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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 12 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:title>Eastern reflector, 12 May 1911</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19110512</dc:date>
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                <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 /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector.<lb />
. . . . <lb />
GREATEST MENACE. <lb />
Extract From Judge If. <lb />
Charge to Barry Grand Jury. <lb />
The greatest menace to North <lb />
Carolina today is a spirit of lawless- <lb />
among certain classes, it is <lb />
such that it demands the attention <lb />
of every good citizen. During the <lb />
past three years as many <lb />
have been killed is this state and <lb />
nearly every one killed without any <lb />
adequate reason. Th is such a <lb />
tiling as making violation of the law <lb />
respectable. Man. some one has <lb />
said, is bundle of and many <lb />
men get to be confirmed criminals, <lb />
utterly regardless of law, and this <lb />
state comes about gradually. The <lb />
child contracts the criminal habit <lb />
and by the time he is a man he de- <lb />
into a confirmed criminal. The <lb />
greatest lesson people of <lb />
state have to learn Is spirit of <lb />
obedience. Which makes the best <lb />
citizen, the best man <lb />
who obeys the laws or the man who <lb />
violates them <lb />
There is much criminal negligence <lb />
in this state, due to the small value <lb />
placed upon human life. There <lb />
seems to be an idea in the minds <lb />
of many that a man is none the <lb />
worse after he takes the life of <lb />
his fellowman just so he escapes <lb />
the penalties of the law. Some even <lb />
think of him as something of a hero. <lb />
The man who keeps a vicious <lb />
that is known to be dangerous, <lb />
and should this animal kill a man, <lb />
his owner is guilty and should be <lb />
punished. Any kind of conduct <lb />
that is likely to cause the loss of <lb />
life needlessly is a violation of the <lb />
by Mt. Airy News. <lb />
IN <lb />
Concerning Earnings of <lb />
Hanking and Trust Co. <lb />
An error crept into the article in <lb />
Friday's Reflector regarding the- <lb />
of the Greenville Bank- <lb />
and rust Co., that was due to a <lb />
misunderstanding. it was stated <lb />
that the bank since its organization <lb />
in 1903 paid dividends <lb />
gating per cent, besides creating <lb />
a surplus almost as large as its cap- <lb />
ital It should have been <lb />
that the per cent, was the <lb />
gate earnings of the bank during that <lb />
period which includes the surplus. <lb />
Some of Them Here. <lb />
The proposition to vote a bond is- <lb />
sue for good roads in Anson county <lb />
was defeated. In sneaking of the re- <lb />
The Wadesboro <lb />
a few of those who voted against <lb />
road improvement yesterday did so <lb />
because they wanted to hit the auto- <lb />
mobile a blow, but they have hit the <lb />
poor old mule the hardest blow of all. <lb />
It doesn't hurt the inanimate ma- <lb />
chine to run over rough roads or to <lb />
climb a telephone post, hut the mule <lb />
gets it in shoulder pulling heavy <lb />
wagons over muddy roads and steep <lb />
it is a tact that in some <lb />
sections of the state, the people are <lb />
laboring under the Impression that <lb />
the good roads ate built for the <lb />
of automobiles. The truth is that <lb />
good roads arc a permanent benefit <lb />
to the farmers, many of whom are <lb />
themselves becoming automobile <lb />
e Ch <lb />
Thrilling Detective Story Free. <lb />
There are three reasons why you <lb />
should read Adventures of Black <lb />
the great Sherlock Holmes de- <lb />
story, to be given free, in book- <lb />
let form, with copies of next Sun- <lb />
day's New York World. In the first <lb />
place it is a rattling good story; sec- <lb />
it is an extraordinarily great <lb />
story; thirdly, it is one of the best <lb />
detective narratives ever written by <lb />
Sir A. Conan Doyle, the most famous <lb />
author of of mod- <lb />
times. Their demand is so great <lb />
Sunday Worlds should ordered <lb />
from newsdealers in advance. <lb />
By The Harem Code. <lb />
you think I am really your <lb />
Solomon's 986th wife asked, <lb />
coquettishly. <lb />
My the Wisest Guy said, <lb />
are one in a <lb />
He got away with it, <lb />
Former Greenville Boy <lb />
Weds Virginia <lb />
One of the prettiest of the mar- <lb />
this far this spring took place <lb />
at S o'clock last evening at the home <lb />
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. <lb />
No. Peyton street, when their <lb />
eldest daughter, Miss Lillian Love <lb />
became the bride of Mr. <lb />
Roland Cooper Ryan, the youngest <lb />
son of Mrs. Nettie R. Ryan and the <lb />
late Mr. Arthur Ryan, of Winchester. <lb />
The ceremony was performed by <lb />
Rev. Dr. J. H. Lacy, pastor of the <lb />
Presbyterian church, of which the <lb />
bride is a member, and he was as- <lb />
by Rev. Dr. George S. Bowers, <lb />
pastor of Grace Lutheran church, <lb />
which the members of the groom's <lb />
family are prominently connected. <lb />
The marriage was attended by a <lb />
large number of family connections <lb />
and friends of the bride and groom <lb />
from a distance and this city. <lb />
The front and rear parlors of the <lb />
home were elaborately <lb />
and beautifully decorated for the <lb />
in white, yellow and green, <lb />
and the young couple plighted their <lb />
under a huge marriage bell of <lb />
field daises, wild apple blossoms <lb />
and honeysuckle, the ring <lb />
being performed by the officiating <lb />
clergyman. <lb />
The wedding march was rendered <lb />
by Prof. J. A. the well-known <lb />
composer and music master, as the <lb />
bridal party entered the parlors. <lb />
The bride wore a gown <lb />
of white with crystal <lb />
trimmings and diamond ornaments, <lb />
her veil was caught with bride roses <lb />
and she carried a large bunch of <lb />
the same She came in on <lb />
the arm of the groom. <lb />
The maid of honor, her <lb />
younger sister, Miss Elsie Rams- <lb />
burg, wore baby blue satin and <lb />
trimmings and pearl ornaments <lb />
and she carried bride roses. Mr. <lb />
William B. Ryan, of this city, a <lb />
brother of the groom, served as best <lb />
man. <lb />
A reception was held immediately <lb />
after the ceremony, and later in the <lb />
evening Mr. and Mrs. Ryan motored <lb />
to Martinsburg, W. Va., where they <lb />
boarded a main line Baltimore and <lb />
Ohio Railroad train for an extended <lb />
wedding journey, which will <lb />
at Buffalo, New York, where <lb />
they will make their future home. <lb />
The bride is a native of Winches- <lb />
and is a very pretty and win- <lb />
some girl, being a general favorite <lb />
among all her friends and <lb />
She was graduated several <lb />
years ago from the Episcopal Fe- <lb />
male Institute, and is an <lb />
musician, having won high <lb />
honors in the music class of the <lb />
institute. She will be missed greatly <lb />
by the young people of Winchester. <lb />
The very large number of handsome <lb />
and costly presents of gold and <lb />
cut glass, fine linens and other <lb />
gifts she received as expressions of <lb />
THE COMFORTS OF <lb />
ENJOYED BY <lb />
WHO BEGAN <lb />
PUTTIES <lb />
MEte <lb />
IN <lb />
THE BANK s <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 Reflector an estate of million dollars. <lb />
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank. <lb />
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb />
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. Any 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 />
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 />
furnished, everything clean <lb />
and attractive, working the <lb />
best barbers. Second to none. <lb />
J. R. J. G.<lb />
good wishes from numerous friends <lb />
attest most certainly the high re- <lb />
in which she is held by all with- <lb />
in the circle of her acquaintance. <lb />
Mr. Ryan is a young man of ex- <lb />
character, being a member <lb />
of one of Winchester's oldest and <lb />
most substantial families, and for <lb />
a number of years he has been <lb />
engaged in business in <lb />
Central Barbershop <lb />
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb />
Proprietor <lb />
Located in main business of town. <lb />
Four in operation and each <lb />
one presided over by a skilled <lb />
Ladies waited mat their home. <lb />
Va., Star, May <lb />
3rd. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Ryan lived in <lb />
Greenville many years ago, he being <lb />
engaged in business here. If we are <lb />
not mistaken. Mr. Roland C. Ryan was <lb />
born here. After the death of Mr. A. <lb />
N. Ryan his widow and children <lb />
ed back to Winchester, their former <lb />
home. <lb />
i- <lb />
in <lb />
r- <lb />
it <lb />
i- <lb />
th <lb />
THE HOME BUILDING <lb />
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION <lb />
ANNUAL NIGHT. <lb />
Board of Directors and Officers El- <lb />
for Next Year. <lb />
The annual meeting of the share- <lb />
holders of the Home <lb />
Loan Association was held Tuesday <lb />
night in the city hall, and heard the <lb />
of the secretary and e <lb />
as checked up and verified by the <lb />
auditor. There were many <lb />
gratification at the good <lb />
showing the association is making <lb />
S The only business to be done by <lb />
the shareholders after hearing the re- <lb />
port was the election of a board of <lb />
Sector, for the next year. So much <lb />
satisfaction was expressed at the <lb />
service of the former directors, that <lb />
he motion was made to unanimously <lb />
re-elect all of them. This was done <lb />
who asked to be relieved of this duty <lb />
as he could not serve longer, and Mr. <lb />
E. G. Flanagan was elected to <lb />
The directors are R. C. <lb />
D J. Whichard, H. A. White, <lb />
D. C. Moore, S. T. White. <lb />
C T. W. A. Bowen B. W. <lb />
Moseley, C. C. Vines, C. Laugh- <lb />
and E. G. Flanagan <lb />
The directors met immediately <lb />
the adjournment of the share- <lb />
holders and unanimously re-elected <lb />
the following <lb />
r C Flanagan, president. <lb />
n j Whichard, vice-president. <lb />
H. A. White, secretary and treas- <lb />
j B. James, attorney. <lb />
The board extended a rising vote <lb />
of thanks to the president and sec- <lb />
for their faithful services. <lb />
BASE BALL MONDAY. <lb />
WHAT THE SOUTH YIELDS. <lb />
Production And Resources Mated In <lb />
Sufficient Form.<lb />
Greenville Defeats Tarboro in Score <lb />
to <lb />
The Tarboro high school ball team, <lb />
accompanied by a number of rooters <lb />
came down Monday to play a game <lb />
the Greenville high school boys. <lb />
The game was called at p. . <lb />
but owing to a lot of contention on <lb />
the part of the visitors as to who <lb />
should play on the home team, about <lb />
an hour was lost. <lb />
When they did the game <lb />
went through with vim and interest <lb />
there being good playing on the part <lb />
of both teams. The score was as<lb />
Tarboro 300-5 <lb />
Greenville 001-6 <lb />
from its factories. <lb />
from its farms. <lb />
from its mines. <lb />
from its forests. <lb />
of cotton with seed. <lb />
of grain. <lb />
of live stock. <lb />
of dairy products. <lb />
of poultry products. <lb />
of fruit and vegetables. <lb />
of tobacco. <lb />
of sugar products. <lb />
of exports. <lb />
feet of lumber. <lb />
pounds of cotton goods <lb />
bushels of cereals. <lb />
tons of coal. <lb />
barrels of <lb />
tons of coke. <lb />
tons of iron ore. <lb />
tons of pig iron. <lb />
tons of phosphate rock. <lb />
tons of <lb />
The South's resources <lb />
population. <lb />
acres of wooden area. <lb />
square miles of land area <lb />
miles of navigable streams <lb />
miles of coast, line. <lb />
miles of railroad. <lb />
in manufacturing. <lb />
separate kinds of industries. <lb />
active spindles. <lb />
active looms. <lb />
cotton seed oil mills. <lb />
cotton mills. <lb />
blast furnaces. <lb />
lumber mills. <lb />
leading minerals. <lb />
490,000,000,000 tons of coal. <lb />
tons of iron ore. <lb />
horsepower in streams. <lb />
hydro-electric power. <lb />
acres farm land. <lb />
head of live stock <lb />
of bank <lb />
of property. <lb />
-Manufacturers Blue Book. <lb />
No. <lb />
,. <lb />
-6 <lb />
our bank. <lb />
Ha. only this, but you have a check on your money; you <lb />
know where every cent row. you can f. ore J <lb />
of loss or theft in the money. <lb />
Safety, simplicity and the, of . <lb />
Checking account at our bank, and these are <lb />
the advantages to be derived from one. <lb />
vantages. <lb />
The Greenville Banking Trust Co <lb />
Capital Stock<lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
C. S. CARR, Cashier<lb />
MAY DANCE AT FARMVILLE. <lb />
Another Claim Paid. <lb />
Greenville. N. C April 1911. <lb />
Mr C L. Wilkinson, Agent, <lb />
Standard Accident Insurance Co. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Dear . . <lb />
I beg to acknowledge receipt <lb />
check for covering seven days <lb />
sickness by the Standard Accident In- <lb />
Company. <lb />
I have carried a policy with the <lb />
Standard Accident Insurance Company <lb />
for three years, with annual premium <lb />
of and the weekly indemnities <lb />
for sickness and accident under my <lb />
policy pays per week. I like <lb />
my policy fine. <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
4-ltd R. A. FORBES. <lb />
Brilliant Occasion For the Young <lb />
People. <lb />
N. C May 4.- The <lb />
young men of Farmville have recent- <lb />
organized a German Club, and the <lb />
annual May dance will be given on <lb />
annual planters <lb />
Friday evening, m <lb />
be furnished by the <lb />
son orchestra. A cone <lb />
will be given from tor <lb />
the benefit of those who don dance <lb />
but like to hear good music. The la <lb />
dies are especially invited. <lb />
d This event is looked forward to as <lb />
a Very brilliant occasion, and quite <lb />
a number of visitors are expected <lb />
The closing exercises of the <lb />
ville High School will be concluded <lb />
Friday morning, the and the <lb />
dance will take place that night The <lb />
Planters is one of the newest and <lb />
best houses in the county and w. <lb />
afford ample room for a large <lb />
The floor will be put in good con- <lb />
for dancing, and the ladies of <lb />
the Magazine Club will decorate, and <lb />
serve refreshments also. <lb />
The German Clubs of Greenville, <lb />
Washington, Wilson, Tarboro, Snow <lb />
Hill, Pinetops and Bethel, are <lb />
invited. <lb />
Even an investor can't guess wrong <lb />
all the time. <lb />
If a girl dislikes to have a young <lb />
man kiss her, here's the He <lb />
isn't the right one. <lb />
Most contract, W J. <lb />
magnetic persuasion. <lb />
J S MOORING <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
FIVE POINTS, <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
.,<lb />
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb />
N CHARGE OF PAUL N. <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
C, May Prof. II. opening exercises of <lb />
High School. Mr. Babbitt also sang. <lb />
returned to Kinston on the <lb />
train in the afternoon. <lb />
Everything is being put in <lb />
for one of the best commence- <lb />
in the history of <lb />
School. There will be thirteen <lb />
graduates this year and three to <lb />
complete the course in music. <lb />
BETHEL GRADED SCHOOL <lb />
CLOSING EXERCISES <lb />
OCCASION OF MUCH INTEREST <lb />
P. left for Brantley's Grove, <lb />
near Ahoskie, Friday evening where <lb />
lie will preach Saturday and <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Don't forgot the nice new pants at <lb />
A. <lb />
Miss Elizabeth Boushall and Vivian <lb />
Roberson went Greenville Friday <lb />
evening. <lb />
Mr. P. T. Anthony, of Greenville, <lb />
was in town Friday evening. <lb />
Rock lime cement and and salt <lb />
ways on Land at. A. W. Ange A <lb />
Messrs. C. E. Langston, Ray Causey <lb />
L. G. Eugene Cannon, Dixie <lb />
and Dennis <lb />
wont over to Ayden Friday evening <lb />
to attend the baseball game. <lb />
J. Stallings and V. <lb />
Berry wont to Greenville ibis morn- <lb />
Miss Cox went to Greenville <lb />
Friday evening. <lb />
Miss Annie of <lb />
went to Thursday night to <lb />
spend a few days with friends. <lb />
Messrs. Leon and Wilbur Kittrell <lb />
entertained a host of friends at their <lb />
home Thursday night, Ice cream was <lb />
served and all present had a nice <lb />
time. <lb />
Misses Carrie Smith and Martha <lb />
Smith spent Thursday night in town <lb />
with friends. <lb />
Mr. Fernando Davenport, who has <lb />
been sick with paralysis, died this <lb />
morning about tour o'clock. <lb />
Prof. F. C. went to Greenville <lb />
this morning. <lb />
Mr. Zeb. Briley and family left <lb />
this morning for to visit <lb />
friends and relatives. <lb />
N. C, May <lb />
Hattie Kittrell, who has been teach- <lb />
near Clayton, returned home <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Messrs. J. II. Stallings, L. G. Whit- <lb />
Royal Adams, Robert <lb />
and Robert went to Ayden <lb />
Saturday evening. <lb />
Mr. J. D. Cox, who has been <lb />
for the Beaufort County <lb />
Company, at Fairmont, is spend- <lb />
a days at home. <lb />
Rev. M. A. Adams tilled his reg- <lb />
appointment in the Baptist <lb />
church Sunday morning and Sunday <lb />
night. He preached two very line <lb />
sermons to huge audiences. <lb />
Messrs. C. E. Langston, S. C. Car- <lb />
roll, R. T. Cox and Eugene Cannon <lb />
went to Greenville Monday evening. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. have <lb />
received a large shipment of rubber <lb />
roofing. <lb />
Get your Bummer suit at <lb />
ton, Barber <lb />
Mattings and matting tacks at <lb />
Harrington, Barber <lb />
Tuesday morning, May Dr. <lb />
Wright, evangelist of the Home <lb />
Mission Board of the Southern <lb />
convention, and Mr. Babbitt, his <lb />
singer, a most helpful service <lb />
in the Baptist church at There <lb />
was a large congregation present, all <lb />
the stores and factories being closed. <lb />
Mr. Wright preached a fine sermon. <lb />
The singing of Mr. Babbitt was soul- <lb />
stirring. They were ; by <lb />
HAVE ENJOYABLE <lb />
BOAT TRIP AND FISH FRY <lb />
REDS THE BLUES <lb />
Pleasant Trip and OH Proctor's <lb />
Seine Beach <lb />
Aviators Organizing. <lb />
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb />
Paris, May are <lb />
to form an trade <lb />
Rev. C. A. Upchurch, of Kinston, who union at Issy, to extend over the <lb />
conducted devotional services at the entire world. <lb />
Some time ago the class of <lb />
Jarvis Memorial Methodist Sunday <lb />
school divided two section, known <lb />
as the Reds and the Blues, and since <lb />
then there has been considered <lb />
between the sections for <lb />
points of excellence, each side being <lb />
punctuality in interest <lb />
given points for new members, at- <lb />
awakened. The social side of the class <lb />
is also kept well in mind and helps <lb />
to draw the members closer together. <lb />
Recently the Blues entertained the <lb />
at a reception in the class room <lb />
in the church that proved a most en- <lb />
occasion. On Monday the Reds <lb />
played host to the Blues, and took <lb />
them down the river to Grimesland <lb />
for a picnic and fish fry. <lb />
The and a few invited <lb />
friends, about fifty in all, left the <lb />
launch Myrtle, a little past o'clock <lb />
and a pleasant a little <lb />
run of two hours brought them to <lb />
their destination, which was Proctor's <lb />
seine beach. Mr. A. B. Ellington took <lb />
a Victor and a large <lb />
of records along, and on the <lb />
trip and until, dinner was spread he <lb />
kept the crowd entertained with ex- <lb />
music. The picnickers watched <lb />
the fisherman haul the seine and saw <lb />
the fish go kicking from the water <lb />
to the kitchen where they were soon <lb />
dressed for cooking. <lb />
The dinner was spread on a table <lb />
on the beach; when all had gather- <lb />
ed around it, Mr. J. S. Norman, cap- <lb />
of the Reds, extended a welcome <lb />
to the Blues and other guests, and <lb />
called on Rev. J. H. Shore for the <lb />
invocation. The trip on the water in <lb />
the brisk air had whetted the appetite <lb />
for dinner, and the way hot shad and <lb />
trimmings disappeared was something <lb />
to make the cooks open their eyes. <lb />
It was a feast right. <lb />
The start home was about a <lb />
past three, and the trip <lb />
up the river was filled with music <lb />
and merriment The Reds are to be <lb />
congratulated upon the success of <lb />
their outing, and the writer <lb />
being one of their guests. <lb />
The School Has Made An Excellent <lb />
Progress, <lb />
The last few days have been event- <lb />
ones the good town of Bethel <lb />
and community on account of the <lb />
closing exercises of the graded and <lb />
high school. The exercises began <lb />
with a concert Friday night. The <lb />
annual sermon was preached Sun- <lb />
day morning. Monday night there <lb />
was a conceit by the lower grades. <lb />
Tuesday morning the exercises by <lb />
the graduating class, Tuesday after- <lb />
noon the literary address, awarding <lb />
and presentation of prizes, <lb />
With the finale and a reception at <lb />
night. <lb />
All of the exercises were well at- <lb />
tended, the people showing much in- <lb />
in all that was done. <lb />
Prof. A. Bivens and his assist- <lb />
ants have done excellent work <lb />
the past school year and the <lb />
students made creditable progress. <lb />
His management of the school <lb />
brought much satisfaction to the <lb />
people of the community. His work <lb />
has been on a high plane. Bethel has <lb />
every reason Io be of the <lb />
school. <lb />
7th Andrews. <lb />
10th Mae White- <lb />
head. <lb />
On Tuesday night the teachers <lb />
held an informal reception in the <lb />
school building, at which a most de- <lb />
was rendered, in- <lb />
several drills, recitations and <lb />
musical numbers by the teachers and <lb />
pupils. <lb />
Those who attended the commence- <lb />
exercises declared it to have <lb />
been one of the biggest treats of <lb />
the season, and a fitting close of an <lb />
excellent year's work. <lb />
Miss Lucie Kerr was suddenly call- <lb />
ed to her home at Va., this <lb />
morning by the illness of her father. <lb />
Mr. D. J. of The Re- <lb />
was in our city yesterday to <lb />
attend the commencement exercises. <lb />
Mr. B. B. Sugg, of Greenville, spent <lb />
Tuesday with us. <lb />
Physician at Bethel. <lb />
Dr. C. O. Griffin, formerly of <lb />
Rocky has located Bethel <lb />
for the practice of medicine. He <lb />
purchased the business there of Dr. <lb />
G. P. who recently had to <lb />
give up his practice because of poor <lb />
health. Dr. Griffin is well equipped <lb />
his profession and is fast making <lb />
friends in his new home. <lb />
B II K I- COMM E S T. <lb />
Closing Exercises of Bethel School <lb />
Held Last Night. <lb />
Bethel, N. C, May <lb />
of last night in the school build- <lb />
marked the close of the most <lb />
successful session in the history of <lb />
the Bethel graded school. <lb />
The enrollment for the year was <lb />
and the attendance and average <lb />
scholarship were such as to please <lb />
the most exacting. The high quality <lb />
of the work accomplished has called <lb />
forth unanimous appreciation of <lb />
the work of Prof. Bivens and his able <lb />
corps of assistants. <lb />
The commencement exercises be- <lb />
on Friday night, with a concert <lb />
by the lower six grades. Among the <lb />
features of the evening were a good- <lb />
night duo drill and a sketch drill <lb />
representing the crowning of the <lb />
fairy queen. These productions were <lb />
exceptionally good and showed much <lb />
careful training. <lb />
The baccalaureate sermon was de- <lb />
livered on Sunday night in the <lb />
Baptist church, by Rev. L. P. Howard, <lb />
of Rocky Mount. <lb />
On Monday night the musical de- <lb />
Which is under the man- <lb />
of Miss Willis, gave a de- <lb />
recital. <lb />
Tuesday was the banner day of <lb />
all. The attendance was beyond any- <lb />
thing seen here in a long time. The <lb />
day was begun by an interesting con- <lb />
test in the morning, in which Miss <lb />
Whitehurst and Mr. Baxter <lb />
Carson were the prize winners. In <lb />
the afternoon Mr. A. J. of <lb />
Raleigh, who represents the State <lb />
Department of Education, delivered <lb />
an address in the interest of <lb />
His subject was the Force of <lb />
Environment, and he showed clearly <lb />
the great influence extended upon <lb />
the individual by enlightened and <lb />
educated surroundings. <lb />
After Mr. address, the <lb />
following prizes and awards for the <lb />
session were <lb />
1st Bullock. <lb />
2nd Andrews. <lb />
3rd Andrews. <lb />
4th Carson. <lb />
HON. F. M WOOTEN <lb />
RETIRES FROM BUSINESS <lb />
K. C. WHITE PURCHASER. <lb />
Business Will be Known Future <lb />
as White's Drug Store. <lb />
Mr. R. C. White has purchased the <lb />
drug business of Coward Wooten, <lb />
which for a number of years has <lb />
conducted by Hon. F. M. Wooten <lb />
in the Wooten building, next door to <lb />
Greenville Banking and Tryst Com- <lb />
Mr. Wooten's reason for sell- <lb />
is to recuperate his health which <lb />
been weakening for some mouths <lb />
past. <lb />
Mr. White is a young man of good <lb />
business qualities and he, together <lb />
with Mr. Charles Home, who is a <lb />
registered pharmacist, will conduct <lb />
the business from no won, serving the <lb />
people with the best their line. <lb />
We hope Mr. Wooten will soon re- <lb />
gain his strength, and we wish Mr. <lb />
White every success in his new <lb />
Down Town Store. <lb />
Bro., who for some <lb />
time have had a store on Dickinson <lb />
avenue, have opened another store <lb />
down town in the building that was <lb />
occupied by the late J. R. Corey. <lb />
They will carry a nice line in their <lb />
down town store. <lb />
Forty Miners Entombed. <lb />
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb />
England, May <lb />
Forty miners are entombed in St <lb />
Margaret's coal mine by fire, which <lb />
has cut off the exit. <lb />
stimulate the TORPID LIVER, <lb />
strengthen the digestive organs, <lb />
regulate the bowels, and arc <lb />
equaled as an <lb />
ANTI-BILIOUS <lb />
In malarial districts their virtues <lb />
are widely recognized, as they <lb />
peculiar properties In freeing <lb />
the system from that poison. <lb />
sugar coated. <lb />
Take No Substitute.<lb />
mm <lb />
Detailed Figured Announced by <lb />
Census Director Durand. <lb />
1310 AND 1900 COMPARED <lb />
Township White <lb />
Township <lb />
Township <lb />
Township <lb />
Township <lb />
Township C, <lb />
Township <lb />
Creek <lb />
Mars Hill town . <lb />
Meadow Fork of Spring <lb />
Creek township. <lb />
Middle Fork of Ivy <lb />
Sandy Mush township. <lb />
Shelton Laurel twp. 1597 <lb />
Spring Creek twp. 1400 <lb />
Upper Laurel township <lb />
West Fork of Ivy twp. <lb />
Township West San- <lb />
Ora . <lb />
Sanford town. <lb />
Township East San- <lb />
ford . <lb />
Township <lb />
town . <lb />
Township Pocket----- <lb />
Township Deep River <lb />
North Carolina's position in thO Township Cape Fear. <lb />
Gains and Losses Shown In a Decade <lb />
by the Various Cities, Towns, <lb />
and Townships Throughout <lb />
the Population Is <lb />
as Against Ten <lb />
Years Ago. <lb />
Lee County <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 />
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 some in- <lb />
stances as high as per cent. Char- <lb />
with a population of in <lb />
1890 and in 1900, is returned <lb />
Broadway town. <lb />
Township Greenwood <lb />
1494 <lb />
1490<lb />
Township 1489 <lb />
Township Deep Rivers <lb />
Township Greenwood. 1330 <lb />
Cameron town . <lb />
Township <lb />
Manly village. <lb />
Southern Pines town. . <lb />
town . <lb />
Township Sand Hill. <lb />
Aberdeen town . <lb />
,., Keyser town . <lb />
Martin County town . <lb />
Mineral <lb />
township . <lb />
village . <lb />
1786 <lb />
1522 j <lb />
1552 <lb />
Township <lb />
Springs . 1592 <lb />
1349 <lb />
Cross Roads township. <lb />
Everetts town . <lb />
Goose Nest township. <lb />
Oak City town . <lb />
Griffin township . <lb />
Hamilton township 1733 <lb />
Hamilton town . <lb />
Jamesville township . <lb />
Jamesville town . <lb />
Poplar Point twp. <lb />
Roberson township . <lb />
Gold Point town. <lb />
Lenoir County <lb />
Neck twp. <lb />
Falling Creek township <lb />
Kinston township . <lb />
Kinston town . <lb />
Institute township. <lb />
Mosely Hall township. <lb />
Lagrange town . <lb />
Neuse township. <lb />
Pink Hill township. <lb />
Pink Hill village . <lb />
Sand Hill township . <lb />
Southwest township----- <lb />
Trent township . <lb />
Vance township. <lb />
township . <lb />
Lincoln County<lb />
Parmele town . <lb />
town . <lb />
Williams township . <lb />
Williamston township <lb />
Williamston town . <lb />
Mecklenburg County. <lb />
1203 <lb />
1615 <lb />
Nash County. <lb />
Baileys township . 1600 <lb />
Baileys town . <lb />
township <lb />
Castalia town . <lb />
Coopers township. <lb />
Dry Wells township . <lb />
Middlesex town . <lb />
township . <lb />
Griffins township . <lb />
Jackson township <lb />
township . <lb />
Spring Hope own <lb />
Nashville township . . <lb />
Nashville town . <lb />
1574 twp. <lb />
i Red Oak township <lb />
Rocky Mount township. <lb />
town <lb />
Township Charlotte. South Whitakers twp. 1414 <lb />
Charlotte city Stony Creek township. <lb />
Township Berryville. Rocky Mount Mills town <lb />
Catawba Springs twp. <lb />
Denver village . <lb />
Creek twp. <lb />
town . <lb />
township . <lb />
Lincolnton township . <lb />
Lincolnton town . <lb />
North Brook township. <lb />
County <lb />
Township Steel Creek <lb />
Township Sharon. <lb />
Township Providence <lb />
Township Clear Creek <lb />
Mint Hill town. <lb />
Township Crab Or- <lb />
chard . <lb />
Township Mallard <lb />
Creek . <lb />
Township <lb />
Cornelius town . <lb />
., Davidson town . <lb />
Township Lemley. 1427 <lb />
Township Creek 1846 <lb />
Township Creek <lb />
Township Morning <lb />
Star . <lb />
Matthews town . <lb />
Township Pineville. 1498 <lb />
Pineville town . <lb />
Township Hunters- <lb />
ville . 1790 <lb />
Mew Hanover County. <lb />
Brackett township . <lb />
Broad River township. <lb />
Crooked Creek township <lb />
township . <lb />
Higgins township . <lb />
village . <lb />
Marion township . <lb />
Marion town . 1519 <lb />
Cove township <lb />
township . <lb />
town . <lb />
North Cove township. 1509 <lb />
Old Fort township. <lb />
Old Fort town . <lb />
1205 <lb />
1307 <lb />
1737 <lb />
Huntersville town <lb />
Mitchell County . <lb />
township . <lb />
Bakersville township <lb />
Bakersville town . <lb />
Bradshaw township <lb />
1475 <lb />
1385 <lb />
1743 <lb />
Cape Fear township . 1708 <lb />
Federal Point township <lb />
Harnett township . <lb />
Wrightsville Beach . <lb />
Masonboro township . <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
extensive with <lb />
city <lb />
Northampton County<lb />
Macon <lb />
township. <lb />
twp <lb />
E. DANA DURAND. <lb />
with 1910, an increase in ten <lb />
years of Wilmington had i township . 1422 <lb />
in 1900 and now has while i township . <lb />
Raleigh shows an increase of approx- <lb />
per cent, having in <lb />
1910, as compared with in 1900. <lb />
is another city that pros- <lb />
having a population of <lb />
as against ten years ago. <lb />
Durham, with people in 1900, <lb />
is returned with in 1910, an in- <lb />
crease of nearly per cent. <lb />
The census returns indicate 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 />
. . <lb />
town . <lb />
township . <lb />
Wilson Mills township., <lb />
1347 <lb />
1582 <lb />
township. <lb />
Franklin township . <lb />
Franklin town . <lb />
Highlands township . <lb />
Highlands town . <lb />
township <lb />
township . 1338 <lb />
Smiths Bridge township. <lb />
Sugar Fork township. <lb />
1410 <lb />
1512 <lb />
-685 <lb />
Cranberry township . <lb />
Elk Park village. <lb />
Fork Mountain twp----- <lb />
Grassy Creek twp. 1853 1437 <lb />
Harrell township . 1319 1417 <lb />
Linville township . <lb />
Montezuma village . <lb />
Little Rock Creek twp. <lb />
Poplar township . <lb />
Red Hill township . <lb />
Roaring Creek twp. <lb />
Snow Creek township. 1350 <lb />
Toe River township . 1230 1311 <lb />
Montgomery County <lb />
Gaston . <lb />
Jackson township . <lb />
Jackson town . <lb />
Kirby township . <lb />
Pendleton town . <lb />
township . 24.50 <lb />
Garysburg town . <lb />
Pleasant Hill township. <lb />
Rich Square township. <lb />
Rich Square town. <lb />
Woodland town . <lb />
. <lb />
Lasker town . <lb />
Seaboard township. <lb />
Seaboard town . <lb />
township . <lb />
town . <lb />
1212 <lb />
Onslow County <lb />
Jacksonville township . <lb />
Jacksonville town . <lb />
Richlands township . <lb />
Richlands village . <lb />
Stump Sound township. <lb />
Swansboro township . <lb />
Swansboro town . <lb />
White Oak township. 1685 1835 <lb />
Orange County<lb />
Madison County <lb />
Big Laurel township . <lb />
Big Pine Creek twp. <lb />
Bull Creek township. <lb />
Foster Creek township. <lb />
Grapevine township . <lb />
Hot Springs twp . 1757 <lb />
Hot Springs, town . <lb />
Little Pine Creek twp. <lb />
Marshall township . <lb />
Marshall town . <lb />
Walnut village. <lb />
Cheek Creek township. <lb />
township <lb />
Hill township . 1682 <lb />
Biscoe village . <lb />
Star town . <lb />
Hollingsworth township. 1734 <lb />
Candor village . <lb />
Little River township. . <lb />
I Mount Gilead township. <lb />
Mount Gilead town . <lb />
Ophir township . <lb />
township . <lb />
Rocky Springs township <lb />
Troy township . <lb />
Troy town . <lb />
township . <lb />
1424 <lb />
1720 <lb />
. Bingham township . 1804 <lb />
Cedar Grove township. <lb />
Chapel Hill township . <lb />
Chapel Hill town . <lb />
I township . 1762 <lb />
Eno township . <lb />
Hillsboro township <lb />
town . <lb />
Little River township. 1244<lb />
1207 <lb />
Moore County . <lb />
Township Carthage. <lb />
Carthage town . <lb />
Township<lb />
Pamlico County . <lb />
Township . 1515 <lb />
Township <lb />
Stonewall town . <lb />
Township <lb />
Bayboro town . <lb />
Vandemere town . <lb />
Township i. <lb />
Township <lb />
. <lb />
be <lb />
1465 <lb />
1768 <lb />
1817 <lb />
an <lb />
L-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
NO LONGER A MYSTERY <lb />
NOTES. <lb />
MANY COMPETE FOB THE PRIZES <lb />
Key to The Puzzle and List of Prize <lb />
Winners oh en. <lb />
The page advertisement of is <lb />
published In The Reflector a <lb />
week ago, attracted much interest <lb />
among our readers, and many have <lb />
been on the puzzle getting <lb />
their answers ready to be placed In <lb />
the hands of the judges today. There <lb />
were twenty-six lists banded in, and <lb />
out of these two gave every advertise- <lb />
correctly and one oilier missed <lb />
only one name. <lb />
The judges, Messrs. F. M. Wooten, <lb />
W. H. Atkins, S. Forbes and A. M. <lb />
Moseley, went carefully over the lists <lb />
this morning. Finding that Mr. B. <lb />
F. Taylor and Miss Ward Moore both <lb />
had correct lists, the judges lumped <lb />
first and second prizes together <lb />
and awarded these each. Mrs. J. <lb />
Hillary's list won the third prize of <lb />
Here is the answer to the puzzle <lb />
advertisements that tell you is <lb />
The Bank of Green- <lb />
ville. <lb />
Company, bot- <lb />
works. <lb />
Greenville Hanking and Trust <lb />
Company, <lb />
Moseley Bros, and <lb />
real estate. <lb />
J. B. Williams, the grocery man. <lb />
t. J. L. Starkey, groceries. <lb />
L. M. Savage, feed and groceries <lb />
Warren, Jr., agent, <lb />
able Life insurance Company. <lb />
W. the new lumber <lb />
dealer. <lb />
C. L. Wilkinson, insurance. <lb />
Frank Wilson, king <lb />
Kicks <lb />
Can- and Atkins, hardware. <lb />
Home Building and Loan As- <lb />
H. E. Foreman, pressing club. <lb />
James S. Dawson, shoe repair- <lb />
II. A. While, insurance. <lb />
F. V. Johnston, feed stuffs. <lb />
C. n. West, contractor. <lb />
Savage Thomas, liverymen. <lb />
C. T. clothing and <lb />
shoes. <lb />
King Shoe Repair Shop. <lb />
C. S. Forbes, clothing. <lb />
Pharmacy. <lb />
P. M. Johnston, plumber. <lb />
J. R. J. G. department <lb />
store. <lb />
Carolina Wins From <lb />
hall Schedule for <lb />
One Negro Strikes Another <lb />
On Head. <lb />
Thursday afternoon two <lb />
youths, Freeman Hemby and John <lb />
Bobbins, who worked the plant of <lb />
the Greenville Lumber and Veneer <lb />
Company, in a difficulty, in winch <lb />
Hemby struck Bobbins on the head <lb />
with a brick, severely fracturing his <lb />
skull. Physicians operated Rob- <lb />
bins, finding it necessary to remove <lb />
a part of the broken bone, and he is <lb />
in a critical condition, <lb />
version of the difficulty <lb />
is that Bobbins was advancing on him <lb />
with a drawn when he picked <lb />
up a brick and threw it at Bobbins. <lb />
This seems hardly plausible, as the <lb />
blow was the back of tin- head <lb />
and indicate, Bobbins had his <lb />
back to him at the lime the brick was <lb />
thrown. Hemby was arrested and <lb />
bold to await developments of Rob- <lb />
injury. <lb />
Chapel Hill, X. May <lb />
won from Guilford Friday to <lb />
and so doing put the championship <lb />
Of the South Atlantic Stales in such <lb />
a fix that, despite Carolina's failure <lb />
to appropriate it, no other <lb />
in North or Virginia <lb />
venture to claim it. <lb />
The student body held a I <lb />
meeting Friday to welcome the <lb />
team back from North- <lb />
trip on which d <lb />
LaFayette and Georgetown. <lb />
Speeches were mad several <lb />
of the faculty, notably <lb />
Noble and aft the <lb />
students gathered around a huge <lb />
bonfire on the campus, singing the <lb />
college hymn with mo <lb />
at any time in the past five yea <lb />
In the annual d <lb />
between the Philanthropic and <lb />
literary societies held in Ger- <lb />
hall Wednesday, the D <lb />
was the winner. The Phi men were <lb />
S. W. Whiting and L. B. Gunter, the <lb />
were G. W. Ward and J. C. <lb />
Busbee. The question <lb />
solved, That the Legislature <lb />
and Referendum Should be Adopted <lb />
In Several states of the These <lb />
debates, besides <lb />
importance for the debating g <lb />
they give the participants, are val- <lb />
from an educational stand point <lb />
for the whole college. They are <lb />
ways on some question of present <lb />
day Importance and go a long ways <lb />
to keep the University men well in- <lb />
formed on current events. <lb />
The which will <lb />
circulated in a few days is said to be, <lb />
for taste in color work, arrangement <lb />
and picture grouping, the finest an- <lb />
the University hag ever pro- <lb />
Manager W. F. has com- <lb />
the following schedule for <lb />
1911 football <lb />
October Forest at Chapel <lb />
Hill. <lb />
October <lb />
at Chapel Hill. <lb />
October 21.-- Davidson at Char- <lb />
October S. S. Franklin at <lb />
Durham or Chapel Hill, <lb />
November P. f. at Richmond. <lb />
November of C. at Chap- <lb />
el Hill. <lb />
November and <lb />
Lee at Norfolk. <lb />
Thanksgiving Day -University of <lb />
Virginia at <lb />
The schedule which was super- <lb />
vised in large by Mr, Branch <lb />
who will coach the team, is <lb />
much lighter than of last season. <lb />
The prospects are only four or <lb />
five letter men will be hack. Cap- <lb />
Winston will lead n practically <lb />
new team and many people regard <lb />
this as a fortunate circumstance, <lb />
The squad last fall was if anything <lb />
a little too experienced. They did <lb />
not catch on to the n of the <lb />
faster game as played under <lb />
new rules. Em o fine <lb />
showing of the <lb />
of and cone by a <lb />
was a fine r cord <lb />
him at v. p, i., the C <lb />
1911 will mt <lb />
Is hoped in<lb />
Go See <lb />
. 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 />
COME sic i <lb />
and <lb />
dies, children, i i <lb />
guarantee our i ii <lb />
pi r pair l <lb />
Brand, <lb />
c. e. <lb />
Loans and <lb />
Overdrafts. 2,403.96 <lb />
S. Bonds. 21,000.00 <lb />
Its and ids. 3,000.00 <lb />
and fixtures 7,281.30 <lb />
change for clearing <lb />
8,919.67 <lb />
b and due from banks. 47,586.04 <lb />
pi cent, redemption <lb />
fund . 1,050.00 <lb />
As the spring begins and you want to do <lb />
your spring shopping. <lb />
Go See for Dress Goods in all <lb />
ties and and Misses Tailor- <lb />
made Skirts, Ladies Shirt Waists, Muslin <lb />
Underwear, Notions, Shoes and Oxfords, <lb />
Household Goods, Traveling Bags and Grips <lb />
Furniture, Chairs and Mattress. <lb />
Go See for Crockery, Glassware, <lb />
Tinware, Wood and Willow Ware. <lb />
Go See t j for Cultivators, Plows and <lb />
all Farming Utensils <lb />
We want your trade. We have the goods <lb />
and will make prices <lb />
It makes no difference what you want we <lb />
can supply it. When you want it and want <lb />
to prints buy it right, Go See <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
stock of merchandise ever carried in Green- <lb />
ville. Don't think because you go and see <lb />
that you must buy from him, but we <lb />
want you to come and learn we have to of- <lb />
fer you and see if we cannot make it to your <lb />
interest to deal with us. We want to say <lb />
once more no matter what you want, <lb />
for personal use, home or farm, Go See <lb />
LIABILITIES. <lb />
Capital. <lb />
Surplus. <lb />
Undivided profits. <lb />
Circulation. <lb />
Bond account. <lb />
Dividends unpaid. <lb />
Cashier's checks. <lb />
Deposits.<lb />
60,000.00 <lb />
10,000.00 <lb />
3,614.99 <lb />
21,000.00 <lb />
21,000.00 <lb />
69.93 <lb />
498.13 <lb />
166,465.11 <lb />
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations. Firms and <lb />
will pleased to meet or correspond with those <lb />
emulating changes or printers opening new accounts. <lb />
want your business <lb />
F. J. FORBES, Cashier <lb />
BOARD OF ALDERMEN AT THEIR <lb />
MEETING THURSDAY NIGHT <lb />
M . <lb />
implements <lb />
I PROFESSIONAL CARDS. <lb />
The Most of Should Last or <lb />
Years. <lb />
Appoint Registrars and Poll Holders <lb />
For June Election. <lb />
The board of aldermen met in reg- <lb />
monthly session Thursday night, <lb />
with five of the members present. The <lb />
only business transacted was calling <lb />
the election to be held the first Mon- <lb />
day in June and appointing <lb />
and poll holders to conduct the <lb />
same, and allowing accounts for the <lb />
past month. <lb />
The meeting, after this work, took <lb />
a recess until Monday night, 8th, <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
The registrars and poll holders <lb />
pointed were as <lb />
First B. C. Pearce <lb />
Poll holders, Charles Cobb and Ash- <lb />
Whichard. Voting place, court <lb />
Second W. D. <lb />
Pruitt. Poll holders, L. W. Lawrence <lb />
and M. H. White. Voting place, Per- <lb />
stables. <lb />
Third T. A. Duke. <lb />
Poll holders, R. A. Tyson, Jr., T. E. <lb />
Hooker. Voting place. Dr. Laughing- <lb />
house's office. <lb />
Fourth D. D. Has- <lb />
Poll holders, W. L. Brown and <lb />
B. F. Taylor. Voting place <lb />
store on Five Points. <lb />
Fifth War- <lb />
Jr. Poll holders, W. S. and <lb />
J. G. Bowling. Voting place <lb />
Warren's office, near Five Points. <lb />
STATE PRIZES AWARDED. <lb />
where th. re has been a <lb />
considerable investment in improved <lb />
Implements, it. is ran rare that any <lb />
thing like adequate buildings and <lb />
sheds have been provided for their <lb />
protection, and it is a distressingly <lb />
common thing to Bee Implements, <lb />
even such expensive ones as mowers, <lb />
and binders, left In the field where <lb />
they were last used, until the season <lb />
conies around for use again. As a <lb />
there a delay In start- <lb />
the next time. Some of the parts <lb />
are found to have rotted or rusted <lb />
so badly that they not do their <lb />
v, and . repair bill is necessary. <lb />
The necessity for these repairs not <lb />
only involves a delay in doing the <lb />
work, but an additional expense. So <lb />
w is this habit of neglecting the <lb />
Implements understood by many <lb />
manufacturers that they can well <lb />
to sell the original implement <lb />
at cost, knowing that they will soon <lb />
reap a rich reward in the profits from <lb />
the sale repairs. Of the leaks <lb />
on our Southern farms this is one <lb />
for which there can he the least ex- <lb />
and which can be most readily <lb />
remedied. The most of the farm <lb />
on the market today are well <lb />
made of the most lasting material <lb />
and in the main should las from <lb />
to years if given even moderate <lb />
care. The first step toward giving <lb />
this care should be the providing of <lb />
ample sheds and houses to protect <lb />
them from the weather when not in <lb />
X. Barrow, in Progressive <lb />
Farmer. <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, . ft Carolina <lb />
N. W. OUTLAW <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
formerly occupied by J. L. <lb />
Fleming. <lb />
Greenville, . ft Carolina <lb />
W. C. D. M. Clark <lb />
CLARK <lb />
Civil Engineers and Surveyors <lb />
Greenville, . Carolina <lb />
S. J. EVERETT <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
In Building <lb />
. ft Carolina <lb />
L. I. Moore, W. H. Long <lb />
MOORE LONG <lb />
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb />
Greenville, , . ft Carolina <lb />
Six Prizes of Five Dollars Given <lb />
for Essays on Health Subjects. <lb />
Six North Carolina school children <lb />
will have glad hearts this week when <lb />
they receive one of the five dollar <lb />
prizes for the best essay on one of <lb />
the following General San- <lb />
Hookworm Disease, and <lb />
Two prizes were offered <lb />
for the best essay on each of the <lb />
subjects, one prize to go for <lb />
the best essay by a child under fifteen <lb />
years of age, the other for the best <lb />
essay by a child over fourteen years <lb />
of age. The committee awarded the <lb />
prizes as <lb />
. HOPE WELL HEMS. <lb />
DR. R. L. CARR <lb />
DENTIST <lb />
Greenville, . ft Carolina <lb />
Schedule <lb />
ROUTE OF THE <lb />
NIGHT EXPRESS <lb />
Schedule in effect December <lb />
N. following schedule fig- <lb />
published as information ONLY <lb />
are not guaranteed. <lb />
TRAINS LEAVE <lb />
a. m. daily, Night Express Pull- <lb />
in Car for Norfolk. <lb />
a. m , dally, for Norfolk and New <lb />
Bern. Parlor car service between <lb />
New Bern and Norfolk, connects for <lb />
all points north and west. <lb />
p. m. daily except Sunday, for <lb />
Washington. <lb />
a. in. daily for Wilson and <lb />
connects north, south and <lb />
west <lb />
a. m., daily except Sunday for <lb />
Wilson and Raleigh, connects for <lb />
all points. <lb />
p. daily for Wilson and <lb />
further information and <lb />
of sleeping car space, apply to <lb />
I. Agent <lb />
ft Carolina <lb />
HARRY SKINNER <lb />
LAWYER <lb />
Greenville, . ft Carolina <lb />
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb />
Practice to diseases of the <lb />
Eye, Ear, and Throat. <lb />
Washington, N. C. Greenville, C <lb />
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. James. <lb />
a. m. to p. m., Mondays. <lb />
MARRIAGE LICENSES. <lb />
This List Covers The Last Two <lb />
Weeks. <lb />
Register of Deeds Moore has issued <lb />
marriage licenses to the following <lb />
couples since last <lb />
Jonah Bass and Annie Bass. <lb />
James L. Evans and Novella <lb />
Tucker. <lb />
Henry A. Rodgers and Mildred Hat- <lb />
ton. <lb />
Zeno Edwards and Queenie Boyd. <lb />
Alonzo Tripp and Ella Smith. <lb />
W. H. Crawford and <lb />
son, <lb />
W. F. Whichard and Flossie Moore. <lb />
E. W. Causey and Etta Wooten. <lb />
Ernest Carr and Rainey Gorham. <lb />
Gordan and Dawson. <lb />
Clemmie and Battle Dan- <lb />
Harry Mayo and Maggie Gray. <lb />
Marcellus Bryant and Mary Moore. <lb />
J. W. Jackson and Joana Green. <lb />
William Brown and J. <lb />
Personal and News Notes That <lb />
Neighborhood. <lb />
Hope Well, ft C, May Tom <lb />
Jackson, Miss Maggie Smith and Mr. <lb />
Luther Smith and Miss Julia Smith <lb />
attended the closing exercises of <lb />
Grifton Graded School Friday. <lb />
Messrs. Oscar Manning, J. B. and <lb />
D. F. went to Grifton Friday. <lb />
Mr. Lewis Vincent, of Greenville, <lb />
was visiting Mr. Sun- <lb />
day. <lb />
Mr. Hyman Savage, of <lb />
ville, was visiting Mr. S. J. Cox Sat- <lb />
night. <lb />
Mr. Robert Stokes, of <lb />
was visiting Mr. C. L. Cox Saturday <lb />
night. <lb />
Miss Annie Parker, of Grimesland, <lb />
was the guest of Misses Alma and <lb />
Jessie Cannon Saturday. <lb />
Hope Well Sunday school is pro- <lb />
line. <lb />
Mr. Richard Jackson stud wife spent <lb />
Saturday night and Sunday at Mr. B. <lb />
T. Cannon's. <lb />
Mr. C. C. Kirkman, of Norfolk, <lb />
came in Saturday. <lb />
Mr. Cox is on the sick <lb />
list. <lb />
Glad to see Mr. Cannon <lb />
out after being confined to his <lb />
bed for a few Jays. <lb />
Mr. Misses Lula and <lb />
Mae, attended the union meeting at <lb />
Ayden Sunday. <lb />
Mr. of Little- <lb />
field, spent Sunday at Mr. Sam <lb />
Smith's. <lb />
ALBION DUNN <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
Office in building, Third St. <lb />
Practices wherever his services are <lb />
desired <lb />
Greenville, . . ft Carolina <lb />
II. S. WARD. <lb />
Washington, N. C. <lb />
C. C. PIERCE <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
WARD PIERCE <lb />
AW <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
The prodigal son went wrong but <lb />
he came-back all right. <lb />
Law Partnership. <lb />
Mr. C. G. Pierce, of the local bar, <lb />
has formed a with Mr. <lb />
ii. B, Ward, of Washington, for <lb />
in all courts. The of <lb />
the firm will ho Ward Pierce. Their <lb />
card appears in this paper. are <lb />
a strong team. <lb />
S. M. Schultz <lb />
Established 1875 <lb />
and Retail Grocer and <lb />
Furniture dealer. Cash paid <lb />
Hides. Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar- <lb />
Turkeys, Egg. Oak Bedsteads <lb />
Mattresses, etc. Suits, Baby Car- <lb />
Go-Cart. Parlor Suits, <lb />
Tables, Lounges, Sales, P. Lori- <lb />
end Gail Ax Snuff. High Life <lb />
tobacco, Key West Cheroots. Hen- <lb />
George Cigars, Canned Cherries <lb />
Peaches. Apple. Syrup. Jelly, <lb />
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap, <lb />
Lye, Magic Food, Mulches, Oil, <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb />
den Seeds, Apples, <lb />
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples, <lb />
Poaches, Prunes, Currants, Raisins <lb />
Glass and Chin aw are. Wooden- <lb />
ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
best Butter, New <lb />
Royal Sewing machines and <lb />
numerous other goods. Quality and <lb />
quantity cheap cash. Come to <lb />
see it me. <lb />
Phone Number <lb />
L-S. M. Schultz- <lb />
PAYS ALL EXPENSES <lb />
PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOUR <lb />
TO <lb />
C. <lb />
MAY <lb />
VIA <lb />
NORFOLK RAILROAD <lb />
WASHINGTON SEA- <lb />
BOARD CO. <lb />
TO <lb />
Including attractive side trips, to <lb />
Virginia Beach, Yarn- <lb />
on and Arlington, <lb />
Prof. Frank M. Supt, <lb />
Raleigh, Schools, will take a party of <lb />
students of the Senior Grades of the <lb />
Raleigh schools to Washing- <lb />
ton. D. C, for an Educational Tour <lb />
on May Prof. Harper will not re- <lb />
strict his to any locality, but <lb />
invites any one of good character to <lb />
join. <lb />
The purpose of the Tour is <lb />
trip to no other place is as <lb />
instructive and interesting as to the <lb />
beautiful City of Washington, the <lb />
seat of our National Government. The <lb />
Congress will be in <lb />
session. <lb />
Interesting features of the program <lb />
Will be a reception at the White <lb />
House, by President Tuft, and a visit <lb />
to the of the United <lb />
where the North Carolina Senators <lb />
and Representatives will welcome the <lb />
party. <lb />
A side trip will be made to Mount <lb />
Vernon the Home of our first <lb />
dent. <lb />
Still another equally interesting <lb />
side trip will ho to Arlington, the <lb />
homo of the Southern Chieftain <lb />
General Robert Edward Leo. <lb />
The journey up and down the his- <lb />
Potomac River on the palatial <lb />
now steamer, of the <lb />
Norfolk and Washington Steamboat <lb />
Company, will be one delight after <lb />
another. The entire trip will be full <lb />
of Interest. <lb />
Write Prof. Frank M. Harper, <lb />
Raleigh for Illustrated booklet giving <lb />
complete details of the trip, or call <lb />
any agent of the Norfolk South- <lb />
Railroad. <lb />
V. CONN, T. P. A., <lb />
Norfolk Southern <lb />
Raleigh, N. C.<lb />
en<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
THE 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, 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 />
respect will be charged for at <lb />
cent per word. <lb />
Communications advertising <lb />
dates will be charged for at three <lb />
cents per line, up to fifty lines <lb />
Entered as second class matter <lb />
August 1910, at the post office at <lb />
Greenville, North Carolina, <lb />
act of March <lb />
FRIDAY, MAY 1911. <lb />
SCHOOL. <lb />
The more The Reflector sees of the <lb />
overcrowded condition of East Caro- <lb />
Training School in <lb />
accommodation of students who de- <lb />
sire to enter and obtain the benefits <lb />
to be derived at this excellent <lb />
the more impatient we become <lb />
at the short-sightedness of the last <lb />
legislature in not making an <lb />
for the enlargement and <lb />
equipment of the school. <lb />
standing the needs of this school was <lb />
called to the attention of the <lb />
that body made liberal <lb />
to every other state school <lb />
for additional buildings and equip- <lb />
while the school here was given <lb />
not a penny except for maintenance. <lb />
And this in the face of the fact that <lb />
the town of Greenville gave the school <lb />
within of the total sum the <lb />
state has put into it, and the town <lb />
and county of Pitt together <lb />
more than the entire state <lb />
for it. Such treatment is a <lb />
shame to the state. <lb />
Now what are the conditions This <lb />
school, which occupies a hitherto <lb />
practically untouched field by a state <lb />
educational institution, a section, too, <lb />
where the need of such a school was <lb />
greater than in any other section, <lb />
finds itself in the second year of its <lb />
existence overcrowded beyond its ca- <lb />
For the spring teachers- <lb />
course that is now in progress there <lb />
were more applications than could be <lb />
accommodated, and twenty-five were <lb />
turned away for want of room. It is <lb />
yet a month to the beginning of the <lb />
summer course, which starts June <lb />
6th, and already every applicant that <lb />
can be accommodated for that course <lb />
has been registered. Two weeks ago <lb />
President Wright saw that the <lb />
cations would exceed the number that <lb />
could be taken in the dormitories, so <lb />
he appealed to the people of Green- <lb />
ville to open their homes and take <lb />
students to board for a few weeks <lb />
While the response to this appeal was <lb />
generous, enough names have come <lb />
in to fill every home that was offered <lb />
and this source of has <lb />
about reached its limit <lb />
With such condition existing <lb />
is nothing left to do but deny <lb />
to further applicants, and this <lb />
alternative has already begun, though <lb />
every denial is made with regret. And <lb />
with applications averaging twenty a <lb />
week, by the time the summer course <lb />
begins fully one hundred public <lb />
school teachers seeking the <lb />
of this splendid school will be <lb />
denied admission. As these teachers <lb />
have an average of thirty pupils in <lb />
their respective schools, and want to <lb />
better equip for teaching j <lb />
these, it moans that three thousand <lb />
children throughout Eastern North <lb />
Carolina will be deprived of <lb />
that by good right belong to <lb />
them. <lb />
Oh, the short-sightedness and <lb />
of the last legislature in <lb />
its treatment of East Carolina Teach- <lb />
Training School, the school <lb />
without exception, is doing hotter <lb />
work for teachers than any other in <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
day will have answered the last roll <lb />
call the next annual reunion. <lb />
and before many years all of them <lb />
have passed over the river. These <lb />
thoughts should inspire us to do all <lb />
we can to fill their remaining days <lb />
with brightness and cheer. We can <lb />
never do too much for the old soldiers <lb />
nor heap too great honors upon them. <lb />
MIST HA YE THE PASS. <lb />
or abridged by the United State <lb />
or by any state on account of <lb />
BY ADVERTISING. <lb />
Says The Wilmington <lb />
are going to make seamless <lb />
hosiery in Concord. How about seen- <lb />
Nobody would buy the <lb />
latter. Hosiery is worn to be seen. At <lb />
least, that is the impression most of <lb />
the female wearers seem to be en- <lb />
to Tel- <lb />
Ha. ha Ho, ho Kindly excuse our <lb />
merriment, but it does seem awfully <lb />
I tinny to realize that Fain, of The <lb />
Telegram, is as big and as brazen a <lb />
rubber-neck as Whichard, of the Re- <lb />
We never thought there <lb />
be <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
Don't shout too quick, my boy. <lb />
Pain cant come in our class if his <lb />
head is off color. Let him send in <lb />
credentials for examination. As <lb />
to we are out of <lb />
that. <lb />
If a good thing costs no more than <lb />
a bad thing, it looks like the part of <lb />
wisdom to have the good thing. Yet <lb />
there are people who prefer to have <lb />
bad roads, when it would cost them <lb />
less to have good roads. <lb />
This being the there <lb />
need not be much surprise that The <lb />
Reflector is a little shy on editorial. <lb />
As Jim Robinson once remarked, we <lb />
spent last night filling up on <lb />
plate <lb />
Judging from the amount of <lb />
can money is having made into <lb />
gold bullion, he is determined that <lb />
if the revolutionist get control they <lb />
will not have enough coin to operate <lb />
with. <lb />
One of the drawbacks to Green- <lb />
ville is the lack of ample hotel ac- <lb />
We hope this year <lb />
will supply this need, or at least have <lb />
Plans perfected looking to that end. <lb />
0- <lb />
Wholesalers and manufacturers in <lb />
the cities who do business with mer- <lb />
chants throughout the towns or the <lb />
country, frequently watch the news- <lb />
papers of those towns to see how the <lb />
merchants advertise and judge them <lb />
accordingly. The Reflector has <lb />
been written for with that <lb />
object in view, as well as received <lb />
letters about certain A <lb />
few days ago a representative of a <lb />
Northern firm interested in a special <lb />
line called in person to examine the <lb />
files of The Reflector in search of <lb />
certain advertisements. Inquiring as <lb />
to the circulation and advertising <lb />
rates of The Reflector, he added, <lb />
such a circulation every inch of <lb />
space you have for sale ought to be <lb />
taken at that price. We people up <lb />
North would jump at such an op- <lb />
for advertising as you offer <lb />
the business men <lb />
We took a trip down Tar river <lb />
Monday, for the first time in several <lb />
years, and could not fail to observe <lb />
the bad condition for navigation that <lb />
has recently come from neglect. The <lb />
government has done no work on this <lb />
river in the last few years, and con- <lb />
ought to hurry to make an <lb />
for it. The river is too <lb />
valuable a stream to neglect, and the <lb />
longer work on it is delayed the more <lb />
it cost to do the work. The <lb />
river should be put in condition for <lb />
a channel feet deep all the way to <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
H there was as much co-operation <lb />
for manufacturing enterprises in <lb />
Greenville as there is for some other <lb />
things, you would see this town hum. <lb />
MEMORIAL DAY. <lb />
Once more has come the day that <lb />
brings in annual reunion <lb />
the veterans of the Confederacy. <lb />
Their ranks grow thinner as each <lb />
year goes by, and it touches the heart <lb />
to see how few arc remaining, and <lb />
some of these feeble with age, as <lb />
they come together on these annual <lb />
occasions to place- or the <lb />
graves of their departed comrades, <lb />
and to mingle once more with those <lb />
yet living and together talk over the <lb />
things of the past. Death has prey- <lb />
ed heavily upon Bryan camp <lb />
during the past year, taking away <lb />
more of its members than in any <lb />
one recent year. And some here to- <lb />
Detective Burns, like a great many <lb />
other human beings, seems to care <lb />
more about getting his name and <lb />
Picture in print than he does about <lb />
what he says. He is making some <lb />
very strong charges, and whether he <lb />
can prove them remains to be seen. <lb />
One thing, he has made an ass of <lb />
Gompers. Silence is the best policy, <lb />
and both men are loosing the respect <lb />
of the people because they don't see <lb />
it that way. <lb />
Next Friday, 12th, will be the meet- <lb />
of the board of governors of Pitt <lb />
County Pair Association. Every <lb />
of the board should be present. <lb />
What is the use of passing that two <lb />
ticket window law if every place in <lb />
the state except seven is to be ex- <lb />
from its operations <lb />
Greenville could not complain that <lb />
Thursday night was a dull one, with <lb />
a ten cents show, a minstrel and a <lb />
banquet all going on. <lb />
According to weather bureau fore- <lb />
casts, there will be summer weather <lb />
sometime this week. Here's hoping <lb />
they have guessed right. <lb />
You can talk to people about it <lb />
and they will tell you Greenville is <lb />
missing much in not taking advantage <lb />
of using the river front. Yet nobody <lb />
makes a move to that end. It offers <lb />
opportunities for pavilions, bath <lb />
houses, and even a park, if <lb />
were only taken of it. Some of <lb />
these days the mistake of delay may <lb />
be realized. <lb />
Congressman of <lb />
has introduced a resolution for <lb />
general woman suffrage. He wants <lb />
to amend the constitution to <lb />
of citizens shall not de- <lb />
As long as he don't <lb />
asks him to, there will continue to <lb />
be trouble in Mexico. <lb />
Greenville's hotel needs have, not <lb />
yet been supplied, but there is talk <lb />
of doing something in that direction. <lb />
The way the months are slipping <lb />
by it will not take long to get to the <lb />
other end of 1911. <lb />
The free list bill does not mean that <lb />
you are going to get anything free <lb />
if it passes. <lb />
The electric service people are <lb />
thinking they will not get a chance <lb />
to run fans. <lb />
Miss May is treating us <lb />
I coolly.<lb />
The tax assessor Is on to his Job. <lb />
If you see a good thing head it to- <lb />
wards Greenville. <lb />
If spring has been backward, the <lb />
leaves are nearly grown. <lb />
o--------- <lb />
It might not be bad policy to place <lb />
your order for June coal. <lb />
You must either take the flies or <lb />
the flies will take you. <lb />
Overcoats and fires are back for <lb />
a return engagement. <lb />
The thing that beats the air most <lb />
now is the base ball bat. <lb />
News from Mexico continues to be <lb />
about as changeable as the weather. <lb />
If you want to talk about a good <lb />
thing, let Greenville be your subject. <lb />
---------o <lb />
The right kind of advertising, the <lb />
kind that pays, is in the newspapers. <lb />
The leaves are not all grown by <lb />
the 10th of May this time, but most <lb />
of them are. <lb />
If a man and his wife are really <lb />
one, and she calls him a fool, who <lb />
is she talking about <lb />
The free list bill has got through <lb />
the lower house of congress by a <lb />
vote of to <lb />
Work Dishonorable <lb />
The great majority of human be- <lb />
in civilized lands have to work, <lb />
and for earning an honest living by <lb />
more or less expert handicraft there <lb />
is a measly, snobbish element of id- <lb />
with more money than brains <lb />
who would put the taboo mark of the <lb />
thing called upon them. An <lb />
editorial in the Pensacola Journal <lb />
In this country, which is supposed <lb />
to be the of the free and the <lb />
home of the comes the report <lb />
from one of the government schools <lb />
that a young man was told to dis- <lb />
continue his attentions to a young <lb />
woman because she was only a work- <lb />
girl. <lb />
The outcome has not been reached, <lb />
but it will unquestionably end in the <lb />
young man winning out and <lb />
the privilege of choosing the <lb />
companions he wishes to take to the <lb />
entertainments, regardless of what <lb />
the custom and precedent has been. <lb />
Army and navy officers have no <lb />
son to feel above the <lb />
man in the streets, of the workman <lb />
in any line of trade, for it is these <lb />
workers that pay their salaries and <lb />
it is a pity that there are such pin- <lb />
headed, contemptible and foolish men <lb />
in charge of the school at Annapolis <lb />
as to object to the working people <lb />
being on friendly terms with the <lb />
students. <lb />
In the departments of the govern- <lb />
is where true democracy and <lb />
friendly feeling should prevail. When <lb />
the superior officers assume to <lb />
the associates of those under <lb />
them this ceases to be a free <lb />
try. <lb />
The working classes are just as <lb />
good as the members of other more <lb />
fortunate classes, and this is being <lb />
demonstrated every day when cases <lb />
like that of the young man in <lb />
arise. In this case he will take <lb />
for a life companion one of the work- <lb />
classes who has the qualities and <lb />
courage of a gentlewoman. <lb />
That the young woman was denied <lb />
in Annapolis society is <lb />
a disgrace to the institution, a dis- <lb />
grace to the nation, and a disgrace <lb />
to our civilization. young man <lb />
is to be commended for the attitude <lb />
he assumed and those responsible <lb />
for the Insult should be given several <lb />
swift kicks and debarred from the <lb />
society of respectable people. <lb />
Assuming that our contemporary <lb />
has its premises correct, we heartily <lb />
endorse what it has said. A working <lb />
girl can be a gentlewoman and a <lb />
lady in America, no than those <lb />
who spend their days in changing <lb />
fine dresses, attending teas, card <lb />
parties and tilting their haughty noses <lb />
with scorn if they happen to pass <lb />
in the street or see an honest work- <lb />
girl. The commander-in-chief of the <lb />
army would be justified in summarily <lb />
removing any officer whose foppish- <lb />
and snobbery would lead him <lb />
to take such a stand as is quoted <lb />
the foregoing, assuming the only <lb />
that could be made of the young <lb />
woman was that she was a <lb />
To do otherwise would dis- <lb />
honor thousands of good mothers, and <lb />
outrage the virtue of a vast majority <lb />
of American girls who will <lb />
be the mothers of the future great- <lb />
of this country. Glory to the <lb />
young man who would slap such silly <lb />
twaddle and foppish in the <lb />
face and stand by his <lb />
He is more fit for an army officer than <lb />
his scramble-brained is <lb />
his superior by sufferance and not on <lb />
News. <lb />
it at home and the woven <lb />
to the world's trade. It is <lb />
said that every sagacious man of <lb />
who has recently been in the <lb />
South has been impressed with the <lb />
belief that cotton manufacturing is <lb />
to be greatly increased in the South <lb />
soon after the opening of the Pan- <lb />
canal. That artificial ocean high- <lb />
way will make it possible for <lb />
can manufacturers to reach the for- <lb />
markets much more speedily and <lb />
economically than the cotton man- <lb />
of Europe can least <lb />
the markets of South America and <lb />
the Orient. <lb />
It is with this increase of cotton <lb />
manufacture in the South in view, <lb />
that already capital in large amounts <lb />
has been invested in the development <lb />
of water powers whose energies is <lb />
to be converted into electricity and <lb />
utilized in the operation of cotton <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
Cotton As An Asset. <lb />
A British expert at Manchester <lb />
writes to the Department of Com- <lb />
and Labor that material <lb />
reduction in the cotton crop of the <lb />
United States through vagaries of <lb />
weather, attack of parasites or other <lb />
causes would be followed by disaster <lb />
to the cotton trade and great loss and <lb />
suffering to the people. A crop of <lb />
bales in the United States ad- <lb />
to produced elsewhere <lb />
is now regarded as necessary to meet <lb />
normal requirements and every <lb />
year increases the world's mill <lb />
capacity. In less than ten years at <lb />
the present rate of natural increase <lb />
in the demand, the requirements of <lb />
the mills may be to <lb />
bales per <lb />
The New Orleans Picayune figures <lb />
it out that last year, our cotton crop <lb />
into this country <lb />
But the Picayune does well to <lb />
explain that amount represents <lb />
the raw cotton sold abroad, and since <lb />
manufacturing increases, its value ac- <lb />
cording to the character of the articles <lb />
made from it from ten to one hundred <lb />
fold, think what that <lb />
worth of raw cotton would be valued <lb />
at if As to the future, <lb />
The Picayune says that one day last <lb />
week, in an address before the South <lb />
Carolina Association at <lb />
Charleston, Mr. John M. Gardin, vice- <lb />
president of the National City Bank of <lb />
New York, is reported to have made <lb />
the statement that in the not distant <lb />
future no American cotton in the raw <lb />
state will be shipped because it will <lb />
be found more profitable to <lb />
Hot <lb />
The work, which is being <lb />
at the Eastern Carolina <lb />
Training School may be <lb />
by the report that although <lb />
the beginning of the summer term Is <lb />
yet a month off the utmost capacity <lb />
of the institution will be taxed to <lb />
handle applications already made, <lb />
and in addition President Wright has <lb />
secured board and lodgings In Green- <lb />
ville for as many as is possible. The <lb />
Greenville Reflector has never for- <lb />
given the late legislature for failing <lb />
to increase the equipment and <lb />
ties of this Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
LAND SALE. <lb />
Wireless On All Steamships. <lb />
It is barely five years since the <lb />
wireless telegraph passed out of the <lb />
experimental stage and was <lb />
ally recognized as a practical means <lb />
of long-distance communication. By <lb />
July every ocean-going steamship <lb />
leaving an American port that car- <lb />
fifty persons, including <lb />
and crew, by law must equip- <lb />
with a wireless-telegraph outfit <lb />
capable of sending messages <lb />
miles. <lb />
Nothing more important has been <lb />
done in many years to increase the <lb />
safety of travel at sea than the <lb />
installation of wireless. Under the <lb />
new system not only, will every <lb />
steamship be provided with better <lb />
means of self-protection, but it will <lb />
be a means of protection for other <lb />
ships. The quickness with which re- <lb />
lief arrived from different quarters <lb />
at the time of the collision that re- <lb />
in the sinking of the Republic <lb />
demonstrated once for all how here- <lb />
after the ocean is to be dotted with <lb />
life-saving stations. <lb />
Other uses of the wireless at sea <lb />
are to be regarded as a convenience <lb />
for passengers and owners that could <lb />
be dispensed with without great loss. <lb />
The compulsory adoption of it by all <lb />
passenger-carrying steamships has <lb />
now become almost as much of a <lb />
safeguard against disaster as a prop- <lb />
of York <lb />
World. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the <lb />
court of Pitt county, made in <lb />
Special Proceeding No. 1666, entitled <lb />
J. G. Move, against Jane Forbes <lb />
et the undersigned commissioner <lb />
will sell for cash, before the court <lb />
house door in Greenville, on Monday, <lb />
June 5th, 1911, the following <lb />
ed house and lot in the town of <lb />
That lot lying on the <lb />
north side of Bonner's Lane, being <lb />
the lot on which Jane Forbes now <lb />
resides, beginning at William <lb />
ton's southwest corner on Bonner's <lb />
Lane and running with <lb />
Sutton's line feet to line, <lb />
formally Flanagan then west- <lb />
feet to Nelson Hopkins line; <lb />
then with Hopkins line to Bonner's <lb />
Lane; thence with Bonner's Lane to <lb />
the beginning, being the same lot <lb />
deeded to George Forbes by F. J. <lb />
Johnson and wife, which deed appears <lb />
of record In the office of the register <lb />
of deeds of Pitt county, in Book P-4, <lb />
page said lot containing 1-S of <lb />
an acre. <lb />
This May 5th. 1911. <lb />
J. G. and Com. <lb />
F. G. James Son, <lb />
Attorneys. <lb />
The Recall. <lb />
It is probable that the experience <lb />
of Greensboro with the recall may be <lb />
a of that of Tacoma. The <lb />
Pacific coast city has already had <lb />
four recall elections, resulting in the <lb />
retirement of a mayor and four com- <lb />
missioners, and a fifth election has <lb />
been scheduled to keep the ball <lb />
It seems that under the recall, a <lb />
new election can be held under <lb />
of a certain per cent of citizens <lb />
In Greensboro the percentage is <lb />
it is easy to get per <lb />
cent of the people of a town to sign <lb />
any sort of a petition, especially one <lb />
aimed at the ruling members of an <lb />
administration. In the Greensboro <lb />
case the new administration is <lb />
ed with having violated the charter <lb />
in holding secret session. Where- <lb />
fore, petitions, it is said, are being <lb />
circulated for another election. <lb />
Greensboro might simplify matters by <lb />
coming to an understanding to swap <lb />
mayors and commissioners every <lb />
mouth, so that during the term pro- <lb />
for by its commission form of <lb />
government, all of its ambitious <lb />
citizens may have had a whack at <lb />
municipal <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
Carolina, <lb />
Pitt county. <lb />
By virtue of authority vested in me <lb />
by an order made and entered In a <lb />
special proceeding entitled W. H. <lb />
Harrington, Jr., L. E. Harrington and <lb />
others against J. B. Edwards, R. D. <lb />
Harrington and others, pending be- <lb />
fore the clerk of Superior court, I <lb />
will sell at the Court house door in <lb />
Greenville, at o'clock, noon, Wed- <lb />
June 7th, 1911, to the highest <lb />
bidder, at public auction, for one- <lb />
third cash, the remainder In equal <lb />
payments six and eighteen months <lb />
from date, the following described <lb />
One tract of land in <lb />
township, containing acres more <lb />
or less, adjoining the of Hardy <lb />
Johnson, the Fannie Wingate lands, <lb />
and others, a full description of <lb />
which can be obtained by referring <lb />
to book H-6, page 0-5, page <lb />
and book H-6, page Pitt <lb />
county registry, a full description of <lb />
which can be obtained therefrom. <lb />
One store building on Evans <lb />
street in the town of Greenville, a <lb />
description of which can be had by <lb />
referring to book B-6, page <lb />
Register of Deeds office, said store <lb />
being part of lot No. in the plot <lb />
of the town of Greenville, and being <lb />
occupied as a barber shop and store <lb />
between the stores of J. R. Corey <lb />
building and the old National Bank. <lb />
One other lot of land lying on <lb />
the east side of Evans street, ad- <lb />
joining the post office lot, and being <lb />
a part of lot No. in the plot of <lb />
the town of Greenville, and more <lb />
described in book H-7, <lb />
Pitt county registry. <lb />
Two lots with one-story frame <lb />
building thereon, being on Second <lb />
street, near the corner of Reade <lb />
street adjoining the old Macon hotel <lb />
property, a full description of which <lb />
can be obtained by referring to book <lb />
W-5. page in the office of Regis- <lb />
of Deeds. <lb />
This the day of May, 1911. <lb />
S. J. EVERETT, Com. <lb />
5-10-11 <lb />
The easiest way of getting even <lb />
with people is by making them good <lb />
friends. <lb />
-M-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
VERY HANDSOME <lb />
CITY OF BALTIMORE AND CITY <lb />
OF NORFOLK <lb />
PLY BETWEEN NORFOLK, BALTIMORE <lb />
Chesapeake Steamship Co. Put Into <lb />
Finest Steamers on the Hay <lb />
Has US Staterooms, Equipped <lb />
With Wireless Telegraph and Ex- <lb />
tensive System of Telephones- <lb />
Sunday Service. <lb />
The steamer City of Norfolk, the <lb />
newest steamer of the Chesapeake <lb />
Steamship Company, is due to arrive <lb />
from Baltimore on her maiden trip <lb />
between Norfolk and Baltimore this <lb />
morning, <lb />
With a large number of passengers <lb />
and a large cargo of freight the new <lb />
steamer in command of Captain <lb />
Thomas, who is well known here, <lb />
owing to his frequent visits here in <lb />
command of other vessels of the <lb />
Chesapeake Steamship Company, left <lb />
Baltimore at o'clock last night. <lb />
As she has not had her trial trip <lb />
in Baltimore, it is thought that she <lb />
will be let out on her trip down the <lb />
Chesapeake Bay, to see what she <lb />
really can do. <lb />
Her contract calls for her to make <lb />
the trip between Norfolk and <lb />
more, a distance of miles, in ten <lb />
hours, which is at the rate of <lb />
teen-and-a-half miles an hour, and if <lb />
the performance of her sister ship <lb />
the City of Baltimore can be used as <lb />
a comparison, she will have no <lb />
trouble in filling contract require- <lb />
Mr. Key Compton, president of the <lb />
Chesapeake Steamship Company and <lb />
a large party of are <lb />
coming down on the vessel, and <lb />
will remain over here until she sails <lb />
on return to Baltimore on Monday <lb />
night. <lb />
Miss Celestine Finley, who <lb />
the boat with the proverbial <lb />
bottle of champagne, when she was <lb />
launched at the ship yard of the <lb />
Maryland Steel Company, at Spar- <lb />
row's Point, Md., on December last, <lb />
is also on board the vessel. <lb />
Telephone System and Wireless. <lb />
With her big sister ship, the City of <lb />
Baltimore, the City of Norfolk will be <lb />
one of the finest vessels plying in the <lb />
bay trade, not only in construction, <lb />
but also in accommodations and com- <lb />
fort for the passengers. <lb />
These two vessels have all modern <lb />
arrangements and besides having <lb />
wireless, have a private branch <lb />
phone exchange, extending to all <lb />
staterooms on the vessel. <lb />
Upon the arrival of the vessel at <lb />
either Norfolk or Baltimore, the <lb />
phone lines are connected up with <lb />
the switchboard at the telephone ex- <lb />
change there, so any one can <lb />
phone from the boat to his home, an- <lb />
his arrival, or for them to <lb />
send his automobile or cab to meet <lb />
him. <lb />
The City of Norfolk and the City of <lb />
Baltimore Sister Ships. <lb />
The City of Norfolk and the City of <lb />
Baltimore are sister ships and are of <lb />
the same design and construction. <lb />
Their dimensions are as <lb />
Length over all, feet; length be- <lb />
tween perpendiculars, feet; beam <lb />
at deck, feet inches; <lb />
beam at water line, feet; <lb />
beam over guards, feet; <lb />
depth of hold, feet; draft at <lb />
nary trim, feet inches. <lb />
The machinery will consist of a <lb />
four-cylinder, triple-expansion, <lb />
face condensing engine, cylinders <lb />
measuring 24-40-47-47 inches by <lb />
inch stroke. There will be four sin- <lb />
and Scotch boilers, feet inches <lb />
diameter by feet inches long, <lb />
and pound pressure. <lb />
Each vessel will have a licensed <lb />
passenger capacity of people and <lb />
a carrying capacity of tons of <lb />
high-class merchandise freight. The <lb />
latest type refrigerating plant with a <lb />
capacity of cubic feet will be in- <lb />
stalled on each vessel. <lb />
Steamer Has Staterooms. <lb />
There are staterooms, located <lb />
as seven on the main deck, <lb />
on the saloon deck, and on the <lb />
gallery deck. Twelve of the rooms <lb />
will connect with baths, which will <lb />
have hot and cold, fresh and salt <lb />
water, when ten additional rooms <lb />
will have hot and cold, fresh and salt <lb />
shower baths. <lb />
They will be lighted throughout by <lb />
electricity. The main saloon is fur- <lb />
in mahogany, while the gallery <lb />
deck and staterooms are in white <lb />
and old ivory. An attractive feature <lb />
of the new vessel is the dining room, <lb />
which is located on the gallery deck <lb />
forward. This enables the passengers <lb />
to have a view of the harbors of Nor- <lb />
folk and Baltimore while they are en- <lb />
joying their meals and the outbound <lb />
trip. <lb />
Another innovation to be installed <lb />
by the Chesapeake Steamship Com- <lb />
is a Sunday boat on the trip be- <lb />
tween the two largest cities on the <lb />
Chesapeake Bay and tributaries- <lb />
Norfolk and Baltimore. <lb />
As both of the new vessels of the <lb />
company, the City of Norfolk and the <lb />
City of Baltimore are in commission <lb />
the Sunday service will be <lb />
rated on next Sunday <lb />
Landmark, April 30th. <lb />
BACK. <lb />
Cures Catarrh Without <lb />
Dosing, or Money Back. <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 />
gists everywhere sell <lb />
April May <lb />
Safe. <lb />
The you wasting <lb />
a good deal of that steak in trim- <lb />
ming it <lb />
The ma'am, I weigh- <lb />
ed it Blade. <lb />
la <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 the <lb />
these goods in the city. <lb />
COME TO SEE US <lb />
VanDyke, Furniture Dealers <lb />
CHESAPEAKE LINE TO BALTIMORE <lb />
Connecting with rail lines for all points <lb />
and WEST <lb />
JUST THE SEASON TO ENJOY A SHORT <lb />
WATER TRIP. <lb />
ELEGANT <lb />
Dining Service Carte and Table <lb />
Steamers leave Norfolk p. m. from foot of Jackson sf <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 />
Carolina Teachers <lb />
Q. <lb />
a School <lb />
Spring and Neater 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 TO BETTER EQUIP <lb />
THE TEACHER FOR HIS WORK. <lb />
Text Those used in the public schools of the State <lb />
For further information, <lb />
ROBT. H. WRIGHT, Pres <lb />
X. C. <lb />
C. L. Wilkinson, Nothing but Insurance <lb />
Steam Boiler, Plate Glass, <lb />
Liability, Burglary, Fidelity and Court Bonds. <lb />
The Only Exclusive Insurance Agent in Greenville <lb />
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb />
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb />
Work, and Flues in Season, See <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
J. J. JENKINS <lb />
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb />
Pulley Bowen <lb />
Greenville, North Carolina <lb />
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS <lb />
O SPECIAL TAX ELECTIONS. <lb />
hi <lb />
tinge in Boundary Line of Swift <lb />
Creek and Townships. <lb />
The board of county commissioners <lb />
in regular monthly session on <lb />
first Monday, with four of the <lb />
present. <lb />
following aggregate sums were <lb />
on the treasurer for current <lb />
For paupers, county <lb />
superintendent health, <lb />
clerk Superior court, <lb />
sheriff, <lb />
es, justices of the peace. <lb />
Ar-8.36; witness tickets, <lb />
and ferries, court cost <lb />
51.30; conveying prisoners, <lb />
jail smallpox, <lb />
29.85; indexing records, <lb />
Tinting and stationery, reg- <lb />
of deeds, court house <lb />
3,531.63. <lb />
register, treasurer, <lb />
423.33; county roads, <lb />
y stock law, stock <lb />
Bethel roads, <lb />
roads, Greenville roads, <lb />
1.95. <lb />
The several officers made their re- <lb />
for the past month, which were <lb />
and ordered recorded. The <lb />
collections were as Sheriff, <lb />
clerk, register of <lb />
A petition from citizens of Swift <lb />
Creek township, asking for <lb />
in the boundary line of Swift Creek <lb />
and townships, was presented, <lb />
and was granted. The change is as <lb />
Beginning at a point where <lb />
the Taft road crosses Indian Well <lb />
swamp, and runs down said swamp <lb />
to Long branch; then up said Long <lb />
branch to White's camp on the Taft <lb />
road; then with the Taft road to the <lb />
beginning. This change was made for <lb />
convenience to the voting precinct. <lb />
Special tax elections were ordered <lb />
held In two school districts in Falk- <lb />
land township, in No. on May <lb />
and No. on June The registrar <lb />
and poll holders for No. J. <lb />
L. Warren, G. W. Satterfield and W. <lb />
L. Brown, and for No. E. C. King, <lb />
C. H. Mayo and F. G. Dupree. <lb />
A Liberal Supply to be Planted in <lb />
the River Here. <lb />
Its Effect On The Present High Cost <lb />
Of Living. <lb />
In discussing the little phrase <lb />
of high we want to <lb />
it with as it exists in the <lb />
American home of moderate means. <lb />
Folly causes waste among the idle <lb />
rich; ignorance causes it among the <lb />
wretchedly poor. But in the home <lb />
over which there presides an <lb />
intelligent, earnest woman, why <lb />
should there be waste Because <lb />
and earnestness go down be- <lb />
fore three factors of modern life <lb />
haste, false values and false pride. <lb />
The little leaks which in the end rep- <lb />
resent the cost of high living can be <lb />
traced to one of these three causes. <lb />
Of late years the American woman <lb />
has adopted the slogan of her <lb />
band and son, is She <lb />
seizes upon every time-saving de- <lb />
vice. She rushes her housekeeping <lb />
as her husband rushes his employees. <lb />
The result is a peculiar form of high <lb />
living in the home did not exist <lb />
when more time was given to its man- <lb />
says Woman's Home Com- <lb />
the single item of marketing. <lb />
Investigators have reported that only <lb />
one-third of the housekeepers in <lb />
American cities and towns do their <lb />
own marketing. The other two-thirds <lb />
it, save on special occasions, <lb />
to servants, children and the <lb />
phone. In the average town where <lb />
the telephone service is unlimited <lb />
three-fourths of the ordering at the <lb />
butcher shops and groceries is done <lb />
over the wire. Dealers all approve <lb />
the telephone method because it is a <lb />
for them as well as the <lb />
customer. Many of them maintain <lb />
that it is fully as economical for the <lb />
housewife, but actual investigation <lb />
proves that this is not rue. The <lb />
housewife who her meals and <lb />
green vegetables with personal care <lb />
and discusses comparative prices of <lb />
different brands in groceries saves <lb />
from five to fifteen per cent, on her <lb />
orders. These figures were furnished <lb />
by representatives of three reliable <lb />
firms in as many typical American <lb />
New York, Detroit and <lb />
more, and the same figures have been <lb />
found to hold good in smaller cities <lb />
and towns. Yours may be the ex- <lb />
to the rule, but find out for <lb />
yourself if this is so; don't take any <lb />
body's word for <lb />
Mr. H. A. White, president of the <lb />
chamber of commerce, is in receipt of <lb />
a letter from Congressman John H. <lb />
Small advising that the States <lb />
commissioner of fisheries has agreed <lb />
to make a liberal planting of young <lb />
shad in Tar river at Greenville. The <lb />
young shad will be taken from the <lb />
shad hatchery at Edenton and <lb />
ed here in charge of a messenger. <lb />
Planting these young shad here will <lb />
increase the run of shad up Tar <lb />
river in the next few year <lb />
Specimen of What a Farmer Makes. <lb />
There nothing like having the <lb />
proof of a thing. Reflector readers <lb />
have learned something about what <lb />
an excellent farmer Mr. W. A. Darden <lb />
is, and that he makes the best of <lb />
everything about his place. He <lb />
lives in the Willow Green section of <lb />
Greene county, not far from the Pitt <lb />
line, and frequently comes over this, <lb />
way. He was here Thursday and call- <lb />
around to see The Reflector man <lb />
handed him a tin bucket with the <lb />
remark is something to put <lb />
on your It did not take <lb />
long to find that the bucket contained <lb />
of the finest butter that can <lb />
be made, and it was made right on <lb />
Mr, farm. <lb />
The <lb />
I thought myself indeed secure, <lb />
So fast the door, so firm the lock; <lb />
But lo the toddling comes to lure <lb />
My parent ear with timorous knock. <lb />
My heart were stone could it with- <lb />
stand <lb />
The sweetness of my baby's plea <lb />
That timorous, baby knocking and <lb />
let me only <lb />
I threw aside the unfinished book, <lb />
Regardless of its tempting charms, <lb />
And opening wide the door I took <lb />
My laughing darling in my arms. <lb />
Who knows but in eternity, <lb />
I, like a truant child, shall wait <lb />
The glories of a life to be, <lb />
Beyond the Heavenly Father's gate <lb />
And will that Father heed <lb />
The truant's supplicating cry, <lb />
As at the outer door I plead, <lb />
I, O Father only <lb />
Eugene Field. <lb />
NEW LINE GOODS AND <lb />
silks; new styles at J. R. J. G.<lb />
NOAH'S LINIMENT gives relief for all Nerve, Bone <lb />
and Muscle Aches and Pains more quickly than any <lb />
other remedy known. IT PENETRATES-It is <lb />
triple strength and a powerful, speedy and <lb />
PAIN REMEDY. Sold by all dealers in medicine at <lb />
per bottle and money back if not satisfactory <lb />
WHAT OTHERS SAY I <lb />
Cured of Rheumatism <lb />
had been fullering with rheumatism for <lb />
three years. Have been using <lb />
and will say that it cured me com- <lb />
Can walk better than I have In two <lb />
years. Rev. S. E. Cyrus, Donald, S. C <lb />
For Cuts and Bruises <lb />
working at my trade I <lb />
eel bruised and cut f I And that <lb />
Liniment takes all the soreness out <lb />
and heals the wound Immediately, <lb />
Ryan, Swansboro, <lb />
Rheumatism in <lb />
received the bottle of Liniment, <lb />
and think It has helped me greatly. I have <lb />
rheumatism in my neck and it relieved it <lb />
right much. Mrs. Martha A. Lambert, <lb />
Dam, <lb />
Pains In the Back <lb />
I suffered ten years with a dreadfully <lb />
sore pain In my back, and tried different re- <lb />
Less than half a bottle of Noah <lb />
Liniment made a perfect cure. Mrs. Rev. J. <lb />
D. Point Eastern, <lb />
Cured of Neuralgia <lb />
five years I suffered with neuralgia <lb />
and pain in side. Could not sleep. I tried <lb />
Liniment, and the first application <lb />
made me feel better. Mrs. Martha A. See, <lb />
Stiff Joints and Backaches <lb />
have used Liniment for <lb />
stiff joints and backache, and I can <lb />
say It did me more good than any pain <lb />
Rev George W. Smith, S. <lb />
Bronchitis and Asthma <lb />
son has been suffering with bronchitis <lb />
and and a very bad cough. Was <lb />
confined to his bed. one recommended <lb />
Liniment, and I rubbed his chest and <lb />
back with it and gave him six drops on sugar, <lb />
and he was relieved immediately. Mrs. A. L. <lb />
Whittaker, Holly Street, Richmond, <lb />
Better Than Remedies <lb />
have obtained as good If not better re- <lb />
from Liniment than we did from <lb />
per bottle. Norfolk <lb />
and Portsmouth Transfer Co., Norfolk, <lb />
Just Received Sets <lb />
Of SAMPLE HARNESS <lb />
Bought at per cent <lb />
below wholesale cost. <lb />
If you want a good <lb />
harness cheap now is <lb />
the time to buy. <lb />
CASH OR CREDIT <lb />
The John Flanagan Buggy Co. <lb />
Greenville, s North Car. <lb />
Subscribe to the Reflector.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0007" n="7" />
                <p>
Tit m Fan <lb />
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb />
Advertising rates furnished <lb />
Ayden. N. C, May E. L. St. <lb />
Claire, the old apostle of education, <lb />
is la town this week preaching some <lb />
logical sermons, besides working for <lb />
the Seminary, as usual. <lb />
The graded school will close Fri- <lb />
day night with a speech by Prof. M. <lb />
C. S. Noble, of Chapel Hill. Every- <lb />
body invited. <lb />
Mr. W. F. Hart made a business <lb />
trip to Murry, Standard and <lb />
Thursday. <lb />
Our new city fathers met and <lb />
Wednesday evening and our pro- <lb />
town did not miss a <lb />
Only good men succeeded good <lb />
men. Still we must expect even <lb />
greater things. <lb />
Capt. D. G. Berry Company will <lb />
give a fish fry at Dawson seine next <lb />
Thursday. <lb />
The first ball game of the season <lb />
will be pulled off this evening. Ply- <lb />
mouth against Ayden. <lb />
The J. R. Smith Company has been <lb />
dissolved by J. R. Smith Bro. <lb />
absorbed the entire store. This <lb />
is the oldest firm in town, having <lb />
started here soon after the railroad <lb />
was built in 1891. <lb />
There was a large sturgeon caught <lb />
at Pitch Kettle seine Thursday, <lb />
weighing near pounds. This meat <lb />
usually sells for cents per pound, <lb />
making it a valuable kind. <lb />
Mrs. Harriet Little, of the <lb />
youngest daughter of William <lb />
May, who lived near Reedy Branch <lb />
church, is visiting her brother, Mr. J. <lb />
J. May. This is her first visit over <lb />
here in nearly years. Her father <lb />
died March 1885, the day President <lb />
Cleveland was first inaugurated. <lb />
Mr. Stancil Hodges made a <lb />
trip to Washington Wednesday <lb />
evening. <lb />
R. C. Davis, house painter and <lb />
orator, carries a full stock of wall <lb />
paper. Estimates furnished on <lb />
plication. All work guaranteed. <lb />
den, N. C. <lb />
All grades of hardware and mill <lb />
supplies, wire netting; car each of <lb />
nails, lime and R Smith <lb />
Bro. <lb />
The progressive firm of E. Turnage <lb />
Sons Company, have built a large <lb />
warehouse near the railroad track <lb />
to better accommodate the handling <lb />
of fertilizers and farm machinery. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Gardner is having her <lb />
house remodeled and a large <lb />
porch built there. When com- <lb />
it will rival some of the beau- <lb />
residences in our <lb />
The high price has caused several <lb />
large lots of cotton to be marketed <lb />
recently. Among the sellers we noted <lb />
Mr. Wright Nobles, J. Ed. <lb />
Aunt Pennie Cannon, Messrs. W. A. <lb />
Darden, R. B. Gerome <lb />
and These are <lb />
all good farmers. <lb />
See our line of ginghams and white <lb />
homespun at cents per <lb />
R. Smith Bro. <lb />
CHICKEN POWDER <lb />
t H to Chickens and Turkeys <lb />
Cock of the Walk <lb />
OVER <lb />
Where The Elephants Are Made To <lb />
Do The Work. <lb />
One morning I got up early and <lb />
went to lumber <lb />
yard at to see the trained el- <lb />
there handle the heavy saw- <lb />
logs which it is necessary to move <lb />
from place to place. It beats a cir- <lb />
It is very clear that My Lord, <lb />
the Elephant, like most other be- <lb />
in the tropics, doesn't entirely <lb />
; approve of work. What he did he did <lb />
j with deliberation, and he <lb />
stopped much to rest between tugs. <lb />
Also when some enormous log, thirty <lb />
or forty feet long and two or three <lb />
feet thick, was given him to pull <lb />
through the mire, he would roar <lb />
mightily at each hard place, getting <lb />
down on his knees sometimes to use <lb />
his strength to better advantage, and <lb />
we could hardly escape the <lb />
that at times he in <lb />
violent The king of the <lb />
group, a magnificent tusker, pushed <lb />
the logs with his snout and tusks, <lb />
while the others pulled them with <lb />
chains. But the most marvelous <lb />
thing is how the barefooted, half- <lb />
naked driver of mahout, astride the <lb />
great giant's shoulders, makes him <lb />
understand what to do in each case <lb />
merely kicking his neck or prod- <lb />
ding his ears. <lb />
At one time while I watched a <lb />
elephant or got his, <lb />
log stuck in the mud and was <lb />
and roaring profanely about his <lb />
trials, when the tusker's mahout bid <lb />
that royal beasts go help his troubled <lb />
brother. Straightway, therefore, <lb />
went the tusker, leaving great holes <lb />
la the mud at each footprint as if <lb />
a tree had been proofed there, gave <lb />
a shove to the recalcitrant <lb />
log, and there was peace again in <lb />
the camp. <lb />
For stacking lumber the elephant <lb />
is especially useful. Any ordinary- <lb />
sized log, tree or piece of lumber he <lb />
will pick up as if it were a piece of <lb />
and tote with his snout, <lb />
and in piling heavy he re <lb />
about matching. <lb />
the pile at a distance he <lb />
looks to see if it is uneven or any <lb />
single piece out of place, in which <lb />
case he is quick to make it right. <lb />
The young lady in our party was <lb />
so much amused when the mahout <lb />
called out, Salaam to <lb />
Salute the and his lordship <lb />
bowed and made his salutation as <lb />
gracefully as his enormous head and <lb />
would permit- Clarence <lb />
foe, m Progressive Farmer. <lb />
The Barnyard<lb />
Died after .- a chick of that <lb />
old which had been fed on <lb />
Powder. Alas <lb />
No. 77.890. Guaranteed <lb />
mm I . d Act June 1906. Serial No. 41.810 <lb />
CHICKEN POWDER <lb />
Remedy for Cholera, <lb />
Them L <lb />
Manufactured by <lb />
W. H. Chicken Powder Co., <lb />
Box Norfolk, Va. <lb />
For sale by Merchants and <lb />
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb />
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb />
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb />
fa the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, March 1911. <lb />
Loans and <lb />
Overdrafts. <lb />
Banking house, furniture <lb />
and fixtures. 831.09 <lb />
Due from banks and <lb />
bankers . 65,654.52 <lb />
100.00 <lb />
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 />
before 14th <lb />
J. R. SMITH STANCILL HODGES, <lb />
R. H u . Notary <lb />
R. a commission expires March 1911 <lb />
Directors. <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
Come let us show you. <lb />
Tripp, Hart Go., Ayden, N. C. <lb />
When Opinions Diner. <lb />
There are so many differing <lb />
ions. A young married woman's <lb />
idea of an important news item is <lb />
the name she has given to her baby <lb />
Topeka Capital. <lb />
Date Changed. <lb />
The date of the Farmers Union <lb />
basket picnic at Bluff has <lb />
been changed from the 17th to the <lb />
25th of May. The public is invited <lb />
to come and bring baskets. There <lb />
will be speeches by prominent men <lb />
of the state. The order of the pro- <lb />
gram will be published later <lb />
Reward, <lb />
of Paper will b <lb />
figs <lb />
to the medical <lb />
Catarrh being a <lb />
ii Catarrh Cure Is taken In. <lb />
upon the blood <lb />
surfaces of the system there. <lb />
the foundation of the d <lb />
and giving the patient strength by <lb />
and Matting <lb />
nature In doing its work. The proprietors <lb />
so much faith in its <lb />
they offer One Hundred Dollars <lb />
Vat U fails Send <lb />
list of testimonials. <lb />
Toledo, Ohio. <lb />
Sold by all Druggists, <lb />
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. <lb />
Funeral of Mr. Perkins. <lb />
The funeral Mr. J. j. Perkins, <lb />
who died Tuesday morning, took <lb />
Place this afternoon, the interment <lb />
being in Cherry Hill cemetery. The <lb />
service was conducted by Rev. J. H. <lb />
Shore. <lb />
The pall bearers were Messrs. D <lb />
E. House, J. L. Wooten, P. C. Hard- <lb />
W. B. Brown, J. E. Winslow <lb />
J- G. C. T. J L. <lb />
Starkey, H. B. Harris, , s Carr <lb />
and S. M. Schultz.<lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
IS. <lb />
WASHINGTON CON- <lb />
SCHEDULE IS THE NEXT IN <lb />
ORDER <lb />
TAFT ANTAGONIZES PROGRESSIVES <lb />
Is Keeps <lb />
In Close Touch With <lb />
Progressives Given One-Fourth <lb />
Representation on Committees <lb />
is Worried. <lb />
Clyde <lb />
Washington, May <lb />
The group of Senate Tories is still <lb />
able to exert a tremendous influence <lb />
upon legislation. Having packed the <lb />
important committees with men who <lb />
take the corporation attitude toward <lb />
the particular legislation to come <lb />
before those committees, the <lb />
are in a position to con- <lb />
serving special privilege by ob- <lb />
and perhaps preventing, <lb />
the passage of legislation desired <lb />
by the people. <lb />
Among those whom the public may <lb />
safely rely upon to oppose most of <lb />
the progressive house measures are <lb />
Smoot, <lb />
Stephenson, Lodge, Oliver, <lb />
Warren, Perkins and a dozen others, <lb />
who will at all times have the hearty <lb />
co-operation of Vice-President Sher- <lb />
man. <lb />
Back of this group of reactionaries <lb />
are arrayed the tariff trusts, the <lb />
railroads, Wall street, Standard Oil <lb />
and the balance of the organized <lb />
; wealth of the country. <lb />
The Democrats and Progressive <lb />
Republicans are pitied against this <lb />
combination. The two forces will, <lb />
when necessary, combine to prevent <lb />
the passage of a bad bill, but they <lb />
will be helpless at times to prevent <lb />
the Tories from obstructing the <lb />
passage of Democratic legislation <lb />
such as the free list bill. <lb />
About, the only thing the average <lb />
can do is to keep tab on the <lb />
votes of his individual <lb />
in both and senate, not- <lb />
particularly whether they vote for <lb />
or against measures desired by the <lb />
people, and when election , times <lb />
rolls around to act accordingly. <lb />
Senator De <lb />
Cooperating with the senate <lb />
who are planning to kill <lb />
the free list bill and other similar <lb />
anti-trust measures, is Nelson <lb />
Aldrich, of Island. <lb />
Mr. Aldrich is connected with <lb />
an institution of his own creation, <lb />
called the monetary commission. The <lb />
commission has a suite of rooms <lb />
adjoining the rooms occupied by the <lb />
committee, to which the free <lb />
list bill will go. <lb />
If it should happen, opines the <lb />
Cleveland Press, that the door were <lb />
open between the rooms of the <lb />
committee and the rooms of the <lb />
monetary commission, it might hap- <lb />
pen that former Senator Aldrich <lb />
might communicate with Senator <lb />
the new chairman of the <lb />
finance committee, and thus the ti- <lb />
head of the senate majority <lb />
might have the benefit of the views <lb />
of the ex-leader possibly lead- <lb />
de of the United States <lb />
senate. <lb />
As a matter of fact, Mr. Aldrich <lb />
keeps in as close touch with the men <lb />
trained to be reactionaries as <lb />
when he was actually a member of <lb />
the senate. <lb />
Taft Antagonizes Progressives. <lb />
President Taft took the leading <lb />
part in the fight against giving the <lb />
progressive Republicans of the sen- <lb />
ate the committee places they de- <lb />
which fight resulted in <lb />
leaving all the big senate commit- <lb />
tees the same citadels of special <lb />
privilege that they were in the <lb />
congress. <lb />
Before the Republican caucus was <lb />
held the regular Republicans of the <lb />
senate signed an agreement by which <lb />
they agreed to give the progressives <lb />
a one-fourth representation on all <lb />
the committees. Senator <lb />
who signed the agreement for the <lb />
regulars, is said to have bitterly <lb />
his regular colleagues for <lb />
putting him in the position of break- <lb />
his political word, which he de- <lb />
he had always especially <lb />
prided himself upon keeping <lb />
late. <lb />
It now develops that <lb />
breach of faith with the progressives <lb />
was forced by white house pressure. <lb />
President Taft considers progressives <lb />
like La his personal enemies <lb />
and he does not want them in a <lb />
position to assist in bringing about <lb />
the passage of legislation like the <lb />
free list bill, which they <lb />
could do by combining with the <lb />
Democrats if given the <lb />
on the big committees to which <lb />
their numerical strength entitles <lb />
Schedule Is Neat <lb />
Schedule K, the joker-filled wool <lb />
schedule of the tariff <lb />
law, will be the subject of the first <lb />
general tariff revision of the Demo- <lb />
house. <lb />
All the jokers by which rates have <lb />
been piled one upon another until <lb />
the total has been far in excess of <lb />
per cent, are to be abolished. <lb />
Likewise there will be abolished <lb />
the infamous provisions of the Payne- <lb />
Aldrich law, by which material con- <lb />
wool, but really made of cot- <lb />
ton, is taxed as wool. The average <lb />
reduction on all items in the woolen <lb />
schedule is expected to reach at least <lb />
per cent. <lb />
What the Democrats propose will <lb />
cause a tremendous outcry from the <lb />
woolen trust and its allies, the pro- <lb />
of raw wool, and will, no <lb />
doubt, provoke men like Warren, of <lb />
Wyoming, of Island, <lb />
and the other high protectionists of <lb />
the senate into predicting the down- <lb />
fall of the nation. <lb />
is Worried. <lb />
United States Attorney General <lb />
is worrying. He is <lb />
afraid the investigations to be made <lb />
into the affairs of the steel trust, <lb />
sugar trust, shoe trust and woolen <lb />
trust will give these concerns <lb />
from prosecution. As all of <lb />
these concerns, with the exception <lb />
of a few a week employees of <lb />
the sugar trust, have enjoyed <lb />
lute immunity from prosecution and <lb />
investigation since the day Mr. Wick- <lb />
left the service of the sugar <lb />
trust to become the chief <lb />
officer of the government, it is <lb />
difficult to understand how the <lb />
which they might receive, but <lb />
will not, through congressional <lb />
could be any more com- <lb />
than the immunity Mr. Wick- <lb />
has given them. <lb />
Should be Interesting. <lb />
The inquiry to be made by the <lb />
house of representatives into the pol- <lb />
machine of Postmaster Gen- <lb />
Hitchcock is one in which the <lb />
whole country will interested. The <lb />
resolution of inquiry directs the post- <lb />
office committee to determine how <lb />
much political work is performed by <lb />
postmasters and subordinate officers <lb />
in the of the country, and <lb />
by what authority they neglect theft <lb />
official duties and violate the civil <lb />
service law. It has long been <lb />
ed that through department <lb />
patronage the postmaster general <lb />
has established a machine for the <lb />
control of delegates to the national <lb />
convention. <lb />
SHAD HAVE BEEN <lb />
PLANTED IN TAR RIVER <lb />
GOVERNMENT SENDS THEM HERE <lb />
Salisbury Wednesday, between <lb />
dent II. L. Shipman and Secretary <lb />
John H. Sherrill, of the North Caro- <lb />
Press Association, it was de- <lb />
to hold the summer meeting <lb />
at Blowing Rock this year, beginning <lb />
June instead of June This <lb />
change is made because of the State <lb />
and State Retail <lb />
associations holding their <lb />
at Hendersonville about June <lb />
and also the Baptist World Al- <lb />
meets in Philadelphia June <lb />
and many North Carolina editors <lb />
desire to attend <lb />
PROOF ESTABLISHED. <lb />
Half a Million Were Liberated at <lb />
Greenville Monday Afternoon. <lb />
By Monday afternoon's Norfolk <lb />
Southern twelve cans containing a <lb />
half million young shad were brought <lb />
to Greenville. The young fish were <lb />
from the government shad hatchery <lb />
at Edenton, and were in charge of <lb />
Mr. L. J. Copeland, who is <lb />
with the hatchery. The fish were <lb />
taken directly from the depot to the <lb />
wharf where Mr. Copeland liberated <lb />
them in Tar liver. <lb />
This is the first planting of young <lb />
shad ever made in Tar river, and it <lb />
was through the efforts of Congress- <lb />
man John H. Small that this ship- <lb />
was sent here. President H. A. <lb />
White, of the chamber of Commerce, <lb />
Agent J. L. Hassell, of the Norfolk <lb />
Southern, and the editor of The <lb />
Reflector Mr. Copeland <lb />
to the wharf to plant the fish. <lb />
Mr. Copeland said these young shad <lb />
were hatched last Saturday, and they <lb />
will attain their growth in three <lb />
years when they will return to the <lb />
river in which they were liberated. <lb />
He also said that from the best <lb />
statistics obtainable of these plant- <lb />
about per cent, of them live <lb />
and reach their growth. If this <lb />
holds good three years hence should <lb />
find a large run of shad up Tar river. <lb />
Thai Advertisements Are <lb />
Always Read. <lb />
The misplaced word contest that <lb />
appeared in Monday's paper showed <lb />
conclusively that advertisements in <lb />
The Reflector are read. In an hour <lb />
after the paper had gone out answers <lb />
were coining in and a stream of them <lb />
have followed since. So many <lb />
answers have been received that <lb />
it was not necessary to continue the <lb />
advertisement longer. The answers <lb />
were numbered as received, and the <lb />
prizes will be awarded next Monday <lb />
to the three first correct answers. <lb />
Keep a watch on the paper for an- <lb />
other contest that will follow . <lb />
AN AKRON MAN. <lb />
BASE BALL THAT <lb />
WAS WORTH THEIR WHILE <lb />
PLYMOUTH GETS DEFEATED. <lb />
An Interesting Game Played Monday <lb />
Afternoon. <lb />
A fast and interesting game of <lb />
ball was that played out at the park, <lb />
Monday afternoon, by teams of Green- <lb />
ville and Plymouth. It was a close- <lb />
contested game, too, the be- <lb />
to in favor of the home team. <lb />
The number of spectators was large, <lb />
and good players on both sides were <lb />
heartily applauded. <lb />
Prominent features of the game <lb />
were a home run by Jordan, the <lb />
pitching of both Brown and Rags- <lb />
dale, and a long run catch in field <lb />
by Forbes. <lb />
Score by R. H. E. <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Plymouth <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
and Jordan; Plymouth, Brown and <lb />
Joyner. Umpires, Skinner and Wood- <lb />
ward. <lb />
Struck out by by <lb />
Brown Bases on balls off Rags- <lb />
dale, off Brown, <lb />
Time, hour minutes. <lb />
N. C. PRESS CONVENTION. <lb />
Date of Meeting Changed From <lb />
June to <lb />
a result of tho conference in <lb />
SIR. WILLIAM F. <lb />
Mr. William F. St., <lb />
Akron, Ohio, <lb />
have been troubled for several <lb />
years with catarrh of the stomach. <lb />
Have used different patent medicines <lb />
to no effect whatever, and have <lb />
considerable with family doctor. <lb />
Sometimes his treatment would re- <lb />
me for a few weeks, but would <lb />
eventually have to go back to him, and <lb />
that had kept up for several years. <lb />
was advised to use and <lb />
have taken three bottles. Never felt <lb />
so good in my life. Am going to con- <lb />
using it. Wouldn't be with- <lb />
out it in the house. gladly <lb />
It to any one afflicted with <lb />
catarrh of stomach, or stomach trouble <lb />
of any <lb />
The above is an oft-repeated story. <lb />
Troubled for years with chronic ca- <lb />
Tried different remedies and <lb />
doctors to no avail. was ad- <lb />
vised by friends. Instant relief <lb />
Great gratitude to <lb />
expressed. This, in brief, is a story <lb />
that is repeated to us a great many <lb />
times every year. <lb />
No one could in touch with out <lb />
vast correspondence one month <lb />
without being impressed with the sin <lb />
and truthfulness of those kind of <lb />
testimonials. <lb />
promptly produces an <lb />
corrects digestion and <lb />
stomach difficulties that have resisted <lb />
other treatment. <lb />
an Ideal . <lb />
1- <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0008" n="8" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
HILL BE INVESTIGATED <lb />
A Democratic Investigation of a Re- <lb />
publican Administration. <lb />
The house Democrats have an- <lb />
that when they have passed <lb />
a certain number of bills which will <lb />
occupy the attention of the senate <lb />
for weeks or months to come, they <lb />
will proceed to investigate the ex- <lb />
and methods of the ex- <lb />
departments. There is no <lb />
reason why they should not do this, <lb />
and there are many reasons why they <lb />
should do it with great thoroughness. <lb />
A Republican administration, like <lb />
the present one, which has had every <lb />
opportunity to render the country <lb />
faithful and honorable service, should <lb />
welcome investigation and should <lb />
have pride in making an exhibit of <lb />
all its expenditures and transactions. <lb />
The post office department, for ex- <lb />
ample, should be glad to make the <lb />
fullest showing of the way in which <lb />
it has used its opportunities during <lb />
the past two years, and should <lb />
come the chance to give good and <lb />
sufficient reasons for many activities <lb />
that the country would like to know <lb />
about Mr. Aldrich, as the leader of <lb />
the Republican senate declared that <lb />
proper business methods in the de- <lb />
would save Uncle <lb />
several hundred million dollars each <lb />
year. It would be useful to see if <lb />
candid, searching, friendly inquiry by <lb />
Democratic committees of the house <lb />
might not help to bring about <lb />
economies. American Re- <lb />
view of Reviews. <lb />
IT HIS PRACTICE <lb />
DAMAGING COTTON. <lb />
Farmers Having to Flaw Up And <lb />
Replant. <lb />
The recent cold -weather has con- <lb />
damaged the young cotton <lb />
plants that were coming up. Mr. <lb />
Fleming tells us that out of <lb />
a planting of acres he is having <lb />
to up and replant about <lb />
acres, and may have to do the same <lb />
for more of his crop. <lb />
For Sprained Ankle. <lb />
Fairmont, N. C, April 1911. <lb />
Mr. C. L. Wilkinson, Agent, <lb />
Standard Accident Insurance Co. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Dear <lb />
Please accept thanks for check for <lb />
by the Standard Accident In- <lb />
Company, covering claim on <lb />
account of sprained ankle. I have <lb />
carried a policy with the Standard <lb />
for several years. <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
J. O. <lb />
Saved 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 />
A peck of trouble looks like a <lb />
bushel to the man who is up against <lb />
it <lb />
Dr. W. Covington, of <lb />
To Fight Hookworm Disease. <lb />
Dr. P. W. Covington, of Rocking- <lb />
ham, has given up his private <lb />
to assume the duties of district <lb />
director of the campaign against <lb />
hookworm disease. Doctor Coving- <lb />
ton is to be congratulated on re- <lb />
this important appointment, <lb />
and on having the opportunity for <lb />
extending his valuable work over a <lb />
large territory. He, like the other <lb />
three directors already in the state, <lb />
is well fitted for his office. He re- <lb />
his academic education at <lb />
College, and his medical <lb />
cation at the University of North <lb />
Carolina and the University of Mary- <lb />
land. After serving as hospital <lb />
dent physician for one year, he lo- <lb />
at Rockingham. There he has <lb />
built up a splendid practice, has held <lb />
important medical appointments, and <lb />
won the esteem of the country at <lb />
large. <lb />
three physicians already hold- <lb />
positions as district directors <lb />
are Doctors B. W. Page, C. F. <lb />
and C. L. These, <lb />
with Dr. Jno. A. Ferrell, the state <lb />
director of the campaign, make four <lb />
giving their entire time <lb />
to the hookworm campaign. Besides <lb />
the physicians there are six micro- <lb />
in the laboratory of hygiene <lb />
at Raleigh their entire time <lb />
to making die examinations for hook- <lb />
worm infection. <lb />
Since the beginning of the campaign <lb />
more than people in the state <lb />
have availed themselves of the op- <lb />
for having free <lb />
made for the disease. Approx- <lb />
one-third of them have shown <lb />
infection. The rapid progress made <lb />
n educating the people on the <lb />
of the disease and general <lb />
sanitation and their splendid response <lb />
point to the ultimate education of <lb />
this and allied diseases. The work- <lb />
should have the hearty co-opera- <lb />
of every citizen. <lb />
CAPITAL'S OPPORTUNITY <lb />
Greenville, N. C, April 1911. <lb />
Mr. C. L. Wilkinson, Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
I beg to acknowledge with thanks <lb />
the receipt of check by the Standard <lb />
Accident Insurance Company, for <lb />
covering claim on account of <lb />
I like the way you handle <lb />
claims, and I also like the Standard <lb />
Accident Insurance Company. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
J. D. SMITH. <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 />
Boy Painfully Hurt <lb />
a little son of Dr. and Mrs. <lb />
Charles Laughinghouse, was painfully <lb />
hurt Thursday afternoon. He was rid- <lb />
his bicycle at a fast speed when <lb />
the wheel slipped and threw him, <lb />
his face being badly cut and bruised <lb />
in the fall. <lb />
Had Initial Wrong. <lb />
In the article Monday or a prompt <lb />
payment of accident insurance by <lb />
Agent C. L. Wilkinson, an of <lb />
the party insured was printed wrong. <lb />
It should have been W. W. Moore, <lb />
instead M. W. as printed. <lb />
North Carolina is the Place for In- <lb />
vestment <lb />
The of Western Can- <lb />
and other new or awakening <lb />
countries in the process of develop- <lb />
called for men and capital, <lb />
They got both and are continuing to <lb />
get them. They get settlers because <lb />
they offer inducements and give pub- <lb />
to them. They get capital be- <lb />
cause there is something doing and <lb />
investors are assured of a square <lb />
deal. Capital wants to be treated <lb />
right and it is all it asks, otherwise <lb />
people with the money get timid and <lb />
will take a rest. Scare capital and <lb />
progress conies to a standstill. <lb />
China is waking up and develop- <lb />
The heretofore sleeping giant <lb />
needs millions of capital for develop- <lb />
Money is wanted to build rail- <lb />
roads and develop industries and <lb />
agriculture and to exploit the mineral <lb />
resources of the Orient. All the <lb />
loaner the world have heard <lb />
China's demand for money, and the <lb />
European money powers are rivaling <lb />
each other in their eagerness to loan <lb />
money in China. Even the financiers <lb />
of the United States have insisted <lb />
upon the opportunity to help furnish <lb />
money to China for developing her <lb />
resources. <lb />
However, why should American <lb />
capital be seeking for investment in <lb />
foreign countries There is no reason <lb />
for the investment of a single <lb />
can dollar in China or foreign <lb />
tries unless the opportunities for <lb />
profitable investment are greater <lb />
there than they are at home. There <lb />
best opportunities for capital are <lb />
is nothing to that, however, for the <lb />
right at home, if capital gets the <lb />
right showing. <lb />
This country needs twice as much <lb />
railroad mileage as it has. With <lb />
double tracking and new lines to be <lb />
built, it is asserted that it is <lb />
for the United States during the <lb />
next ten years to double the present <lb />
trackage. Then there is needed <lb />
millions to keep up equipment and <lb />
furnish new equipment required for <lb />
needed railroad development in this <lb />
country. <lb />
American capital is losing <lb />
for development all over this <lb />
country. In the South there is an <lb />
awfully big hole for the absorption of <lb />
investments. Rich resources in the <lb />
South are neglected because of the <lb />
lack of capital. Thousands of miles <lb />
of new railroads are needed and min- <lb />
and agricultural development <lb />
await the quickening influences of <lb />
capital. Millions of dollars are need- <lb />
ed for industrial development and <lb />
vast sums of money are required to <lb />
drain millions of acres of swamp and <lb />
lands, to build good roads, <lb />
to equip towns and cities with sewer- <lb />
age, water, streets, etc. Indeed, there <lb />
is unlimited use for capital in the <lb />
South, and American capitalists do <lb />
not have to be anxious to loan money <lb />
in China. Let American capitalists <lb />
look around in North Carolina and <lb />
they will behold opportunities for in- <lb />
vestment on all sides. A pile of it is <lb />
needed in Wilmington to get this port <lb />
in readiness for Panama Canal <lb />
so there is no need to send <lb />
money away to China or anywhere <lb />
else so long as the demand at home <lb />
is <lb />
If capital is not assured in the <lb />
South it is time for us to offer it all <lb />
the reasonable chances necessary to <lb />
get it interested. We must not block <lb />
the progress of the South, but at least <lb />
compete with China in displaying <lb />
Southern opportunities for the mil- <lb />
lions of money that might be prof <lb />
ably turned loose in every <lb />
south of Mason and Dixon's <lb />
especially in North Carolina <lb />
is a double-track, electric-pow <lb />
State with inexhaustible <lb />
open to development. North Car <lb />
wants capital and people. T <lb />
completion of the Panama Canal w <lb />
catch us unprepared for business <lb />
Wilmington Star. <lb />
DESTROYS SLEEP. <lb />
Want Human Butchery <lb />
Some folks may be inclined to <lb />
at the present Peace Congress, b <lb />
for our pat there are too many I <lb />
and brainy men, too many w <lb />
have been tested in the crucible a, <lb />
found genuine, at the congress for <lb />
to be so silly as to give it the h <lb />
It's true that often the small <lb />
fellow accidentally stumbles on t <lb />
when men of <lb />
capacities have searched for it <lb />
years, and have used reams of pa <lb />
in making deductions, yet the idea, <lb />
being promoted by the Peace C <lb />
is so exalted and humane <lb />
none should it. j <lb />
should rather lend their best <lb />
ors towards obtaining the glorious c <lb />
Success for such a <lb />
cannot a second be snatched fr <lb />
the atmosphere, and neither can t <lb />
greatest intellectual builders and t <lb />
most powerful diplomatic <lb />
in a week, or month rear <lb />
wall that will withstand the attack <lb />
the red-tongued, sharp-tailored <lb />
of war. But this end can be <lb />
War, at its best, is, but the bloc <lb />
thirsty raving of that which is <lb />
and ferocious in the <lb />
of men. This is the spark that <lb />
the fire . It plays upon the mind <lb />
the flame bursts forth and then <lb />
and daring surge <lb />
the veins and human butchery <lb />
lows. Then comes the sequel of s <lb />
women and suffering <lb />
and ruin. <lb />
ands of dear and useful lives, <lb />
would not only have made <lb />
homes happy and brighter, but <lb />
have advanced the world, would ha <lb />
helped Christianity, are sacrifice <lb />
Heroes stain battlefields with tin <lb />
blood, instead of being allowed <lb />
have their rich, red fluid surge <lb />
the betterment of humanity. <lb />
is no reason why disputes <lb />
countries should not be settled <lb />
some other way than by war, U <lb />
there is every reason why they <lb />
be so settled. It is not an impost <lb />
to And the solution, but eve- <lb />
person should make it a <lb />
It will not lessen courage any to <lb />
the martial spirit. It will not <lb />
tract from the glory of heroism <lb />
cast out human <lb />
ton Dispatch. <lb />
Insurance Against Rain. <lb />
The bane of outdoor life in <lb />
is the excessive rainfall. Shows, <lb />
ants, garden parties, seaside <lb />
cricket matches <lb />
of all kinds are to an <lb />
degree at the mercy of the skies. ll <lb />
wonder that the English have final <lb />
elaborated a systematic scheme <lb />
provide indemnity for <lb />
or loss caused by wet weather. T <lb />
new plan, which is associated <lb />
Lloyd's underwriters, will first <lb />
tried at the resorts on the south <lb />
east coasts from May to October. Y <lb />
may insure against rain, to a <lb />
fraction of an inch, on any sing <lb />
day; or against rain on more th; <lb />
two days during any one week; <lb />
if planning a week end party, again <lb />
rain on four consecutive <lb />
Record Herald. <lb />
i-<lb />
Many Greenville People Testify To <lb />
This. <lb />
You can't sleep at night. <lb />
With aches and pains of a bad <lb />
you have to get up from <lb />
urinary troubles. <lb />
on account of the <lb />
Z weak kidneys working aright <lb />
with Kidney <lb />
Here is proof of their efficiency <lb />
Mrs James Garris, Twelfth St <lb />
ii m C am pleas- <lb />
Greenville, N. C, <lb />
r X T red i-5 <lb />
me and in <lb />
I got up in the morning, I was m n <lb />
fit condition to begin my work- When <lb />
T read of Kidney <lb />
and my back and kidneys do not <lb />
cents Co., Buffalo <lb />
New York, sole agents for the United <lb />
Remember the <lb />
take no other. <lb />
FOR COTTON OR CORN. <lb />
The Farmer Needs a <lb />
row and a Weeder. <lb />
Legal Notices <lb />
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND <lb />
To The <lb />
The teachers at the graded school <lb />
colored People have <lb />
ed an exhibit to be given at the col <lb />
graded school building next <lb />
Wednesday afternoon from to <lb />
The exhibit is for white people only, <lb />
n will consist chiefly of specimens <lb />
of Their work in carving, sewing and <lb />
basketry. <lb />
I take Pleasure in extending to the <lb />
white people of the community an <lb />
invitation to visit the school and see <lb />
the display of work done by the co <lb />
children. We to <lb />
, the industrial features, and I <lb />
much good has been <lb />
quite a number of white <lb />
people visited the school to see <lb />
exhibit. I hope a larger <lb />
to school for the col- <lb />
or people occasionally, and, to some <lb />
Sent inform themselves as to what <lb />
being done there. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
, H. B. SMITH, <lb />
Superintendent of Schools. <lb />
May 1911. <lb />
Even the one-horse farmer can use <lb />
the harrow and weeder to advantage <lb />
i the early cultivation of the corn. <lb />
if the land has been properly <lb />
prepared. Of course, in using a <lb />
row he must use a smaller one and <lb />
can not cover so much ground as <lb />
with two horses; but if his soil is <lb />
sandy or mellow, and has been well <lb />
prepared, he can use the weeder to <lb />
the greatest advantage. If bis son <lb />
is heavy, he will need the smoothing <lb />
harrow, and here is where the man <lb />
with two horses can make the labor <lb />
of one man and two horses worth <lb />
Ire than two men and two horse <lb />
working separately. The chief gain in <lb />
the use of the soothing harrow and <lb />
two horses, however, will be in the <lb />
let that if he uses these the corn <lb />
crop is e to get the best <lb />
it is possible to it <lb />
when it needs it most; whereas, B <lb />
Redoes not use this <lb />
method the corn crop is apt to be <lb />
entirely neglected <lb />
rush of other work, and when it <lb />
get attention it will cost much <lb />
more to put it in good condition. <lb />
Most farmers have come to a point <lb />
where they hesitate to deny a harrow <lb />
may be run over a corn or cotton <lb />
crop advantageously, after it has <lb />
come up; but comparatively we yet <lb />
may do it but still <lb />
fear that it will, in <lb />
differently for them and ruin then- <lb />
crop. Or, perhaps, it is <lb />
old human tendency to do <lb />
the way they have been <lb />
to do them. Whatever the <lb />
cause for our failure to run the <lb />
ow o -every acre of well <lb />
ed corn land before the corn comes <lb />
up and at least twice after it is up <lb />
the neglect cost us much hard la <lb />
later in the season and many <lb />
bushels of corn in decreased yields. <lb />
Progressive Farmer. <lb />
State of North Carolina. <lb />
enters and<lb />
road near Ta mi . <lb />
the beginning, containing five <lb />
acres more or less. <lb />
to or protest <lb />
or they will be law. <lb />
This April 13th, <lb />
This 13th, <lb />
Entry taker. <lb />
ville on Monday, June <lb />
following described house w <lb />
the Town of <lb />
whereon the said Barnhill <lb />
now reside; <lb />
of Head and Second street aim <lb />
Miles Grimes, then. with <lb />
of said Miles <lb />
direction parallel <lb />
Mortgagee. <lb />
F. G. JAMES SON.<lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having duly Qualified <lb />
So estate <lb />
immediate <lb />
Pleaded iii <lb />
George B. <lb />
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE <lb />
Under and by virtue, of <lb />
as <lb />
April 1911, O a <lb />
Company of Greenville, C <lb />
of E. A. Cherry deceased. <lb />
NOTICE OF SALE. <lb />
North County. <lb />
In the Superior Court. <lb />
C. A. Carter I <lb />
directed <lb />
to. undersigned from the Superior <lb />
the first line to <lb />
to the beginning. -u <lb />
This the 4th day of <lb />
Sheriff of Pitt County. <lb />
Do Ghost Haunt Swamp T <lb />
No, never. Its foolish to fear a <lb />
fancied evil, when there are real and <lb />
deadly perils to guard against W <lb />
swamps and marshes, bayous, and <lb />
These are <lb />
germs that cause ague, chills <lb />
K weakness, aches to the bones <lb />
and Muscles and may induce deadly <lb />
typhoid. But Electric Bitters de- <lb />
Soy, and casts out these vicious <lb />
germs from the blood. bot- <lb />
drove all the malaria from my <lb />
wrote Wm. Fretwell, of Lu- <lb />
N- V I've bad fine health <lb />
Use this safe sure rem- <lb />
only at all druggists. <lb />
World's Famous Dyspepsia Cure. <lb />
U you have anything the matter <lb />
with your stomach you ought to know <lb />
now that <lb />
lets are guaranteed by Coward <lb />
Wooten to cure indigestion, or any <lb />
by <lb />
as the following, or money back, <lb />
headache, dim- <lb />
nervousness, sour stomach, tor <lb />
of food, belching of gas, <lb />
heavy at pit of stomach, <lb />
of pregnancy, or sickness caused <lb />
by over indulgence the night before <lb />
your meals don't digest but lie <lb />
like a lump of lead in your stomach <lb />
i you have foul breath and loss of <lb />
la few tablets will <lb />
in fine shape in <lb />
any of your family suN <lb />
stomach trouble of any kind <lb />
Let a cent box of <lb />
tablets at once. Coward Wooten <lb />
and druggists everywhere sell MI-0 <lb />
NA on money back plan. . <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having Qualified as <lb />
of Ida Dan el. late <lb />
twelve months from the a <lb />
notice. All persons <lb />
make immediate 1911. <lb />
F. g. James Sou,<lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Totters of administration upon the <lb />
Letters deceased, <lb />
signed by given <lb />
before the 4th. day of May 1912. <lb />
in J R. J. G. FOR LA- <lb />
and muslin under- <lb />
best grades at <lb />
It Startled The World. <lb />
When the astounding claims were <lb />
first made for Salve, <lb />
but years of wonderful cure <lb />
have proved them true, and every <lb />
where it is now known as the best <lb />
on earth for burns, boils, scald . <lb />
sores, cuts, bruises, sprains, swell <lb />
eczema, chapped hands, fever <lb />
sores and piles. Only at all <lb />
druggists. <lb />
THERESA SMITH, <lb />
Administratrix of estate of J. J- Smith <lb />
3-ltd <lb />
LAND SALE. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Super- <lb />
hill which judgment appears of re <lb />
door in the following <lb />
So Town o, <lb />
resides. corner of Read <lb />
F. G. JAMES SON., <lb />
LAND SALE.<lb />
D-9. page <lb />
Confederate Passes <lb />
the <lb />
Mr. James S. Norman died Friday <lb />
afternoon at his home in Beaver Dam <lb />
township. He was a Confederate <lb />
veteran and one of the heroes of <lb />
Fisher. He was a of <lb />
Beaufort county but moved to Pitt <lb />
lust after the war, and was among <lb />
oUr best citizens. Mr. Norman was <lb />
years of age and is survived by <lb />
four sons and one daughter. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018147_tn_0009" n="9" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and Fan and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
BRYAN GRIMES CAMP <lb />
CONFEDERATE VETERANS <lb />
HOLD AL REUNION. <lb />
Large Crowd <lb />
Speech by Mr. <lb />
This Memorial Day dawned bright <lb />
and balmy, and at an early hour <lb />
were coming in town to attend <lb />
the reunion of Bryan Grimes Camp <lb />
of Confederate veterans. <lb />
Before the hour of assembling, the <lb />
veterans met and chatted each other, <lb />
while the visitors sought out places <lb />
of advantage to view the parade. <lb />
At ten o'clock the line formed on <lb />
Third street near the court house <lb />
square, and headed by a drum corps <lb />
marched out Evans and Ninth streets <lb />
to the Star warehouse, where the ex- <lb />
took place. There were about <lb />
veterans in line. <lb />
At the warehouse a large crowd <lb />
had assembled, the Daughters of the <lb />
Confederacy and Children of the <lb />
Confederacy also going in a body. <lb />
Here Mr. R. W. King, chairman of <lb />
the committee of arrangements, call- <lb />
ed on Rev. C. M. Rock for the in- <lb />
vocation. <lb />
An address of welcome to the <lb />
tors, eloquent and cordial, was de- <lb />
livered by Mayor F. M. Wooten. <lb />
Major Harding, Commander of <lb />
Bryan Grimes Camp, responded to <lb />
the address of welcome, and extend- <lb />
ed greetings to his comrades. <lb />
A class from the Training School <lb />
sang <lb />
was followed with a recitation <lb />
Sword of by Miss Fannie <lb />
Spain, of the graded school, and <lb />
Conquered by Miss <lb />
Herndon. <lb />
on the Old Camp <lb />
was sung by the Training School <lb />
class, which was followed with a <lb />
recitation to Conquered Ban- <lb />
by Miss Nina Harris. <lb />
Mr. J. B. James then in <lb />
ate words introduced the orator of <lb />
the day, Mr. Albion Dunn. Mr. Dunn <lb />
in recounting the deeds of valor of <lb />
Lee and Jackson, made one of the <lb />
most brilliant Memorial Day ad- <lb />
dresses that the veterans of Pitt <lb />
county have had the pleasure of <lb />
hearing at any of their reunions. In <lb />
concluding ho paid a beautiful <lb />
to Gen. Bryan Grimes in whose <lb />
honor the camp of Pitt county is <lb />
named. The Reflector would have <lb />
been glad to print the speech in full, <lb />
but its length forbid that, and it was <lb />
too excellent to give In broken ex- <lb />
tracts. It was a master piece of <lb />
oratory and those who heard it en- <lb />
Joyed a feast. <lb />
At the conclusion of Mr. Dunn's <lb />
admirable address, Commander H. <lb />
Harding stated to the camp that <lb />
the only compensation the ladies and <lb />
others requested in return for this <lb />
day's pleasure provided for the old <lb />
soldiers, was that they should give <lb />
the and when the com- <lb />
came the yell sounded with <lb />
spirit. <lb />
There were then cries from the <lb />
camp for and our <lb />
citizen responded in a few <lb />
words of cheer and Incidents of the <lb />
war in which they fought together. <lb />
After the speaking, Rev. C. W. <lb />
Ware pronounced the benediction, <lb />
and as the Training School class <lb />
sang Be With You Till . We <lb />
Meet the veterans again <lb />
formed in line to march to the Lib- <lb />
warehouse for dinner. Here a <lb />
bountiful dinner had been prepared <lb />
for them, and this brought to a con- <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
BASK WILL ENLARGE. <lb />
Banking and Trust Co. To <lb />
Increase CapitaL <lb />
The Greenville Banking and Trust <lb />
Company, already one of Greenville's <lb />
best and strongest financial <lb />
is making a step forward that <lb />
means much for the community. Its <lb />
capital stock is to be increased from <lb />
to and its field of <lb />
operations and usefulness will be <lb />
correspondingly enlarged. The first <lb />
meeting of the stockholders under this <lb />
new will be held to- <lb />
morrow morning, May 5th, at <lb />
o'clock, and every stockholder is re- <lb />
quested to be present at that time. <lb />
Hope Well Items. <lb />
Hope Well, N. C, May <lb />
a number of people from this sec- <lb />
attended church at Reedy Branch <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Mr. Tom Jackson and Miss Maggie <lb />
Smith, Mr. Claude Nelson and Miss <lb />
Julia Smith, Mr. Oscar Manning <lb />
Misses Lela and Mae of this <lb />
section, attended the <lb />
at Hanrahan on the second of May. <lb />
Rev. M. A. Adams will fill his reg- <lb />
appointment at Hope Well next <lb />
Sunday. All are cordially Invited. <lb />
Some of our friends attended a <lb />
wedding last week. <lb />
Messrs. Jarvis Cox and Claude <lb />
Nelson spent Sunday at Timothy. <lb />
Mr. Luther Smith, of Hanrahan, <lb />
spent Saturday night at Mr. C. J. <lb />
Smith's. <lb />
Farmers of this section are setting <lb />
tobacco. <lb />
To The Public. <lb />
That I might improve my health, <lb />
I have retired from the drug <lb />
I retire with a profound sin- <lb />
gratitude to the people of the <lb />
town and county for the generous <lb />
and friendly patronage given my <lb />
drug store. By your patronage, you <lb />
have contributed much pleasure to <lb />
me and to my wife, and we are <lb />
thankful. <lb />
The accounts made with me, I hold <lb />
and will be glad to balance myself <lb />
or Mr. Home will do so for <lb />
me. He will have the ledger at Mr. <lb />
White's drug store. <lb />
FRANK M. WOOTEN. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Mr. R. C. White has purchased my <lb />
drug store, which was operated under <lb />
the firm name of Coward Wooten. <lb />
Mr. White, assisted by Mr. Charlie <lb />
a registered druggist, will <lb />
continue the business at the same <lb />
stand, fully equipped to carry on the <lb />
business as it has been conducted <lb />
by myself, and I commend them to <lb />
the patrons of Coward Wooten. <lb />
trusting that such patrons will give <lb />
Mr. White the same liberal patron- <lb />
age given me in the past. <lb />
F. M. WOOTEN, <lb />
As <lb />
From Page <lb />
and the material wealth and <lb />
happiness of our state will know <lb />
no bounds. Indeed this part of our <lb />
dear old state will become one of the <lb />
garden spots of the world <lb />
In the last twelve months I have <lb />
been through our country to <lb />
in to <lb />
sin In the northwest, on through the <lb />
southern states to Mississippi, and <lb />
can truthfully say to you I have not <lb />
seen a section with greater <lb />
ties than we have here at home. I <lb />
see no reason why we should not <lb />
have here as prosperous, as happy a <lb />
people as the world in all her full- <lb />
can produce. Our climate for <lb />
the twelve months is as fine as can <lb />
be found; our soil is rich or lends; <lb />
itself to fertility, and the native i <lb />
of our people is as great as any , <lb />
to be found. The key to success for <lb />
us in EDUCATION spelled in cap-1 <lb />
We are about the most <lb />
people on the American <lb />
continent, and we will remain so if <lb />
we awake to our opportunities. But <lb />
if we do not awake to our <lb />
ties, struggling humanity in less <lb />
localities will straggle in and <lb />
take possession by degrees and our <lb />
sons and daughters will gradually <lb />
sell their birthright for a mess of <lb />
pottage. <lb />
Friends let me insist upon it, the <lb />
safe guard of our liberties and the <lb />
key to our prosperity, is education. <lb />
But our people will never be prop- <lb />
educated until the teachers have <lb />
been properly trained for this <lb />
serious civic duty. It is <lb />
a conscious realization of this <lb />
that our state hag established <lb />
is maintaining the school at Gr <lb />
ville. You may call me an <lb />
a crank, if you will, but the b <lb />
den of my life, yes, my life, <lb />
is in this work. I care not <lb />
riches, or honor, but I do care <lb />
that little child, who is soon to <lb />
the stern responsibilities of <lb />
I want him to be able to face th <lb />
responsibilities with the <lb />
that will enable him to cope <lb />
them successfully. Fellow teachers, <lb />
do you, not see the responsibilities <lb />
resting upon your shoulders Are <lb />
you prepared to meet those <lb />
as they should be met I <lb />
am not making this plea to get you <lb />
to get go to Greenville, God forbid that <lb />
I should be so base, but, I do appeal <lb />
to you from a conscious realization <lb />
of the responsibilities resting upon <lb />
you to make the preparation you <lb />
to meet with success the noble work <lb />
you are now undertaking and I don't <lb />
care where you get your preparation, <lb />
just so you get it. But the trained <lb />
teacher must have the support of <lb />
the people. <lb />
The hope of our state is in the <lb />
education of its youth and the hope <lb />
of this education is In the trained <lb />
teacher. <lb />
Get the knowledge necessary and <lb />
couple with that knowledge a high <lb />
and noble purpose and your efforts <lb />
will be crowned with success. <lb />
A Card. <lb />
I offer myself a candidate for <lb />
mayor of our town, and trust that <lb />
the people may see fit to elect me <lb />
to the office for the next term. And <lb />
if elected, it is my purpose to de- <lb />
vote my time to the work of the of- <lb />
and living in the open air as <lb />
much as possible. <lb />
I shall keep office in the office <lb />
building now being built by Jno. L. <lb />
Wooten. I am sincerely grateful to <lb />
every one of you for both your pat- <lb />
and your confidence which <lb />
you have given me. <lb />
FRANK M. WOOTEN. <lb />
New Century <lb />
No Levers. No Springs. <lb />
Always in Balance <lb />
Farmers actually want the on account of Its <lb />
many distinctive features. Which are Operators weigh <lb />
balances gangs. Perfectly balanced pole even so much as <lb />
a balance lever. Simplicity a lever, spring, <lb />
or other nuisance on it Light of draft, because It weighs less and <lb />
has draft closer to shovels. of cultivation, that Is, move- <lb />
does not affect position of gangs. Six shovels, spring break <lb />
Works perfectly In widest or narrowest rows cotton, corn, beans, <lb />
peanuts, tobacco, potatoes, etc. <lb />
Learn more about this cultivator. Fifty of the best farmers <lb />
in Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let demonstrate <lb />
to you its many distinctive features. <lb />
We also sell the celebrated SEW DEERE WALKING <lb />
the best and most satisfactory walking cultivator on the <lb />
market When In need of anything In the hardware line be sure <lb />
to see us. <lb />
Hart Hadley <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
It <lb />
Healthful laMe Bl- <lb />
Agriculture Is the Sort Useful, the -lost <lb />
The audience listened r <lb />
lively to the performers. Every <lb />
rendered well Intend- <lb />
stated at the close that it <lb />
was the best recital that the school <lb />
yet given. <lb />
In one of we class rooms on the <lb />
first floor was an exhibition of <lb />
mens of drawing by the of<lb />
this exhibit was of more than pass- <lb />
Interest Beginning with the on I <lb />
work by the primary the <lb />
showed the progressive steps <lb />
through to the higher grades The e <lb />
HI EXHIBIT <lb />
ANOTHER NIGHT OF GRADED <lb />
SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT <lb />
THE PUPILS RENDER GOOD PROGRAM <lb />
G, <lb />
; V. SHALL POX LAW. <lb />
Might Interest You to Road And <lb />
Ponder It <lb />
, , recently sent out from <lb />
Somber <lb />
snowing . <lb />
Pupils in That Department of I he <lb />
School. <lb />
Though not so large as on the <lb />
night, there was a considerable <lb />
audience at the graded school Tues- <lb />
day night in attendance upon the <lb />
recital by the larger pupils of the <lb />
music department. Those present <lb />
were more than repaid, for a splendid <lb />
program was well rendered, bearing <lb />
testimony to the excellent training <lb />
the pupils had received. <lb />
The program was as<lb />
Miss Lillie Lanier. <lb />
Solo-Sonata No. . Beethoven <lb />
Miss Forbes. <lb />
Duet-Rustic Dance . Hoffman. <lb />
Misses May Warren <lb />
and Mary Hart. <lb />
Caprice . <lb />
. <lb />
Miss Gertrude Critcher. <lb />
Solo-Love and Roses . <lb />
Miss Rena Smith. <lb />
. <lb />
. Clark <lb />
Misses and Lucy Jenkins. <lb />
Solo-Grace . <lb />
Miss Madeline Higgs. <lb />
. Smith <lb />
Sallie Jackson and <lb />
Fanny Spain. <lb />
Chapel. <lb />
Miss Doris <lb />
. Godard <lb />
Miss Lucy<lb />
Miss Annie Leonard Tyson. <lb />
Solo-La Gazelle . <lb />
Miss Christine Johnston. <lb />
March Concert. <lb />
Miss Maude Lee. <lb />
a. <lb />
n. <lb />
pencil and In color, that were <lb />
indeed creditable. <lb />
In February the teacher, Miss Kale <lb />
M Lewis, offered three prises to <lb />
encourage independent work outside <lb />
of school. The prizes were to <lb />
awarded to those persons who <lb />
brought in the best collection at the <lb />
end of the session. The prises were I <lb />
awarded by a committee to Mir,. Rosa <lb />
Exum, of the seventh grade, she win- <lb />
the first prize for the best <lb />
largest collection; the second prize <lb />
was awarded to Miss Novella Exum, <lb />
of the fifth grade, and the third to <lb />
Miss Emily Little, of the <lb />
grade. <lb />
This is the fourth year the <lb />
of drawing has boon taught In toe <lb />
graded school. The teacher, <lb />
Miss Kate W. Lewis, has brought the <lb />
work up to a high standard of <lb />
In the three in Which <lb />
she has been in charge of it. <lb />
graded school authorities regret to <lb />
up. Her work baa always been <lb />
satisfactory. However, the Training <lb />
school, at which place she has taught <lb />
two days per week for the past two <lb />
sessions, will require all her tune <lb />
hereafter. The Training school to to <lb />
be congratulated on securing MISS <lb />
Lewis. <lb />
The visitors to the art exhibit <lb />
were served with lemonade by to. <lb />
teachers In charge. <lb />
Tonight the commencement <lb />
will conclude with a recital by <lb />
the smaller music pupils. <lb />
I sets forth very clearly the <lb />
.,, a concerning smallpox, and It <lb />
ill he of considerable <lb />
-x., longer to this state to place <lb />
I guards at the door of the houses <lb />
re smallpox appears. The last <lb />
modified the law, placing <lb />
the quarantine regulations under the <lb />
board of health and cutting off the <lb />
appropriation of some which <lb />
it annually cost to conduct the small- <lb />
pox quarantine. Taking the position <lb />
smallpox to controllable by <lb />
the state board of health <lb />
In prescribing Quarantine regulations <lb />
and rules for whooping cough, <lb />
lea, fever, yellow fever, <lb />
bubonic plague, leaves off any <lb />
concerning smallpox. <lb />
On the other hand Dr. W. S. Ran- <lb />
;, secretary of the board of health, <lb />
had a number of pink and black <lb />
printed with the following <lb />
FIB SWEPT <lb />
Town Almost Wipe f Tie <lb />
Flames. <lb />
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb />
Manchuria, May <lb />
again swept the town today. It <lb />
buildings being burned, with <lb />
loss. Brigands started tie <lb />
fire. <lb />
ACCORDING TO BURKS. <lb />
statement. <lb />
lately the state required <lb />
smallpox to be quarantined. The <lb />
state board of health shall now no <lb />
longer advocate or insist upon the <lb />
of smallpox. The board <lb />
takes this position for three <lb />
sons. . . <lb />
Quarantine is uncertain <lb />
protection; vaccination a certain <lb />
protection. Quarantine works <lb />
harm in many cases by giving <lb />
people a false sense of security <lb />
the disease, thereby <lb />
them to the certain pro- <lb />
which vaccination would <lb />
give. <lb />
Large lumber to Answer <lb />
Graft Charge. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Columbus, Ohio, May e <lb />
William J. Burns says from to <lb />
persons will be indicted in the <lb />
graft scandal . <lb />
CLOUDBURST DESTROYS <lb />
Eleven Hundred <lb />
Drowned. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Australia. May <lb />
cloudburst overwhelmed the <lb />
early today, and persons <lb />
drowned. <lb />
Mrs. Tail Better. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Washington, May <lb />
H. Taft is better, and will probably <lb />
go to Washington tomorrow. <lb />
Quarantine is a very ex- <lb />
pensive protection. The cost of the <lb />
quarantine of smallpox to the state <lb />
n recent years has approximated <lb />
annually, or enough to more <lb />
the state university. <lb />
-Third Quarantine is inequitable. <lb />
. u the taxes that all contribute <lb />
re v to protect a class. The ma- <lb />
of People, having been <lb />
. are already protected. <lb />
is a duty-a duty <lb />
to one's self, and second to <lb />
community. <lb />
are giving this warning be- <lb />
the only way of attempting to <lb />
handle smallpox by quarantine has <lb />
caused many people to rely upon <lb />
state to protect them and have not, <lb />
been vaccinated. As quarantine WU <lb />
no longer be enforced throughout tie <lb />
state, those who have neglected to <lb />
be vaccinated during the last five <lb />
years are hereby notified of the <lb />
their negligence in this matter <lb />
exposes them to. and are urged to be <lb />
vaccinated at the earliest moment. <lb />
that smallpox Is the <lb />
penalty of your own negligence aid <lb />
that you little deserve the sympathy <lb />
of the public If yon contract the dis- <lb />
graceful disease. <lb />
new health laws empower <lb />
the chairman of the board of <lb />
commissioners to appoint <lb />
tine officer, who shall be paid by the <lb />
county to take care of those cases <lb />
of Quarantine which are prescribed <lb />
by the health board, such as yellow <lb />
fever, cholera, typhus fever, etc. <lb />
Is nothing, it is said, in the <lb />
new laws which prevents the <lb />
conducting smallpox <lb />
an its own account. In fact, the bur- <lb />
den of smallpox extermination a <lb />
really shifted from the state to the <lb />
individual and the<lb />
ISSUE <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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