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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
HOT <lb/>
-------O. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern <lb/>
Sold for Cash or Credit, <lb/>
everything purchased <lb/>
from our factory is <lb/>
GUARANTEED <lb/>
if you buy a buggy or <lb/>
Harness from us and are <lb/>
not satisfied. We will sat- <lb/>
you or give you <lb/>
our money back. <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Company <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
BUGGIES and HARNESS <lb/>
NEWS THAI IS OF <lb/>
TAR HEELS <lb/>
GATHERED EXCHANGES. <lb/>
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's <lb/>
Bob Headers. <lb/>
whole city was <lb/>
Shocked late this afternoon, when the <lb/>
news was received that Claude <lb/>
was drowned at <lb/>
son's mill pond, about lour miles <lb/>
north of the city. A large crowd <lb/>
mediately went to the scene in <lb/>
and buggies and on bi- <lb/>
cycles. It was about when the <lb/>
accident happened and the body was <lb/>
not recovered until about C o'clock. <lb/>
Mr. T. R. Rouse, cashier of the <lb/>
Rouse Hanking Company, of La- <lb/>
Grange, was last night appointed <lb/>
temporary receiver of the Bank of La- <lb/>
Grange by Judge Whedbee, before <lb/>
whom application was made at Golds- <lb/>
The order is made returnable <lb/>
before Judge Peebles at Kinston June <lb/>
to show cause why the receivership <lb/>
should not be made permanent. The <lb/>
Hank of LaGrange was closed <lb/>
day by the corporation Commission <lb/>
because the officers had been running <lb/>
it contrary to Times <lb/>
As the result of too much liquor <lb/>
and a disagreement with Will <lb/>
a Ed a white man <lb/>
of the Zebulon section, is dead, and <lb/>
his assailant is in the Wake county <lb/>
jail to await trial in July for <lb/>
The tragedy occurred at Mr. S. <lb/>
Gill's saw mill, three and a half <lb/>
miles northeast of Zebulon, last <lb/>
about o'clock, ac- <lb/>
cording to the best Information, be- <lb/>
cursing the who returned <lb/>
In kind and later struck the white <lb/>
man twice across the head with a <lb/>
pine limb, crushing the skull and <lb/>
causing Evening <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
The State Optical society will meet <lb/>
In Asheville July and The <lb/>
State Optical and Retail as- <lb/>
will meet here July and <lb/>
These meetings are held in the <lb/>
same place and in close succession, <lb/>
because of the fact that a majority of <lb/>
the members of the State Optical as- <lb/>
are members of the other <lb/>
association. The meetings will be held <lb/>
at the Battery Park hotel. It is <lb/>
thought that about members and <lb/>
delegates will be in attendance. <lb/>
Ward suffered a <lb/>
severe attack of vertigo last night <lb/>
and was taken to Pittman Sanitarium <lb/>
where he has remained all day. Court <lb/>
has been adjourned. Dr. Julian Baker <lb/>
says he will not be able to hold court <lb/>
this week. The last heard from the <lb/>
judge is that he slept some today and <lb/>
is improving. <lb/>
The Call of The Nurse. <lb/>
No calling has more rapidly ad- <lb/>
in public esteem the past few <lb/>
years than that of the trained nurse, <lb/>
and every movement looking to <lb/>
proving the efficiency, and widening <lb/>
the sphere of usefulness of those who <lb/>
adopt nursing as a life work should <lb/>
engage the attention and cordial <lb/>
of the public. The meeting <lb/>
next week of the American Society <lb/>
Of Superintendents of Training <lb/>
Schools for Nurses in Boston prom- <lb/>
to be a noteworthy occasion in <lb/>
the annals of the <lb/>
The trained nurse should be a <lb/>
nurse by instinct as well as by train- <lb/>
She should have that <lb/>
able something about her that calms, <lb/>
rather than excites, the patient. She <lb/>
must love her work, as the true <lb/>
loves his, having an instinct <lb/>
for relieving the suffering. <lb/>
The white-garbed angels of the <lb/>
hospital wards are doing a noble <lb/>
work. They give an air of gentle- <lb/>
and quiet to the sick room that <lb/>
robs the hospital of much of its <lb/>
dread, and those who have once been <lb/>
under their ministrations are their <lb/>
friends for life. All honor to the noble <lb/>
young women who go forth from <lb/>
their homos to the relief of suffering <lb/>
Virginian. <lb/>
Take The Reflector With You. <lb/>
If you are going away for the sum- <lb/>
mer, leave your address with The <lb/>
Daily Reflector, so the paper can <lb/>
go and give you the news from home <lb/>
during your absence. <lb/>
No Levers. No Springs. <lb/>
Always in Balance <lb/>
Hart Hadley <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
YES <lb/>
THOROUGH BRED <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good <lb/>
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy. <lb/>
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to- <lb/>
taste. No spice to make your tongue <lb/>
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco, with <lb/>
all the improvements up-to-date. CHEW <lb/>
IT AND PROVE IT at our expense, the <lb/>
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail to <lb/>
us with your name and address for attractive <lb/>
FREE offer to chewers only. W <lb/>
SCALES CO., <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Post Office <lb/>
Farmers actually want the on account of Us <lb/>
many distinctive features. Which are Operators weigh <lb/>
balances gangs. Perfectly balanced pole without even so mart as <lb/>
a balance lever. Simplicity a lever, spring, racket <lb/>
or other nuisance on it. Light of draft, because it weighs less aid <lb/>
has draft closer to shovels. of cultivation, that to, move- <lb/>
does not affect position of gangs. Six shovels, spring break <lb/>
Works perfectly in widest or rows cotton, corn, beans, <lb/>
peanuts, tobacco, potatoes, etc. <lb/>
Learn more about tills cultivator. Fifty of nest farmers <lb/>
In Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let us demonstrate <lb/>
to you its many distinctive features. <lb/>
We also sell the celebrated NEW DEERE WALKING <lb/>
the best and most satisfactory walking cultivator en the <lb/>
market. When In need of anything in the hardware line be sure <lb/>
to see us. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector.<lb/>
fr <lb/>
Agriculture is the the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
N. C, Fill DAY, <lb/>
HIMSELF <lb/>
L. V. Hart, of Tarboro Bank, Commits <lb/>
Suicide <lb/>
A SHORTAGE IN HIS ACCOUNTS <lb/>
Motive For Desperate Act Found To <lb/>
Have Been The Discovery That <lb/>
Cashier's Accounts Had Been Found <lb/>
Short by State Examiner <lb/>
Tarboro, June more stunned <lb/>
or shocked community would be hard <lb/>
to find than Tarboro about o'clock <lb/>
this afternoon. Report came down the <lb/>
street that Luther Hart had shot him- <lb/>
self. <lb/>
At one o'clock Mr. Hart was seem- <lb/>
in his usual good humor, even <lb/>
told a man that he would see him <lb/>
dinner, to which he was on his <lb/>
way. Soon after reaching home his <lb/>
wife, who was in a room superintend- <lb/>
the serving of dinner, when in a <lb/>
room above, heard a pistol shot. <lb/>
A hurried visit up there disclosed her <lb/>
unconscious husband lying prone with <lb/>
a wound through his head. The ball <lb/>
had entered just above the temple <lb/>
and came out just back of the ear on <lb/>
the other side. Physicians were sent <lb/>
for, but they could no nothing. <lb/>
For years he has been the <lb/>
cashier of the Bank of Tar- <lb/>
The motive for the suicide became <lb/>
known about four o'clock, just about <lb/>
the time Mr. Hart died. <lb/>
As Bank Examiner <lb/>
ed into the books, he began to find en- <lb/>
tiles that needed explanation. Of this <lb/>
he asked Braxton Hussy, the assist- <lb/>
ant cashier, who, after being plied <lb/>
with questions, broke down and stated <lb/>
that the stealing had been going on <lb/>
for seven years and that he was glad <lb/>
it was all over, that he knew the <lb/>
crash would come and he was glad <lb/>
that the suspense was over. <lb/>
Solicitor apprised of this <lb/>
confession, swore out a warrant for <lb/>
Mr. Hussey and had him bound over <lb/>
to court. <lb/>
There are all kinds of speculations <lb/>
about the extent of the shortage. Mr. <lb/>
Hussey says he received but <lb/>
no one believes that this will begin to <lb/>
cover the amount of the shortage. <lb/>
Mr. bond was fixed at <lb/>
Mr. Hussey not only made a <lb/>
but he also conveyed to the <lb/>
bank every item of property that he <lb/>
had. <lb/>
Sub-Committee of Congress Hiving it <lb/>
Consideration <lb/>
Hank Failed to Open. <lb/>
Tarboro, N. C, June Bank <lb/>
of Tarboro failed to open its doors <lb/>
today, following the discrepancies in <lb/>
accounts of Cashier L. V. Hart, who <lb/>
suicided yesterday. The deposits of <lb/>
the bank are and the capital <lb/>
HOME BOYS WIN ANOTHER GAME <lb/>
It Was Almost One-Sided As Visitors <lb/>
Could Not Find Kali. <lb/>
The team of Wilson came <lb/>
over Wednesday and played a game <lb/>
here with the Greenville team. It <lb/>
was practically a one-sided game, <lb/>
the visitors not being a match for <lb/>
the home boys at any point. <lb/>
Score by R. H. E.<lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
For Greenville, Riddick <lb/>
and Lanier. Kincaid, Ed- <lb/>
wards and Davis. <lb/>
Struck By Lanier, Kincaid. <lb/>
Edwards, <lb/>
SHERIFF DUDLEY CLIMBING UP. <lb/>
He Finds A New Point Of <lb/>
Sheriff S. I. Dudley took a climb <lb/>
up in the this morning. He <lb/>
was seen up on the very highest <lb/>
around the tower on top of the <lb/>
new court house, fully a hundred feet <lb/>
above ground, and with an imaginary <lb/>
Held glass was viewing the landscape <lb/>
o'er. Just how far he could see or <lb/>
what was spied was not learned, but <lb/>
that he took in the territory for miles <lb/>
around there is no doubt. Now, ye <lb/>
law breakers, you had better watch <lb/>
your corks, or from this new lookout <lb/>
the sheriff will get his eye on you. <lb/>
WILL TAKE EXPRESS COMPANIES <lb/>
And Operate Them By The Govern- <lb/>
Connection With Hail <lb/>
Charges of Ex- <lb/>
press Companies For Carrying <lb/>
Small <lb/>
Washington, June sub- <lb/>
committee on post offices and post- <lb/>
roads met today and took up for con- <lb/>
the Lewis bill, which pro- <lb/>
for condemning and purchasing <lb/>
the express companies and adding <lb/>
them to the Postal system, and es- <lb/>
a complete system for the <lb/>
quick transport of packages and the <lb/>
eatable products of the farm and <lb/>
truck garden, etc. At their last con- <lb/>
in Washington the <lb/>
of the business men of the <lb/>
country and the granges ask- <lb/>
ed congress to establish such a sys- <lb/>
and representatives of these in- <lb/>
were present at the hearing <lb/>
before the committee today. <lb/>
are two main reasons why <lb/>
the express companies must be added <lb/>
to the postal said Mr. Lewis <lb/>
in his argument. the express <lb/>
company service does not reach be- <lb/>
the railways to the country or <lb/>
the farmers, which the post office <lb/>
does, through the rural free delivery, <lb/>
which is waiting with empty wagons <lb/>
to receive the express packages and <lb/>
take them to the country stores and <lb/>
the farms, and carry back to the <lb/>
towns and the cities the produce of <lb/>
the farms and truck gardens for the <lb/>
people to eat, at living prices. Sec- <lb/>
the contracts of the express <lb/>
companies with the railways give <lb/>
them an average transportation of <lb/>
throe quarters of a cent a pound; and <lb/>
with this rate the express charges <lb/>
by post would be reduced from two- <lb/>
thirds to one-half on parcels rang- <lb/>
from pounds to pounds, and <lb/>
about per cent, on heavier weights, <lb/>
as a consequence of the co-ordination <lb/>
of the express company plants with <lb/>
the post office and rural delivery, and <lb/>
the elimination of the express com- <lb/>
profits, which are averaging over <lb/>
per cent, on the investment. <lb/>
express companies are positive <lb/>
hindrances and obstacles to the <lb/>
of the country. The average <lb/>
charge carrying a ton of express <lb/>
in Argentina is and for the <lb/>
countries of Europe while the <lb/>
average express Co. charge in the <lb/>
States is They charge I <lb/>
times as much to carry a ton of ex- <lb/>
press as a ton of freight in <lb/>
countries. Here the express <lb/>
charge times as much. O <lb/>
course, these charges simply <lb/>
by half or more of the traffic of th <lb/>
United States. Our average is <lb/>
than one hundred pounds per <lb/>
while that of the other countries i <lb/>
over two hundred per capita, <lb/>
we have far greater demand for I <lb/>
on account of our long-1 <lb/>
distances and more extensive <lb/>
cannot have an efficient <lb/>
eels post. The government <lb/>
conduct it on mail railway <lb/>
rates, at over four cents <lb/>
pound, in competition with the ex- <lb/>
press paying but <lb/>
fourths of a cent a pound, <lb/>
the weight of equipment in both <lb/>
which enables the express <lb/>
to pay over fifty per cent, <lb/>
profits to themselves, although <lb/>
no service whatever to <lb/>
farmers and to points off the <lb/>
ways. <lb/>
Mr. Lewis has worked out a s <lb/>
torn of based on <lb/>
methods, from which a <lb/>
package, for instance, can be sent <lb/>
miles for cents, while the <lb/>
now charge cents a <lb/>
for like distances; from <lb/>
Maine, to San Francisco, will c <lb/>
cents for live pounds, and <lb/>
for pounds, as against the <lb/>
company charges of cents a <lb/>
7.50. <lb/>
With the rural free delivery a p <lb/>
of the express system, an <lb/>
parcels post will market the <lb/>
produce and save them the time i <lb/>
labor of marketing their truck. Ra <lb/>
even lower than those Quoted <lb/>
on Page <lb/>
., .<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
IT IS TRULY ft <lb/>
BY A <lb/>
Fays An Eloquent To Mother- <lb/>
hood. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I have heard it said that the most <lb/>
beautiful sentence in the English <lb/>
language was Dr. Johnson's opening <lb/>
sentence in his hook, and <lb/>
indeed it is beautiful, but for fine <lb/>
sentiment, true to our best smooth <lb/>
flow of words, beautiful imagery and <lb/>
exquisite beauty, I have read <lb/>
equal to this from Clarence Poe, <lb/>
of North Carolina. Writing of a <lb/>
departed princess of India, <lb/>
in whoso memory her <lb/>
band had erected a temple called the <lb/>
reported to be the most ex- <lb/>
building upon earth, he <lb/>
walked the ancient <lb/>
way of motherhood, that way along <lb/>
which woman finds the testing of her <lb/>
soul, the mystic reach and infinite <lb/>
meaning of her existence as man finds <lb/>
his in some bitter conflict that for- <lb/>
ever frees him from the bonds of <lb/>
selfishness. Seven times she walked <lb/>
the mother's ancient way down to <lb/>
the gates of death and brought back <lb/>
a new life With her, but the eighth <lb/>
time she did not <lb/>
Can this sentence be surpassed <lb/>
Isn't it sublime To me it signifies <lb/>
that we have in North Carolina a <lb/>
writer and patriot such as we have <lb/>
never had before; one whom we should <lb/>
delight to praise and honor, for he <lb/>
will be remembered when many who <lb/>
now think they arc great have been <lb/>
forgotten. <lb/>
Of course many of your readers <lb/>
have read the quotation and admired <lb/>
it, but many more have had no op- <lb/>
to read it and many only <lb/>
gave it a careless perusal, and as I <lb/>
was so impressed with its grandeur, <lb/>
sublimity and beauty I wanted others <lb/>
to enjoy reading it. <lb/>
We do not always appreciate our <lb/>
great men, and often those whom we <lb/>
think great in a few years appear <lb/>
o those whose prospective Is more <lb/>
for right judgment pig- <lb/>
I may have erroneous opinions <lb/>
f Mr. Poe, but from my point of <lb/>
he is an exceedingly promising <lb/>
man, and if properly <lb/>
by us his name and statue will <lb/>
day be in the Hall of Fame. <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
THE BOARD COUNTY <lb/>
COMMISSIONERS <lb/>
PROCEEDINGS OF LAST MEETING. <lb/>
POISONED BY MATCHES. <lb/>
Amounts of Disbursements And Col- <lb/>
At the regular June meeting of the <lb/>
board of county commissioners, all <lb/>
the members were present. The fol- <lb/>
lowing aggregate sums were ordered <lb/>
paid out of the For paupers, <lb/>
superintendent of health, <lb/>
county home, coroner, <lb/>
court house, bridges <lb/>
and ferries, conveying prison- <lb/>
and insane court cost, <lb/>
jurors, jail, cap- <lb/>
distillery, clerk to board, <lb/>
clerk court, printing <lb/>
and stationery, postage, <lb/>
salaries, register of deeds, clerk <lb/>
court, sheriff, <lb/>
county stock law, <lb/>
county roads, <lb/>
stock law, roads; <lb/>
Beaver Dam roads, Bethel <lb/>
roads, Greenville roads, <lb/>
The several Officers tendered their <lb/>
reports for the past month which were <lb/>
approved and ordered recorded. The <lb/>
collections were, by register of deeds <lb/>
by clerk court, by <lb/>
sheriff, <lb/>
W. A. Forbes was elected <lb/>
of roads for twelve months at <lb/>
a salary of per month. <lb/>
Some changes in allowances to <lb/>
were made, and some corrections <lb/>
in tax list ordered. <lb/>
The board also held a recess with <lb/>
the building committee to examine <lb/>
bids on furnishing the new court <lb/>
house and jail and to make contracts <lb/>
for the same. While tin's has not yet <lb/>
been completed by the committee and <lb/>
recorded, it is learned that furniture <lb/>
was bought that will be in keeping <lb/>
with the new court house. <lb/>
ELDER D. DEAD. <lb/>
Ate a Box Each, But Doctor <lb/>
Got There In Time. <lb/>
Farmville, June the two <lb/>
two-year-old children of Capt. <lb/>
Smith and Mr. Robert Barrett <lb/>
ere playing together, their mother <lb/>
out of the room, and they <lb/>
a chair, climbed up to a bureau, <lb/>
n which was a gross of matches. They <lb/>
cured the matches, took them a box <lb/>
and sat down to have a feast, <lb/>
discovered they had devoured <lb/>
box each and were on <lb/>
e second. <lb/>
Dr. Patrick was hastily summoned <lb/>
id told the trouble, he came prepared <lb/>
battle with the poison in a few <lb/>
and the work of he- <lb/>
With purging and vomiting he <lb/>
had their little stomaches empty <lb/>
id though weak, they were soon all <lb/>
Died After An Illness Of Only Two <lb/>
Days. <lb/>
Elder George D. a prom- <lb/>
minister of the Primitive Baptist <lb/>
church, died Saturday night at his <lb/>
home in Robersonville after a brief <lb/>
illness, and was buried Sunday. <lb/>
Elder was years of <lb/>
age, and apparently looked the <lb/>
of health, being as splendid a <lb/>
specimen of physical manhood as is <lb/>
usually seen. Only a week previous <lb/>
to his death he returned from a <lb/>
month's trip through several north- <lb/>
states where he attended several <lb/>
associations of his denomination, and <lb/>
after getting home spoke of how well <lb/>
he had felt during that trip and how <lb/>
much he had enjoyed it. <lb/>
Last Thursday he spent the greater <lb/>
part of the day out on his farm. <lb/>
returning home that evening he <lb/>
was taken with paralysis of the mus- <lb/>
and nerves, and in two days <lb/>
had away. <lb/>
His death was indeed a shock, and <lb/>
a great loss to his section and to the <lb/>
denomination he served. <lb/>
COME TO SEE US FOB MOST LAST- <lb/>
tag and satisfactory hosiery for la- <lb/>
dies, children, men and We <lb/>
guarantee our hosiery, Whit Leather <lb/>
Brand, per pair. Linen Wear <lb/>
Brand, per pair. J. R. J. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
FOR SALE- FIELD PEAS, <lb/>
t o. b. Iron peas all <lb/>
good stock. G. A. Johnson Bro., <lb/>
Grifton, N. C. <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 colors--Ladies and Misses Tailor- <lb/>
made Skirts, Ladies Shirt Waists, Muslin <lb/>
Underwear, Notions, Shoes and Oxfords, <lb/>
Household Goods, Traveling Bags and Grips <lb/>
Furniture, Chairs and Mattress. <lb/>
Go See for Crockery, Glassware, <lb/>
Tinware, Wood and Willow Ware. <lb/>
Go See for Cultivators, <lb/>
all Farming Utensils <lb/>
Plows and <lb/>
We want your trade. We have the goods <lb/>
and will make prices right <lb/>
It makes no difference what you want we <lb/>
can supply it. When you want it and want <lb/>
to buy it right, Go See <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
stock of merchandise ever carried in Green- <lb/>
ville. Don't think because you go and see <lb/>
that you must buy from him, but we <lb/>
want you to come and learn we have to of- <lb/>
fer you and see if we cannot make it to your <lb/>
interest to deal with us. We want to say <lb/>
once more no matter what you want, <lb/>
for personal use, home or farm, Go See <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina <lb/>
Condensed Statement of <lb/>
The National Bank of Greenville <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
at the close of business March 7th, 1911 <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
boa and 180,407.19 <lb/>
Overdrafts. <lb/>
S. Bonds. 21.000.00 <lb/>
Stocks and bonds. 3,000.00 <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures 7,281.30 <lb/>
Exchange for clearing <lb/>
house. 8.919.67 <lb/>
Cash and due from banks. 47,586.04 <lb/>
per cent, redemption <lb/>
fund. 1,050.00 <lb/>
1271,648.16 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
50,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus. 10,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits. 3,614.99 <lb/>
Circulation. 21,000.09 <lb/>
Bond account. 21,000.0 <lb/>
Dividends unpaid. 69.93 <lb/>
Cashier's checks. 498.13 <lb/>
We invite the accounts of Banks. Corporations. Firms and <lb/>
Individuals, and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those <lb/>
contemplating changes or opening new accounts. <lb/>
We want your business <lb/>
F. J. FORBES, Cashier <lb/>
mm <lb/>
mm <lb/>
ft II. p The<lb/>
THE STATE PRESS <lb/>
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. <lb/>
Resolutions of Respect Adopted <lb/>
Lodge A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
ANNUAL SESSION 86-28. <lb/>
Retailed Program of Convention <lb/>
Mountain Outing. <lb/>
The following is the detailed pro- <lb/>
gramme of the meeting to be held in <lb/>
Lenoir, June 26-28 and of the out- <lb/>
to immediately <lb/>
Monday Evening, June o'clock. <lb/>
The convention will be called to or- <lb/>
by the president, Mr. M. L. Ship- <lb/>
man, of the Hendersonville Hustler. <lb/>
Prayer by Rev. J. O. Atkinson, of <lb/>
the Christian Sun. <lb/>
Address of welcome by Hon. W. C. <lb/>
Newland. <lb/>
Response by Mr. Josephus Daniel, <lb/>
of the News and Observer. <lb/>
Tuesday Morning, June O'clock <lb/>
Meeting called to order by the <lb/>
president. <lb/>
Report of executive committee on <lb/>
new members. <lb/>
President's address. <lb/>
Supervision of Public <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, state <lb/>
geologist and secretary of North <lb/>
Carolina Good Roads Association. <lb/>
Basis of the <lb/>
Mr. Wade H. Harris, of the Char- <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Newspaper and Public <lb/>
Dr. W. P. Few, president of <lb/>
Trinity College. <lb/>
Open Mr. J. J. Far- <lb/>
of the High Point Enterprise. <lb/>
to be Derived from Treat- <lb/>
of the Hookworm <lb/>
Dr. John A. Ferrall, state director <lb/>
hookworm campaign. <lb/>
Appointment of committees and <lb/>
miscellaneous business. <lb/>
Question box. <lb/>
At p. m., the editorial <lb/>
party will be taken to Hibriten <lb/>
where a light luncheon will be <lb/>
served. <lb/>
Tuesday Evening, O'clock. <lb/>
Reading of Historical Paper, Mr. <lb/>
D. J. Whichard, of the Greenville Re- <lb/>
Annual oration, Mr. James H. <lb/>
Cowan, of the Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
Annual Poem, Mr. W. Lowrie Hill. <lb/>
of Our Fatherless Ones. <lb/>
Appalachian <lb/>
Rev. Hight C. Moore, of the Biblical <lb/>
Recorder. <lb/>
Wednesday Morning, June <lb/>
O'clock. <lb/>
Press as a Factor in <lb/>
Fire Hon. James R. <lb/>
Young, state insurance <lb/>
Best Method of Securing and <lb/>
Retaining Local Mr. W. <lb/>
C. Dowd, of the Charlotte News. <lb/>
and Aims of the Pied- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mr. B. H. of the <lb/>
Shelby Highlander. <lb/>
Intra-Coastal Waterway and <lb/>
Its Relation to Piedmont-Western <lb/>
North Hon. John H. Small. <lb/>
Liberty of the Dr. W. <lb/>
Louis Poteat, president of Wake For- <lb/>
est College. <lb/>
Special order, <lb/>
of officers. <lb/>
Wednesday Afternoon. <lb/>
At o'clock the editorial party will <lb/>
leave Lenoir Blowing Rock, <lb/>
where the night will be spent. On <lb/>
Thursday they will be taken to <lb/>
where dinner will be served <lb/>
on the campus of the Appalachian <lb/>
Training School. Thursday afternoon <lb/>
the party will be taken back to <lb/>
Blowing Rock, where will take <lb/>
Whereas, it has pleased the <lb/>
Architect of the Universe to <lb/>
remove from our midst, our late <lb/>
brother, Blount <lb/>
And, Whereas, the intimate <lb/>
long held by our deceased <lb/>
brother with the members of this <lb/>
lodge render it proper that we should <lb/>
place on record our of <lb/>
his services as a Mason and his <lb/>
merits as a man; therefore, be it <lb/>
That while we. the members <lb/>
of Greenville Lodge No. A. P. and <lb/>
A. M., bow in humble submission to <lb/>
will of the Great I Am. we do <lb/>
the less mourn for our brother, <lb/>
who has been called from labor to <lb/>
rest. <lb/>
That in the death of Blount <lb/>
Coleman Pearce, this lodge loses its <lb/>
charter member. He was <lb/>
a zealous in his work. <lb/>
to advance the interest of <lb/>
the order, although he removed from <lb/>
this jurisdiction to another, Sanford, <lb/>
X. C. in 1898, yet he kept in <lb/>
with his old lodge, who was <lb/>
always glad to have him In their <lb/>
midst. <lb/>
That In his death the state loses <lb/>
n esteemed. loyal and patriotic cit- <lb/>
the family loses affectionate <lb/>
and loving father and husband. <lb/>
That this lodge tender its heart <lb/>
felt sympathy to the family and rel- <lb/>
of our deceased brother in their <lb/>
Bad affliction. <lb/>
That a copy of these <lb/>
be spread upon the minutes, a <lb/>
copy be sent to the Oxford Orphan <lb/>
Friend. The Express, and <lb/>
The Daily Reflector for publication, <lb/>
and a copy be sent to the bereaved <lb/>
family. <lb/>
J. M. <lb/>
R. WILLIAMS, <lb/>
H. HARRISS, <lb/>
Committee. <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office opposite R. Smith <lb/>
Stables, and next door to John Flan- <lb/>
Buggy Co's new building <lb/>
. Carolina <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
formerly occupied by J. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Greenville, Carolina <lb/>
v c D. M. Clark <lb/>
CLARK <lb/>
Engineers and Surveyors <lb/>
. . Carolina <lb/>
Spring Bedding Plants <lb/>
for beautifying the yard. <lb/>
j Decorative plants for the house <lb/>
Choice Cut Flowers <lb/>
for weddings and all social events <lb/>
Floral offerings arranged in the <lb/>
most artistic style at notice. <lb/>
Mail, telephone and telegraph or- <lb/>
promptly executed by, <lb/>
J. L. Company <lb/>
Florists. <lb/>
Ask for Price List <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C.<lb/>
S. J. EVERETT <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
In Building <lb/>
. H. <lb/>
I. Moore. <lb/>
IV. H. long <lb/>
MOORE LONG <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
. K. Carolina <lb/>
Central Ea tar Shop<lb/>
Proprietor <lb/>
Located in main business of town, <lb/>
Four chairs In operation and each <lb/>
one over by a skilled <lb/>
barber. Ladies waited on at their <lb/>
home. <lb/>
DR. R. L. CARE <lb/>
DENTIST <lb/>
. . N. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYER <lb/>
. . Caroline. <lb/>
H. W. CASTER, M. D. <lb/>
limited to diseases of tin <lb/>
Wye, Bar, Nose Throat. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Greenville, n. C <lb/>
office with D. L. James <lb/>
a. m. to p. m., Mondays. <lb/>
THE MODERN SHOP <lb/>
S. J. NOBLES <lb/>
furnished, everything <lb/>
and attractive, working the very <lb/>
best barbers. Second to none. <lb/>
i OPPOSITE I. B. J. G. <lb/>
ALBION DUNN <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
office in building, Third St. <lb/>
Practices wherever his services are <lb/>
desired <lb/>
. Carolina <lb/>
Rooms For Rent <lb/>
Suitable for light <lb/>
I in or bed rooms. Apply to <lb/>
Mellie M. Harris, <lb/>
Dickinson Avenue, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
During the week Register of Deeds <lb/>
Moore issued marriage licenses to <lb/>
the following <lb/>
J. C. Moore and Mamie rope. <lb/>
Jesse L. Rollins and Susie Taylor. <lb/>
Walter Weed and Lena Whitfield. <lb/>
Robert Barnhill and Hattie Alston. <lb/>
Langley and Lula Edwards <lb/>
H. S. WARD. C. C. PIERCE. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Greenville, <lb/>
WARD PIERCE <lb/>
Greenville, N. G <lb/>
Practice In all the Courts. <lb/>
Tire Iron Master. <lb/>
Iron photo-play at <lb/>
the tonight is one of <lb/>
best of its kind ever brought to <lb/>
Greenville and should not miss <lb/>
seeing it. The program will consist <lb/>
of three thousand feet of film with <lb/>
one extra reel. <lb/>
in the fine drives and views, and <lb/>
where a luncheon will be served. On <lb/>
Friday morning the editors will get <lb/>
an early start Linville, stop for <lb/>
lunch at Grandfather mountain, get- <lb/>
ting into Linville in time to see the <lb/>
attractions there and do some fishing <lb/>
in the lake On Saturday morning <lb/>
the train will be taken at <lb/>
in time to make connections at Hick- <lb/>
Lincolnton and Gastonia. <lb/>
No meeting of the association that <lb/>
has ever been held offers a more de- <lb/>
than is <lb/>
ed this year, and no editor, no matter <lb/>
how busy he is, should fail to take <lb/>
la entire trip <lb/>
. z- <lb/>
Established 1875 <lb/>
and Retail Grocer <lb/>
Furniture dealer. Cash paid <lb/>
Hides. Fur. Cotton Seed. Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Bedsteads <lb/>
Mattresses, etc. Suits, Baby Car- <lb/>
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, <lb/>
Tables, Lounges, Sates, P. Lon- <lb/>
and Gail Ax High Lite <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, Matches, Oil, <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples, <lb/>
Peaches, Prunes, Currants, Raisins <lb/>
Glass and Wooden- <lb/>
ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
best Butter, New <lb/>
Royal Sewing machines and <lb/>
numerous other goods. Quality <lb/>
quantity cheap cash. Come to <lb/>
see me. <lb/>
Phone Number <lb/>
hen You Are Warm <lb/>
Come try r Delicious Ice Cream, Candies <lb/>
We deliver ice cream on Sundays if orders <lb/>
are placed in time. Will be in from to <lb/>
a. m. Sundays to answer calls. <lb/>
The Candy kitchen, Phone <lb/>
Will Celebrate Anniversary. <lb/>
On Friday, June 30th, the <lb/>
of the breaking of ground for the <lb/>
erection of the buildings of East Car- <lb/>
Training school will <lb/>
be celebrated with appropriate <lb/>
Gov. W. W. KitChin and other <lb/>
prominent speakers will be present. <lb/>
Bun <lb/>
The branch that crosses Evans <lb/>
street just south of the graded school <lb/>
has for several days been as dry as <lb/>
the streets. This is something we do <lb/>
not recall ever seeing before. <lb/>
Work Will Start Soon- <lb/>
After you take Tr. King's New Life <lb/>
Pills, and you'll quickly enjoy their <lb/>
line results. Constipation and <lb/>
vanish and tine appetite re- <lb/>
turns. They regulate stomach, liver <lb/>
and bowels and impart new strength <lb/>
and energy to the whole system. Try <lb/>
them. Only at all druggists. <lb/>
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED TWO <lb/>
cars machinery, consisting of <lb/>
everything needed on a farm. Terms <lb/>
to purchaser. E. Sons,<lb/>
.-.,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
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Is <lb/>
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no <lb/>
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it, <lb/>
Bill <lb/>
to <lb/>
id- <lb/>
if <lb/>
on <lb/>
Cl <lb/>
Th <lb/>
D. <lb/>
id <lb/>
in. <lb/>
id <lb/>
Carolina and Fan Mir Eastern <lb/>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and I he <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Winterville an d vicinity <lb/>
Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
day after a visit in Virginia. <lb/>
That roofing sold <lb/>
Winterville, N. C, June <lb/>
W. E. Cox, of Wilmington, spent Fri- <lb/>
day evening and night with his moth- <lb/>
Mrs. W. E. Cox. <lb/>
When you have wheat you want <lb/>
ground carry it to Harrington, Bar- <lb/>
mill. They good <lb/>
flour. <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Cox and Miss Jeannette <lb/>
Cox made a trip to Greenville Thurs- <lb/>
day through the dust and returned <lb/>
through the rain. <lb/>
Plenty of floor oil on hand at A. <lb/>
W. Ange Ai Co. <lb/>
Miss Mary Smith, of Ayden, is <lb/>
spending a few days with Miss Pattie <lb/>
Sutton. <lb/>
Get your turned work and repair- <lb/>
done at Harrington, Barber <lb/>
Co. shops, prices are reasonable. <lb/>
Messrs. Cox and Eugene <lb/>
Cannon went to Ayden yesterday. <lb/>
When you want a good cook stove <lb/>
see A. W. Ange Company. They <lb/>
have good stoves cheap. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Harper has purchased <lb/>
the L. L. Kittrell home and will move <lb/>
there next week. He is fixing to <lb/>
make another soul happy. <lb/>
Now is the time for you to begin <lb/>
to make your arrangements for your <lb/>
hay balers and manure spreaders. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber Company <lb/>
and save time. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, of Kinston, <lb/>
are spending a day or two in town. <lb/>
Misses and Dora Cox made <lb/>
shopping trip to Greenville yes- <lb/>
Messrs. Harrington, Barber Com- <lb/>
are selling some good hats very <lb/>
cheap for the cash. See them for <lb/>
hats while they last. <lb/>
China Wedding. <lb/>
Thursday night the home of Rev. <lb/>
and Mrs. M. A. Adams was the scene <lb/>
of a beautiful twentieth anniversary. <lb/>
The home was tastily decorated with <lb/>
flowers and potted plants, when both <lb/>
old and young gathered to enjoy the <lb/>
evening. Mr. and Miss Adams stood <lb/>
beneath a beautiful arch while a wed- <lb/>
ding was played, and the mar- <lb/>
people followed by the next near- <lb/>
est married until all the party march- <lb/>
ed in and congratulated them. The <lb/>
party then went to the dining room <lb/>
where refreshments were served. <lb/>
Quite a nice collection of handsome <lb/>
china was received and reviewed by <lb/>
the party before departing. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C, June <lb/>
Messrs. Eugene Cannon and <lb/>
attended church at Grin- <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Co. sell <lb/>
roof paint. Will stop <lb/>
leaks and prevent rust. <lb/>
Mr. Thomas Dawson, of <lb/>
Ayden, but now of Florida, spent <lb/>
Monday in town. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com- <lb/>
are purchasing a lot of high <lb/>
grade buggy material and will soon <lb/>
be rolling out some of their best make <lb/>
of buggies. <lb/>
Mr. O. W. Rollins, of Ayden, was <lb/>
in town Sunday. <lb/>
See the lace and hamburg at A. W. <lb/>
Ange and <lb/>
Prof. H. F. Brinson came in <lb/>
by <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Company is <lb/>
taking quality and price <lb/>
into consideration. <lb/>
Mr. J. F. Stokes, of Greenville, was <lb/>
in town Tuesday looking after the <lb/>
interest of the Pitt County News. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com- <lb/>
are well prepared to take care <lb/>
of the dead. Nice coffins or caskets <lb/>
on hand and can give excellent <lb/>
ice. <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Cox has returned from <lb/>
Fairmont and is spending a few days <lb/>
at home. <lb/>
Lime and cement at A. W. Ange and <lb/>
Mr. Ola Tucker, of Greenville, was <lb/>
in town Saturday. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Co. have <lb/>
a beautiful line of and <lb/>
black silk hose. <lb/>
Misses Alice Folds, of Kinston and <lb/>
Minnie Greene, of Wilmington, spent <lb/>
Monday night with Mrs. B. D. Forrest. <lb/>
Bring your corn and wheat to <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and mill, <lb/>
grind any day, satisfaction <lb/>
teed. <lb/>
Cannon was all smiles last <lb/>
night, in town. <lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. B. T. Cox attended <lb/>
services at Red Banks Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. Hugh made Winter- <lb/>
ville a pleasant visit Sunday. <lb/>
The picnic season is now open with <lb/>
the usual mos <lb/>
and gnats. But there is fun, <lb/>
just the same. <lb/>
Miss Lula Chapman and <lb/>
had a pleasant ride <lb/>
over to Ayden yesterday evening. <lb/>
Surprise Marriage. <lb/>
All were surprised Sunday afternoon <lb/>
to learn that Mr. J. L. Rollins and <lb/>
Miss Susie Taylor had been united <lb/>
in marriage. It was quite a surprise <lb/>
to all for none expected it. Miss <lb/>
Susie made many friends while here <lb/>
in school last year, and said she <lb/>
would return, but no one thought <lb/>
she would change teachers. She is <lb/>
the daughter of Mr. Lemuel Taylor, <lb/>
near Kinston, and Mr. Rollins is <lb/>
bookkeeper for A. W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
We wish them all the success and <lb/>
happiness possible while traveling <lb/>
through life in double harness. <lb/>
BY DR. STRAYER <lb/>
Speaks to Teachers and Citizens at <lb/>
Training School <lb/>
ADVANTAGES OF SUMMER SCHOOL <lb/>
Tendencies in Public <lb/>
Interestingly Discussed By <lb/>
This Able North <lb/>
Carolina Fortunate in Having Him <lb/>
School Doing <lb/>
did Work. <lb/>
Some Flies For the Fans. <lb/>
Greenville is certainly the <lb/>
Greenville has more eggs in the <lb/>
basket to give teams that come this <lb/>
way. <lb/>
When the Coast Line League opens, <lb/>
then keep your eye on Greenville. <lb/>
Wonder if the fats and the leans <lb/>
will get together again this season. <lb/>
Come along boys. <lb/>
Lanier do pitch great ball. <lb/>
They will have to take something <lb/>
larger than a bat to find the ball <lb/>
pitched by Lanier. <lb/>
Lutterloh unnerved the visitors <lb/>
with an the fence home <lb/>
the second time he went to the bat. <lb/>
The grand stand went wild. <lb/>
The Wilson Times says Greenville <lb/>
has the best amateur team in the <lb/>
slate. Keep up reputation, boys. <lb/>
Dr. George D. Strayer, of <lb/>
University, who is one of the <lb/>
faculty for the summer term at East <lb/>
Carolina Training School, <lb/>
instructing a class of school super- <lb/>
and principals on school <lb/>
administration, delivered a lecture <lb/>
in the school auditorium on Monday <lb/>
night, to the entire student body and <lb/>
a number of town people who went <lb/>
over to hear him. <lb/>
The subject of his lecture, which <lb/>
v.-as able and entertaining, was <lb/>
Tendencies in Public <lb/>
He handled his subject under sever- <lb/>
headings, the first being the age <lb/>
of the child and its physical <lb/>
and care. He pointed out the <lb/>
need of gymnasiums and playgrounds, <lb/>
not alone for recreation but for <lb/>
cal development of the child; and <lb/>
that medical inspection, school nurses <lb/>
and dental clinics are necessities for <lb/>
the preservation of health. He ad- <lb/>
open air schools, schools for <lb/>
the blind, the deaf and dumb, for the <lb/>
cripple, that these might have equal <lb/>
chance in life with physically <lb/>
more fortunate. <lb/>
Dr. Strayer also stressed the moral <lb/>
feature of education; that moral <lb/>
training is essential to character <lb/>
Parental schools, juvenile courts <lb/>
and reform schools were all given <lb/>
their place in importance. Moral <lb/>
training does not reach its height <lb/>
in the school room unless we have <lb/>
moral teachers. <lb/>
Then he carried his hearers on <lb/>
through the various needs for <lb/>
of the boys and girls into a <lb/>
useful life; the boys should have clubs <lb/>
for debating, for dramatic diversion, <lb/>
for athletics, and training along me- <lb/>
and business lines. The <lb/>
girls should also have clubs for sew- <lb/>
cooking, social and literary feat- <lb/>
and their training in home <lb/>
making, sanitation and nursing <lb/>
should not be neglected. <lb/>
The sphere of public education <lb/>
should also extend to the adult <lb/>
that they may be qualified for more <lb/>
effective work. They should have <lb/>
lectures, civic clubs, centers of rec- <lb/>
libraries, associations of par- <lb/>
near their schools, so that the <lb/>
interest of the community may be at- <lb/>
to and centered in the school. <lb/>
The conditions for accomplishing <lb/>
these are better and broader <lb/>
for children, youths and adults. <lb/>
Public education is not local or <lb/>
It should be compulsory. The <lb/>
length of the school term should be <lb/>
increased to from to nine months, in <lb/>
fact, school of some kind should be <lb/>
going on oil the year. And the <lb/>
should be compelled to attend <lb/>
school not less than month in the <lb/>
year. Sentiment should also be <lb/>
to the point of paying teachers <lb/>
sufficient to keep them in the work <lb/>
the minimum should be a living wage <lb/>
that is pay enough during the <lb/>
months they teach to support them <lb/>
all the year. Not only should there <lb/>
be a longer term, but a longer school <lb/>
day, more hours being put in the <lb/>
work. <lb/>
All through Dr. Strayer's lecture <lb/>
was filled with the best of thought, <lb/>
this report only touches the <lb/>
outlines here and there. He is an <lb/>
educator of unusual ability, and the <lb/>
people of Eastern North Carolina are <lb/>
more than fortunate in his spending <lb/>
some weeks here in this summer <lb/>
school to impart instruction that will <lb/>
be felt through years to come in our <lb/>
educational work. The time is past <lb/>
when education is nothing but books. <lb/>
It is character building, home <lb/>
better equipment for life's duties <lb/>
and service to others, more comfort, <lb/>
more joy, more <lb/>
not only for time but for eternity. <lb/>
That is what this institution here in <lb/>
Greenville is doing in the training of <lb/>
teachers. <lb/>
The summer school is doing <lb/>
did work. The dormitories and town <lb/>
are filled with teachers taking ad- <lb/>
vantage of the splendid opportunities <lb/>
here, and they are manifest- <lb/>
much interest in the course of <lb/>
It is not a time of play, <lb/>
but genuine school work for all in <lb/>
Now Lay Me Down to Sleep. <lb/>
The fire upon the hearth is low, <lb/>
And there is stillness everywhere <lb/>
Like troubled spirits, here and there <lb/>
The firelight shadows fluttering go, <lb/>
as the shadows round me creep, <lb/>
A childish treble breaks the bloom <lb/>
And from a farther room <lb/>
lay me down to <lb/>
aid, somehow, with that little prayer <lb/>
And that sweet treble in my ears, <lb/>
My thoughts go back to distant <lb/>
years, <lb/>
linger with a dear one there; <lb/>
as I bear the child's amen, <lb/>
My mother's faith comes back to me <lb/>
Crouched at her side I seem to be, <lb/>
mother holds my hands again. <lb/>
for an hour in that dear place <lb/>
O for the peace of that dear time <lb/>
for childish trust sublime <lb/>
for a glimpse of mother's face <lb/>
do not seem to be alone <lb/>
Sweet magic of that treble tone <lb/>
And I lay me down to <lb/>
Eugene <lb/>
Wires Down. <lb/>
The received notice this <lb/>
that all the press wires <lb/>
of Washington were down by <lb/>
the storm, which would cause a cur- <lb/>
of our wire news service to- <lb/>
day or make it late. These mishaps <lb/>
are unavoidable, much as they are <lb/>
regretted. <lb/>
A FACT <lb/>
ABOUT THE <lb/>
What is known as the <lb/>
is seldom occasioned by actual exist- <lb/>
external conditions, but in the <lb/>
great majority of cases by a dis- <lb/>
ordered <lb/>
THIS IS A FACT <lb/>
which may be <lb/>
by trying a course of <lb/>
They regulate the LIVER. <lb/>
They to the <lb/>
mind. They bring health and tic- <lb/>
to the body. <lb/>
TAKE NO .<lb/>
Th Hume and Farm and The Eastern<lb/>
All Over <lb/>
are says Mrs. Nora Guffey, of Broken <lb/>
Arrow, Okla., use my letter in any way you want to, <lb/>
if it will induce some suffering woman to try I had <lb/>
pains all over, and suffered with an abscess. Three <lb/>
failed to relieve me. Since taking I am in <lb/>
better health than ever before, and that means much to me, <lb/>
because I suffered many years with womanly troubles, of <lb/>
different kinds. What other treatments I tried, helped me <lb/>
for a few days <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Cheese <lb/>
TO MERCHANTS <lb/>
making contracts for fall de- <lb/>
livery, write or wire for contract <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Don't wait, until you are taken down sick, before <lb/>
care of yourself. The small aches and pains, and other <lb/>
symptoms of womanly weakness and disease, always mean <lb/>
worse to follow, unless given quick treatment <lb/>
You would always keep handy, if you knew <lb/>
what quick and permanent relief it gives, where weakness <lb/>
and disease of the womanly system makes life seem hard <lb/>
to bear. has helped over a million women. Try it <lb/>
Write Advisory Dept. Chattanooga. Medicine Co. Chattanooga, Tenn., <lb/>
for Special Instructions, and 64-page book. Treatment sent free. J <lb/>
V- <lb/>
THE REMODELED <lb/>
THE SEA <lb/>
THE RESORT MADE BEAUTIFUL. <lb/>
POWDER <lb/>
Is Death to Hawks -Life to Chickens and Turkeys <lb/>
Cock of the Walk <lb/>
I take Chicken Powder and <lb/>
feed my children it too. Look at <lb/>
me and observe the Hawk. Cock-a- <lb/>
The Barnyard <lb/>
Died after eating a chick of that <lb/>
old Rooster, which had been fed on <lb/>
Chicken Powder. Alas Alas <lb/>
Registered trade mark U. S. Patent Office April 1910. No. Guaranteed <lb/>
by W. H. under the Food and Drag Act, June 1906. Serial No. <lb/>
CHICKEN POWDER <lb/>
Kills Hawks, Crow, Owls and Minks. Best Remedy for Cholera, <lb/>
Gaps, Limber Neck, Indigestion and Leg Weakness. <lb/>
Keeps Them FREE From Vermin, Thereby Causing Them to pro- <lb/>
duce an Abundance of Eggs. <lb/>
Manufactured by <lb/>
W. H. Chicken Powder Co., <lb/>
Box Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
For sale by Merchants and Druggists <lb/>
to <lb/>
The cheese of highest quality of- <lb/>
in this territory. Brand <lb/>
in More sold than any <lb/>
other brand offered in Eastern North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
J. Benjamin Higgs <lb/>
Distributor <lb/>
Greenville, North Car. <lb/>
kept on as cleanly <lb/>
white sections of <lb/>
Greensboro Record. <lb/>
a plan as the<lb/>
SEW YORK'S SANE FOURTH. <lb/>
BREAKING UP A NUISANCE. <lb/>
Delegation of Colored Citizens Protest <lb/>
Against Disorderly Houses. <lb/>
A large delegation from the <lb/>
of colored New Zion Baptist <lb/>
church, headed by the pastor and <lb/>
board of deacons, visited police head- <lb/>
quarters the other morning and en- <lb/>
complaint against several <lb/>
denizens of the neighborhood of their <lb/>
church in Jacksonville whom they <lb/>
wished prosecuted for running <lb/>
houses. The delegation of col- <lb/>
citizens, both men and women <lb/>
thoroughly in earnest concerning <lb/>
the matter and exhibited unusual <lb/>
to testily against the <lb/>
women. <lb/>
Warrants were sworn out for the <lb/>
alleged disturbers of the peace and <lb/>
it is probable that they will be given <lb/>
a hearing in the city court Monday. <lb/>
The delegation told of wild <lb/>
carousals at night in the settle- <lb/>
declared that, they wore <lb/>
unable to worship at their church in <lb/>
peace on account of the terrible dis- <lb/>
This action on the part of the <lb/>
of Greensboro's settle- <lb/>
establishes a precedent and if <lb/>
continued its results will be far <lb/>
reaching. Members of the delegation <lb/>
this morning complained of the fact <lb/>
that no such houses are allowed to <lb/>
h conducted in this city by white <lb/>
women, but if they would properly <lb/>
consider the fault lies wholly with <lb/>
the better class of . <lb/>
Heretofore great difficulty has been <lb/>
experienced in successfully <lb/>
ting even the worst criminals <lb/>
they either have the other <lb/>
members of their race in a certain <lb/>
fear of them, or for some other reason <lb/>
testimony which may be relied upon <lb/>
is hard to obtain. If the <lb/>
who really desire law and order will <lb/>
help to see that it is observed the <lb/>
settlements will soon be cleared <lb/>
which infest, them and they b <lb/>
Parade Of Nations Is One Of The <lb/>
Features Of Program. <lb/>
Mayor Gaynor's and sane <lb/>
Fourth of committee is <lb/>
for local celebrations in every one <lb/>
of the five boroughs, and, whore <lb/>
at several centers in each of <lb/>
them. Isaac V. treasurer of <lb/>
the committee, believes that plenty of <lb/>
funds will be forthcoming as soon as <lb/>
the citizens realize what is being <lb/>
planned. <lb/>
In Manhattan there will be <lb/>
es in the morning in front of the city <lb/>
hall, at which Mayor Gaynor expects <lb/>
to preside. It is hoped that the <lb/>
speakers will be Gov. Woodrow <lb/>
Wilson, of New Jersey, and the new <lb/>
Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson. <lb/>
As at all the celebrations organized <lb/>
by the committee, the Declaration of <lb/>
Independence will be read. <lb/>
The National Guard will not parade <lb/>
this year, but Dr. George F. <lb/>
chairman of the committee, has organ- <lb/>
instead a novel parade. A pro- <lb/>
cession of of the is to be held <lb/>
all around the City Hall Park. Every <lb/>
nationality in Manhattan is to be <lb/>
represented by an entire family, the <lb/>
head of which will carry the colors <lb/>
of the country in which he was born. <lb/>
It has been suggested that the general <lb/>
offer a prize for the largest <lb/>
family in line. England, Scotland, Ire- <lb/>
land, Italy, France, the German em- <lb/>
Russia, Norway, <lb/>
and the Balkan States are <lb/>
among the countries to be represent- <lb/>
ed, and the procession will pass before <lb/>
the mayor and the invited guests be- <lb/>
fore the regular proceedings begin. <lb/>
New York Times. <lb/>
STOLEN ONE DIAMOND <lb/>
ring, between 3-4 and 7-8 karat, <lb/>
Tiffany setting. Liberal reward for <lb/>
information leading to recovery. <lb/>
C. D. c <lb/>
The New Virginia Beach In All Its <lb/>
Glory And Attractiveness. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va., June the <lb/>
completion of the vast improvements <lb/>
as planned and already under con- <lb/>
by the Norfolk Southern <lb/>
railroad, former patrons of Virginia <lb/>
Beach will not recognize the place. <lb/>
While in the past this resort has <lb/>
always had an interest and character- <lb/>
all its own, yet the new <lb/>
Beach will be so far in advance <lb/>
of its former self as to practically <lb/>
have its existence in a new resort <lb/>
world. <lb/>
Thousands of dollars are being <lb/>
spent this year by the Norfolk South- <lb/>
Railroad for permanent buildings <lb/>
wonderful improvements at the <lb/>
beach. Thousands of additional <lb/>
are planned for and being spent <lb/>
by the citizens and residents of the <lb/>
beach to create additional improve- <lb/>
and advantages for this city <lb/>
by the sea. <lb/>
The mammoth new casino that is <lb/>
already under construction at <lb/>
Beach will cost the Norfolk <lb/>
Southern over in its erection <lb/>
alone. This casino will establish a <lb/>
new standard for summer resort <lb/>
amusement parks. It is over feet <lb/>
in length and feet in width, con- <lb/>
a spacious pavilion, a <lb/>
moth and modern equipped and <lb/>
grill room, convention hall, a large <lb/>
airy ball room, and commodious and <lb/>
well equipped bath houses. The ball <lb/>
room is feet in length by feet <lb/>
in width, enclosed in glass and <lb/>
rounded by a spacious veranda. The <lb/>
casino building throughout is unique <lb/>
in style and attractiveness. Of the <lb/>
bungalow type, with it.; spacious <lb/>
connecting hall ways and <lb/>
surrounded beautiful walks and park- <lb/>
ed areas, it will indeed be a place <lb/>
beautiful. <lb/>
But the casino is not the only great <lb/>
accommodation feature at Virginia <lb/>
Beach. There are numerous sum- <lb/>
mer hotels and cottages which vie <lb/>
with each other in appointment, neat- <lb/>
and attractiveness. The rates <lb/>
at the several hotels and cottages <lb/>
sufficiently low-priced to satisfy <lb/>
one, when the excellent service <lb/>
is taken into consideration, the won- <lb/>
is how these rates can be so <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
Virginia Beach is truly the <lb/>
port of the At the same time <lb/>
is noted for its cosmopolitan ways <lb/>
The rapid increase of interest in this <lb/>
resort and the wonderful increase in <lb/>
its population are the causes which, <lb/>
has lead to the planned expenditures <lb/>
already under way in the way of <lb/>
increased buildings, added <lb/>
and magnificent improvements <lb/>
that will this year add to the <lb/>
of the place. <lb/>
The Norfolk Southern Railroad has <lb/>
prepared a neat folder which fully <lb/>
describes the advantages, scenery and <lb/>
accommodations at this popular re- <lb/>
sort. This folder also gives a list <lb/>
of the hotels and cottages, and rates <lb/>
for accommodations of all kinds. <lb/>
These folders may be obtained from <lb/>
any of the Norfolk Southern agents <lb/>
and representatives, or can be <lb/>
cured by writing the general pas- <lb/>
W. W. Nor- <lb/>
folk, Virginia.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Carolina Home Fan- -an he Eastern <lb/>
The Carolina Borne and Farm and The Eastern <lb/>
THE SKIMMED MILK <lb/>
QUESTION AGAIN <lb/>
KB. HEARSE DR. <lb/>
This To The <lb/>
Baby. <lb/>
OFFERS CHALLENGE <lb/>
FOR EXHIBIT AT COUNTY FAIR, <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Not a great many of your readers <lb/>
may recall an article credited to the <lb/>
New York Times as it appeared In <lb/>
The Daily Reflector of Fewer <lb/>
still, perhaps, retained an <lb/>
from it sufficiently definite to <lb/>
fully appreciate a communication In <lb/>
your issue of June 9th. If the reader <lb/>
should take a humorous view of Mr. <lb/>
contentions, he should not <lb/>
miss a re-reading of The Time's <lb/>
Mr. Harris betrays no effort <lb/>
In this direction, however, his <lb/>
apparently, being altogether in- <lb/>
and as serious as possible. <lb/>
For this reason bis letter should <lb/>
bear a second reading and a <lb/>
with the article to which it re- <lb/>
Letter of Mr. <lb/>
New June 1911. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
I was interested in reading In your <lb/>
May 27th issue an article with the <lb/>
caption Skimmed milk in <lb/>
which you quote Doctor Wiley as <lb/>
Wiley says he is con- <lb/>
that the lives of almost an <lb/>
unlimited number of infants are en- <lb/>
dangered every day by the use of <lb/>
such <lb/>
Dr. Wiley has evidently changed <lb/>
mind since he published the second <lb/>
and <lb/>
and their He <lb/>
says in said book on page <lb/>
med residue which is left <lb/>
from the removal of cream is known <lb/>
as skimmed milk. Skimmed milk <lb/>
contains the principal part of the <lb/>
constituents of milk, the <lb/>
greater quantity of its sugar and a <lb/>
very large quantity of its mineral mat- <lb/>
It is a very valuable food prod- <lb/>
lacking only the element of fat. <lb/>
Naturally the composition of skim- <lb/>
med milk would be that of milk <lb/>
for the abstraction of fat. It <lb/>
contains some little fat when <lb/>
pared by the gravity method and only <lb/>
a very small portion when separated <lb/>
mechanically. The abstraction of the <lb/>
fat increases the relative proportion <lb/>
of sugar and <lb/>
On page he states <lb/>
It does not differ greatly in its chem- <lb/>
properties from skimmed milk, <lb/>
although there is a slight difference <lb/>
in the relative percentages of the <lb/>
milk solids in cream as compared <lb/>
with the same constituents in whole <lb/>
On page ho states <lb/>
If sweet milk does not meet <lb/>
the requirements, sour milk or but- <lb/>
properly modified may be <lb/>
It is evident from the above quota- <lb/>
that skimmed milk is a <lb/>
substance, and that it is also <lb/>
necessary to modify cow's milk prior <lb/>
to feeding it to an infant. <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
H. L. HARRIS. <lb/>
The Times <lb/>
crusade against manufacturers <lb/>
of condensed skimmed milk who mis- <lb/>
represent their product, has been <lb/>
started by the Department of <lb/>
has recommended that <lb/>
certain manufacturers be prosecuted <lb/>
ARE YOU <lb/>
GOING TO THE <lb/>
Let Is Hear From The Neighbor. <lb/>
hood Thai Will Take Them Up. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I hope the committee on premiums <lb/>
of the Pitt County Fair Association j <lb/>
will give a blue ribbon at least to j <lb/>
the neighborhood that makes the I <lb/>
most creditable all round exhibit. The j <lb/>
State fair offers premiums to <lb/>
and farm exhibits. We might, it <lb/>
I appears to me, limit ours to neighbor- <lb/>
hoods and individual farms. <lb/>
don't mean Grimes- <lb/>
land, as your printer made me say <lb/>
In a former challenges any <lb/>
other in the county to <lb/>
with her. We want the <lb/>
space immediately to the left of the <lb/>
main entrance to the warehouse and <lb/>
like for our competitor to be <lb/>
upon the right. <lb/>
We will have in this display <lb/>
co, cotton, corn, peanuts, beans, <lb/>
oats, wheat, potatoes white <lb/>
and sweet, collards and pop corn, <lb/>
cows, fat cattle, sheep, home- <lb/>
raised horses. Let us hear through <lb/>
the paper from the neighborhood <lb/>
which, is willing to compete. By <lb/>
the way, I forgot to mention the <lb/>
exhibit in which we take most pride- <lb/>
boys and girls, young men and young <lb/>
women, to the manor born and <lb/>
brought up, of course. We have ten <lb/>
farms all upon one road extending <lb/>
about two miles in our burg. <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
or doses will cure any <lb/>
eases of Chills and Fever. Price,<lb/>
for violation of the pure food law and <lb/>
it is probable that proceedings against <lb/>
them will be started within the next <lb/>
few days. <lb/>
a result of an investigation of <lb/>
the condensed milk situation, which <lb/>
been in progress, at the Bureau <lb/>
of Chemistry for some time, Dr. Wiley <lb/>
says he is convinced that the lives <lb/>
of an almost unlimited number of in- <lb/>
are endangered every day by <lb/>
the use of such milk. <lb/>
department is doing every- <lb/>
thing it can to stop the sale of con- <lb/>
skimmed said Dr. Wiley <lb/>
Its effect throughout the country <lb/>
on infant mortality can only be <lb/>
estimated, but I do know that it en- <lb/>
dangers the life of every child to <lb/>
whom it is York Times. <lb/>
Does it appear that Dr. Wiley has <lb/>
changed his or that Mr. <lb/>
L. Harris, conscious that hand <lb/>
la quicker than the slyly <lb/>
for that other <lb/>
article which interested the Bu- <lb/>
of <lb/>
After a careful reading of the above <lb/>
letter, isn't it delicious to find that <lb/>
the article with which it belabors <lb/>
poor Dr. Wiley doesn't say a solitary <lb/>
word about <lb/>
The Daily Reflector of May 26th <lb/>
said <lb/>
is now up to the skimmed milk <lb/>
condensers to get acquainted with Dr. <lb/>
Wiley and the Agricultural Depart- <lb/>
Did The Reflector have in <lb/>
mind the method adopted by Mr. <lb/>
study of And Their <lb/>
W. A. B. <lb/>
SEASHORE <lb/>
The ATLANTIC HOTEL, at Morehead <lb/>
offers superior attractions, <lb/>
accommodations, the. largest variety of <lb/>
and guests here enjoy the j <lb/>
most invigorating and healthful climate on <lb/>
th Coast. <lb/>
Ideal Surf Fishing in the World- <lb/>
Sate Sailing on Inland Waters or the Atlantic Ocean <lb/>
Largest Bali Room in the Hall en- <lb/>
SPLENDID CUISINE <lb/>
SOUTHERN COOKING A FEATURE <lb/>
The Summer Home for Mother and Baby-Cool <lb/>
Sea Special <lb/>
Low Rate SEASON, TEN-DAY and WEEK-END <lb/>
excursion fares via <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN R. R. <lb/>
Hotel Rates, <lb/>
Morehead City, <lb/>
Formerly Manager if White Springs. W. Va. <lb/>
V--- t <lb/>
THE HOME BOYS <lb/>
HER GAME <lb/>
SCORE, AURORA, <lb/>
Another Snappy Game With Some <lb/>
Good Features. <lb/>
In the second game between Green- <lb/>
ville and Aurora, played in the park <lb/>
here y afternoon, the home <lb/>
boys again came out winners in a <lb/>
score of to Aurora has a good <lb/>
team, and do as fine field work as <lb/>
any can show, but they are weak at <lb/>
the bat, and their being shut out <lb/>
was due mainly to inability to find <lb/>
the balls off Greenville's pitchers. <lb/>
The features of Thursday's game <lb/>
were the home run of Jordan, bring- <lb/>
in two men, the home run by <lb/>
and the superb fielding of <lb/>
for Aurora. With one foot <lb/>
on the fence he caught with one hand <lb/>
a fly that would have been a park <lb/>
ball, as pretty a catch as was -ever <lb/>
seen on any <lb/>
Score by R. H. E <lb/>
Greenville G <lb/>
Aurora <lb/>
Greenville, and <lb/>
Riddick; Aurora, Holiday and <lb/>
son. <lb/>
by base on <lb/>
balls by Holiday base <lb/>
on balls <lb/>
Mr. Franks. <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad <lb/>
SCHEDULES <lb/>
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green- <lb/>
ville and Kinston. Effective May 16th, 1911. <lb/>
Norfolk Ar. <lb/>
Hobgood <lb/>
Hobgood Ar. <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
Williamston <lb/>
Plymouth <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
SEES END OF TROLLEY CARS. <lb/>
For further information, address nearest ticket <lb/>
agent or W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent Green- <lb/>
ville, N. C. <lb/>
W. J CRAIG, P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A. <lb/>
WILMINGTON, N. C.<lb/>
Tells National Electrical Association <lb/>
Of His Latest Invention. <lb/>
Thomas A. Edison was the guest <lb/>
of honor yesterday, the third day <lb/>
of the convention of the National El- <lb/>
Light Association. Mr. Edi- <lb/>
son bowed his thanks and Mr. Samuel <lb/>
read a set speech for him. After- <lb/>
ward the inventor said he was ready <lb/>
with the inventions of which he had <lb/>
spoken storage battery <lb/>
that will run a car or wagon and the <lb/>
motion picture machine with the <lb/>
words spoken as the action proceeds. <lb/>
storage battery for a wag- <lb/>
said he, operating on a butch- <lb/>
wagon in Orange. It costs <lb/>
cents to run it miles. You recharge <lb/>
it at the end of every trip with an or- <lb/>
feed wire. The battery is fit- <lb/>
under the seat. <lb/>
surface car is being <lb/>
at Concord, N. C, and they are <lb/>
laughing at the rest of the United <lb/>
States for using trolley cars. , It <lb/>
Buying Patent Rights. <lb/>
We advise our readers not to buy- <lb/>
patent rights. There is some hum- <lb/>
buggery connected with ninety-nine <lb/>
of every hundred of them and in <lb/>
ninety-nine cases out of a hundred <lb/>
the buyer either cannot or will not <lb/>
work profitably the hundredth right. <lb/>
So there is hardly a possibility of <lb/>
success with them. We have known <lb/>
hundreds who bought patent rights. <lb/>
but do not know a single case where <lb/>
was made. If there is such <lb/>
big money in them it looks like <lb/>
some purchaser would succeed with <lb/>
his right. We are glad to note that <lb/>
people do not buy patent rights so <lb/>
readily as they did years ago. We <lb/>
have known people to buy farm <lb/>
rights and some have even mortgaged <lb/>
their lands to buy state rights. What <lb/>
is a patent right It is just a <lb/>
to sell some new thing. Some- <lb/>
times it is a patent fence, or a <lb/>
churn or a quilter or a knitting ma-j <lb/>
chine or a combination tool. Al <lb/>
kinds of patent rights have been sold. <lb/>
There is no telling what kind of thing <lb/>
some fellow will come around with. <lb/>
We are not writing against agents. <lb/>
They have put many valuable articles <lb/>
in the homes of the people. If you <lb/>
want and are sure it is all right, then <lb/>
buy it but do not buy the privilege of <lb/>
something. We once heard <lb/>
of a man who sold a farm near a <lb/>
town for the privilege of selling <lb/>
tombstones in a certain county, when <lb/>
In fact as an American citizen he was <lb/>
born with the right to sell tombstones <lb/>
in that county. When you invest <lb/>
your money be sure you are getting <lb/>
something for it. Most men who buy <lb/>
patent rights soon discover that they <lb/>
have paid out good money for a for- <lb/>
tune which will never come. Have <lb/>
you bought a patent right Then you <lb/>
have been humbugged and the best <lb/>
thing to do is to go along at your <lb/>
regular work and think and say as <lb/>
little about it as possible. If you have <lb/>
been humbugged do not try to hum- <lb/>
bug others. Just remember that you <lb/>
have met a shrewd for you <lb/>
one. who has fleeced field <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
when a bill is paid, it is paid for good. You <lb/>
have your receipt, one that is easy to keep, easy <lb/>
to find any time, and that you can always verify at <lb/>
our bank. <lb/>
Not only this, but you have a check on your <lb/>
know where every cent goes, you can figure it up any time <lb/>
and know just what you make, you spend it for. <lb/>
here is no chance for a mistake in making no <lb/>
danger of loss or theft in carrying the money. <lb/>
Safety, simplicity and accuracy are the notes of a <lb/>
, checking account at our bank, and these are only a few of <lb/>
the many advantages to be derived from one. <lb/>
We make no charge for the accommodation, so do not <lb/>
hesitate any longer to avail yourself of these ad- <lb/>
vantages. <lb/>
The Greenville Banking Trust Co. <lb/>
Capital Stock <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. C. S. CARR, Cashier<lb/>
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH <lb/>
THE CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb/>
Daily Service Including new Steamers <lb/>
just placed in Service the of and City <lb/>
of are the most elegant and up-to-date Steam- <lb/>
between Norfolk and Baltimore. <lb/>
Equipped with Wireless Telephone in Each Room. <lb/>
Delicious Meals on for Comfort <lb/>
Convenience. <lb/>
Steamers Norfolk <lb/>
Steamer Old Point Comfort <lb/>
Steamer Arrive Baltimore . <lb/>
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North-East <lb/>
and Reservations made and any information <lb/>
furnished by <lb/>
W. H. PARNELL, N Virginia <lb/>
very <lb/>
moving picture and talking <lb/>
machine combination, the inventor <lb/>
said he and his associates were near- <lb/>
ready to place it upon the market. <lb/>
have a in the Bronx <lb/>
with a stage bigger than the <lb/>
opera house. We have about <lb/>
actors going through new dramas. <lb/>
They talk into a megaphone. We have <lb/>
about forty dramas. All that is to be <lb/>
done is to get the business end <lb/>
straightened out and they will be <lb/>
in the moving picture shows. <lb/>
not applied it to the Shakes- <lb/>
dramas yet, but it will get there <lb/>
It will be good for every kind of <lb/>
ma. We've had tests of it and it's all <lb/>
When asked if the trolley car was <lb/>
lining to be out of he <lb/>
After awhile there won't <lb/>
be any more <lb/>
Edison said that his was the first <lb/>
electric light convention he had ever <lb/>
attended, although he invented the <lb/>
electric light in York <lb/>
American, <lb/>
Boot, of The Guards. <lb/>
Reporting the Canadian trade <lb/>
agreement with the Root amendment, <lb/>
the senate finance committee is true <lb/>
to a long record of distinguished <lb/>
service. That committee is <lb/>
the very citadel of the interests. In <lb/>
its rooms tariffs written by the trusts <lb/>
are O. jokers intended to <lb/>
wise legislation are contrived and <lb/>
amendments deadly to reform arc <lb/>
drawn and forwarded. <lb/>
Without the Bluster backing of a <lb/>
group as carefully chosen as this, <lb/>
Elihu Root's adroit amendment would <lb/>
have little notice. It is clearly enough <lb/>
the paper amendment, but the <lb/>
hopes of all the trusts hang upon it, <lb/>
for if accepted by the senate it opens <lb/>
a way to kill reciprocity and block <lb/>
progress. The senate may eliminate <lb/>
it, but that will take time, and time <lb/>
is valuable to trusts as well as to men <lb/>
who fight for life. <lb/>
Owing to circumstances not pleas- <lb/>
ant to recall, the fatal amendment s <lb/>
presented by Mr. Root and affects <lb/>
the paper traCe, whereas if there had <lb/>
been no scandal in Illinois it might <lb/>
easily have appeared In the <lb/>
of Mr. and re- <lb/>
lated only to lumber. We cannot con- <lb/>
Mr. Root upon the company <lb/>
that he but here arc some <lb/>
compensations in the fact that if <lb/>
is to be assassinated the man <lb/>
put forward to do the job cannot be <lb/>
said to owe his election senator to <lb/>
Many Horses Get Too Much Hay. <lb/>
Experience and observation have <lb/>
convinced the writer that we feed <lb/>
very much more hay to our driving <lb/>
and hard-working horses than is best <lb/>
for them, and these observations are <lb/>
theoretically, by the small <lb/>
stomach of the horse, the fact that <lb/>
he must work hard while digesting <lb/>
his feed and the experimental <lb/>
that he does not digest coarse <lb/>
feeds so well when at hard or fast <lb/>
work. On the other hand, it must <lb/>
not be inferred that the horse does <lb/>
not need a certain amount of hay or <lb/>
roughage. There is a general rule <lb/>
that the horse should have from <lb/>
to 1-2 pounds of roughage to every <lb/>
pounds of weight, daily. For <lb/>
work, there may be no objection to <lb/>
his receiving the larger 1-2 <lb/>
pounds daily for every pounds of <lb/>
bribery by the trust that will profit <lb/>
by it. <lb/>
Even if the amendment had merit <lb/>
its purpose is to prevent and not to <lb/>
perfect an agreement. Its adoption <lb/>
may mean the failure of the move- <lb/>
The disposition of the lumber <lb/>
and paper trusts on our northern <lb/>
boundary will then be re-established <lb/>
Every other trust the land will be <lb/>
confirmed in its exertions. That will <lb/>
be a trust victory, indeed, for if this <lb/>
reform comes to naught it will be the <lb/>
people and their president, and not <lb/>
a political party merely, that will be <lb/>
discredited and <lb/>
York World. <lb/>
his hays are cheaper than <lb/>
concentrates, but for the hard-work- <lb/>
horse, the smaller <lb/>
pound daily for every pounds of <lb/>
his better. We are not <lb/>
able to quote definite experimental <lb/>
evidence to support our experience <lb/>
and observation, but we feel pretty <lb/>
safe in stating that this smaller <lb/>
amount of the roughage and giving <lb/>
all of it at night feed, give bet- <lb/>
results than the roughage the <lb/>
horses will eat, or able to eat, during <lb/>
the time they are in the stable, morn- <lb/>
noon and night. With the <lb/>
or saddle-horse, especially, we <lb/>
feel morally certain this is true We <lb/>
would, therefore, advise against the <lb/>
feeding of hay in the morning or at <lb/>
noon, and only a moderate amount at <lb/>
over pounds to a horse <lb/>
weighing Butler, <lb/>
in Farmer. <lb/>
A Charming Woman <lb/>
one who is lovely in face, form, <lb/>
mind and temper. But its hard for a <lb/>
woman to be charming without health <lb/>
A weak, sickly woman will be <lb/>
and irritable. Constipation and <lb/>
kidney poisons show in pimples, <lb/>
blotches, skin eruptions and a wretch- <lb/>
ed complexion. Hut Electric Bitters <lb/>
always prove a godsend to women <lb/>
who want health, beauty and friends. <lb/>
regulate stomach, liver and kid- <lb/>
purify the blood; give strong <lb/>
nerves, bright eyes, pure breath, <lb/>
smooth, velvety skin, lovely com- <lb/>
and perfect health. Try <lb/>
them. at all druggists. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
H ii <lb/>
The Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
THE HOME and <lb/>
FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
MIX COMPANY, lac <lb/>
D. J. Editor. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Subscription, one year, <lb/>
Six months. <lb/>
rates may be had upon <lb/>
application at the business office in <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner Evans <lb/>
and Third streets. <lb/>
All cards of th inks an <lb/>
of respect will be chained for at <lb/>
sent per word. <lb/>
Communications advertising <lb/>
will be charged for at three <lb/>
per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
as second class matter <lb/>
August at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina, <lb/>
act of March 1879 <lb/>
FRIDAY, JUNE 1911. <lb/>
PRAYING FOR <lb/>
of comment on the streets during <lb/>
the last few days that in these <lb/>
ices the preacher prayed that it <lb/>
might not rain on any tobacco field <lb/>
before the 15th of June, by which <lb/>
time, without rain, he expected all <lb/>
the tobacco plants would die. The <lb/>
15th of June is nearly here, and there <lb/>
has not been any rain of consequence <lb/>
yet. <lb/>
Greenville does not <lb/>
need the and those <lb/>
who do not want to see the Sabbath <lb/>
desecrated with the carrying on of <lb/>
such business, should be equally ac- <lb/>
as are the advocates of the meas- <lb/>
-o <lb/>
LADIES SHOULD HE RESPECTED. <lb/>
Who opposes praying for rain <lb/>
Bishop of Albany, urged his <lb/>
clergy and people to pray God to <lb/>
a joyful rain upon his <lb/>
and refresh it. since it is <lb/>
dry, to the great comfort of his <lb/>
worthy servants, and to the glory <lb/>
of his And the next day it <lb/>
News and Observer. <lb/>
This reminds us of something that <lb/>
happened in Pitt county some years <lb/>
ago. It was in the midst of a severe <lb/>
drought, and at several churches the <lb/>
people assembled to pray for rain. <lb/>
In one neighborhood there were two <lb/>
churches not very far <lb/>
Baptist and Methodist. The <lb/>
Primitives gathered one day in their <lb/>
meeting house and prayed for rain. <lb/>
It did not rain that day, and they <lb/>
quite naturally accepted it as so fore- <lb/>
ordained. A day or two following <lb/>
this the Methodists met In their <lb/>
church to pray for rain. Before they <lb/>
got back home there was rain sure <lb/>
enough, a regular downpour that <lb/>
filled ditches and washed away the <lb/>
bridges. <lb/>
The following the Prim- <lb/>
preacher came to town, as he <lb/>
usually did on Saturdays when he <lb/>
had no preaching appointment. <lb/>
Bunches of folks gathered here and <lb/>
there discussing the big rain and the <lb/>
condition of crops. A friend who did <lb/>
not mind joking him said to the <lb/>
preacher, the Methodists <lb/>
seemed to beat you on praying for <lb/>
he answered, just <lb/>
look what a rain they got. They <lb/>
ways overdo everything they go <lb/>
Another thing this calls attention <lb/>
to is that there is now in Greenville <lb/>
a tent, on the lot on Fifth street be- <lb/>
tween and the <lb/>
School campus in which what are <lb/>
called preachers have been <lb/>
holding services every night tar <lb/>
last few weeks. It has been a sub- <lb/>
What has become of the manliness <lb/>
of the men The man who is a gen- <lb/>
in all that term implies will <lb/>
lot be unmindful of the feelings of <lb/>
ladies, nor will he do anything that <lb/>
will cause them embarrassment One <lb/>
thing going on in Greenville that is <lb/>
occasioning much complaint, and <lb/>
should be stopped at once, is the con- <lb/>
of men at Five Points, es- <lb/>
on Sundays, to watch the la- <lb/>
dies of the Training School as they <lb/>
pass going to and from church. It is <lb/>
really like the ladies were having to <lb/>
run the gauntlet of inspection, and <lb/>
not a few of them have stayed away <lb/>
from church on Sundays and remain- <lb/>
ed in the dormitories at the school <lb/>
rather than face such embarrass- <lb/>
The men thus congregating <lb/>
and watching the ladies pass may be <lb/>
more due to thoughtlessness than the <lb/>
intention of being disrespectful. The <lb/>
ladies are entitled to every respect <lb/>
and courtesy, and these should be <lb/>
accorded them, but it is neither res- <lb/>
nor courteous to congregate <lb/>
on the street to watch them when they <lb/>
pass. The real gentleman stands <lb/>
ready at all times to both respect and <lb/>
protect an unprotected lady, and the <lb/>
ladies at the Training School being <lb/>
without the protection for the time be- <lb/>
of their fathers and brothers, <lb/>
makes it more upon the <lb/>
men of Greenville to accord this. We <lb/>
believe this mention of the matter <lb/>
will sufficient to remove the cause <lb/>
for complaint. <lb/>
Every time in recent years that <lb/>
there has been a change in the board <lb/>
of aldermen of Greenville, there have <lb/>
been renewed efforts to get repealed <lb/>
the ordinance relative to business on <lb/>
Sabbath and permit places sell- <lb/>
cold drinks, cigars, etc., to have <lb/>
In view of the be- <lb/>
ginning of a new fiscal year on the <lb/>
first of July, when several new <lb/>
will be on the board, those <lb/>
wanting the change have already be- <lb/>
gun an active campaign for the <lb/>
Mrs. Carrie Nation, who made much <lb/>
reputation as a and <lb/>
had quite an eventful career died <lb/>
Friday night in Kans. <lb/>
She was as known as any <lb/>
man in the country, though her <lb/>
was not the kind that most <lb/>
women would envy. <lb/>
Talk about a mixed up affair, or one <lb/>
that is likely to get mixed in the long <lb/>
run, a double marriage that took place <lb/>
in Austin, Texas, Sunday, is it. The <lb/>
brides were twin sisters, of Texas, <lb/>
and so much alike that their most in- <lb/>
friends cannot tell them apart, <lb/>
while the grooms are twin <lb/>
of Missouri, and as much <lb/>
alike as two peas. At the marriage <lb/>
the brothers were dressed exactly <lb/>
alike, as were the sisters, and the <lb/>
only way the latter could be <lb/>
was by carrying different <lb/>
colored bouquets. As the brothers <lb/>
had only known the sisters about a <lb/>
year, if the two couples live near to- <lb/>
they may get so mixed up as to <lb/>
be unable to tell from <lb/>
A Boston school who has <lb/>
followed the profession of teaching <lb/>
for forty-nine years, and in all those <lb/>
years never landed a man, may <lb/>
be that she did not want in de- <lb/>
livering an address to young women <lb/>
school teachers said that flirting <lb/>
do much to rest a tired mind after <lb/>
the arduous duties of the school <lb/>
Yes, and it sometimes brings <lb/>
about a state of affairs in which there <lb/>
is no rest at all. <lb/>
You do not have to look far to see <lb/>
that great changes have taken place <lb/>
in Greenville and in Pitt county in <lb/>
the last few years. While progress <lb/>
has been made morally, socially, ed- <lb/>
and commercially, <lb/>
cultural has kept even with it, <lb/>
and farms and country homes have <lb/>
shown wonderful improvements. And <lb/>
all this is but the beginning of an <lb/>
era of progress which the next few <lb/>
years will show. Just keep your eye <lb/>
on Pitt county. <lb/>
The Charlotte News talks like it <lb/>
wished Editor Caine had smuggled <lb/>
some of that Asheville booze and took <lb/>
it over to the press convention at <lb/>
Lenoir. Why, he couldn't have got <lb/>
one of the boys to touch it. Every <lb/>
one of them would call for butter <lb/>
milk. <lb/>
.-o- <lb/>
China is demanding six millions <lb/>
dollars in gold from Mexico as in- <lb/>
for the slaughter of about <lb/>
three hundred Chinese subjects in <lb/>
that country and the destruction of <lb/>
their property. <lb/>
This is a time when it is best to <lb/>
be careful about what you eat or <lb/>
drink. The warm weather and <lb/>
proper food make a combination <lb/>
dangerous to health. <lb/>
In Georgia experiments are in <lb/>
on a cotton plant. The <lb/>
idea is to develop a cotton plant that <lb/>
is and bearing bolls filled with <lb/>
large seed which will be much richer <lb/>
in oil than the regular plant. <lb/>
We are not kicking about base ball <lb/>
enthusiasm, but just suppose the <lb/>
were as enthusiastic for securing <lb/>
manufacturing enterprises. There <lb/>
would be something doing. <lb/>
Four thousand bottles of liquor, re- <lb/>
captured in blind tigers, were <lb/>
emptied into the French Broad river <lb/>
at Asheville on Wednesday. Guess the <lb/>
fish all had a spree. <lb/>
is going to reap a big <lb/>
harvest off the Americans at the <lb/>
coronation. and and J. <lb/>
Johnson will not be the only <lb/>
there. <lb/>
Do not be boastful over the man <lb/>
who appears to be beneath you today. <lb/>
He may be above you tomorrow. <lb/>
come often in life. <lb/>
In a horse hitched to a <lb/>
brewery wagon bit off the ear of a <lb/>
man who was standing near on the <lb/>
street. Another case charged up to <lb/>
near-beer. <lb/>
With all Central America about to <lb/>
become involved in a revolution, there <lb/>
seems to be little prospect of peace <lb/>
and rest in the countries south of <lb/>
us. <lb/>
The weather makes one feel like <lb/>
packing his grip and going where it <lb/>
is cooler. But with most of us, it is <lb/>
too far to walk. <lb/>
The last few days have been cool <lb/>
enough and with sufficient breeze to <lb/>
make Greenville as delightful as the <lb/>
seashore. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
They used to call Colonel Bryan <lb/>
the but the Wash- <lb/>
Post has changed it to <lb/>
less <lb/>
It is rather premature to call a man <lb/>
the next president, when it is not <lb/>
even known that he will get the <lb/>
nomination. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
Even if you should like knocking <lb/>
better than boosting; people will not <lb/>
think so much of you doing it. <lb/>
The way not to have a dead town <lb/>
is to continue bringing something <lb/>
alive to it. <lb/>
Possibly the earthquake down in <lb/>
Mexico may help some to stop the <lb/>
disturbance. <lb/>
It has to be done, whether you <lb/>
want to or not. So go on and list <lb/>
your taxes. <lb/>
They are about to go to the Root <lb/>
of it in the argument over the <lb/>
matter. <lb/>
It takes all kind of people to make <lb/>
a town, yet every town has some <lb/>
that are no good to it. <lb/>
m . . <lb/>
The fly is ever present, but his room <lb/>
preferable to his company. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
They had Senator going <lb/>
to resign some weeks ago, but he <lb/>
holds right on. <lb/>
There are other people who might <lb/>
learn the lesson from Mr. Bryan of <lb/>
sticking to his job. <lb/>
J. P. and Jack J. are both there <lb/>
for the coronation. <lb/>
Also and <lb/>
The ice man is one you do not hear <lb/>
complaining about the weather be-v <lb/>
warm. <lb/>
Give us a red head every time In <lb/>
preference to being bald with so <lb/>
many flies around. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
The mountains must yet be full of <lb/>
liquor, if we can judge from the way <lb/>
they have been finding it in Ashe- <lb/>
ville and Hendersonville. <lb/>
A million dollars endowment for <lb/>
Trinity College sounds good. We <lb/>
hope it will be a certainty, and that <lb/>
con. <lb/>
terminal just opened in Chicago. How <lb/>
to get there to look at it is the ob- <lb/>
in the way. <lb/>
Mr. Roosevelt now says they told <lb/>
it on him too quick, as he has not <lb/>
pledged himself to support Mr. Taft <lb/>
nor any one else for the next <lb/>
nomination. Oh, well, if any- <lb/>
body has lied, he should remember <lb/>
that he once headed the list of the <lb/>
Club. <lb/>
If The Greenville Reflector is to be <lb/>
believed that newly launched Pitt <lb/>
county fair should be a wonder when <lb/>
it reaches maturity next fall. Won- <lb/>
of the Training School girls will <lb/>
add to the ornamentation of the <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Yes, they will be right there, and <lb/>
worth coming miles to see. You need <lb/>
not put any on about believing <lb/>
us. <lb/>
time in local affairs to put the <lb/>
re- <lb/>
The Henderson Gold Leaf is <lb/>
for the <lb/>
you ever observed how lit- <lb/>
talent and standing it takes to be <lb/>
a first class You will find <lb/>
that in about nine cases out of every <lb/>
ten the fellow who has accomplished <lb/>
little for himself and done less for <lb/>
the community in which he lives is <lb/>
the one who wants to every- <lb/>
body and every thing. When you <lb/>
find that you are just bound to give <lb/>
vent to your pent up feeling by do- <lb/>
some get you some <lb/>
sort of an implement and go to the <lb/>
field and knock <lb/>
make but natural the slight over- <lb/>
sight complained of, Noah, did his <lb/>
duty as commanded, and he was or- <lb/>
to preserve rather than destroy. <lb/>
If the present generation is equally <lb/>
well there would not be a fly left to <lb/>
tell the story in a fortnight. It is <lb/>
useless to attempt to burden down <lb/>
the shades of the departed <lb/>
for sins of omission of the pres- <lb/>
News. <lb/>
If a man is really opposed to good <lb/>
roads, he ought to think a long lime <lb/>
before letting anybody else know he <lb/>
is in such a back-number class. <lb/>
If some of the Americans who have <lb/>
gone over to the coronation could be <lb/>
kept there, this country would not <lb/>
lose anything worth speaking of. <lb/>
When the senators are elected by <lb/>
the direct vote of the people, they <lb/>
will be more careful how they vote <lb/>
on matters affecting the interests of <lb/>
the people. <lb/>
A New Jersey shoemaker fell heir <lb/>
to a quarter million dollars, and <lb/>
forthwith dropped his last and awl. <lb/>
Possibly his first investment will be <lb/>
in an automobile. <lb/>
It is all fixed now so far as the <lb/>
Republican nomination for president <lb/>
is concerned, ex-President Roosevelt <lb/>
having announced that he will give <lb/>
his unqualified endorsement to <lb/>
dent Taft for re-nomination in 1912. <lb/>
What the colonel says goes. <lb/>
Indiana must also have some medal <lb/>
seeking reporters. An item comes <lb/>
from a town in that state which says <lb/>
that during a storm a church, filled <lb/>
with was struck by <lb/>
lightning and a prayer book held by <lb/>
a woman was burned out of her <lb/>
hand. <lb/>
It was very kind of the Chicago <lb/>
North Western to send us <lb/>
a ticket cf admission, with the <lb/>
vices of a guide promised, to make <lb/>
an Inspection of its new passenger <lb/>
Those towns that want to swing <lb/>
around to Sundays and let <lb/>
certain lines of business be done on <lb/>
the Sabbath as on other days, ought <lb/>
to take a day off and memorize the <lb/>
Fourth Commandment. Some <lb/>
men want to do business on <lb/>
Sunday, but doth it profit a <lb/>
man if he shall gain the whole world <lb/>
and lose his own The sight <lb/>
of a dollar makes some people for- <lb/>
get that God yet rules the universe. <lb/>
That awful tragedy in Tarboro, <lb/>
Wednesday, shows that men in <lb/>
of trust where the handling of <lb/>
money belonging to other people is <lb/>
involved, cannot filch this money and <lb/>
apply it to their own use without <lb/>
their misdoings being discovered <lb/>
sooner or later. When men do such <lb/>
deeds they not only waste their own <lb/>
lives, leading to <lb/>
as with one of the parties in this <lb/>
case, but they also bring misery and <lb/>
suffering upon others. Oh. that men <lb/>
would think of these things and not <lb/>
permit themselves to be led into acts <lb/>
of dishonesty. <lb/>
Even if the is a long one, <lb/>
keep cheerful. Rain is coming after <lb/>
a while, and crops will be better than <lb/>
many anticipate. Nobody hereabouts <lb/>
is going to starve for the lack of <lb/>
something to eat. Let the farmers <lb/>
keep the grass out of their crops, and <lb/>
the business men hustle for more <lb/>
business, and the fall will find you <lb/>
all getting along as well as ever. <lb/>
Don't waste the time grumbling, but <lb/>
keep busy. <lb/>
Mayor Gaynor, of New York, paid <lb/>
a handsome tribute to the Southern- <lb/>
who attended the Cotton Seed <lb/>
convention in that city. In <lb/>
delivering the address of welcome to <lb/>
the delegates, he took occasion to <lb/>
have votes of South- <lb/>
people, who now live here. Let <lb/>
me tell you they are the best votes <lb/>
we have. They have brought with <lb/>
them the pure political sentiment of <lb/>
the South. They vote right every <lb/>
The poor man holds in his power <lb/>
that which is most important not <lb/>
only to himself but to the rich man <lb/>
for he helps himself and makes his <lb/>
more fortunate neighbor richer with- <lb/>
out increasing the burden on either <lb/>
when he votes for good roads. How <lb/>
is this It is an old tale; we have <lb/>
told it over and is by the <lb/>
increase in values caused by good <lb/>
roads. The bonds voted in every <lb/>
community for good roads have <lb/>
never cost a cent, the increase in <lb/>
valuation have more than paid <lb/>
Courier. <lb/>
Would Make a Good Governor. <lb/>
Ex-Governor Glenn has been ten- <lb/>
the editorship of a paper to be <lb/>
established in Texas and asked to <lb/>
name the salary at which he will take <lb/>
the place. Should Mr. Glenn decide <lb/>
to enter the newspaper field North <lb/>
Carolina would afford him a better <lb/>
opening than Texas. Reidsville <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
There is one man essential to the <lb/>
welfare of this or any other town. <lb/>
The average every day citizen who <lb/>
lives within his means, cares little <lb/>
for social functions or society shin- <lb/>
who pays his debts, is the man <lb/>
after all who is helping most to <lb/>
build up this and every other town. <lb/>
He is not only the kind of man who <lb/>
is making this town but he is the <lb/>
man who will keep it going. This <lb/>
fellow about whom we are talking is <lb/>
the salt of the earth. Sometimes <lb/>
he is a store keeper, a shop hand or <lb/>
day laborer, sometimes he is a pro- <lb/>
man. No matter what <lb/>
his station in life; he is always on <lb/>
the job and can be depended on. <lb/>
Asheboro Courier. <lb/>
A Turtle Years Old. <lb/>
Four hundred years ago, according <lb/>
to estimates, Indians, with their crude <lb/>
fishing devices, might have tried to <lb/>
catch a large turtle that appeared at <lb/>
times in the Bay, but it <lb/>
eluded generation after generation <lb/>
of red men, white sailors and oyster <lb/>
fishers until a few days ago, when <lb/>
it was finally captured and sent to a <lb/>
fish merchant in Homestead. It will <lb/>
make soup for persons or more. <lb/>
The turtle, weighting pounds <lb/>
and measuring nearly five feet in <lb/>
across its shell was captured <lb/>
in the river, near <lb/>
Md., and created a sensation in that <lb/>
town. According to the owner, there <lb/>
are barnacles on its shell. <lb/>
Post. <lb/>
Noah Attacked. <lb/>
The Wilmington Star invades the <lb/>
realm of forgotten years to shower <lb/>
forth anathemas upon the head of <lb/>
Noah for not killing the two flies he <lb/>
carried with him into the ark. <lb/>
There are, as the lawyers, say, ex- <lb/>
which should <lb/>
weigh with the jury in the case. In <lb/>
the first place Noah was years old <lb/>
when he took charge of the Ark, a fact <lb/>
in itself which should excuse him from <lb/>
the ignoble task of slaying insects. <lb/>
Besides, with such a cosmopolitan <lb/>
jumble of fowls, fishes and beasts on <lb/>
hand it is but natural that the very <lb/>
multiplicity of detail work should <lb/>
The School. <lb/>
We have been attracted by an <lb/>
contributed to The Carolina <lb/>
Union Farmer, by Mr. W. T. Swanson, <lb/>
describing a model school which he <lb/>
has discovered at George, on the Tar <lb/>
river, in county. It <lb/>
is called a high school and Miss Han- <lb/>
Starr is the principal. But it <lb/>
is of the work of Miss Margaret <lb/>
Brown, an assistant, that Mr. Swan- <lb/>
son chiefly talks. Miss Brown, he <lb/>
says, knows what the world, wants, <lb/>
people who can do things and <lb/>
do not mind doing them. He tells <lb/>
us that she has laid off the back <lb/>
ground of the school plot into thirty- <lb/>
six gardens, about by feet, and <lb/>
numbered them. She has left a <lb/>
narrow walk between the gardens <lb/>
for the pupils to stand and work. <lb/>
A narrow walk is laid between the <lb/>
tiers of the gardens for a passage. <lb/>
Each of the thirty-six children is <lb/>
assigned to a garden corresponding <lb/>
to his or her member on the plat <lb/>
book. Each pupil is left to choose <lb/>
such plants as desired, but the teach- <lb/>
carefully inspects all seeds <lb/>
brought. The little gardeners are <lb/>
shown how to fertilize the gardens <lb/>
with barn manure. The ground was <lb/>
previously plowed as deep as <lb/>
stances would permit. The manure <lb/>
was thoroughly mixed with the soils, <lb/>
then dug and hoed, till the surface <lb/>
was as fine and smooth as a salad <lb/>
bed. Each pupil was required to do <lb/>
his or her own work. When the <lb/>
seeds were presented she told the <lb/>
gardeners how far apart to plant the <lb/>
seed and how deep to cover them. <lb/>
She is not a boss, but a mild cheer- <lb/>
sweet director. <lb/>
Then there is David H. Brown, a <lb/>
graduate from the West Town <lb/>
cultural School of Pennsylvania, who <lb/>
has charge of the Ear Row Contest <lb/>
among the large boys. His field lies <lb/>
still to the rear of the garden de- <lb/>
The rows are laid off <lb/>
about as usual. The plat is heavily <lb/>
manured and well plowed and <lb/>
rowed. Each boy has his own row. <lb/>
All of these rows are fertilized with <lb/>
the fertilizer ingredients just alike. <lb/>
Each boy chooses his own variety of <lb/>
seed corn, and the plat is to be <lb/>
just the same all over. The <lb/>
same number of stalks are to be left <lb/>
in each row. Strict account is to <lb/>
be kept of everything, and the boy <lb/>
who gets the most, pounds of shelled <lb/>
corn takes the prize, and of course, <lb/>
his corn to be considered the best <lb/>
variety. It seems to us that through <lb/>
Mr. Swanson, The Carolina Union <lb/>
Farmer has discovered the model <lb/>
school. Charlotte Chronicle. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
IF HE BUYS <lb/>
IT WILL BUN THE SOOTH <lb/>
fAXES ABE IX HIE WEST. <lb/>
Leave The South Hake <lb/>
Johnson City, Tenn. June <lb/>
D. Roberts, of the <lb/>
city, asks all <lb/>
Southern people to Bend a copy of <lb/>
their newspaper to him and <lb/>
so to J. A. T. Bacon, <lb/>
States Information Bureau, <lb/>
Keystone Avenue, Seattle, Washing- <lb/>
ton, especially when it contains mat- <lb/>
relating to agricultural <lb/>
and development in the South, <lb/>
marking such items. Mr. Roberts <lb/>
wishes to reprint them in the <lb/>
and Mr. Bacon will <lb/>
give them out to people who want to <lb/>
know about the South. <lb/>
Ralph A. Parlier, formerly Le- <lb/>
N. C, writes from Everett, <lb/>
Washington, as <lb/>
are extremely high here, <lb/>
and if get in shape to buy a farm, <lb/>
it will be in the South. think <lb/>
Bacon, of Seattle, is exactly right <lb/>
about people making a mistake com- <lb/>
here from the South. As he says, <lb/>
the first sell you land <lb/>
at from to an acre, and then <lb/>
it costs to an acre <lb/>
to put it in shape. This country is <lb/>
suited for raising only a few things, <lb/>
such as potatoes, turnips, berries and <lb/>
garden truck. Wheat raised here is <lb/>
not used for flour, but for stock feed. <lb/>
The potatoes we have here are not <lb/>
as good as those raised in the South. <lb/>
People who buy land should buy in <lb/>
the South where everything that <lb/>
grows can be <lb/>
WILD IS CALIFORNIA. <lb/>
The Fly Season. <lb/>
At about the same period of the <lb/>
year when it becomes necessary to <lb/>
begin talking about sane Fourth of <lb/>
July celebrations, the house fly also <lb/>
comes up as unfinished business. <lb/>
The scientific has proved the <lb/>
qualities of the fly and has <lb/>
also pointed the way to exterminate <lb/>
it most effectively. To screen the <lb/>
doors and windows is good as far as <lb/>
it goes, and to kill the flies that <lb/>
in running the and <lb/>
getting into the house is also good; <lb/>
but best way is to <lb/>
Herod by killing the firstborn flies <lb/>
before they are born. Each <lb/>
fly travels only a short distance <lb/>
from the place of his birth, and the <lb/>
places that serve as hatching <lb/>
grounds few and easily deter- <lb/>
mined. Flies are hatched in piles of <lb/>
refuse and decaying organic matter, <lb/>
animal or fact, almost <lb/>
any place that is nasty and offensive <lb/>
to the senses of people of clean <lb/>
its. If you keep your premises free <lb/>
from such material, there will be no <lb/>
flies in your immediate neighborhood, <lb/>
and you may be escaping typhoid <lb/>
and summer complaints and <lb/>
ills that are in the list of the <lb/>
harmless little <lb/>
World-Herald. <lb/>
Remnant of a Tribe Has Kept Itself <lb/>
Hidden for Forty Years. <lb/>
The discovery of the remnant of a <lb/>
tribe of Indians hiding in a wild and <lb/>
unsettled portion of county by <lb/>
scientists from the University of Cal- <lb/>
has held to the keenest inter- <lb/>
est among anthropologists, and an <lb/>
fort is being made to have the gov- <lb/>
of the United States take <lb/>
charge of the remaining members. <lb/>
Prof. A. L. of the depart- <lb/>
of anthropology of the <lb/>
of California, <lb/>
there should be a tribe of en- <lb/>
wild Indians at this date in so <lb/>
thickly settled a state as California <lb/>
seems absolutely incredible. <lb/>
When the first rumor of the <lb/>
tamed aborigines in county <lb/>
reached the University of California, <lb/>
it was known at once who the Indians <lb/>
must be if they existed at all, for the <lb/>
so-called or Mill Creek tribe <lb/>
of this region had long been regarded <lb/>
as one of the smallest and at the same <lb/>
time most unique tribes in California. <lb/>
But as this band was last seen in <lb/>
1870, the possibility of their having <lb/>
been able to keep themselves entirely <lb/>
hidden for forty years was remote. <lb/>
expedition headed by T. T. <lb/>
Waterman, an instructor in the de- <lb/>
of anthropology was out a <lb/>
month and whole after the most <lb/>
kind of work and most vigilant <lb/>
care they were unable to meet any of <lb/>
the Indians in person they brought <lb/>
back evidence which indisputably <lb/>
proves their existence. <lb/>
tract which they inhabit is <lb/>
only a few miles square and an easy <lb/>
day's journey from Vina on the Shasta <lb/>
route of the Southern Pacific rail- <lb/>
road. It is without question the <lb/>
roughest and most impenetrable <lb/>
stretch of country in California. The <lb/>
Indians know every inch of this <lb/>
As soon as one of their trails <lb/>
becomes worn they abandon it for <lb/>
less visible paths. The trails go <lb/>
brush instead of through it, so <lb/>
that the Indians do most of their <lb/>
traveling on hands and knees. This <lb/>
prevents the stock which occasionally <lb/>
strays into the region from following <lb/>
the trails and beating them out. <lb/>
limbs have to be removed the <lb/>
Indians cut them with old saws or <lb/>
knives that they have stolen from <lb/>
neighboring ranchers, so as to avoid <lb/>
the sound of chopping with an ax, <lb/>
which might lead to their being lo- <lb/>
the country which they inhabit <lb/>
is absolutely useless even to cattle It <lb/>
is practically never entered. The few <lb/>
ranchers that cross the country prefer <lb/>
to travel around the tract instead <lb/>
of through Francisco <lb/>
THE SUNDAY <lb/>
WILL BE DISCUSSED <lb/>
AT THE PRATER LEAGUE-<lb/>
LAW OF COTTON DRAFTS. <lb/>
SEE J. H. k J. MOTE FOR LA. <lb/>
muslin under- <lb/>
wear; best grades at lowest prices <lb/>
B, , <lb/>
The reason a girl can dance all night <lb/>
without getting tired is she couldn't <lb/>
handle a broom for ten minutes with- <lb/>
out breaking down. <lb/>
The Aldermen Especially Invited to <lb/>
be Present Sunday. <lb/>
The Men's Prayer League has <lb/>
now for about seven months been <lb/>
holding meetings each Sunday after- <lb/>
noon, and the good it has done the <lb/>
men who attend, and through them <lb/>
the community, has been very <lb/>
Subjects are announced a <lb/>
week in advance and three leaders <lb/>
appointed to open the discussion on <lb/>
it, others present having the <lb/>
to speak as they desire. Those <lb/>
who have attended the meetings have <lb/>
been impressed with the subjects and <lb/>
character of these discussions, as <lb/>
they have been of such trend as to in- <lb/>
spire and uplift men to a higher life, <lb/>
making them better Christians and <lb/>
better citizens. <lb/>
Quite naturally the members of the <lb/>
league are interested in matters that <lb/>
affect the moral well being of the <lb/>
community, and as just now the <lb/>
town is threatened with what is call- <lb/>
ed the Sunday the effort be- <lb/>
made to get the aldermen to per- <lb/>
places selling cold drinks, cigars, <lb/>
etc., to keep open on Sundays and <lb/>
carry on their business then as on <lb/>
other days. So the subject selected <lb/>
for discussion at the league meeting <lb/>
next Sunday is, the Open Sunday <lb/>
in Keeping With God's The <lb/>
text is Exodus with the fol- <lb/>
lowing references also given for read- <lb/>
on the Exodus <lb/>
and Ezekiel and <lb/>
Matthew John and James <lb/>
The leaders appointed for this dis- <lb/>
are Prof. H. E. Austin, Dr. J. <lb/>
W. Bryan and Mayor F. M. <lb/>
and many others are expected to take <lb/>
part In it. The meeting will be held <lb/>
in the Christian church at <lb/>
o'clock p. m., and all men of the town <lb/>
are invited to be present, with special <lb/>
invitations to the aldermen of both <lb/>
the present and incoming boards, the <lb/>
ministers, classes, Sunday <lb/>
school officers and official members <lb/>
of the churches. It is intended that <lb/>
the meeting shall the sentiment <lb/>
of Greenville on this question. <lb/>
There was a very good meeting of <lb/>
the league the past Sunday after- <lb/>
noon in the Presbyterian church when <lb/>
the subject was Treasure <lb/>
The leaders, Messrs. W. J. <lb/>
Brown, B. S. Warren and B. W. <lb/>
Moseley, gave splendid talks, as did <lb/>
also some others who followed them. <lb/>
Be sure that you read up on the <lb/>
text and references for next Sunday, <lb/>
and attend the meeting in the Chris- <lb/>
church. <lb/>
Suits Will be Brought Against <lb/>
for Recovery of Million Dollars. <lb/>
Pending litigation for the recovery <lb/>
of money lost as a result of <lb/>
lent cotton bills of lading is being <lb/>
watched with much interest by the <lb/>
Federal Judge Noyes overruling the <lb/>
demurrer in the case of Anthony . <lb/>
Hanny against the Guaranty Tr; <lb/>
Company has alarmed some of <lb/>
foreign exchange men; while the <lb/>
by the appellate division <lb/>
the lower court's decision in <lb/>
suit against the Hanover <lb/>
Bank, holding the bank <lb/>
liable, has had the effect of <lb/>
bankers feel that there is little ch <lb/>
of their being compelled to n <lb/>
good the losses sustained by the <lb/>
of the drafts accompanied <lb/>
the spurious bills of lading. As <lb/>
matter of fact, the banks do <lb/>
know exactly where they stand, a. <lb/>
in the event that Judge r <lb/>
is sustained by the higher <lb/>
it is expected that they will <lb/>
obliged make drafts <lb/>
several millions of <lb/>
Both the Springs suit and the Hi <lb/>
nay suit were test cases, the fort <lb/>
having been brought in the <lb/>
court and the latter in the Fed <lb/>
court. Inasmuch as the <lb/>
the appellate division in the <lb/>
suit was unanimous, an appeal c <lb/>
not be taken unless permission s <lb/>
granted. Should it be refused, <lb/>
decision rendered last Friday t <lb/>
stand as the law of New York st <lb/>
The draft in this case was a l <lb/>
and it made no reference <lb/>
the bills of lading; and the <lb/>
held that Springs Co. <lb/>
it, they became obliged <lb/>
pay according to the <lb/>
New York Journal of Commerce. <lb/>
TO SEW YORK <lb/>
And Return By The Atlantic Coast <lb/>
Line. <lb/>
On Thursday, June 15th, the Atlantic <lb/>
Coast Line will sell round trip tick- <lb/>
from Greenville to New York and <lb/>
return, either via all rail, through <lb/>
Richmond and Washington, or via <lb/>
Norfolk and Old Dominion S. S. Co., <lb/>
for limited to return June <lb/>
Rate for children between the <lb/>
ages of five and twelve years will be <lb/>
For Pullman and steamship <lb/>
accommodations, call on W. H. Ward, <lb/>
ticket agent, or T. C. White, general <lb/>
passenger agent, Wilmington, N. C, <lb/>
or W. J. Craig, traffic man- <lb/>
ager, Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
Let Them Talk. <lb/>
Some folks are kicking because <lb/>
Woodrow Wilson is going around the <lb/>
country making speeches. Gracious <lb/>
If the man would sit down and keep <lb/>
a still tongue we'd never know what's <lb/>
in him. The country wants to know <lb/>
right now what all the presidential <lb/>
timber stands for, and, if the gentle- <lb/>
men can afford to talk, it's for the <lb/>
people to listen and them up by <lb/>
what hey say. That's the way we <lb/>
found out a whole lot of things on <lb/>
Col. Bryan, Col. Roosevelt, Judge <lb/>
Taft and Captain <lb/>
ton Star. <lb/>
Why Dread Typhoid I <lb/>
Secretary Stimson has set a <lb/>
example to the army by having h <lb/>
self vaccinated against typhoid <lb/>
All the officers and men of the p <lb/>
maneuver camps have been <lb/>
with the result that an <lb/>
them typhoid the dreaded dis. <lb/>
of entirely abs <lb/>
It is sad to think how th.,. <lb/>
sands of sick American soldiers and <lb/>
how many hundreds of deaths <lb/>
have been saved if this new <lb/>
had been available at the t <lb/>
of the Spanish war. A <lb/>
proportion of the army is now <lb/>
against typhoid, and the t <lb/>
general has recommended <lb/>
vaccination be made compulsory <lb/>
all. <lb/>
What is good for the <lb/>
health is good for the civilian's <lb/>
well. Typhoid vaccine prepared <lb/>
reliable firms under <lb/>
supervision is now on the mar. <lb/>
The three injections at about ten- <lb/>
intervals cause very slight <lb/>
some people experiencing only a <lb/>
local soreness or stiffness. Then <lb/>
no sore, no bandage or anything <lb/>
the kind beyond, in most cases, a <lb/>
or two of fever for twenty-i <lb/>
hours and the naturally <lb/>
but not incapacitating effects. <lb/>
immunity, which is not absolute <lb/>
very but absolute as <lb/>
for about th <lb/>
years. A number of Charlotte <lb/>
pie have already been <lb/>
against typhoid, and we hope t <lb/>
many others here and . <lb/>
will have their doctors <lb/>
them without <lb/>
server. <lb/>
FOR HEAVY YOKE OF <lb/>
and nearly new cart. G. T. <lb/>
Tyson. R. F. D.<lb/>
Legal Notices g L. I -CROSS TOE ST <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Letters of administration upon the <lb/>
estate cf J. J. Smith, deceased, j <lb/>
this day been issued to the under- i <lb/>
signed by the clerk of Superior court <lb/>
of Pitt county, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons holding claims against I <lb/>
said estate to present them to me j <lb/>
for payment, duly authenticated, on <lb/>
or 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/>
ENTRY OF VACANT <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
A. A. Smith enters and claims the <lb/>
following piece or of land, sit- <lb/>
in the county of Pitt, Swift Creek <lb/>
township, described at. <lb/>
Beginning at a sweet gum, near the <lb/>
run of Swift Creek, it being the <lb/>
of J. G. and J. J. <lb/>
Moore, and runs to a water <lb/>
oak, J. B. Smith's corner; thence <lb/>
southward to J. B. Smiths corner in <lb/>
the run of Swift Creek; with <lb/>
the run of Swift to the begin- <lb/>
containing eight more or <lb/>
less. <lb/>
This June 1911. <lb/>
A. A. SMITH. <lb/>
Any and all persons claim title <lb/>
to or interest in the above described <lb/>
land must tile with the protest <lb/>
in writing, within the next days, <lb/>
or they will be barred by law. <lb/>
This June 1911. <lb/>
W. M. MOORE, <lb/>
Ex-officio Entry Taker.<lb/>
SCHEDULE <lb/>
leave effective Jan- <lb/>
g, <lb/>
YEAR HOUND <lb/>
a. Atlanta, Birmingham <lb/>
Memphis and points West, <lb/>
and Florida points, <lb/>
at Hamlet for Charlotte and <lb/>
Wilmington. <lb/>
SEABOARD MAIL. No. <lb/>
wit i coaches and parlor car. Con- <lb/>
with steamer for Washing- <lb/>
. Baltimore, New York, Boston <lb/>
FAST MAIL--No. <lb/>
m. For Richmond, Wash-; <lb/>
g. in York Pullman <lb/>
J coaches and dining car. <lb/>
pi u at Richmond with C. <lb/>
and points West. <lb/>
. . with Pennsylvania <lb/>
. and for <lb/>
i. . I <lb/>
MAIL No. <lb/>
i. n. Atlanta, Charlotte, <lb/>
Memphis, <lb/>
i West Parlor cars to<lb/>
kM <lb/>
Start <lb/>
IT NOW <lb/>
War <lb/>
-4 <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having this day been appointed and <lb/>
qualified by the clerk of the Superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county, as <lb/>
tor, with the will annexed, of Flor- <lb/>
E. Home, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all persons holding <lb/>
claims against the estate of said <lb/>
Florence E. Home to present them, <lb/>
duly authenticated, to me for pay- <lb/>
on or before the 2nd day of <lb/>
June, 1912, or this will be plead <lb/>
in bar of their recovery. All per- <lb/>
sons indebted to said estate are also <lb/>
hereby notified to make immediate <lb/>
payment to me. <lb/>
This the 31st day of May, 1911. <lb/>
E. A <lb/>
Administrator, with the will annexed, <lb/>
of Florence E. Home, deceased. <lb/>
Jarvis Blow, <lb/>
ii No. for <lb/>
Oxford, and <lb/>
. No. for <lb/>
. . . and points West, Jack- <lb/>
and all Florida points. <lb/>
i sleepers. Arrive Atlanta <lb/>
. a in. <lb/>
, Arrives a. m. <lb/>
a. m. New York <lb/>
p. m. Penn. station. Pullman <lb/>
to Washington and New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
I. B. OS P. A., Portsmouth, Va. <lb/>
II. D. P. A Raleigh, X. C. <lb/>
A. D. Brown, President of Hie Hamilton-Brown Shoe St. <lb/>
and Boston, clerked when he was a hoy. He saved his money <lb/>
He bought U Interest in his old employers store. He Is now worth <lb/>
millions. Thousands of men work for him . <lb/>
Make Hank Bank. <lb/>
THE BANK OF <lb/>
J. s. MOORING <lb/>
POPULAR EXCURSION. <lb/>
To Norfolk, Va Thursday June <lb/>
via Southern <lb/>
From Goldsboro, Beaufort, New <lb/>
Bern, Washington, and intermediate <lb/>
stations, the Norfolk Southern rail- <lb/>
road will give greatly reduced rates <lb/>
to Norfolk, on Thursday June 1911. <lb/>
Following is the schedule and <lb/>
Fare.<lb/>
SALE OF PROPERTY. <lb/>
On Saturday, the 24th day of June, <lb/>
1911, at o'clock noon, before the <lb/>
court house door in Greenville, the <lb/>
undersigned will expose to public <lb/>
sale, all the property of the <lb/>
Company, consisting of chairs, tables, <lb/>
desk, bottles and extracts, together <lb/>
with the right to make, sell and man- <lb/>
This sale will be <lb/>
made for the purpose of closing out <lb/>
the business formerly con- <lb/>
ducted by the Company. <lb/>
This the 31st day of May, 1911. <lb/>
J. W. HIGGS, <lb/>
Secretary and Treasurer of the <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
By F. C. Harding,<lb/>
From Schedule. <lb/>
Goldsboro a. m. <lb/>
LaGrange 7.25 a. m. <lb/>
Kinston . a. m.<lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
i O <lb/>
I i <lb/>
C. L. but <lb/>
Life, Fire, Accident, Health, Steam Plate Glass, <lb/>
Liability, Burglary, Fidelity and Court Bonds. <lb/>
The Only Exclusive Insurance Agent in Greenville <lb/>
COMMISSIONER REPORT. <lb/>
Beaufort <lb/>
New Bern <lb/>
Vanceboro <lb/>
Farmville <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
ABOUT TELEPHONING. <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
3.50 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
3.00 <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
And a fertile imagination may pro- <lb/>
duce nothing but weeds. <lb/>
Why Stop Two People To Answer A <lb/>
Call. <lb/>
We have often wondered why <lb/>
in using the telephone do not give <lb/>
their message to the person who <lb/>
answers the call. In a large major- <lb/>
of cases this could be done <lb/>
but instead of this the <lb/>
person who answers the call is apt <lb/>
to be asked if another person is in, <lb/>
that other person has to be called <lb/>
a. in. . <lb/>
a. m. . <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
a. m. . <lb/>
a. m. ., <lb/>
. a. m. ., <lb/>
Arrive Norfolk p. m. <lb/>
Returning, special train leave <lb/>
Norfolk at a. m., June 17th, <lb/>
1911. <lb/>
R. E. PIPKIN. F. W. <lb/>
Promoter. General Agent. <lb/>
GOLDSBORO, N. C. <lb/>
W. W. <lb/>
G. P. A., Norfolk, Virginia. <lb/>
to the phone, and thus two people <lb/>
are stopped from their business to <lb/>
do what one could have done in half <lb/>
the time. This may seem <lb/>
cant to some people, but It means u <lb/>
great deal to people who are busy. <lb/>
Be considerate of the other fellow <lb/>
when you use a phone, and have in <lb/>
mind to put the person called to as <lb/>
little inconvenience as possible, just <lb/>
as you would like for others to do <lb/>
when you are the one called. <lb/>
Sums Saved to State by Salary <lb/>
System <lb/>
State Insurance Commissioner J. <lb/>
R. Young is now preparing his report <lb/>
and in it he treats of the matter <lb/>
of revenue. In his report it is shown <lb/>
that since the department was formed <lb/>
in 1899 there has been collected and <lb/>
paid into the state treasury a total <lb/>
of <lb/>
But the point in his report that is <lb/>
more striking than this, is that it is <lb/>
that great sums have been <lb/>
saved to the state by the salary sys- <lb/>
which would otherwise have gone <lb/>
to individuals by the fee system. In <lb/>
the report the astonishing statement <lb/>
is made that since under the <lb/>
fee system, there would have been <lb/>
paid out for the <lb/>
of insurance companies, or an <lb/>
average of each year. Com- <lb/>
missioner Young in his report says <lb/>
amount before the salary sys- <lb/>
supplanted the fee system, would <lb/>
have gone into the office of the sec- <lb/>
of the state and that it would <lb/>
have paid in more than the total cost <lb/>
it the department, including all <lb/>
and other expenses. <lb/>
The revenue section of the report <lb/>
to what a large amount the <lb/>
of Insurance companies <lb/>
n North Carolina has grown. In <lb/>
the receipts were <lb/>
In 1910-1911 they had been multiplied <lb/>
per showing a total of <lb/>
And without the fee system <lb/>
there would each year have gone great <lb/>
for transacting the business. <lb/>
The amount collected for the year <lb/>
prior to the organization of the de- <lb/>
was It <lb/>
is also worthy of note, as of interest <lb/>
showing one of the advantages of <lb/>
the department, that there has been <lb/>
collected and paid into the state treas- <lb/>
of the amount that would have <lb/>
under the old law gone to the <lb/>
of state as his fees or <lb/>
for supervising insurance com- <lb/>
the sum of This <lb/>
shows an average of an- <lb/>
and more than the total cost <lb/>
of the department, all <lb/>
and other <lb/>
Landmark. <lb/>
If a man has nothing to do, he Is <lb/>
always equal to the task. <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
inn i. <lb/>
Carolina Home Farm n The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
H.<lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb/>
Advertising rates furnished <lb/>
SEW DORMITORY FOR to 7th verse. <lb/>
The saw mill machinery, lumber, <lb/>
married Mr. Sylvester Garris. <lb/>
Mr. R. H. Garris, of Ayden, has <lb/>
purchased a four passenger Overland <lb/>
touring car. <lb/>
Messrs. J. R. Turnage and A. E. <lb/>
Garris returned about noon today <lb/>
with a handsome touring car for Mr. <lb/>
R. H. Garris, which is the first one <lb/>
bought in our neighborhood. <lb/>
Excursionists Return Former <lb/>
Referred to The Scriptures. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, June Odd <lb/>
Fellows officers for the ensuing term <lb/>
G. F. Cooper, X. G. <lb/>
Dr. W. H. Dixon, V. G. <lb/>
E. A. Garris, Sec. <lb/>
H. G. Burton, Fin. Sec. <lb/>
J. R. Smith, Treas. <lb/>
Forest fires are burning in the <lb/>
community of Elm Grove church. <lb/>
A protracted meeting is now in <lb/>
progress at the Methodist church. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Hocutt, of Hookerton, is <lb/>
assisting Mr. Caraway. We hope <lb/>
much good may result from this meet- <lb/>
Messrs. W. B. Alexander. Leon <lb/>
J. A. Harrington, Richard <lb/>
Wingate and Jesse Hart have all re- <lb/>
turned from Florida. They report a <lb/>
pleasant, hot and dusty trip, also that <lb/>
ham sandwiches were cents, shaves <lb/>
cents, coca-colas cents per <lb/>
glass. Mr. Wingate was taken sick <lb/>
and did not go any further than <lb/>
Jacksonville. They stopped over at <lb/>
Savannah and saw Jake and <lb/>
John L. Sullivan fight three rounds <lb/>
according to rules. <lb/>
There must be a prophet at More- <lb/>
head, Mr. W. F. Hart writes that he <lb/>
went out fishing and landed trout <lb/>
weighing pounds each. At the same <lb/>
time his lantern fell over board. He <lb/>
reported this to a fellow fisherman <lb/>
and the next day his friend was trawl- <lb/>
along and thinking he was <lb/>
a fine and upon <lb/>
found it to be the lost lantern <lb/>
Read the 6th chapter of 2nd Kings, <lb/>
log carts, etc., of Mr. W. J. Braxton, <lb/>
were burned Saturday evening and <lb/>
was a total loss. This makes the <lb/>
second time this mill plant has been <lb/>
burned recently. <lb/>
The trustees of the Baptist Semi- <lb/>
nary have let the contract to Mr. J. <lb/>
A. Griffin to build a dormitory, which <lb/>
will be up to date and contain about <lb/>
rooms. They also contemplate <lb/>
overhauling the present school build- <lb/>
making it much larger and more <lb/>
convenient. <lb/>
We claim that North Carolina <lb/>
troops were the first at Bethel, fur- <lb/>
at Gettysburg and the last to <lb/>
lay down their arms at <lb/>
This, no doubt, is true. We have re- <lb/>
a letter from Sergeant <lb/>
showing the people of Ayden and Pitt <lb/>
county what metal Robert Lester <lb/>
Jones is made of. This letter will <lb/>
speak for itself. This is the same <lb/>
young man who distinguished him- <lb/>
self a few months ago, by saving a <lb/>
town from a destructive fire. This <lb/>
young officer is the son of Mr. Monk <lb/>
Jones, who once lived near <lb/>
ton's Cross Roads. <lb/>
The game of ball with Bethel Fri- <lb/>
day was a farce, Ayden winning by the <lb/>
score of to The feature of the <lb/>
game was the home run of for <lb/>
Ayden. <lb/>
Mrs. Pennie Garris, mother of Mr. <lb/>
A. B. Garris, fell a few days ago and <lb/>
sustained injuries from which she <lb/>
died yesterday. She was buried to- <lb/>
day at Memorial church. Rev. <lb/>
E. T. Phillips conducted the <lb/>
She was a Miss Kittrell, and <lb/>
Ode To A Street Sprinkler. <lb/>
Sprinkle, sprinkle, little cart, <lb/>
How I wonder where thou art, <lb/>
When the dust is high and dry, <lb/>
Xever can I find you nigh. <lb/>
When the clouded sun is set. <lb/>
And the streets with rain are wet, <lb/>
Then you wing your little flight; <lb/>
Sprinkle, sprinkle, left and right. <lb/>
Boston Transcript. <lb/>
RIVER STAGE AND <lb/>
Figures Snowing The Condition of <lb/>
Both Here. <lb/>
Mr. R. M. Hearne, who is the gov- <lb/>
observer of the river and <lb/>
rain fall for this point, has furnish- <lb/>
ed The Reflector some interesting <lb/>
figures. <lb/>
On Monday, the water in Tar <lb/>
river stood at 2.9, the lowest level <lb/>
reached this year. <lb/>
The rainfall on the 12th was <lb/>
Between June 1st and 12th the fall <lb/>
had been making a total of only <lb/>
less than half an for <lb/>
the twelve days. During the month <lb/>
of May it was 1.50. <lb/>
The government thermometer on <lb/>
Monday registered in the shade <lb/>
on the north side of the house, the <lb/>
highest record so far this year. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. <lb/>
In the State of North Carolina, at the of business, June 1911. <lb/>
stock paid in . . <lb/>
Banking House, profits, less <lb/>
expenses and <lb/>
Demand loans <lb/>
Due from banks and subject to <lb/>
Silver coin, including <lb/>
minor coin currency <lb/>
Bank notes <lb/>
other U. S. notes . Total <lb/>
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, Stancill Hodges, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear <lb/>
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
STANCILL HODGES, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before me, <lb/>
this 10th day of June, 1911. <lb/>
D. G. BERRY, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
My commission expires February <lb/>
1911. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH, <lb/>
ELIAS TURNAGE, <lb/>
R. C. CANNON,. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
Let Us Have Your Order <lb/>
NITRATE OF SODA. PRICES ARE <lb/>
TEED. WE HAVE JUST UNLOADED TWO <lb/>
CARS OF FARM MACHINERY. TERMS TO <lb/>
SUIT THE PURCHASER.<lb/>
The Carolina Route and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
NOW IN FULL BAST <lb/>
AT <lb/>
LARGE ARRIVAL OF GUESTS. <lb/>
Seat Compliment To A North Caro- <lb/>
Girl. <lb/>
Beach, June <lb/>
the arrival of some guests who <lb/>
have made reservations at the Sea- <lb/>
shore Hotel, as well as a number of <lb/>
others who came to spend week-end <lb/>
at the beach, the realization that the <lb/>
summer season is upon us has been <lb/>
brought to our minds, and as of yore, <lb/>
the surf is dotted with bathers, while <lb/>
the Banks Channel is once more <lb/>
alive with pretty little sail boats, <lb/>
launches, etc., the whole scene being <lb/>
one of pleasure and society. <lb/>
The past week has been marked <lb/>
by many fishing and sailing parties, <lb/>
notable among these being a fishing <lb/>
party given by Judge R. B. Peebles, <lb/>
at which time several gentlemen par- <lb/>
took of his hospitality to enjoy a <lb/>
few hours on the briny deep, <lb/>
in the fine sport of deep sea fish- <lb/>
Among the guests was Mr. W. <lb/>
C. Carrington, of who <lb/>
for several seasons past has been one <lb/>
of the most, ardent sportsmen, and one <lb/>
who each year visits the Seashore <lb/>
Hotel, from time to time during the <lb/>
season. The party went out in the <lb/>
and the occasion was <lb/>
greatly enjoyed by all present. <lb/>
One of the most pleasing features <lb/>
of the music at the Seashore Hotel <lb/>
last evening was the rendition of <lb/>
Sweetest Girl in which <lb/>
catchy little song came out some <lb/>
years ago, when it was dedicated to <lb/>
Miss Pearl Fort, of Pikeville, and <lb/>
which was most beautifully rendered <lb/>
by Miss Tully, one of the members <lb/>
of the orchestra at the Seashore. <lb/>
Miss Tully sang this song in <lb/>
to Col. W. B. Fort, of- Pikeville, <lb/>
who is well and favorably known <lb/>
throughout this state, and who is a <lb/>
most welcome guest at the Seashore <lb/>
Hotel. Miss Fort is the attractive <lb/>
daughter of Col. Fort, and the little <lb/>
compliment was greatly appreciated <lb/>
by him, while the splendid music <lb/>
furnished by the orchestra was much <lb/>
enjoyed by all who were present. <lb/>
A large crowd of <lb/>
as well as practically all of the guests <lb/>
on the beach attended the beautiful <lb/>
week-end dance at on <lb/>
day evening, when <lb/>
did orchestra furnished most <lb/>
site dance music, and all things <lb/>
tended to make this one of the most <lb/>
delightful dances of the early sum- <lb/>
mer season. <lb/>
Wrightsville Beach, June <lb/>
of the most delightful dances in the <lb/>
history of took on <lb/>
Monday when the Tidewater <lb/>
Power Co. entertained in honor of <lb/>
the little folks, they being given the <lb/>
exclusive use of the ball room, until <lb/>
nine o'clock, when the grand march <lb/>
was formed, and attractive souvenirs <lb/>
were presented to the children, these <lb/>
being little sail boats, full rigged, and <lb/>
It is unnecessary to say that the <lb/>
children were greatly pleased. <lb/>
Another delightful dance took place <lb/>
at on Tuesday evening, when <lb/>
the grown folks were also given a <lb/>
souvenir dance by the Tidewater Co., <lb/>
at which time many guests from the <lb/>
city, as well as the visitors and <lb/>
dents of the beach availed themselves <lb/>
of the opportunity to spend a delight- <lb/>
evening at this splendid resort. <lb/>
One the most successful and at <lb/>
the same time one of the most enjoy- <lb/>
able fishing parties of the season <lb/>
was given on Monday, when a party <lb/>
of gentlemen, guests of the Seashore <lb/>
Hotel, went out in the sharpie <lb/>
to the Five Mile Rocks, <lb/>
where several hours were spent in <lb/>
deep sea fishing. Those in the party <lb/>
were as Mr. E. Reeves, of <lb/>
New York; Mr. W. C. Carrington, of <lb/>
S. C; Mr. M. F. <lb/>
of Concord, and several others. Be- <lb/>
tween and members of the <lb/>
finny tribe were lauded, and the fish- <lb/>
are enthusiastic over the <lb/>
of their trip. <lb/>
Residents of the beach are glad to <lb/>
learn that a large number of <lb/>
will visit here on June 28th, <lb/>
when an excursion will be run from <lb/>
Atlanta, in two sections, one solid <lb/>
section of sleepers and one of coach- <lb/>
es. The trip will be for a ten-day <lb/>
visit to Wrightsville, and it is es- <lb/>
that there will be between <lb/>
1200 and 1500 Georgians who will take <lb/>
advantage of this splendid <lb/>
to visit Wrightsville Beach. <lb/>
Mr. S. S. Lanier, of Birmingham, <lb/>
Ala., entertained about guests in <lb/>
the private dining room of the Sea- <lb/>
shore Hotel, at a very delightful din- <lb/>
a few days ago, given <lb/>
to the representatives of <lb/>
the various coal companies register- <lb/>
ed at this popular These <lb/>
gentlemen are here trying to secure <lb/>
the contracts for coal for the A. C. <lb/>
R. Railroad Company. The dinner <lb/>
was greatly enjoyed by all present, <lb/>
and is but one of the many pleasant <lb/>
social functions which will be given <lb/>
at Wrightsville Beach, from time to <lb/>
time, throughout the season. <lb/>
GALLOWAY'S X ROADS <lb/>
The Happenings Down in <lb/>
Township. <lb/>
Galloway's X Roads, June <lb/>
Mr. Caraway filled his regular <lb/>
at Salem Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
The farmers say their crops are <lb/>
suffering much for the need of rain, <lb/>
especially tobacco. <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Galloway made a trip over <lb/>
to Hookerton Friday. He also attend- <lb/>
ed the meeting of the Union <lb/>
Saturday at Farmville. <lb/>
Mr. Charlie Elks, one of our old <lb/>
home boys, who has been at work in <lb/>
South Carolina, returned last week. <lb/>
We are glad to have him with us again <lb/>
Mr. M. C. Tyson is all <lb/>
a boy. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hudson and <lb/>
daughter, Miss Maggie, attended <lb/>
church at Red Banks Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. G. S. Porter went to Greenville <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Mr. H. H. Porter was all smiles <lb/>
today. He was driving his new bug- <lb/>
Mr. G. S. Porter says his screen <lb/>
doors are proving to be right much <lb/>
benefit to his soda fountain. <lb/>
Messrs. Mason Edwards and <lb/>
Cannon say they like to work in a <lb/>
store as long as they have the pleas- <lb/>
of waiting on so many pretty <lb/>
girls. <lb/>
Favorite Songs. <lb/>
Mr. Than <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
Mr. and Over <lb/>
Mr. Your Sins <lb/>
Be As <lb/>
Mr. for a Thous- <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mr. The Sweet By and <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
Gen. A. F. Haw of Washing- <lb/>
ton, D. C, have <lb/>
and find It very beneficial <lb/>
for kidney trouble, and especially <lb/>
good for <lb/>
coughs, colds <lb/>
and catarrh <lb/>
Gen. A. f. <lb/>
Hawley. <lb/>
Kidney Trouble for Nearly Thirty Years. <lb/>
William Bailey, Past Col. Enc. No. Union Veteran Legion, and prom <lb/>
identified with many of great labor protective associations in <lb/>
Chicago and New York, and secretary of one of the largest associations <lb/>
in the former city, had for nearly thirty years been with kidney <lb/>
troubles. <lb/>
Within a short period ho has been persuaded to try and his <lb/>
present healthy condition is attributed to his judicious use of that great <lb/>
remedy. Washington climate is notoriously bad for kidney and liver <lb/>
troubles, yet by a judicious use of the remedy ho is now quite cured and in <lb/>
excellent physical condition. <lb/>
This brief statement of facts, without exaggeration or hyperbole, appears <lb/>
to toll the whole story, which the Company is authorized to use, if <lb/>
it so chooses, believing, as I do, that by so doing it will for the general <lb/>
good. William Bailey, I St., N. E., Washington, D. <lb/>
Kidneys Weak. <lb/>
Mr. M. Broderick, Secretary and <lb/>
Treasurer Local Union No. Inter- <lb/>
national Brotherhood of Teamsters, <lb/>
writes from E. 46th St., Chicago, HI., <lb/>
as <lb/>
have been suffering from a weak <lb/>
back and kidney trouble for some time, <lb/>
and have been able to find relief only <lb/>
through the use of <lb/>
the season I usually <lb/>
keep a bottle of your medicine in the <lb/>
house, and by taking a at night I <lb/>
am feeling the next morning. <lb/>
of my friends assure mo that <lb/>
is equally as good for var- <lb/>
ailments as it is for my complaint; <lb/>
but I do know that for kidney trouble <lb/>
and suffering from a weak back it has <lb/>
no <lb/>
Cold Settled in Kidneys. <lb/>
Mr. Joseph East 4th St., <lb/>
Topeka, Em., <lb/>
My wife took for liver trouble <lb/>
and a run-down condition incident to <lb/>
the same. A few bottles built up her <lb/>
health and strength. <lb/>
took for a cold which set- <lb/>
in my kidneys, giving me much <lb/>
pain. In two weeks I was much better, <lb/>
and in a few months I was <lb/>
For Liver and Kid <lb/>
Mr. W. H. Armistead, Cumberland, <lb/>
C. II., Va., <lb/>
has cured m of chronic <lb/>
catarrh of long standing. I thank you <lb/>
much for your advice. I think it is <lb/>
a great medicine. It will do ail that <lb/>
you recommend it to do. Besides, I can <lb/>
recommend it to all liver kid- <lb/>
Chronic Kidney Trouble, <lb/>
Judge O. J. Park, It. F. D. <lb/>
Ga., <lb/>
For a long time I was troubled with <lb/>
catarrh of the kidneys, and after taking <lb/>
I feel like a new man. I think <lb/>
it the greatest catarrh medicine of the <lb/>
and believe it will any case of <lb/>
catarrh on <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
Crops, Items Personal <lb/>
Notes <lb/>
N. C, June L. <lb/>
B. Stokes went to Ayden Friday morn- <lb/>
It is down this way. <lb/>
Tobacco is small and a poor stand, <lb/>
dome cotton is nice, while some is <lb/>
not up to chop. <lb/>
Mr. John D. Stokes, who has been <lb/>
quite sicK, is able to be out again, <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Stokes spent <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday with relatives <lb/>
down in Craven. <lb/>
Mr. of Ayden, <lb/>
spent Thursday night here. <lb/>
We boast of having as good public <lb/>
roads as any section in the county. <lb/>
But they certainly need sprinkling <lb/>
occasionally in this dry weather. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Stokes went to <lb/>
Saturday to visit <lb/>
and returned Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. Jack and family from near <lb/>
Simpson, spent Saturday night and <lb/>
Sunday at Mr. D. C. <lb/>
We had a large crowd at Sunday <lb/>
school Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION <lb/>
Society Christian Endeavor, <lb/>
July <lb/>
On account of the above occasion, <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line will sell round <lb/>
trip tickets on July and from <lb/>
Greenville to Atlantic City at <lb/>
with return limit July but tickets <lb/>
may be extended to August by <lb/>
depositing with joint agent and pay- <lb/>
of <lb/>
For further particulars, schedules, <lb/>
reservations, etc., apply to W. H. <lb/>
Ward, ticket agent, Greenville, N. <lb/>
or address T. C. White, general pas- <lb/>
agent; W. J. Craig. Passenger <lb/>
manager, Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
Try An Advertisement. <lb/>
If the merchants would do more <lb/>
advertising, they would find <lb/>
better, even if it is the dull <lb/>
time of year. When people do not <lb/>
have much to spend they are on the <lb/>
lookout to invest it to the best ad- <lb/>
vantage, and the advertiser who holds <lb/>
out the best inducements to them will <lb/>
get this trade.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0008" n="8"/>
<p>
rum <lb/>
COMING BUCK <lb/>
TO SOUTHERN STATES <lb/>
; MOVEMENT <lb/>
iii From Scattered <lb/>
Wasting to <lb/>
S. June <lb/>
all over the are <lb/>
; letters from Southern <lb/>
i and Northwest, which <lb/>
who are coining back <lb/>
me The secretary of <lb/>
Association, W. <lb/>
Johnson City, Tenn., <lb/>
i several gathering <lb/>
addresses of people who have <lb/>
g i e west. Me says Inquiries <lb/>
i in lands for rates are x <lb/>
rate of fifty a day. most <lb/>
i from former Southern people <lb/>
i of them, lie says, requests <lb/>
be given to their ft <lb/>
. sections of Went <lb/>
of and boards <lb/>
trade in the South are <lb/>
In this movement. Ev <lb/>
mail to the West Carries <lb/>
Is of letters and pieces Of <lb/>
which set forth the <lb/>
of this country and a direct <lb/>
e appeal to its natives to come <lb/>
back to their own home Eve <lb/>
women are at work; mothers i <lb/>
writing to their children and <lb/>
lo brothers, all telling of the <lb/>
great development of the South. <lb/>
On the first of July the <lb/>
Association will begin pub- <lb/>
an organ for circulation <lb/>
among the million of Southerners in <lb/>
other states. It will he called the <lb/>
Magazine. An announcement <lb/>
of it sent to the West has brought a <lb/>
great many requests for copies. <lb/>
HELPFUL WORDS. <lb/>
From A Greenville Citizen. . <lb/>
Is your hack lame and painful. <lb/>
Does it ache especially after <lb/>
Is there any soreness in the kidney <lb/>
region <lb/>
These symptoms indicate weak kid- <lb/>
There is danger In delay. <lb/>
Weak kidneys fast get weaker. <lb/>
Give your trouble prompt <lb/>
Kidney Pills act quickly. <lb/>
They strengthen weak kidneys, <lb/>
cad this Greenville testimony. <lb/>
J. Perkins, Fourth St., <lb/>
N. C, says, am confident that <lb/>
Kidney Pills are a good <lb/>
i e. medicine and I feel justified in <lb/>
them. My supply was <lb/>
obtained from the John L. Wooten <lb/>
Company, and the result of their <lb/>
bowed that they can be relied <lb/>
to bring relief from kidney com- <lb/>
sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
iV Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
sole agents for the United <lb/>
, the name <lb/>
other. <lb/>
gasoline engine, one Bell <lb/>
Threshing machine, practically <lb/>
B, Turnage Sons, Ayden.<lb/>
or ti doses will cure any <lb/>
Of Chills and Fever. Price.<lb/>
Life without love is like a good din- <lb/>
without an <lb/>
We Said of That Cause <lb/>
Disease. <lb/>
M. Pasteur, called the <lb/>
Greatest Physician often said be- <lb/>
that we shall one day rid the <lb/>
world of all diseases that is caused <lb/>
by <lb/>
Of all the diseases caused by germs <lb/>
catarrh is one of the most persistent <lb/>
and loathsome. Catarrh can be <lb/>
cured, but only by destroying the <lb/>
germs. <lb/>
Breathe it <lb/>
and cure catarrh by kill- <lb/>
the germs. The <lb/>
is the only sensible method, be- <lb/>
c u e you breathe the highly anti- <lb/>
septic and germ killing air directly <lb/>
over the entire membrane infested <lb/>
with catarrh germs. <lb/>
will cure catarrh. <lb/>
1.1. be tome cases where <lb/>
but the chances are ten <lb/>
to one in its favor, and the sufferer <lb/>
catarrh takes no risk, because <lb/>
. a guaranteed remedy, and <lb/>
I doesn't cure Store <lb/>
II refund the purchase price. <lb/>
will also give instant re- <lb/>
lief and cure in bronchitis, coughs, <lb/>
and A outfit, <lb/>
eluding bard rubber pocket inhaler, <lb/>
costs only If you now own a <lb/>
Inhaler you can get a bottle <lb/>
of for cents.<lb/>
Long of New Ones The <lb/>
Week. <lb/>
For the week ending 7th, the <lb/>
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the <lb/>
following new industries for North <lb/>
Alia wood <lb/>
company. <lb/>
company; <lb/>
railroad company; <lb/>
construction company. <lb/>
Bessemer cotton mill <lb/>
mine. <lb/>
casket factory. <lb/>
peanut factory <lb/>
bottling works. <lb/>
company. <lb/>
Hobgood brick and build- <lb/>
company. <lb/>
hotel company. <lb/>
warehouse com-<lb/>
pump <lb/>
company. <lb/>
Wilmington. quarry. <lb/>
Stale liar <lb/>
The thirteenth annual meeting of <lb/>
the North Carolina Bar Association <lb/>
will be held at Lake June <lb/>
18th to 30th. Addresses will be made <lb/>
by Hon. J. S. Manning, of Durham; <lb/>
Hon. J. J. Britt, of Washington, D. <lb/>
Ci Hon. Martin W. Littleton, of New <lb/>
York and Hon. T. M. Pittman, of <lb/>
Henderson. Col. Harry Skinner, of <lb/>
is chairman of the ex- <lb/>
committee and secretary of <lb/>
the memorial committee, for both of <lb/>
which lie will present the annual re- <lb/>
port. <lb/>
Public Stenographer. <lb/>
Miss Lucille Tripp has opened a <lb/>
public stenographer's office in The <lb/>
Reflector Those desiring <lb/>
her services can call at the office or <lb/>
phone number <lb/>
ST RECEIVED TWO CAB LOADS <lb/>
it .;.; .; soda. Can your <lb/>
Prices E. Turn- <lb/>
Sons Ayden <lb/>
That will please you are printers <lb/>
that know their business and this <lb/>
shop is complete in this line. <lb/>
I The Reflector Co. <lb/>
and Porch Screens <lb/>
-inn,, J You have only to telephone <lb/>
us your order for that Ham- <lb/>
mock and Porch Screen you <lb/>
have been neglecting to get <lb/>
time end we will <lb/>
send them right to you. June <lb/>
it here and July will soon fol- <lb/>
low so you can't put off your <lb/>
order any longer Just <lb/>
yourself lying back in <lb/>
one of these nice hammocks <lb/>
on front porch protected from the glare of the street by one of our new and <lb/>
improved porch screens. You can see the passers but the passers can't she you, thus <lb/>
protected, and can enjoy a sweet rest in tee cool. COME TO SEE US <lb/>
Taft VanDyke Phone<lb/>
Why be to The Beaufort <lb/>
Ample Hotel Accommodations. <lb/>
Now Has <lb/>
THE INLET INN <lb/>
BEAUFORT, CAROLINA <lb/>
Announces that it has added new additional bedrooms, <lb/>
with a sea view and new furniture, new felt mattresses; an up-to- <lb/>
date 50-room hotel, with every room in the house an outside room <lb/>
and every room with a sea view, except three; a large lobby, new <lb/>
parlor, additional and spacious verandas, all modern con- <lb/>
artesian water; faces Atlantic Ocean. Most delightful <lb/>
spot on the coast to spend your summer. Write and secure rooms <lb/>
for summer. and up; weekly, and up. Special <lb/>
rates for families and parties. <lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb/>
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb/>
Work, and Flues in Season, See <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb/>
Pulley <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
in <lb/>
health <lb/>
Organization of Sanitary Clubs <lb/>
Urged <lb/>
INSURANCE MEN INTERESTED <lb/>
of a Report on The Present <lb/>
Condition of Thirty-Two <lb/>
Cities Prepared by Hi- <lb/>
J. Messenger, A. s., Actuary <lb/>
the Travelers Insurance Com- <lb/>
my, Hartford, Conn. <lb/>
York, June at least <lb/>
per cent, of the population in <lb/>
cities of this country equipped <lb/>
good water supply systems main- <lb/>
use well water that is subject to <lb/>
was stated in a re- <lb/>
rt of a special investigation of the <lb/>
condition of thirty-two Amer- <lb/>
submitted to the <lb/>
of Life Insurance Presidents to- <lb/>
by Hiram J. Messenger, actuary, <lb/>
Hartford, Conn. In cities with <lb/>
systems the population living <lb/>
unconnected with sewers <lb/>
en at about forty per cent. <lb/>
investigated are with one <lb/>
two exceptions in the South and <lb/>
West, and are as <lb/>
Roanoke, Knoxville, Chat- <lb/>
Nashville, Louisville, <lb/>
Indianapolis, Bloomington, <lb/>
St. Louis, Memphis, Lit- <lb/>
Rock, Vicksburg, New Orleans, <lb/>
Montgomery, Birmingham, At- <lb/>
Macon, Jacksonville, St. Au- <lb/>
Charleston, Au- <lb/>
Columbia, Charlotte, Danville, <lb/>
New York and Hartford, <lb/>
n addition to water supply and <lb/>
systems, the principal points <lb/>
covered disposal of garb- <lb/>
inspection of milk, meats and <lb/>
provisions; board of health <lb/>
for maintaining sanitary <lb/>
laboratory equipment and <lb/>
of the department of <lb/>
climatic conditions; location of <lb/>
and natural character of <lb/>
country; character of city <lb/>
character of people, <lb/>
ti special reference as to whether <lb/>
not they appreciate the importance <lb/>
maintaining proper health <lb/>
Is and whether or not there is a <lb/>
public that can <lb/>
j brought to bear upon the city <lb/>
in regard to such <lb/>
evidence found practically <lb/>
through the <lb/>
showed that there <lb/>
been a most wonderful improve- <lb/>
t in the general sanitary <lb/>
i during the last ten or twenty <lb/>
states the report, in <lb/>
South in proportion to their <lb/>
, as a rule, are spending as <lb/>
money in improvements affect- <lb/>
e general health of the city as <lb/>
e North, <lb/>
was found that as a rule most <lb/>
pities visited had a fairly good <lb/>
pf city water. The important <lb/>
n in regard to the city water <lb/>
Is not so much the character <lb/>
water furnished by the city <lb/>
systems, but the extent to <lb/>
the inhabitants use the city <lb/>
and the extent to which they <lb/>
use of some other source of <lb/>
regard to the disposal of garb- <lb/>
conditions in most cities were <lb/>
unsatisfactory. The most sanitary <lb/>
way of of garbage is prob- <lb/>
ably to burn it. About half a dozen <lb/>
of the cities investigated had <lb/>
plants and as a rule these <lb/>
plants were working in a reasonably <lb/>
satisfactory if they <lb/>
were not it was generally because <lb/>
the work of collecting the garbage <lb/>
for burning was subject to political <lb/>
influences with unfavorable results. <lb/>
In the great majority of the <lb/>
garbage dumped on vacant hits, <lb/>
frequently within the city limits and <lb/>
sometimes not far from the heart of <lb/>
the city. <lb/>
for inspection of milk, <lb/>
meats and perishable provisions were <lb/>
quite general, and it is clear that <lb/>
they are being enforced with <lb/>
effectiveness every year; but <lb/>
work of this kind depends <lb/>
mainly upon three <lb/>
from political control, a competent <lb/>
and particularly a courageous board <lb/>
of health and a strong public <lb/>
ion in favor of thorough enforcement <lb/>
of the work. <lb/>
a large city in the South one <lb/>
of the great public markets was vis- <lb/>
and the conditions were simply <lb/>
revolting. Great quantities of meat, <lb/>
vegetables and more or less over- <lb/>
ripe fruit were displayed in an open <lb/>
market extending for two blocks, <lb/>
with no kind of protection for the <lb/>
perishable provisions. Never were <lb/>
such swarms of flies seen before. In <lb/>
one case a big piece of meat was so <lb/>
covered with flies that it was really <lb/>
difficult to make out what it was. <lb/>
Fortunately, a movement is on foot <lb/>
to have this market done away with. <lb/>
All public markets of the kind ought <lb/>
to be abolished. It is impossible to <lb/>
maintain sanitary conditions as <lb/>
long as such things <lb/>
The report urged the organization <lb/>
of sanitary clubs in every city in the <lb/>
country and it was suggested that the <lb/>
Association of Life Insurance <lb/>
dents take the lead in this work <lb/>
through its agents, medical <lb/>
and other representatives in <lb/>
communities. <lb/>
THE BEAUTIES OF <lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA <lb/>
ALONG HISTORIC <lb/>
The Great <lb/>
of Nature <lb/>
NEW STYLES IN <lb/>
and oxfords; all <lb/>
leathers, Just arrived. J. R. J. G.<lb/>
A woman feels her superiority <lb/>
when a man refuses to argue with <lb/>
her. <lb/>
NEW LINE GOODS AND <lb/>
silks; new styles at J. R. J. G.<lb/>
There are two choices of what to <lb/>
with your is to waste it <lb/>
and the other to lose it. <lb/>
It takes a real estate promoter to <lb/>
make a mountain out of a molehill. <lb/>
Wins Eight Life. <lb/>
It was a long and bloody battle for <lb/>
life that was waged by James D. <lb/>
of Newark, N. J., of which <lb/>
he lost much blood <lb/>
from lung hemorrhages, and was <lb/>
weak and rundown. For eight months <lb/>
I was unable to work. Death seemed <lb/>
close on my heels, when I began, <lb/>
three weeks ago, to use Dr. King's <lb/>
New Discovery- But it has helped <lb/>
me greatly. It is doing all that you <lb/>
For weak, sore lungs, ob- <lb/>
coughs, stubborn colds, <lb/>
hoarseness, la grippe, asthma, hay- <lb/>
fever or any throat or lung trouble <lb/>
its supreme. and Trial bot- <lb/>
free. Guaranteed by all drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
Handiwork <lb/>
Displayed. <lb/>
Hanrahan N. C., June 1911. <lb/>
I have watched her with peculiar <lb/>
admiration and intensified <lb/>
from where she merges into the Trent <lb/>
near that historic though not very <lb/>
progressive old town of New Bern. <lb/>
And I don't wonder that her people <lb/>
are not as progressive commercially <lb/>
as are sonic others, when I <lb/>
plate the sublime grandeur and <lb/>
luring beauties of nature that her <lb/>
people daily and hourly behold. Yes, <lb/>
I have watched the old Neuse from <lb/>
there to near her fountain head, and <lb/>
I have yet to see one spot along her <lb/>
banks and in her channel that failed <lb/>
to enrapture me with the one thought <lb/>
of God's great love to man and all <lb/>
of His creation. I have watched on <lb/>
her north side the fertile land with <lb/>
abundant crops of cotton, corn and <lb/>
golden grain. I have gazed upon her <lb/>
stately oaks hung with that long gray <lb/>
moss as they seemed to typify <lb/>
strength and love, wrestling beneath <lb/>
and even supporting old age. I have <lb/>
watched her wild flowers and clinging <lb/>
roses, seemingly planted to cheer the <lb/>
lonely boatman who away from home, <lb/>
wife and children, guides <lb/>
his boat that carries our commerce. <lb/>
I have watched her southern banks <lb/>
with little lowlands and far from the <lb/>
fertility of soil; having running <lb/>
most parallel with her channel and <lb/>
about one mile from her banks, from <lb/>
seashore to well up towards her <lb/>
source, a belt of sand bearing only <lb/>
small black jacks and wire grass, but <lb/>
here and there and not separated by <lb/>
much space the yellow <lb/>
vine, it seems as are the <lb/>
foot prints on the sands of time to <lb/>
cheer a forlorn and perhaps a fallen <lb/>
traveler, who seeing might take <lb/>
age and go on. But of all the beau- <lb/>
spots that I have seen situated <lb/>
on this or any other river, is the one <lb/>
about mid way between Goldsboro <lb/>
and Kinston and half a mile above <lb/>
the little village of White Hall, made <lb/>
historic by one battle during the Civil <lb/>
war. On the north spreads out that <lb/>
fertile valley, and on its south bank <lb/>
is a range of hills scattered here and <lb/>
there, but just at this spot are seven <lb/>
of these looming up from its bank <lb/>
and seemingly purposely arranged in <lb/>
a half circle as if placed there for <lb/>
eternal vigilance to keep with a strict <lb/>
injunction to ever watch and never <lb/>
to sleep, and guard with safety the <lb/>
same number of springs that find <lb/>
their source in your bosom and send <lb/>
their life giving waters from your <lb/>
feet to mingle a few yards distant <lb/>
with the somewhat red waters of the <lb/>
Neuse lest some one bent with years <lb/>
and wrecked with life's burdens and <lb/>
financial or other cares, should slip <lb/>
in, drink and be made young again, <lb/>
and thereby be cheated out of heaven <lb/>
for many years. <lb/>
three miles north of this spot <lb/>
and on that sand belt, that this <lb/>
first saw the light, heard the <lb/>
chickens cackle and crow, and the <lb/>
birds warble out their sweetest lays. <lb/>
must digress just here to say, <lb/>
that it was here the banks and <lb/>
on the same side of this river, about <lb/>
miles east of there, and in a spot <lb/>
almost as beautiful as is that at <lb/>
en Springs, where born and <lb/>
reared a of beauty, love and <lb/>
force. So powerful was her brow <lb/>
and keen the arrow that when it was <lb/>
aimed at our worthy superintendent <lb/>
its force and cutting point went <lb/>
Straight to his venerable heart Per- <lb/>
haps this accounts for his great love, <lb/>
well guided zeal, fatherly devotion <lb/>
and never flagging energy for the up- <lb/>
lift of all the people, and especially <lb/>
those of Pitt. It takes deep sorrow <lb/>
and keen disappointments to bring <lb/>
out the best there is in a great and <lb/>
good man. This b learned our <lb/>
professor another lesson, that a man <lb/>
does not have to ride in the finest <lb/>
dire at the most costly <lb/>
hotels, and make the greatest display <lb/>
to win that love that worthy of his <lb/>
bestowal, but by riding in whatever <lb/>
is most convenient, or going on foot <lb/>
if needs yes. and eating and sleep- <lb/>
big in some of the most humble <lb/>
homes, doing anything In any way <lb/>
for God that he has won the highest <lb/>
regards of not one, but of all the <lb/>
people. So the hand of Providence <lb/>
was guiding it professor, and what <lb/>
was her great loss been our <lb/>
state's and Pitt county's eternal gain. <lb/>
Be <lb/>
N. my last your printer made <lb/>
me say, back the god of man, instead <lb/>
of the god of wine; and, <lb/>
thy brim have passed instead of have <lb/>
pressed. <lb/>
Write your copy a little <lb/>
and plainer, and the printer can <lb/>
it <lb/>
Kills Took Coin Prom Holes. <lb/>
On Shylock's principle, take <lb/>
my life when you take the means <lb/>
whereby I rats came very <lb/>
near eating up Mr. J. L. <lb/>
mules on farm, five miles <lb/>
south of town. For some time he <lb/>
had been noticing that his mules <lb/>
were falling off more rapidly than <lb/>
they should have, even in work time <lb/>
and hot weather. One day last week <lb/>
he discovered the cause, which was <lb/>
nothing i than the rats were eat- <lb/>
the n which he fed to the <lb/>
mules, literally robbing them of <lb/>
their meals. By watching he found <lb/>
that the rats, which were of <lb/>
size, swarmed out as soon as <lb/>
lie had put the corn in the box for <lb/>
the mules and left the stable, and <lb/>
dragged the whole ears away to <lb/>
their hiding places and devoured it. <lb/>
He them carrying it off and <lb/>
he also found an immense pile of <lb/>
cobs hidden away under the barn, <lb/>
where they had devoured it. He <lb/>
lost no time in setting upon the <lb/>
rats and smote them with clubs, <lb/>
dogs and even a shot gun. After <lb/>
the slaughter he found that <lb/>
had been killed. Fortunately his <lb/>
crib was rat-proof, or he would have <lb/>
had no corn to feed the mules in <lb/>
the first Journal. <lb/>
League Opens Next Friday. <lb/>
The Coast Line League, composed <lb/>
of teams of Ayden, Grit- <lb/>
ton and Kinston, will begin the sea- <lb/>
son next Friday, 16th. The opening <lb/>
games will Ayden at <lb/>
and Grifton at Kinston. <lb/>
Liniment Is <lb/>
remedy for <lb/>
Sciatica, Lame Back, <lb/>
g fl Joints and Muscles, <lb/>
Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, <lb/>
Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, <lb/>
Colic, Cramps, Neuralgia, <lb/>
Toothache, and all Nerve, <lb/>
Done and A c o I <lb/>
and Pains. The genuine <lb/>
has Noah's Ark on every <lb/>
and looks like this <lb/>
cut. hut has RED hand on <lb/>
front of package and <lb/>
always <lb/>
in Ink. Beware of <lb/>
unit noons. Large bottle, <lb/>
cents, an sold by all <lb/>
do a c r s In in <lb/>
or money <lb/>
by Noah Remedy <lb/>
Jo., Inc., Richmond, Va. <lb/>
-i.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018152_0009" n="9"/>
<p>
p-r-<lb/>
IS. <lb/>
Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
from Page <lb/>
promised, by having the rural and city <lb/>
carriers assemble the small consign- <lb/>
of the individual shippers and <lb/>
utilize the fast freight service on <lb/>
trunk lines, with passenger trains on <lb/>
the branch roads to hurry the stuff <lb/>
to destination, at the regular fast <lb/>
freight rates. The post office will re- <lb/>
coup itself by securing carload rates <lb/>
for the assembled shipments, while <lb/>
the small shippers get their <lb/>
over the present conditions by <lb/>
having their collect and delivery sys- <lb/>
for practically nothing. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY BOY <lb/>
FRONT <lb/>
PROVES HIMSELF A REAL HERO. <lb/>
SEEKING RELEASE OF <lb/>
PITT IN KANSAS JAIL <lb/>
Goes Out In A Capsized Boat And <lb/>
Saves Six People. <lb/>
The letter published below should <lb/>
have appeared in our Ayden <lb/>
Tuesday, but through an <lb/>
oversight the correspondent failed to <lb/>
get it in with his other copy, so it <lb/>
is published <lb/>
Fort Hancock N. J., June 1911. <lb/>
Mr. R. W. Smith, Correspondent, <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
Dear <lb/>
Having sent an article to your val- <lb/>
paper a few months ago con- <lb/>
Lance Corporal Lester Jones, <lb/>
of the Coast Artillery Corps, of Fort <lb/>
I now take the pleasure <lb/>
to call your attention to another ex- <lb/>
equally heroic. <lb/>
Since I wrote you before, the com- <lb/>
of which he is a member, has <lb/>
changed station to Fort Hancock, N. <lb/>
J. Here this brave son of <lb/>
North Carolina distinguished himself. <lb/>
While taking a walk one evening by <lb/>
the beach he saw out in the bay a <lb/>
boat in apparent distress. While he <lb/>
was getting a boat ready in which to <lb/>
go out in, the boat turned over. With <lb/>
all possible speed he put out to the <lb/>
capsized craft and got there just in <lb/>
time to save the lives of six helpless <lb/>
people. This, I think, ought to be <lb/>
brought to the attention of his friends <lb/>
and relatives at home. Like all real <lb/>
heroes, he himself, would never say <lb/>
anything about the matter. I being <lb/>
a son of North Carolina, things of <lb/>
this sort make my heart swell with <lb/>
pride. Hoping to see this in an early <lb/>
issue of your valued paper, I remain, <lb/>
a constant reader, <lb/>
MICHAEL J. <lb/>
Bread Sergeant, Co. Artillery. <lb/>
EXCAVATION CAVES IN. <lb/>
Burled Ferd Hum hill And Gives Him <lb/>
Close Call. <lb/>
Tuesday afternoon while workmen <lb/>
were excavating for the sewer on <lb/>
Sutton lane, there was a cave-in that <lb/>
came near resulting seriously. At a <lb/>
point where the ditch was about ten <lb/>
feet deep, Ferd Barnhill, colored, <lb/>
foreman of the street hands was at <lb/>
work at the bottom of it, when with- <lb/>
out a moments warning the ditch <lb/>
caved in and he was completely <lb/>
buried under a huge pile of dirt. <lb/>
Other hands happened to be near <lb/>
and they quickly dug Ferd out of <lb/>
his grave. Fortunately he- received <lb/>
no injury, except slight bruises, but <lb/>
it gave him a close call. <lb/>
Asks Governor of Oklahoma to Inter- <lb/>
cede in Behalf of W. J Nichols. <lb/>
Oklahoma City, Okla., June <lb/>
Governor received a letter <lb/>
Monday from the secretary of state <lb/>
of North Carolina, asking his as- <lb/>
in securing the release from <lb/>
the Federal prison at <lb/>
Kan., of W. J. Nichols, a former <lb/>
member of the North Carolina <lb/>
Nichols was convicted of <lb/>
the postal laws, under the <lb/>
name of C. L. Jackson, in-connection <lb/>
with the operation of the Little <lb/>
Crater Crude Burner Company. <lb/>
Nichols sold county rights for the <lb/>
sale of a new patent crude oil burn- <lb/>
maintaining headquarters at El- <lb/>
reno. Through the efforts of Post- <lb/>
master E. E. Brown, of Oklahoma <lb/>
City, the Federal authorities were in- <lb/>
to start prosecutions for us- <lb/>
the mails to defraud. Nichols <lb/>
handled thousands of dollars as a re- <lb/>
of his scheme, but was convicted <lb/>
and sentenced to serve two years. A <lb/>
short time ago Nichols wrote the <lb/>
governor, accusing the Federal of- <lb/>
of the western district of <lb/>
and Postmaster of <lb/>
having conspired to railroad <lb/>
him to Observer. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
Personal News In That Hustling <lb/>
Neighborhood. <lb/>
N. C, June <lb/>
Smith and Mr. Mills Smith are sick. <lb/>
Miss Agnes Smith left last Thurs- <lb/>
day for Asheville to spend some <lb/>
time. <lb/>
Miss Winnie Evans spent a few <lb/>
days of last week at the home of Mr. <lb/>
Ivey Smith. <lb/>
Mrs. Walter Gay of Farmville, <lb/>
spent a part of last week here. <lb/>
Miss Lucy of Ayden, spent <lb/>
last week here with friends. She <lb/>
returned home Monday. <lb/>
Messrs. Walters and Pittman con- <lb/>
ducted a meeting at the Free Will <lb/>
Baptist church at Arthur last week. <lb/>
The meeting closed Sunday night <lb/>
with two additions. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith were vis- <lb/>
his mother, Mrs. Pattie Smith, <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. Tyson and little daughter <lb/>
of were here Wednesday. <lb/>
Mn and Mrs. C. E. <lb/>
went to Farmville Saturday. <lb/>
We had a fine shower Monday <lb/>
and night. <lb/>
Mrs. C. C. Cobb and daughter, of <lb/>
Norfolk, are spending some time at <lb/>
Excursion. <lb/>
Make your plans to go with the <lb/>
excursion to Morehead City <lb/>
and Beaufort on Thursday, 22nd. De- <lb/>
trip with eight hours at the <lb/>
seaside. Round trip, children <lb/>
under years, <lb/>
Another Tiger. <lb/>
Mayor Wooten had another <lb/>
before him Monday. Reed <lb/>
Gorham, colored, an old offender, was <lb/>
caught the and was <lb/>
bound over to Superior court. <lb/>
And a lazy man will take any kind <lb/>
of a job he can't get. <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 without even so as <lb/>
a balance lever. Simplicity a lever, spring, <lb/>
or other nuisance on it. Light of draft, because it weighs less <lb/>
has draft closer to shovels. of cultivation, that is, <lb/>
meat 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 nest <lb/>
in Pitt county using this cultivator. Call and let us demonstrate <lb/>
to you its many distinctive features. <lb/>
We also sell the celebrated NEW 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/>
N. C.<lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
YES <lb/>
THOROUGH BRED <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
A quarter pound plug of sure enough g <lb/>
chewing for cents. Got all beat easy <lb/>
No excessive sweetening to hide the real to- <lb/>
taste. No spice to make your tongue <lb/>
sore. Just good, old time plug tobacco, <lb/>
all the improvements up-to-date. CHEW <lb/>
IT AND PROVE IT at our expense, <lb/>
treat's on us. Cut out this ad. and mail <lb/>
us with your name and address for <lb/>
FREE offer to chewers only. <lb/>
SCALES CO., <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Post Office. <lb/>
Subscribe to the Reflector. <lb/>
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 1911. <lb/>
Number <lb/>
RECEIVER APPOINTED <lb/>
FOR BANK OF TARBORO <lb/>
BANK HOPELESSLY WRECKED. <lb/>
Mr. Ed. Pennington in Charge and <lb/>
Investigation Proceeds. <lb/>
Late Monday afternoon Judge Ward <lb/>
READY FOR CORONATION. <lb/>
Final Decorations And Finishing <lb/>
Touches Put Today. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
London, June orders <lb/>
were issued today to troops <lb/>
which will participate in the <lb/>
nation. King George received all <lb/>
foreign envoys and ministers at <lb/>
who is still at the hospital gradually n . , , . , <lb/>
Buckingham Palace last night. The <lb/>
convalescing, or rather <lb/>
growing <lb/>
much stronger, so that he does <lb/>
not feel that dizziness when in an <lb/>
upright position, upon the <lb/>
of Chairman of <lb/>
the Corporation Commission appoint- <lb/>
ed Ed. Pennington, cashier of the <lb/>
Farmers Banking and Trust Co., <lb/>
receiver of the Bank of Tarboro, pend- <lb/>
a suit instituted to wind up the <lb/>
affairs of that institution. <lb/>
The order making the appointment <lb/>
required a bond of and that <lb/>
he should enter upon his duties as <lb/>
soon as qualified. This was done. By <lb/>
noon the bond was given and Mr. <lb/>
Pennington took charge. <lb/>
But the examiners are still at work <lb/>
and hope to complete their labors to- <lb/>
morrow. <lb/>
The condition of the bank cannot <lb/>
yet be approximated. There are so <lb/>
many overdrafts and checks paid <lb/>
but never charged to accounts that <lb/>
no one can tell till there has been a <lb/>
more close inspection of all the <lb/>
books and. probably many suits. <lb/>
What the checks paid meant when <lb/>
not credited is yet to be ascertained. <lb/>
They may have been drawn with the <lb/>
knowledge that they had or should <lb/>
have had a balance to their credit. <lb/>
Or they may have been some of the <lb/>
many good accommodations <lb/>
of the cashier out of the trust fund <lb/>
in his charge. <lb/>
Receiver Pennington probably will <lb/>
have an expert accountant to go over <lb/>
every account of the bank, and then <lb/>
barring results of litigation the con- <lb/>
will be known. <lb/>
Not much news has developed or <lb/>
come to the surface since last issue <lb/>
unless it be evidence of greater <lb/>
and the efforts to rob, or <lb/>
defraud any and every one that had <lb/>
money in the bank or could be in- <lb/>
to put their funds therein. <lb/>
Examiner does little talk- <lb/>
last decorations were put up today <lb/>
and all finishing made for <lb/>
the coronation. <lb/>
London, June rehearsal of <lb/>
the coronation ceremony was held in <lb/>
West Minister Abbey today. <lb/>
TODAY'S EVENTS IN <lb/>
NATIONAL CAPITOL <lb/>
ANOTHER MESSAGE FROM TAFT. <lb/>
Taft on The Go. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New York, June Taft <lb/>
leaves New York this morning for <lb/>
New Haven, after spending the night <lb/>
with Henry W. Taft. <lb/>
are Southerner, <lb/>
for publication and what one ob- June 20th. <lb/>
is by inference. He promptly <lb/>
told the Southerner man that the <lb/>
bank books, he called them padded, <lb/>
showed deposits of loans <lb/>
yet on his report to the <lb/>
commission it is alleged that <lb/>
the deposits are apparently <lb/>
These with borrowed from <lb/>
banks make liabilities that padded <lb/>
books showing loans with <lb/>
security in less or more <lb/>
cases cannot overcome. But let it <lb/>
not be inferred that these figures dis- <lb/>
close all liabilities or assets. They <lb/>
are given to show that as far as <lb/>
the money was <lb/>
and these padded books <lb/>
show that at least of de- <lb/>
posits went into the maelstrom of <lb/>
reckless speculation. <lb/>
To the stockholders Mr. <lb/>
has promised to make a report to- <lb/>
morrow afternoon at o'clock. <lb/>
Unless there was something sen- <lb/>
street talk would not be in- <lb/>
Most every thing has been <lb/>
voiced out except the safety deposit <lb/>
box he had in the bank. The <lb/>
is to be brought here tomorrow and <lb/>
then more ills than even sensations, <lb/>
if not more ills than ever resulted <lb/>
from the opening of Pandora's box <lb/>
Mrs. Lea Improving <lb/>
Says Gobble Small Concerns <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Washington, June <lb/>
Taft sent a special message to con- <lb/>
urging an amendment to the <lb/>
pure food law, making the penalty <lb/>
for misbranding drugs. <lb/>
Senator Root spoke in favor of his <lb/>
amendment to the reciprocity bill. <lb/>
Horace continued his <lb/>
testimony before the committee in- <lb/>
the Sugar Trust. He de- <lb/>
that it was better for the small <lb/>
business concerns to be gobbled up <lb/>
by the trusts than that they should <lb/>
fail. <lb/>
Mrs. Lea, wife of Senator Lea, of <lb/>
Tennessee, to save whose life the sen- <lb/>
had a quart of his blood infused <lb/>
into her body, is much better today <lb/>
with great hope of her ultimate re- <lb/>
The senator is also recover- <lb/>
from the loss of his blood. <lb/>
ANOTHER STEEL TRUST <lb/>
Judge Gary Said It Would Be Form- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
By Wire to The <lb/>
New York, June E. H. <lb/>
Gary before sailing for Europe in- <lb/>
today that an international <lb/>
Steel Trust might be formed. He <lb/>
denied, however, that it would en- <lb/>
to control prices. He said <lb/>
there would be an effort <lb/>
ate by all steel makers in the <lb/>
ACCOUNTANT SUICIDES. <lb/>
TRIAL WILL COLLAPSE <lb/>
Government Cannot Sustain Charges <lb/>
Against <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Italy, June <lb/>
witnesses have failed to substantiate <lb/>
the government charges against the <lb/>
it is predicted that the <lb/>
cases will collapse and the prisoners <lb/>
be freed. <lb/>
Jumps From Fourteenth Story Win- <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New York, June from <lb/>
John D. an ex- <lb/>
pert accountant, jumped from a four- <lb/>
teen-story window at Broadway <lb/>
this morning. The fall of his body <lb/>
created a panic on the street. <lb/>
CHOLERA SITUATION <lb/>
FOUR CASES IN N. Y. HARBOR. <lb/>
STRIKE SETTLED. <lb/>
Various Lines Enter <lb/>
Agreement. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
London, June end of the <lb/>
strike was officially announced to- <lb/>
day by the International <lb/>
Union. The Cunard, White Star, Al- <lb/>
Dominion, and other lines agree <lb/>
to the increased scale. <lb/>
What of time we waste in <lb/>
wandering about things e that are <lb/>
none of our business. <lb/>
Quarantine Other Ships Arriving With <lb/>
Suspicious Sickness. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New York, June cholera <lb/>
situation is causing alarm. There <lb/>
are now four cases aboard the Italian <lb/>
liner de Ships from <lb/>
Berlin and Trieste with suspicious <lb/>
sickness aboard, were today ordered <lb/>
to quarantine. <lb/>
YALE COMMENCEMENT. <lb/>
President Tait Heads The <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New Haven, June Yale <lb/>
commencement is being held in <lb/>
Hall. President Taft, Justice <lb/>
Lunar and other notables are pres- <lb/>
The commencement was head- <lb/>
ed by President Taft, after which ex- <lb/>
were held. <lb/>
It is better to be pleasant than <lb/>
Important you can not be both. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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