP <lb />
FOR 1910 <lb />
W. K. TROPHY GOES <lb />
TO ILLS. MAN <lb />
BEST EAR IN 3,125.713,600 BU <lb />
R. A. James, of Charleston, ill-, Is <lb />
The 1919 Winner of The <lb />
Best Ear In the 8,125- <lb />
Bushels Of Last Year's <lb />
Bumper Crop. <lb />
form <lb />
The W. K. Kellogg- National <lb />
Corn Trophy <lb />
R. A. . has <lb />
the proud distinction of having grown <lb />
the best ear of corn in all the <lb />
bushels of last year's bumper <lb />
crop. At the National Corn Show- <lb />
just hell at Columbus, Ohio, this gen- <lb />
was awarded die W. K. <lb />
National Trophy, donated <lb />
in 1909 W. K. president of <lb />
Form <lb />
R. A. James, Winner of W. K. Kellogg <lb />
National Corn Trophy for 1910 <lb />
the Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Co., <lb />
of Battle Creek, Michigan. <lb />
Thousands of ears of corn from all <lb />
parts of the country and of all <lb />
were entered in the <lb />
The selection of the grand <lb />
champion Sweepstakes and the award <lb />
Of the Kellogg trophy were made on <lb />
general points of superiority. <lb />
The ear of corn grown by Mr. <lb />
James is of Reid's Yellow Dent <lb />
It is inches long, 1-2 <lb />
inches in circumference, and has <lb />
rows of kernels, C to the inch in <lb />
the row, average 5-8 of an inch in <lb />
depth, and 5-16 of an inch in width. <lb />
It is indeed a very correct type of <lb />
yellow dent corn. <lb />
Mr. James, the winner, is a <lb />
farmer about years of age, <lb />
and of pleasing personality, a man <lb />
who has given careful study to corn <lb />
culture, and who has achieved his <lb />
success as a grand champion winner <lb />
inly by years of hard work and pains- <lb />
taking seed selection and careful <lb />
breeding from season to season. <lb />
Illinois growers are especially el- <lb />
over the result for the season <lb />
that this is the first time in four <lb />
years that the honors have been <lb />
wrested from the state Indiana. Last <lb />
year's champion ear, the first winner <lb />
of the Kellogg trophy, was grown by <lb />
Mr. Fred C. of Newton, Ind. <lb />
It was also Reid's Yellow Dent <lb />
crossed with Alexander Gold <lb />
Standard. Last year's prize winner <lb />
the most perfectly formed ear of <lb />
the two, though it requires a care- <lb />
judge to distinguish the points <lb />
of superiority. <lb />
The trophy awarded to Mr. James <lb />
made by Tiffany, of New York, <lb />
for Mr. W. K. Kellogg, at a cost of <lb />
It is made of Sterling silver, <lb />
bronze and enamels, and is a truly <lb />
artistic creation. It stands inches <lb />
in height. Mr. Kellogg's interest in <lb />
corn growing can be understood when <lb />
corn exhibit The trophy is offered <lb />
for annual competition until won <lb />
twice by the same grower. <lb />
The National Corn Show at which <lb />
the award was made, was an event <lb />
of tremendous magnitude. At one <lb />
THE FUND. <lb />
School Children Asked to Assist the <lb />
Daughters of Confederacy. <lb />
Request has been made of us to <lb />
of the sessions President Taft was give each school child one of the <lb />
present and delivered an address. <lb />
of strips, and ask the <lb />
children to return the strips filled <lb />
with pennies. The pennies will be <lb />
turned over to the treasurer of the <lb />
monument fund. In accordance with <lb />
the request, each child in the graded <lb />
Another Prompt Claim. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, April 1911. <lb />
Mr. C. L. Wilkinson, Agent, <lb />
Standard Accident Insurance Co., school will be given one of the strips <lb />
Greenville, N. C. today, and be asked to return the <lb />
Dear strips on May 11th. <lb />
I beg to acknowledge receipt of The cause is a most worthy one, <lb />
check for by the Standard Ac- and while I know parents are often <lb />
and Health Insurance Com- begged by children for pennies till <lb />
covering one week's sickness, they feel that a fortune would be <lb />
Just five days after the claim was needed to give every time the little <lb />
I received the above check. want a penny or a nickel, yet <lb />
I trust the people will encourage the <lb />
consider a policy in the Standard Ac- <lb />
Insurance Company to be a <lb />
good policy, inasmuch as the accident <lb />
and health and monthly indemnities <lb />
are with annual premium of <lb />
I beg to remain, <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
Z. P. VANDYKE. <lb />
children In this matter. We ought <lb />
to have a Confederate monument in <lb />
Greenville; to this I believe every- <lb />
one will agree. The monument ought <lb />
to be built by all the people, not by <lb />
a few. And the children ought to <lb />
contribute their share of effort and <lb />
money towards it. The lesson they <lb />
learn, and the veneration aroused in <lb />
their hearts, for those who wore the <lb />
gray through the long struggle, is <lb />
worth far more than the pennies for <lb />
Jury Awards Mr. Cromartie which request is made. I hope our <lb />
VERDICT FOR <lb />
Against Railroad. <lb />
I people will take this view of the mat- <lb />
A suit that attracted much interest and that the children be en- <lb />
in the present term of civil court was in their efforts for the <lb />
H. B. SMITH, <lb />
Superintendent of Schools. <lb />
May 1911. <lb />
that of Mr. Avon Cromartie against <lb />
the Atlantic Coast Line. While at <lb />
work for the railroad Cromartie <lb />
lost a considerable portion of one <lb />
foot which maimed him for life. He <lb />
sued the railroad company for It doesn't matter whether you give <lb />
and the jury gave him a verdict his satanic majesty his due or not; <lb />
for he'll get it just the same. <lb />
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb />
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb />
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb />
in the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, March 1911. <lb />
Form <lb />
World's Bert Ear of Corn <lb />
for 1910 <lb />
it is stated that the Kellogg Toasted <lb />
Corn Flake Co., of which he is <lb />
dent, has an output requiring <lb />
bushels of corn a day, raw product, <lb />
for its manufacture. A peculiar feat- <lb />
is that while the Kellogg product <lb />
is made exclusively from selected <lb />
white corn, the Kellogg trophy has <lb />
been won each time by a yellow <lb />
RESOURCES. <lb />
and 70,097.28 <lb />
11.09 <lb />
miking house, furniture <lb />
and fixtures. 831.09 <lb />
me from banks and <lb />
bankers . 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 />
paid. 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, J. R. 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 />
J. R. SMITH, Cashier. <lb />
Subscribed and sworn to before 14th day of January, 1911. <lb />
STANCILL HODGES, <lb />
J. R. SMITH, Notary Public. <lb />
R. H. GARRIS, My commission expires March 1911 <lb />
R. C. CANNON, <lb />
Directors. <lb />
NOTICE I NOTICE <lb />
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fall 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 Ginghams, No- <lb />
Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in <lb />
Dry-Goods Store. <lb />
Come let us show you. <lb />
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb />
vi <lb />
The Carolina and<lb />
Currituck County . <lb />
Atlantic township . <lb />
Crawford township <lb />
township <lb />
Moyock township . 1409 <lb />
Poplar Branch township <lb />
Dare County<lb />
Ken- <lb />
township <lb />
Croatan and Stumpy <lb />
Point township. <lb />
East Lake township. <lb />
Hatteras township . <lb />
Nags Head township. <lb />
Manteo town . <lb />
b, 1496 <lb />
Township Otter Creek 1555 <lb />
3- Township Lower Town <lb />
i creek . 1330 <lb />
Pinetops town . <lb />
Township Walnut <lb />
Creek . <lb />
Township Rocky <lb />
Mount. <lb />
Rocky Mount town . <lb />
Township <lb />
Township Upper Town <lb />
Greene County <lb />
1255 <lb />
Creek <lb />
1454 <lb />
1205 <lb />
Bull Head township----- 1351<lb />
township . <lb />
Hookerton township----- <lb />
Hookerton town . <lb />
Jason township . <lb />
town. <lb />
olds township . <lb />
township. <lb />
Shine township . <lb />
Snow Hill township----- <lb />
White Oak <lb />
Henderson County <lb />
Creek township <lb />
31- Creek township. <lb />
Bethania township <lb />
. Broad Bay township. <lb />
Davidson County W , <lb />
Creek township 1385 <lb />
Alleghany township . <lb />
Arcadia township . <lb />
Boone township . <lb />
Conrad Hill township. 1453 <lb />
Cotton Grove township. 1609 <lb />
township . 1886 <lb />
Denton village . <lb />
Hampton township . <lb />
Healing Spring township <lb />
Jackson Hill township. <lb />
Lexington township . <lb />
Lexington town. <lb />
Midway township. <lb />
Reedy Creek township . <lb />
Silver Hill township . <lb />
township . <lb />
Thomasville town . <lb />
Tyro township . 1525 <lb />
College twp----- <lb />
Yadkin College town----- <lb />
1300 <lb />
1817 <lb />
1767 <lb />
1345 <lb />
1650 <lb />
Blue Ridge township <lb />
Clear Creek twp. <lb />
crab Creek twp. <lb />
j township . <lb />
I Green River twp. <lb />
j Hendersonville township <lb />
Snow Hill town. <lb />
Willow Green township. <lb />
1787 Guilford County <lb />
Bruce township . <lb />
Center Grove township <lb />
Clay township . <lb />
Deep River township. <lb />
township <lb />
1349 Friendship township ., <lb />
1601 <lb />
town . <lb />
Hooper Creek township. 1371 <lb />
Mills River township. 1607 <lb />
1304 <lb />
1739 <lb />
1917 <lb />
1840 <lb />
Hertford County <lb />
township <lb />
1294 Kernersville township. <lb />
Kernersville town . <lb />
Lewisville township----- <lb />
Middle Fork township. <lb />
1538 Old Richmond township 1503 <lb />
1374 township . 1770 <lb />
1395 Salem Chapel township. 1349 <lb />
South Fork township. <lb />
Vienna township. 1229 <lb />
Winston township <lb />
Salem town . <lb />
1299 <lb />
Gilmer <lb />
township <lb />
Ahoskie township . <lb />
Ahoskie town . <lb />
Harrellsville township . <lb />
Harrellsville town . <lb />
Keck twp. <lb />
o township. <lb />
village . <lb />
Murfreesboro town <lb />
St. Johns township. <lb />
Union village <lb />
1756 <lb />
Greensboro city <lb />
Am Greene township . <lb />
High Point township. <lb />
Point city. <lb />
Jamestown township <lb />
Winton township. J <lb />
I town . <lb />
,., . 1513 <lb />
Winston city 1320 <lb />
1234 j Madison township . <lb />
1213 Franklin Monroe township . 1469 <lb />
Morehead township <lb />
cedar Rock township. township . 1577 <lb />
cypress township . 1204 town . <lb />
Dunn township . <lb />
1307 township . <lb />
town . <lb />
Gold Mine township. 1449 <lb />
I Harris township . <lb />
County Hayesville township . 1862 <lb />
Davie township . <lb />
T . <lb />
township . <lb />
township . <lb />
Farmington township . <lb />
Fulton township . 1282 <lb />
Jerusalem township . <lb />
Mocksville township . <lb />
Mocksville town . <lb />
Shady Grove twp. 1570 <lb />
Advance town . <lb />
township <lb />
Louisburg town <lb />
Sandy Creek township. <lb />
Youngsville township . <lb />
town . <lb />
Rock Creek township. <lb />
M township . <lb />
Washington township . <lb />
1587 <lb />
1880 <lb />
Brinkley township <lb />
village . W <lb />
township . 1449 <lb />
township . 1505 <lb />
Tillery town . <lb />
township . <lb />
1578 <lb />
1266 <lb />
1321 <lb />
1546 <lb />
town <lb />
Hyde County <lb />
1861<lb />
Currituck township . 21.42 <lb />
township. <lb />
Lake Landing township <lb />
Ocracoke township <lb />
Swan Quarter township. <lb />
Swan Quarter village. <lb />
1857 <lb />
County <lb />
Barringer township . 1472 <lb />
Halifax County Bethany township . J <lb />
Halifax County-------- township. 1494 <lb />
Coddle Creek township <lb />
. 22.405 Bessemer City town . <lb />
County Mountain <lb />
town . <lb />
Dallas township. <lb />
Gaston County Afield town. <lb />
------1 Faucett township <lb />
Halifax township . <lb />
Halifax town . <lb />
township. <lb />
township . <lb />
Cherryville town. <lb />
Crowder Mountain twp. <lb />
township <lb />
Cypress Creek township <lb />
Faison township . <lb />
Faison village. <lb />
township . <lb />
Island Creek township. <lb />
village . <lb />
Wallace town . <lb />
Kenansville township . <lb />
town . <lb />
Limestone township----- <lb />
Magnolia township <lb />
Magnolia town . <lb />
township. 1606 <lb />
Rose Hill township----- 1385 <lb />
Rose Hill town . <lb />
Smith township. <lb />
Warsaw township <lb />
Warsaw town . <lb />
township <lb />
1529 <lb />
Mooresville town . <lb />
1340 Concord township . <lb />
1616 Cool Spring township. <lb />
Davidson township <lb />
Eagle Mills township. <lb />
township <lb />
j New Hope township . <lb />
j township <lb />
Alexis town . <lb />
Dallas town . <lb />
Mills town . <lb />
Gastonia township . <lb />
Gastonia town . <lb />
River Bend township. <lb />
Mountain Island town <lb />
Mount Holly town . <lb />
Stanley town . <lb />
South Point township <lb />
Belmont town . <lb />
Lowell town . <lb />
town . <lb />
1670 <lb />
1348 <lb />
1433 <lb />
Littleton town . <lb />
Palmyra township. <lb />
Hobgood town . <lb />
town . <lb />
Roanoke Rapids twp . <lb />
Roanoke Rapids town. <lb />
township----- <lb />
Scotland Neck township. <lb />
Scotland Neck town. <lb />
township . <lb />
. <lb />
County <lb />
township . <lb />
Shiloh township .-. <lb />
Statesville township . <lb />
city . <lb />
township . <lb />
Union Grove township. <lb />
1613 <lb />
1220 <lb />
1229 <lb />
1262 <lb />
1412 <lb />
1314 <lb />
n County <lb />
1599 <lb />
Anderson Creek twp. <lb />
twp. <lb />
Dunn town . <lb />
Barbecue township . <lb />
Gates County Black River township <lb />
Angler town <lb />
1479 <lb />
Gatesville township <lb />
. Gatesville town . <lb />
Hall township <lb />
Haslett township . <lb />
Durham Count Holly Grove township. <lb />
Cedar Fork township. <lb />
Cedar Hunters Mill township. <lb />
19.055 P . <lb />
city township . <lb />
Lebanon township. 1216 <lb />
Mangum township. <lb />
Oak Grove township .-. 1611 1392 <lb />
Patterson township. 1806 1652 <lb />
1406 <lb />
1672 <lb />
1420 <lb />
1295 <lb />
Graham County <lb />
township . <lb />
Robbinsville town. <lb />
township. 1498 <lb />
Edgecombe County Yellow Creek township. <lb />
Buckhorn township . <lb />
Duke township . <lb />
Grove township . <lb />
Coates town . <lb />
Hectors Creek township. <lb />
Johnsonville township . <lb />
Lillington township . <lb />
Lillington town . <lb />
Creek township. <lb />
Buies Creek town. <lb />
Creek twp----- <lb />
Upper Little River twp. <lb />
Barker Creek twp. <lb />
Canada township . <lb />
Pork township. <lb />
Cashier Valley township <lb />
town hip----- <lb />
Dillsboro township <lb />
town . <lb />
Greens Crock township <lb />
Hamburg township . <lb />
Mountain township <lb />
township . <lb />
Whittier town . <lb />
River township . <lb />
Savannah township <lb />
Scott Creek township. <lb />
Sylva township . <lb />
Sylva town . <lb />
Webster township. <lb />
1303 <lb />
1464 <lb />
1533 <lb />
1565 <lb />
1702 <lb />
1220 <lb />
1294 <lb />
1695 <lb />
1268 <lb />
1515 <lb />
1246 <lb />
Township Tarboro. <lb />
Princeville town . <lb />
Tarboro town . <lb />
Township Lower Con-<lb />
Conetoe village . <lb />
Township Upper Con- <lb />
. <lb />
Township Deep Creek 1433 <lb />
Township Lower Fish- <lb />
Creek . 1682 <lb />
Township Upper Fish- <lb />
Creek . <lb />
Whitakers town . <lb />
Township Swift Creek <lb />
town. W <lb />
Haywood County <lb />
I J <lb />
township . <lb />
Granville County Canton town <lb />
township . <lb />
Cecil township <lb />
Johnston County <lb />
township . <lb />
Banner <lb />
Benson town . <lb />
Bentonville township <lb />
Beulah township <lb />
1373 <lb />
township <lb />
township <lb />
Kenly town . <lb />
Micro town . <lb />
Boon Hill township----- <lb />
Princeton town . <lb />
Clayton township . <lb />
1668 <lb />
1751 <lb />
wit <lb />
Creedmoor town . <lb />
Fishing Creek twp. <lb />
Oak Hill township. <lb />
Oxford township . <lb />
Oxford town . <lb />
Salem township . <lb />
Sassafras Fork twp. <lb />
Stovall town. <lb />
Tally Ho township . . <lb />
Walnut Grove township <lb />
1207 <lb />
Clyde township . <lb />
Clyde town. <lb />
Crabtree township . <lb />
East Fork township----- <lb />
Fines Creek township. 1405 <lb />
Iron Duff township. <lb />
Ivy Hill township. <lb />
Creek twp. <lb />
Pigeon township . <lb />
Waynesville township . <lb />
town . <lb />
1269 <lb />
1740 <lb />
1617 <lb />
Clayton town . <lb />
Cleveland township <lb />
Elevation township <lb />
township <lb />
1441 <lb />
1364 <lb />
Four Oaks town . <lb />
Meadow township <lb />
township . <lb />
Level township . <lb />
Pine Level town . <lb />
Pleasant Grove township 1557 <lb />
Selma township . <lb />
Selma town . 1331 <lb />
be <lb />
1202 <lb />
1523 <lb />
1502<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0008" n="8" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and Farm Aid The Eastern <lb />
LAST WEEK A BIG <lb />
ONE FOR GRIFTON, N. C. <lb />
CELEBRATE SCHOOL CLOSING <lb />
Big Speeches, Large Barbecue mid I <lb />
Tremendous Hall <lb />
Grifton, April closing ex- <lb />
of Grifton public schools were <lb />
held Thursday and Friday if this <lb />
week and were largely attended by <lb />
the citizens of the town and <lb />
rounding country. <lb />
On Thursday night the first <lb />
nations were held. They consisted <lb />
of songs, drills, and de- <lb />
and were much en- <lb />
joyed by all who were present. The <lb />
students went through their <lb />
parts in such a way as to reflect <lb />
credit upon the teachers who have <lb />
had them in charge for the past year. <lb />
Every selection was full of interest <lb />
and was presented in a spirited man- <lb />
resulting in not a dull moment <lb />
during the entire evening. <lb />
Yesterday was the big day, through. <lb />
The exercises were opened at <lb />
o'clock by prayer by Rev. L. B. Patti- <lb />
shall, pastor of the M. E. church, <lb />
after which the children rendered a <lb />
splendid chorus. This was followed <lb />
by the annual address, which was <lb />
delivered by Prof. W. I. Cranford, of <lb />
Trinity College. Professor Cranford <lb />
was introduced by Mr. Paul Webb, a <lb />
bright young attorney and a graduate <lb />
of Trinity College, who has been lo- <lb />
in Grifton for a short while. <lb />
Professor Cranford's address was a <lb />
scholarly one and made a fine <lb />
upon his hearers. He dealt <lb />
with the educational and moral uplift <lb />
of man, and his remarks were such <lb />
as to instill a high hope for the <lb />
future within the breasts of all who <lb />
heard him. Prof. Cranford is a pleas <lb />
speaker, and it was a rare treat <lb />
for all who had the privilege and <lb />
pleasure of hearing him. <lb />
Professor Cranford was followed by <lb />
Prof. W. H. County Super- <lb />
of Public Instruction for <lb />
Pitt county, who, in a brief talk, gave <lb />
a history of the good work that the <lb />
school at Grifton was doing. His re- <lb />
marks were very interesting, and es- <lb />
so to the patrons of the <lb />
school, as they gave them an insight <lb />
to what their school was doing for <lb />
their children . <lb />
After the speeches came another <lb />
song, after which all adjourned to the <lb />
yard near by, where a free dinner and <lb />
barbecue was served. This was a <lb />
mighty good part of the program, for <lb />
many were the thoughts that were <lb />
flitting through the minds of those <lb />
present of the good things in store <lb />
for them, and only such good things <lb />
as the housewives of Pitt county are <lb />
noted for. <lb />
The dinner disposed of, all repaired <lb />
to the baseball park, where a ball <lb />
game was witnessed, in which the <lb />
Grifton boys defeated the Hookerton <lb />
boys to the tune of to There <lb />
was much enthusiasm, by all who <lb />
were present. <lb />
The exercises were closed last night <lb />
by a play and by the pupils <lb />
of the school, which were enjoyed by <lb />
a large crowd that was present. <lb />
the principal <lb />
of the school, and his assistants, have <lb />
done fine work at Grifton this year, <lb />
and so satisfactory have been their <lb />
labors that the trustees have <lb />
re-elected them for the com- <lb />
year. Professor <lb />
hails from Monroe, this state. <lb />
No county in the state is doing more <lb />
along educational lines than Pitt, and <lb />
right here in the neighborhood of <lb />
Grifton. Ayden and Winterville are to <lb />
be found three of the best schools in <lb />
the state. They are doing a good <lb />
work, the results of which will be far- <lb />
reaching and will last through <lb />
yet to come. Much of the <lb />
credit for this good school work is <lb />
due to Professor the county <lb />
superintendent of public instruction <lb />
who is not only an able man, hut is <lb />
a hard worker and never tires in l's <lb />
labors to build up the schools in his <lb />
county and to increase the interest <lb />
in education among the people he <lb />
X. Coley, in News and <lb />
Observer. <lb />
SAFETY AND <lb />
Intelligence and Sobriety of the New <lb />
Democratic Regime. <lb />
When the Democrats, for the first <lb />
time in eighteen years, won control <lb />
of the lower house of congress last <lb />
November, the Republican politicians <lb />
and papers pictured and cartooned the <lb />
event as a sort of a barbaric dance of <lb />
the hungry. The comic papers of the <lb />
period dealt with the Democratic pa- <lb />
after eighteen years of exile, <lb />
packing his lean bag, and taking a <lb />
train for Washington to be in at the <lb />
In the light of all this <lb />
Republican prophecy, the first official <lb />
act of the Democratic congress is <lb />
They abolished ninety-eight <lb />
offices, clerkships, and <lb />
attached to the lower house <lb />
alone, aggregating about an- <lb />
in salaries. This was their <lb />
own medicine, to be sure, but it was <lb />
a pretty strong dose, nevertheless. <lb />
Probably every Democrat in congress <lb />
was under pressure from one or more <lb />
of his constituents, from party work- <lb />
to whom he is under obligations, <lb />
for some of these Jobs. The <lb />
was not easy. The disappoint- <lb />
to hundreds of place-seekers <lb />
will make every Democrat's <lb />
next year just so much more <lb />
There is therefore, all the <lb />
more reason for thoughtful <lb />
who understand and appreciate <lb />
in government, to give <lb />
and practical support to the <lb />
party that has accomplished it. <lb />
Some o committees of congress <lb />
which were important and useful <lb />
decades example, the <lb />
committee on Pacific railroads when <lb />
the early transcontinental lines were <lb />
being built with government <lb />
been obsolete for nearly <lb />
a generation. Some of these com- <lb />
have not held a meeting for <lb />
many years, but they went on, car- <lb />
a full equipment of idle clerks <lb />
and providing many places for <lb />
Republican graft <lb />
and nothing else. The new Democrat- <lb />
congress has abolished six of these <lb />
useless thus voluntarily <lb />
abdicating about sixty honorary of- <lb />
fices for members and paid clerkships <lb />
aggregating nearly thirty thousand <lb />
dollars a year. These voluntary sac- <lb />
of power and patronage are <lb />
creditable in the highest degree. <lb />
The economies already put in <lb />
by the Democrats apply merely <lb />
to the lower house itself. When <lb />
they get around to the executive de- <lb />
of the government, the op- <lb />
will be incomparably <lb />
greater. The new Democratic ways <lb />
and means committee, together with <lb />
the rules committee and the <lb />
committee, have put in mo- <lb />
machinery which, it is confidently <lb />
believed, will save the government one <lb />
hundred and fifty million dollars a <lb />
year. To any fair-minded observer, <lb />
the most conspicuous impression of <lb />
the new order at Washington is the <lb />
YOUR HAIR <lb />
SILVER <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
IS. <lb />
HAVE SOME <lb />
GOLD <lb />
THE BANK <lb />
Copyright 1909, tr C. E. Zimmerman <lb />
MOST of the poverty and want in this world <lb />
may be attributed not to the lack of in- <lb />
but putting off the time of com- <lb />
to save. Don't delay--start your <lb />
bank account today. <lb />
The Greenville Banking Trust Co. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
C . S. CAR, <lb />
MOSELEY BROTHERS <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
Phone <lb />
Insurance <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
sobriety and intelligence with which <lb />
the new Democratic majority has <lb />
the responsibility of con- <lb />
ducting the government of the United <lb />
Sullivan in Collier's. <lb />
B. C. PEARCE DEAD. <lb />
Passed Away At His Home in <lb />
Sanford. <lb />
His many friends here at his old <lb />
home are pained to learn of the death <lb />
of Mr. B. C. Pearce, of Sanford, <lb />
which occurred a little past midnight <lb />
last night. He suffered a stroke of <lb />
paralysis a few weeks ago and con- <lb />
gradually to grow weaker <lb />
the end came. <lb />
Mr. Pearce was in his 83rd year, <lb />
and a native of Pitt county. The <lb />
greater part of his life was spent in <lb />
Greenville where for many years he <lb />
was engaged in the mercantile <lb />
For a short while he was reg- <lb />
of deeds of the county, filling <lb />
out the unexpired term of Mr. W. <lb />
A. Cherry, who died while in office. <lb />
He always took a prominent part in <lb />
public affairs and in politics, and was <lb />
a staunch Democrat. In later years <lb />
he became a traveling salesman and <lb />
was very popular with the trade. He <lb />
was a man greatly liked by every <lb />
one, and was one of the oldest <lb />
of Greenville Masonic and <lb />
Royal Arch Masons. <lb />
Mr. Pearce was twice married, his <lb />
first wife being Miss Ann of <lb />
Greenville, who died in 1880. He <lb />
is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Ada <lb />
Sat ed Child From Death. <lb />
our child had suffered from <lb />
severe bronchial trouble for a <lb />
wrote G. T. Richardson, of Richard- <lb />
son's Mills, Ala., feared It had <lb />
consumption. It had a bad cough all <lb />
the time. We tried many remedies <lb />
without avail, and doctor's medicine <lb />
seemed as useless. Finally we tried <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery, and are <lb />
pleased to say that one bottle effected <lb />
a complete cure, and our child is <lb />
again strong and For <lb />
coughs, colds, hoarseness, <lb />
asthma, croup and sore lungs, its the <lb />
most infallible remedy that's made. <lb />
Price and Trial bottle free. <lb />
Guaranteed by all druggists. <lb />
That's What. <lb />
that a court house you are <lb />
building over asked a <lb />
as he walked up to the corner <lb />
Thursday. Getting the right answer <lb />
he added is certainly going to <lb />
a handsome <lb />
Cherry, by is first marriage. His <lb />
second wife was Mrs. Maggie Hunt, <lb />
of Sanford, to whom he was married <lb />
in 1898. She also survives him. After <lb />
his second marriage Mr. Pearce made <lb />
his home in Sanford, where he also <lb />
took a prominent stand In public <lb />
fairs. He was most active in work- I <lb />
for the establishment of Lee <lb />
county by the legislature, and was <lb />
the first treasurer of that county <lb />
when it was formed. <lb />
TO HOLD ATTENTION <lb />
The First Requirements of a <lb />
Advertisement. <lb />
NEEDLESS CUSTOMS. <lb />
The Honey Bee and Its Intel- <lb />
When sit down to write an <lb />
advertisement for your space in the <lb />
local newspaper the first question <lb />
you should put to yourself, if you <lb />
are one of those men who want to <lb />
see their advertisements bring re- <lb />
What must be the lust re- <lb />
of this advertisement <lb />
The first requirement of an <lb />
is to attract attention. To <lb />
catch and hold the attention of a <lb />
customer necessitates something <lb />
in the announcement that is different <lb />
from the usual run of type matter <lb />
in the paper and also different from <lb />
the ordinary style of advertisements <lb />
therein. Further, that <lb />
must compel the attention sufficiently <lb />
to hold it till the prospect realizes <lb />
that she or he wants to read the rest <lb />
of the advertisement for the sake of <lb />
what is said in it. <lb />
There are several ways to attract <lb />
attention. One is by means of a <lb />
striking headline In bold type, an- <lb />
other way may be planned by the use <lb />
of plenty of white space in and around <lb />
the ad, and still one more means is <lb />
the use of some freak arrangement <lb />
of the type matter. Attention may <lb />
also be got by a combination of all <lb />
these ways. But there is one other <lb />
way of attracting attention that beats <lb />
them all. <lb />
It has been found from experience <lb />
in country and in dealing with <lb />
goods that sell mostly to women, that <lb />
a good illustration is the best way <lb />
not only to attract attention, but to <lb />
hold it, and create interest in the <lb />
rest of the advertisement. The <lb />
should have human inter- <lb />
est and should, as far as possible, <lb />
enter into it by means of a figure <lb />
of a man or woman performing <lb />
something or having done something, <lb />
v the result of the done <lb />
being shown. <lb />
For a long time it was thought <lb />
that comic pictures were the best <lb />
means of attracting attention and <lb />
while this may be so to a limited <lb />
extent, it has been found that they <lb />
do not create that necessary desire <lb />
to read the rest of the advertisement. <lb />
Because they are comic they cause <lb />
laughter which means that the laugh- <lb />
often extends to the <lb />
of the goods or even to the ad- <lb />
himself. When an <lb />
is laughed at it seldom car- <lb />
conviction to the mind of the <lb />
customer. A well drawn <lb />
with a basis is there- <lb />
fore, the best means of attracting at- <lb />
to an ordinary retail mer- <lb />
chant. <lb />
The illustration should be well <lb />
drawn. A badly drawn or silly <lb />
reflects on the goods and the <lb />
store. It is better to do without the <lb />
illustration altogether than have a <lb />
bad one. And the picture should not <lb />
only be well drawn, but it should <lb />
blend well with the rest of the ad- <lb />
When it attracts at- <lb />
it should also direct the mind <lb />
to the other portion of the advertise- <lb />
that creates and brings con- <lb />
Pictures of the <lb />
kind in advertising are a <lb />
evolution in retail publicity. <lb />
They have been used for a long time <lb />
in successful national advertising. A <lb />
glance at the Saturday Evening Post <lb />
or any of the good magazines will <lb />
show this and it will also prove an- <lb />
other thing, that comic pictures or <lb />
are not usually used by <lb />
It is surprising how many things <lb />
pertaining to man and his progress <lb />
springs up seedless. In the advance <lb />
these seedless things take hold and <lb />
ever and anon without clamor are in <lb />
place. Apparently the mushroom <lb />
asserts fecundity and stays a while. <lb />
It may be earth in its chemical an- <lb />
holds place and gives us God's <lb />
bounty to His creatures. <lb />
In the animate world bees are the <lb />
curious denizens of earth. Their <lb />
intelligence has not courted the <lb />
of man, but the folklore of their <lb />
colonies is a marvel to those who <lb />
challenge their ways. The honey bee <lb />
is eminently the friend of man. The <lb />
legends of those countries cherish- <lb />
the love of these bees are, as a <lb />
matter of curiosity, very engaging. <lb />
Cornwall is in the highest degree <lb />
the home of this lore. There betwixt <lb />
owner and hive was intimate <lb />
edge. Christmas morning the bees <lb />
receive the compliment of the sea- <lb />
son Just like other members of the <lb />
household. Easter day they were <lb />
told Christ was risen, and, a death <lb />
occurring in the family, the ill <lb />
was whispered softly into the hive <lb />
Nobody inquired closely into the or- <lb />
of these beliefs. They were ac- <lb />
as seedless. It is said the <lb />
best beliefs are found in Cornwall <lb />
There these are archaic, and are <lb />
adorned by wealth of details. It used <lb />
to be the rule to whisper to the <lb />
bees all the principal events which <lb />
happened in the family, so they <lb />
would not think themselves neglect- <lb />
ed or roused to anger. Honey was <lb />
taken from the hive on St. <lb />
day. <lb />
In the East lovers extolled the eyes <lb />
of their mistresses as like brown <lb />
bees. <lb />
Bees were not sold. They should <lb />
always be bartered, the traditional <lb />
price being a bushel of corn. <lb />
I may come back to the bee, holy <lb />
Scripture having given him <lb />
with events that transcend the <lb />
common themes of this stumpy life. <lb />
Judge R. T. Bennett, in Wadesboro <lb />
Messenger and Intelligencer. <lb />
Possibilities of Youth. <lb />
The pride of life looms largo among <lb />
the motives that determine <lb />
Th's is the golden season <lb />
opportunity. should make much <lb />
of it while it lasts. When old age <lb />
creeps on and our youthful vigor be- <lb />
it is too late to think <lb />
of what might have done. <lb />
It amounts to something to walk <lb />
down the street and have people point <lb />
you out as a man who has <lb />
some great mission, whether <lb />
it is to accumulate wealth or to carve <lb />
a great name the world of men <lb />
and women. <lb />
The chosen youth gets what he goes <lb />
after. The chance is open to all. The <lb />
youth who thinks that he has only to <lb />
idly wait and fate will thrust great- <lb />
upon him is sadly mistaken. He <lb />
must work out his own salvation. The <lb />
purse of fortunates may smooth the <lb />
way, but real work must be done by <lb />
the boy himself if he expects to be <lb />
successful. <lb />
Most of our great men have started <lb />
life with but little before them. One <lb />
of our presidents was a tailor and his <lb />
old-fashioned shop still stands as a <lb />
monument to him; another a car- <lb />
another chopped wood for an <lb />
existence. At the time none of them <lb />
ever thought the day would come <lb />
when they would occupy the <lb />
chair. <lb />
Fate sometimes makes it easier for <lb />
some than for others, but fate is usu- <lb />
ally just In the distribution of her <lb />
gifts. <lb />
Great men are made. They are not <lb />
born to greatness. They come into <lb />
this world with the possibilities of <lb />
being celebrated. <lb />
Take advantage of youth while the <lb />
chance lasts. It can never be renewed. <lb />
The wonderful foundation of per- <lb />
youth is a myth. It has caused <lb />
the death of more than <lb />
who sought to find it. There <lb />
is but one youth to every life and it <lb />
is all too brief. If the opportunity <lb />
is not accepted in it can never <lb />
be accepted at Appeal. <lb />
Legal Notices <lb />
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND <lb />
State of North Carolina. <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
K. it. enters and claims <lb />
the following piece or parcel of land <lb />
situated in the county of Pitt, Bethel <lb />
township <lb />
Beginning at a pine slump on the <lb />
road near Taylors mill. running <lb />
nearly north to the canal, thence with <lb />
the canal to the big bridge on the <lb />
public road, theme with the road, <lb />
to the beginning, containing five <lb />
acres more or less. <lb />
Any and all claiming title <lb />
to or interest in the above described <lb />
land must tile with me their protest <lb />
in writing within the next days <lb />
or they will be barred by law. <lb />
This April 13th, 1911. <lb />
K. It. WHITEHURST <lb />
This 13th, day of April, 1911. <lb />
M. MOORE, <lb />
Entry taker. <lb />
A Big Truth. <lb />
The world believes and is going <lb />
to continue to believe that in <lb />
man, some time, somewhere, <lb />
some circumstances, there is <lb />
something of good. Therefore, a <lb />
man weakens his own position be- <lb />
fore his fellows when he blankly <lb />
and persistently refuses to give his <lb />
opponent or his enemy credit for <lb />
anything worthy. The world knows <lb />
that no one man is likely to be <lb />
found on the wrong side of every <lb />
question, of whatever nature, that <lb />
may arise during an entire life time. <lb />
those big advertisers to exploit their <lb />
offerings. <lb />
Remember always, Mr. Retailer, <lb />
that attention getting is classed as <lb />
about sixty per cent, of all retail ad- <lb />
and when next you write <lb />
an advertisement without using the <lb />
best means to get that attention, you <lb />
are losing about sixty per cent, of <lb />
the value of your whole announce- <lb />
Henderson, in the <lb />
Merchants Journal and Commerce. <lb />
The Reflector will furnish you <lb />
to suit any line of goods <lb />
free of cost to <lb />
The put some men on <lb />
easy street. <lb />
The Danger of Going Barefooted. <lb />
As the season is now approaching <lb />
when all children desire to go bare- <lb />
footed, it is well that they should be <lb />
warned that this pleasure does not <lb />
come without danger. Until recent <lb />
years we attached little importance <lb />
to ground-itch, or toe-itch, so com- <lb />
seen among barefooted <lb />
who go about in the dew or <lb />
damp places. We know that the <lb />
ground-itch is the initial symptom <lb />
of hookworm disease and that it would <lb />
not unless the soil had been <lb />
polluted by sufferers from the disease. <lb />
The of eggs passing daily <lb />
along with the excreta from their <lb />
bodies into tiny microscopic <lb />
worms too small to be seen. These, <lb />
when allowed to come in contact with <lb />
the skin, burrow through producing <lb />
an attack of ground-itch. The truth <lb />
of this assertion can be easily proved <lb />
by making a poultice of polluted soil <lb />
and applying it for a few hours to <lb />
some part of the body. Always at <lb />
the site of such a poultice there de- <lb />
the ground-itch rash if there <lb />
be a sufficient number of worms en- <lb />
the skin. <lb />
Moreover, it is known that about <lb />
fifty days after the attack of ground- <lb />
itch the little worms that entered <lb />
the skin will have found their way in <lb />
the small intestine and there <lb />
oped to a size sufficient for them to <lb />
be easily seen with the naked eye. <lb />
They are nearly one-half inch in <lb />
length. The medicine given to get <lb />
rid of them, by acting as a poison, <lb />
causes them to be expelled from the <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb />
as administratrix of the estate of <lb />
George B. deceased, notice <lb />
is hereby given to all persons <lb />
ed to the estate to make immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned; and all <lb />
persons having claims against the <lb />
estate arc notified to present the <lb />
same for payment to the undersigned <lb />
on or before the 28th day of March, <lb />
or this notice will be pleaded in <lb />
bar of recovery. <lb />
This day of March, 1911. <lb />
MARY E. <lb />
Administratrix is George B.<lb />
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. <lb />
Under and by virtue of the author- <lb />
contained in an order of the clerk <lb />
of the Superior court of Pitt county <lb />
I shall expose to public sale to the <lb />
highest bidder for 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 Trust Co., <lb />
and live shares of the capital stock <lb />
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 />
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 />
estate of the said deceased to ex- <lb />
them to the undersigned within <lb />
twelve months from the date of this <lb />
notice, or this notice will be pleaded <lb />
in bar of their All persons <lb />
indebted to said estate will please <lb />
make immediate payment. <lb />
This the 8th day of April, 1911. <lb />
T. J. DANIEL, Administrator. <lb />
P. G. James Son, <lb />
body. By washing the stools through <lb />
cheese cloth they may be collected. <lb />
The harm they produce is too well <lb />
recognized to require discussion at <lb />
tis time. Suffice it to say, that the <lb />
blood is sapped, the body stunted, the <lb />
vitality lowered. Thus, the life and <lb />
happiness of those dearest to us may <lb />
be blasted. It is now time every <lb />
one should know what is meant by <lb />
ground-itch, hookworm disease, pol- <lb />
luted soil, and poor sanitary arrange- <lb />
Your board of health <lb />
will be glad to supply this <lb />
free to any one who will ask for <lb />
it. . <lb />
It doesn't take a very clever woman <lb />
to make a man make a fool of him- <lb />
self. <lb />
Probably love at locksmiths <lb />
because it holds the key to the situ-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018146_tn_0009" n="9" />
                <p>
w i <lb />
The Carolina Hone and Fan and The Eastern Reflector.<lb />
I, <lb />
THE REFLECTOR COMPANY <lb />
STOCKHOLDERS MEETING <lb />
PER DIVIDEND DECLARED <lb />
Business -Made Gratifying Increase <lb />
The Past Year. <lb />
The board of directors of The Re- <lb />
Company met Monday night <lb />
to hear and pass upon the report of <lb />
the plant for the fiscal year ended <lb />
April 30th. The report showed a <lb />
very gratifying growth in business <lb />
during the year and that the earn- <lb />
had been 10.4 per cent. A <lb />
of per cent, payable June <lb />
first, was declared. The subscription <lb />
list of the daily edition increased <lb />
about 1-3 per cent, and the weekly <lb />
edition per cent., and the improve- <lb />
of its equipment more than <lb />
per cent. It has taken a year of hard <lb />
work to bring about such results, and <lb />
the patronage of the people has shown <lb />
their appreciation of the enterprise. <lb />
The paper has grown in popularity <lb />
with the public as is shown in the <lb />
increased subscription list. Being <lb />
better equipped for job printing, there <lb />
has also been a large increase in that <lb />
department. <lb />
This morning the stockholders of <lb />
the company met to also hear the <lb />
report and to elect a board of <lb />
rectors for the coming year. The <lb />
stockholders were likewise gratified <lb />
at the showing the paper was able <lb />
to make for the year, and approved <lb />
what the officers and directors had <lb />
done. <lb />
The entire board of directors was <lb />
re-elected by unanimous vote. These <lb />
are D. J. Whichard, L. Joyner, S. <lb />
J. Everett, R. J. Cobb, C. Laugh- <lb />
in C. W. Wilson and H. <lb />
Whedbee. <lb />
Before adjourning the stockholders <lb />
extended a vote of thanks to the <lb />
president for his efforts to advance <lb />
the interest of the company. <lb />
The directors met immediately after <lb />
the stockholders adjourned and re- <lb />
elected the following <lb />
J. Whichard. <lb />
G. Cox. <lb />
Secretary and <lb />
Sugg. <lb />
B. <lb />
IN THE MATTER OF BILLBOARDS <lb />
Newspapers Are The Best For Ad- <lb />
A new turn has been given to the <lb />
matter of billboard advertising by the <lb />
action of the organization or circus <lb />
owners, which by a vote has deter- <lb />
mined to use newspaper advertising <lb />
in place of that by billboards. It <lb />
was the circus advertising that gave <lb />
the send off to the billboards, and if <lb />
these live up to their agreement it <lb />
will largely tend to abbreviate it, if <lb />
not to destroy utterly. <lb />
It is the excess of the use of shriek- <lb />
pictures in red and yellow and <lb />
blue that is bringing about the de- <lb />
cadence of the billboard. So great a <lb />
nuisance has this become that in <lb />
several places there are strict <lb />
as to their use, the public <lb />
been aroused by the lurid and <lb />
of times indecent pictures that thrust <lb />
themselves alike upon age and youth. <lb />
The rule of conservatism has been <lb />
forgot and one billboard advertiser <lb />
endeavors to outdo the other in the <lb />
flaring of the billboard delineation of <lb />
his offerings. <lb />
The idea is that the huger and more <lb />
glaring the billboard the greater <lb />
money-fetcher it will prove, for the <lb />
billboard has only existence in the <lb />
hope of the nimble dollar. <lb />
Time was when the circus and the <lb />
were the only patrons of the <lb />
billboard. Now everything on the <lb />
face of the earth is displaying on it <lb />
and the grow bigger, the <lb />
more insistent. You see mo- <lb />
lasses dripping from them, soda-water <lb />
fizzes on them, ice cream parades it- <lb />
self, breakfast food chokes itself into <lb />
your thought, the cigar looms up <lb />
huge and smoky, the oceanic width of <lb />
pantaloons and the clinging of hobble <lb />
skirts dance upon your vision, while <lb />
the various brands of keep <lb />
on multiplying. It is a pot of <lb />
extravaganza, illustrated on the white <lb />
wash brush style that attacks the <lb />
public as it passes. It is the <lb />
of the man who must shriek, <lb />
who thinks that noise is logic. <lb />
In the cities where civic improve- <lb />
turns to seeing that the <lb />
tractive is driven from sight there <lb />
has been for years a fight on the <lb />
disfiguring billboard, which one day <lb />
glows with the colors of the rainbow <lb />
and the next is in rags and tatters <lb />
from wind and storm, and in some <lb />
cases people are refusing to patron- <lb />
billboard advertised wares as a <lb />
protest against the habit. There are <lb />
an increasing number of people in <lb />
this country in the fight against the <lb />
billboard and strength is added to <lb />
the cause by the determination of the <lb />
circus owners to cut it out of their <lb />
plans of seeking the public patronage <lb />
and transferring their advertising to <lb />
the News and <lb />
Observer. <lb />
Rather Ambiguous. <lb />
famous epitaph placed on the <lb />
monument over her grave <lb />
by a woman up in Maine, in <lb />
peace until I join has almost a <lb />
duplicate in a sign on the door of a <lb />
doctor's office in a Cleveland office <lb />
building. This sign reads, not ab- <lb />
abandon hope until you have <lb />
seen <lb />
Overheard at the <lb />
wonder why the people on the <lb />
floor always applaud said the <lb />
dame in the proscenium box. <lb />
can see the explain- <lb />
ed the other lady in the box. tried <lb />
it once, just for a <lb />
Herald. <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Letters of administration upon the <lb />
estate of J. J. Smith, deceased, <lb />
this day been issued to the under- <lb />
signed by the clerk of Superior court <lb />
of Pitt county, notice is hereby given <lb />
to all persons holding claims against <lb />
said estate to present them to me <lb />
for payment, duly authenticated, on <lb />
or before the 4th day of May, 1912, <lb />
or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of their recovery. All persons in- <lb />
to said estate are urged to <lb />
make immediate payment to me. <lb />
This the 3rd day of May, 1911. <lb />
THERESA SMITH, <lb />
Administratrix of estate of J. J. Smith <lb />
deceased. <lb />
Jarvis Blow, <lb />
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb />
Volume <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. FRIDAY, MAY 1911. <lb />
Number <lb />
OF <lb />
THE MASSES <lb />
EAST CAROLINA A FIELD OF <lb />
POSSIBILITIES <lb />
THE WORK OF THE E. C. T. T. S. <lb />
Delivered by Pres. R. H. Wright, <lb />
Superintendent of the East Caro- <lb />
Training School, at <lb />
the Closing of the Stantonsburg <lb />
On an occasion of this kind it <lb />
seems to me well that the speaker <lb />
should leave you a few thoughts <lb />
worth your while. You should not <lb />
come here and go away without some <lb />
thought that is worth while. <lb />
teachers, students and par- <lb />
I take it for granted that you <lb />
are interested in the great problem <lb />
of I am therefore go- <lb />
to talk to you about the American <lb />
public place in our civic <lb />
life. <lb />
To one interested in the growth <lb />
of our constitutional his- <lb />
and its economic one <lb />
interested in the growth and develop- <lb />
of our institutions, there is <lb />
nothing more than to <lb />
trace the- evolution of our public <lb />
school system; for this growth and <lb />
development is peculiar to our own <lb />
nation. Many educators would have <lb />
us believe our public schools have <lb />
been developed from European sys- <lb />
This statement is not based <lb />
upon the facts of history. Many <lb />
sections are trying to claim priority <lb />
in the establishment of the public <lb />
school of today. To all such let me <lb />
what a tangled web we <lb />
weave, when first we practice to de- <lb />
The truth is our system is not <lb />
fully developed today; for we are <lb />
now undergoing the first stage of its <lb />
Metamorphosis. But, what we have, <lb />
has been a slow but steady elevation <lb />
of the public consciousness for the <lb />
need of universal education as the <lb />
real foundation for our institutional <lb />
stability. <lb />
When this new nation sprang into <lb />
July 1776, it is true as <lb />
stated in the immortal Declaration of <lb />
Independence that governments as <lb />
instituted among men did derive their <lb />
powers from the consent of the gov- <lb />
But, as the idea then for <lb />
the first time given a national birth, <lb />
the idea of political liberty as it grew <lb />
and developed we reached a stage <lb />
we no longer believe government <lb />
derive their just powers from the con- <lb />
sent of the governed, but from the <lb />
will of the governed. In America <lb />
it is not matter of <lb />
we will consent to, but a matter of <lb />
what we wish done. The govern- <lb />
is not a thing apart from our <lb />
life, but our life is an integral part <lb />
of the government. <lb />
It is a noticeable fact in the history <lb />
of civilization that people have <lb />
liberty in proportion to public <lb />
intelligence. Educate the musses <lb />
and you eliminate the classes in <lb />
government. Education is the <lb />
greatest enemy and the <lb />
warmest friend. As a nation we <lb />
are beginning to that in a <lb />
civilization like the one in which we <lb />
live, in a nation like ours where the <lb />
government rests upon the heads of <lb />
an intelligent citizenship, not only <lb />
the government itself but the very <lb />
civilization depends in no small meas- <lb />
upon public education. Our <lb />
nation, our state, or our county will <lb />
prosper in just the proportion that <lb />
public education is fostered. We <lb />
may believe this or not, but it is as <lb />
true as fate; for it is a natural step <lb />
in our evolution. <lb />
What is the function of our public <lb />
schools Are they to be fostered <lb />
simply to keep alive and <lb />
teach government, or are they to <lb />
touch the heart and life of our people <lb />
Is education with us to be as it has <lb />
been in the past for leadership alone, <lb />
or is it to reach itself down to the <lb />
very foundation of our life, lay hold <lb />
of the masses of mankind and bring <lb />
us to a more vivid realization of our <lb />
and opportunities and <lb />
thus raise the standard of living and <lb />
advance our civilization As sec <lb />
it, the public schools, and include <lb />
all state supported educational in- <lb />
situations in the expression, pub- <lb />
must not only train for <lb />
leadership, but they must touch in a <lb />
vital way the every day affairs of <lb />
our people. We must have leaders <lb />
in church and state, but we must <lb />
have also, an intelligent citizenship, <lb />
and of the two we most need an in- <lb />
citizenship; for from the <lb />
rank and file we will develop leaders, <lb />
provided that rank and file is <lb />
It is the substantial <lb />
of England who have preserved <lb />
that great nation in many crises. <lb />
And, the safety, to say nothing of the <lb />
great prosperity of our state, depends <lb />
upon the intelligence of our <lb />
Our system of public education <lb />
from the State University down to <lb />
the kindergarten while not perfect <lb />
is based upon correct principles. <lb />
We realize that difficulties of <lb />
Democracy are the opportunities of <lb />
M. Butler, and that <lb />
each generation is the in- <lb />
of a glorious past, but also a <lb />
trustee for posterity. And that <lb />
preserve, protect, and transmit its <lb />
inheritance unimpaired is its highest <lb />
duty. To accomplish this is not the <lb />
task of a few, but the duty of <lb />
M. Again we realize <lb />
that alone will triumph <lb />
which has both intelligence and char- <lb />
To develop them among the <lb />
whole people is the task of education <lb />
M. <lb />
I That is no smack of charity <lb />
about the public educational system <lb />
of America. It is for all. It is <lb />
the universal and inalienable right <lb />
of every man and woman, every son <lb />
and daughter of the realm. It is <lb />
the corner-tone of our plan, the es- <lb />
factor of our government <lb />
purpose. The <lb />
public schools are to train boys <lb />
and girls, not to support the <lb />
thriftless or the <lb />
We realize that adds to <lb />
the real enlightenment of the multi- <lb />
adds to the happiness, the <lb />
and the security of a republic <lb />
which rests upon the common <lb />
and equality of rights for <lb />
This does not mean so- <lb />
if by socialism you mean a <lb />
kind of paternalism. It does mean <lb />
equality of rights under the law, but <lb />
not equality of results in spite of <lb />
moral and legal rights. <lb />
We realize that the educational <lb />
pose of our state would make the <lb />
work of the aid the industries, <lb />
that it give as much prom- <lb />
and as much honor to manual <lb />
skill as to intellectual occupations, <lb />
and yet its educational purpose <lb />
reaches to the very mountain tops of <lb />
human learning. <lb />
is time for all to realize that <lb />
that purpose points not only to a free <lb />
elementary school in reach of every <lb />
home, but also to a free high <lb />
and a free university, college or train- <lb />
school for every young man or <lb />
woman who can avail himself of <lb />
these opportunities. <lb />
these things our state <lb />
system is divided into two types of <lb />
schools to train for leader- <lb />
ship. <lb />
schools that will lay for <lb />
us at least the ground work for an <lb />
intelligent citizenship. <lb />
In the former class are schools to <lb />
prepare leaders in practically every <lb />
Held open to our people for useful <lb />
occupation. The state owes it to <lb />
to equip these institutions so <lb />
they may do in an efficient way the <lb />
work for which they have been <lb />
And then it owes it to itself <lb />
to see that these educational plants <lb />
turn back to the state the type of per- <lb />
son for which they have been <lb />
I stand here this morning as the head <lb />
of the youngest of these state schools <lb />
and say u you that if we do not <lb />
give back to the state well trained <lb />
Lechers we have no claim upon North <lb />
Carolina for state aid. If we, do, the <lb />
Old North State can not afford to <lb />
let the school at Greenville suffer <lb />
for a lack of financial aid. The same <lb />
is true of every other one of our <lb />
state educational institutions. <lb />
Turning now to the other division <lb />
of our educational system, our pub- <lb />
schools, the schools for the great <lb />
masses of our people, yes the schools <lb />
for over ninety-five per cent, of our <lb />
people. The task that confronts us <lb />
here almost staggers me. But after <lb />
all it is the most important side <lb />
of our system; for it is here that <lb />
the system reaches itself down to <lb />
the home of every citizen of our state, <lb />
here it is that the system comes into <lb />
vital touch with the people who con- <lb />
the yeomanry of our state. <lb />
Here it is after all, that the people <lb />
will get their education. These are <lb />
schools that are the real educational <lb />
expression of our Democracy. These <lb />
state schools that train for leader- <lb />
ship are in part the out-growth of <lb />
European civilization, but the public <lb />
schools are the pure expression of <lb />
American Democracy. They did not <lb />
begin until long after our government <lb />
had been established. There were <lb />
a few free schools in a few localities, <lb />
but they were not the expression of <lb />
the American idea. It is only quite <lb />
recently that the real American pub- <lb />
school has come forward. It is <lb />
destined to grow and develop until <lb />
every child everywhere in this great <lb />
land of ours has the educational op- <lb />
that belongs to him as an <lb />
inheritance of our government. <lb />
Never before in our state's history <lb />
have our people been so wide awake <lb />
to our needs, educationally, A few <lb />
years ago it was not hard to find <lb />
communities in eastern North Caro- <lb />
where good citizens honestly <lb />
questioned the advisability of spend- <lb />
public funds for public education. <lb />
It was indeed a question in the minds <lb />
of many whether the state could with <lb />
justice to the taxpayer spend the <lb />
money raised by taxes for the <lb />
cation of all the children in the state. <lb />
Today we find our leaders advocating <lb />
larger and ever larger appropriations <lb />
from the state treasury for the ed- <lb />
of our children. Yes the <lb />
question now is, shall we as a state <lb />
not only furnish the money, but force <lb />
the parents to send the child to school <lb />
Why this great change in so short <lb />
a time Simply because our people <lb />
realize that ignorance is a blight <lb />
upon our civilization. They realize <lb />
that the unlettered boy has an almost <lb />
impossible handicap in the great race <lb />
of life. Also, that the safety as well <lb />
as the progress of the state is de- <lb />
pendent upon the education of our <lb />
young citizenship. <lb />
Educate a boy, truly educate him <lb />
and he will unfurl his sails to the <lb />
winds of actual life and steer his <lb />
course straight to the harbor of <lb />
Remove the handicap of <lb />
from the next generation <lb />
on Page <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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