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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
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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>
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY JULY 1911. <lb/>
Nu in her 27- <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Of Breaking Ground for the Buildings <lb/>
of E. C. T. T. School <lb/>
SCHOOL AUDITORIUM WAS FILLED <lb/>
Ex-Gov. Gives Interestingly <lb/>
History of Origin and Growth of <lb/>
The by <lb/>
Governor Dr. Strayer and <lb/>
Mr. Make Dona- <lb/>
for Library Fund. <lb/>
This is another proud day for <lb/>
Greenville and Pitt county, and it <lb/>
fully demonstrates the interest our <lb/>
people feel in the institution they la- <lb/>
bored so earnestly to have located <lb/>
here, and none are more rejoiced than <lb/>
they over the great success to which <lb/>
this institution has attained. <lb/>
On the second day of July, three <lb/>
years ago, the first spade of dirt was <lb/>
thrown in preparation for the build- <lb/>
to be provided for East Carolina <lb/>
Training school. The an- <lb/>
of that date following this <lb/>
year coming on Sunday, today was <lb/>
as the day upon which to <lb/>
the event with appropriate ex- <lb/>
Beside the people of the town and <lb/>
county who were out in large <lb/>
there were many here from <lb/>
other towns, in fact, the eastern sec- <lb/>
of the state was well represent- <lb/>
ed. Some business houses of Greenville <lb/>
were closed during the exercises, so <lb/>
they might have an opportunity to <lb/>
attend, and the auditorium of the <lb/>
school was filled. The president and <lb/>
faculty and board of trustees of the <lb/>
county and town officials, and <lb/>
speakers taking part in the program <lb/>
had seats upon the rostrum. <lb/>
After prayer by Rev. C. M. Rock, <lb/>
pastor of Memorial Baptist church, <lb/>
and the singing of Hail the <lb/>
Power of President <lb/>
Wright welcomed all here, and in in- <lb/>
ex-Governor T. J. Jarvis, <lb/>
who was to give the history of the <lb/>
origin and progress of the school, Mr. <lb/>
Wright stated that the spade with <lb/>
which the first dirt was broken by <lb/>
Gov. Jarvis and the photograph taken <lb/>
of the scene had been and would be <lb/>
preserved as long as the institution <lb/>
stands. <lb/>
Governor historical sketch <lb/>
of the school was as <lb/>
Ladies and <lb/>
As we are assembled to celebrate <lb/>
the third anniversary of the breaking <lb/>
of ground for the buildings of the <lb/>
East Carolina Training <lb/>
school, I deem it appropriate to give <lb/>
you a brief account of the beginning, <lb/>
growth and work of this school. <lb/>
The act establishing the East Car- <lb/>
Training school was <lb/>
passed by the legislature at its <lb/>
in 1907, and was ratified March <lb/>
8th, 1907. <lb/>
On the 7th day of May, 1907, the <lb/>
people of Greenville, by practically a <lb/>
unanimous vote, authorized the board <lb/>
of aldermen to issue and sell <lb/>
000.00 of bonds with the distinct <lb/>
that the larger part of it <lb/>
was to be appropriated to this school, <lb/>
if it should be located at Greenville. <lb/>
And, on the 14th day of May, 1907, <lb/>
the people of Pitt county, by a large <lb/>
majority, -voted to issue and sell <lb/>
000.00 of bonds for a like purpose. <lb/>
The act creating the school <lb/>
towards the <lb/>
and equipment of the buildings <lb/>
and authorized the state board of <lb/>
education to locate the school at some <lb/>
point in Eastern North Carolina. A <lb/>
number of the progressive towns in <lb/>
the eastern section of the state made <lb/>
attractive bids for the location of <lb/>
this school in their midsts. Green- <lb/>
ville and Pitt county jointly offered <lb/>
the state board of education <lb/>
000.00 in cash, to be expended in the <lb/>
purchase of a site and the erection <lb/>
of buildings, if the school should be <lb/>
located at Greenville. <lb/>
The state board of education vis- <lb/>
the several towns bidding for the <lb/>
school, and inspected the sites offered, <lb/>
and in July, 1907, the board, after <lb/>
careful consideration, located the <lb/>
school at Greenville and selected the <lb/>
present site. <lb/>
The trustees of this school were <lb/>
appointed by the state board of ed- <lb/>
in accordance with the act <lb/>
creating the school, and these <lb/>
tees met in the town of Greenville <lb/>
on the 9th day of March, 1908, and <lb/>
organized. At this meeting J. <lb/>
Jarvis, J. Y. Joyner and Y. T. Or- <lb/>
were appointed an executive <lb/>
committee, and Hook and Rogers, of <lb/>
Charlotte, and H. W. Simpson, of <lb/>
New Bern, were chosen architects. <lb/>
The second meeting of the board of <lb/>
trustees was held in Greenville on <lb/>
April 16th, 1908, at which time the <lb/>
architects submitted to the board the <lb/>
plans, which had been approved by <lb/>
the executive committee, for four <lb/>
buildings, An administration <lb/>
building, a dormitory, a <lb/>
dormitory and a refectory. The <lb/>
plans were approved by the board, <lb/>
and the committee was instructed to <lb/>
call for bids and proceed with the <lb/>
erection of the four buildings. How <lb/>
well the committee obeyed their in- <lb/>
and performed their duty <lb/>
you can judge for yourselves by an <lb/>
inspection of these four buildings. <lb/>
The committee advertised for bids, <lb/>
and on the 9th day of June, 1908, <lb/>
these bids were opened. There were <lb/>
eighteen bidders present. They came <lb/>
from Georgia, South Carolina, North <lb/>
Carolina, Virginia and New Jersey. <lb/>
There was difference be- <lb/>
tween the highest and lowest bids, <lb/>
the highest being by G. W. <lb/>
Wharton, of N. J., and the <lb/>
lowest by the Building and Lumber <lb/>
Company, of N. C, for <lb/>
The Building and Lumber Company <lb/>
gave the bonds and executed the con- <lb/>
tracts required by the committee, and <lb/>
on the second day of July, 1908, <lb/>
three years ground was <lb/>
broken for the erection of these <lb/>
buildings; and it is this event we <lb/>
celebrate today. I make bold to as- <lb/>
that nowhere else in North Car- <lb/>
at any period in her history, <lb/>
has so much done in the cause <lb/>
of education in the same length of <lb/>
time as has been done here in the <lb/>
last three years. <lb/>
Hear This Marvelous <lb/>
The contractors began the work of <lb/>
construction as soon after July 2nd <lb/>
as they could complete their <lb/>
rations, and they pushed the work <lb/>
with all speed with good <lb/>
workmanship, both Messrs. York and <lb/>
the managers of the contract- <lb/>
company, giving it their constant <lb/>
attention, and the architects and ex- <lb/>
committee making frequent <lb/>
inspection. In excavating the ground <lb/>
for the administration building the <lb/>
contractors encountered at its west <lb/>
end, on the highest point of the <lb/>
ground, an extensive pocket of black <lb/>
quick sand, into which one might in- <lb/>
a rod several feet with one <lb/>
hand. This unexpected difficulty <lb/>
a suspension of work on <lb/>
this building till we could go into <lb/>
the woods and cut and haul piles, and <lb/>
get a pile driver on the grounds to <lb/>
drive them. As soon as this could be <lb/>
done piles from to inches <lb/>
in diameter and from to feet <lb/>
long were driven into this <lb/>
of quick sand, and on top of these <lb/>
were put three feet of concrete. It <lb/>
cost extra to make the <lb/>
safe and secure, and when this <lb/>
was done the work on this building <lb/>
proceeded. <lb/>
The legislature of 1909 <lb/>
the sum of for two ad- <lb/>
central power <lb/>
house and an for the <lb/>
furnishing and equipping all six of <lb/>
the buildings, including the laundry <lb/>
and refrigerating plant. The com- <lb/>
directed the architect to <lb/>
pare the plans for these two new <lb/>
buildings. Bids were asked for these, <lb/>
and the furniture and equipment for <lb/>
all the business. These bids were <lb/>
opened on the 4th day of May, 1909, <lb/>
by the executive committee, and the <lb/>
contract for the two additional build- <lb/>
was awarded to the same con- <lb/>
tractors at the price of The <lb/>
committee remained in session three <lb/>
days and let the contracts for the <lb/>
furniture and equipment for all the <lb/>
buildings. <lb/>
The board of trustees met on June <lb/>
11th, 1909, and after having received <lb/>
full reports of the progress of the <lb/>
work of construction, determined to <lb/>
upon the school for the reception of <lb/>
students on the 5th day of October, <lb/>
1909. At this meeting Prof. Robert <lb/>
H. Wright was elected president of <lb/>
the institution, and C. W. Wilson, H. <lb/>
E. Austin, Sallie Joyner Davis, Maria <lb/>
D. Graham and Minnie E. Jenkins <lb/>
were elected professors. The other <lb/>
positions were filled later on; and <lb/>
by earnest and untiring effort the <lb/>
buildings were ready and the officers <lb/>
and teachers on hand prepared to <lb/>
open the school on October 1909. <lb/>
The enrollment of students on the <lb/>
first day exceeded our fondest ex- <lb/>
on page<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Fara The Eastern <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Out of Their Own Mouths. <lb/>
Speaking on the floor of the United <lb/>
States senate the other day, Hon. <lb/>
Elihu Root, Protectionist though he is <lb/>
and has always been, gave utterance <lb/>
to this <lb/>
I never have thought that the duties <lb/>
which were imposed upon farm pro- <lb/>
ducts were of any real general <lb/>
fit to the farmer. <lb/>
And no more do the vast majority <lb/>
of the Republican apostles and de- <lb/>
fenders or inordinate Protection so <lb/>
believe. The fact is that the party and <lb/>
the men who put and have kept so- <lb/>
called protective duties on staple <lb/>
products acted in the be- <lb/>
ginning, and have ever since continued <lb/>
to act, not with a view to <lb/>
the but with a view to de- <lb/>
the agricultural interests into <lb/>
the belief that they were sharing in <lb/>
the spoils of Protection and so into <lb/>
support of the protective system. To <lb/>
say that they have not resized from <lb/>
the start that no amount of pro- <lb/>
could effect, one way or the <lb/>
other, the prices in the domestic mark- <lb/>
et of products of the soil of which we <lb/>
grow a surplus for export, over and <lb/>
above a sufficiency for home <lb/>
would be to credit them with a <lb/>
lack of intelligence which they have <lb/>
far from shown in any other <lb/>
What they have done has been <lb/>
to play upon the credulity of the farm- <lb/>
and so Induce them to serve as <lb/>
to save the chestnuts of the <lb/>
inordinately protected manufacturing <lb/>
Interests from burning. <lb/>
And what is true of the farmer is <lb/>
also true of labor. It is these two <lb/>
elements of the citizenship of the <lb/>
country which have kept the <lb/>
policy alive and in effect, lo, these <lb/>
many years, both deluded into so do- <lb/>
by the utterly fallacious plea that <lb/>
they were the beneficiaries of the sys- <lb/>
The fact is, as both the <lb/>
and the working man are <lb/>
now beginning to realize, that neither <lb/>
is by Republican <lb/>
On the contrary, both are in- <lb/>
When even avowed Protection- <lb/>
are themselves driven to admit <lb/>
so much, certainly It is high time the <lb/>
farmers and the workingmen were <lb/>
making their awakening complete and <lb/>
ceasing to act as stool-pigeons for <lb/>
the few privileges beneficiaries of a <lb/>
system which robs them in the name <lb/>
and under the guise of Protection. <lb/>
The Dog and The Tax. <lb/>
A correspondent in today's <lb/>
speaks a word in behalf of the <lb/>
dog. We had not supposed the <lb/>
had been understood to be <lb/>
war on all dogs, for there are <lb/>
good dogs and bad <lb/>
dogs and vagabond dogs. The collie <lb/>
and the shepherd are practically use- <lb/>
to the farmer while every farmer <lb/>
should keep his own bird dog, hunt <lb/>
out as many of his own partridges <lb/>
as he might desire and save them <lb/>
from destruction by the pot hunters <lb/>
But he should pay tax on his dogs. <lb/>
The very objection which our <lb/>
urges against the dog tax. <lb/>
that rather than pay this tax <lb/>
many owners will kill their dogs, is <lb/>
the exact reason why the Chronicle <lb/>
urges the imposition of the dog tax. <lb/>
man who owns a dog worth paying <lb/>
taxes on will sacrifice the dog for the <lb/>
sake of a dollar, but the operation of <lb/>
the law would result in weeding out <lb/>
the hordes of vagabond dogs which <lb/>
over-run the state. In some of the <lb/>
counties in which a dog tax was <lb/>
a number of dogs were killed <lb/>
by their owners this year. A dog law <lb/>
that would operate otherwise would <lb/>
be of no account. We believe our <lb/>
correspondent will agree with us that <lb/>
any man who owns a good dog ought <lb/>
to be willing to pay taxes on him. <lb/>
And a dog not worth paying tax on <lb/>
ought to die. Save the sheep should <lb/>
be the slogan of the next <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Never leave home on a journey <lb/>
without a bottle of Chamberlain's <lb/>
Colic, and Rem- <lb/>
It is certain to be needed and <lb/>
cannot be obtained when on board <lb/>
the cars or steamships. For sale by <lb/>
all dealers. <lb/>
Change at Postal Oilier. <lb/>
Mr. O. D. Phillips, who for several <lb/>
months has been manager of the <lb/>
Postal telegraph office here, has been <lb/>
transferred to Wilson. He is <lb/>
in the office here by Mrs. M. <lb/>
B. of Augusta, who took <lb/>
charge Monday. <lb/>
Owning Home Industries at Home <lb/>
The best city in the South, as far <lb/>
as the knowledge of the writer ex- <lb/>
tends, from every point of view, is a <lb/>
small city in which every industry, <lb/>
with one exception, is owned by <lb/>
who reside in the city, is operated <lb/>
by local people and by people whose <lb/>
interest center almost exclusively in <lb/>
the place. The industry owned <lb/>
by outsiders was established by lo- <lb/>
cal people and much of its stock is <lb/>
yet held by them. As an illustration <lb/>
of how local ownership of industries <lb/>
helps, there is one large industry in <lb/>
the city referred to which was found- <lb/>
ed twenty-five years ago with <lb/>
capital of this concern has been <lb/>
increased to and every dollar <lb/>
of the new capital has been earned <lb/>
by the company in the course of its <lb/>
quarter of a century in business. <lb/>
There are several men interested in <lb/>
this business who have wealth by <lb/>
means of the earnings of this <lb/>
If it had been established and <lb/>
owned by persons living elsewhere, <lb/>
the profits would have been <lb/>
elsewhere and would have gone <lb/>
to enrich other cities and towns. <lb/>
Greensboro Telegram. <lb/>
SAVE . <lb/>
WHY <lb/>
NATURE <lb/>
TEACHES US <lb/>
TO C <lb/>
INTO THE if- <lb/>
BANK Now <lb/>
So You'll <lb/>
ST WHEN YOU <lb/>
NEED IT. ITS SAFE IN <lb/>
THE BANK <lb/>
JAMES J. HILL, the great railroad king, <lb/>
made a pick when a young man. <lb/>
He BANKED and SAVED his earnings. He be- <lb/>
came a contractor and multi-millionaire. <lb/>
Make OUR Bank Bank. <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier <lb/>
R. L. Davis, Pres. S. T. Hooker, V-Pres. <lb/>
H. D. Bateman, Cashier <lb/>
Deafness Cannot Be Cured <lb/>
by local application, as <lb/>
roach the diseased portion of the car <lb/>
There hi only one to cure deafness, <lb/>
and by constitutional remedies <lb/>
Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed <lb/>
of the mucous of the <lb/>
Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed <lb/>
you have a rumbling sound or <lb/>
hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, <lb/>
Deafness Is the result, and unless the In- <lb/>
ran be taken out and this <lb/>
tube restored to Its normal condition, <lb/>
hearing will be destroyed forever; nine <lb/>
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, <lb/>
Is nothing an Inflamed <lb/>
of the mucous surfaces. <lb/>
will Hundred Dollars case <lb/>
by <lb/>
Hill's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, <lb/>
f CO, Toledo, Ohio. <lb/>
Bold by <lb/>
Take for constipation, <lb/>
The Taper Trust And Senate. <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/>
plutocratic service. That commit- <lb/>
tee is the very citadel of the inter- <lb/>
In it's rooms tariffs written by <lb/>
the trusts are O. jokers intend- <lb/>
ed to nullify wise legislation are <lb/>
contrived and amendments deadly to <lb/>
reform are drawn and forwarded. <lb/>
Without the sinister backing of a <lb/>
group as carefully chosen as this. <lb/>
Elihu Root's adroit amendment <lb/>
would have little notice. It is clear- <lb/>
enough the paper trust's amend- <lb/>
but the hopes of all the <lb/>
hang upon it, for if accepted by the <lb/>
Senate it opens a way to kill <lb/>
and block <lb/>
York World. <lb/>
TRINITY COLLEGE <lb/>
1859 <lb/>
1892 <lb/>
1910-1911 <lb/>
Three memorable The Granting of the Trinity College; the Removal cf <lb/>
the College to the growing and prosperous City Durham; the Building of the New and Greater <lb/>
Trinity. <lb/>
Magnificent new with new equipment and enlarged facilities. <lb/>
Comfortable dormitories and beautiful pleasant surroundings. <lb/>
Five Academic; Mechanical, Civil and Electrical Engineering; Law; Ed- <lb/>
Graduate <lb/>
For and other information, address <lb/>
R. L. FLOWERS, Durham, N. C. <lb/>
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL <lb/>
Established 1898 <lb/>
Location Equipment unsurpassed. <lb/>
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College. Special <lb/>
attention given to health. A in looks after the living conditions of boys <lb/>
under his care. <lb/>
of college graduates. Most mode-n methods of instruction. <lb/>
Fall term opens <lb/>
For illustrated address <lb/>
W. W. PEELE, HEADMASTER Durham, N. C. <lb/>
FAIR GOVERNORS TO MEET. <lb/>
There Should he a Large Attendance <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
Next Friday, 7th, the date for <lb/>
the meeting of the governing board <lb/>
and township committees of the Pitt <lb/>
County Fair Association, and there <lb/>
should be a large attendance. The <lb/>
revised premium list will be ready <lb/>
to submit that day and the township <lb/>
committees should also bring in a <lb/>
report of donations secured for <lb/>
It is time to be actively at <lb/>
work now to make the fair a great <lb/>
success. <lb/>
Farmers throughout the county <lb/>
are taking much interest in the fair <lb/>
and many of them are going to make <lb/>
exhibits. <lb/>
An egg in the hand is worth two in <lb/>
the grocery. <lb/>
Pied The Form. <lb/>
Senator Clark, of Arkansas, voted <lb/>
with the Republicans for the amend- <lb/>
to put the direct election <lb/>
senators under federal supervision. <lb/>
Thus it is that a so-called Southern <lb/>
Democrat pies the form. <lb/>
Federal supervision of elections in <lb/>
the South during <lb/>
days was sufficiently experimental <lb/>
for all who were living here in those <lb/>
days. <lb/>
For nearly a half century a few <lb/>
Democratic senators of <lb/>
have succeeded in defeat- <lb/>
of combinations of capital. Ir <lb/>
their party's policies in the in- <lb/>
this instance one man was <lb/>
Maxton Scottish Chief. <lb/>
Reputation is the world's measure. <lb/>
Character is we really have. <lb/>
CROPS mi D <lb/>
Work On The Seminary And General <lb/>
Improvements. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, July Osceola <lb/>
Ross and baby, of Zebulon, are vis- <lb/>
her father, Mr. <lb/>
Sr., at Fountain Hill. <lb/>
Friday evening at o'clock the <lb/>
barn and pack house of Mr. C. J. <lb/>
in was <lb/>
burned, and with it his carts, wagons, <lb/>
hay, oats and peas, causing a loss of <lb/>
with no insurance. The <lb/>
gin of the fire is unknown unless it <lb/>
was spontaneous combustion. <lb/>
Mrs. Jesse Cannon has returned <lb/>
from John Hopkins hospital, where <lb/>
she has undergone a successful <lb/>
for kidney trouble. <lb/>
Capt. Levi Whitehead, section master <lb/>
who has been located near Parmele, <lb/>
has been returned to this section. <lb/>
Mr. W. J. Braxton is getting the <lb/>
timber on the ground to enlarge the <lb/>
Seminary, and Mr. J. A. Griffin has <lb/>
already laid the foundation for the <lb/>
dormitory; ere long we hope to see <lb/>
the school well equipped, and endow- <lb/>
ed, as it is a certainty. Mr. Daniel <lb/>
letter in the Free Will <lb/>
had the right ring to it, with Dr. <lb/>
St. Claire in the field, Geo. Vance at <lb/>
the bat, Exum in the pit, Phil- <lb/>
lips and Prescott on deck, Prof. Saw- <lb/>
umpire, this community, with <lb/>
all the F. W. B. wire working, we <lb/>
feel sure of scoring with Greenville's <lb/>
base ball team. <lb/>
Mr. W. F. Hart and wife, who have <lb/>
been visiting here, returned to their <lb/>
home in Morehead Monday. <lb/>
We guess that Ayden and Griffon's <lb/>
ball teams must have felt like <lb/>
cents when they read the last two <lb/>
issues of the Pitt County News, es- <lb/>
the two pitchers. But all is <lb/>
well that ends well. <lb/>
We don't think we could expect <lb/>
crops to be any better than they <lb/>
Cotton and corn is certainly fine in <lb/>
this section. Still, it is hot and dry. <lb/>
Installation of officers Monday night <lb/>
G. F. Cooper is N. G., and Dr. W. H. <lb/>
Dixon, V. G. <lb/>
Dr. C. R Riddick and wife left Mon- <lb/>
day to visit relatives in Gates <lb/>
They will be gone about two <lb/>
weeks. <lb/>
Mrs. A. E. Garris is very sick with <lb/>
gastritis of the stomach. <lb/>
Ex-Judge J. L. Hobgood was in <lb/>
town Saturday. He tells us Mr. H. B. <lb/>
Smith, who for some time has been <lb/>
suffering with rheumatism, is able <lb/>
to get about without the use of crutch- <lb/>
es. Also that Mrs. Tripp is <lb/>
very sick with abscess on the brain. <lb/>
Mr. W. H. Smith, son of Mr. W. G. <lb/>
Smith, is sick at his home in Greene <lb/>
county with typhoid fever. <lb/>
We met our friend, Mr. John Bill <lb/>
Cannon, last Friday as he alighted <lb/>
from the train after hearing Gov. <lb/>
magnificent speech. He <lb/>
said that he could tell you how to <lb/>
farm, teach school, manufacture, mer- <lb/>
and conduct the affairs of <lb/>
the state, and no doubt but he will <lb/>
be our next U. S. senator, as he had <lb/>
made good every trust committed to <lb/>
him. Mr. Cannon said he was like <lb/>
the man in Cleveland county, who <lb/>
regarded Governor Kitchin as the <lb/>
greatest statesman of his age. Mr. <lb/>
Cannon is a good Democrat and is <lb/>
usually correct in his diagnosis of a <lb/>
man. That Governor Kitchin had <lb/>
been tried, is never denied and his <lb/>
friends are safe in trying him again <lb/>
and again. <lb/>
Our city fathers met Tuesday night <lb/>
to transact the regular monthly <lb/>
Durham, Lenoir, Beaufort and <lb/>
other counties have sanitariums <lb/>
for the benefit and of <lb/>
the public. Why not have one in Pitt <lb/>
county There are not many weeks <lb/>
but we see some patient going away <lb/>
for surgical operation. Our county <lb/>
has the money, and plenty of brains. <lb/>
We only like the push and energy. <lb/>
We would like to hear this matter <lb/>
discussed. <lb/>
Uncle is a good <lb/>
fisherman among his other <lb/>
He told us he had white shad <lb/>
for breakfast last Thursday morning, <lb/>
caught from the Little <lb/>
Creek. Our waters produce some- <lb/>
thing more than cat fish and eels all <lb/>
the year round. <lb/>
Messrs. S. E. Harrington and Dan- <lb/>
Moore have about the best tobacco <lb/>
crops near here. John and Alfred <lb/>
Grimsley and Luther Meadows have <lb/>
nice tobacco crops also. While the <lb/>
majority of tobacco is so badly <lb/>
en as to fall way below the average, <lb/>
our corn and cotton is nice all <lb/>
around here. <lb/>
Miss Myrtle is visiting <lb/>
Miss Mary Smith this week. <lb/>
We thought this was the dull sea- <lb/>
son of the year, but we took a look <lb/>
through the manufacturing plant of <lb/>
L. L. Kittrell Saturday and found <lb/>
things humming. The three men re- <lb/>
check, measure, toll, grind and <lb/>
deliver the meal when ground. We <lb/>
expect to soon sec a roller Hour <lb/>
mill installed so as to further ac- <lb/>
our farmers. They are do- <lb/>
a nice lot of work, turning col- <lb/>
sawing balusters and making <lb/>
cabinet mantels, manufacturing <lb/>
and various other articles. This <lb/>
is a fine opening for buggies. We soon <lb/>
hope to see their factory start to <lb/>
buggies for the fall trade. <lb/>
Mrs. Nancy Turnage and daughter. <lb/>
Miss Myrtle, has returned from Kin- <lb/>
where they had been visiting <lb/>
Mrs. B. Turnage. <lb/>
Miss Edith Mumford, who has been <lb/>
visiting friends at LaGrange and Seven <lb/>
Springs, returned home Monday. <lb/>
When you talk about pretty corn <lb/>
and cotton just include <lb/>
township. <lb/>
Capt. Levi R. Walston, who is en- <lb/>
on a log train at Spring Hope, <lb/>
is home here for a few days. <lb/>
Mr. John S. Ross, of Zebulon, own- <lb/>
of the Blount Hotel here, arrived <lb/>
yesterday with a force of hands and <lb/>
we hear Will overhaul his hotel, re- <lb/>
pair, repaint and have a rat killing <lb/>
in general, thereby making the hotel <lb/>
more attractive and comfortable. <lb/>
Girl Fire Chief. <lb/>
Fort Tampa, Fla., is to be protected <lb/>
from fire by a brigade organized and <lb/>
trained by the daughter of a the late <lb/>
chief of the Tampa fire department. <lb/>
This girl, Maggie Harris, is said to be <lb/>
the first girl in the United States, and <lb/>
probably in the world, to organize a <lb/>
fire department. About forty men <lb/>
have agreed to serve under her <lb/>
She is drilling them according <lb/>
to the rules and methods of her late <lb/>
Mechanics. <lb/>
Condensed Statement of <lb/>
THE <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
At of Business June 1911. <lb/>
RESOURCES <lb/>
Loans and Discounts . <lb/>
Overdrafts . 2,925.78 <lb/>
U. S. Bonds . 21,000.00 <lb/>
Stocks . 2,500.00 <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures . 7.136.30 <lb/>
for Clearing House . 10,929.31 <lb/>
Cash and Due from Banks . 37.007.70 <lb/>
per cent. Redemption fund . 1,060.00 <lb/>
LIABILITIES <lb/>
Capital . <lb/>
Surplus . 10.000.00 <lb/>
Undivided Profits . <lb/>
Circulation . 21,000.00 <lb/>
Bond Account . 21.000.00 <lb/>
. 24,325.00 <lb/>
Dividends Unpaid . 91.42 <lb/>
Cashier's Checks . 723.33 <lb/>
Deposits . 140,385.74 <lb/>
TOTAL DIVIDENDS 11,300.00 <lb/>
We invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms and In- <lb/>
and will be pleased to meet or correspond with those <lb/>
contemplating changes or opening new accounts, fl We want your <lb/>
business. FORBES, Cashier<lb/>
Accused of Stealing. <lb/>
E. E. Chamberlain, of Clinton, Me., <lb/>
boldly accuses <lb/>
Salve of sting from <lb/>
burns or pain from sores <lb/>
of all distress from boils <lb/>
or piles. robs, cuts, corns bruises, <lb/>
sprains and injuries of their <lb/>
he says, a healing remedy its equal <lb/>
don't Only at all <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
The men who do not need a spur <lb/>
often need a balance-wheel. <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
Low Round Trip Fares From <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Tickets on Sale July and 1911. <lb/>
City, N J. <lb/>
Account Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. Final return <lb/>
limit July which may be extended to August by depositing <lb/>
ticket and paying <lb/>
Account Mystic Shrine. Final return limit July which <lb/>
may be extended to August. by depositing ticket and <lb/>
Via All N Y <lb/>
21.45 Vii Norfolk II I. <lb/>
THESE RATES ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. <lb/>
For illustrated booklets of each of the above cities and <lb/>
trips and for schedules, Pullman reservations, etc., call on <lb/>
W. H. WARD, Ticket Agent. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
or address <lb/>
W. J. Pass. Traffic T. C. WHITE, Gen. Pass. <lb/>
W N. C.<lb/>
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH <lb/>
TRAVEL VIA <lb/>
The Chesapeake Line <lb/>
Dully Service Including The new Steamers just placed <lb/>
in Service the of Norfolk and of are the <lb/>
most elegant and up-to-date between Norfolk and <lb/>
more. <lb/>
Equipped With Wireless Telephone in Each Room. Delicious <lb/>
on Board Everything for Comfort Convenience. <lb/>
Steamers Norfolk <lb/>
Steamer Old Point <lb/>
Steamer Arrive Baltimore <lb/>
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North East and West. <lb/>
Reservations made and any Information courteously furnished by <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Norfolk, Virginia <lb/>
. m.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Far and The Eastern Reflector.<lb/>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity <lb/>
Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
Winterville, X. C, July H. <lb/>
J. Langston returned Wednesday <lb/>
from the western part of the <lb/>
state. <lb/>
Get your repair work done at <lb/>
Barber and shop. They <lb/>
do alL kinds, and their prices are <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
Miss Gladys Sutton, of Greensboro, <lb/>
spent Wednesday in town with <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Company <lb/>
have received a large shipment of <lb/>
mowing machines and <lb/>
self-dump See them before <lb/>
placing your order. <lb/>
Miss Lizzie Cox, of near Cox's Mill, <lb/>
spent the week with friends in town. <lb/>
If you want a nice pair of pants, <lb/>
A. W. Ange and Company has them, <lb/>
and cheap, too. <lb/>
Miss Eunice Woodard and little <lb/>
brother, Albert, of Wilson, is spend- <lb/>
a few days with Miss Chap- <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Company <lb/>
are carrying a large stock of repairs <lb/>
for the and Os- <lb/>
borne mowing machines. <lb/>
Messrs. C. T. Cox and Albert Wood- <lb/>
ard paid St. Abrams Spring a visit <lb/>
Thursday evening and thoroughly en- <lb/>
Joyed It. Uncle Abram has made a <lb/>
good many improvements there. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your lime. A car load on <lb/>
hand. <lb/>
Quite a number of our people went <lb/>
to Greenville yesterday, some to at- <lb/>
tend the exercises at E. C. T. T. S., <lb/>
and some to attend the exercises at <lb/>
the ball ground. <lb/>
Large stone jars at A. W. Ange <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mrs. Forrest and two <lb/>
of Rocky Mount, spent <lb/>
and Thursday with her broth- <lb/>
Mr. B. D. Forrest. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com- <lb/>
are putting in some nice wagon <lb/>
and cart material. We also notice <lb/>
they are making shipments of a few <lb/>
carts and wagons. <lb/>
Miss Lizzie Cox returned home to- <lb/>
day after spending several days with <lb/>
friends in town. <lb/>
Come and see the wall paper <lb/>
at Harrington, Barber and <lb/>
They have a complete line and from <lb/>
the leading wall paper house of New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
We notice in the weekly paper, <lb/>
the Carolina Home and Farm and the <lb/>
Eastern Reflector, that our Ayden <lb/>
correspondent has come to life, but <lb/>
he had to use Winterville items to do <lb/>
it. was the printer's mix-up. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C, July M. <lb/>
L. Barker and son, left Sat- <lb/>
to visit relatives near <lb/>
son. <lb/>
Miss Cox, who has been at- <lb/>
tending school at and <lb/>
visiting her aunt, near Asheville, since <lb/>
school closed, returned home <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Some extra good values are being <lb/>
offered at Harrington, Barber and <lb/>
in summer dry goods and hats. <lb/>
Mr. Jno. R. Carroll came in <lb/>
day night from Blue Mont, where he <lb/>
attended the Young Men's Christian <lb/>
Association. <lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Boushall, of Bell <lb/>
Cross, a teacher in Winterville High <lb/>
School, spent a few days with her <lb/>
many friends here this week. <lb/>
Messrs. Harrington, Barber and <lb/>
Company are selling their stock of <lb/>
shoes at greatly reduced prices, in <lb/>
order to make room for their fall <lb/>
stock. <lb/>
Miss Pattie Leary, of Ahoskie, who <lb/>
is attending the E. C. T. T. S., f pent <lb/>
Sunday and Monday with Miss <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
Several of hay riders made <lb/>
us a visit Monday night. <lb/>
Repair your tobacco furnaces. A. <lb/>
W. Ange and Company has the lime <lb/>
to do it. <lb/>
Capt. Levi Whitehead and family, <lb/>
who sometime ago left us and went <lb/>
to Bethel have returned and Capt. <lb/>
Whitehead has taken charge of his <lb/>
section of railroad again. We all are <lb/>
glad to have them back with us. <lb/>
Miss Cox left Monday even- <lb/>
for Greenville to attend the E. <lb/>
C. T. T. S. <lb/>
The best molasses and the best roof <lb/>
paint at Harrington, Barber and <lb/>
Quite a number of our boys attend- <lb/>
ed the ball games yesterday. <lb/>
Miss Sarah Barker came in from <lb/>
Chocowinity yesterday. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your matting, floor oil cloth <lb/>
and wall paper. <lb/>
Miss Esther Johnson and <lb/>
Cox spent yesterday In Ayden. <lb/>
For thermometers and to- <lb/>
twine, see A. W. Ange and <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
Miss Eunice and Mr. Albert Wood- <lb/>
ard, of Wilson, who has been visiting <lb/>
Miss Chapman, returned home <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Mr. Herbert Cox is spending a few <lb/>
days at Grimesland. <lb/>
St. Luke's Episcopal Sunday school <lb/>
made the park at Dr Cox's merry <lb/>
with laughter and fun Monday <lb/>
evening, croquet and other <lb/>
games were much enjoyed by the <lb/>
and last but not least, was the <lb/>
cake and cream which was served at <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
Misses Helen and Elizabeth Adams <lb/>
left this morning for Ahoskie to spend <lb/>
a week or two with friends. <lb/>
We are glad our Ayden correspond- <lb/>
has come to life. <lb/>
GETS BACK TO <lb/>
SCHOOL ROOM <lb/>
PAYS EULOGY TO HIS DEAD DOG <lb/>
Traveling Salesmen <lb/>
Are selling Remedies, <lb/>
Flavoring Extracts, Spices, Toilet <lb/>
etc., to over two million farm <lb/>
homes in every section of the United <lb/>
States and Canada. We want a bright <lb/>
energetic young salesman to handle <lb/>
our business in Pitt <lb/>
The J. R. Watkins Company, South <lb/>
Gay street, Baltimore, Maryland. Es- <lb/>
Capital over <lb/>
Plant contains over acres <lb/>
floor space. <lb/>
Sprains require careful treatment. <lb/>
Keep quiet and apply Chamberlain's <lb/>
Liniment freely. It will remove the <lb/>
soreness and quickly restore the <lb/>
parts to a healthy condition. For <lb/>
School Keeper Cuts Short The Flow <lb/>
of Eloquence. <lb/>
Hanrahan, N. C, July my <lb/>
last had come to a <lb/>
close and books are called. With <lb/>
sad hearts we had to respond to that <lb/>
authoritative call. So here he went <lb/>
each one trying to <lb/>
make the most racket. Our tyrannical <lb/>
school keeper had fully settled down <lb/>
to his day's task. I had been plan- <lb/>
marshaling my forces, <lb/>
consisting of the small boys and <lb/>
for something that I deemed <lb/>
more entertaining than spending that <lb/>
long afternoon in looking at the few <lb/>
pictures in that old blue-back speller. <lb/>
That faithful old servant of God, the <lb/>
circuit rider they called him in those <lb/>
days is called now the pastor in <lb/>
who got around one Sunday <lb/>
in about four months, had preached <lb/>
the day before, Sunday, at our nearest <lb/>
church, live miles away. Papa and <lb/>
mother went and ca. us children, <lb/>
Mrs. Meadows and her two children. <lb/>
The preacher gave a long discourse <lb/>
sermons were the standard by <lb/>
which talent was measured in those <lb/>
on the life and labors of Mr. <lb/>
Meadows, the one that the tree kill- <lb/>
ed. He had told of his love for <lb/>
country, his devotion to home and <lb/>
family, of his tragic, untimely death. <lb/>
He told in loud and thrilling tones <lb/>
of the pitiable condition of his <lb/>
ow and two helpless children left in <lb/>
this cold world without an earthly <lb/>
pilot to steer their over life's <lb/>
troublesome sea, no star of hope <lb/>
from which to get their bearings, no <lb/>
light house on the craggy rocks nor <lb/>
beacons of friends nor loved one <lb/>
standing along the shore. All seem- <lb/>
ed darkness, gloom, yea, even dis- <lb/>
pair, for besides the loss of husband <lb/>
and father it was war times, and the <lb/>
looming of the cannon could be heard <lb/>
from off Fort Fisher. <lb/>
But with all its gloom and sadness, <lb/>
my young heart and soul had caught <lb/>
on fire with inspiration and I deter- <lb/>
mined at some future day to <lb/>
duce in my own words a part, at <lb/>
least, of this sermon as a eulogy to <lb/>
my murdered dog, for then I thought <lb/>
that dog almost, if not quite, equal <lb/>
to any man, and vastly superior to <lb/>
many men, his slayer, for instance. <lb/>
But I had not the slightest idea that <lb/>
the yearned-for time and place would <lb/>
so soon present itself, but <lb/>
come only to those who use <lb/>
them, a lesson that my oldest sister <lb/>
had taught me, though I was young. <lb/>
So on entering that old cabin the <lb/>
small boys and girls at my <lb/>
planned signal, each and all <lb/>
in a space arraigned behind the <lb/>
door, as I had hoped would cut off <lb/>
from view of that old man. Soon he <lb/>
had called up the large boys and <lb/>
girls to their reading lesson. <lb/>
This was the time of my <lb/>
So I mounted one of those <lb/>
sharp edged benches and began my <lb/>
discourse in real My subject <lb/>
was faithfulness of a true dog <lb/>
to his I had told of his no- <lb/>
qualities, of his sleek black hair, <lb/>
his charming beauty, of his never <lb/>
guarded faithfulness, especially to his <lb/>
young master. I was about to reach <lb/>
the climax as I then thought a pow- <lb/>
oratorical display, of eloquence <lb/>
and pathos. I was telling with <lb/>
feeling of the tragic death of <lb/>
that faithful companion and play- <lb/>
mate of mine, and saw in reality, or <lb/>
imaginary, tears of sympathy rolling <lb/>
down the cheeks of my attentive list- <lb/>
when I felt a severe rap across <lb/>
my back was repeated for <lb/>
several times h. quick succession. <lb/>
As soon as my glands would <lb/>
secrete I began crying. are <lb/>
you doing he yelled out, <lb/>
learn you how to quit your books and <lb/>
lead this whole gang of children off <lb/>
with you. I'll teach you how to <lb/>
your school master when you <lb/>
think you are hid behind the door, <lb/>
you impertinent little <lb/>
By this time he had slackened his <lb/>
licks and I had the rejoinder. So I <lb/>
said was only paying a eulogy to <lb/>
the life and character of my dog <lb/>
that you deliberately, without any <lb/>
cause, killed, and if for that you are <lb/>
treating me in this style, I shan't <lb/>
come back here any more, for I don't <lb/>
like you any He saw that I <lb/>
would die before I would be driven, <lb/>
so he sauntered back to his seat <lb/>
after making my hearers face to- <lb/>
wards his cabin. <lb/>
The remainder of that afternoon <lb/>
wore drearily away until o'clock, <lb/>
then he let us out to go home. I <lb/>
told papa that if he would not send <lb/>
me back there, that I would not <lb/>
him with my many questions, and <lb/>
that I would daily sit at the feet of <lb/>
my oldest sister and drink in her <lb/>
sweet counsel, and even try to learn <lb/>
of wisdoms ways. So he let me stay <lb/>
home.<lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
BELIEVED ATTEMPT TO <lb/>
PRESIDENT <lb/>
SPENT BULLET STRIKES A LADY. <lb/>
Police Hunting The Men Who Fired <lb/>
The Shot <lb/>
Tuesday being the Fourth of July <lb/>
and a holiday, caused some of The <lb/>
Reflector's telegraphic news to come <lb/>
late after the paper for. the day had <lb/>
been printed. One of the dispatches, <lb/>
even if a day late, is of sufficient In- <lb/>
to be given <lb/>
Indianapolis, July seat- <lb/>
ed in the reviewing stand from which <lb/>
President Taft was to witness the <lb/>
parade, Mrs. Henry wife <lb/>
of the chairman of the committee on <lb/>
arrangements, was struck by a spent <lb/>
bullet. This occurred shortly be- <lb/>
fore the president's arrival on the <lb/>
stand. Police are unable to find <lb/>
where the shot was fired from, though <lb/>
they are hunting for two men who are <lb/>
believed to have plotted to kill the <lb/>
president. <lb/>
n aBS <lb/>
pus <lb/>
pun pun <lb/>
Nobody seems to know how to go <lb/>
out and swim when it means leaving <lb/>
a pretty girl on the beach. <lb/>
Mills <lb/>
This popular remedy never fails to <lb/>
effectually cure <lb/>
dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick <lb/>
Biliousness <lb/>
And ALL DISEASES arising from a <lb/>
Liver and Bad Digestion <lb/>
The natural result is good appetite <lb/>
and solid flesh. Dose small; elegant- <lb/>
sugar coated and easy to swallow. <lb/>
Take No Substitute.<lb/>
INTERESTING NEWS FROM <lb/>
SCOTLAND NECK <lb/>
CHURCH BUYS LOT PARSONAGE. <lb/>
Woman Found Dead In <lb/>
Weather, But Good Crops. <lb/>
Scotland Neck, N. C, July <lb/>
Mr. Editor, as this is the fourth of <lb/>
July, will try to write you a few <lb/>
squibs. <lb/>
We are having it very dry here, <lb/>
though we have a light shower <lb/>
and cotton and corn in this <lb/>
section are doing well and are very <lb/>
fine. Gardens are suffering for <lb/>
The Baptist church here has <lb/>
chased a two thousand dollar lot and <lb/>
is arranging to build a handsome par- <lb/>
on it. It. is on Church street. <lb/>
Rev. O. L. Powers, pastor of the <lb/>
Baptist church, after being away for <lb/>
a few weeks, is home again and fill- <lb/>
ed his pulpit Sunday morning and <lb/>
night. He goes to Robersonville this <lb/>
week to assist in a meeting. <lb/>
The work of the graded school <lb/>
building is progressing very rapid- <lb/>
The relatives and friends of Mrs. <lb/>
Walter Marks were greatly shocked <lb/>
here Sunday evening when they learn- <lb/>
ed that she was found dead in bed <lb/>
that morning at her home in James- <lb/>
ville. There was one in the house <lb/>
that was living except her nine <lb/>
months old baby. Don't know what <lb/>
time of day she was found. We think <lb/>
it was the saddest case we ever heard <lb/>
of. She was well Saturday night as <lb/>
usual and Mr. Marks was up very <lb/>
early Sunday morning and was going <lb/>
on an excursion, and thinking to let <lb/>
his wife rest, did not disturb her, sup- <lb/>
posing she was well. You may be <lb/>
sure it was a great shock to him <lb/>
when he learned that she was a <lb/>
corpse. Her remains were brought <lb/>
here Monday morning and buried in <lb/>
the Scotland Neck cemetery. The <lb/>
burial services were conducted by <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Powers. <lb/>
There was a large crowd of Scot- <lb/>
land Neckties went off this morning <lb/>
four or five miles to somebody's mill <lb/>
pond There were five <lb/>
or six wagons loaded down and we <lb/>
are not going to tell how many bug- <lb/>
carts, carriages and automobiles, <lb/>
but enough to fill the road a con- <lb/>
distance. I told them that <lb/>
I hoped it would rain before they got <lb/>
back, but there is not much <lb/>
for it now at three o'clock. It <lb/>
is so hot I'll have to stop. <lb/>
More Need Good Roads. <lb/>
The road-drag joy ride is an idea <lb/>
from Missouri. A few weeks ago a <lb/>
farmer south of Columbia put into <lb/>
operation an efficient system plan <lb/>
when he used his road-drag for a <lb/>
wagon on a trip to town with pro- <lb/>
duce. He could boast afterward that <lb/>
he had combined two pieces of <lb/>
business in one movement. <lb/>
Yet a later experiment goes even <lb/>
further than this by welding <lb/>
and pleasure. This is the Mel- <lb/>
System, named for L. T. Mel- <lb/>
of Huntsville. Chronicles the <lb/>
Columbia <lb/>
His wife wished to visit a neigh- <lb/>
about a mile away, and, as he <lb/>
was using the team to a road-drag, <lb/>
he placed a few boards and a seat on <lb/>
the drag, Mrs. was hauled <lb/>
to the neighbor's and later brought <lb/>
home on the drag. Thus the road work <lb/>
was not delayed nor the lady <lb/>
pointed. <lb/>
The only unpleasing aspect is that <lb/>
the lady must have reached the <lb/>
neighbor's badly mussed from jolting, <lb/>
and somewhat sprinkled with dust. <lb/>
Yet from this crude beginning <lb/>
legislation may spring, as, <lb/>
say, a law requiring all joy-riding <lb/>
to tow road-drags. This <lb/>
would improve the roads and reduce <lb/>
the speed of Weekly. <lb/>
SUNDAY SCHOOL <lb/>
SESSION <lb/>
IS WELL ATTENDED. <lb/>
or doses will cure any <lb/>
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,<lb/>
Stubborn Case <lb/>
was under the treatment of two writes <lb/>
Mrs. R. L Phillips, of Indian Valley, Va., they pro- <lb/>
my case a very stubborn one, of womanly weak- <lb/>
I was not able to sit up, when I commenced to <lb/>
take <lb/>
I used It about one week, before I saw much change. <lb/>
Now, the severe pain, that had been in my side <lb/>
has gone, and I don't suffer at all. I am feeling better than <lb/>
in a long time, and cannot speak too highly of <lb/>
Prominent Sunday School Workers <lb/>
Deliver Interesting Lectures. <lb/>
The Sunday School Institute for <lb/>
this district held under the direction <lb/>
of the North Carolina Baptist Con- <lb/>
began here this morning in <lb/>
Memorial Baptist church, to continue <lb/>
for three days. About thirty people <lb/>
from a distance were present at the <lb/>
opening, and those with the town <lb/>
people made a good attendance. <lb/>
The devotional exercises this morn- <lb/>
were conducted by Dr, I. M. <lb/>
Mercer, of Rocky Mount. Then after <lb/>
some announcements by Mr. E. L. <lb/>
Middleton as to the purpose of the <lb/>
institute, the regular program for the <lb/>
day was taken up. <lb/>
The lectures by Mr. Middleton, Dr. <lb/>
Brewer and Dr. were excel- <lb/>
lent and received the closest <lb/>
These are especially helpful <lb/>
to Sunday school workers, and of <lb/>
much interest to others. All who <lb/>
can do so should avail themselves of <lb/>
the opportunity of hearing these dis- <lb/>
speakers. <lb/>
The for tomorrow is as <lb/>
a. <lb/>
a. in the Life of <lb/>
R. <lb/>
a. Elementary De- <lb/>
L. Middleton. <lb/>
a. Train Teachers <lb/>
I. J. Van <lb/>
a. Preparation of the <lb/>
E. Brewer. <lb/>
p. to Train Teachers. <lb/>
I. J. Van <lb/>
p. Preparation of the <lb/>
E. Brewer. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. in the Life of <lb/>
R. <lb/>
p. Sunday School In <lb/>
American J. Van <lb/>
ties voting bonds as a matter of <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
The <lb/>
if you are one of those ailing women who suffer from any <lb/>
of the troubles so common to women. <lb/>
is a builder of womanly strength. Composed <lb/>
of purely vegetable ingredients, it acts quickly on the <lb/>
womanly system, building up womanly strength, toning up <lb/>
the womanly nerves, and regulating the womanly system. <lb/>
has been in successful use for more than years. <lb/>
Thousands of ladies have written to tell of the benefit they <lb/>
received from it Try it for your troubles. Begin today. <lb/>
. Chattanooga. <lb/>
Special and 64- page book. Horn Treatment See. j <lb/>
For Roads. <lb/>
Major A. A. in The <lb/>
Fayetteville Observer, is advocating <lb/>
an issue of in bonds to build <lb/>
good roads for Cumberland county, <lb/>
and one argument which he uses is <lb/>
to all counties. It is that <lb/>
it is cheaper to issue bonds than it is <lb/>
to build roads by the direct tax <lb/>
system. He gives the figures to prove <lb/>
it, says Major <lb/>
three years ending December <lb/>
1910, that our county has spent <lb/>
946.75 for good roads, an average of <lb/>
per year, and at each meet- <lb/>
of the commissioners there are <lb/>
delegations from outlying districts <lb/>
begging for our small convict force, <lb/>
and under a bond issue we could give <lb/>
such sections relief. Under a bond is- <lb/>
sue of at per cent, would <lb/>
cost per annum interest, <lb/>
which is less than we are now <lb/>
paying, so that we would only have <lb/>
a sinking fund to provide for. With <lb/>
under contract system, we <lb/>
could build good roads for the whole <lb/>
county in a short time, and in my <lb/>
opinion at less cost than we are now <lb/>
paying per The bond issue for <lb/>
building good roads in the state is <lb/>
growing in popularity. Iredell gave <lb/>
it an impetus when that county voted <lb/>
an issue of If Iredell can <lb/>
stand that much, certainly the big <lb/>
county of Cumberland could stand <lb/>
half as much. It is a good sign that <lb/>
the people do not stand so much in <lb/>
fear of bonds as formerly. A few <lb/>
years hence, we expect to see <lb/>
When The Failures Talk. <lb/>
Truly says the Greensboro Daily <lb/>
makes us tired to hear a <lb/>
poor man who will not work trying <lb/>
to express sympathy for or an interest <lb/>
in the laboring <lb/>
And this thought can be carried on <lb/>
and on, with profit. The man <lb/>
with the right spirit in his heart, <lb/>
with the proper amount of common <lb/>
sense in his mind and any mat- <lb/>
at all in his cranium hates to hear <lb/>
the failure in any branch preaching <lb/>
in support of some thing which caused <lb/>
his failure. If he is going to be man- <lb/>
enough to act as a horrible exam- <lb/>
all right, but when he tries to <lb/>
pose as a shining that is where- <lb/>
in he makes a fool of himself. When <lb/>
a man tries to preach morality he <lb/>
should be in a position for people to <lb/>
know that he is sincere, that he is <lb/>
consistent, that he really knows some- <lb/>
thing. When the failure, with pomp <lb/>
and bravado, commences to tell a <lb/>
person how a business should be con- <lb/>
ducted, why he should be given the <lb/>
No man has a right to <lb/>
teach unless he has made something <lb/>
of himself. This does not mean that <lb/>
he has got to be worth money, nor, <lb/>
on the other hand, does it mean that <lb/>
because he is worth money <lb/>
may have been left It means <lb/>
has his life profited him or others <lb/>
Is he a manly, an intellectual <lb/>
Along the same line of reasoning <lb/>
we hate to hear the bum talking <lb/>
against prohibition, and we despise <lb/>
to listen to some hypocritical <lb/>
shouting for it. Many con- <lb/>
men, those of intellect, <lb/>
fer on the question of prohibition, and <lb/>
one does rot mind turning a listening <lb/>
ear to either side, but when the hypo- <lb/>
talks disgust sweeps over the <lb/>
listener, and when the bum com- <lb/>
to damn prohibition the feel- <lb/>
is one of repugnance. The bum <lb/>
who talks against prohibition is <lb/>
a spectacle of himself and even <lb/>
the honest chap who is against <lb/>
should feel disgust when he <lb/>
raises his vote in such a strain. <lb/>
Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
Prohibition Will be Given Real Test <lb/>
With the elimination of the near- <lb/>
bear saloons in North Carolina the <lb/>
prohibition law will be given a real <lb/>
test. The old saloon with its <lb/>
of crime and vice passed away <lb/>
when the prohibition law came into <lb/>
effect, but the near-beer saloon took <lb/>
its place in many parts of the state. <lb/>
It is true that some of these places <lb/>
were kept clear of vice and run in a <lb/>
manner. But attendance <lb/>
upon the sittings of a recorder's court <lb/>
in almost any town of the state would <lb/>
convince any one that these places <lb/>
were the centers from which a large <lb/>
part of the crime committed in the <lb/>
community radiated. It was in con- <lb/>
either direct or indirect, with <lb/>
these places that the greater part of <lb/>
the illegal sales whiskey were <lb/>
made. The gruesome murder recently <lb/>
committed to county in con- <lb/>
with one of these places <lb/>
brought home in an impressive man- <lb/>
to the people of this section the <lb/>
criminal aspect of near-beer saloons. <lb/>
With the elimination of the near- <lb/>
beer saloons the last hang-out place <lb/>
of the saloon element has passed. <lb/>
What other center this element will <lb/>
congregate around remains to be seen, <lb/>
and the workings of the real <lb/>
law will be watched with much <lb/>
interest from this time <lb/>
ham Sun. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Rome Farm The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
AN OPEN LETTER <lb/>
FROM EVANS <lb/>
TO ROADS <lb/>
Takes Issue With Bond Advocates <lb/>
For Using Term. <lb/>
An open letter to the Greenville Town- <lb/>
ship <lb/>
Dear <lb/>
In Wednesday's issue of The Re- <lb/>
I notice a call you for a <lb/>
mass meeting to be held in Greenville, <lb/>
on July 4th, for the purpose, as you <lb/>
give it, of forming a Greenville <lb/>
Township Association, <lb/>
and to carry to a successful issue the <lb/>
election for a bond issue, which was <lb/>
recently provided for by the <lb/>
What I wish to know is. how you <lb/>
can link both of these propositions <lb/>
together and ask all who are in favor <lb/>
of good roads to with you. There <lb/>
are very few, if any, in the township <lb/>
who are not in favor of good roads, <lb/>
but there is quite a large number, <lb/>
an overwhelming majority, I think, <lb/>
who are opposed to the bond issue as <lb/>
proposed in the legislative act. <lb/>
I have noticed that those who favor <lb/>
the bond issue are continually <lb/>
calling themselves the friends of good <lb/>
roads, and in the same breath are <lb/>
dubbing those opposed to this bond <lb/>
issue as the opponents of good roads <lb/>
which strikes me as another effort <lb/>
to befuddle the issue and mislead the <lb/>
people. <lb/>
How strange it is, that those who <lb/>
favor the issuance of bonds are con- <lb/>
trying to find some other <lb/>
banner under which to conduct their <lb/>
campaign Why is it that you do <lb/>
not forthwith openly and boldly form <lb/>
an association for the ostensible <lb/>
pose of carrying the election for <lb/>
bonds, and like men who have faith <lb/>
in their cause, hoist on high a flag <lb/>
that represents your true position <lb/>
If your meeting Tuesday is called <lb/>
for the purpose of organizing to car- <lb/>
this election, it looks as if the <lb/>
meeting is not to be exactly as rep- <lb/>
resented. There are men all over <lb/>
the township who would be glad to <lb/>
meet together to devise ways and <lb/>
means to make better roads, but who <lb/>
should not be into coming here <lb/>
to merely the and <lb/>
devised by a hand <lb/>
full of who did not represent <lb/>
the township when they met here in <lb/>
Greenville one night last winter with- <lb/>
out giving more than twenty-four <lb/>
notice that such meeting would <lb/>
be held, and proceeded to fix a law <lb/>
according to their own sweet way. <lb/>
W. F. EVANS. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
College of Agriculture and <lb/>
Mechanical Arts <lb/>
The State's Industrial <lb/>
Four-year courses in in Civil- <lb/>
Electric, and Mechanical Engineering, in <lb/>
Industrial Chemistry, in Cotton <lb/>
and Dyeing. Two-year courses in <lb/>
Mechanical Art and in Textile Art. One- <lb/>
year courses in These courses <lb/>
are both practical and scientific. <lb/>
nations for admission are held at all county <lb/>
seats on July For Catalog address <lb/>
THE REGISTRAR, <lb/>
West <lb/>
It's easy to believe that you have <lb/>
good taste, but it isn't so easy to <lb/>
convince others. <lb/>
PRAYER LEAGUE HAS <lb/>
PATRIOTIC <lb/>
NEXT SUNDAY <lb/>
League Votes Down Proposition To <lb/>
Suspend For Two Months. <lb/>
The timeliness of subjects discussed <lb/>
by the Men's Prayer League at the <lb/>
meetings each Sunday afternoon has <lb/>
been observed by those attending as <lb/>
well as those keeping up with the <lb/>
reports of the meetings. <lb/>
as it Relates to was the <lb/>
subject for the past Sunday at the <lb/>
meeting in the Methodist church, and <lb/>
the talks by the leaders, Messrs. O. <lb/>
B, Warren, C. C. Pierce and R. M <lb/>
Hearne, were in splendid keeping <lb/>
with the subject. The songs at this <lb/>
service also breathed the Christian <lb/>
spirit of true patriotism. <lb/>
Owing to the warm weather there <lb/>
was some discussion on the question <lb/>
of suspending the meetings of the <lb/>
league for two months, but a motion <lb/>
to that effect was voted down almost <lb/>
unanimously. This shows the spirit <lb/>
and interest of the men who are at- <lb/>
tending the meeting. <lb/>
Next Sunday at p. m., the <lb/>
meeting will be held in the <lb/>
church, when the subject will <lb/>
be View or Text, <lb/>
Romans Matthew and <lb/>
Leaders, Messrs. Tom Du- <lb/>
J. C. Tyson and J. A. Lang. <lb/>
RAIN IN BEAVER DAM. <lb/>
Asleep With Head On End of Cross <lb/>
Tie. <lb/>
Beaver Dam, N. C, July 1911. <lb/>
On June 28th this section was vis- <lb/>
by a copious rain accompanied <lb/>
by some rain and wind. The latter <lb/>
did but little damage, while the crops <lb/>
are much by the rain, not <lb/>
so much moisture falling since March. <lb/>
The old man that the editor saw <lb/>
that early morning in the deep rail- <lb/>
road cut near Arthur, was not a <lb/>
tramp proper. He is a carpenter of <lb/>
three score years, who was returning <lb/>
to his work in the Ballard section. <lb/>
He took along a pint of Farmville <lb/>
corn juice to help up his heart if it <lb/>
got slow, and his brain got sleepy. <lb/>
The good old man laid down with his <lb/>
head on the end of a cross tie to <lb/>
rest, knowing as he says, that the <lb/>
midnight train was by and the could <lb/>
get a few nap by the next <lb/>
train. When he awoke the engine <lb/>
was passing his head. He says, <lb/>
I saw all that red light I <lb/>
slipped my head off that cross tie <lb/>
and lay close to the ground. That <lb/>
seemed to be a long train. I'll nap <lb/>
no more with my head on a cross <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
In this issue appears the notice of <lb/>
Institute, Whitsett, N. C. <lb/>
This school has had a remarkable <lb/>
history for the last twenty-five years <lb/>
and has grown to be one of the state's <lb/>
leading boarding schools. Last year <lb/>
it had two hundred and fifty students <lb/>
and forty graduates. Dozens of <lb/>
dents from Pitt, Greene and <lb/>
rounding counties have attended this <lb/>
school, and all have been well pleas- <lb/>
ed. If you are interested in schools <lb/>
you should write for a copy of the <lb/>
beautiful which is now <lb/>
When duty calls some in <lb/>
another direction. <lb/>
Go See <lb/>
As the spring begins and you want to do your spring <lb/>
shopping. <lb/>
GO SEE for Dress Goods in all qualities and <lb/>
and Misses Tailor-made Skirts, Ladies Shirt <lb/>
Waists, Muslin Underwear, Notions, Shoes and Oxfords, <lb/>
Household Goods, Traveling Bags and Grips, Furniture, <lb/>
Chairs and Mattress. <lb/>
GO SEE for Crockery, Glassware, Tinware, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware. <lb/>
GO SEE for Cultivators, Plows and all Farm- <lb/>
Utensils. <lb/>
We want your trade. We have the goods and will make <lb/>
prices right. <lb/>
It makes no difference what you want we can supply <lb/>
it. When you want it and want to buy it right, GO SEE <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete stock of mer- <lb/>
ever carried in Greenville. Don't think because <lb/>
you go and see that you must buy from him, but we <lb/>
want you to come and learn what we have to offer you and <lb/>
see if we cannot make it to your interest to deal with us. <lb/>
We want to say once more no matter what you want, <lb/>
for personal use, home or farm, GO SEE <lb/>
J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina <lb/>
Needs County Hospital. <lb/>
Dr. J. Howell W. Day, of <lb/>
ville, an ex-president of the North <lb/>
Carolina Medical Society, in a re- <lb/>
cent interview, urges the necessity <lb/>
of county hospitals for the care of <lb/>
the sick. <lb/>
He says that future generations <lb/>
will wonder at our great <lb/>
for our court houses and jails, <lb/>
while caring for the sick is left to <lb/>
private enterprise. Dr. Way insists <lb/>
that physicians should be better <lb/>
paid. In closing his interview Dr. <lb/>
Way <lb/>
is an undeniable fact that the <lb/>
average North Carolina doctor of <lb/>
medicine works harder for less <lb/>
money than any other educated class <lb/>
of men in the state, or in their re- <lb/>
communities. But in this <lb/>
matter tradition, refined ethical <lb/>
conceptions, habit, sympathetic con- <lb/>
for former patients, and <lb/>
other influences so affect the aver- <lb/>
age doctor, that he will not lift his <lb/>
hand to better these conditions hence <lb/>
it behooves the friends of the <lb/>
thinking men and women, who <lb/>
realize that at no time in the history <lb/>
of civilization has the work of the <lb/>
physician been so valuable as in the <lb/>
present era, to see they are better <lb/>
and more promptly <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
Venters X Roads Items. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C, June H. <lb/>
A. Windham preached at Rose Hill <lb/>
Sunday. There was a large crowd to <lb/>
hear him. <lb/>
Mr. Johnnie Moore and Misses <lb/>
Helen Page and Nancy Mills, from <lb/>
Cox's Mills, Sunday with Miss <lb/>
Misses Sallie and Branch. <lb/>
Miss Lula Haddock spent Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday with Miss Sadie <lb/>
Harris. <lb/>
Mr. W. A. Garris and wife went to <lb/>
Winterville today. <lb/>
The farmers are busy laying by <lb/>
their corn and tobacco. <lb/>
OUR WEEKLY <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER <lb/>
TAFT STANDS BY ALDRICH. <lb/>
Democrats Are Fulfilling Their <lb/>
Promise. <lb/>
Clyde H. <lb/>
Washington, July young <lb/>
members of the house are working <lb/>
like veterans. The present house is <lb/>
one that no Democrat, or any other <lb/>
American citizen for that matter, <lb/>
need apologize for. I believe that <lb/>
the country thoroughly appreciates <lb/>
this, Thus declared Speaker <lb/>
Champ Clark. He was hard at work <lb/>
in his private office at the time, sit- <lb/>
ting behind a desk piled high with <lb/>
correspondence, reports of <lb/>
gating committees, and an assort- <lb/>
of books that would serve any <lb/>
ordinary man as an entire library. <lb/>
members of the house are <lb/>
fighting a good said the speak- <lb/>
are fulfilling as rapidly and as <lb/>
literally as possible every promise <lb/>
made to the people. <lb/>
promised in the Denver plat- <lb/>
form to reform the rules of the <lb/>
house, and we have done it. That is <lb/>
an accomplished fact. <lb/>
opponents declared that only <lb/>
under the old rules could the <lb/>
of the house be transacted. It <lb/>
was predicted that if the committees <lb/>
were named by the house chaos would <lb/>
result. <lb/>
have reformed and liberalized <lb/>
the rules and elected committees and <lb/>
we business and bring joy <lb/>
to the hearts of all lovers of the re- <lb/>
public. <lb/>
promised the people that we <lb/>
would submit a proposition to amend <lb/>
the constitution to permit the people <lb/>
to vote direct for United States sen- <lb/>
The house promptly passed <lb/>
such a measure. <lb/>
promised to pass a bill com- <lb/>
the publication of campaign <lb/>
expenses before the elections. That <lb/>
has been done. <lb/>
promised to admit New Mex- <lb/>
and Arizona. We have done our <lb/>
best to bring that about. It is up to <lb/>
the senate. <lb/>
promised to cut down the dis- <lb/>
of the government. We <lb/>
have already made a beginning by <lb/>
abolishing more than one hundred <lb/>
useless offices in and about the house <lb/>
of representatives, thereby saving <lb/>
annually. <lb/>
is only an earnest of what <lb/>
we will accomplish. <lb/>
are living up to the <lb/>
doctrine of in the <lb/>
public expense that labor my be light- <lb/>
No doubt we will be <lb/>
sneered at by spendthrifts as cheese- <lb/>
parers, but hard-headed sensible <lb/>
folk will our action, because <lb/>
it deserves to be <lb/>
promised to repeal the tariff <lb/>
on wood pulp, print paper, lumber, <lb/>
timber and logs and that those <lb/>
would be placed on the free list. <lb/>
So far is the Democratic house is <lb/>
concerned that pledge has been <lb/>
filled in the reciprocity bill and the <lb/>
free list which now <lb/>
sleeps in the Republican <lb/>
Taft Still With Aldrich. <lb/>
President Taft's recent statement <lb/>
that the adoption of ex-Senator Aid- <lb/>
currency system, designed to <lb/>
put the control of American money <lb/>
absolutely in the hands of Wall street <lb/>
bankers, is the most important <lb/>
now pending, has resulted in <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
the old issue being raised between <lb/>
himself and progressive Republicans. <lb/>
He has presented himself and his <lb/>
administration as a new menace to <lb/>
public interest and raised the Dem- <lb/>
and progressive Republicans <lb/>
to a higher plane of public useful- <lb/>
as the only effective force the <lb/>
public can rely upon to resist the <lb/>
money power of Morgan and <lb/>
the president's efforts to serve it. <lb/>
Both Aldrich and Mr. Taft declare <lb/>
there is no intention of establishing <lb/>
anything like a central government, <lb/>
bank. But nobody can read the Aid- <lb/>
rich plan in detail without realizing <lb/>
that it is a central bank of issue that <lb/>
he proposes. His so-called <lb/>
association of is to be the <lb/>
depository and fiscal agent of the <lb/>
national government. It is to have <lb/>
the sole issue power. It may receive <lb/>
deposits from those national banks <lb/>
that are stockholders in it. It shall <lb/>
establish branch banks which just as <lb/>
under the central government bank <lb/>
scheme, will rush their local deposits <lb/>
to the central bank, thus taking <lb/>
money out of the community which <lb/>
would otherwise be loaned out for in- <lb/>
vestments in home enterprises. It <lb/>
may buy and sell government and <lb/>
state securities and gold coin or <lb/>
lion. may paper for <lb/>
banks depositing with it. <lb/>
In short, the Aldrich reserve <lb/>
is a bank with immense <lb/>
and powers, but without the <lb/>
name of a bank. Wall street will <lb/>
control it. It is obvious that the <lb/>
words were <lb/>
because of the prejudice against <lb/>
such an institution by the country <lb/>
banks. Uncle Sam once tried a <lb/>
bank. It was manned and ma- <lb/>
by politicians and brought <lb/>
a panic on the entire country. Aid- <lb/>
flimsy misrepresentations even <lb/>
though endorsed by Mr. Taft, will <lb/>
accomplish but little. Remembering <lb/>
its last experience, this government <lb/>
will not stand for another central <lb/>
government bank. <lb/>
A Democratic Doctrine. <lb/>
Election of senators by the direct <lb/>
vote of the people, which is now held <lb/>
up in congress by an amendment <lb/>
supported by of Kansas, and <lb/>
the entire group of special privileges <lb/>
servers in the senate, is distinctly a <lb/>
Democratic proposition. The report <lb/>
of the proceedings of the Republican <lb/>
national convention of 1908 shows <lb/>
that the vote on, including in the <lb/>
platform a demand for the election <lb/>
of senators by the people Yeas <lb/>
and nays <lb/>
What Free List Menus. <lb/>
The Democratic free list bill in <lb/>
congress simply means that the farm- <lb/>
will get his vehicle, farm tools, <lb/>
wire fencing harness and shoes for <lb/>
less money. Is not that a good thing <lb/>
Can You Figure This Out J <lb/>
While the Republican trust-buster, <lb/>
Kellogg, was prosecuting the Stand- <lb/>
ard Oil Company for the government, <lb/>
he was receiving regular and <lb/>
compensation from the steel trust. <lb/>
Directors of the concern that paid <lb/>
him these were stockholders in the <lb/>
concern he was prosecuting. What is <lb/>
the answer <lb/>
A King Who Left Home. <lb/>
Set the world to talking, but Paul <lb/>
of Buffalo, N. Y., says he <lb/>
always keeps at home the king of lax- <lb/>
King's New Life Pills <lb/>
and that they're a blessing to all his <lb/>
family. Cure constipation, headache, <lb/>
indigestion, dyspepsia. Only cents <lb/>
at all druggists. <lb/>
DIRECTORY <lb/>
AND CITY OFFICIALS <lb/>
Satan smiles every time he sees <lb/>
a church closed for the summer. <lb/>
Churches, Lodges and Social <lb/>
County. <lb/>
Superior Court C. Moore <lb/>
SheriffS. I. Dudley. <lb/>
Register of M. Moore <lb/>
B. <lb/>
C. OH. Laughing- <lb/>
house. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
P. D. <lb/>
J. Holland, J. J. May, B. M. Lewis, W. <lb/>
B. Proctor. <lb/>
Town <lb/>
M. Wooten. <lb/>
C. Tyson. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Chief T. Smith. <lb/>
Fire D. Overton. <lb/>
E. Nobles, C. S. Can. <lb/>
W. A. Bowen, E. B. Higgs, J. F. <lb/>
Davenport, E. G. Flanagan, Z. P. <lb/>
VanDyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Water and Light A <lb/>
White, C. Laughinghouse. K. L. <lb/>
Humber. <lb/>
G. Couch. <lb/>
Churches. <lb/>
Baptist, C. M. <lb/>
Rock, pastor; C. C. <lb/>
C. W. Wilson, superintendent Sn- <lb/>
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary. <lb/>
C. C. Ware, <lb/>
J. G. Latham, clerk; C. C. Ware, <lb/>
superintendent of Sunday school; J. <lb/>
A. Lang, secretary. <lb/>
Episcopal, St. rector at <lb/>
present; H. Harding, senior warden <lb/>
and secretary of Vestry; W. A. Bowen <lb/>
superintendent of Sunday school. <lb/>
Methodist, Jarvis J <lb/>
If. Shore, pastor; A. B. <lb/>
clerk; H. D. Bateman, superintend- <lb/>
of Sunday school; L. H. Pender, <lb/>
secretary. <lb/>
pastor at <lb/>
P. M. Johnston, clerk; P. M. John- <lb/>
superintendent Sunday <lb/>
Miss Olivia House, secretary. <lb/>
Chapel <lb/>
Rev. W. O. pastor. <lb/>
Lodges. <lb/>
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
L. H. Pender, W. M.; R. Williams, <lb/>
Sec. <lb/>
Sharon, U. D., A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
H. Harding, W. M.; E. E. Griffin, <lb/>
Sec. <lb/>
Greenville Chapter No. R. A. M. <lb/>
R. C. Flanagan, H. P.; J. E. <lb/>
low, Sec. <lb/>
Covenant No. I. O. O. <lb/>
Brown, N. G.; L. H. Pender, <lb/>
Greenville Encampment No. I. O. <lb/>
O. F James Brown, C. P.; D. C. <lb/>
Moore, Scribe. <lb/>
Tribe No. I. O. <lb/>
R. S. Sachem; J. L. <lb/>
Evans, C. of R. <lb/>
Tar River No. K. of J. <lb/>
Woodward, C. C; A. B. Ellington, <lb/>
K. of R. and S. <lb/>
Tar River Ruling No. F. M. <lb/>
W. Brown, W. R.; J. W. Little, <lb/>
W. C. <lb/>
Clubs. <lb/>
L. Hall, president; <lb/>
M. R. Turnage, secretary. <lb/>
End of E. O. <lb/>
fries, Pres.; Mrs. E. B. Sec. <lb/>
Sans <lb/>
president; Mrs. W. L. Hall, secretary <lb/>
Round K. R. <lb/>
president; Mrs. S. J. Everett, <lb/>
Civic W. H. Ricks, <lb/>
president; Mrs. E. V. Smith, <lb/>
Daughters of L <lb/>
TWO WOMEN KILLED <lb/>
BY LIGHTNING STROKE <lb/>
MAN SEVERELY SHOCKED <lb/>
Were All Working Id a Field Near <lb/>
Jack. <lb/>
During the thunder storm Thurs- <lb/>
day afternoon two women were kill- <lb/>
ed instantly by the same stroke of <lb/>
lightning while they were at work in <lb/>
the field of Mr. A. B. Hudson, near <lb/>
Black Jack. They were Mrs. W. H. <lb/>
and Mrs. Alfred Edwards. A <lb/>
son of Mrs. Corbett who was plowing <lb/>
nearby was also struck knocked <lb/>
insensible, but soon revived. The <lb/>
electrical storm was very severe in <lb/>
that section of the county, while they <lb/>
had only a little rain. <lb/>
Mrs. Edwards leaves a husband <lb/>
and several small children, the old- <lb/>
est about nine years. <lb/>
Mrs. Corbett leaves a husband and <lb/>
one child nearly grown. They were <lb/>
buried this afternoon. <lb/>
Creek Items. <lb/>
Grimesland, N. C, June <lb/>
through this section are very good, <lb/>
people are nearly through laying by. <lb/>
Things are not nearly as dry as they <lb/>
were before the big rain. <lb/>
Miss Hattie Mobley spent Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
L. D. Buck at Grimesland. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Williams is all smiles. <lb/>
She has a nice <lb/>
Mr. Sam Holliday and Mrs. Edd <lb/>
Holliday spent Sunday afternoon <lb/>
with Mrs. J. L. Williams. <lb/>
Mrs. John Wilson spent Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday at Mr. L. W. <lb/>
son's. <lb/>
Mr. Jim Stokes and wife spent Sun- <lb/>
day with Mrs. J. L. Williams. <lb/>
A crowd of our people went <lb/>
Monday afternoon. They <lb/>
had good luck, but got run out of the <lb/>
woods by a thundercloud before they <lb/>
all got their buckets full. <lb/>
Mrs. Nancy Elks of Grimesland <lb/>
spent Saturday night and Sunday at <lb/>
Mr. M. L. Riggs. <lb/>
There are two girls in this section <lb/>
that says they are run over with <lb/>
work and would like to have help. <lb/>
Attack Like Tigers. <lb/>
In fighting to keep the blood pure <lb/>
the white corpuscles attack disease <lb/>
germs like tigers. But often germs <lb/>
multiply so fast the little fighters are <lb/>
overcome. Then see pimples, boils, <lb/>
eczema, and sores <lb/>
and strength and appetite fail. <lb/>
This condition demands Electric Bit- <lb/>
to regulate stomach, liver and <lb/>
kidneys and to expel poisons from the <lb/>
blood. are the best blood <lb/>
writes C. T. of Tracy, <lb/>
Cal., have ever They make <lb/>
rich, red blood, strong nerves and <lb/>
build up your health. Try them. <lb/>
at all druggists. <lb/>
Important Notice. <lb/>
The board of equalization will meet <lb/>
in the office of the county commission- <lb/>
on Monday, July 10th, for the <lb/>
purpose of giving those who have not <lb/>
done so an opportunity of listing <lb/>
taxes, and also to hear any complaints <lb/>
as to valuation of property for <lb/>
order of J. B. chair- <lb/>
man of the board of equalization. <lb/>
J. Jarvis, president; J. L <lb/>
en, secretary. <lb/>
The Kings A. L. <lb/>
Blow, president; Mrs. J. G<lb/>
L- . it<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
THE HOME and <lb/>
FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR COMPANY, Inc. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Subscription, one year, . . <lb/>
Six <lb/>
rates may be had upon <lb/>
application at the business office in <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner Evans <lb/>
and Third streets. <lb/>
All cards of thanks and resolutions <lb/>
f respect will he charged for at <lb/>
cent per word. <lb/>
Communications advertising <lb/>
dates will be charged for at three <lb/>
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910. at the post office at <lb/>
North Carolina, undo <lb/>
act of March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY, JULY 1911. <lb/>
EDITORS AT <lb/>
The editor of The Reflector is back <lb/>
at his post after an absence of four <lb/>
days attending the meeting of the <lb/>
North Carolina Press Association at <lb/>
Lenoir. He has attended many meet- <lb/>
of the association since he be- <lb/>
came a member in 1878, when he <lb/>
Joined at Catawba Springs, near <lb/>
Hickory, and can truthfully say that <lb/>
none of them was more delightful <lb/>
than this last meeting at Lenoir. The <lb/>
people of that progressive mountain <lb/>
city did everything that seemed <lb/>
to add to the pleasure of their <lb/>
guests. <lb/>
Arriving at Lenoir Monday evening, <lb/>
the editors were met by a committee <lb/>
of citizens and taken to their <lb/>
stopping places, most of them <lb/>
being quartered at Davenport Col- <lb/>
where the sessions of the con- <lb/>
were held. Rev. J. B. Craven, <lb/>
president of the college, and his <lb/>
charming wife, gave every attention <lb/>
to the comfort of those stopping with <lb/>
them. <lb/>
At the first meeting of the con- <lb/>
Monday night, the board of <lb/>
trade distributed envelopes contain- <lb/>
post card views of Lenoir for <lb/>
the use of the members in writing <lb/>
home, and checks for cold drinks or <lb/>
cigars at any of the drug stores. <lb/>
Tuesday morning they were taken in <lb/>
carriages and automobiles for a <lb/>
drive up Hibriten mountain and lunch <lb/>
WM served on the mountain top. <lb/>
That afternoon while the members <lb/>
were engaged in meeting, the ladies <lb/>
of the editorial party were delight- <lb/>
fully entertained at a reception by <lb/>
the ladies of Lenoir. That evening <lb/>
the men had automobile trips around <lb/>
the city. <lb/>
Tuesday night and Wednesday <lb/>
forenoon were devoted to the <lb/>
of the convention. In addition <lb/>
to the part taken by the editors in <lb/>
the splendid program, there were ad- <lb/>
dresses by several distinguished men <lb/>
of the state, these being Dr. Joseph <lb/>
Hyde Pratt, Dr. Few. president of <lb/>
Trinity College, Dr. John A. Ferrell, <lb/>
Hon. J. R. Young. Dr. Poteat, founder <lb/>
of Wake Forest College, and Con- <lb/>
John H. Small. <lb/>
The work of the convention was <lb/>
completed by dinner Wednesday, <lb/>
though the program had to be rather <lb/>
hurried, and that afternoon a large <lb/>
number left on the three <lb/>
trip to Blowing Rock, Boone, <lb/>
Grand Father <lb/>
Mountain and other points in that <lb/>
beautiful country. While The Re- <lb/>
man was among those who did <lb/>
not take the extended mountain trip, <lb/>
he nevertheless another de- <lb/>
afternoon before facing home- <lb/>
ward. Dr. A. A. Kent, a leading <lb/>
physician and Caldwell county's rep- <lb/>
in the legislature is <lb/>
a brother-in-law of President R. H. <lb/>
Wright, of East Carolina <lb/>
Training took us out over <lb/>
the Turnpike mountain roads for a <lb/>
trip of about twenty-five miles. Be- <lb/>
sides the pleasure of discussing <lb/>
topics with a gentleman so <lb/>
well informed, the ride over the fine <lb/>
roads among the mountains was much <lb/>
enjoyed. <lb/>
SHADE TREES. <lb/>
come to the governor and other <lb/>
of the state who are here today <lb/>
to attend the celebration of the an- <lb/>
of the breaking of ground <lb/>
for the buildings of East Carolina <lb/>
Teachers Training school. We are <lb/>
all proud of our splendid institution <lb/>
and are glad to have others come <lb/>
here and see what we have. The in- <lb/>
speaks for Itself. <lb/>
-o <lb/>
The lawyers took a step in the <lb/>
right direction at the meeting of the <lb/>
Bar Association at when <lb/>
they recommended that the number <lb/>
of Superior court judges be increased <lb/>
to twenty-four, that the present sys- <lb/>
of rotation of judges be abolished, <lb/>
that solicitors be put on salary, and <lb/>
that the law relating to the selection <lb/>
of jurors be amended. <lb/>
The silver maple as a shade tree <lb/>
is tabooed by the shade tree com- <lb/>
mission of Trenton, N. J., and they <lb/>
impose a fine on any one planting <lb/>
them in that city, oil account of the <lb/>
established fact that this particular <lb/>
tree is short lived, will not stand the <lb/>
strain of heavy winds, and <lb/>
is too small when full grown to <lb/>
ford any great amount of shade. <lb/>
The shade tree commission of <lb/>
Trenton is doing a splendid work <lb/>
along the line of beautifying the <lb/>
city. We believe a similar com- <lb/>
mission for Greenville would be a <lb/>
good thing. There is too much <lb/>
less slaughter of trees here by <lb/>
who have no conception of civic <lb/>
beauty, and we suggest that the new <lb/>
board of aldermen elect a committee <lb/>
of its members to look after this in- <lb/>
of the town and not leave it up <lb/>
to the police as heretofore. <lb/>
It is important that we have <lb/>
shade trees and that they be protect- <lb/>
ed and not butchered by the author- <lb/>
as it were. <lb/>
It is to be hoped there will be a <lb/>
large attendance of the board of gov- <lb/>
and township committees of <lb/>
the Pitt county fair at the meeting <lb/>
to be held on next Friday, 7th. Town- <lb/>
ship committees should be busy <lb/>
soliciting premium list donations be- <lb/>
fore the meeting and report that <lb/>
day. <lb/>
They have come across another <lb/>
senatorial scandal, the charge being <lb/>
made against Senator Stephenson of <lb/>
Wisconsin, that was used to <lb/>
secure his election. <lb/>
The New York Journal of Com- <lb/>
reports the condition of the <lb/>
cotton crop for June at 85.9, two <lb/>
points better than in May and five <lb/>
points better than a year ago. <lb/>
Two French editors struck a <lb/>
over an race and <lb/>
settled it in a sword duel, each re- <lb/>
a wound in the arm. France <lb/>
still recognizes the duel to be legal. <lb/>
The mid-year dividends paid by the <lb/>
banks of Charlotte amounted to <lb/>
Charlotte does things on a big <lb/>
scale. <lb/>
The wire trust is now running the <lb/>
gauntlet. Maybe they will reach the <lb/>
rope trust after a while and bang <lb/>
somebody. <lb/>
Carolina Home Farm The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
t. <lb/>
With today's issue of The Farm- <lb/>
ville Enterprise <lb/>
ton's term as its editor expires, he <lb/>
having resigned to take a more <lb/>
position on a tobacco market <lb/>
elsewhere. Since taking up the <lb/>
work of The Uncle <lb/>
has endeared himself to many <lb/>
of its readers and he will be missed. <lb/>
Mr. G. A. Rouse, formerly of Snow <lb/>
Hill, will succeed him. <lb/>
Greenville extends a cordial <lb/>
The government requires that a <lb/>
citizen must take an oath <lb/>
the constitution of the United <lb/>
yet the government will issue to a <lb/>
citizen a license to sell liquor in a <lb/>
prohibition state and thus help that <lb/>
citizen to become a violator of the <lb/>
law. This is rank inconsistency. <lb/>
The Charlotte Observer has dis- <lb/>
covered that North Carolina produces <lb/>
more cotton per acre than any other <lb/>
state. Then the other states must <lb/>
have a very small yield, for even in <lb/>
North Carolina, the state that leads, <lb/>
it is not half as much per acre as it <lb/>
should and could be made. <lb/>
You can wait for the casualty re- <lb/>
turns, especially from the North, <lb/>
from the use of pop crackers on <lb/>
this, the biggest of all national <lb/>
Down here ii the South we <lb/>
go fire-works crazy in celebrating <lb/>
Christmas, a senseless custom, and <lb/>
the North takes Its bug-house turn <lb/>
when the Fourth of July comes. <lb/>
When the new court house is com- <lb/>
we would like to see work <lb/>
start up on something else as large <lb/>
to fill in the gap between now and <lb/>
the beginning of work on the gov- <lb/>
building. <lb/>
We offer our congratulations to the <lb/>
press association upon its selection <lb/>
of so Enterprising a man for its new <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
That kind of a pun is hardly <lb/>
it <lb/>
Cowan jumped the game, and don't <lb/>
know what he missed by not being <lb/>
there. Guess he could not leave off <lb/>
watching the girls in bathing <lb/>
Now they are saying that dollar <lb/>
bills are full of microbes. Bring them <lb/>
along this way dollar we'll <lb/>
take care of the microbes. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
We have seen it, and can say that <lb/>
Raleigh's new auditorium building is <lb/>
something large enough to brag <lb/>
about. <lb/>
And the charge is that former <lb/>
dent Roosevelt was sweet on the <lb/>
sugar trust. <lb/>
The city water is all right again. <lb/>
It took only a few days for the <lb/>
to be corrected. <lb/>
No more June brides for a year, <lb/>
but the October ones will come in <lb/>
the meantime. <lb/>
Be in Greenville Tuesday, July <lb/>
Fourth, and help organize a township <lb/>
good roads association. <lb/>
You should be equally as patriotic <lb/>
every other day of the year as on <lb/>
the glorious 4th. <lb/>
According to advices from <lb/>
Cowan in the Wilmington Dispatch, <lb/>
you should also boil eggs. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
The Fourth of July orator today got <lb/>
off his speech about the signers of <lb/>
the Declaration of Independence. <lb/>
When they come they get their <lb/>
eyes opened about Greenville. <lb/>
Greenville's only Fourth of July <lb/>
diversion will base ball. <lb/>
Now, is you catch a fellow selling <lb/>
near-beer swat him. <lb/>
Greenville will have a real sane <lb/>
fourth unless some of the ball rooters <lb/>
overdo their job. <lb/>
o--------- <lb/>
Congressmen are not thoroughly <lb/>
appreciating having to stay in Wash- <lb/>
and work all the summer. <lb/>
July Fourth is good roads day all <lb/>
over the state. It is a good way to <lb/>
observe independence day. <lb/>
Raleigh's new auditorium is bring- <lb/>
it into note as a convention city. <lb/>
The dentists will meet there next <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Our congratulations to William- <lb/>
upon having installed a good <lb/>
electric lighting system. It is a sign <lb/>
of progress. <lb/>
The State Bar Association in <lb/>
away last week elected ex-Judge <lb/>
Francis D. Winston president. It is <lb/>
an honor he will wear worthily. <lb/>
Beverly is once more occupying <lb/>
top of the column position, all be- <lb/>
cause the president is summering <lb/>
there. <lb/>
There will be some growling on <lb/>
the part of the fellow who failed to <lb/>
list his taxes when he faces a double <lb/>
tax. <lb/>
The state building commission has <lb/>
decided to cut down one story on the <lb/>
new administration building and make <lb/>
it four stories instead of five. <lb/>
Now listen at them go after the <lb/>
governor for the place on the <lb/>
ration commission made vacant by <lb/>
the death of Commissioner Brown. <lb/>
If all the North Carolina papers <lb/>
have said about Lenoir the past week <lb/>
was put in a book, it would make a <lb/>
big volume. <lb/>
And some of them are actually <lb/>
charging that this unusually long hot <lb/>
spell is caused by Halley's comet <lb/>
coming so near the earth a few months <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
An increase of in exports <lb/>
and in imports for the city <lb/>
of Wilmington the past fiscal year <lb/>
shows a gratifying growth of business <lb/>
in North Carolina's chief seaport. <lb/>
Greenville, in keeping with her <lb/>
spirit, extends a cordial welcome to <lb/>
every visitor here at the Sunday <lb/>
School Institute. The best that <lb/>
the town has is theirs, coupled with <lb/>
the wish that each may have an ex- <lb/>
pleasant stay among us. <lb/>
o- <lb/>
California got another shake, but <lb/>
a bad one. <lb/>
The city of Charlotte has made an <lb/>
appropriation of toward the <lb/>
support of two trained nurses to at- <lb/>
tend poor people who are unable to <lb/>
provide themselves with proper at- <lb/>
in cases of sickness. This is <lb/>
a step in the right direction. <lb/>
Editor Isaac London, of the Siler <lb/>
City Grit, was awarded the mendacity <lb/>
medal at the recent press convention, <lb/>
and will wear it the coming year. He <lb/>
has certainly told some whoppers <lb/>
during the past year. <lb/>
President Taft was the center of a <lb/>
sensation in Indianapolis on the <lb/>
fourth. A spent bullet striking a per- <lb/>
son the platform from which he <lb/>
was speaking, brought out the stir <lb/>
that two thugs were trying to kill <lb/>
the president. <lb/>
Mr. Henry C. Brown, one of the <lb/>
members of the state corporation <lb/>
commission, died Tuesday morning at <lb/>
bis home in Raleigh. He served as <lb/>
clerk to the board for many years, and <lb/>
at the last state election was chosen <lb/>
a member of the commission. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
The Fairmont Messenger, a good, <lb/>
live weekly paper, published in <lb/>
Robeson county, has recently <lb/>
chased a cylinder press and <lb/>
will soon have it installed ready for <lb/>
use. This is a mark of progress we <lb/>
are glad to see. <lb/>
Whichard sat in this chair a few <lb/>
minutes during the writer's absence, <lb/>
but that is not the reason some of <lb/>
these squibs are red-headed. <lb/>
Greensboro News. <lb/>
Guess you found the seat warm, too. <lb/>
Eh In fact, it was too warm for us <lb/>
to tarry long. <lb/>
An Elizabeth City correspondent <lb/>
must be trying to get in the <lb/>
sen class with the Hendersonville <lb/>
low. He reports an old dig- <lb/>
about a stump and unearthing <lb/>
a pot that contained in gold. <lb/>
His story was looking a little <lb/>
until he said the reported <lb/>
the find to his employer on whose <lb/>
land he was digging stumps, and the <lb/>
latter took a few pieces of the gold <lb/>
as souvenirs and let the carry <lb/>
the balance home to his family. That <lb/>
ruined the story. <lb/>
About Advertising. <lb/>
A business ebbs or flows, goes up <lb/>
or in proportion as the business <lb/>
man let people know- what he has <lb/>
to sell them. To act on the idea that <lb/>
what people want they will come and <lb/>
seek after, might do if all business <lb/>
men followed it. But the shrewd, up- <lb/>
to-date business man will not follow <lb/>
such fossilized methods, but through <lb/>
judicious, attractive and generous ad- <lb/>
tells the public what he has, <lb/>
and the public reciprocates by <lb/>
with him. In truth, people do not <lb/>
want to bother themselves with won- <lb/>
where they can get an article <lb/>
when the fact can be brought to their <lb/>
notice through an ad in the local <lb/>
paper. The invariable rule is no ad- <lb/>
little business; fair <lb/>
fair business; generous ad- <lb/>
prosperous business. Why <lb/>
the rule works out so infallibly is <lb/>
clear to every Intelligent mind. <lb/>
Standard Laconic. <lb/>
latch the front door, people in <lb/>
caution as to disease, in <lb/>
steps to keep from getting some j Presidency may be studied to ad- <lb/>
malady, often leave a loop-hole. by certain gentlemen within <lb/>
Champ Clark's Strength. <lb/>
Mr. Clark's attitude toward the <lb/>
comes as the result of just a little <lb/>
thoughtlessness, or, perhaps, of a <lb/>
weak spot in the armor of thorough- <lb/>
and it is this weak spot that <lb/>
the disease-shaft frequently hits. It <lb/>
is not an infrequent occurrence for <lb/>
people, when they go to public places, <lb/>
to make certain of the purity of the <lb/>
drinking water, before touching it, and <lb/>
yet give little heed to the receptacle <lb/>
that holds the water, or the drinking <lb/>
cup that is hanging nearby, of per- <lb/>
haps resting on some soggy spot. And <lb/>
the cup probably holds more <lb/>
germs, more kind of germs, <lb/>
running the gamut of disease, <lb/>
consumption, and <lb/>
than anything else. Hence, now <lb/>
much attention is being given to this <lb/>
menace. The attention is widespread, <lb/>
but it is going to be even wider, and <lb/>
of much greater force. Means now, <lb/>
such as paper cups, each cup suitable <lb/>
for but one usage, are being adopted, <lb/>
and many people go armed with their <lb/>
own drinking cups to public places. <lb/>
Just what will be the reason- <lb/>
able and easiest working, solution re- <lb/>
mains to be seen, but it is a matter <lb/>
that should be given attention by the <lb/>
individual. <lb/>
The following brief item from the <lb/>
New York Tribune is interesting and <lb/>
helpful in the <lb/>
city bacteriologists of Chicago <lb/>
have made a collection of public <lb/>
drinking cups from hotels, schools, <lb/>
stores and railway stations, and have, <lb/>
with a view to proving their unclean- <lb/>
made bacterial cultures and <lb/>
microscopical examinations from <lb/>
them. They found germs of many <lb/>
varieties and specimens of diphtheria <lb/>
and pneumonia. Pigs were inoculated <lb/>
with these germs, and all those <lb/>
which were treated with the pus <lb/>
germs developed fatal Many <lb/>
positive tests were also made with the <lb/>
diphtheria cultures. The secretary of <lb/>
the Illinois Board of Health, writing <lb/>
on the same subject, pub- <lb/>
drinking cup is as antiquated as <lb/>
the ducking stool and the inquisition; <lb/>
people never think of eating from pub- <lb/>
plates or wearing public clothes <lb/>
or smoking public <lb/>
ton Dispatch. <lb/>
whose bonnets the buzzing of the <lb/>
presidential bee deafens them to the <lb/>
voice of common sense and the call <lb/>
of public duty. <lb/>
a result last year's <lb/>
the party placed me in the <lb/>
most responsible position it had to <lb/>
give. My duty is here helping the <lb/>
house to make good, and I am going <lb/>
to stay here as long as there is any- <lb/>
thing for me to do. In other words. <lb/>
I am not going to neglect the work <lb/>
here in order to run around the <lb/>
try after another <lb/>
Previous to this year and the open- <lb/>
of the session called to deal with <lb/>
the for-seeking reciprocity <lb/>
policy, it cannot be said that Mr. <lb/>
Clark's claim to B presidential <lb/>
nation was regarded as very serious, <lb/>
nor, perhaps, would his name now <lb/>
be placed near the head of the list <lb/>
of probable nominees. But he has <lb/>
developed a remarkable aptitude for <lb/>
minding the business he has in hand <lb/>
and letting his future take care of <lb/>
itself, which opens up very interest- <lb/>
York Times. <lb/>
And The Drinking Cup. <lb/>
Like a person who locks down all <lb/>
the windows at night and forgets to <lb/>
King Cotton. <lb/>
In spite of a general and <lb/>
early adverse crop condition, it is <lb/>
now predicted that the South will <lb/>
present this year the cotton <lb/>
crop in the history of its cultivation. <lb/>
In a recent article in the <lb/>
Record, Editor Richard H. <lb/>
Edmonds made this <lb/>
The value of the cotton crop of <lb/>
1910-11 is probably <lb/>
than the combined output of all <lb/>
the gold mines of the world. The to- <lb/>
exports for the year of cotton <lb/>
and cotton products amount to <lb/>
this being in ex- <lb/>
of the combined exports of bread- <lb/>
stuffs, meat and dairy products, cat- <lb/>
hogs, and sheep, mineral oils and <lb/>
iron and steel. As Mr. Edmonds well <lb/>
says, cotton is not simply an asset of <lb/>
great value to the South, but also <lb/>
of vital importance to the prosperity <lb/>
of the United States. <lb/>
In the cultivation of cotton and the <lb/>
manufacture of its various products <lb/>
the South has a field of unchallenged <lb/>
supremacy and prosperity. A proper <lb/>
exploitation of this field means a <lb/>
quick growth of population and a <lb/>
wonderful increase in property val- <lb/>
News. <lb/>
The Railroad. <lb/>
Some of the big railroad systems <lb/>
of the country have adopted the plan <lb/>
of oiling their roadbeds with a view <lb/>
to eliminating the dust nuisance which <lb/>
is particularly annoying during sum- <lb/>
mer travel. If the innovation works <lb/>
well it will remove one of the most <lb/>
disagreeable features of traveling by <lb/>
rail. <lb/>
Dust is not only annoying, it is <lb/>
It is now recognized as a <lb/>
good medium for the dissemination of <lb/>
disease germs. The oil treatment <lb/>
has been applied successfully to city <lb/>
streets and public roads for some <lb/>
years, and the use of oil as a <lb/>
of dust is increasing rapidly. <lb/>
Now that some of the are <lb/>
beginning to employ it there will be <lb/>
a still wider field for the crude pro- <lb/>
duct of Mr. numerous <lb/>
wells. <lb/>
The traveling public will hail the <lb/>
railroad with joy, and will <lb/>
hope that its mileage may increase. <lb/>
In time, perhaps, we shall also have <lb/>
the railroad, and it will be <lb/>
for the weary traveler to get <lb/>
an breath of fresh air and <lb/>
a view of the landscape without the <lb/>
necessity of a subsequent visit to an<lb/>
Embezzler Arrested. <lb/>
Deputy Sheriff R. H. Harper, of <lb/>
county, arrived in the <lb/>
city last night for the purpose of car- <lb/>
back to his county Charles <lb/>
Chaney, a white man, charged with <lb/>
embezzlement of from Edward <lb/>
Davis, of Elizabeth City. Chaney <lb/>
was first located in Edenton, and <lb/>
from there he came to this town, <lb/>
where he was arrested by the chief <lb/>
of Police Geo. N. Howard, at the <lb/>
request of the Elizabeth City <lb/>
Chaney is a young man, <lb/>
and has only been here a short while <lb/>
Accompanied by the deputy sheriff <lb/>
he left on the Southern train <lb/>
this News. <lb/>
Only Seen by the Man in the Moon. <lb/>
You needn't talk about the <lb/>
when in the silvery moon- <lb/>
light a gallant young gentleman is <lb/>
looking his angelic sweetheart full in <lb/>
the face, and there is no eye all <lb/>
the world to <lb/>
Star.<lb/>
-v. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
V. <lb/>
.-,, . <lb/>
H. <lb/>
The Carolina Hone and Farm The Eastern Reflector.<lb/>
QUITS SCHOOL <lb/>
DAYS <lb/>
GOES TO THE SEA SIDE. <lb/>
How Ocracoke Her <lb/>
Way Out of Difficulties. <lb/>
Hanrahan, N. C, June 1911. <lb/>
It seems that digression is a large <lb/>
part of my profession when looking <lb/>
for something better than I have in <lb/>
possession. So from my first day at <lb/>
school I'll wonder away, and in- <lb/>
stead tell something of my sea-side <lb/>
stay. <lb/>
What did I see at Ocracoke Lots <lb/>
of tame-wild geese and many dead- <lb/>
live oaks. To a kinder people I <lb/>
never spoke. They will feed you, <lb/>
sleep you, and tell you a Joke, take <lb/>
you to the surf, let you tumble and <lb/>
soak; they will tell you the traditions <lb/>
of ancient Roanoke, but history <lb/>
at Ocracoke. They will tell you <lb/>
how the island got her name <lb/>
never say how a ship that was <lb/>
passing in the darkness got lame. <lb/>
She carried as a mascot a cock that <lb/>
was game, by crowing at day light <lb/>
he had reached some fame. The ship <lb/>
had sunk to edge of her and <lb/>
a voice was heard through an old <lb/>
fashioned funnel, and the captain ex- <lb/>
claimed, Crow let each <lb/>
get quick to his bundle and respond <lb/>
to the call from the funnel, and <lb/>
through the darkness they waded <lb/>
ashore and since that time this name <lb/>
it bore, except for that <lb/>
have been put upon it. <lb/>
One of the most amusing stories <lb/>
those people told me while there, was <lb/>
of a genteel young fellow from <lb/>
Greenville, Goldsboro, Raleigh <lb/>
cause that city gent was so green, <lb/>
hen he sat down on a turf near by, <lb/>
off with his shoes, rolled his pants <lb/>
legs high, then took his girl with a <lb/>
tender embrace and bore her over to <lb/>
a dry place. Then as each couple <lb/>
came in turn, this same lesson our <lb/>
young man learned. Now when he <lb/>
thinks to go to Rome, he asks, <lb/>
the people there act as they do at <lb/>
His girl pardoned him for <lb/>
his breach of their etiquette, she <lb/>
agreed to try to learn the etiquette <lb/>
of interior. So today they are <lb/>
happy up in the interior. She can <lb/>
adopt the customs of our people, and <lb/>
when they visit her parents on the <lb/>
coast, she will have taught him that <lb/>
it is no breach of their etiquette if it <lb/>
Is necessary to pull off your shoes, <lb/>
roll up your pants, take up your girl <lb/>
and bear her across the stream or <lb/>
from boat to shore. <lb/>
learned on our return home <lb/>
that Kinston had secured the school <lb/>
for the feeble-minded. If adults <lb/>
were allowed to attend this school, <lb/>
then Kinston would be filled to her <lb/>
utmost capacity. <lb/>
Will resume my in my next. <lb/>
EDITORS ELECT OFFICERS. <lb/>
some other city up in the interior. <lb/>
But his destination, wherever it may <lb/>
have been, even if it were Hanrahan, <lb/>
he had evidently never in broad day- <lb/>
light and in the presence of her <lb/>
father, mother and others embraced <lb/>
a girl. But awhile ago one of those <lb/>
lovely belles, who live close to <lb/>
and nature's God, came up in <lb/>
the Interior, and her winning ways, <lb/>
cultured discourses, many of <lb/>
them are posted on most any subject, <lb/>
learning both from observation and <lb/>
by being trained in our best <lb/>
and refined looks captured his heart. <lb/>
So he took a trip after corresponding <lb/>
a while to see her, and to be sure he <lb/>
was putting on all the dignity he <lb/>
knew how. Sunday came and it was <lb/>
church time. They both wore their <lb/>
best tailor-made clothes, silk hose <lb/>
and patent leather slippers. They <lb/>
were followed by her parents, and <lb/>
several other young couples made their <lb/>
way to the church. About mid way <lb/>
the island is a slough that at high <lb/>
tide is about knee deep in water. <lb/>
This must be crossed to reach the <lb/>
church. On arriving at this slough <lb/>
our gent from the interior was very <lb/>
much embarrassed. He stood for a <lb/>
while and looked at his girl and then <lb/>
at the water, but what to do he did <lb/>
not know. As he was from the city <lb/>
she hesitated in suggesting a way <lb/>
out of his dilemma. So at last he, <lb/>
with shoes and all plunged in and <lb/>
waded across, leaving his best girl <lb/>
on the opposite side. She seeing no <lb/>
other way out waded in, too. A nice <lb/>
plight they were in to attend church. <lb/>
So they stood awhile and pondered. <lb/>
He would look at his girl and then <lb/>
his vision wandered. He saw she <lb/>
smiled, but why he did not know. <lb/>
So while they were hesitating and <lb/>
he was strenuously meditating, an- <lb/>
other young couple arrived on the <lb/>
They laughed out right, be- <lb/>
Probably Meet In Morehead City <lb/>
Next Year. <lb/>
At the meeting in Lenoir the North <lb/>
Carolina Press Association elected <lb/>
the following officers for the coming <lb/>
President, J. J. Farris, of the High <lb/>
Point Enterprise. <lb/>
First Vice-President, J. H. Caine, <lb/>
f the Asheville Citizen. <lb/>
Second Vice-president, H. C. Martin, <lb/>
of the Lenoir Topic. <lb/>
Third Vice-president, J. T. Fain, of <lb/>
or the Greensboro Telegram. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Secretary and Treasurer, J. <lb/>
Sherrill, of the Concord Tribune. <lb/>
Historian, R. F. of the Mon- <lb/>
roe Journal. <lb/>
Orator, Josephus Daniels, of the <lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb/>
Poet, William Hill, of Barium <lb/>
Springs, Our Fatherless Ones. <lb/>
Executive committee, H. A. Lon- <lb/>
don, of the Pittsboro Record; R. M. <lb/>
Phillips, of the Greensboro News; D. <lb/>
T. Edwards, of the Kinston Free <lb/>
Press; R. W. Vincent, of the Charlotte <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
The association will probably hold <lb/>
its meeting next year at the Atlantic <lb/>
Hotel in Morehead City. While the <lb/>
selection of the time and place of <lb/>
meeting is left with the executive <lb/>
committee, the association expressed <lb/>
a preference for Morehead City and <lb/>
recommended that the committee <lb/>
that place if satisfactory arrange- <lb/>
can be made. <lb/>
Thirty Tears Together. <lb/>
Thirty years of <lb/>
of it. How the merit of a good thing <lb/>
stands out in that the worth- <lb/>
of a bad one. So there's no <lb/>
guesswork in this evidence of <lb/>
Concord, Mich., who <lb/>
have used Dr. King's New Discovery <lb/>
for years, and its the best cough <lb/>
and cold cure I ever Once it <lb/>
finds entrance in a home you can't <lb/>
pry it out. Many families have used <lb/>
it forty years. Its the most <lb/>
throat and lung medicine on earth. <lb/>
for asthma, hay <lb/>
fever, croup, quinsy or sore lungs. <lb/>
Price Trial bottle free. <lb/>
A leading <lb/>
BOARDING SCHOOL Low <lb/>
Wide Excellent <lb/>
Location <lb/>
with views and full <lb/>
particular sent Free <lb/>
Write Adorns <lb/>
MM H <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Have you found out what interest- <lb/>
news is contained in the want <lb/>
page There is a reason why <lb/>
want ads are interesting to every- <lb/>
body. Supply and demand create <lb/>
a market. The man who has an <lb/>
article which he has no further <lb/>
use for, with the assistance of a <lb/>
little want ad, can find rapidly <lb/>
the other man who is looking or <lb/>
just that article. <lb/>
Phone Your Wants to <lb/>
The Daily Reflector <lb/>
The Carolina Home and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Bed Room Suits <lb/>
WITH A LOW BASE, LONG MIRROR IN GOLD- <lb/>
EN QUARTERED OAK BUREAU, ALSO A <lb/>
SPLENDID LINE OF MIRROR-BACK <lb/>
CHINA CLOSET IN QUARTERED POLISHED <lb/>
OAK. THE NEW PERFECTION OIL COOK <lb/>
STOVE WILL KEEP YOU COOL AND COOK <lb/>
WITH SO MUCH MORE COMFORT <lb/>
Taft VanDyke, Furniture <lb/>
J. S. MOORING <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
Buyer of Cotton and Country Produce <lb/>
FIVE POINTS, GREENVILLE, N. C. <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/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
SHOULD HAVE ATTENTION. <lb/>
y Important Matters to The Farm- <lb/>
of The State. <lb/>
any sections of the state are pass- <lb/>
through the most severe drought <lb/>
y have ever experienced at this <lb/>
son of the year. <lb/>
any of us, as we review the farm <lb/>
rations of the past three months, <lb/>
where we have made costly mis- <lb/>
es. We also see where we hit the <lb/>
so to speak, and scored <lb/>
We have illustrations and <lb/>
or opportunities for <lb/>
on the farms of others, the <lb/>
of these successes and mis- <lb/>
We should make careful note <lb/>
these and they will serve us in <lb/>
stead in the years to It <lb/>
Id be a day well spent to take <lb/>
at this season and drive over the <lb/>
and observe the crops on the <lb/>
fields and farms along the <lb/>
make inquiry as to date and <lb/>
th of breaking, subsequent <lb/>
date of planting, and method <lb/>
cultivation, and previous crops <lb/>
noting carefully the physical <lb/>
mechanical condition of each <lb/>
d. In this way we can get in- <lb/>
matter for discussion at <lb/>
ion meetings, Alliance <lb/>
Clubs, picnics and social <lb/>
It is thus that we can <lb/>
and teach some most valuable <lb/>
sons in and crop manage- <lb/>
t, and thereby make our mistakes <lb/>
tributary to our future success, <lb/>
the past, with all that it teach- <lb/>
Is behind us; the immediate <lb/>
e engages our attention; harvest <lb/>
not yet; the critical period is just <lb/>
us, and we should try to <lb/>
laking further mistakes. In the <lb/>
of the season our <lb/>
thoughts were engaged <lb/>
with the problem of proper fer- <lb/>
in most instances, methods <lb/>
preparation and planting received <lb/>
consideration. Many of <lb/>
did not reckon with the problem <lb/>
moisture, but just took it for grant- <lb/>
that it would be forthcoming, and <lb/>
we find the cause of some of <lb/>
most costly mistakes. <lb/>
is the most important <lb/>
In the production of crop-, and <lb/>
by which water may be <lb/>
fired in the subsoil and conserved <lb/>
future use by the crops should <lb/>
our most careful <lb/>
early in the season. <lb/>
The planting season in many see- <lb/>
opened with less water in the <lb/>
than ever before, and the <lb/>
in most places since April <lb/>
is below the average for this <lb/>
by several inches. As a re- <lb/>
It, the soil is unusually dry, and <lb/>
e soil water unusually low for this <lb/>
of the year. And, as already <lb/>
we are just entering the <lb/>
period in the growth of the crop <lb/>
the stage of growth at which most <lb/>
is required to bring to good <lb/>
and maturity. <lb/>
With a normal rainfall the <lb/>
of the growing season it will re- <lb/>
tire our utmost skill to produce a <lb/>
Ir crop in many sections. We will <lb/>
to conserve every particle of <lb/>
possible, and herein we need <lb/>
i be resourceful, and perform the <lb/>
in the most efficient manner. <lb/>
e only thing to do is to cultivate, <lb/>
titivate shallow, cultivate frequent- <lb/>
Avoid open furrows. The man <lb/>
takes a shovel plow, or solid <lb/>
and opens a ditch on each <lb/>
of the raw, as some are now do-<lb/>
is guilty of <lb/>
of plant life. cot- <lb/>
ton sweeps, harrows and cultivators, <lb/>
set to run shallow, not over one or <lb/>
two inches deep, and good implements <lb/>
to use in making a dust mulch. Lay <lb/>
aside the Dixie and shovel plow and <lb/>
thereby save the crop. Make all <lb/>
possible haste to stir the soil after <lb/>
a Under present <lb/>
it is imperative that we do this; <lb/>
if we do not, and a crust is allowed <lb/>
to form and remain for a few days <lb/>
the soil actually becomes dryer than <lb/>
if no rain had fallen, and the crop <lb/>
suffers severely. <lb/>
We should keep the cultivation go- <lb/>
even if no rain falls to form a <lb/>
crust. In some instances it may <lb/>
be better to run a drag or a light <lb/>
roller constructed for the purpose to <lb/>
break the crust or compact the soil <lb/>
where too open and loose. Go over <lb/>
the crop every week or ten days; <lb/>
if allowed to lie too long, injury will <lb/>
done by cultivation. <lb/>
it behooves us as farmers to study <lb/>
the situation, to stand by our crops, <lb/>
seek advice from each other and try <lb/>
not to let our crops suffer through <lb/>
any mistake of ours. <lb/>
There is another thing that should <lb/>
not escape our scarcity <lb/>
and high price of hay. Many farmers <lb/>
are now paying to cash per <lb/>
ton, and to on time for <lb/>
thy hay. The drought has cut short <lb/>
the hay crop in the north and west, <lb/>
and hay is going to be scarce and <lb/>
high next winter and spring. <lb/>
Fortunately, it is not too late for <lb/>
to yet the and <lb/>
that we will need. An acre or two <lb/>
sowed or planted to sorghum now, or <lb/>
any time in July, and well fertilized, <lb/>
will yield an abundance of forage. <lb/>
Millet can be sown, as also can corn, <lb/>
cow peas and soy beans, and no op- <lb/>
should be spared to grow an <lb/>
abundance of these crops to provide <lb/>
ample supply of forage for winter and <lb/>
spring. <lb/>
In the fall, rye, winter oats, wheat, <lb/>
barley, crimson clover and vetch can <lb/>
be easily and cheaply grown, and is <lb/>
far superior to the best timothy <lb/>
hay. <lb/>
We recently saw a farmer paying <lb/>
cash per ton for hay, and we <lb/>
wondered by what process of reason- <lb/>
he arrived at the conclusion to <lb/>
grow cotton and to buy hay instead <lb/>
of growing the hay himself. And as <lb/>
we pondered we thought of the re- <lb/>
mark of a ten-year-old boy, who stood <lb/>
in a cotton field, leaning on his hoe <lb/>
handle, in the middle of an after- <lb/>
noon, about the last of May, watching <lb/>
a farmer driving by with ten bales <lb/>
of hay on his wagon. He had passed <lb/>
early in the morning on his way to <lb/>
town and was now on his way home. <lb/>
As we drove by with the cultivator <lb/>
the boy said, I have just been <lb/>
thinking. If that man had gone out <lb/>
last fall with his team and prepared <lb/>
half an acre of land and sowed to oats <lb/>
and crimson clover, and cut with <lb/>
mowing machine this spring and put <lb/>
in the barn, it would not have taken <lb/>
longer to do this work than he has <lb/>
been gone from home for this load of <lb/>
hay, and he would have made as much <lb/>
or more hay, too, and could have <lb/>
saved the money he paid for that <lb/>
Was the boy right <lb/>
Unless more than ordinary <lb/>
is paid to our forage crops from <lb/>
now on, many farmers in this state <lb/>
will buy hay next summer at prices <lb/>
higher than they have paid for it <lb/>
in years. The hay crop out West it <lb/>
short. In fact, it is short everywhere, <lb/>
and we may reasonably look for ex- <lb/>
high prices for hay next <lb/>
REAPING BENEFIT. <lb/>
From The Experience of Greenville <lb/>
People. <lb/>
We are fortunate indeed to be able <lb/>
to profit by the experience of our <lb/>
neighbors. The public utterances of <lb/>
Greenville residents on the following <lb/>
subject will interest and benefit thou- <lb/>
sands of our readers. Read this state- <lb/>
No better proof can be had. <lb/>
Mrs. Jane L. Godwin, <lb/>
son avenue, Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
feel justified in recommending <lb/>
Kidney in return for the <lb/>
benefit I received from them. For a <lb/>
long time my back ached and I had <lb/>
dizzy spells and headaches. The <lb/>
kidney secretions also annoyed me <lb/>
and I had pains through my lions. <lb/>
When I read of Kidney Pills, <lb/>
I got a box from the John L. Wooten <lb/>
Drug Company, their use as <lb/>
relieved me. I can now rest <lb/>
much better at night and my <lb/>
has improved in every <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Remember the and <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
AS TO EXPERIMENT PARKS. <lb/>
Teacher at Training School. <lb/>
Miss Daisey B. of Raleigh, <lb/>
has been elected teacher of Latin at <lb/>
East Carolina Training <lb/>
School, to succeed Miss Birdie <lb/>
Kinney, who resigned. Miss is <lb/>
a graduate of Peace the <lb/>
State Normal and Industrial College, <lb/>
and took a degree from Cornell this <lb/>
spring. She has taught in the graded <lb/>
schools of Wilmington and Raleigh, <lb/>
and is highly recommended. <lb/>
Trinity College. <lb/>
Attention is called the advertise- <lb/>
of Trinity College and Trinity <lb/>
Park School, at Durham. These <lb/>
schools stand at the head of education- <lb/>
institutions and offer superior ad- <lb/>
vantages. sent on <lb/>
cation. <lb/>
Teachers to Statesville. <lb/>
Misses Margaret Blow and Nellie <lb/>
Pender, of Greenville, have been elect- <lb/>
ed as teachers in the Statesville grad- <lb/>
ed schools for the next term. We can <lb/>
assure the Statesville people that ex- <lb/>
selections were made in these <lb/>
two young ladies. <lb/>
In Regard to Their Establishment In <lb/>
Each County of the State. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Burgess state <lb/>
mist, has addressed a communication <lb/>
in regard to the value of establish- <lb/>
farm experimental stations in <lb/>
each county in the state and <lb/>
sizing at the same time the need that <lb/>
the press of the state aid in the work <lb/>
that has been started to inculcate <lb/>
more scientific farming principles in- <lb/>
to those engaged in this vocation. <lb/>
Farmers of Mecklenburg have re- <lb/>
a copy of the following letter <lb/>
from <lb/>
are aware that the local press <lb/>
takes great interest in the welfare of <lb/>
the that the interest <lb/>
of the two are at many points <lb/>
cal. <lb/>
The leading function of the North <lb/>
Carolina Department of Agriculture is <lb/>
not its police work but that of pro- <lb/>
agricultural wealth among <lb/>
the farmers of the state. With this <lb/>
in view, we are establishing in each <lb/>
county a number of local <lb/>
farms, one on each public road <lb/>
leading into the county seat, on which <lb/>
simple but vital experiments are con- <lb/>
ducted in plain view of every passer- <lb/>
by. This local experiment work is <lb/>
planned with a view to arousing in- <lb/>
on the part of the farmer <lb/>
the study of his own local conditions <lb/>
of crop production. In this way we <lb/>
hope to aid the farmers in each <lb/>
to increase their crop yields and <lb/>
thus enable the state to grow at <lb/>
home the millions of dollars worth <lb/>
of food supplies which are now an- <lb/>
shipped into the state from <lb/>
outside sources. We are enclosing a <lb/>
copy of our contract which will show <lb/>
the subject and indicate the scope <lb/>
of the work. <lb/>
now on we shall desire to <lb/>
reach the farmers of your county <lb/>
through your paper and with your <lb/>
permission, will offer you, from time <lb/>
time, for publication, short <lb/>
on our work as it progresses in <lb/>
your county and on other agricultural <lb/>
subjects of interest to your <lb/>
truly yours, <lb/>
L. BURGESS, <lb/>
By direction of the commissioner. <lb/>
Colored Man Needs Help. <lb/>
Willis Clark, of the best known <lb/>
and most public spirited colored men <lb/>
of Greenville, is permanently dis- <lb/>
and has been for sometime, and <lb/>
is in need of assistance. He was for <lb/>
years connected with the colored fire <lb/>
department and a faithful fire fighter, <lb/>
rendering the town much service. He <lb/>
will appreciate anything the people <lb/>
do for him in his affliction. <lb/>
summer. Begin now to prepare for <lb/>
the evil day. If your stubble land is <lb/>
too hard to break with a plow, run a <lb/>
disk or cutaway harrow over it at <lb/>
once so as to form a mulch and stop <lb/>
evaporation of the little water re- <lb/>
in the soil. Then when the <lb/>
first rain falls prepare and sow at <lb/>
once with some crop for hay. A fail- <lb/>
on the part of the farmers of the <lb/>
state to attend to this now will re- <lb/>
in costly experience next sum- <lb/>
mer. <lb/>
T. J. W. BROOM, <lb/>
Assistant Demonstrator <lb/>
ALDERMEN ORGANIZE. <lb/>
And Elect Officers for the Coming <lb/>
Fiscal Year. <lb/>
The fiscal year of Greenville In <lb/>
municipal affairs beginning the first <lb/>
of July, the recently elected and hold- <lb/>
over aldermen met at noon today to <lb/>
take over the administration from <lb/>
their predecessors. Mayor F. M. <lb/>
Wooten presided and administered the <lb/>
official oath to the aldermen. The <lb/>
board is as <lb/>
First J. E. Nobles. <lb/>
Second A. Bowen and E. <lb/>
Third F. Davenport and <lb/>
J. S. Tunstall. <lb/>
Fourth P. VanDyke and <lb/>
B. F. Tyson. <lb/>
Fifth C. Edwards. <lb/>
The following officers were elected <lb/>
by the <lb/>
Alderman J. E. <lb/>
Nobles. <lb/>
Clerk and tax C, Ty- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Chief of T. Smith. <lb/>
Assistant A. Clark. <lb/>
Night H.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb/>
Advertising rates furnished <lb/>
Ayden. M. C, June had a <lb/>
fine game of base ball yesterday. <lb/>
Mr. W. F. Hart and wife, of More- <lb/>
head City, are visiting friends in <lb/>
Ayden. <lb/>
A large crowd, about two car loads <lb/>
of people, came down from Green- <lb/>
ville to witness the ball game Tues- <lb/>
day. Next time we shall expect Dr. <lb/>
G. Ernul, Messrs. Ben. Patrick <lb/>
and to come and help <lb/>
root for Greenville. <lb/>
Field peas are getting scarce, as <lb/>
our people are sowing more and more <lb/>
each year. <lb/>
Corn and cotton is extremely fine in <lb/>
this section, while the tobacco crop <lb/>
is not worth talking <lb/>
Mrs. J. and son, <lb/>
Jack, passed through here Tuesday <lb/>
for Ocracoke, where Mr. Jake <lb/>
will wed, on Wednesday, <lb/>
Miss Virginia Dare Pittman, the ac- <lb/>
daughter of Capt. Bob. <lb/>
Pittman, formerly of Grifton. <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Dickinson is visiting rel- <lb/>
in Granville and Person county, <lb/>
also attended the celebration of the <lb/>
24th of June at the Oxford Orphan- <lb/>
age. <lb/>
Quite a large delegation of Ayden- <lb/>
expect to hear Gov. Kitchin speak <lb/>
in Greenville Friday. Governor <lb/>
Kitchin is very popular with our <lb/>
den people. <lb/>
Mr. J. F. and family <lb/>
spent Wednesday in Ayden. <lb/>
Messrs. R. W. Smith and W. F. Hart <lb/>
spent Thursday with Mr. E. E. <lb/>
in Greene county. <lb/>
Mr. Marshall Tripp had his right <lb/>
hand badly cut in a machine that he <lb/>
was operating this morning, cutting <lb/>
off the ends of three of his fingers. <lb/>
Our farmers should feel very grate- <lb/>
for their nice crops of corn and <lb/>
cotton, the largest for the time of <lb/>
year for several years. Our vicinity <lb/>
has had ideal seasons so far and a <lb/>
bountiful yield is expected. <lb/>
Work has begun on the large <lb/>
on the Seminary lot which will <lb/>
be an ornament to Ayden and the <lb/>
pride of the Free Will Baptists. <lb/>
Rev. M. A. Adams, pastor of the <lb/>
Baptist church, gave a brief report <lb/>
to his congregation Sunday afternoon <lb/>
of his trip to Philadelphia, where he <lb/>
had been attending the Baptist Alli- <lb/>
of the World. These meetings <lb/>
are held once in five years, the next <lb/>
one will he held at Berlin, Germany. <lb/>
FOR FAIRBANKS <lb/>
Morse gasoline engine, one Bell <lb/>
Threshing machine, practically <lb/>
new. E. Turnage Sons, Ayden.<lb/>
WE HAVE RECEIVED TWO <lb/>
cars of machinery, consisting of <lb/>
everything needed on a farm. Terms <lb/>
to suit purchaser. E. Turnage Sons, <lb/>
Ayden. <lb/>
JUST RECEIVED TWO CAR LOADS <lb/>
of nitrate of soda. Can supply your <lb/>
needs. Prices guaranteed. E. Turn- <lb/>
age Sons, Ayden. <lb/>
NEWS THAT IS OF IN- <lb/>
TAR HEELS <lb/>
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES. <lb/>
J. H. Assigns. <lb/>
Mr. Jesse H. Starkey, a main street <lb/>
grocer, made an assignment Sat- <lb/>
night to Mr. T. M. Hooker. <lb/>
He reserved his homestead <lb/>
Total assets estimated about <lb/>
with liabilities about the same. <lb/>
The Jury's Verdict in the Hill Tragedy <lb/>
At Jamestown. <lb/>
With the commissioners of Guilford <lb/>
county who met yesterday for their <lb/>
regular monthly session the report of <lb/>
the coroner's jury in the Jamestown <lb/>
tragedy of June when Mrs. Ida <lb/>
Hill, of Lexington, met her death, was <lb/>
filed by Coroner Wood, the last meet- <lb/>
of his jury having been held last <lb/>
Tuesday, the 27th. Their verdict <lb/>
threw no light on the mystery that <lb/>
has baffled the community in which <lb/>
it occurred, and has caused consider- <lb/>
able speculation on the two theories <lb/>
of murder and suicide. The verdict <lb/>
as filed <lb/>
the undersigned jurors, sum- <lb/>
and empaneled this day <lb/>
by W. W. Wood, coroner of <lb/>
ford county, to inquire into the cause <lb/>
of the death of Mrs. Ida Hill, of Lex- <lb/>
N. C, which occurred at <lb/>
Jamestown, N. C, on the night of June <lb/>
or morning of June in the home <lb/>
of her mother, Mrs. Emily J. Rags- <lb/>
dale, being duly sworn and having <lb/>
viewed the dead body of the deceased <lb/>
and after examining the evidence and <lb/>
circumstances available and brought <lb/>
before us, find that the death of the <lb/>
deceased was unlawfully caused by <lb/>
means of strangulation, but by whose <lb/>
act we are unable to ascertain. Signed, <lb/>
W. W. Wood, coroner; J. W. <lb/>
D. F. Staley, H. P. Staley, E. S. Arm- <lb/>
field D. W. Moore, C. V. <lb/>
The jury first met on the day fol- <lb/>
lowing the tragedy, but being unable <lb/>
to ascertain any definite information, <lb/>
deferred adjournment until the 27th, <lb/>
which Coroner Wood states, was that <lb/>
something tangible might develop. <lb/>
Filed with the verdict was testimony <lb/>
taken from Dr. J. R. Gordon, J. W. <lb/>
and J. W. on June <lb/>
8th. <lb/>
Despite the verdict of the coroner's <lb/>
jury the death of Mrs. Hill has gone <lb/>
on record as one of the mysterious <lb/>
tragedies in the history of the state. <lb/>
The case which is still a subject of <lb/>
discussion bring forth two theories, <lb/>
those of suicide and murder. Every <lb/>
effort that has been made has failed <lb/>
to unravel the tangle, or to absolutely <lb/>
dislodge either of the conflicting <lb/>
ions, and although detectives have <lb/>
spent many days studying, their efforts <lb/>
to trail a murder have not resulted <lb/>
in News, July <lb/>
4th. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
ONE WHO KNEW. <lb/>
IS. <lb/>
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's <lb/>
Readers. <lb/>
representative of the <lb/>
Daily News was today shown a let- <lb/>
from a Mr. stating that Lee <lb/>
Sigmon is at Woodlawn, well and <lb/>
hearty, and will write his wife as <lb/>
soon as he reaches his destination, <lb/>
which the writer refused to disclose. <lb/>
Sigmon, who was baggage agent for <lb/>
the Southern and C. and N. W. rail- <lb/>
roads in this city, disappeared Mon- <lb/>
day night, and foul play had been <lb/>
but if credence can be attach- <lb/>
ed to Mr. letter, anxious minds <lb/>
will be set at rest. <lb/>
During a baseball game In Char- <lb/>
Saturday the umpire, named Nu- <lb/>
gent, made a decision that incensed <lb/>
the crowd and but for the protection <lb/>
of policemen the umpire would have <lb/>
been mobbed. Protected from the <lb/>
crowd at the game he was later as- <lb/>
sailed by a mob when the car on <lb/>
which he was riding reached the <lb/>
square and the police had to get an <lb/>
automobile to get away. <lb/>
Gastonia Thirty or more spin- <lb/>
mills in Gaston county will be <lb/>
closed down for the next ten days, or <lb/>
two weeks, and as a consequence <lb/>
many thousand mill operatives will be <lb/>
idle for that period. This number <lb/>
represents per cent, or more of the <lb/>
spinning mills and even larger per <lb/>
of spindles in this country. <lb/>
L. F. Davis, cashier of the wrecked <lb/>
bank of LaGrange, was arrested at <lb/>
Asheville last Friday night and car- <lb/>
back to La Grange where he <lb/>
stands indicted, under a warrant <lb/>
charging him with the embezzlement <lb/>
of the funds of that institution. <lb/>
Mr. William F. suffered a <lb/>
stroke of apoplexy this morning and <lb/>
died within a few hours, the end <lb/>
coming about o'clock this after- <lb/>
noon. He was in apparent good <lb/>
health and was this morning at <lb/>
his barber Free Press. <lb/>
attempting to <lb/>
rest a group of gambling at <lb/>
Falls last night, about <lb/>
o'clock, Chief of Police Silas <lb/>
shot and killed a whose name is <lb/>
unknown. The Is said to have <lb/>
had a pistol drawn on the officer. <lb/>
Mr. W. L. Vaughan has been re- <lb/>
elected superintendent of education <lb/>
for Beaufort county. <lb/>
Enlightens a Visitor on Our New <lb/>
Buildings. <lb/>
Two gentlemen of color, one a <lb/>
visitor, were walking up the street <lb/>
together. Reaching the corner the <lb/>
visitor lifted his eyes in astonish- <lb/>
at the new court house and <lb/>
new jail. <lb/>
fine he ex- <lb/>
claimed. am <lb/>
replied the native, <lb/>
is fine fur a big <lb/>
see in front am de min- <lb/>
while de udder <lb/>
one back am de boy's <lb/>
and and they went <lb/>
for other scenes. <lb/>
Potato Fanning. <lb/>
A gentleman who planted one acre <lb/>
in potatoes, did not dig when others <lb/>
did, but gave his some extra time to <lb/>
get more growth and more potatoes. <lb/>
He dug this week. <lb/>
On the acre he put worth of <lb/>
fertilizers, the cultivation cost <lb/>
and the seed potatoes cost <lb/>
His crop was some over three <lb/>
barrels, a mixture of seconds and <lb/>
culls. <lb/>
Potatoes were almost a failure this <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Dangerous, But- <lb/>
Owing to the rottenness of the sash <lb/>
in an upper front window of the <lb/>
Mercantile store, the lower part <lb/>
gave way and two large panes of <lb/>
glass fell to the sidewalk with a rat- <lb/>
crash. Fortunately no one was <lb/>
hurt, but it was a dangerous thing. <lb/>
FINE PROGRAM. <lb/>
The Three Reel Service at <lb/>
Good. <lb/>
The <lb/>
Those present at the <lb/>
Tuesday night witnessed one of <lb/>
the best motion picture programs, <lb/>
that has ever been shown here. Three <lb/>
reels were projected and each one <lb/>
was of the highest order, and the <lb/>
two last Fool Day and <lb/>
the Trip Along Pongee River, China <lb/>
deserve special mention. <lb/>
Odd Fellows Install Officers. <lb/>
Last night the following officers of <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F., <lb/>
were installed by L. H. Pender, deputy <lb/>
grand master. <lb/>
James Brown, Noble Grand. <lb/>
E. G. Flanagan, Vice Grand. <lb/>
L. H. Pender, Secretary. <lb/>
D. W. Treasurer. <lb/>
A Financial <lb/>
Where To Live. <lb/>
Fountain Inn is a town in South <lb/>
Carolina. The editor of the <lb/>
of that address, says he would <lb/>
have his present position than to <lb/>
write editorials for a metropolitan <lb/>
daily, one of his reasons being that <lb/>
in the great city he would know a <lb/>
few boys around the office, be on <lb/>
speaking terms with the patrolman of <lb/>
his block have a nodding <lb/>
acquaintance with his next-door <lb/>
neighbor and know his <lb/>
janitor, while ninety-nine out of <lb/>
one hundred faces he passed in <lb/>
the street would be unknown. He <lb/>
would rather hunger for the open <lb/>
county and board walks, for fields of <lb/>
clover, wheat, and barley, and he <lb/>
would miss the cackle of the hens. In <lb/>
Fountain Inn he knows all the first <lb/>
names, hardships and triumphs, <lb/>
and faults; he can sit up with <lb/>
neighbors when they are sick, and <lb/>
they will take notice when it is his <lb/>
turn to die. The town is without <lb/>
rich or poor, without saloons or <lb/>
dens; the- people like the <lb/>
churches, and the children deemed <lb/>
fortunate in their school. We like <lb/>
the looks of the It is In- <lb/>
It announces at the head <lb/>
of its editorial page that it will not <lb/>
accept patent medicine or other <lb/>
it is published <lb/>
in what the editor in his enthusiasm <lb/>
conservatively calls the richest farm- <lb/>
district on earth; and It is a <lb/>
pleasant and wholesome theory that <lb/>
he finds Fountain Inn plenty large <lb/>
enough. Many a person who rushes <lb/>
to the big cities manages only, as <lb/>
Marlowe has it, to live in grief and <lb/>
baleful Week- <lb/>
from page <lb/>
and in a few days the <lb/>
school was fully organized with a <lb/>
large attendance and doing earnest <lb/>
work. <lb/>
On the 12th day of November, 1909, <lb/>
the president-elect was formally In- <lb/>
president of the <lb/>
in the presence of the board of <lb/>
trustees, many notable educators <lb/>
from other institutions, the student <lb/>
body and a large concourse of <lb/>
tors. <lb/>
The first regular session of the <lb/>
school opened on October 5th, 1909, <lb/>
and closed on May 20th, 1910. There <lb/>
were enrolled at this session <lb/>
students. <lb/>
The first summer session opened <lb/>
on the 24th day of May, 1910, and <lb/>
closed on the 30th day of July, 1910. <lb/>
There were enrolled at this session <lb/>
teachers. <lb/>
The second regular session opened <lb/>
ed on the 13th day of September, 1910, <lb/>
and closed on the 23rd day of May, <lb/>
1911. There were enrolled at this <lb/>
session students. <lb/>
The present session of the sum- <lb/>
mer school opened on the 6th day of <lb/>
June, 1911, to close July 29th, 1911, <lb/>
and up to the present time there <lb/>
have been enrolled teachers. The <lb/>
total enrollment for the two years, <lb/>
1.010. <lb/>
From these recorded facts, we are <lb/>
able to make this marvelous sum- <lb/>
In three time we built, furn- <lb/>
and equipped with the most <lb/>
proved, up-to-date conveniences and <lb/>
appliances, six beautiful buildings, <lb/>
well fitted and adapted to school <lb/>
work, and that students have <lb/>
entered these buildings and have re- <lb/>
instruction from an able corps <lb/>
f high class teachers. In addition <lb/>
d the number that have been enroll- <lb/>
d, not less than others have <lb/>
lied for admission into the <lb/>
for the two summer terms. The <lb/>
resident was compelled to write <lb/>
that every room was taken, <lb/>
of these found room in the <lb/>
own. And just here I wish to thank <lb/>
he town people for the generous <lb/>
in which they have opened <lb/>
heir doors to these teachers. But <lb/>
this was not sufficient and great <lb/>
lumbers have been kept away who <lb/>
the instruction. Such a rec- <lb/>
rd cannot be found anywhere else <lb/>
r at any other period in the state's <lb/>
and well may I call it mar- <lb/>
There is another fact In this record <lb/>
lat should not be forgotten. The <lb/>
tie to this property, building, furn- <lb/>
equipment and everything per- <lb/>
thereto, is in the state, but <lb/>
state has put into this <lb/>
plant, while the county of <lb/>
and the town of Greenville have <lb/>
at into it To that the <lb/>
ate Is still behind by <lb/>
his remarkable record teachers these <lb/>
lessons that should appeal <lb/>
the friends of education every- <lb/>
There was a place for this <lb/>
and it is filling that place; <lb/>
ere was a need for this school, and <lb/>
is meeting that need. The people <lb/>
predate and approve the stand it <lb/>
taking and the work it is doing, <lb/>
cause they see In mission the <lb/>
ming of better schools for their <lb/>
and they are rallying to it. <lb/>
So far, ladles and gentlemen, I <lb/>
have simply been rehearsing facts <lb/>
which are of record, and which any- <lb/>
one may verify. I now propose to <lb/>
submit a few reflections of my own. <lb/>
This school is what its name <lb/>
Training School, <lb/>
nothing more and nothing less. <lb/>
It does not aspire to be a college or <lb/>
to do college degree work. It is not <lb/>
in opposition or competition with any <lb/>
college In the state, but it seeks to <lb/>
serve them all by stimulating and <lb/>
informing the public schools from <lb/>
which they must draw their patron- <lb/>
age. It has its own chosen field, and <lb/>
it is content to occupy it. It does <lb/>
not hope to completely fill this field <lb/>
because its borders are ever widen- <lb/>
and its opportunities and de- <lb/>
ever increasing. The service <lb/>
it is rendering in its chosen field is <lb/>
fundamental and invaluable, and it <lb/>
takes great pride in rendering this <lb/>
service. <lb/>
It stands for trained teachers for <lb/>
our public schools, and it is bend- <lb/>
all its energies to furnish such <lb/>
teachers. It is so near the public <lb/>
schools and comes in such close <lb/>
touch with them, that it may well <lb/>
be called a part and parcel of the <lb/>
public school system of the state. <lb/>
Ninety per cent of our people are <lb/>
dependent alone upon the public <lb/>
schools for what education they get. <lb/>
The only training they and their <lb/>
children can receive to fit them for <lb/>
the duties of life, and for the dis- <lb/>
charge of citizenship, is what they <lb/>
are not trained to help conduct the <lb/>
get in the public schools. If these <lb/>
public are poor, then the <lb/>
training they get will be poor. If <lb/>
the training in these public schools <lb/>
Is what it should be, then we may <lb/>
look for an educated citizenship, <lb/>
pared and equipped for the duties <lb/>
that lie out before them. It there- <lb/>
fore follows that a school that is <lb/>
pouring its life into public <lb/>
schools to make them better, is <lb/>
great service to the state and <lb/>
society. <lb/>
The governments of our country <lb/>
are coming nearer and nearer to the <lb/>
people, and the people are being in- <lb/>
and urged to take more effect- <lb/>
control and management of <lb/>
governments, national, state and <lb/>
municipal. For the people to do <lb/>
this wisely and well, it is absolutely <lb/>
necessary that they should be <lb/>
and fitted for these duties. <lb/>
It must be clear to every thoughtful <lb/>
man, that the great masses of our <lb/>
people are dependent upon the <lb/>
of the public schools, is de- <lb/>
pendent upon the efficiency of the <lb/>
teachers, and the efficiency of the <lb/>
teacher is dependent upon the <lb/>
of his training. The train- <lb/>
ed teacher for the public schools, <lb/>
is therefore, a public necessity. The <lb/>
private schools and the denomination- <lb/>
colleges may supply some of these <lb/>
teachers, it is hone the less the <lb/>
duty of the state to make ample pro- <lb/>
visions for this vitally essential work <lb/>
and to see to it that all the public <lb/>
schools are supplied with trained, <lb/>
competent teachers. <lb/>
The state has taken charge of the <lb/>
public schools. It levies and col- <lb/>
the taxes for their support. It <lb/>
appoints and licenses the teachers <lb/>
to teach them, and it supplies the <lb/>
money to pay them. It is therefore <lb/>
imperative duty of the state to furn- <lb/>
competent teachers for the child- <lb/>
who are forced to attend these <lb/>
schools or none. Anything short of <lb/>
this is a criminal neglect of a public <lb/>
duty. <lb/>
The school and audience then sang <lb/>
Old North and <lb/>
dent Wright introduced Governor W. <lb/>
W. Kitchin, who spoke. The govern- <lb/>
or had every cause to feel gratified <lb/>
at the ovation given him as he arose. <lb/>
Governor Address. <lb/>
He said it filled him with pride to <lb/>
be here, and in looking around upon <lb/>
what is here, he must say that he <lb/>
never saw a healthier three-year-old <lb/>
institution, and that much credit for <lb/>
it is due ex-Governor Jarvis, Super- <lb/>
W. H. and the <lb/>
late Hon. J. L. Fleming, who labored <lb/>
so earnestly to secure it. <lb/>
The state of North Carolina may <lb/>
have made a good bargain in <lb/>
this school, but if Governor Jarvis <lb/>
made a bad bargain for Greenville <lb/>
and Pitt county, it was the first bad <lb/>
bargain he ever made. <lb/>
The state levies taxes to maintain <lb/>
schools not for the benefit of a few, <lb/>
but for the benefit of all the people <lb/>
of the state. We want to see North <lb/>
Carolina occupy a high place; we <lb/>
want to see our farmers and <lb/>
prosperous and happy. We <lb/>
want to see the lawyers, the doctors, <lb/>
the teachers so honorable, so high <lb/>
above suspicion, so worshiping at the <lb/>
shrine of truth and Justice that the <lb/>
finger of criticism can never he point- <lb/>
ed at them. Teachers are laying the <lb/>
foundation for this hi an educated <lb/>
citizenship. If the teachers fail in <lb/>
their duty, the structure of citizen- <lb/>
ship is erected on a false <lb/>
Civil government is taught in our <lb/>
schools, and it is well. I would not <lb/>
say that the old govern- <lb/>
of thousands of years ago was <lb/>
not the best the men of that age were <lb/>
prepared for. In those old days there <lb/>
was no printing press, no rapid com- <lb/>
so the people had to <lb/>
struggle along with patriarchs, kings <lb/>
and nobles to make laws for them. <lb/>
The struggle of the successive ages <lb/>
has been to throw off these and bring <lb/>
the government to the hands of the <lb/>
people. Self-government has come <lb/>
to stay. The printing press and rural <lb/>
mail delivery, coupled with the work <lb/>
of the earnest teacher, the freedom <lb/>
of the press, freedom of speech and <lb/>
growth in intelligence have made <lb/>
things change. <lb/>
The old highway robber found the <lb/>
farmer on his way to the market <lb/>
an easy prey. Those robbers have <lb/>
been succeeded by the green goods <lb/>
and gold brick swindlers, and it re- <lb/>
quires more intelligence to protect <lb/>
themselves against these. When you <lb/>
find men advocating an unjust law, <lb/>
they do so under the guise that it is <lb/>
best for the people. We need a high <lb/>
class of citizenship to prevent being <lb/>
deceived by these, and here is where <lb/>
the work of the good teacher conies <lb/>
in. Men must be above corruption <lb/>
and the purchase of influence, and <lb/>
they must have the courage of their <lb/>
convictions and to do right. <lb/>
Let no one think that because gen- <lb/>
ago some great men were <lb/>
produced who never saw inside of a <lb/>
school house, that this can be done <lb/>
now. The farmer who now plants <lb/>
and cultivates corn after the methods <lb/>
of the past can raise some corn, but <lb/>
he's a failure as a farmer. Education <lb/>
is preparation for life work, for con- <lb/>
for the environments with which <lb/>
you are to be surrounded. The thoughts <lb/>
that stick are the ones that count. <lb/>
Education makes people honest. Do <lb/>
not think because you are honest now <lb/>
that you need no fortification. The <lb/>
tide and current of temptation run <lb/>
high, and we need to strengthen <lb/>
against this by a love of honesty and <lb/>
honor. Overcome one temptation and <lb/>
the next one Is easier to overcome, <lb/>
likewise the yielding to one <lb/>
makes it easier to fall under the <lb/>
next. The first downward step is the <lb/>
one to be regretted. Had not the <lb/>
first step been taken no failure would <lb/>
occur. The difference between a good <lb/>
man and a bad man is not in statue <lb/>
nor brilliancy, but in moral <lb/>
One man resists temptation and <lb/>
is good, another succumbs to the <lb/>
temptation and is bad. <lb/>
The sour man is not happy, he may <lb/>
have accumulated a fortune, but if <lb/>
he lacking in human kindness, <lb/>
friendship and sympathy he is a fail- <lb/>
You need friends for the good <lb/>
you can do. Your enemies will not <lb/>
follow your advice, but it is only your <lb/>
friends upon whom you can count. <lb/>
No one rejoices more in the strides <lb/>
North Carolina is making than myself. <lb/>
We are on the up grade agriculturally, <lb/>
industrially, commercially, education- <lb/>
ally and Yet we need the <lb/>
help and sympathy of every good <lb/>
man and woman. Love your duty <lb/>
and do it bravely. <lb/>
Dr. Address <lb/>
Dr. George D. Strayer, of Columbia <lb/>
University, was the next speaker. He <lb/>
drew a striking comparison of the <lb/>
schools of Germany and those of Dem- <lb/>
America. In Germany they <lb/>
government, but to be subservient to <lb/>
authority. The ideal American school <lb/>
prepares for the public good. He em- <lb/>
the administration of the <lb/>
on page <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
of Missouri. <lb/>
FACIAL NEURALGIA. <lb/>
Mrs. C. 1311 Woodland <lb/>
Kansas City, Mo., <lb/>
feel it a duty due to yon and to <lb/>
others that may afflicted like myself, <lb/>
to speak for <lb/>
trouble first came after la grippe <lb/>
eight or nine years ago, gathering la <lb/>
my head and neuralgia. Buffered <lb/>
most all the time. My ears and <lb/>
eyes badly affected for the last two <lb/>
years. I think from your description of <lb/>
internal catarrh that I must had <lb/>
that also. I suffered very severely. <lb/>
ever relieved mo <lb/>
It keeps mo from taking cold. <lb/>
the exception of deaf- <lb/>
I am feeling perfectly cured. <lb/>
am forty-six years old. <lb/>
feel that words are inadequate to <lb/>
express my for <lb/>
Stomach Trouble Seven Years. <lb/>
Mrs. T. K. R. Hickory Point, <lb/>
Tenn., <lb/>
been afflicted with catarrh <lb/>
and stomach trouble for seven years, <lb/>
and after having tried four different <lb/>
doctors they only relieved me for a little <lb/>
while. I was induced to try <lb/>
End I am now <lb/>
an Ideal Laxative.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0008" n="8"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm art The Eastern <lb/>
GREENVILLE TOWNSHIP <lb/>
GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION <lb/>
MADE <lb/>
Committee Will Be Appointed t Con- <lb/>
duet Campaign for Roads <lb/>
A meeting was held In the city hall <lb/>
at noon today for the purpose of or- <lb/>
a Greenville Township Good <lb/>
Roads Association. <lb/>
Owing to a change in the hour of <lb/>
meeting from o'clock to noon, and <lb/>
the interest that centered in the base <lb/>
ball games of the day, there was only <lb/>
a small attendance at the meeting, <lb/>
but it was deemed best by those <lb/>
present to proceed to the election of <lb/>
of officers and leave the direction of <lb/>
a good roads campaign of the town- <lb/>
ship to the direction of a committee. <lb/>
The following officers were <lb/>
E. B. Higgs, president; J. F. Evans, <lb/>
vice president; D. J. Whichard, sec. <lb/>
and treasurer. <lb/>
The appointment of a campaign and <lb/>
membership committee of twelve was <lb/>
left with the officers above named, <lb/>
and the committee will be <lb/>
later. <lb/>
COX SCHOOL HOUSE ITEMS- <lb/>
Hews From That of <lb/>
Township. <lb/>
Grimesland, N. C., July and <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Oakley, from near Winter- <lb/>
ville, spent Saturday night with Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. C. A. Porter. <lb/>
Miss Martha Cherry spent Saturday <lb/>
night with Miss Olive Kittrell. <lb/>
Miss Maggie Hudson spent <lb/>
day night with Miss Daisy Porter. <lb/>
Little Misses Eula and Mavis Lee <lb/>
Oakley are spending this week at the <lb/>
home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Porter. <lb/>
Mrs. Eva Tucker, from near Green- <lb/>
ville, spent Saturday night and Sun- <lb/>
day with Mrs. Delia Tucker. <lb/>
We are sorry to hear that Mr. <lb/>
Johnson Mills is quite sick. <lb/>
There was a large crowd at prayer <lb/>
meeting Sunday night. We were glad <lb/>
to have so many out. Hope to have <lb/>
as many with us again. <lb/>
Miss Annie Walker and brothers. <lb/>
Masters Roland and Clarence, from <lb/>
the Oxford orphan asylum, are spend- <lb/>
the vacation months with Mrs. <lb/>
J. S. Porter. <lb/>
Quite a large crowd attended the <lb/>
children's day exercises at Salem <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Crops throughout this section are <lb/>
still doing very well, but none of <lb/>
the farmers have cured any tobacco <lb/>
yet. <lb/>
Mr. Harvey Cannon spent Friday <lb/>
night with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
Ivey Cannon. <lb/>
Ten Tilings to do In Typhoid Fever. <lb/>
In all cases of typhoid, however, <lb/>
mild, the patient should remain in <lb/>
bed. The course of the disease may <lb/>
be greatly shortened by keeping the <lb/>
patient in a prostrate position. <lb/>
The vessels used in the sick <lb/>
room should be thoroughly scalded <lb/>
after use. <lb/>
All food utensils should be <lb/>
washed and scalded separately be- <lb/>
fore placing with dishes used by the <lb/>
family. <lb/>
Bed linens, towels, wearing <lb/>
be plunged into boiling <lb/>
water or water containing a strong <lb/>
solution of carbolic acid before they <lb/>
are washed. <lb/>
Chloride of lime, which can be <lb/>
bought in dozen cans, or <lb/>
of mercury, are safe disinfectants for <lb/>
vessels used in the sick room. <lb/>
The caretaker should cleanse <lb/>
her hands with a disinfectant <lb/>
acid, of mer- <lb/>
before taking food. <lb/>
Treat all excreta from patient <lb/>
with disinfectant of sufficient strength <lb/>
that all typhoid germs may be killed <lb/>
before removing from the sick room. <lb/>
Bury all excreta from typhoid <lb/>
patient. <lb/>
Keep all flies from the sick <lb/>
room. <lb/>
Write to your State Board of <lb/>
Health for literature upon the care <lb/>
and treatment of typhoid fever. <lb/>
Raleigh Progressive Farmer. <lb/>
Right in your busiest season when <lb/>
you have the least time to spare you <lb/>
are most likely to take and <lb/>
lose several day's time, unless you <lb/>
have Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera <lb/>
and Remedy at hand and <lb/>
take a dose on the first appearance <lb/>
of the disease. For sale by all deal- <lb/>
Map of Greenville <lb/>
Mr. D. C. James has just completed <lb/>
for the town officials a very complete <lb/>
and handsome map of Greenville. It <lb/>
will be submitted to the post office <lb/>
department of the government for <lb/>
as to the plan of numbering <lb/>
the town for free mail delivery. <lb/>
Happiest Girl in Lincoln. <lb/>
A Lincoln, Neb., girl writes, <lb/>
had been ailing for some time with <lb/>
chronic constipation and stomach <lb/>
trouble. I began taking Chamber- <lb/>
Stomach and Liver Tablets <lb/>
and in three days I was able to be up <lb/>
and got better right along. I am the <lb/>
proudest girl in Lincoln to find such <lb/>
a good For sale by all <lb/>
dealers. <lb/>
A man's idea of a charitable <lb/>
man is one who doesn't hand him <lb/>
lemons. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
State Normal and <lb/>
Industrial College <lb/>
Maintained by the State for the <lb/>
en of North Carolina. Five regular <lb/>
leading to Degrees. Special <lb/>
Courses for teachers. Free tuition <lb/>
to those agree to become teach- <lb/>
in the State. Fall Session be- <lb/>
gins September 1911. For cat- <lb/>
and other information address <lb/>
JULIUS I. FOUST, Pres. <lb/>
Greensboro,. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Grand Picture Program <lb/>
The Three Reel Film service used <lb/>
at the is direct from <lb/>
the Grand and Revelry <lb/>
Raleigh. They were splendid last <lb/>
night. See tonight's program on page <lb/>
our. <lb/>
best remedy tor <lb/>
Sciatica, Lame Back, <lb/>
fl Joints and Muscles, <lb/>
Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, <lb/>
Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, <lb/>
Colic, Cramps, <lb/>
Toothache, and all Nerve, <lb/>
Bone and Muscle Aches <lb/>
and Pains. The genuine <lb/>
The Greenville Banking <lb/>
Trust Company <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Condensed Statement, June 7th <lb/>
HE SOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts . <lb/>
Overdrafts . 2,251.2 <lb/>
Stocks and bonds. 1,227.96 <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures. <lb/>
Cash and due from banns. 34,333.03 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital . <lb/>
Profits . 2,064.16 <lb/>
. None <lb/>
Bills payable . None <lb/>
Deposits . 145,055.75 <lb/>
J. R. President G. S. Cashier <lb/>
A. J. MOORE, Asst. Cashier. <lb/>
i- <lb/>
Tr- i <lb/>
My <lb/>
We have on sale at our factory the <lb/>
Columbia, Rambler, Crescent and <lb/>
Bicycles, for ladies and Gentlemen, boy <lb/>
and girls. bicycles are known the <lb/>
world over for their easy running and <lb/>
We guarantee them. If you are <lb/>
thinking of buying, come to see us. <lb/>
THE JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
The Home of Women's <lb/>
Pulley Bowen <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
North Carol <lb/>
Views From Court House Tower. <lb/>
Mr. Henry Sheppard has taken <lb/>
some very interesting photo- <lb/>
of views of the town from the <lb/>
of the new court house tower. <lb/>
front of The views show up well. Mr. Shep- <lb/>
always <lb/>
in RED Ink. Beware of d hag many pictures of the <lb/>
imitations. bottle, <lb/>
cents, and sold by an court house which were taken at <lb/>
Guaranteed or money re- Stages during the progress <lb/>
funded by Noah Remedy j , <lb/>
Inc., Richmond. work. <lb/>
NOTICE OF <lb/>
The firm of Ricks Brothers v <lb/>
June 6th, 1911, dissolved by <lb/>
consent, W. H. Ricks <lb/>
entire interest of J. A. Ricks P <lb/>
business. W. H. Ricks <lb/>
outstanding obligations of <lb/>
for merchandise purchased <lb/>
store, and all accounts due <lb/>
for merchandise are payable t <lb/>
JNO. A. RICKS, <lb/>
W. H. RICKS, <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Legal Notices <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Letters of administration upon the <lb/>
estate of J. J. Smith, deceased, <lb/>
this day been issued to the under- <lb/>
signed by the clerk of Superior court <lb/>
of Pitt county, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons holding claims against <lb/>
said estate to present them to me <lb/>
for payment, duly authenticated, on <lb/>
or before the 4th day of May, 1912, <lb/>
or this 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/>
Jarvis Blow, <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk as <lb/>
tor of the estate of Mrs. Margaret J. <lb/>
Moore, deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons having claims <lb/>
against said deceased, to present <lb/>
the same, duly authenticated, on or <lb/>
before the 17th day of June, 1912, or <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
their recovery. All persons indebted <lb/>
to said estate will make immediate <lb/>
payment. <lb/>
This June 17th, 1911. <lb/>
C. G. LITTLE. Administrator, <lb/>
of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.<lb/>
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND. <lb/>
State of North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
A, A. Smith enters and claims the <lb/>
following piece or parcel of land, sit- <lb/>
In the county of Pitt, Swift Creek <lb/>
township, described as <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 eastward to a water <lb/>
oak, J. B. Smith's corner; thence <lb/>
southward to J. B. Smith's corner in <lb/>
the run of Swift Creek; thence with <lb/>
the run of Swift Creek to the begin- <lb/>
containing eight acres, more or <lb/>
less. <lb/>
This June 1911. <lb/>
A. A. SMITH. <lb/>
Any and all persons claiming title <lb/>
to or interest in the above described <lb/>
land must file with the their 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/>
Entry Taker.<lb/>
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the firm <lb/>
of and White has this day <lb/>
dissolved co-partnership by mutual <lb/>
consent, Samuel T. White buying the <lb/>
interest of G. G. in said <lb/>
piano and organ business. The <lb/>
will be continued by Sam White <lb/>
Piano Company. All persons owing <lb/>
the firm of and White will <lb/>
pay the Sam White Piano Company. <lb/>
All accounts due by said firm should <lb/>
be presented at once to Sam White <lb/>
Piano Company for payment. <lb/>
G. G. <lb/>
T. WHITE. <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, deceased, 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 notice 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/>
SALE OF PROPERTY. <lb/>
On Saturday, the 24th day of July. <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/>
desks, bottles and extracts, together <lb/>
with the right to make, sell and man- <lb/>
This sale will <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, Attorney. <lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the <lb/>
undersigned has qualified as <lb/>
c. t. a. of the estate of J. K. <lb/>
Gowan, deceased. Persons owing said <lb/>
estate will please make prompt set- <lb/>
and those to whom said es- <lb/>
is indebted will present their <lb/>
claims within twelve months of the <lb/>
date of this notice, or the same will <lb/>
be pleaded in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
July 1911. <lb/>
J. M. <lb/>
c. t a., J. K. de- <lb/>
W. F. Evans, Atty. <lb/>
Good For The Lawyers. <lb/>
At last the State Bar Association <lb/>
has done something besides meet and <lb/>
frolic. It has taken in favor of <lb/>
reform in the judiciary system of the <lb/>
state. The reforms which it would <lb/>
advocate and which it will press be- <lb/>
fore the- next legislature, are the <lb/>
same that The Chronicle urged on <lb/>
the past legislature, but to no avail, <lb/>
because not a single lawyer came to <lb/>
its support and the judges by virtue <lb/>
of the dignity of their office, were bar- <lb/>
red from even a suggestive support. <lb/>
The State Bar Association has gone <lb/>
on record on four important points <lb/>
that the number of judges be <lb/>
ed to twenty-four, that the present <lb/>
system of rotation be abolished, that <lb/>
solicitors be put on salary and that <lb/>
the laws relating to the selection of <lb/>
Jurors be amended. The association <lb/>
appears to have been waked to the <lb/>
importance of this judicial reform by <lb/>
the very earnest and forcible remarks <lb/>
of Mr. Chas. W. Tillett, who placed <lb/>
the matter in such a light that a law- <lb/>
even though a blind one, could <lb/>
see. This action stamps the meeting <lb/>
of the lawyers at as the most <lb/>
important one they have held in this <lb/>
state in years. If the reforms <lb/>
are brought to pass, then will <lb/>
the North Carolina Bar Association <lb/>
have accomplished four distinctly <lb/>
changes in the judiciary system <lb/>
of the Chronicle. <lb/>
The Path of Safety. <lb/>
The Declaration of Independence <lb/>
charged George III with endeavoring <lb/>
prevent the population of these <lb/>
by foreigners. It would <lb/>
pear to be about time for a new de- <lb/>
against the of <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
Certainly, it is high time our <lb/>
laws were so strengthened as <lb/>
effectually to keep out the scum, riff- <lb/>
and chronic criminals of other <lb/>
countries. This class of alien <lb/>
we ought not to want and can <lb/>
not afford to have under any <lb/>
other kinds of <lb/>
should be welcomed and encouraged. <lb/>
But if there has to be any swerving <lb/>
from the straight path to that end, <lb/>
let it be on the side of too straight <lb/>
rather than too lax, regulations. Bet- <lb/>
keep out a hundred desirable <lb/>
migrants than let in one recruit from <lb/>
the Black Hand, the or the <lb/>
Grandfathers and grandmothers <lb/>
have been primarily responsible for <lb/>
many of the present-day divorces. <lb/>
South a Land of <lb/>
It is the aim of the Progressive <lb/>
Farmer to start a crusade for paint- <lb/>
Southern farmhouses. Not only <lb/>
does painting a house add greatly to <lb/>
its beauty and to the beauty of the <lb/>
whole farm on which it is situated, <lb/>
but there is no doubt about it that <lb/>
it has a subtle psychological effect in <lb/>
bringing everybody on the place to a <lb/>
more cheerful frame of mind. <lb/>
There is something depressing about <lb/>
a weather-beaten, unpainted house <lb/>
that can not fail to have its effect <lb/>
upon the temper and disposition of its <lb/>
occupants. They can not have quite <lb/>
the cheerfulness and buoyancy that <lb/>
comes from beautiful surroundings <lb/>
with the contagious suggestion of <lb/>
cheerfulness and prosperity in them. <lb/>
Paint the farmhouse and the farm- <lb/>
will very soon decide that he must <lb/>
have a farm fit to keep company with <lb/>
the house; he will decide that he must <lb/>
clean up the ragged patches and stop <lb/>
the ruinous and cure the gal- <lb/>
led and sickly spots and he will pres- <lb/>
begin to take more interest in <lb/>
his own appearance also. It is <lb/>
to tell just how far-reaching are <lb/>
the effects of a properly painted and <lb/>
beautiful farmhouse. <lb/>
Nor will this good influence stop <lb/>
with the individual farmer. His <lb/>
neighbors will presently become <lb/>
ashamed not to have equally <lb/>
homes for themselves, and the <lb/>
neighborhood might soon become a <lb/>
neighborhood of painted farmhouses, <lb/>
and then this neighborhood might, by <lb/>
the same process, awaken the em- <lb/>
of other neighborhoods and <lb/>
spread the good work still farther. <lb/>
Not only is it worth while to paint <lb/>
the farmhouse for the sake of the <lb/>
beauty and also for the sake of the <lb/>
cheering effect upon the persons who <lb/>
live in it, but it is also worth while <lb/>
as a matter of simple economy. <lb/>
is already expensive, and <lb/>
more so all the time, and paint <lb/>
lengthens the life of the lumber. <lb/>
The South is today the only section <lb/>
of the country in which the painted <lb/>
house is not the rule rather than the <lb/>
exception. There might have been <lb/>
some excuse for our backwardness <lb/>
in this matter when cotton was selling <lb/>
for or cents a pound and farm <lb/>
lands worth to an acre, but <lb/>
for the condition to exist today is an <lb/>
indictment of our civilization. Our <lb/>
farmers have money enough to enable <lb/>
them to paint their houses and there <lb/>
is no excuse for their not doing it. <lb/>
We would like to have every Pro- <lb/>
Farmer reader enlist himself <lb/>
or. herself in this crusade for well <lb/>
painted farm houses in the South. Of <lb/>
course, the farmer who has had a <lb/>
great deal of sickness in his family <lb/>
or some similar misfortune, or who <lb/>
is struggling to pay off a mortgage, <lb/>
may be excused; but we should like <lb/>
for the painting habit to become so <lb/>
contagious among all others as to <lb/>
make people the prosperous <lb/>
farmer has not painted his house, he <lb/>
is not a reader of The Progressive <lb/>
And even the man who <lb/>
feels that he can not yet afford to <lb/>
paint, the small farmer in debt, the <lb/>
tenant, can whitewash his buildings. <lb/>
Whitewash is wholesome and will <lb/>
make the lowliest home look neat and <lb/>
thrifty and <lb/>
Farmer. <lb/>
also contains much information which <lb/>
will be able to use with <lb/>
advantage in the prosecution of the <lb/>
trust. <lb/>
The prime object of the organizers <lb/>
of the steel trust was to restrict com- <lb/>
petition. It was capitalized at <lb/>
although at the time of <lb/>
its organization it owned tangible <lb/>
property worth only Its <lb/>
tangible property is now estimated <lb/>
to be worth as against <lb/>
outstanding securities amounting to <lb/>
In ten years its con- <lb/>
of production has dropped from <lb/>
to per cent; but It now con- <lb/>
per cent, of the Lake ores, <lb/>
and its position stronger than It <lb/>
was in actual resources. The <lb/>
which formed the steel corpora- <lb/>
got in cash for its <lb/>
work. The corporation has made <lb/>
average annual profits of per cent, <lb/>
on the money invested. All the pro- <lb/>
of the trust have not been <lb/>
developed, so that the dividends from <lb/>
the properties that have been de- <lb/>
are larger than per cent. <lb/>
The trust does not now control more <lb/>
than per cent, of production, and <lb/>
the competition now is more active, <lb/>
apparently at least, than it has been <lb/>
in the last ten years. <lb/>
The object for which the steel trust <lb/>
was formed was in restraint of trade; <lb/>
its cornering of the Lake ores was <lb/>
for the purpose of strengthening its <lb/>
hold upon the steel-makers industry <lb/>
of the country. Whether or not <lb/>
the monopoly which the steel <lb/>
trust has sought to make can <lb/>
be defended within the rule of <lb/>
reason is a question the courts <lb/>
must determine. In the meantime, the <lb/>
congressional committee should be <lb/>
able to pick a many good thing out <lb/>
of commissioner Smith's report which <lb/>
will add greatly to the interest of the <lb/>
inquiries it is making as to the loop- <lb/>
holes of the law through which this <lb/>
giant worked its way to its present <lb/>
dominating position in the business <lb/>
TREES OF AGATE AND TOPAZ. <lb/>
Beauty and Wonders of the Petrified <lb/>
Forest of Arizona. <lb/>
The Great Steel Trust. <lb/>
Herbert Smith, United States <lb/>
Commissioner of Corporations, has <lb/>
made an exhaustive report on the <lb/>
United States Steel Corporation, which <lb/>
will be of much value to the con- <lb/>
committee now engaged in <lb/>
investigating that great trust <lb/>
The petrified trees in Arizona that <lb/>
are of red moss agate and amethyst <lb/>
and smoky topaz and agate are nearly <lb/>
or entirely transparent and so <lb/>
fully preserved that all the veins and <lb/>
even the bark can be plainly seen. <lb/>
The hardened dewdrops of this en- <lb/>
chanted wood, says the Yoga <lb/>
Messenger are purple and amethyst <lb/>
and topaz such as one <lb/>
found in the heart of an ancient <lb/>
king of the forest. <lb/>
In an outlying part of the forest <lb/>
are different logs. They are perfectly <lb/>
opaque and tinted in soft browns and <lb/>
grays. They are partly covered by a <lb/>
great deposit of limestone and strange <lb/>
bluish clay, whose depth shows how <lb/>
many millions of years they <lb/>
been there. <lb/>
The most striking part of the for- <lb/>
est is called Chalcedony Park. Here <lb/>
is the greatest number of petrified <lb/>
trees found in any one place in the <lb/>
world. One of them has fallen across <lb/>
a deep canon, feet wide, thus form- <lb/>
the only bridge of solid agate in <lb/>
existence. <lb/>
The wood of these trees makes <lb/>
beautiful ornaments when polished, <lb/>
but it is so hard to cut that even mod- <lb/>
methods find it extremely <lb/>
cult to saw through it. <lb/>
The man who considers the world <lb/>
a lemon to be squeezed usually has <lb/>
a sour disposition. <lb/>
.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018154_0009" n="9"/>
<p>
Carolina Home and Farm -no The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
from page <lb/>
American school, and declared that <lb/>
the type of education that is demand- <lb/>
ed cannot be had until the needs are <lb/>
recognized by those in authority. <lb/>
Turning from the teachers to the <lb/>
he said this school here is <lb/>
doing an admirable work, but is not <lb/>
properly equipped for the work re- <lb/>
quired of it. It is for the people to <lb/>
say whether these teachers are to <lb/>
be able to do their work. They have <lb/>
the right to demand of the people a <lb/>
liberal education, a minimum term <lb/>
and a minimum salary. This school <lb/>
needs a practice school and a library. <lb/>
Mr. Address. <lb/>
Mr. E. C. Brooks, editor of North <lb/>
Carolina Education, was next intro- <lb/>
He said this institution came <lb/>
in the midst of a great educational <lb/>
awakening. With a determination <lb/>
that the most remote school should <lb/>
have the best trained teacher, the pa- <lb/>
spirit of the people of Green- <lb/>
ville and Pitt county was asserted in <lb/>
founding this school. But there are <lb/>
still further demands that must be <lb/>
met. There are yet people who do <lb/>
not believe in public education, and <lb/>
school boards who are inclined to <lb/>
select relatives as teachers instead of <lb/>
those equipped for the work. <lb/>
against those ideas must con- <lb/>
until they are corrected. <lb/>
Ail the speeches at these exercises <lb/>
were excellent, but space forbids <lb/>
only brief reference to them. The <lb/>
songs by the student body that in- <lb/>
the speeches were a pleas- <lb/>
part of the exercises and re- <lb/>
credit upon the school. <lb/>
In his closing remarks, President <lb/>
Wright referred to the aid <lb/>
fund, contributed by the last <lb/>
class, and read the following <lb/>
as coming voluntarily from those at- <lb/>
tending the present summer term, <lb/>
which indicates their sentiment in <lb/>
keeping with the motto, <lb/>
that has been adopted by the <lb/>
On June 1911, by permission of <lb/>
the president, a mass meeting of the <lb/>
student body of the summer school <lb/>
was held in the auditorium, its <lb/>
purpose being to form plans for <lb/>
raising a fund toward increasing the <lb/>
school library appropriation. This <lb/>
fund to be a testimonial of the <lb/>
to the state of the <lb/>
afforded in the Training school <lb/>
through the efficient services of its <lb/>
able corps of earnest officers and <lb/>
teachers. <lb/>
The purpose of the meeting was <lb/>
stated by Miss Daisy Reed, met with <lb/>
a most enthusiastic reception. A <lb/>
chairman was elected, committees <lb/>
pointed, and work begun at once, and <lb/>
today we find in the treasury <lb/>
in cash with notes aggregating quite <lb/>
an appreciable sum payable in a short <lb/>
time. <lb/>
The entire anniversary exercises <lb/>
were most successful and marks an- <lb/>
other era in the history of the <lb/>
school. <lb/>
And no more do the vast majority <lb/>
of the Republican apostles and de- <lb/>
fenders or inordinate Protection so <lb/>
believe. The fact is that the party and <lb/>
the men who put and have kept so- <lb/>
called protective duties on staple <lb/>
products acted in the be- <lb/>
ginning, and have ever since continued <lb/>
to act, not with a view to <lb/>
the farmers, but with a view to de- <lb/>
the agricultural interests into <lb/>
the belief that they were sharing in <lb/>
the spoils of Protection and so into <lb/>
support of the protective system. To <lb/>
say that they have not realized from <lb/>
the start that no amount of pro- <lb/>
could effect, one way or the <lb/>
other, the prices in the domestic mark- <lb/>
et of products of the soil of which we <lb/>
grow a surplus for export, over and <lb/>
above a sufficiency for home <lb/>
would be to credit them with a <lb/>
lack of intelligence which they have <lb/>
far from shown in any other <lb/>
What they have done has been <lb/>
to play upon the credulity of the farm- <lb/>
and so induce them to serve as <lb/>
to save the chestnuts of the <lb/>
inordinately protected manufacturing <lb/>
interests from burning. <lb/>
And what is true of the farmer is <lb/>
also true of labor. It is these two <lb/>
elements of the citizenship of the <lb/>
country which have kept the <lb/>
policy alive and in effect, lo, these <lb/>
many years, both deluded into so do- <lb/>
by the utterly fallacious plea that <lb/>
they were the beneficiaries of the sys- <lb/>
The fact is, as both the <lb/>
and the working man are <lb/>
now beginning to realize, that neither <lb/>
is by Republican <lb/>
On the contrary, both are in- <lb/>
When even avowed Protection- <lb/>
are themselves driven to admit <lb/>
so much, certainly it is high time the <lb/>
farmers and the workingmen were <lb/>
making their awakening complete and <lb/>
ceasing to act as stool-pigeons for <lb/>
the few privileges beneficiaries of a <lb/>
system which robs them in the name <lb/>
and under the guise of Protection. <lb/>
Out of Their Months. <lb/>
Speaking on the floor of the United <lb/>
States senate the other day, Hon. <lb/>
Elihu Root, Protectionist though he is <lb/>
and has always been, gave utterance <lb/>
to this <lb/>
I never have thought that the duties <lb/>
which were imposed upon farm pro- <lb/>
ducts were of any real general <lb/>
fit to the farmer. <lb/>
Henry Brown Dead. <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C, July Henry <lb/>
Clay Brown, member of the North <lb/>
Carolina died <lb/>
this morning at o'clock, after an <lb/>
illness that has steadily grown worse <lb/>
since May when he was last at <lb/>
his desk. <lb/>
It was as successor to the late B. <lb/>
F. Aycock, that Mr. Brown was first <lb/>
appointed on the commission, May <lb/>
1910, after he had given to the com- <lb/>
mission service as secretary since <lb/>
1891, that eminently equipped him for <lb/>
the commission and won for him the <lb/>
universal verdict of being the best <lb/>
equipped man for the place that could <lb/>
be found for the <lb/>
He was born in Randolph county, in <lb/>
1857, a son of John Randolph and <lb/>
Mary A. Brown and while yet a youth <lb/>
held clerkships at Chapel Hill, <lb/>
being a in a cot- <lb/>
ton mill at the latter place. He took <lb/>
a business course at Poughkeepsie <lb/>
business college and in 1885 became <lb/>
cashier of the Bank of Mount Airy, <lb/>
continuing in this position with the <lb/>
railroad commission up to the time <lb/>
he was appointed secretary to the old <lb/>
railroad commission and the <lb/>
corporation commission up to the <lb/>
time he was appointed commissioner <lb/>
by Governor Kitchin. Following his <lb/>
appointment May 1910, he was <lb/>
in the state Democratic con- <lb/>
in July and elected in No- <lb/>
and was filling out his first <lb/>
elective term at the time of his death. <lb/>
or doses will cure any <lb/>
case of Chills and Fever. Price,<lb/>
King of all Farm Wagons. <lb/>
The man who uses Weber wagons will use <lb/>
His judgment is good. Why not fol- <lb/>
low his advice We have a Weber wagon <lb/>
awaiting your inspection. If you want to <lb/>
save yourself money, investigate. For sixty- <lb/>
six years the Weber has been the pride of <lb/>
all users. Use one and let it be your pride. <lb/>
We have literature concerning this wagon <lb/>
that we want you to call for. Call to-day. <lb/>
Let us talk over the wagon proposition. If <lb/>
you don't buy, you will know the merits of <lb/>
the Weber wagon and will be in position to <lb/>
know a good wagon when you see it. Get a <lb/>
Weber you will get the best. We have <lb/>
what you want. We will be glad to see you <lb/>
anytime. <lb/>
Hart Hadley <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
TOBACCO <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/>
Name- <lb/>
Post Office,<lb/>
-X- <lb/>
Agriculture is the Host Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, 1911. <lb/>
Number <lb/>
WILMINGTON TYPHOID <lb/>
FEVER SITUATION <lb/>
LESS THAN TWO CENT. ILL- <lb/>
Report Is Result of Health Or. <lb/>
of City. <lb/>
Wilmington, N. C, July has <lb/>
been learned this city during the <lb/>
past few days that reports are <lb/>
being circulated over North Caro- <lb/>
and also different Southern <lb/>
cities relative to typhoid fever in <lb/>
Wilmington. These reports, in most <lb/>
instances, are absolutely at variance <lb/>
with the facts in the case. From May <lb/>
1st to this date one hundred and sixty <lb/>
cases of typhoid fever have been re- <lb/>
ported as shown by the records in <lb/>
office of superintendent of health, <lb/>
and there is no doubt about every <lb/>
case being reported as a very strict <lb/>
ordinance was passed some time <lb/>
since requiring physicians to report <lb/>
all cases of typhoid and some ten or <lb/>
fifteen other cases within twenty-four <lb/>
hours. Of the cases in the above to- <lb/>
twenty-eight were treated at a <lb/>
local hospital and part of these were <lb/>
from out of the city. Something over <lb/>
thirty of the cases reported have <lb/>
been discharged and there have been <lb/>
only five deaths, two of these being <lb/>
patients at the hospital and who were <lb/>
brought here for treatment. This <lb/>
shows that the death rate as to <lb/>
patients has been less than <lb/>
two per cent. At the present time <lb/>
there are about one hundred and <lb/>
twenty of typhoid in <lb/>
ton, and, when it is taken into con- <lb/>
that this is a city of <lb/>
as shown by the last census, the <lb/>
number is not considered as large by <lb/>
any means. For a period of two <lb/>
months there have been less than six <lb/>
cases reported for each thousand of <lb/>
the inhabitants. The type is very <lb/>
mild and some of the leading <lb/>
say it is what known as para- <lb/>
typhoid, this being a name given to <lb/>
the type of fever by Dr. Osier. In <lb/>
para-typhoid the deadly typhoid germ <lb/>
does not appear and patients often <lb/>
recover in from ten days to two <lb/>
weeks, and such has been the his- <lb/>
of many of the cases here. <lb/>
Records show that the number of <lb/>
cases of fever here has been but lit- <lb/>
if any, greater than in the other <lb/>
towns of the state, but the reports <lb/>
probably got started on account of <lb/>
the council under the new <lb/>
form of government passing a <lb/>
number of stringent ordinances <lb/>
sanitary conditions and are <lb/>
seeing that the ordinances are being <lb/>
enforced, in other words, the health <lb/>
department with Dr. Chas. T. <lb/>
a physician with splendid train- <lb/>
for the work, began to clean the <lb/>
city up ad it had never been cleaned <lb/>
before and compelled the <lb/>
of all sanitary laws. <lb/>
Some of these reports had it that <lb/>
typhoid was also at Wrightsville <lb/>
Beach. This is absolutely untrue and <lb/>
in a statement just issued by Dr. W. <lb/>
D. county superintendent <lb/>
of health, ho <lb/>
Beach, North Carolina, has ever been <lb/>
and is today entirely free from fever <lb/>
of any Water at <lb/>
Wrightsville Beach is secured from <lb/>
an artesian well feet deep and <lb/>
analysis shows it absolutely pure. <lb/>
to escape interviewers. <lb/>
A hot fight for senator from Mis- <lb/>
is now in progress . Gov- <lb/>
expects to succeed <lb/>
Senator Percy. <lb/>
Washington, July La- <lb/>
arraigned <lb/>
dent Taft in a speech today on the <lb/>
Canadian reciprocity bill. He de- <lb/>
Taft has not kept his <lb/>
pledges and denounced practical- <lb/>
all acts of the president's <lb/>
He said Taft and the <lb/>
party are recreant to tariff re- <lb/>
form pledges. <lb/>
government paid, <lb/>
to assistant prosecutors <lb/>
from 1900 to 1911 in ad- <lb/>
to in salaries to the <lb/>
same period, according to a report <lb/>
furnished the house committee on <lb/>
expenditures in the department of <lb/>
justice. <lb/>
STORE BROKEN <lb/>
OPEN AND ROBBED <lb/>
J. AND BRO. VICTIMS. <lb/>
TODAY'S EVENTS IN <lb/>
NATIONAL CAPITOL <lb/>
DR. WILEY MAY LOSE HIS JOB. <lb/>
A woman has about as much use <lb/>
for a man who doesn't admire her as <lb/>
a fatted calf has for a prodigal sou. <lb/>
NEWS THAT IS OF IN- <lb/>
TO TAR HEELS <lb/>
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES. <lb/>
Mrs. Ere In Fight <lb/>
la <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Washington, July La- <lb/>
today introduced a cotton <lb/>
and wool amendment to the <lb/>
bill now before the senate. <lb/>
Testimony before the com- <lb/>
now investigating the sugar <lb/>
showed that the railroads have <lb/>
discriminated in favor of the trust <lb/>
in lighter charges. <lb/>
Dr. Wiley may lose job as he <lb/>
allowed Dr. II. H. to collect <lb/>
illegal fees from the government <lb/>
to twenty dollars per day <lb/>
as an expert pharmacist President <lb/>
Taft is having this matter <lb/>
gated. <lb/>
Miss Kelsey, who married Edward <lb/>
Valentine Dee, the navy paymaster's <lb/>
Clerk, who defaulted to the amount <lb/>
of forty-six thousand dollars from the <lb/>
battleship Georgia, is in hiding at <lb/>
Colonial Beach, Virginia, She tries <lb/>
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's <lb/>
Busy Readers. <lb/>
The twin infants of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
Hurley Griffin died yesterday after- <lb/>
noon at their home on West Depot <lb/>
street, their death occurring only a <lb/>
few minutes Tribune <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Moody, who has been a <lb/>
good gardener for fifty years, says <lb/>
that the present is the worse time he <lb/>
has ever seen on gardens with the <lb/>
exception of one year, probably 1881. <lb/>
Robinsonville, July <lb/>
the 6-year-old son of Mr. A. F. <lb/>
a prominent merchant and hotel <lb/>
man of this place, was kicked in the <lb/>
head by a horse here and instantly <lb/>
killed. <lb/>
The final vote on the special tax <lb/>
for those outside of Kinston, but in <lb/>
district designated by the <lb/>
to come Into the Kinston <lb/>
graded school district was for to <lb/>
against. The total registered vote <lb/>
was Free Press. <lb/>
Amount Taken Not <lb/>
Rounds Sent For. <lb/>
Sometime during Wednesday night <lb/>
the store of and Bro. near <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line depot was <lb/>
entered by an unknown party and <lb/>
some of their goods was taken, the <lb/>
exact amount of which cannot be <lb/>
learned at the time this is being <lb/>
written, because the store is closed <lb/>
waiting for the bloodhounds to be <lb/>
brought from Tarboro to trail the <lb/>
thief. <lb/>
Entrance to the store was made <lb/>
through the front door by breaking <lb/>
a glass and unlocking it from inside. <lb/>
A back window was found open and it <lb/>
is thought the escape was made from <lb/>
there. <lb/>
Early this morning Policeman G. <lb/>
A. Clark got on the trail of a <lb/>
actions led Mr. Clark to fol- <lb/>
low him up. About o'clock he was <lb/>
located in the neighborhood of the <lb/>
graded school, but escaped to <lb/>
the woods of the branch between Mr. <lb/>
R. A. Tyson and the Anderson place, <lb/>
where he was located about two p. <lb/>
m. Sheriff Dudley and several others <lb/>
were now with Mr. Clark. Being <lb/>
in the swamp, the who <lb/>
proved to be Andrew Wilkins, was <lb/>
soon caught. With him were some <lb/>
of the goods which have been <lb/>
as some taken from Mr. <lb/>
store. <lb/>
Sometime during the day while <lb/>
they were after the a pistol <lb/>
was fired by someone unknown and <lb/>
when the was captured, it <lb/>
found that a ball was in his left <lb/>
thigh. He was taken to Dr. Skinner's <lb/>
office who looked after his wound, <lb/>
but failed to locate the ball. Later <lb/>
he will be given a hearing on the <lb/>
charge of robbery. <lb/>
In this cast-, Mr. Clark did more <lb/>
than his duty. Of course, he <lb/>
While to him is due so <lb/>
much credit, others also did their <lb/>
duty, hut he was there from start <lb/>
to last. That's Mr. Clark. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>