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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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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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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/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Jamaica <lb/>
The island of Jamaica, Great <lb/>
possession in the West hides, <lb/>
has looked with envious eyes upon <lb/>
the reciprocity agreement between <lb/>
the United States and Canada. The <lb/>
Telegraph-Guardian of Kingston goes <lb/>
so far as to suggest that Jamaica be <lb/>
annexed to Canada if there is no <lb/>
way In Which the reciprocal <lb/>
can be secured. <lb/>
It is interesting to note that the <lb/>
citizens of Jamaica have <lb/>
watched with satisfaction the de- <lb/>
of Cuba and Rico <lb/>
under American administration. They <lb/>
know the conditions which prevailed <lb/>
in those islands under Spanish rule, <lb/>
and the contrast is most marked. <lb/>
Rico as a dependency of the United <lb/>
States, has made progress along com- <lb/>
and educational lines, while <lb/>
Cuba, even though it now has its de- <lb/>
pendent government, owes its exist- <lb/>
as a republic to the United <lb/>
States. This is the evidence which is <lb/>
before the eyes of the Jamaicans, as <lb/>
they want some share in the pros- <lb/>
of their fellow-islanders. <lb/>
Washington Herald. <lb/>
Collections. <lb/>
R. B. <lb/>
of the office of Collector Geo, H. <lb/>
Brown, of the Western re- <lb/>
venue district, reports collections <lb/>
for last month aggregating <lb/>
and the remarkable feature of the <lb/>
report is that none of the revenue <lb/>
collected was on spirits. In fact <lb/>
it is the month In the history <lb/>
of the office that nothing was collect- <lb/>
ed on spirits. <lb/>
The collections In this district <lb/>
the fiscal year which closed with <lb/>
last month totaled an <lb/>
increase of over the <lb/>
ceding year. Practically all the in- <lb/>
crease was in the collections on to- <lb/>
Since the state prohibition <lb/>
laws became effective the collections <lb/>
on spirits have gradually decreased, <lb/>
but the collections on tobacco have <lb/>
showed an enormous increase, hence. <lb/>
Well Said. <lb/>
Few men have grown more in twelve <lb/>
years than has Bryan Grimes. A <lb/>
representative planter to begin with, <lb/>
whose father's fame is an undying <lb/>
heritage, he proved Immediately up- <lb/>
taking office that be was wort; <lb/>
of it He made a model secretary <lb/>
Of State. But lie has not been con- <lb/>
tent With this. He has taken a place <lb/>
In the fore front of the <lb/>
men. He is a leader at once of the <lb/>
farmers, of the progressive Demo- <lb/>
and of state's library and <lb/>
historical interests. He developed <lb/>
remarkably as a public speaker, and <lb/>
in any campaign he is prepared to <lb/>
do full service. He appears to be In <lb/>
fine and ready for twenty <lb/>
of political progress. <lb/>
In Carolina Democrat. <lb/>
Save <lb/>
WHY <lb/>
NATURE <lb/>
VS <lb/>
Aldermen Scrap, <lb/>
There was an exciting scene en- <lb/>
acted in front of the city market last <lb/>
night at o'clock, when at the <lb/>
conclusion of the monthly meeting <lb/>
of the board, aldermen Alexander <lb/>
Webb and J. Sherwood <lb/>
clinched, alderman Webb throwing <lb/>
to the pavement, <lb/>
face down. The two were taken in- <lb/>
to custody by officers Brown and <lb/>
Wyatt and gave bond in the sum of <lb/>
each for their appearance before <lb/>
the acting police justice Monday <lb/>
morning at o'clock. <lb/>
The affair had its origin in the <lb/>
meeting of the board, when alderman <lb/>
Upchurch called alderman Webb a <lb/>
and Observer. <lb/>
hiss Worth It. <lb/>
Kisses at per are rather ex- <lb/>
thought <lb/>
Of Chestnut place, -X. J., <lb/>
facing Judge Van S. of <lb/>
in court and paying that sum <lb/>
on a charge of disorderly conduct <lb/>
committed when lie seized Mar- <lb/>
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Hudson of oil Clay <lb/>
avenue, west, and placed an ardent <lb/>
kiss on her lips. <lb/>
will give you said <lb/>
no <lb/>
The Judge was determined and the <lb/>
fine was upheld. <lb/>
was worth it, said the <lb/>
oscillator, <lb/>
INTO THE <lb/>
NOW <lb/>
TO<lb/>
Stock Farm for Beaufort. <lb/>
Washington, C., July Car <lb/>
of Mooresville, Ohio, has re- <lb/>
purchased the Bowen farm, a <lb/>
few miles below this city, on <lb/>
river, and will run a high class stock <lb/>
farm there during the next several <lb/>
years. He expects to raise fine horses <lb/>
and has already shipped a carload of <lb/>
line horseflesh here. It is also under- <lb/>
stood that he will open up a race <lb/>
track during the coming fall. <lb/>
Accepts Call To Farmville. <lb/>
Rev. C. who has been <lb/>
studying at the Atlantic Christian <lb/>
College for several years, spent to- <lb/>
day in the city on his way to <lb/>
where he; has accepted a call <lb/>
to the pastorate of the Christian <lb/>
church of that town, and will move <lb/>
his family there. Mr. is <lb/>
one of the strong young men of his <lb/>
denomination In this state, and that <lb/>
he will accomplish much good in that <lb/>
Held is beyond <lb/>
Free Press. <lb/>
For Bummer in children <lb/>
always give Chamberlain's Colic, <lb/>
Cholera and Remedy and <lb/>
oil, and a speedy sure is <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. <lb/>
Happiest in Lincoln. <lb/>
A Lincoln, Neb., girl <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 clays I was able to be up <lb/>
and got better right along. I am the <lb/>
proudest girl in Lincoln to find such <lb/>
i good For sale by all <lb/>
dealers. <lb/>
Ahead f Greenville. <lb/>
The home-raised watermelons <lb/>
this season made their appearance <lb/>
on the local market today, and they <lb/>
brought fancy prices. Mr. George <lb/>
Lee brought in four right nice ones, <lb/>
which were sold for cents each. <lb/>
Kinston Free Press. <lb/>
LL HAVE <lb/>
WHEN YOU v <lb/>
IT. ITS <lb/>
THE BANK <lb/>
JAMES J. HILL, the great railroad king, <lb/>
made slinging a pick when <lb/>
He BANKED and SAVED his earnings. He be- <lb/>
came a contractor and multi-millionaire. <lb/>
Make 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/>
if you would have Others think <lb/>
well of you set an example by think- <lb/>
well of yourself. <lb/>
State of Ohio, city of Toledo, I <lb/>
Lucas County, f-3, <lb/>
Frank J. makes that lie la <lb/>
partner of ho firm of P, J. <lb/>
Co., doing business in the of To- <lb/>
County and State aforesaid, and <lb/>
that Bald firm will pay the sum of <lb/>
hundred dollars for each and <lb/>
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured <lb/>
by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURB <lb/>
FRANK J. <lb/>
Sworn to before mo and subscribed In <lb/>
my presence, this day of December. <lb/>
A. D. <lb/>
A. W. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
Hall's Catarrh Pure is taken internally <lb/>
and acts directly upon the blood and mu- <lb/>
surfaces of the system. Send for <lb/>
testimonials, free. <lb/>
F. J. CO. Toledo, O. <lb/>
Sold by all Druggists, <lb/>
Take Hall's Family for constipation. <lb/>
Mystery of The Sphinx. <lb/>
Prof. George A. of Harvard <lb/>
after several years of tire- <lb/>
less research, has announced that the <lb/>
figure on the Sphinx is that of a lion <lb/>
equipped with the head of <lb/>
a Pharaoh of Egypt on the <lb/>
fourth dynasty, who ruled in about <lb/>
the year B. C. This is the king <lb/>
who built the second pyramid, which <lb/>
is known to archaeologists as <lb/>
meaning is <lb/>
was the son of Cheops, and <lb/>
he was succeeded, in turn, by <lb/>
nus, who built the third pyramid. <lb/>
The investigations which disclosed <lb/>
the identity of the Sphinx began in <lb/>
and were finally only <lb/>
a short time ago. purposes <lb/>
form an interesting story of <lb/>
research, three noted <lb/>
gists, representing three big nations, <lb/>
being the leading actors. They were <lb/>
each given permission to delve for <lb/>
hidden treasurers beneath the desert <lb/>
sand, and settled by drawing lots as <lb/>
to how they should divide the ground <lb/>
pyramid, and his discoveries were of <lb/>
chosen for the purpose. To Prof. <lb/>
fell the investigation of the third <lb/>
unusual <lb/>
Mechanics. <lb/>
A Famous Detective Story Free. <lb/>
The complete story in book form <lb/>
that will go with every copy of next <lb/>
Sunday's New York World is the third <lb/>
adventure of Mr. Peter Ruff, entitled <lb/>
Demand of the Double <lb/>
by D. Phillips <lb/>
the greatest writer of de- <lb/>
stories this country has ever <lb/>
produced. There will also be two <lb/>
most interesting love stories in The <lb/>
Sunday World's Fiction <lb/>
Diabolical by Chris- <lb/>
and Other by <lb/>
Sara Cone Bryant. The Sunday <lb/>
World's Fiction Magazine is worth <lb/>
the cost of the big Sunday World <lb/>
alone. Order your copy in advance. <lb/>
Ohio Bribe-Takers. <lb/>
Ohio bribers are getting it In the <lb/>
neck. Monday a verdict of guilty was <lb/>
returned against Rodney J. <lb/>
senate by a jury <lb/>
which gave sixty-six and one-half <lb/>
hours to deliberation. was the <lb/>
alleged go-between in the bribery. <lb/>
He and his wife and daughter sat <lb/>
moved when the verdict was an- <lb/>
Two indicted senators, how- <lb/>
ever, who were in the court room <lb/>
were visibly perturbed. at- <lb/>
gave notice of the filing of a <lb/>
motion for a new trial. It is believed <lb/>
that the defense attorney's fees will <lb/>
aggregate One of his law- <lb/>
C. J. of Dayton, <lb/>
ed is a poor man. The <lb/>
inference generally drawn is that a <lb/>
large fund for legal defense has been <lb/>
made up by indicted <lb/>
lobbyists and others who fear to be <lb/>
dragged into the case. The penalty <lb/>
which faces is a prison sen- <lb/>
of one to five years and a fine <lb/>
of to He may have to stand <lb/>
trial on two other indictments. <lb/>
Greensboro Record. <lb/>
Pellagra Treatment. <lb/>
An of the Beaumont Mills, <lb/>
S. C, went into <lb/>
and Floyd's drug store the other day <lb/>
and bought some tincture of iodine. <lb/>
He said he had pellagra and was us- <lb/>
the iodine as a remedy. He said <lb/>
he took one drop in water three times <lb/>
a day for a week, two drops three <lb/>
times a clay third week, and then <lb/>
went back to one drop again. He <lb/>
said lie had had pellagra for a year, <lb/>
but since beginning this treatment <lb/>
had improved. The man asserted that <lb/>
a woman living at Saxon Mills had <lb/>
cured herself of pellagra with this <lb/>
treatment,<lb/>
PROCEEDINGS OF <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
AT THE EAR MEETING <lb/>
TO SEA HIGHWAY. <lb/>
Wort <lb/>
Drawn on Treasurer, Report <lb/>
of and Other Matters. <lb/>
The board of county commission- <lb/>
were In regular monthly session <lb/>
on the 3rd, with all the members <lb/>
present. <lb/>
The aggregate were <lb/>
drawn on the <lb/>
Paupers . <lb/>
Court House . <lb/>
Printing . <lb/>
Opening Gates . <lb/>
Bridges and Ferries . <lb/>
County Home . <lb/>
County Commissioners . <lb/>
Jury Tickets . <lb/>
Roads, general. <lb/>
Stock Law . <lb/>
Supt. Health . <lb/>
Dr. C. . <lb/>
Clerk of Court . <lb/>
S. I. Dudley . <lb/>
Register of Deeds . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Salaries. <lb/>
D. C. Moore, clerk. <lb/>
S. I. Dudley, sheriff. <lb/>
W. M. Moore, register, . <lb/>
W. B. Wilson, treasurer, . . <lb/>
Tax Listers. <lb/>
J. J. Elks, <lb/>
S. A. Carolina, . . <lb/>
J. C. Gaskins, . <lb/>
S. W. Joyner, Beaver Dam,. <lb/>
D. C. Barrow, <lb/>
T. L. Williams, Falkland, . <lb/>
W. A. Forbes, superintendent <lb/>
road convicts, renewed his bond <lb/>
for the ensuing year. <lb/>
The various county officers filed <lb/>
their several reports. <lb/>
A petition from the supervisors of <lb/>
township for for its <lb/>
roads was approved. <lb/>
W. B. Gray and wife, and Mrs. Mary- <lb/>
Taylor, were ordered moved to the <lb/>
county home. <lb/>
237.00 <lb/>
. 1.520.87 <lb/>
. 90.50 <lb/>
11.40 <lb/>
104.55 <lb/>
. 230.79 <lb/>
. 113.75 <lb/>
. 14.50 <lb/>
79.00 <lb/>
. 62.50 <lb/>
5.00 <lb/>
9.20 <lb/>
. 31.85 <lb/>
15.70 <lb/>
. 36.40 <lb/>
. 250.00 <lb/>
. 333.33 <lb/>
,. 250.00 <lb/>
. 200.00 <lb/>
120.00 <lb/>
78.00 <lb/>
129.30 <lb/>
72.00 <lb/>
75.00 <lb/>
120.00 <lb/>
of <lb/>
Of <lb/>
The Route Located and the <lb/>
Will Scum Begin. <lb/>
Raleigh. July <lb/>
Joseph Hyde Pratt, who is <lb/>
with Chairman Varner, of. <lb/>
board of trustees of the Central <lb/>
way. was In Raleigh today and <lb/>
his report on the location <lb/>
the section of the Tennessee line, <lb/>
giving the details of the conditions <lb/>
that are to be met with in the con- <lb/>
of this section of the <lb/>
highway that is to from M <lb/>
head and Beaufort to the whole <lb/>
length the state to the <lb/>
line. From Raleigh to he <lb/>
adopts the route via Cary and Morris- <lb/>
ville, as against the and <lb/>
East Durham route. From Durham <lb/>
to Graham he adopts the route by <lb/>
way of Hillsboro and Mebane rather <lb/>
than the route by Chapel Hill route <lb/>
is put in shape it can readily be In- <lb/>
on the map and tourists Pan <lb/>
use either route. From Graham to <lb/>
Greensboro the run will be by <lb/>
of Elon College and The <lb/>
run from to Salisbury is <lb/>
to be via High Point. <lb/>
Lexington and Spencer. The road <lb/>
thence lo is to be by New- <lb/>
ton and Hickory and Connelly Springs <lb/>
Then the run is to be by Glen-Alpine <lb/>
and and and on to <lb/>
Old Fort. Thence the run to Ashe- <lb/>
ville is to be by way of Black <lb/>
and the Swannanoa Valley road <lb/>
through Buncombe county, while the <lb/>
he Asheville to the Tennessee line <lb/>
Statement of <lb/>
THE NATIONAL BANK <lb/>
It t Business <lb/>
IS <lb/>
Loam . <lb/>
. <lb/>
. Bonds. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Furniture and F . <lb/>
Exchange i H . <lb/>
ks . <lb/>
per c lion fund . <lb/>
C.<lb/>
Bill. <lb/>
C . <lb/>
Surplus . <lb/>
Pro <lb/>
. <lb/>
Account . . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Divide id <lb/>
Cashier's . <lb/>
2,500.00 <lb/>
7,136.30 <lb/>
10,829.81 <lb/>
37.007.70 <lb/>
1.050.00 <lb/>
. 10.000.00 <lb/>
. 2,366.95 <lb/>
. 21.000.00 <lb/>
. 21,000.00 <lb/>
. 24,325.00 <lb/>
91.42 <lb/>
723.33 <lb/>
. . 140.385.74 <lb/>
1269,892.44 <lb/>
ORGANIZED 1908. TOTAL DIVIDENDS <lb/>
We Invite the accounts of Banks, Corporations, Finns and In- <lb/>
and will be pleased to or correspond with those <lb/>
contemplating ages or opening new accounts. He want <lb/>
J-<lb/>
Jurors For August Term. <lb/>
Jurors drawn by the commission- <lb/>
for the August term of Pitt <lb/>
court are Criminal <lb/>
T. E. Pollard and J. L. Lewis, of <lb/>
J. B. Gurganus, Carolina; <lb/>
C. T. Kittrell, J. B, Jenkins, E. T. <lb/>
Burney. W. J. Mumford, G. G. <lb/>
J. J. Taylor, C. J. Tucker and <lb/>
S. A. Jenkins, R. M. <lb/>
and J. W. Elks, J. W. <lb/>
Moore, Willis Moseley, W. G. Newton, <lb/>
J. H. J. M. Williams, Sr., S. <lb/>
F. and K. R. Wooten, Falk- <lb/>
land; Paul Allen, Farmville; S. C. <lb/>
E. C. Jack S. Smith, <lb/>
J. Stanley Smith, S. W. Goodwin, H. <lb/>
Burnett and J. T. Bundy, Farmville; <lb/>
B. L. Smith, James Tripp and W. P. <lb/>
Jr., col., Greenville; J. R. <lb/>
Chauncey, C. C. Smith, M. <lb/>
B. Harper, W. H. Chapman and Asa <lb/>
Jones, Swift Creek. <lb/>
FOR CIVIL TERM. <lb/>
B. Worthington, W. B. Alex- <lb/>
and J. L. Tripp, <lb/>
T. F. Proctor, Harry C. Evans and H. <lb/>
H. Proctor, J. A. Newton and <lb/>
J. T. Matthews, Falkland; M. O. <lb/>
J. T. Edwards, S. E. Gates, <lb/>
J. N. Hart, Henry Edwards, W. J. <lb/>
G. A. Evans and O. W. Elks, <lb/>
Greenville; J. R. B. B. Sat- <lb/>
the <lb/>
is to be through county until <lb/>
the Madison county roads can be got- <lb/>
ten in shape, which will take a year <lb/>
at least. However. Dr. be- <lb/>
that the Central Highway be <lb/>
has mapped out will be In such <lb/>
that tourists can readily make the <lb/>
run all the way from the seashore to <lb/>
the Tennessee line by October of this <lb/>
year. <lb/>
This report was to the <lb/>
Central Highway meeting held here <lb/>
at which there were enthusiastic <lb/>
speeches by a number of people and <lb/>
resolutions were adopted calling on <lb/>
the Wake commissioners to take steps <lb/>
at once to do Wake's full part In the <lb/>
road building. Dr. Pratt reported <lb/>
that he has secured the- services of <lb/>
three government engineers for v. <lb/>
in laying out the highway route and <lb/>
the plan to issue <lb/>
to persons desiring maps of <lb/>
the road carries and something like <lb/>
expense, the road work will ho under <lb/>
way with a well defined survey for <lb/>
guidance very soon <lb/>
Telegram. <lb/>
Low Round Trip Fares From <lb/>
Greenville, N. G. <lb/>
Tickets on Sale July S and , 1911. <lb/>
18,75 Via M Rail H <lb/>
14.40 Norfolk bUy, It J. <lb/>
Account Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. Final return <lb/>
, S may be extended to August by depositing <lb/>
ti k and paying <lb/>
Account Mystic Shrine. Final return limit July which <lb/>
may be extended to August by depositing ticket and <lb/>
23.80 Via All H Y <lb/>
21.45 Vi Norfolk II <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. II. WARD, Ticket Agent Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
or address <lb/>
H w. Pass. Traffic Mar. T. WHITE, Gen. Pass. <lb/>
Wilmington, X. C. <lb/>
-i . i <lb/>
or G will cure any <lb/>
cases of Chills and Fever. Price, <lb/>
NEW STYLES N <lb/>
and oxfords; all <lb/>
leathers, just arrived. J. R- J- <lb/>
Slate Reunion. <lb/>
The state reunion of the veterans <lb/>
will he held this year at Wilmington. <lb/>
X. C, on 2nd and 3rd or August Our <lb/>
Wilmington friends extend to every <lb/>
veterans a hearty invitation and will j <lb/>
surely give us a royal welcome. I <lb/>
order that they may have the <lb/>
as to how many to prepare <lb/>
accommodations for it Is <lb/>
necessary that they should know the <lb/>
number that expects to attend least <lb/>
two weeks before the meeting. So <lb/>
I urge upon the veterans to lei me <lb/>
hear from them as soon as <lb/>
make up their minds, so that I may <lb/>
send in the Information as to the <lb/>
number they may expect from this <lb/>
Camp. <lb/>
The railroad fair I suppose will <lb/>
be about. cent per mile both ways <lb/>
as usual. <lb/>
J. A. LONG, <lb/>
Com. Camp Jones No. 1206<lb/>
want I <lb/>
ES, Cashier <lb/>
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH <lb/>
TRAVEL VIA <lb/>
The Chesapeake Line <lb/>
including new Steamers just placed <lb/>
i service the of Norfolk -City of Baltimore are the <lb/>
most elegant and up-to-date Steamers between Norfolk and <lb/>
more. <lb/>
Equipped with Wireless Telephone In Each Room. Meals <lb/>
on Board Everything fer Comfort mid Convenience. <lb/>
Steamers Norfolk <lb/>
Steamer Old Point Comfort. <lb/>
Steamer Arrive <lb/>
Connecting at Baltimore for all points North, North Last and West. <lb/>
Reservations made and any information courteously furnished by <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Norfolk, Virginia <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
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/>
A GOOD PLACE FOR ton, Barber and company. They have <lb/>
And <lb/>
a largo stock on hand. <lb/>
Items In- Miss went to Green- <lb/>
ville to visit relatives and<lb/>
Messrs. J. F. Harrington, B. F. <lb/>
Local <lb/>
t crest. <lb/>
Winterville, X. C, July <lb/>
M. U. Bryan was called to <lb/>
Sunday to attend the burial of her Manning and Eugene Cannon went to <lb/>
mother. Norfolk and Ocean View Saturday <lb/>
Mr. J. Cox came in Saturday returned by Mon- <lb/>
night to spend a few days. day morning. They report a good <lb/>
in .- i , time. <lb/>
I Cheap summer goods at <lb/>
A. W. Ange and Mr- M B- Bryan and family, for- <lb/>
here, but now of Raleigh, <lb/>
Mr. J. A. of Grifton, spent <lb/>
Sunday with friends near bore. <lb/>
Mr. J. L, Rollins went to Which- <lb/>
Sunday to attend the burial of <lb/>
his grandmother. <lb/>
Miss Kate Chapman is visiting near <lb/>
Gardner's X Roads. <lb/>
Lime, tobacco, cotton, lanterns, <lb/>
thermometers and alarm clocks at A. <lb/>
W. Ange and <lb/>
to spend a day or <lb/>
came in Sunday <lb/>
two at home. <lb/>
Barber and Company <lb/>
have just received a car load of royal <lb/>
Hour. <lb/>
Mr. Ernest Cox left Monday even- <lb/>
for <lb/>
When you buy from home mer- <lb/>
chants, you are helping the town and <lb/>
Miss Chapman is spending the thereby you share in the profits of <lb/>
week Miss Cora Carroll. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Mae who <lb/>
is attending the East Carolina Teach- <lb/>
Training school, spent Sunday and <lb/>
Monday at home. <lb/>
Winterville has a fine opening for <lb/>
a good barber. <lb/>
Rev. m. A. Adams returned home <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Messrs. G. R. Dixon and <lb/>
Buck returned Tuesday from More- <lb/>
your own purchase. <lb/>
R. L. Abbott and partner at- <lb/>
tended the game of ball at Ayden <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Judging by the way the farmers <lb/>
are buying handy tobacco trucks and <lb/>
tobacco Hues from the A. G. Cox <lb/>
Manufacturing Company, they must <lb/>
be about ready to cure some <lb/>
co. <lb/>
Messrs. Eugene Cannon and C. T. <lb/>
head, they spent several days Cox drove over to Ayden yesterday <lb/>
fishing. evening. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Company If it is a regular style of Hunsucker <lb/>
have fifty thousand shingles for sale, buggy you want, or a special job you <lb/>
All red heart cypress. prefer, the A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Mr. T. C. Nelson and family have Company is in a position to satisfy <lb/>
moved to Greenville. you. <lb/>
Winterville is a hustling little town Miss Annie of <lb/>
as is proven by the number of drum- is spending a day or two in town to <lb/>
that come; just yesterday seven the delight of her many friends, <lb/>
got off one train here. We are giving carts and wagons our <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Com- special attention now. When you get <lb/>
for your summer pants. They ready to buy, come to see us or write, <lb/>
are selling them cheap. We have something to say to you. A. <lb/>
Mrs. E. E. Cox left for Washington Q. Cox Manufacturing Company. <lb/>
Monday evening to visit friends and W. E. Proctor and children, <lb/>
relatives. several days with Mrs. Ben. <lb/>
Miss Evelyn Sutton left Monday to Tucker this week, <lb/>
visit friends in Kinston. Winterville, N. C, July W. <lb/>
Miss Cox, after spending I. Wingate left Thursday for Fair <lb/>
Monday at home, returned to E. C. Haven, Mass., to visit two of his <lb/>
T. T. S. that evening. daughters who arc <lb/>
When you get ready for your baling For the cash and while they last, <lb/>
wire, it will pay you to see Harrington, Barber and Company are <lb/>
selling all their summer stock <lb/>
dress goods, such as lawns, batiste, <lb/>
and poplins at about half of <lb/>
the cost price, so they can have room <lb/>
for the fall stock. It is a chance of <lb/>
a lifetime to get a bargain. <lb/>
Mr. J. S. Ross, of Ayden, in <lb/>
town Thursday. <lb/>
Don't forget the price has been <lb/>
made low on slippers at A. W. Ange <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mrs. J. H. C. Dixon returned Wed- <lb/>
from near Gardner's X Roads, <lb/>
where she spent some time with her <lb/>
father who is quite sick. <lb/>
For cash and to give the trade a <lb/>
wonderful bargain, Harrington, Bar- <lb/>
and Company have marked their <lb/>
hats down and you can get a <lb/>
good hat for a little money. <lb/>
Messrs. G. R. Dixon and Williford <lb/>
Buck left yesterday to spend a week <lb/>
at Morehead. <lb/>
Fruit jars and rubbers at A. W. <lb/>
Ange and <lb/>
Winterville has a fine opening for <lb/>
a first-class barber shop. <lb/>
Rev. M. A. Adams left Thursday <lb/>
morning to attend the Sandy Bottom <lb/>
Association, near Carthage. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox spent <lb/>
Friday in Greenville. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your requirements in lime <lb/>
for repairing your tobacco barn furn- <lb/>
aces and all other work when lime <lb/>
is needed. <lb/>
Mr. R. L. Abbott attended the base <lb/>
ball game at Grifton yesterday. <lb/>
Misses Mimic and Dora Cox at- <lb/>
tended the Sunday School Institute <lb/>
in Greenville this week. <lb/>
Mr. Eugene Cannon, <lb/>
as went to Ayden yesterday <lb/>
to see the boys get beat in a game of <lb/>
ball. <lb/>
Get your pumps, piping and points <lb/>
at Harrington, Barber and <lb/>
They have a large stock on hand. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox left today <lb/>
for the mountains in the western <lb/>
part of the state, where they will <lb/>
spend some time. <lb/>
Misses Esther Johnson and Pearl <lb/>
Hester went to Greenville today to <lb/>
spend a few days with friends there. <lb/>
WRIGHTS AD MEASURES <lb/>
What Was <lb/>
Found In <lb/>
Last Monday. <lb/>
The Twin Seat Hunsucker is a leader in and quality. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company are making other <lb/>
good style buggies. Send in order and get your choice. <lb/>
The report on an investigation car- <lb/>
on last May of the weights <lb/>
measure conditions in Charlotte by <lb/>
the bureau of standards, has been <lb/>
received by Mayor C. A. Bland and in <lb/>
its pages of facts, there is much <lb/>
interesting reading. <lb/>
In the report it is said there is <lb/>
power invested In the board of <lb/>
regarding the regulation of <lb/>
weights and measures within the city <lb/>
limits, but that the board has never <lb/>
exercised the power vested in it. <lb/>
The county has a standard keep- <lb/>
whose apparatus is very <lb/>
and his sealer's record sheet is <lb/>
in a deplorable condition. <lb/>
weights and measures were found <lb/>
scattered about in the rear room of <lb/>
a gun shop and apparently no care <lb/>
had been given them in <lb/>
general our investigation shows <lb/>
that the supervision of the weights <lb/>
and measures of the city of Charlotte <lb/>
is very insufficient and characterized <lb/>
by great <lb/>
While 26.3 per cent, of the beam <lb/>
scales tested were incorrect by more <lb/>
than per cent, per cent, of the <lb/>
computing and 57.1 per cent, of the <lb/>
spring dial scales were in error more <lb/>
than this amount. Of the counter <lb/>
scales tested and over which <lb/>
were sold per cent, were <lb/>
. A number of scales which <lb/>
in favor of the dealer so much <lb/>
as an ounce in one pound, were re- <lb/>
ported to have been tested by the <lb/>
county standard keeper. <lb/>
Of the weights tested, only 64.6 <lb/>
per cent, were correct within 1.2 per <lb/>
cent. Of the remainder 35.4 per <lb/>
cent, incorrect weights, 51.4 per cent, <lb/>
were light in weight. Some of the <lb/>
errors were more than per cent, a <lb/>
very poor showing for this class of <lb/>
apparatus. <lb/>
Not only were 55.5 per cent, of the <lb/>
dry measures tested found incorrect <lb/>
by more than per cent, but all of <lb/>
those found incorrect were short <lb/>
These figures, however, do not <lb/>
the correct percentage of dry <lb/>
measures short for the general <lb/>
here is to measure dry beans and <lb/>
sometimes green beans and <lb/>
berries by liquid -measures. The <lb/>
liquid measure when used for <lb/>
dry commodities deliver per <lb/>
cent, and upward less than the <lb/>
amount. <lb/>
In some cases the bottomless type <lb/>
of measure found in use and <lb/>
since this type generally deliveries <lb/>
per cent, or more less than the <lb/>
amount of the larger dry com- <lb/>
the consumers of this city <lb/>
suffer further from short weights by <lb/>
its use in the market <lb/>
Great carelessness characterizes <lb/>
the scale of liquid commodities. <lb/>
Nearly all of the brands of print <lb/>
butter found in the Charlotte market <lb/>
and examined, averaged light in <lb/>
weight. These shortages were hi <lb/>
most cases not large four out of <lb/>
the seven brands of regular brands <lb/>
of regular print examined were <lb/>
in error less than per cent. <lb/>
Of the packages of commodities <lb/>
put up by local stores and found In <lb/>
several different stores, one-half <lb/>
were full weight and the other half <lb/>
underweight. The average error of <lb/>
all of these packages was only <lb/>
per cent and the maximum error <lb/>
only 4.2 per cent, underweight. <lb/>
seems certain that an enact- <lb/>
by the state and rigid enforce- <lb/>
of such laws as are advocated <lb/>
by the National Conference of <lb/>
Weights and Measures, could not fail <lb/>
to bring order to the present chaotic <lb/>
state of the weights and measures <lb/>
in this city and others of the state <lb/>
of North <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
We're Proud of Our Record. <lb/>
Established in 1868. Capital over <lb/>
Headquarters for the <lb/>
farmers of North America. Over 2.- <lb/>
customers. Over sales- <lb/>
men on the road. Over eighty first <lb/>
class household articles needed in <lb/>
home at every season of the year. <lb/>
Our plant contains over ten acres of <lb/>
floor space. Right now we need a <lb/>
reliable energetic young man to <lb/>
el and sell our products in Pitt <lb/>
Address the J. R. Watkins Com- <lb/>
South Gay street, Baltimore <lb/>
Maryland. Established in 1868. Cap- <lb/>
ital over Plant contains <lb/>
acres floor space. <lb/>
Exhibiting Fine Pictures. <lb/>
Judging from the crowds that <lb/>
witnessed the picture play at the <lb/>
Gaiety last evening, they are <lb/>
exhibiting a high class of pictures. <lb/>
One of the features for last even- <lb/>
was both educational and Inter- <lb/>
Your and re- <lb/>
a great deal of comment. <lb/>
We desire to call your attention <lb/>
to their program that appears else- <lb/>
where daily in this paper, for future <lb/>
reference. <lb/>
Catarrh of the Stomach <lb/>
a Prevalent Disease <lb/>
Difficult to Relieve. <lb/>
SOME INSURANCE <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
A PROMPT AND <lb/>
Mr. S. W. Jackson, Weaver Block, I <lb/>
Greenville, Ohio, I was <lb/>
superintendent of construction of J. F. <lb/>
Bender and Co., of Hamilton, <lb/>
Ohio, I became entirely unfit for <lb/>
with of tho stomach. <lb/>
friend called my attention to a <lb/>
remedy for this condition. I begun to <lb/>
improve at once. I was soon to re- <lb/>
turn to my former profession. <lb/>
would require many pages to de- <lb/>
scribe the condition I was in and the re- <lb/>
lief I have <lb/>
Here is another case. Officer George <lb/>
Y. Stout, North Broadway, Haiti- <lb/>
more, Md., suffered very much <lb/>
with catarrh of the stomach and <lb/>
Indigestion. I lost fifty pounds in <lb/>
four months. <lb/>
friend called my attention to a <lb/>
remedy, which I used, and gradually- <lb/>
got well. I have gained half my lost <lb/>
weight back <lb/>
Chronic Stomach Trouble. <lb/>
Mr. Egbert J. Gillespie, South <lb/>
Main St., Los Angeles, Cal., <lb/>
of Lather's International Union, was <lb/>
also suffering from catarrh of the <lb/>
a long time. He grew thinner and <lb/>
paler, lost all ambition and appetite. <lb/>
Sick at the stomach, indigestion con- <lb/>
A friend also called his attention to <lb/>
a remedy, which brought a de- <lb/>
improvement. Alter continuing <lb/>
the use of the remedy for a month, he <lb/>
considers himself permanently relieved. <lb/>
Now, once more. Mr. Christian <lb/>
man, Pa., says ho suffered <lb/>
for many years with catarrh of the <lb/>
stomach. It produced a miserable <lb/>
cough, day and night. Ho tried doctors <lb/>
and many remedies. At last his <lb/>
was called to a remedy, the same <lb/>
remedy that relieved the others which <lb/>
have been referred to above. He m <lb/>
that he was entirely rid of his stomach <lb/>
difficulty. <lb/>
Brought Back Health. <lb/>
What was the remedy that has <lb/>
wrought this remarkable relief So far, <lb/>
the remedy has not been mentioned. <lb/>
If any one doubts the correctness of <lb/>
these statements it is very easy to <lb/>
them by writing to the people whose <lb/>
names have been given, enclosing a <lb/>
stamp for reply. <lb/>
The remedy is within the reach of <lb/>
every one. It is simply the good, old <lb/>
reliable remedy known, as <lb/>
REMEDY. <lb/>
If the truth were known, the <lb/>
are that has relieved <lb/>
as many cases of catarrh of the stomach <lb/>
as any other popular remedy in <lb/>
We have a great many <lb/>
testimonials from all parts of the <lb/>
United States, declaring in strong and <lb/>
enthusiastic terms has en- <lb/>
relieved them of catarrh of the <lb/>
stomach, that they were wretched and <lb/>
miserable beyond words, but Permit <lb/>
has restored them to health, vigor and <lb/>
happiness. <lb/>
These are the facts. Now, if you have <lb/>
stomach difficulty, it is up to you to act <lb/>
upon them or them, as you <lb/>
please. <lb/>
Symptoms of Stomach Catarrh. <lb/>
affection may result from <lb/>
in diet, or the use of alcohol. The ex- <lb/>
use of tobacco, especially when <lb/>
the juice or the leaves are swallowed, <lb/>
is likely to cause it. <lb/>
seasoned or coarse, irritating <lb/>
foods, sometimes induce the disease. <lb/>
chronic gastritis of the <lb/>
is essentially a secondary <lb/>
affection, one of the primary causes is <lb/>
an unhealthy stale of tho mouth, nose <lb/>
or throat, such as bad teeth or catarrh <lb/>
of the nose <lb/>
patients are usually poorly <lb/>
nourished, pale, sallow, thin, fatigue <lb/>
easily induced, muscles flabby. Loss <lb/>
of appetite or capricious appetite, <lb/>
tongue is usually coated brown- <lb/>
gray. Cankered mouth is a com- <lb/>
occurrence. <lb/>
is not common. When present <lb/>
it is usually dull, and is aggravated by <lb/>
food, especially when this i.- of an <lb/>
character. <lb/>
may occur in the morning, <lb/>
Also after meals. Sickness to tho <lb/>
frequent and persistent. <lb/>
produces dull headache, and a <lb/>
feeling of general nervous distress. <lb/>
Constipation usually quite <lb/>
These symptoms, given by Gould and <lb/>
Pyle, coincide exactly with the frequent <lb/>
descriptions Dr. is receiving <lb/>
from patients all over the United States. <lb/>
If you have any of these symptom <lb/>
get a bottle of Take a dose be- <lb/>
fore each meal. See if your stomach <lb/>
does not immediately feel better, <lb/>
appetite improve, your digestion at <lb/>
once resume business. <lb/>
People who object to liquid medicine <lb/>
now secure rerun tablets. <lb/>
raw <lb/>
JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Local Happenings Of Interest In <lb/>
This Section. <lb/>
Black Jack, N. C, July <lb/>
are having some dry weather through <lb/>
this section at this time, and crops <lb/>
are suffering very much for rain. <lb/>
Farmers through this section are <lb/>
getting ready to cure tobacco. <lb/>
We are having a nice Sunday school <lb/>
at Black Jack now. We invite you <lb/>
all to attend. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. Clark, of <lb/>
Grimesland, spend Sunday with rel- <lb/>
and friends here. <lb/>
Mr. J. R. and sons went <lb/>
to Washington Saturday. <lb/>
W. will fill his <lb/>
appointment at Black Jack Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. W. L. Clark and son, J. H. <lb/>
Clark, went to Washington <lb/>
day. <lb/>
If a young man hasn't the cheek to <lb/>
kiss a pretty widow, she may be will- <lb/>
to furnish It. <lb/>
Hope Well Items. <lb/>
Hope Well, N. C, July <lb/>
Well Sunday school is progressing <lb/>
line. <lb/>
Misses Mae and Lena are <lb/>
spending a few weeks at Norfolk. <lb/>
Miss Annie Stokes from Wall <lb/>
street spent this week with Miss Lela <lb/>
Some of our friends wore all smiles <lb/>
Sunday over their friend returning <lb/>
Saturday evening. <lb/>
Mr. Oscar Manning spent Sunday <lb/>
at <lb/>
Quite a number of people from this <lb/>
section attended the picnic on the first <lb/>
of July at <lb/>
Crops are very good throughout <lb/>
this section. <lb/>
Listen out for the wedding bells <lb/>
soon. <lb/>
North Carolina Gel <lb/>
Payments. <lb/>
From the Insurance Press is <lb/>
the facts that life insurance or- <lb/>
of the United States and <lb/>
Canada distributed in <lb/>
in 1910. The various paid <lb/>
were and the dividends <lb/>
and payments f <lb/>
For policy holders who were able <lb/>
to hold their protection throughout <lb/>
the year dividend payments were in- <lb/>
creased largely. The record of <lb/>
paid by the companies that re- <lb/>
ported in New York showed an in- <lb/>
crease to the amount of <lb/>
compared with for increase <lb/>
in 1909 and for increase in <lb/>
1908. Several millions of dollars of <lb/>
dividends were applied for the <lb/>
chase of annuities and paid-up <lb/>
to insurance carried. <lb/>
According to that record a notable <lb/>
feature of tho transactions was that <lb/>
the amount of the dividend <lb/>
was in ex- <lb/>
of the amount of disbursements <lb/>
for surrendered, lapsed and <lb/>
ed policies <lb/>
Besides showing increase of the <lb/>
amount paid, the record accounted for <lb/>
of dividends and <lb/>
paid, including amounts left on de- <lb/>
posit, an increase of com- <lb/>
pared with for increase in <lb/>
1909. Dividends declared on or <lb/>
portioned to annual and deferred div- <lb/>
policies in 1910, payable In 1911, <lb/>
amounted to an Increase <lb/>
of over declared dividends <lb/>
for 1910. The amounts set apart, cal- <lb/>
or provisionally ascertained <lb/>
upon deferred dividend policies bad <lb/>
a total of an Increase of <lb/>
for the year. <lb/>
Business insurance boomed, the <lb/>
amounts of new Insurance ranging <lb/>
from to The <lb/>
of life insurance for the <lb/>
protection of business interests has <lb/>
increased notably in tho past three <lb/>
years. Chief executives and managers <lb/>
of departments of corporations, on <lb/>
whose energy and experience success- <lb/>
transactions depend, have taken <lb/>
insurance against the contingencies <lb/>
of financial loss and interruption of <lb/>
operations in the event of death. <lb/>
Life insurance for the individual <lb/>
capitalizes unearned income; for the <lb/>
corporation or partnership it capital- <lb/>
productive value in affairs less <lb/>
sentimental than those of tho home. <lb/>
In amount of beneficiaries paid New <lb/>
York state heads the list with <lb/>
500.000, with Pennsylvania and <lb/>
following. New City heads <lb/>
the list of cities with <lb/>
with Philadelphia and <lb/>
Chicago next. The total <lb/>
payments for Carolina were <lb/>
The largest individual <lb/>
payment in the state was at Kinston, <lb/>
the next was at Grifton, <lb/>
Charlotte came third with <lb/>
Some total payments in Pitt county <lb/>
were as At Grifton, <lb/>
Greenville, Falkland, <lb/>
These represent the places only at <lb/>
which more than were paid <lb/>
and do not include various smaller <lb/>
amounts at. other places. <lb/>
Post Oilier Receipts. <lb/>
The receipts of the Greenville post <lb/>
office for the fiscal year ending June <lb/>
1911, were tome more than <lb/>
100.00. <lb/>
The Latest News From Our <lb/>
Village. <lb/>
N. C, July W. <lb/>
. Harper went to Ayden Friday. <lb/>
Mr. James A. Stokes went to Green- <lb/>
ville Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. S. K. Harper went to <lb/>
dine Saturday morning. <lb/>
Mr. Yates and family, of <lb/>
Raleigh, are visiting relatives and <lb/>
friends here. <lb/>
Mr. Frank Stokes returned from <lb/>
Vanceboro Saturday. <lb/>
Several of our boys went to Gard- <lb/>
Saturday to play base ball. <lb/>
Messrs. and Lev Stokes <lb/>
went to Ayden Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Stokes, of <lb/>
worth, spent Sunday here with rel- <lb/>
ate . <lb/>
Crops are Buffering considerably in <lb/>
tins section on account of the dry <lb/>
weather, <lb/>
Mrs. W. Harper and daughters, <lb/>
Misses Mattie and Bessie, spent Sun- <lb/>
day at <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Stokes and family, of <lb/>
Vanceboro, spent Sunday here <lb/>
We had a large crowd at Sunday <lb/>
school Sunday. Glad to sec so many <lb/>
out. Come again and bring your <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
Mr. J. A. Stokes, of <lb/>
spent Monday afternoon here. <lb/>
It is very dry throughout this sec- <lb/>
lion. The creeks and swamps have <lb/>
dried up and most every body re- <lb/>
ports a scarcity of water in their <lb/>
wells. <lb/>
Their Infant Son Pond. <lb/>
Little Zeb. Warren Brown, nine <lb/>
weeks old, son of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
W. Brown, died at their home In <lb/>
South Greenville, Friday afternoon. <lb/>
The little fellow was laid to rest Sat- <lb/>
in the family burying ground, <lb/>
near town. <lb/>
Of <lb/>
A new degree has been invented by <lb/>
the University of Michigan. It is rep- <lb/>
resented by the letters P. <lb/>
which mean of public <lb/>
The first P. degrees were con- <lb/>
a few days ago upon Ev- <lb/>
ans and who have been very <lb/>
successful in chasing germs to their <lb/>
lair and catching them. The new de- <lb/>
it seems, is to be reserved for <lb/>
the honor of scientists who do some- <lb/>
thing notable in the way for <lb/>
the public health by hygienic, <lb/>
or other <lb/>
Morning News. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
The only license to marry issued <lb/>
last week was to one white <lb/>
Hilton Garris and Julia Tripp. <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 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 poisons indebted <lb/>
to said estate will make immediate <lb/>
payment. <lb/>
This June 17th, 1911. <lb/>
G. LITTLE, Administrator, <lb/>
Of Mrs. Margaret J. Moore.<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. 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/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Carolina Rome Mi and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
, ; .<lb/>
FARMVILLE MOVING <lb/>
SWIFTLY FORWARD <lb/>
NEWSY LETTER ROM THAT <lb/>
Going <lb/>
Entertainment -Base Rail, Too. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C., July <lb/>
you haven't seen a column dedicated <lb/>
to Farmville In some time, we are <lb/>
moving quietly and forward. <lb/>
There are a good many people that <lb/>
haven't been to our prosperous little <lb/>
town in a year or and we Invite <lb/>
them to pay us another visit and <lb/>
have their eyes opened as to our <lb/>
activity. <lb/>
There are at present three hand- <lb/>
some new residences nearing com- <lb/>
and six others under con- <lb/>
Among them are Mrs. F. <lb/>
L. Joyner and Mr. Long's, which <lb/>
will he one of the most modern in <lb/>
the county. <lb/>
We had quite a large real estate <lb/>
deal on Main street the first of the <lb/>
week, the and Overby Hard- <lb/>
ware Company bought feet of Mr. <lb/>
Jim Lang's property. They are going <lb/>
to tear down the old building and <lb/>
erect at. once three nice tWO-Story <lb/>
business houses. The material Is be- <lb/>
hauled two Other new two- <lb/>
story brick stores further down <lb/>
street. <lb/>
Now, if you people <lb/>
don't hustle, we are going to over- <lb/>
take you, and when we have succeed- <lb/>
ed in doing that we are going by <lb/>
you. <lb/>
There was B hay ride given by the <lb/>
young men last week and two big <lb/>
wagons were filled to overflowing <lb/>
with happy young couples on the <lb/>
roads the stillness <lb/>
of the night with laughter and songs <lb/>
as the wheels rolled along. After re- <lb/>
turning to town with many Jostles <lb/>
and peels of laughter all went to <lb/>
Burnett's drug store and were served <lb/>
with refreshments. <lb/>
for them and sent them home with <lb/>
the sad term to <lb/>
Will was here on our <lb/>
No doubt they <lb/>
to be elsewhere before our <lb/>
I the home <lb/>
pi <lb/>
The borne boys played in fine form <lb/>
and in the end had crossed the <lb/>
plate, while the visitors played <lb/>
hard they all ma I co i and <lb/>
In the end only had reached borne, <lb/>
and be would have been out but for <lb/>
a wild throw on the part of one of <lb/>
the home boys. <lb/>
Today we cross bats with Snow <lb/>
Hill and a and closely contested <lb/>
game Is expected. <lb/>
Lost Valuable Cow. <lb/>
The Enterprise says <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Roberson, of <lb/>
lost a valuable cow last week. She <lb/>
gave four gallons of milk and two and <lb/>
a half pounds butter daily. <lb/>
TRAINING SCHOOL VISITORS <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. John Entertain, <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. John Stanley Smith <lb/>
elegantly entertained at a progressive <lb/>
heart heart party Monday evening <lb/>
from to o'clock at their lovely <lb/>
home on street, in honor <lb/>
of Miss Virginia Hoke. from West <lb/>
Virginia, and Martha Glenn, of <lb/>
The guests were greeted at <lb/>
the door by Mr. and Mrs. Smith and <lb/>
from there they passed Into the hall, <lb/>
where delicious punch was served by- <lb/>
Miss Rosa Moore and Mr. Ed- <lb/>
wards. <lb/>
The guests were then invited into <lb/>
the parlor which was very tastily <lb/>
orated with cut flowers and potted <lb/>
plants. Here followed the Interest- <lb/>
and exciting game of heart dice. <lb/>
After an hour's playing it. was <lb/>
found that Mr. Arthur and Miss <lb/>
Martha Glenn won the prize, a lovely <lb/>
card case. Many other little games <lb/>
and a tree contest were indulged in <lb/>
and Instrumental music was charm- <lb/>
rendered by Miss Blanche King. <lb/>
After this the guests were Invited in- <lb/>
to the dining room where delightful <lb/>
ices were served, after which the <lb/>
guests departed, all declaring this <lb/>
lovely party more than sustains the <lb/>
reputation already won by Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. Smith as charming entertain- <lb/>
Base Dal i. <lb/>
we have been hiving <lb/>
base ball, too. Our team went to <lb/>
and brought the game <lb/>
home, with them. Pinetops was here <lb/>
Tuesday with her first nine line. <lb/>
The home boys proved to be too swift <lb/>
Make Interesting Talks To Tin- <lb/>
Students. <lb/>
Col. John s. Cunningham, of Per- <lb/>
son county, East Carolina <lb/>
Teachers Training school today and <lb/>
made an interesting talk to the <lb/>
dents at the opening exercises this <lb/>
morning. Col. is now <lb/>
connected with the United Stales de- <lb/>
of agriculture in the bu- <lb/>
of plant industry and tobacco <lb/>
investigations. His work will be <lb/>
largely in North Carolina doing <lb/>
work among tobacco <lb/>
farmers. <lb/>
Lr. W. W. Garner, chief of the to- <lb/>
Investigations of the United <lb/>
es department of agriculture, was <lb/>
also in Greenville today, lie is on <lb/>
way to South Carolina to visit <lb/>
i lie tObaCCO growing sections of that <lb/>
state. Dr. Garner has been very lib- <lb/>
with his recommendations for <lb/>
aiding North Carolina tobacco grow- <lb/>
Miss Edith Royster, of Raleigh, as- <lb/>
superintendent of Wake <lb/>
schools, spent today visiting the <lb/>
Training school and delivered a <lb/>
to the students this afternoon. <lb/>
Negro Woman Kills White Man. <lb/>
Roper, X. July <lb/>
less, a middle-aged woman, <lb/>
shot and probably fatally wounded <lb/>
W. C. at Gum Neck, in <lb/>
county, yesterday afternoon. <lb/>
The shooting look place on the wharf <lb/>
of one of the steamboat lines running <lb/>
from Elizabeth City to Hyde county. <lb/>
was die agent. A number <lb/>
of more or less drunken had <lb/>
gathered lo meet the steamer and, <lb/>
coming disorderly, ordered <lb/>
them to quiet or leave the place, <lb/>
whereupon the woman <lb/>
drew a thirty-two revolver and <lb/>
proceeded lo empty every chamber <lb/>
at short range, three <lb/>
balls taking effect in his side and <lb/>
back, passing out on the opposite <lb/>
side. <lb/>
She escaped to the but <lb/>
was finally captured and together <lb/>
With man who aided her in <lb/>
her attempted escape, are In <lb/>
Jail. <lb/>
Accused of Stealing. <lb/>
E, Chamberlain, of Clinton, Me., <lb/>
boldly accuses <lb/>
Salve of sting from <lb/>
burns or pain from sores <lb/>
of all kinds the distress from boils <lb/>
or piles. cuts, cores bruises, <lb/>
Ins and Injuries Of their <lb/>
j a, a healing remedy its equal <lb/>
don't Only at all <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 MOTE for Crockery, Glassware, Tinware, <lb/>
Wood and Willow Ware. <lb/>
GO SEE MOTE for Cultivators, Plows and all Farm- <lb/>
Utensils. <lb/>
We 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 Move that you must buy from him, but we <lb/>
want you lo come and learn what we have to offer you and <lb/>
sec 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 L <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
Home and Philosophy. <lb/>
Dr. Stone, the president of Purdue <lb/>
University, has obtained a divorce <lb/>
from bis wife because she has adopted <lb/>
an East Indian religious cult, known <lb/>
as Yogi philosophy. She has been <lb/>
away from the doctor for four years <lb/>
now, enjoying among others <lb/>
of the cult in Germany. <lb/>
When a true wifely philosophy runs <lb/>
up against the Yogi Philosophy and <lb/>
gets knocked out, it is time for a <lb/>
divorce. <lb/>
It is always a sad case when a <lb/>
wife's mind gets all up with <lb/>
occultism the strange <lb/>
of the Indies. It interferes with good <lb/>
bread, ordinary beds, flowers on the <lb/>
able, regular meals, nursing the <lb/>
baby, attending church those <lb/>
little habits and ways that make a <lb/>
sane and cheerful home. No true <lb/>
philosophy, no amount of Intellectual- <lb/>
should drive a woman from her <lb/>
home. If it is not a homo that <lb/>
responds to her intellectuality, then <lb/>
there is something the matter, with <lb/>
her intellectuality. If a woman docs <lb/>
not fit a home like a song fits a can- <lb/>
throat, then it is time to pause <lb/>
and State Journal. <lb/>
Years 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/>
And some church members seem to <lb/>
think it is up to the minister to <lb/>
make good for the entire <lb/>
Summer girls mostly have very <lb/>
wintry heart affairs. <lb/>
the Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
OUR WEEKLY LETTER , <lb/>
THE ALLIANCE <lb/>
Progressive Republicans <lb/>
See Taft Defeated. <lb/>
To <lb/>
Clyde H. special Wash- <lb/>
correspondent of The Re- <lb/>
Washington, July <lb/>
Taft will be opposed by progressive <lb/>
Republicans for a re-nomination on <lb/>
the ground that he is still the mouth- <lb/>
piece of Aldrich and the great law- <lb/>
defying industrial corporations of the <lb/>
country. <lb/>
If proof was necessary to show that <lb/>
the old alliance between Taft and <lb/>
Aldrich still exists, the president <lb/>
himself furnished it on two notable <lb/>
occasions within the last couple of <lb/>
weeks when he went out of his way <lb/>
to the Aldrich near-central- <lb/>
bank scheme, which is designed to <lb/>
give Wall street absolute control of <lb/>
the money and credit of the United <lb/>
States, and thus make it the <lb/>
lute master of business and <lb/>
try. <lb/>
Progressive Republicans contend <lb/>
that if the president should be re- <lb/>
and re-elected would <lb/>
continue to be the complaisant help- <lb/>
mate of schemers like Aldrich, who <lb/>
are striving constantly to make the <lb/>
great masses of the public little more <lb/>
than the serfs of the few men who <lb/>
compose the great financial <lb/>
nation, of which J. Morgan <lb/>
and the Standard Oil capitalists are <lb/>
the most And <lb/>
Mr. Taft now publicly confirms the <lb/>
fears of the progressives. <lb/>
Therefore the only thing left for <lb/>
the public to conclude is that Mr. <lb/>
Taft's re-election would necessarily <lb/>
place back in control of congress the <lb/>
same class of men who were swept <lb/>
out by the indignation of the public <lb/>
in the last election. <lb/>
Democrats Making Honest Efforts. <lb/>
The Democrats are sincere in their <lb/>
efforts to run the house of <lb/>
on an economical business <lb/>
basis. The report of Jerry Smith, <lb/>
chief clerk of the house, just made <lb/>
public, shows that during the month <lb/>
of June a saving of was <lb/>
effected as a result of the abolishing <lb/>
of useless offices. This item, which <lb/>
does not include the big reduction <lb/>
on the police force which the senate <lb/>
has not yet concurred in but will <lb/>
prove shortly, means a saving of <lb/>
in a year. <lb/>
This is not a stupendous sum, It is <lb/>
true, but the spirit is in striking <lb/>
contrast to the wastepaper bas- <lb/>
in the offices of Postmaster Gen- <lb/>
Hitchcock and the expensive <lb/>
recreations taken by the Aldrich <lb/>
commission at. public expense <lb/>
at Narragansett pier. <lb/>
Taft <lb/>
Once more the White House press <lb/>
bureau has been to back-track. <lb/>
It was like Franklin A. Shot- <lb/>
well, of Omaha, secretary of the <lb/>
Progressive Republican League of <lb/>
Nebraska, came to Washington, had <lb/>
a talk with the president, and was <lb/>
quoted by the White House press bu- <lb/>
as saying that Nebraska was <lb/>
strong Taft for re-nomination <lb/>
and Now it. happens that <lb/>
the league which Mr. Shotwell was <lb/>
made to appear as speaking for, is <lb/>
against Taft instead of be- <lb/>
for him. When the officials of <lb/>
the Nebraska organization heard of <lb/>
Shot statement they promptly <lb/>
passed resolutions repudiating it. and <lb/>
wired them to Washington. The fact <lb/>
is the real progressive Republicans <lb/>
stand as a unit against Taft's <lb/>
and every indication is that <lb/>
if he secures the nomination they <lb/>
will permit him to go down in defeat. <lb/>
Then they will make an attempt to <lb/>
re-organize the Republican party. <lb/>
Progressives Lose <lb/>
When it is too late some of the <lb/>
Republican Insurgents in the United <lb/>
States senate who are opposing <lb/>
may learn that they are com- <lb/>
one of those huge political <lb/>
blunders that have been described as <lb/>
worse than crimes. <lb/>
Real Revision <lb/>
The wool bill, passed by the Dem- <lb/>
house, but not acted upon as <lb/>
yet in the Republican senate, reduces <lb/>
the tax cloth out of which the <lb/>
poor man's clothing is made, from <lb/>
per cent, to from 2-7 to per cent; <lb/>
on women's dress goods from <lb/>
per cent, to from to per cent., <lb/>
and on blankets from per cent, <lb/>
to per cent. <lb/>
DIRECTORY <lb/>
CITY OFFICIALS <lb/>
CURED TO STAY CUBED, <lb/>
Greenville citizen Found Complete <lb/>
Freedom from Kidney Troubles. <lb/>
If you suffer from backache <lb/>
From disorders <lb/>
From any disease of the kidneys. <lb/>
Re cured to stay cured. <lb/>
Kidney Pills make lasting <lb/>
cures. <lb/>
Greenville people testify. <lb/>
Here's one case of <lb/>
James Hardison. Fifth St., <lb/>
N. C, says, had trouble <lb/>
from my kidneys and the kidney <lb/>
passed too frequently at <lb/>
night. In the morning when I got <lb/>
up, there was a lameness across my <lb/>
lions and I also suffered from back- <lb/>
ache. Kidney Pills, which I <lb/>
procured from the John L. Wooten <lb/>
Drug Company, relieved all these <lb/>
symptoms of kidney complaint, and <lb/>
restored my to a normal con- <lb/>
At the present, time I am <lb/>
free from backache and I have no <lb/>
hesitation in giving Kidney <lb/>
Pills the credit, for bringing about <lb/>
this given Jan- <lb/>
Ho Trouble Since. <lb/>
On December 1910, Mr. Hardison <lb/>
take pleasure in confirming <lb/>
my former statement in praise of <lb/>
Kidney Pills. This remedy <lb/>
made a permanent cure In my case <lb/>
and during the past two and a half <lb/>
years I have had no need of a kidney <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
the <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
So Prints, <lb/>
When the poet tries his hand he <lb/>
should also show his name. The fail- <lb/>
of to disclose his <lb/>
accounts for his poem not getting <lb/>
In print. It has been said perhaps <lb/>
a few less than a thousand times, <lb/>
that this paper does not print any- <lb/>
thing without knowing who writes <lb/>
it. <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 obtained when on board <lb/>
the cars or steamships. For sale by <lb/>
all dealers. <lb/>
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. <lb/>
Churches, Lodges and Social <lb/>
County. <lb/>
Superior Court C. Moore <lb/>
SheriffS. I. Dudley. <lb/>
Register of M. Moore <lb/>
I. Wilson. <lb/>
C. Laughing- <lb/>
house. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
P. D. <lb/>
J. Holland. J. J. May, B. M. Lewis, W. <lb/>
E. Proctor. <lb/>
Town <lb/>
M. Wooten. <lb/>
C. Tyson <lb/>
L. Cur. <lb/>
Chief T. Smith. <lb/>
Fire D. <lb/>
E. Nobles, C. s. Car,, <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, R. L. <lb/>
Dumber. <lb/>
G. Couch. <lb/>
Churches. <lb/>
Baptist, C. M. <lb/>
Rock, pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; <lb/>
C. W. Wilson, superintendent Sun- <lb/>
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary. <lb/>
C. C. Ware, pastor; <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, J <lb/>
H. Shore, pastor; A. B. Ellington, <lb/>
clerk; H. Bateman, superintend- <lb/>
of Sunday school; L. H. <lb/>
secretary. <lb/>
Presbyterian- No pastor at <lb/>
P. M. Johnston, clerk; P. M. John- <lb/>
superintendent Sunday school; <lb/>
Miss Olivia House, secretary. <lb/>
Chapel <lb/>
Rev. W. O. pastor. <lb/>
Lodges. <lb/>
No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
L. H. Render, W. M.; R. Williams, <lb/>
Sec. <lb/>
Sharon, U. A. F. and A. ML <lb/>
H. Harding, W. M.; E. E. Griffin, <lb/>
Greenville Chapter No. R. A. M. <lb/>
R. C. Flanagan, H. P.; J. E. Wins- <lb/>
low, Sec. <lb/>
Covenant No. I. O. O. <lb/>
Brown, N. G.; L. II, Pender, Sec. <lb/>
Greenville Encampment No. I. <lb/>
O. Brown, C. P.; D. C. <lb/>
Moore, Scribe. <lb/>
No. I. O. <lb/>
R. S. Sachem; J. L. <lb/>
Evans, C. of R. <lb/>
Tar River No. K. of P.- G. J. <lb/>
Woodward, C. C.; A. B. Ellington, <lb/>
K. of R. and S. <lb/>
Tar River Ruling No. F. M. <lb/>
W. Drown, W. R.; J. W. Little <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Clubs. <lb/>
L. Hall, president; <lb/>
M. R. Turnage, secretary. <lb/>
End of E. O. <lb/>
fries, Pies.; 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/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith <lb/>
stables, and next door to Flan- <lb/>
Buggy Co's new building <lb/>
. K. Carolina <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
formerly occupied by J. L. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Greenville. . If, Carolina <lb/>
C. D. M. Clark <lb/>
ft CLARK <lb/>
Engineers and Surveyor <lb/>
N. Carolina <lb/>
S. J. EVERETT <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
In Building <lb/>
Greenville, . N. Carolina <lb/>
L. I. Moore, W. EL long <lb/>
MOORE LONG <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
. n. Carolina <lb/>
DR. R. L. CARR <lb/>
DENTIST <lb/>
Greenville. . . M. <lb/>
HARRY SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYER <lb/>
. . N. Carolina <lb/>
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb/>
Practice limited to diseases of the <lb/>
Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Greenville, K. C <lb/>
Greenville with Dr. D. L. James. <lb/>
a. m. to p. m., Mondays. <lb/>
ALBION DUNN <lb/>
AT LAW <lb/>
Office In building, Third St. <lb/>
Practices wherever his services are <lb/>
desired <lb/>
. . Carolina <lb/>
H. i . WARD. C. C. PIERCE. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Greenville, <lb/>
WARD PIERCE <lb/>
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the Courts. <lb/>
Greenville Cabinet <lb/>
WORKS <lb/>
Antique Furniture <lb/>
ed. Cabinet, Stair and Re- <lb/>
pair Work a Specialty. <lb/>
Charley Denser, <lb/>
Third St., Greenville, <lb/>
THE SHOP <lb/>
S. J. NOBLES <lb/>
clean <lb/>
and attractive, working the very <lb/>
best barbers. Second to none. <lb/>
OPPOSITE II. J. G. <lb/>
J. Jarvis, president; Mrs. J. L. <lb/>
en. secretary. <lb/>
The Kings A. L. <lb/>
Blow, president; Mrs. J. G. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
Tie Carolina Home and Fan and 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/>
tee Carolina Home and Earn and Tie Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
Subscription, year. <lb/>
Six months. <lb/>
rates may be had upon <lb/>
application at the business office in <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner Evans <lb/>
and Third streets. <lb/>
All cards of thanks and resolutions <lb/>
respect will be charged for at <lb/>
cent per word. <lb/>
Communications advertising <lb/>
dates will be charged for at three <lb/>
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
Entered as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910, at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina, <lb/>
act of March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY, JULY 1911. <lb/>
HOW CITY PEOPLE LIVE. <lb/>
People who live in the country and <lb/>
country towns, where there is plenty <lb/>
of room and abundant space between <lb/>
buildings, have much to be thank- <lb/>
for, especially amid such torrid <lb/>
temperature as has prevailed for <lb/>
some days recently. They read of <lb/>
intense heat, and prostrations and <lb/>
deaths occurring in the cities, but <lb/>
the news dispatches give only a <lb/>
slight idea of the intense suffering <lb/>
In the densely populated centers. <lb/>
While the temperature may really be <lb/>
no higher in the cities than In the <lb/>
country regions, the sun pouring <lb/>
down all day upon the compact stone <lb/>
and brick buildings makes them so <lb/>
hot that they are almost like ovens, <lb/>
and this heat is so retained that the <lb/>
buildings do not get cool during the <lb/>
night. <lb/>
The writer has Just had an <lb/>
during a forced stay of a few <lb/>
days in Baltimore of seeing how <lb/>
suffer under such conditions. <lb/>
They exist through the day some <lb/>
how, and at night they almost live <lb/>
on the streets and in the parks. <lb/>
Along the residence section every <lb/>
house had a group of people with <lb/>
chairs and pillows on the sidewalks <lb/>
In front, and hundreds of men <lb/>
on benches and grass plots in the <lb/>
parks. Finding a place cool enough <lb/>
to sleep in was a problem with many <lb/>
of them. <lb/>
In this, as in many other things, <lb/>
the people of the country are far <lb/>
more blessed than the people of the <lb/>
city. <lb/>
the Republicans for, for <lb/>
these many tariff pro- <lb/>
for <lb/>
cal as the <lb/>
Democratic party stands for free <lb/>
trade think it would be more in <lb/>
keeping with Mr. Simmons to work <lb/>
to that end. What a party looking <lb/>
A Democratic <lb/>
working for high tariff protection of <lb/>
an <lb/>
Do you know who feeds the <lb/>
baby He is the man who needs <lb/>
the money most and that's why he <lb/>
voted the Democrat ticket, so let us <lb/>
have free trade in everything or join <lb/>
the Republican party. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The Simmons and Cummins changes <lb/>
of the free list bill are having a hard <lb/>
time. From all reports the senate <lb/>
won't stand for them and will vote <lb/>
them down today. It seems to us <lb/>
that if any merchandise or <lb/>
ties are admitted free, all should be. <lb/>
Democracy advocates free trade, and <lb/>
why not have it Lots of Demo- <lb/>
and Republicans both are beat- <lb/>
the devil around this, the same <lb/>
bush. Interests is the cause of the <lb/>
inconsistency, and when we vote we <lb/>
should be mighty sure we are voting <lb/>
for clean, strong men. <lb/>
There are five candidates in the <lb/>
Georgia senatorial contest and the <lb/>
first ballot is being taken today. Gov- <lb/>
Hoke Smith and Senator Fer- <lb/>
are thought to be in the lead, one <lb/>
of whom will probably be elected in a <lb/>
second ballot, as it is expected the <lb/>
first vote will be too close to get a <lb/>
majority. <lb/>
North Carolina is going to have it <lb/>
just as bad. Wonder if all those <lb/>
fellows are after this one particular <lb/>
Job just for the name there is in it, or <lb/>
well, there Is so much of the other <lb/>
you may guess. <lb/>
how she managed to do the trick of <lb/>
deceiving the northern would-be <lb/>
to fill her coffers, a full <lb/>
account of which is published in this <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
The state reunion of Confederate <lb/>
veterans will be held at Wilmington <lb/>
the 2nd and 3rd of August. That city <lb/>
is making much preparation for the <lb/>
entertainment of the veterans. We <lb/>
have not heard of any movement on <lb/>
the part of Pitt county veterans to <lb/>
attend this reunion, but suppose there <lb/>
are a number who will go. <lb/>
Senator F. M. Simmons has in- <lb/>
an amendment to the Can- <lb/>
reciprocity bill, providing flour <lb/>
as well as wheat, and fresh meats as <lb/>
well as live stock on the free list. <lb/>
He says this amendment is in the in- <lb/>
of the farmers, as it is unjust <lb/>
to them to admit wheat and live stock <lb/>
and not flour and dressed meats. <lb/>
Here is food for a Mr. <lb/>
Bryant Branch volunteered in the <lb/>
Confederate army, and was engaged <lb/>
in the battle of Seven Pines, and had <lb/>
not been heard from since the bat- <lb/>
Recently he turned up at his <lb/>
old home in the Bear March sec- <lb/>
A notice in another part of this <lb/>
paper requires the sidewalks cleaned <lb/>
by the occupants, under penalty of <lb/>
law, before the 20th of this month. <lb/>
Get busy and clean up. Such a no- <lb/>
should not be required at all. <lb/>
Civic pride ought to prompt the act. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
Senator Lee S. Overman, of North <lb/>
Carolina, is one of the party in com- <lb/>
with President Taft taking a <lb/>
cruise on the There <lb/>
is hardly a more popular senator than <lb/>
North Carolina's junior member. <lb/>
RECIPROCITY ON FREE TRADE. <lb/>
Simmons may be right in sticking <lb/>
to his agreement and trying to keep <lb/>
a high tariff on lumber, but that <lb/>
very thing is what we have been <lb/>
That little joke about the raw-hide <lb/>
traces and a hill which must be climb- <lb/>
ed with a loaded wagon and it rained, <lb/>
told editorially in this week's issue <lb/>
of the Siler City Grit is so old It is <lb/>
hoary. Editor London will have to <lb/>
be more original if he wants to keep <lb/>
the mendacity medal. The fact that <lb/>
he tells It as an actual occurrence ac- <lb/>
in his county may be a point <lb/>
in his favor though. <lb/>
Because a girl who had typhoid <lb/>
fever three years ago was allowed to <lb/>
wash milk cans on her father's farm <lb/>
there is an epidemic of the fever in <lb/>
Englewood, a Chicago suburb. The <lb/>
case was discovered by the health de- <lb/>
Thirty-four persons taking <lb/>
milk from the girl's father are ill. <lb/>
She is what is known as a <lb/>
of germs. <lb/>
Miss Hoffman, of western North <lb/>
Carolina of is <lb/>
brought before the public again by <lb/>
the editor of the Cleveland <lb/>
Star, who, while at the press con- <lb/>
week before last, discovered <lb/>
Mr. Henry American am- <lb/>
to Mexico, set the Mexicans <lb/>
a very poor example when he refused <lb/>
to show the usual respect of standing <lb/>
while was played through <lb/>
courtesy by a Mexican band. <lb/>
France is showing a rapid Increase. <lb/>
Over here we continue to chew cow, <lb/>
as horses come too high to kill and <lb/>
eat. <lb/>
Charlotte was first in the state to <lb/>
come with an announcement of the <lb/>
coronation in moving pictures. <lb/>
Thought it was about time for the- <lb/>
pictures to be along. <lb/>
When a man has to be always ex- <lb/>
plaining his actions to other people <lb/>
there is some doubt as to his honesty. <lb/>
Give us the man who does not have <lb/>
to explain. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
Hoke Smith is now senator from <lb/>
Georgia. Look out for him, he'll <lb/>
more than likely make a noise that <lb/>
can be heard. <lb/>
is to figure in the news <lb/>
reports from Washington again on <lb/>
the resumption of his election <lb/>
today. <lb/>
They say the coolest place in town <lb/>
is the top of the court house tower, <lb/>
but we have not been up to test It <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
A woman who couldn't swim floated <lb/>
for- hours in New York bay until res- <lb/>
cued. She must be made of cork. <lb/>
Watch the bottom drop out from <lb/>
under Senator Simmons He has <lb/>
ceased a stand pat and is running. <lb/>
Hoke Smith was born in North <lb/>
Carolina. Wonder if the Charlotte <lb/>
Observer wants to claim him.<lb/>
Now when King George dies the <lb/>
coronation will have to be done over <lb/>
again, new crown and all. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
Senator Simmons is entitled to <lb/>
membership in the club <lb/>
evidently. <lb/>
Now Chairman Eller is after Sen- <lb/>
Simmons. He says he <lb/>
say<lb/>
The typhoid fever reports from <lb/>
have done that city no lit- <lb/>
damage, and it appears there was <lb/>
little cause for any such alarm as <lb/>
has been broadcast during the past <lb/>
two weeks by calamity howlers. <lb/>
We are not taking up for the house- <lb/>
fly especially, but what would be- <lb/>
come of us if they were exterminated <lb/>
while human beings and other <lb/>
are so unclean <lb/>
If Representative Kahn's <lb/>
could become a law it would help <lb/>
the American republic to kinder re- <lb/>
its self respect, which is being <lb/>
somewhat battered by the <lb/>
marriages for bankrupt titles. <lb/>
The consumption of horse flesh in <lb/>
There are numerous receptive can- <lb/>
for the corporation <lb/>
vacancy. <lb/>
The governor might hurry up the <lb/>
appointment for corporation com- <lb/>
missioner and stop the contest. <lb/>
Bicycle delivery is popular with <lb/>
the Greenville grocers. The good <lb/>
streets make this easy. <lb/>
You would do better by advertising <lb/>
to get business than by complaining <lb/>
at not having any. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
It is the time of year to expect <lb/>
warm weather, and you would be <lb/>
awfully surprised if It was to <lb/>
Congress is making quite an effort <lb/>
to get through by August first. <lb/>
Mr. Eller Is <lb/>
a Democrat. <lb/>
The hot wave continues to roll. <lb/>
It Is not near-hot but real hot. <lb/>
The death list from heat wave <lb/>
has been large. <lb/>
Such big fish yarns as they do send <lb/>
UP from the seashore. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
You cannot help Greenville by never <lb/>
taking part in anything that means <lb/>
for progress. <lb/>
The first ward is doing some more <lb/>
bragging. says they have the <lb/>
best alderman in the bunch. <lb/>
The defaulting of bank cashiers in <lb/>
North Carolina is becoming most too <lb/>
popular. reports the latest. <lb/>
He had a shortage of <lb/>
Oxford has caught the craze from <lb/>
that Elizabeth City story and gone to <lb/>
hunting for eleven hundred dollar <lb/>
gold pots. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
The weather man has been <lb/>
something cooler for days, <lb/>
but it failed to come on schedule <lb/>
time, <lb/>
Wonder what the Charlotte <lb/>
Is going to say about Buncombe <lb/>
county investing a thousand dollars <lb/>
In blood <lb/>
They have not yet discovered the <lb/>
cause of the typhoid fever epidemic <lb/>
In Wilmington, but are all <lb/>
steps to prevent It <lb/>
Many licks are taken at the house <lb/>
fly, but he continues to cause dis- <lb/>
ease and expense and will continue <lb/>
lo do so until exterminated. <lb/>
but what have we got to offer in <lb/>
the way of employment to induce <lb/>
them to come <lb/>
Luck conies even to a newspaper <lb/>
man once in a while. Mr. J. P. Lucas, <lb/>
of the Charlotte Observer staff, has in- <lb/>
from an uncle who <lb/>
died in Texas. <lb/>
Extra space is given an account from <lb/>
the News and Observer, of a trusted <lb/>
employee attempting murder and <lb/>
robbery, on account of the lesson It <lb/>
should teach. <lb/>
selves and their business more prom- <lb/>
before the buyers. People <lb/>
soon those whose names they <lb/>
do not see in print. <lb/>
-0-- <lb/>
In his home town John D. <lb/>
feller's six drive horses are valued <lb/>
at each. The profit in oil ought <lb/>
to enable him to own better horses <lb/>
than that. <lb/>
is too much selfishness In <lb/>
Greenville for the town to prosper <lb/>
like it ought to. When the business <lb/>
people unite for a thing it comes, but <lb/>
when they pull apart nothing comes. <lb/>
Harry Atwood started from New <lb/>
York in great shape to to Wash- <lb/>
It has been several days and <lb/>
he has not reached the capital yet. <lb/>
A good walker could have made it <lb/>
on foot In less time. <lb/>
Representative Hobson has intro- <lb/>
a bill in congress to construct <lb/>
a national highway Niagara <lb/>
Falls to New York. The government <lb/>
will take interest in public highways <lb/>
some of these days. <lb/>
There are sixty-five candidates be- <lb/>
fore the State Board of Pharmacy for <lb/>
license, thirteen of whom are <lb/>
Raleigh aldermen settle their <lb/>
with their fists. They ought to <lb/>
to Greenville and learn how to <lb/>
end their disputes only in words. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
The state has paid over the <lb/>
for the site for the new <lb/>
building in Raleigh, and work <lb/>
on the buildings will soon begin. <lb/>
is going on in <lb/>
has taken its accustomed place in the <lb/>
editorial column of the Durham Her- <lb/>
when Joe King goes a fishing. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
Some enthusiasm in the direction <lb/>
of securing manufacturing <lb/>
es in Greenville would be a good <lb/>
thing for the town. <lb/>
Newcomers, and many of them, <lb/>
wasted to help Greenville grow, <lb/>
It is too late now, several years <lb/>
ago we licked Spain for it, to say <lb/>
that the Maine was blown up by an <lb/>
internal explosion. But that is the <lb/>
opinion that General chief of <lb/>
the engineers. <lb/>
The question of keeping dogs off <lb/>
the streets of Greenville unless they <lb/>
are muzzled, was a warm one before <lb/>
the board of aldermen Thursday <lb/>
night, Alderman Nobles, of the first <lb/>
ward, being against the dogs, and Al- <lb/>
of the second ward, <lb/>
for them. <lb/>
A and a white man were <lb/>
rested and tried together, in Durham, <lb/>
for running a blind tiger. That is <lb/>
usually the blind tiger combination, <lb/>
the in the front doing the sell- <lb/>
and the white man backing him <lb/>
under cover. <lb/>
The Biblical Recorded, of Raleigh, <lb/>
the organ of the Baptist denomination <lb/>
in this is years old. Quite <lb/>
an honorable age. and the Recorder <lb/>
is as good as it is old. In these <lb/>
years the paper has had ten different <lb/>
editors. <lb/>
The prospect of good crops ought <lb/>
to make the merchants more active <lb/>
in advertising so as to keep them- <lb/>
In the bond election Tuesday Char- <lb/>
people showed that they placed <lb/>
higher appreciation on schools than <lb/>
they did upon an The <lb/>
school bonds received a majority of <lb/>
and the auditorium bonds <lb/>
Charlotte folks usually have their <lb/>
ideas on right. <lb/>
Charlotte celebrated Independence <lb/>
Day, July 4th, in a way that counts <lb/>
for progress. On that day an election <lb/>
was held on the question of issuing <lb/>
bonds, amounting in the aggregate to <lb/>
for various city improve- <lb/>
and the vote showed a large <lb/>
majority in favor of the bonds. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The Folly of Lawsuits. <lb/>
Whatever else you do, don't get <lb/>
into a lawsuit over some trifling dis- <lb/>
agreement with a neighbor. The <lb/>
courts are full of suits which could <lb/>
have been settled by mutual <lb/>
or by arbitration to the great <lb/>
advantage of all parties except the <lb/>
lawyers in the case. Just the other <lb/>
day a suit was decided after two or <lb/>
three years of expense and worry on <lb/>
the part of two families. It was <lb/>
over a disputed line, as so many such <lb/>
suits are, and the land in dispute <lb/>
was probably not worth fifty dollars. <lb/>
The suit cost the winner and <lb/>
the loser, being taxed with the costs, <lb/>
necessarily had more to pay. It is <lb/>
probable that each party spent at <lb/>
least worth of time in monkey- <lb/>
with the case. <lb/>
Another case recently noticed is <lb/>
where a farmer had a right to get <lb/>
water from a spring on a neighbor's <lb/>
land. He wanted to build a spring- <lb/>
house, the owner objected. The first <lb/>
man had got along without a spring- <lb/>
house for years, it would not have <lb/>
damaged the land-owner a penny, <lb/>
yet an injunction has been issued and <lb/>
a lawsuit Is on. Each party will <lb/>
probably spend several hundred <lb/>
and be no better off, and the old <lb/>
friendliness of the neighborhood will <lb/>
be a thing of the past <lb/>
To begin a suit in court over some <lb/>
such matter which could easily <lb/>
be adjusted by a little give and take, <lb/>
is not only the poorest sort of <lb/>
case of wasting <lb/>
dollars to gain possible cents, <lb/>
but is also a crime against the com- <lb/>
and a foolish waste of the <lb/>
best part of life. For what shall It <lb/>
profit a man if he gain a needless <lb/>
lawsuit only to lose the goodwill of <lb/>
his neighbors and his own friend- <lb/>
towards Pro- <lb/>
Farmer. <lb/>
interest of one is the Interest of all. <lb/>
No town will become a business <lb/>
center so long as its men rely <lb/>
upon a few merchants to make the <lb/>
effort to bring trade to the town. <lb/>
Too often the men in a few lines of <lb/>
trade are about the only ones that <lb/>
reach out for custom. Other mer- <lb/>
chants will wait until these men have <lb/>
induced the people to come to town <lb/>
and content themselves with trade <lb/>
that naturally drifts to their place. <lb/>
A public spirited man should ask <lb/>
himself if he is doing his part in at- <lb/>
people to town to trade. <lb/>
Maxton Scottish Chief. <lb/>
Taxing The Childless. <lb/>
Wisconsin starts an attack on race <lb/>
suicide. It is a small start, but even <lb/>
a start is revolutionary. The <lb/>
has passed an income tax bill <lb/>
which becomes law if endorsed by the <lb/>
people at next year's election. The <lb/>
tax proposed ranges from one-half <lb/>
of one per cent up to six per cent, in- <lb/>
creasing with the size of the income. <lb/>
But there is exemption up to a <lb/>
point. In the case of an <lb/>
man this is For each de- <lb/>
pendant, and here's where the attack <lb/>
on race suicide comes in, an extra <lb/>
is exempted. Under this rule, as <lb/>
a man's family grows, his tax de- <lb/>
creases. The decrease is not enough, <lb/>
in this case, to make much incentive <lb/>
to large families, but it establishes the <lb/>
principle, which is important. Our <lb/>
taxes have always run just the other <lb/>
why. So far as tariffs increase <lb/>
prices they subsidize race suicide, for <lb/>
those taxes increase as the family in- <lb/>
creases. Even our system of direct <lb/>
taxation has that effect. Let a baby <lb/>
come, and we do not penalize the <lb/>
father with a tax on its cradle <lb/>
Nebraska State Journal. <lb/>
How To Make Our Town. <lb/>
One man cannot make a town. The <lb/>
newspaper cannot do it. But one <lb/>
man on a newspaper with the help <lb/>
of the wide-awake men of the place <lb/>
all pulling together, can make a wide <lb/>
difference In the place. Every man <lb/>
who succeeds in a town is a help to <lb/>
it. The more money he makes, if he <lb/>
spends it, the better for the com- <lb/>
The larger business he <lb/>
builds up, the more he advertises, <lb/>
and hence the more attention he <lb/>
brings to the town. A man cannot <lb/>
build up an honorable business in the <lb/>
town without helping the country. The <lb/>
Indicted For Failing to Suicide. <lb/>
Establishing a precedent in local <lb/>
courts, Irving a young white <lb/>
man, was indicted in the recorder's <lb/>
court yesterday and will be tried this <lb/>
morning on a charge of attempting to <lb/>
commit suicide, which is a <lb/>
or under the common law. <lb/>
was found Saturday night lying across <lb/>
one of the tracks of the suburban line <lb/>
between League and parks. <lb/>
It is stated that he was lying with his <lb/>
feet across one rail and his head <lb/>
across other. He was seen by Mo- <lb/>
W. C. Baird, who was on a <lb/>
car returning from the beach on a <lb/>
parallel line, and was picked up. He <lb/>
is quoted as saying that he wanted to <lb/>
commit suicide is the reason he lay <lb/>
down on the track. It is thought Bur- <lb/>
was under the influence of <lb/>
key at the Star. <lb/>
It Is Great <lb/>
The granulated appearance of a <lb/>
watermelon Indicates the <lb/>
imprisoned particles of sugar develop- <lb/>
ed from the saccharine constituent of <lb/>
the kind grown in the generous loamy <lb/>
soil of eastern North Carolina. Some <lb/>
foolish people cut a watermelon with <lb/>
a knife, totally ignorant of the Pender <lb/>
county method of breaking open a <lb/>
juicy specimen and fanning the bees <lb/>
away while getting away with the <lb/>
delicious hunks as fast as they can <lb/>
be lifted from the shattered rind. <lb/>
should the heathen <lb/>
Why, it's simply because they want <lb/>
to come to eastern North Carolina <lb/>
where the best of everything grows <lb/>
to the quintessence of perfection. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
or doses will cure any <lb/>
cases of Chills and Fever. Price,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
la. <lb/>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector. <lb/>
Pin COUNTY FAIR <lb/>
NOVEMBER AND <lb/>
GOVERNING BOARD NAMES DATE <lb/>
Splendid Premium List Arranged For <lb/>
Exhibits. <lb/>
The governing board of Pitt County <lb/>
Fair Association held an interesting <lb/>
meeting today in the city hall. Thurs- <lb/>
day and Friday, November and <lb/>
were selected as the date for holding <lb/>
the first county fair, and the fair <lb/>
promises to be a great success. <lb/>
A premium list for exhibits was <lb/>
adopted that aggregates something <lb/>
over This premium list is in <lb/>
the hands of the printers and will be <lb/>
published in a few days. <lb/>
THE CITY FATHERS <lb/>
TO WORK <lb/>
ALDERMEN THURSDAY NIGHT. <lb/>
SAYS ITEM WAS WRONG. <lb/>
Mr. Everett Gives Correction of <lb/>
The Trouble. <lb/>
The following item appeared in <lb/>
The Reflector on January 7th. <lb/>
telephone message to The Re- <lb/>
tells of a serious trouble that <lb/>
occurred not far from House station. <lb/>
The message says that Mr. Tobe <lb/>
Fleming went to his father's, Thurs- <lb/>
day, to assist in killing hogs, and up- <lb/>
on returning to the home found a <lb/>
man named Everett there. <lb/>
Fleming ran Everett away with a gun <lb/>
but was prevented by Mrs. Fleming <lb/>
from using the gun. Friday night <lb/>
Fleming went to House,,, and he and <lb/>
Everett get Into a difficulty in which <lb/>
Fleming was badly hurt. The trouble <lb/>
has led to the separation of Fleming <lb/>
and his wife, both of them returning <lb/>
home of their respective par- <lb/>
Mr. Everett, who recently <lb/>
returned from Petersburg, where he <lb/>
had been since early in January, says <lb/>
that he was the man referred to in <lb/>
this article, as he had a fight with <lb/>
Fleming at House station the night <lb/>
before he went away, and that all of <lb/>
it except the reference to the fight <lb/>
is a mistake and does him an <lb/>
We give him the benefit of this <lb/>
correction. <lb/>
Officers <lb/>
Ordinance. <lb/>
Little routine business was trans- <lb/>
acted by the board of aldermen at <lb/>
their regular meeting last night. <lb/>
Perhaps the most important of their <lb/>
proceedings was passing a dog <lb/>
This ordinance declares dogs run- <lb/>
at large a public nuisance, and <lb/>
provides that all such dogs must be <lb/>
and providing for impound- <lb/>
and killing of all dogs found run- <lb/>
at large not properly muzzled. <lb/>
License was granted for five res- <lb/>
and two pool and billiard <lb/>
rooms. License for two others for <lb/>
restaurants were refused. <lb/>
The officers elected, their salaries <lb/>
and duties are as <lb/>
Chief of T. Smith, salary, <lb/>
per month; bond, He is <lb/>
so assistant tax collector. <lb/>
A. Clark, salary, per <lb/>
month. He is also building inspect- <lb/>
or. <lb/>
Assistant P. <lb/>
salary, per month. He is super- <lb/>
of the market, team and <lb/>
street work. <lb/>
Night H. <lb/>
per month. <lb/>
C. Tyson, salary, per <lb/>
month; bond, He is also tax <lb/>
collector and clerk to the Water and <lb/>
Light Commission. <lb/>
L. Carr, salary, <lb/>
per month, bond, <lb/>
The mayor's salary was fixed at <lb/>
per month. <lb/>
Coolest Fountain Ever <lb/>
enjoy drinking here delightfully cool, <lb/>
dainty and delicious drinks cool you within, the fast <lb/>
revolving fans cool you without. Our Ice Cream excels <lb/>
The Carolina Home Fan and The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
II <lb/>
If there is a Drug Store in this town where The Price, <lb/>
The Service, The Quality and Variety of Stock count <lb/>
for anything it is at <lb/>
White's Drug Store. <lb/>
TRINITY COLLEGE <lb/>
1859 <lb/>
1892 <lb/>
1910-1911 <lb/>
Three memorable The Granting of the Charter Trinity College; the Removal of <lb/>
the College to the growing and City Durham; the Building of the New and Greater <lb/>
Trinity. t , . <lb/>
Magnificent new buildings with new equipment and enlarged facilities. <lb/>
Comfortable hygienic 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, Secretary, Durham. N. C. <lb/>
STANDING COMMITTEES. <lb/>
Of The Board Of Aldermen Of <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
At the meeting of the board of <lb/>
Thursday night Mayor F. <lb/>
M. Wooten appointed the following <lb/>
committees for the fiscal year begin- <lb/>
July 1st, the first named on each <lb/>
committee being <lb/>
B. J. E. <lb/>
Nobles, W. A. Bowen. <lb/>
E. Nobles, H. C. Ed- <lb/>
wards, B. F. Tyson. <lb/>
F. Tyson, Z. P. Van <lb/>
Dyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Lights and F. Daven- <lb/>
port, J. S. Tunstall, J. E. Nobles. <lb/>
P. VanDyke, W. A. <lb/>
Bowen, E. B. <lb/>
B. B. F. Ty- <lb/>
son, J. S. Tunstall. <lb/>
A. Bowen, Z. P. Van- <lb/>
Dyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Property and C. <lb/>
Edwards, J. S. Tunstall, J. F. Daven- <lb/>
port. <lb/>
Municipal F. Daven- <lb/>
port, W. A. Bowen, Z. P. VanDyke. <lb/>
SEE J. R. J. G. FOR LA- <lb/>
and muslin under- <lb/>
wear; best grades at. lowest<lb/>
Miss Leila Bryan <lb/>
Entertains. <lb/>
Seldom has i-here been seen in the <lb/>
community a more brilliant scene of <lb/>
jovial youths than was manifest at <lb/>
the home of Mrs. W. E. Tucker, on <lb/>
Thursday evening, when Miss Leila <lb/>
Bryan, in her usual graceful manner, <lb/>
entertained a number of her young <lb/>
friends. The hall, veranda and lawn <lb/>
was beautifully lighted in keeping <lb/>
with the color scheme, which was <lb/>
pink and green. Roses and <lb/>
were seen in profusion. <lb/>
The guest were received by Miss <lb/>
Leila Bryan and Mr. Fred Ward <lb/>
and ushered to the parlor, <lb/>
where they were received by Miss <lb/>
Earl Proctor and Mr. Arthur B. <lb/>
Corey. <lb/>
After merry greeting and laughter, <lb/>
the guests were served with lemon- <lb/>
ice and lady fingers by little Miss Lei- <lb/>
la Bryan and Master Leon Edwards. <lb/>
After many delightful and various <lb/>
games were ended, cut hearts were <lb/>
drawn and the guests retired to the <lb/>
beautifully decorated dining room, <lb/>
where they were served with cream <lb/>
and cake by Miss Elmo Tucker and <lb/>
Mr. James K. Proctor. <lb/>
At eleven-thirty the guests depart- <lb/>
ed reluctantly, declaring Miss Bryan <lb/>
a charming hostess. <lb/>
TRINITY PARK SCHOOL <lb/>
Established 1898 <lb/>
Location ideal; Equipment unsurpassed. . ,. ,, c <lb/>
Students have use of the library, gymnasium, and athletic fields or Trinity College. Special <lb/>
attention given to health. A teacher in each looks after the of <lb/>
under his care. <lb/>
Faculty of college graduates. Most modern methods of instruction. <lb/>
Fall term opens September <lb/>
For Illustrated address , . <lb/>
W. W. PEELE, HEADMASTER, Durham, N. C. <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/>
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb/>
Pulley Bowen <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
,. <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
STORMS DEVELOP <lb/>
MEAT OAKS <lb/>
A STORY OF DAYS LONG GONE. <lb/>
Type of the Old School Where Teach- <lb/>
Was Thorough. <lb/>
Hanrahan, N. C, July <lb/>
the high tide of prosperity to the <lb/>
comparatively few who owned slaves <lb/>
in the South, and before the Civil <lb/>
war had brought on the idle tide for <lb/>
a while of adversity, but which after- <lb/>
ward made it possible for every man <lb/>
to stand on equal footing, my oldest <lb/>
sister had finished the course at St. <lb/>
Mary's, then as now, one of the best <lb/>
female schools in our South land. <lb/>
Then that school did not give <lb/>
mas, but one thing it did, old Dr. <lb/>
Sneed, of blessed memory, instilled <lb/>
high ideals into the minds and hearts <lb/>
of every one of his pupils if such <lb/>
principals could be imparted to them. <lb/>
Any girl who attended his school two <lb/>
years and did not return a strong <lb/>
advocate of abolition principles that <lb/>
wanted to see everything have liberty <lb/>
and freedom,, hating to see a bird <lb/>
caged, rather feed and treat them <lb/>
kindly, that they might sing more <lb/>
sweetly their songs of love and cheer <lb/>
as they flit from tree to tree. An- <lb/>
other practical idea old Dr. Sneed in- <lb/>
stilled into the mind of my sister was <lb/>
that of a love well nigh kin to de- <lb/>
for the very best literature <lb/>
that was and still another <lb/>
was to even use the simplest <lb/>
at her command to express <lb/>
clearly the thought that she might <lb/>
wish to convey. These ideals and <lb/>
principles followed her even until at <lb/>
she crossed over to him with <lb/>
others in the beyond. <lb/>
So the next day after my first at <lb/>
the old log cabin school house, I took <lb/>
my place at the feet of this sister and <lb/>
listened- to her charming stories and <lb/>
the gems that she so often read to <lb/>
me, and oh, how my mind and heart <lb/>
did yearn to be able just to say or <lb/>
write something that would Jingle <lb/>
and lift one's soul up as did some of <lb/>
those lines lift mine up. I dreamed <lb/>
-and pondered, thought and wondered, <lb/>
ever trying with my heart still sigh- <lb/>
for the gift to write just four <lb/>
lines that would jingle. She had <lb/>
taught me that the only way to at- <lb/>
anything with the while was by <lb/>
close application and the strictest <lb/>
care and observation of the small de- <lb/>
tails that, come to us in life. So the <lb/>
days went by and wore into weeks, <lb/>
months, and two years had passed, <lb/>
the war clouds had recoiled back and <lb/>
left the terrific storm of <lb/>
days, when all the offices of our <lb/>
land, even to the country offices, were <lb/>
filled by men. One day <lb/>
during this period, on a sultry <lb/>
June day, mother, sister <lb/>
and I were sitting in the front yard <lb/>
underneath the canopy of the state- <lb/>
oaks that added so much beauty <lb/>
and comfort to our home in the long <lb/>
summer days. Little Eugene Mead- <lb/>
came running and screaming at <lb/>
the top of his voice. We all rushed <lb/>
to meet him to find the trouble. <lb/>
please, my mama was making soap <lb/>
in the yard and her frock catch fire, <lb/>
and she until she fell and <lb/>
when I her she could not <lb/>
talk, and she is dead and has let <lb/>
sis and me. Oh, please come go with <lb/>
me The frame of a horse that <lb/>
my older brother had gotten from <lb/>
the Yankee camps was harnessed as <lb/>
quick as possible, and papa and <lb/>
drove over there. They found <lb/>
r burned beyond recognition, <lb/>
lying in the little clearing about <lb/>
yards from the cabin, with the little <lb/>
girl kneeling over her dead mother. <lb/>
They wrapped the body as best they <lb/>
could and prepared it for burial, then <lb/>
sent for two of the nearest neighbors <lb/>
to come stay that night with the <lb/>
corpse. That night as we sat on the <lb/>
porch at home, papa and mother were <lb/>
talking of the sad, sad condition of <lb/>
the little boy and girl. Papa said <lb/>
that there was nothing else to be <lb/>
done with them except to bind them <lb/>
out and that the clerk of the court <lb/>
was a hard-hearted and <lb/>
man, and that he felt sure they <lb/>
would have to go to some one that <lb/>
would but little, if any, mercy <lb/>
towards them. It was sad for us all <lb/>
and the way seemed dark and, oh, so <lb/>
gloomy for the two children. My sis- <lb/>
listened at the dark picture until <lb/>
she could her sentiments no <lb/>
longer, then she quoted these <lb/>
Judge not the Lord by feeble <lb/>
But trust Him for His grace; <lb/>
Behind a frowning Providence <lb/>
He hides a smiling face. <lb/>
She said that she felt that though <lb/>
the early life of little Eugene would <lb/>
be dark and tossed on many rough <lb/>
billows, that before him there was a <lb/>
great mission in life. She said it <lb/>
took storms to develop the great oaks <lb/>
and rough seas to develop and make <lb/>
the very best mariners, and she felt <lb/>
that out of all this chaos that God <lb/>
would bring some great blessing to <lb/>
the world in days to come. <lb/>
Be <lb/>
ESCAPED DEATH. <lb/>
Versatility In The Army. <lb/>
Is there anything that can not be <lb/>
done by officers of the United States <lb/>
army And done exceptionally well <lb/>
There is nothing. For example, take <lb/>
Colonel Goethals and watch him con- <lb/>
the Panama Canal with ease <lb/>
and grace after various civilians had <lb/>
tried their hands at the Job without <lb/>
achieving any glittering success. Then <lb/>
take the five bachelor lieutenants at <lb/>
Fort Scriven, Georgia, who gave a <lb/>
chafing dish party, the particulars of <lb/>
which we find in the Army and Navy <lb/>
Journal. It was a surprise party. It <lb/>
was given in the Club. The <lb/>
service publication which makes <lb/>
known the achievements of these <lb/>
heroes justly remarks that great <lb/>
deal of praise is due the bachelors <lb/>
for having given such an elaborate <lb/>
party without the assistance of the <lb/>
ladies of the For <lb/>
dining room and den, in them- <lb/>
selves very handsome, were lavishly <lb/>
decorated with carnations and ferns. <lb/>
The beautiful pale pink flowers were <lb/>
massed in profusion on the mantel <lb/>
and library table in the den. In the <lb/>
dining room a large vase, filled with <lb/>
the same gorgeous flowers adorned <lb/>
the table. As a souvenir of the <lb/>
a large bouquet, tied with pink <lb/>
tulle, was presented to each of the <lb/>
young ladies present. A delightful <lb/>
Welsh rabbit was served with dainty <lb/>
sandwiches, and a mild punch was <lb/>
served during the It is <lb/>
not plain that these bachelors are <lb/>
artists and poets as well as warriors <lb/>
What bachelor outside the service <lb/>
could tie a bow of pink tulle around <lb/>
a bouquet Doubtless, also, any one <lb/>
of the five, like Cyrano, could com- <lb/>
pose a ballad while preparing to <lb/>
transfix an enemy on the point of <lb/>
his service sword. a <lb/>
toast, standing, to the army men who <lb/>
can conduct a Welsh rabbit which <lb/>
will not kill either at close or long <lb/>
News. <lb/>
When a woman of laughs heart- <lb/>
means it <lb/>
All Because A Trusted Fell <lb/>
Asleep. <lb/>
Wilson, July most sensational <lb/>
and blood-curdling story was told in <lb/>
Mayor Dickinson's court this morning <lb/>
of the intention of a Wilson by <lb/>
the name of Sylvester who <lb/>
formerly had been employed by <lb/>
Messrs. George W. Barnes and Bros., <lb/>
grocers, on lower East Nash street. <lb/>
Only from the fact that fell <lb/>
asleep last Monday night, Mr. George <lb/>
Barnes would have met a most tragic <lb/>
death. As stated, had been <lb/>
in the employ of Barnes Bros, for <lb/>
some time, and they had let him go <lb/>
simply because he had an opportunity <lb/>
to better his condition, telling him <lb/>
that if his new place did not prove <lb/>
satisfactory to report to them and <lb/>
they would reinstate him. They re- <lb/>
posed the utmost confidence in him. <lb/>
Mr. George Barnes had been in the <lb/>
habit of sleeping in his store, and on <lb/>
last Monday night, after closing hours, <lb/>
rapped on the back door and <lb/>
asked Mr. Barnes if he might not <lb/>
spend the night in his store that he <lb/>
would sleep in a chair. Permission <lb/>
was granted him, and when Mr. <lb/>
Barnes awoke next morning <lb/>
was dead to the world, snoring loud- <lb/>
On Tuesday morning <lb/>
Richard Farmer, a 15-year- <lb/>
old delivery boy, and said to <lb/>
Richard, I've a plan whereby we can <lb/>
make a bunch of money. If you will <lb/>
join in with me and fix the window <lb/>
tonight so that I can enter the store, <lb/>
I'll go in and rob and give you half <lb/>
what I get. Will you do <lb/>
The boy has the requirements <lb/>
of a good seemingly to <lb/>
agreed to enter into the con- <lb/>
and told him he would leave <lb/>
the shutter unfastened and the rest <lb/>
easy sailing. Then <lb/>
told Richard about his sleeping in the <lb/>
store the night before, and that it <lb/>
was his intention when Mr. Barnes <lb/>
fell asleep to chop his head off with <lb/>
the meat and continuing, he said <lb/>
forget; tonight leave the shut- <lb/>
unhooked; we'll go in and fix <lb/>
Barnes and then go to old man Gal- <lb/>
their's and rob his place. He has a <lb/>
bag of money as long as you are. You <lb/>
know the old man can't see much, <lb/>
and when he finish the job the old <lb/>
woman won't see at <lb/>
The faithful boy went to his em- <lb/>
and unfolded to him the <lb/>
plot. Mr. Barnes called in <lb/>
Police Officer Wynn and asked him <lb/>
what he should do in the matter. The <lb/>
officer instructed Mr. Barnes to keep <lb/>
to mention the matter to a <lb/>
living cautioned the boy to <lb/>
do just as wanted him to do <lb/>
even to entering the store with him. <lb/>
Late in the afternoon met <lb/>
the boy on the street and said to him <lb/>
forget tonight. And I say, did <lb/>
you have a good day at the store to- <lb/>
Richard told him a good <lb/>
had been done, when re- <lb/>
make a good spill to- <lb/>
night, <lb/>
This was last Tuesday, and Mr. <lb/>
Barnes, who was on the watch on the <lb/>
inside, when he heard the noise on <lb/>
the outside, <lb/>
answered, It's <lb/>
Mr. Barnes recognized his voice and <lb/>
refused to turn him in. con- <lb/>
to fumble at the window when <lb/>
Mr. Barnes fired his pistol and the <lb/>
ran away. <lb/>
Friday afternoon he met Richard <lb/>
and wanted to know if he had not <lb/>
given him away. The boy told him <lb/>
he had kept his word and that he <lb/>
J wouldn't tell on him for a hundred <lb/>
dollars. It was then agreed that the <lb/>
job should be pulled off between <lb/>
and this morning. The boy told Mr. <lb/>
Barnes of the new arrangement, and <lb/>
at the appointed time both of the <lb/>
showed up. and entrance was <lb/>
made by the window by Rich- <lb/>
In the meantime the three Barnes <lb/>
boys, Officer Wynn and the day <lb/>
operator at the Atlantic Coast <lb/>
Line depot had secreted themselves <lb/>
around the building. As soon as <lb/>
things got quiet in the store Policeman <lb/>
Wynn fired off his pistol, which had <lb/>
been agreed on as a signal for Richard <lb/>
to come out and surrender. After <lb/>
Richard came out the officer called to <lb/>
to come out, but received no <lb/>
response. Then firing in the air five <lb/>
or six times, the frightened wretch <lb/>
came out with his hands up. <lb/>
After hearing the evidence, Mayor <lb/>
Dickinson required a justified bond of <lb/>
for appearance at <lb/>
court, failing to give which he <lb/>
was placed in Jail. <lb/>
FARM WEALTH. <lb/>
Wonderful Progress for Caro- <lb/>
Una in Ten Years. <lb/>
North Carolina's agricultural <lb/>
given out from the Census <lb/>
Bureau in Washington several days <lb/>
ago, makes a fine showing for the <lb/>
state. The increase in value of <lb/>
farm lands and farm buildings for <lb/>
the decade of 1900-1910 was wonder- <lb/>
The value went from <lb/>
in 1910 to in 1911, <lb/>
an increase of per cent. The in- <lb/>
crease in the value of land alone was <lb/>
per cent. The increase in the <lb/>
use of fertilizers was per cent. <lb/>
There was a per cent, decrease in <lb/>
the number of acres per farm. In <lb/>
other words, the North Carolina farm <lb/>
has been reduced from acres to <lb/>
acres. This is a healthy sign. <lb/>
The smaller the farm the better the <lb/>
farmer. The total acreage fell off <lb/>
per cent, in the ten years. <lb/>
The average value of land per acre <lb/>
went up from to <lb/>
a gain of per cent. That is <lb/>
a remarkable showing for the state. <lb/>
Short Weights and Measures <lb/>
The federal experts from the bu- <lb/>
of standards swooped down up- <lb/>
on Columbia merchants several days <lb/>
ago and found of the total number <lb/>
of scales used In the stores of that <lb/>
city that per cent, only were <lb/>
within per cent, while 47.5 per <lb/>
cent, were doctored to cheat the <lb/>
chaser, per cent, were short weigh- <lb/>
customers to the extent of per <lb/>
cent or more. Nearly every store In <lb/>
the city was found to be <lb/>
dry commodities by liquid measure. <lb/>
Of the few liquid measures in use <lb/>
quart measures were found <lb/>
which were more than per cent, <lb/>
The practice of guessing at <lb/>
the quantity in measuring liquids is <lb/>
declared to be common. Of but- <lb/>
prints investigated only one was <lb/>
found to be correct in weight. Tests <lb/>
made put up by local stores showed <lb/>
per cent, of the packages to be <lb/>
short in <lb/>
State. <lb/>
STRAY TAKES HAVE <lb/>
en up one sow, weight about <lb/>
pounds, nearly black with three <lb/>
white feet and large face, marked <lb/>
two slits in left ear, two slits and <lb/>
under bit in right. Owner can get <lb/>
same by proving property and lay- <lb/>
charges. Marion <lb/>
ville, N. C, R. F. D. No. <lb/>
7-8<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Reflector.<lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF C. L. PARKER <lb/>
Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and <lb/>
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb/>
Advertising rates furnished <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, July of the <lb/>
most pleasant communications of <lb/>
Ayden Lodge No. A. F. and A. M., <lb/>
was held here yesterday. There were <lb/>
several visitors in attendance, the <lb/>
occasion being the annual <lb/>
of officers. The lodge was con- <lb/>
at by the master, and <lb/>
after the routine of business was dis- <lb/>
posed of, the gavel was turned over <lb/>
to Mr. R. W. Smith, a past master, <lb/>
who installed the officers for the <lb/>
ensuing year. At meridian the craft <lb/>
was called from labor to refreshments <lb/>
and assembled at the Imperial To- <lb/>
Warehouse, where the table <lb/>
was groaning under such a <lb/>
dinner, consisting of barbecue, <lb/>
ham, chicken, cake, pickles, etc., that <lb/>
go to make such a success. Quite a <lb/>
number of the brethren took with <lb/>
them their wives, daughters, mothers, <lb/>
sisters and a few boys, who are due <lb/>
much credit for making the day a <lb/>
success. When dinner was over there <lb/>
were several basket fulls of <lb/>
taken up. The lodge was call- <lb/>
ed from refreshments to labor at <lb/>
o'clock and two candidates were <lb/>
prepared and took their first step in <lb/>
the secrets of Masonry, after which <lb/>
the lodge closed in due form and <lb/>
harmony, to meet and eat barbecue <lb/>
again next first Thursday at one <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
The loss of Mr. C. J. <lb/>
was instead of in last <lb/>
letter. <lb/>
If you know anything that will <lb/>
make glad the hearts of your neigh- <lb/>
tell us; if not, keep it to your- <lb/>
self. <lb/>
Mrs. Annie Coward left Wednesday <lb/>
for Va., to visit her <lb/>
Mrs. Joseph Dixon. Mrs. Cow- <lb/>
ard is getting along in years, but <lb/>
carries sunshine in her soul and <lb/>
mellows with age. Miss Olivia Berry <lb/>
accompanied her. <lb/>
Mr. R. H. Garris has returned from <lb/>
Fremont, where he was summoned <lb/>
to the bedside of his daughter, Mrs. <lb/>
W. Ed. Hooker, who is very sick. <lb/>
Kinston and Ayden play ball here <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Mr. Joe Fed. and wife, of <lb/>
are visiting Mr. <lb/>
Jones, in East Ghent. <lb/>
Mr. Stancil Hodges is having a sys- <lb/>
of water works installed in his <lb/>
residence. <lb/>
Mrs. J. R. Spier, of Ridge Spring, <lb/>
spent Thursday with Mrs. Agnes <lb/>
Blount. <lb/>
Miss Lucy Hodges, of Kinton, Is <lb/>
visiting Mrs. J. R. Turnage. <lb/>
There were local rains in the vi- <lb/>
of Grifton, Ridge Spring and <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Ayden, N. C, <lb/>
John S., and Sam Hart, <lb/>
all left Saturday for Morehead and <lb/>
they go from there Monday down <lb/>
further where the ponies grow wild. <lb/>
The annual penning and branding <lb/>
takes place on the of May each <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Mr. Geo. W. returned a few <lb/>
days ago from down on the Atlantic <lb/>
coast and tells us while cruising along <lb/>
the beach his attention was attracted <lb/>
by the sign of some high sea <lb/>
track, and by reason of himself <lb/>
being born and raised near there, he <lb/>
recognized it as a turtle's track and <lb/>
while meditating upon it and exam- <lb/>
in the sand, he found her nest <lb/>
containing fourteen dozen or eggs, <lb/>
as large as a walnut. He gave some <lb/>
to his comrades and took a quantity <lb/>
home with him and served them at <lb/>
his hotel here in Ayden. <lb/>
Rev. W. B. Everett has returned <lb/>
from Morehead, where he has held a <lb/>
successful meeting. He tells us that <lb/>
a generous hearted sea captain took <lb/>
him out and gave him a lesson In <lb/>
catching fat-backs. He says that he <lb/>
was not afraid of being drowned, as <lb/>
he was too sick and his head was <lb/>
swimming all the time. <lb/>
Prof. J. E. Sawyer has returned <lb/>
from an eastern tour, where he has <lb/>
been lecturing in the interest of the <lb/>
Seminary. <lb/>
The most wonderful thing to relate <lb/>
is that Mr. Jack of our town, has <lb/>
a hog that was hurt in some way last <lb/>
spring, and the trouble settled in his <lb/>
shoulder to the extent that his leg, <lb/>
shoulder blade and all has come off <lb/>
and the place cured up and haired <lb/>
over. He gets about on three feet as <lb/>
though nothing had happened. The <lb/>
pig weighs about pounds and we <lb/>
expect to see it on exhibition at the <lb/>
Pitt county fair. <lb/>
Mr. J. J, Hines left Sunday for <lb/>
Richmond to spend a few weeks in a <lb/>
sanitarium there and will possibly <lb/>
undergo an operation. <lb/>
Mr. J. R. Smith is giving his house <lb/>
a new coat of paint. <lb/>
Mr. J. M. up on Lee street <lb/>
is improving the looks of his home by <lb/>
painting his houses and front fence. <lb/>
This is a good sign of progress and <lb/>
will help any town or community to <lb/>
repaint their fences, clean up, white <lb/>
wash and keep healthy, which is next <lb/>
to Godliness. <lb/>
There was a large crowd in town <lb/>
Saturday, and we hear that in many <lb/>
sections that corn is drying up and <lb/>
that oak trees are dying the <lb/>
road. <lb/>
Mr. Edgar Dixon was in town <lb/>
Saturday selling green corn which <lb/>
found a ready market, and was first- <lb/>
class. <lb/>
We have had several calls for de- <lb/>
and application blanks since our <lb/>
last barbecue. We judged this would <lb/>
wake the boys up. They will come <lb/>
if you make the meetings interesting. <lb/>
Miss Myrtle who had <lb/>
been visiting relatives in town, re- <lb/>
turned home Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. Will Cox lost a nice horse last <lb/>
week. <lb/>
We hear that Mr. J. H. Cobb <lb/>
a nice drive horse last Saturday. <lb/>
Mr. O. W. Rollins went to Stokes <lb/>
Sunday to attend the funeral of his <lb/>
grandmother, Mrs. Maria Rollins. <lb/>
We took a stroll Monday through <lb/>
the campus of the Seminary and <lb/>
was struck with surprise and <lb/>
ration, seeing so many mechanics at <lb/>
work, hammering, squaring and <lb/>
timbers for the large <lb/>
and each piece fitting so nicely. <lb/>
We then went on to the main school <lb/>
building and found another squad of <lb/>
workmen remodeling the rubbish, and <lb/>
also preparing timbers and other ma- <lb/>
and everything moving on so <lb/>
nicely that we wondered if the master <lb/>
builder had not been taking lessons <lb/>
from the trestle board of Grand <lb/>
Master Hiram. <lb/>
Mr. Harry Burton and wife, and <lb/>
Miss Edwards are spend- <lb/>
some time at Wrightsville Beach. <lb/>
Grifton and Ayden played ball here <lb/>
Tuesday afternoon <lb/>
Mr. Jim Little, who has been play- <lb/>
on the Ayden team, is sick and <lb/>
was carried to his home near Hook- <lb/>
Saturday. We hope he may <lb/>
soon recover and return, as we sure <lb/>
need him to help fan out the other <lb/>
boys. <lb/>
Miss Myrtle Tucker, who has been <lb/>
visiting her uncle, Mr. E. E. <lb/>
returned Monday to her home in Whit- <lb/>
The of the Baptist and <lb/>
Christian Sunday schools will enter- <lb/>
the Tuesday evening <lb/>
in Winfield park. <lb/>
J. R. Carroll fulfilled Mr. <lb/>
Adams pulpit at the Baptist church <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday, it being <lb/>
meeting. <lb/>
We have never noticed a greater <lb/>
improvement in any farm than was <lb/>
made on the west side of the late <lb/>
Abram Cox homestead. Last year a <lb/>
great portion of it only supplied fire <lb/>
wood, brush, brooms and straw, and <lb/>
a harbor for foxes and rabbits. This <lb/>
year Mr. Titus the champion <lb/>
farmer, has reclaimed the most of it, <lb/>
opened the ditches, put a good wire <lb/>
fence around it and has a fine crop <lb/>
of peanuts, corn cotton thereon. <lb/>
Good seed, good soil, and a good farm- <lb/>
together can make a wonderful <lb/>
show in a short time. <lb/>
Mr. J. Carl Jones and family are <lb/>
spending a few days in Lenoir county <lb/>
looking after his farming Interest. <lb/>
Mr. Osceola Ross and little girl left <lb/>
Tuesday for their home in Zebulon. <lb/>
Master Johnnie Lyn Jenkins return- <lb/>
ed Saturday from Middlesex. <lb/>
The barber shop near Jone's mar- <lb/>
is taking a vacation. <lb/>
Mr. Jesse left Sunday for <lb/>
Richmond, where on Monday he wed- <lb/>
Miss Esta Talbert, of that city. <lb/>
They came in on the train Tues- <lb/>
day to make their future home in <lb/>
den. <lb/>
PROF. HAROLD BARNES <lb/>
AT E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
LECTURE HIGHLY APPRECIATED. <lb/>
WE HAVE JUST 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/>
Killed By The Train. <lb/>
Simon Harris, colored, was killed <lb/>
by the Norfolk Southern train Sat- <lb/>
about two miles west of Farm- <lb/>
ville. He was struck on the head. <lb/>
Evidently he was sitting on the track. <lb/>
It is supposed that he was not sober. <lb/>
FOR FAIRBANKS <lb/>
Morse gasoline engine, one Bell <lb/>
Threshing machine, practically <lb/>
new. E. Turnage Sons, Ayden. <lb/>
-Not Buttermilk. <lb/>
Those editors who got only butter- <lb/>
milk on that mountain trip must have <lb/>
been too slow for anything. When <lb/>
we saw them it did not look like but- <lb/>
That story <lb/>
though is a one to tell the folks <lb/>
back at Times. <lb/>
JUST RECEIVED TWO CAR LOADS <lb/>
of nitrate of Can supply your <lb/>
needs. Prices guaranteed. E. Turn- <lb/>
age Sons, Ayden. <lb/>
Western Evening <lb/>
With Field and <lb/>
No audience that has assembled in <lb/>
the auditorium of the Training school <lb/>
was ever more delighted than the one <lb/>
gathered there last evening. The <lb/>
was a lecture by Prof <lb/>
Barnes, of Gerard College, <lb/>
His subject Western <lb/>
Evening With Field and <lb/>
In the final part of his <lb/>
Prof. Barnes discussed briefly <lb/>
reading under the following <lb/>
teach to read <lb/>
Reading and literature symbolizes all <lb/>
the thought and emotions of man. <lb/>
It is of various kinds. <lb/>
Various selections call for <lb/>
methods of interpretation and <lb/>
expression. All are not read the same <lb/>
way. <lb/>
Great necessity for <lb/>
on the part of the teacher. <lb/>
Value of distinct articulation, <lb/>
enunciation, etc. <lb/>
Remaining too long on the study <lb/>
of a reading lesson or literary pro- <lb/>
effect <lb/>
Supplementary reading its <lb/>
uses and value. <lb/>
The old Friday afternoon ex- <lb/>
Value of being a good reader. <lb/>
Illustrations of different types. <lb/>
The teacher should be a good <lb/>
strong talker. Should know how to <lb/>
dramatize, etc. <lb/>
Prof. Barnes gave much valuable <lb/>
information upon this important sub- <lb/>
and every teacher present will <lb/>
be able to teach reading much more <lb/>
intelligently now than she has ever <lb/>
done heretofore. Following this <lb/>
splendid discussion of reading and <lb/>
expression Mr. Barnes gave a <lb/>
magnificent living, present <lb/>
of the truth that reading means <lb/>
something when properly done, as he <lb/>
read and interpreted as finely as we <lb/>
have ever heard the following poems <lb/>
from Field and Riley; <lb/>
Sugar Plum <lb/>
and <lb/>
and<lb/>
Things at <lb/>
Singing in God's<lb/>
Little Boy of <lb/>
the Frost is on the Pump- <lb/>
to <lb/>
at Old Aunt <lb/>
No one can portray in print the <lb/>
splendid way in which these poems <lb/>
were given. You must hear to know. <lb/>
Prof. Barnes has been one of the in- <lb/>
in this summer term from <lb/>
the beginning and has won the ad- <lb/>
of every one, both as a man <lb/>
and as a teacher. The entire <lb/>
showed their appreciation of <lb/>
him last evening by enthusiastic <lb/>
time and again during the <lb/>
of the best lectures ever <lb/>
delivered before the is the <lb/>
unanimous opinion of everybody who <lb/>
heard Prof. Barnes last evening. <lb/>
He's a wise son who doesn't neg- <lb/>
the education of his parents. <lb/>
Blood Was Wrong <lb/>
AH women, who suffer from the aches and pains, due <lb/>
to female ailments, are urged to try the reliable, <lb/>
scientific, tonic remedy, for women. acts promptly, <lb/>
yet gently, and without bad effects, on the womanly system, <lb/>
relieving pain, building up strength, regulating the system, <lb/>
and toning up the nerves. During the past hart century, <lb/>
thousands of ladies have written to tell of the quick curative <lb/>
results they obtained, from the use of this well-known medicine. <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
The <lb/>
Mrs. Jane suffered from womanly trouble for <lb/>
nearly ten years. In a letter from N. G, she <lb/>
was not able to do housework. My <lb/>
stomach was weak, and my blood was wrong. I had back- <lb/>
ache, and was very weak. I tried several doctors, but they <lb/>
did me no good I used tor or A months, and now <lb/>
I am in the best health I have ever been. I can never praise <lb/>
It Is the best tonic, for women. <lb/>
Whether seriously sick, or simply weak, try <lb/>
Instruction,, book. Horn. for <lb/>
SPECIAL LICENSE TAXES. <lb/>
Adopted by the Aldermen of Green <lb/>
for the Fiscal Year Be- <lb/>
ginning July 1st 1911. <lb/>
On each pool, billiard and bagatelle <lb/>
table, per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On opera house or hall used as <lb/>
opera house, per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On theatricals and min- <lb/>
showing in other than <lb/>
ed halls, per day. <lb/>
On public auctioneers, per <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On butchers, per year or <lb/>
part of a year; fresh meat dealers <lb/>
subject to the same tax. <lb/>
On wood and coal dealers, <lb/>
On of medicines or other <lb/>
articles of merchandise, selling <lb/>
on foot, from stand, or vehicle, <lb/>
or in a house temporarily rented or <lb/>
used for that purpose, per day <lb/>
On dealers in fire works, or fire- <lb/>
crackers, not including cannon crack- <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers in cannon crackers <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers in second-hand cloth- <lb/>
per day. <lb/>
On dealers of a circus and men- <lb/>
combined, to both of which <lb/>
only one admission fee is charged <lb/>
for each day or part of a day, <lb/>
two rings or more, on <lb/>
each side show On show <lb/>
given under canvass or otherwise, Ir <lb/>
which animals are exhibited or trapeze <lb/>
or juggling performances are given, <lb/>
for each day or part of a day <lb/>
whether free or otherwise. Circus- <lb/>
es advertising or parading in town, <lb/>
but showing outside corporate limits, <lb/>
are subject to the same tax. <lb/>
On itinerant oculist or optician, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On on the streets of lemon- <lb/>
and cold drinks, fruit and con- <lb/>
per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On each slot machine with fixed <lb/>
returns, per year or part of a <lb/>
year, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On undertakers, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On photographers, per year <lb/>
or part of a year. <lb/>
On itinerant photographers, <lb/>
per month or part of <lb/>
On junk dealers, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On livery stables, per year <lb/>
or part of a year. <lb/>
On hotels charging per day, <lb/>
per year; charging per <lb/>
day, per year; private board- <lb/>
houses taking more than, two <lb/>
boarders, per year or part of <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
On skating rinks, per month <lb/>
or part of month. <lb/>
On each real estate and rent col- <lb/>
or agent, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers in pistols, metal <lb/>
bowie knives, daggers, etc., <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On exhibitions of wax works or <lb/>
curiosities for profit, per day. <lb/>
On merry-go-rounds, stand or <lb/>
place for any game or play used for <lb/>
profit, per day. <lb/>
On drays, for each horse <lb/>
used per year or part of year. <lb/>
On Gypsies, palmists, fortune tel- <lb/>
etc., per day or part of <lb/>
a day. <lb/>
On feather renovators, <lb/>
year of part of a year. <lb/>
On bill board posters, <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On every person or firm retailing <lb/>
cigarettes in town, shall pay a license <lb/>
tax of per year or part of year. <lb/>
On all persons or corporations <lb/>
selling illuminating oil, lubricating <lb/>
oil, benzine, or gasoline <lb/>
where there is located in town an <lb/>
agency, station or for dis- <lb/>
of such oil in quantities of <lb/>
gallons or more in any one tank <lb/>
or receptacle, shall pay a license tax <lb/>
of per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On all persons issuing trading <lb/>
stamps as deferred in section of <lb/>
the revenue act of North Carolina of <lb/>
1909, shall pay a license tax of <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On moving pictures shows in other <lb/>
than licensed hall, shall pay a tax <lb/>
of per month or part of a <lb/>
month, or per year or part <lb/>
per <lb/>
per <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On every person or corporation <lb/>
peddling clocks, stoves or ranges in <lb/>
town per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On every individual or firm, or his <lb/>
or their agents, engaged in the <lb/>
of buying and selling bicycles or <lb/>
bicycles and motorcycle supplies and <lb/>
fixtures shall pay a license tax of <lb/>
per year or part of a year, <lb/>
On every commission merchant, <lb/>
broker or dealer, buying or selling <lb/>
goods or merchandise on commission, <lb/>
shall pay a license tax of per <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On pawn brokers, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On gift enterprises or any person <lb/>
or establishment offering any article <lb/>
for sale and proposing to present the <lb/>
purchaser with gift or prize as an <lb/>
inducement to purchase or on every <lb/>
itinerant dealer in prize photographs <lb/>
or prizes of any kind, shall pay a <lb/>
license tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On switch back railway, shooting <lb/>
gallery, or place for any kind of game <lb/>
or play with or without a name shall <lb/>
pay a tax of per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On every dealer in stocks, bonds <lb/>
or other certificates, shall pay a <lb/>
license tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On each firm or corporation man- <lb/>
or bottling soda water, <lb/>
Coca-cola, ginger ale, and <lb/>
like preparations, shall pay a <lb/>
tax of per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On every person whether as agent <lb/>
for another, or as principal who en- <lb/>
gages in the business of taking orders <lb/>
for enlarging photographs or who <lb/>
enlarge photographs, shall pay a <lb/>
license tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On merchants, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On barber shops, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On express companies, per <lb/>
year or part of year. <lb/>
On telegraph companies, per <lb/>
year or part of year. <lb/>
On jewelers, per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On drug stores, per year or <lb/>
part of year. <lb/>
On warehouses for the sale of to- <lb/>
per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On dealers in sewing machines, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers in musical instruments, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On manufacturers that sell other <lb/>
finished goods than their own make, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On that carry stock for <lb/>
sale, such as pipe belting or <lb/>
repairs of any kind per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers classed as mer- <lb/>
in agricultural implements that <lb/>
are either stored or sold in town, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On ice cream and cold drinks, <lb/>
less sold by merchants in building <lb/>
they use daily for their merchandise <lb/>
business, per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On dealers in or agent for <lb/>
biles, per year or part of a year <lb/>
On embalmers, per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On Banks or banking institutions, <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On pressing clubs, per year <lb/>
or part of year. Tailors are sub- <lb/>
to same license. When both <lb/>
are run together only one license is <lb/>
required. <lb/>
On automobile transfers, per <lb/>
year or part of a year for each ma- <lb/>
chine used. <lb/>
On transfers for each <lb/>
used per year or part of a year <lb/>
On plumbers, per year or part <lb/>
of year. <lb/>
Baseball Wives. <lb/>
In the early days a woman with a <lb/>
ball club was a rarity. Now it Is <lb/>
common for seven or eight players to <lb/>
take their wives on long trips and <lb/>
sometimes their children. Managers <lb/>
admit that the women have a re- <lb/>
straining and refining influence, but <lb/>
they are not wanted. Often managers <lb/>
make wry faces when notified that <lb/>
some of the men are taking their <lb/>
wives. The women take the minds of <lb/>
the players off the <lb/>
a good tiling, but more frequently a <lb/>
bad one. If there should be a quarrel <lb/>
the wives are certain to take sides. <lb/>
Two of the Cubs lost their tempers <lb/>
one night and clashed. It was over <lb/>
in a minute, and both were sorry. <lb/>
Chance, sitting as a judge, passed this <lb/>
fine you each and <lb/>
if either of you dares tell his wife I'll <lb/>
make it Magazine. <lb/>
Industries. <lb/>
For the week ending July 5th, The <lb/>
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the <lb/>
following new Industries established <lb/>
in North <lb/>
cigar factory. <lb/>
Lumberton automobile <lb/>
company. <lb/>
gas plant. <lb/>
We understand that a farmer <lb/>
living not many miles from town <lb/>
was putting out soda in his crop a <lb/>
few days ago, and while passing to <lb/>
the field passed a mud hole in which <lb/>
he noticed a of tad poles and <lb/>
he decided to see what effect a little <lb/>
soda would have on them, so he toss- <lb/>
ed a little soda into the hole and <lb/>
waited a few moments and to his <lb/>
surprise they were full grown frogs, <lb/>
it is said in fifteen minutes, and went <lb/>
hopping Guide. <lb/>
Fire Horror Grows. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Bay City, Mich., July solid <lb/>
wall of flames is sweeping northward, <lb/>
threatening to blot out the entire up- <lb/>
per part of the lower Michigan <lb/>
Twenty-one counties are em- <lb/>
braced in the fire zone. Villages and <lb/>
hundreds of outlying homes have been <lb/>
obliterated. Scores of the <lb/>
are dead and hundreds are <lb/>
doomed in the path of the fire. <lb/>
is adding to the fire horror. <lb/>
The women and children are fleeing <lb/>
through the country. Governor Os- <lb/>
borne is campaigning to care for the <lb/>
homeless. <lb/>
Militia In Fire District <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Detroit, July companies <lb/>
of the state militia was mustered in <lb/>
today by Governor Osborne for service <lb/>
in the fire-stricken region. <lb/>
PRICES REDUCED OX ALL LOW <lb/>
cut summer shoes and oxfords. J. <lb/>
R. and J. G. N <lb/>
NEW CORNED <lb/>
catch of the season. J. R. and J. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
TRY THE <lb/>
and you will be surprised at <lb/>
the satisfaction you will get. J. R. <lb/>
and J. G. <lb/>
FRESH CORNED MULLETS, AT J. <lb/>
R. and J. G. Dept. Store.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0008" n="8"/>
<p>
, urn in <lb/>
MISS ROYSTER <lb/>
AT TRAINING SCHOOL <lb/>
LECTURE TO BODY. <lb/>
How To Enlist Community Interest In <lb/>
School Work. <lb/>
Miss Edith Royster, the assistant <lb/>
superintendent of schools in Wake <lb/>
county, spent the day Friday in <lb/>
visiting the E. C. T. T. S. school. <lb/>
Miss Royster has been so intimately <lb/>
connected with the public school <lb/>
work of the state for the past eight <lb/>
or ten years that she is thoroughly <lb/>
acquainted with its needs. She has <lb/>
always been an enthusiastic worker <lb/>
and Wake county is showing the <lb/>
fruits of her work by making strides <lb/>
in educational progress that but few <lb/>
counties in the state are now making. <lb/>
At the last period of the day for <lb/>
work in the Training school Friday <lb/>
the student body assembled in the <lb/>
auditorium and was addressed by <lb/>
Miss Royster. She spoke to them on <lb/>
Speaking first <lb/>
of the work of the teacher in trying <lb/>
to remove the dragon of ignorance <lb/>
from our state, she said that it was <lb/>
our duty to enlist every one in the <lb/>
in the work. We need the <lb/>
help of the people. The great work <lb/>
of the teacher is to get the <lb/>
to fight with her in this gigantic <lb/>
struggle. We must stand for the best <lb/>
and have stand with us. We <lb/>
must first do something ourselves and <lb/>
then have others assist. To work <lb/>
for the community means to forget <lb/>
self. This spirit always brings <lb/>
both help from others and <lb/>
to us. She told of many in- <lb/>
stances in her own county where the <lb/>
teacher had exhibited the community <lb/>
spirit and in every case fine results <lb/>
had followed. She pointed out how <lb/>
this would result in having the com- <lb/>
make voluntary contributions <lb/>
to extend the school term and better <lb/>
educational conditions, saying that <lb/>
in Wake these conditions had amount- <lb/>
ed to as much as one year's school <lb/>
fund in the past seven years. To do <lb/>
this work of enlisting the community <lb/>
and working with the community <lb/>
spirit, means sacrifice, but it pays <lb/>
in the end. <lb/>
Miss Royster spoke of a number of <lb/>
things which she hoped soon to see <lb/>
in the public schools coming through <lb/>
the co-operation of teachers and <lb/>
community. She mentioned specially <lb/>
the individual drinking cup, oral <lb/>
and rural libraries. These are <lb/>
means to get community interests. She <lb/>
said in her county co-operation was <lb/>
being added by the Union. <lb/>
On this excellent talk to the school <lb/>
Miss Royster said many things which <lb/>
will be exceedingly to the <lb/>
teachers in their work, and her visit <lb/>
here was an occasion of much pleas- <lb/>
to the school. She will always <lb/>
be a welcome visitor here. <lb/>
King's Lineage. <lb/>
Rev. Hyde, rector of the <lb/>
Trinity Episcopal church of <lb/>
mouth, believes not only that the <lb/>
British are direct descendants of <lb/>
the Israelites but that King George <lb/>
V is a lineal descendant of a cousin <lb/>
of the house of David. <lb/>
royal house of says <lb/>
Mr. Hyde, its back <lb/>
to the line of David and of Judah. <lb/>
be specific, Tea <lb/>
of the last king of <lb/>
line married the young <lb/>
king of the in the north of <lb/>
Ireland, in B. C. They were <lb/>
married by the prophet Jeremiah and <lb/>
crowned on the Bethel stone. <lb/>
himself was of the royal <lb/>
line of Judah. since he was a de- <lb/>
of one of the twin sons of <lb/>
Judah, David being a descendant of <lb/>
the other twin son. <lb/>
marriage was the beginning <lb/>
of the royal house of the Scots and <lb/>
this line in time, though the <lb/>
and Stuarts, became the royal line <lb/>
of the British empire. <lb/>
V, therefore, is a descend- <lb/>
ant of David, and belongs to a <lb/>
which can never cease to exist, <lb/>
for it has the promise of God that it <lb/>
will never cease to have a descend- <lb/>
ant to reign over the people of Is- <lb/>
The people <lb/>
are this race; hence they are the <lb/>
people of God. <lb/>
we can trace the lineage <lb/>
of the British rule back even as <lb/>
far as Adam. Anna, a cousin of Mary, <lb/>
the mother of Christ, married a prince <lb/>
of the royal house of and, <lb/>
hence became an ancestor of that <lb/>
house. <lb/>
said that He would establish <lb/>
the throne of and <lb/>
that David would never cease to have <lb/>
a descendant. George T is a fulfill- <lb/>
of these words, for he is a de- <lb/>
of David, and he sits upon <lb/>
the throne of <lb/>
The Greenville Banking <lb/>
Trust Company <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Condensed Statement, June 7th 1911. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts. <lb/>
Overdrafts. 2,251.2 <lb/>
Stocks and bonds. <lb/>
Furniture and fixture. 4,115.86 <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 C. S. CARR, Cashier <lb/>
A. J. MOORE, Asst. Cashier. <lb/>
fatten <lb/>
in <lb/>
f We have just received an <lb/>
arts elegant Go-cam <lb/>
and such <lb/>
and please you. We want <lb/>
Greenville Must Have a Contest. <lb/>
If the boys in every town in North <lb/>
Carolina would smite the flies as the <lb/>
boys in Texas are smiting the germ- <lb/>
breeding pests, we would soon have <lb/>
flies and very few, if any, cases <lb/>
of typhoid lever. As the result of <lb/>
a fly-killing contest at San Antonio, <lb/>
Texas, yesterday, one and a quarter <lb/>
million dead flies lay in heap, <lb/>
a pile three feet high and five <lb/>
feet wide, which represented the <lb/>
slaughter wrought by small boys. <lb/>
The boy winning had a record of <lb/>
dead Post. <lb/>
The View from An <lb/>
It is a great surprise to the <lb/>
to see how uniform the <lb/>
face of the earth appears when view- <lb/>
ed from a great altitude. Although <lb/>
individual objects are hard to <lb/>
such things as rivers, and <lb/>
railways are easily recognized by <lb/>
their contour, direction or some slight <lb/>
individually or characteristic which <lb/>
can readily be shown upon a map, <lb/>
especially if the maps are made or <lb/>
corrected by men who fly above the <lb/>
earth and get an accurate and literal <lb/>
bird's-eye view of its surface. Ob- <lb/>
seem to loom up with the <lb/>
greatest clearness to one standing on <lb/>
the surface of the earth appear very <lb/>
different and quite insignificant when <lb/>
view from above; while a patch of <lb/>
colored soil which would not be no- <lb/>
at all by a person standing on <lb/>
the ground is a most valuable land- <lb/>
mark to the air sailor. Map cases <lb/>
are fitted to the aviator's seat, on <lb/>
touring where they can <lb/>
be readily seen, and M. Prier on his <lb/>
journey from London to Paris had <lb/>
his route clearly shown on a map <lb/>
which he carried mounted in a clever- <lb/>
arranged map-case inside of which <lb/>
it could be unrolled, keeping his route <lb/>
continually before him as he passed <lb/>
rapidly over his course. This case <lb/>
was provided with a <lb/>
cover which thoroughly protected it <lb/>
from the wind, rain and oil thrown <lb/>
off by the motor. a map, watch <lb/>
compass, aneroid and revolution <lb/>
the air pilot is thoroughly equip- <lb/>
for navigating the atmosphere <lb/>
and traveling as far as his motor will <lb/>
take without <lb/>
to call your special attention to our Victor and Triumph <lb/>
Refrigerators. They are lined -with Wool and give <lb/>
most sanitary results of any line on the market. We have a <lb/>
big lot on hand and we will delight in showing you these <lb/>
goods whether you buy or not. <lb/>
Yours truly, Taft VanDyke <lb/>
J. S. MOORING <lb/>
General Merchandise <lb/>
Buyer <lb/>
FIVE POINTS, <lb/>
of and Country Produce <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb/>
For Slate or Tin, Tip Shop Repair <lb/>
Work, and Flues in Season, See <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
College of Agriculture and <lb/>
Mechanical Arts <lb/>
The Collie <lb/>
Four-year in Agriculture; 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 Agriculture. 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/>
DR. F. FITTS <lb/>
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN <lb/>
Kinston and Greenville <lb/>
In Greenville a. m. to p. m. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and <lb/>
Saturdays. <lb/>
All curable diseases successfully <lb/>
treated without drugs or surgery. <lb/>
Office over Frank Wilson's Store <lb/>
Phone Examination Free<lb/>
man will always find <lb/>
what he's looking for if he looks long <lb/>
enough. <lb/>
Notices <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt County, <lb/>
In the Superior Court. <lb/>
Abram Mills <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
By virtue of an execution directed <lb/>
to the sheriff of Pitt county, from the <lb/>
supreme court of Pitt county in the <lb/>
above entitled action, I will on Mon- <lb/>
day, the 28th day of August 1911, <lb/>
it being the first Monday of the Aug- <lb/>
civil term of the superior court <lb/>
of Pitt county, at the hour of <lb/>
o'clock noon, at the court door <lb/>
in said county, sell to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash, to satisfy said ex- <lb/>
all the right title and <lb/>
which the the defend- <lb/>
ant, on the 15th day of January 1903, <lb/>
or at any time thereafter, had in the <lb/>
following description of real estate to <lb/>
One tract of land lying and <lb/>
being In the county of Pitt and state <lb/>
of North Carolina, and in <lb/>
township, beginning at a small bridge <lb/>
in the Joseph Jones line, and runs <lb/>
with a ditch to the head nearly op- <lb/>
the house, then S. W. several <lb/>
small pines in the head of the branch, <lb/>
then N. 1-2 east poles to a <lb/>
stake in the Joseph Jones line,, then <lb/>
S. 1-2 east 2-3 poles to the be- <lb/>
ginning, containing acres more or <lb/>
less. Also one other tract of land <lb/>
in said township, county, and state. <lb/>
Beginning in the Franklin line on the <lb/>
big ditch in the Fred then <lb/>
running up the ditch to Henry Bed- <lb/>
line, then with Henry Bed- <lb/>
line to Lorenzo <lb/>
line, then with Lorenzo <lb/>
line to Biggs Stock's line then with <lb/>
the Jones and line back to the <lb/>
beginning, containing acres, more <lb/>
or less. <lb/>
Also one other tract of land in said <lb/>
county and state, bounded on the north <lb/>
by B. W. Tucker, on the east by the <lb/>
Haddock land, on the south by B. <lb/>
Tripp, on the west by the county <lb/>
road, containing acres, more or <lb/>
less. <lb/>
This the day of July 1911. <lb/>
S. I. DUDLEY, <lb/>
Sheriff of Pitt county <lb/>
It <lb/>
p. . <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/>
to me. <lb/>
This the 31st day of May, 1911. <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
with the will annexed, <lb/>
of Florence E. Home, deceased. <lb/>
Blow, <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/>
Ex-officio Entry Taker.<lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
supreme court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as executor of the last will and <lb/>
of Mrs. Sermons, de- <lb/>
ceased, notice is hereby given to all <lb/>
persons indebted to the estate to <lb/>
make immediate payment to the <lb/>
and all persons having <lb/>
claims against said estate will take <lb/>
notice that they must present the <lb/>
same to the undersigned for payment <lb/>
on or before the 8th day of July, 1912, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This the 8th day of July, 1911. <lb/>
J. MARSHAL COX, <lb/>
of Sermons <lb/>
SALE OF PROPERTY. <lb/>
On Saturday, the 24th day of July, <lb/>
at o'clock, noon, before the <lb/>
house door in Greenville, the <lb/>
will expose to public <lb/>
ale, all the property of the <lb/>
consisting of chairs, tables, <lb/>
bottles and extracts, together <lb/>
Kith the right to make, sell and man- <lb/>
This sale will be <lb/>
for the purpose of out <lb/>
he business formerly con- <lb/>
by the Company. <lb/>
This the 31st day of May, 1911. <lb/>
J. W. HIGGS, <lb/>
and Treasurer of the <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
y F. C. Harding, Attorney.<lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the <lb/>
has qualified as <lb/>
c. t. a. of the estate of J. K. <lb/>
deceased. Persons owing said <lb/>
will please make prompt set- <lb/>
and those to whom said es- <lb/>
is indebted will present their <lb/>
aims within twelve months of the <lb/>
of this notice, or the same will <lb/>
i pleaded in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
July 1911. <lb/>
J. M. <lb/>
c. t. a., J. K. de- <lb/>
. F. Evans, Atty. <lb/>
Two Agents Arrested. <lb/>
Insurance Commissioner James R. <lb/>
Young said yesterday that he had <lb/>
procured the arrest of E. E. White- <lb/>
head at High Point, who was <lb/>
without license the Standard <lb/>
Home Company, of Birmingham, Ala- <lb/>
an investment company some- <lb/>
what like the building and loan as- <lb/>
in this state. A license, <lb/>
required by section of the state <lb/>
Insurance Laws, had been refused, <lb/>
and the agent got what he might have <lb/>
expected. Whitehead was tried yes- <lb/>
and bound over to the Superior <lb/>
court under bond. <lb/>
Another arrest under the insurance <lb/>
laws took place yesterday, when Cap- <lb/>
W. A. Scott, arrested Calvin T. <lb/>
Lewis In Brunswick county on the <lb/>
charge of burning a store. Up to yes- <lb/>
afternoon, as the insurance <lb/>
commissioner said, the preliminary <lb/>
trial had not been and <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
-S. M. Schultz- <lb/>
Established 1875 <lb/>
and Retail Grocer and <lb/>
Furniture dealer. Cash paid <lb/>
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed. Oil Bar- <lb/>
Turkeys, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads <lb/>
Mattresses, etc. Suits, Baby Car- <lb/>
Go-Carts, Parlor Suits, <lb/>
Tables, Lounges, Safes, P. Lori- <lb/>
and Gail Ax Snuff, High Life <lb/>
tobacco, Key West Cheroots, Hen- <lb/>
George Cigars. Canned Cherries <lb/>
Peaches, Apples, Syrup, Jelly, <lb/>
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap, <lb/>
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Chi. <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gar- <lb/>
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples, <lb/>
Peaches, Prunes, Currants. Raisins <lb/>
Glass and Wooden- <lb/>
ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb/>
best Butter, New <lb/>
Royal Sewing machines and <lb/>
numerous other goods. Quality and <lb/>
quantity cheap for cash. Come to <lb/>
sec me. <lb/>
Phone Number <lb/>
S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
Spring Bedding Plants <lb/>
for beautifying the yard. <lb/>
Decorative plants for the house <lb/>
Choice Cut Flowers <lb/>
for weddings and all social events <lb/>
Floral offerings arranged in the <lb/>
most artistic style at notice. <lb/>
Mail, telephone and telegraph or- <lb/>
promptly executed by, <lb/>
J. L. Company <lb/>
Florists. <lb/>
Ask for Price List <lb/>
Phone Raleigh, N. C. <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 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/>
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 who agree to become teach- <lb/>
in the State. Fall Session be- <lb/>
gins September 1911. For cat- <lb/>
and other information address <lb/>
JULIUS L FOUST, Pres. <lb/>
Greensboro,. . . C. <lb/>
Vacation Outing <lb/>
The Glorious Mountains of <lb/>
Western <lb/>
North <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
Land of the <lb/>
Sapphire <lb/>
Where There is Health in Every <lb/>
Breath. The Climate is Perfect <lb/>
the Year Round. In Spring and <lb/>
Summer the Region is Ideal. <lb/>
Reached by <lb/>
SOUTHERN RAILWAY <lb/>
Solid through train, including <lb/>
Parlor Car, between <lb/>
Asheville and Waynesville, via <lb/>
Raleigh, Greensboro, Salisbury. <lb/>
Oilier convenient through car <lb/>
arrangements. <lb/>
Summer Tourist Tickets on <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1911. <lb/>
Let your ideals and wishes be <lb/>
known. <lb/>
J. H. WOOD, R. H. <lb/>
D. P. A, T. P. A, <lb/>
Asheville, N. C. Charlotte, N. C. <lb/>
J. O. JONES, T. P. A., <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C<lb/>
Wants <lb/>
Mr. A. E. Kline, who did much <lb/>
work building the Norfolk Southern <lb/>
railroad, is now engaged in railroad <lb/>
building in South Carolina, building <lb/>
a road from Greenville towards <lb/>
Charlotte. One of his old workers <lb/>
says he wants hands, and has made <lb/>
him an offer. <lb/>
Central Barber Shop <lb/>
HERBERT <lb/>
. Proprietor <lb/>
Located in main business of town, <lb/>
Four chairs in operation and each <lb/>
one presided over by a skilled <lb/>
barber. Ladles waited on at their <lb/>
home. <lb/>
Chinese in the Philippines. <lb/>
The Chinese merchants in the Phil- <lb/>
form the greater portion of <lb/>
the import market and are still in a <lb/>
greater degree the collectors of our <lb/>
exports. Their business ramifications <lb/>
are without equal. The Manila <lb/>
houses distribute and collect to and <lb/>
from others in the provincial ports, <lb/>
which in turn spare and gather from <lb/>
the various towns where Chinese de- <lb/>
posits are in touch with the stores <lb/>
in the barrios through which small <lb/>
and individual <lb/>
sellers and buyers are reached. In <lb/>
this respect they are the very back- <lb/>
bone of the merchant community <lb/>
and the stand-by of Philippine trade. <lb/>
As a distributing medium they are <lb/>
content with a very small profit, and <lb/>
when one considers the very reason- <lb/>
able figure asked for the commodities <lb/>
of life by the little village or barrio <lb/>
it will be seen how small <lb/>
must necessarily be the profits of <lb/>
the three or four middlemen. Of <lb/>
course, many of the large import and <lb/>
exports bodegas in Manila are own- <lb/>
ed by Americans and European firms <lb/>
as well as by Chinese, but the med- <lb/>
of collection and distribution is <lb/>
primarily through the <lb/>
Monthly. <lb/>
Loses His Job. <lb/>
George P. Ward, years of age, <lb/>
said to be the oldest in <lb/>
the world, lost his job at Middleton. <lb/>
Conn., because he got too slow to de- <lb/>
liver three hundred papers on <lb/>
time. <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/>
SCHOOL <lb/>
Wide <lb/>
Location M t <lb/>
Be <lb/>
F and full <lb/>
particulars Free <lb/>
particular, Free -a <lb/>
hi <lb/>
f, T. <lb/>
And Greenville Too. <lb/>
Isn't It remarkable that with the <lb/>
waterways we and the govern- <lb/>
spending millions on inland <lb/>
and for deepening our <lb/>
that some fellow organ- <lb/>
a steamboat line between New <lb/>
Bern, Norfolk and <lb/>
Bern Sun.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018155_0009" n="9"/>
<p>
. -v <lb/>
The Carolina Borne and Farm The Batten <lb/>
AURORA NINE <lb/>
VS. GREENVILLE-RAIN <lb/>
GAME CALLED IN FOURTH INNING <lb/>
Report in News And Observer Some- <lb/>
what a <lb/>
Defeats Greenville. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, July a <lb/>
snappy game of ball here today the <lb/>
fast Greenville ball team were de- <lb/>
by Aurora, the champion <lb/>
team of Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
Of Aurora, was at his best and was <lb/>
never in danger. The score Au- <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
The above item appeared in The <lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer this morn- <lb/>
and is to the Greenville <lb/>
fans. <lb/>
The game between Aurora and <lb/>
Greenville here yesterday was called <lb/>
account of rain in the forth in- <lb/>
That left five to be played and <lb/>
we can't see how the correspondent <lb/>
an Aurora <lb/>
figure that our team lost the <lb/>
game with a score of to <lb/>
though it stood thus at the call. <lb/>
The game promised to be a crack- <lb/>
good one, and but for the rain, <lb/>
Aurora might not have been able to <lb/>
make any such claim as the above. <lb/>
Aurora, the champion amateur <lb/>
team of Eastern North Carolina Bah <lb/>
We've beat them three games to one <lb/>
this season. <lb/>
never in Why, we <lb/>
had a man on both second and third <lb/>
and one out when the game was call- <lb/>
danger <lb/>
GREENVILLE BEAT <lb/>
THE SCORE BEING TO <lb/>
Slow and Uninteresting Game From <lb/>
The First Inning. <lb/>
Since Greenville went to Kinston <lb/>
July 4th and got beat so badly the <lb/>
people here thought the game to be <lb/>
played here yesterday would be hard <lb/>
fought and closely drawn and the <lb/>
fans turned out in full force expect- <lb/>
to see something good, but the <lb/>
day proved to be Greenville's and <lb/>
the boys slugged the Kinston balls <lb/>
all over the field, the score being <lb/>
to in our favor. <lb/>
Kinston took the lead in the first <lb/>
inning by scoring one run, but in the <lb/>
second Greenville recovered with six <lb/>
to the good, making seven runs, thus <lb/>
standing until the sixth, when two <lb/>
more runs were added, and then to <lb/>
the eighth and ninth when three <lb/>
more were put on, making a total of <lb/>
twelve. Heavy slugging of the Sloan <lb/>
balls and some misplays put Kinston <lb/>
to the bad. <lb/>
Features of the game Dar- <lb/>
den's running, one-hand catch, and <lb/>
home run. <lb/>
Score by <lb/>
R. H. E. <lb/>
01212 <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
Lanier and Reddick; <lb/>
Sloan, Fleming, Rogers. <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA IN 1781. <lb/>
Got. Letter Describing <lb/>
at That Time. <lb/>
An interesting letter from Abner <lb/>
hash, Governor of North Carolina <lb/>
and member of the constitutional con- <lb/>
to Gen. Nathaniel Greene, Gran- <lb/>
ville county, May 1781, brought <lb/>
at auction in Philadelphia a few <lb/>
ago. Nash, whose autograph <lb/>
is rare, gives in the letter an account <lb/>
of the deplorable condition of affairs <lb/>
in his state at that trying period, <lb/>
when Gen. Greene was trying to de- <lb/>
feat the British forces under Lord <lb/>
Cornwallis. Nash <lb/>
my endeavors to raise the <lb/>
even to obstruct the march of <lb/>
Lord Cornwallis through this state, <lb/>
proved in vain. I was myself in <lb/>
their front most of the way, but able <lb/>
to effect nothing. They have now <lb/>
passed over Roanoke into Virginia, <lb/>
where the joined enemy are greatly <lb/>
an for the Marquis, <lb/>
His force is not only small, <lb/>
but he mentions in the letter of the <lb/>
15th that he knows nothing of the <lb/>
Pennsylvania troops. <lb/>
Virginia militia are for the <lb/>
present fresh and spirited, and I <lb/>
hope they will prove of great support <lb/>
to the Marquis. Our militia, especial <lb/>
of the lower parts, are good for <lb/>
nothing. I congratulate you, sir, on <lb/>
your success against the enemy to <lb/>
the southward, their being compelled <lb/>
by the judicious methods you took <lb/>
to abandon their strong posts in the <lb/>
heart of the country. <lb/>
Marquis is very public spirit- <lb/>
ed and disinterested. He wishes me <lb/>
to have much more at heart the re- <lb/>
you than himself. Great <lb/>
numbers have taken protection on <lb/>
parole of Lord Cornwallis on his <lb/>
march through the country, and par- <lb/>
ties of robbers, commanded by <lb/>
of his commissioning, rang- <lb/>
through the committing <lb/>
murder, robberies, and every species <lb/>
of enormity. Could you permit Gen. <lb/>
Summer to remain a while to assist <lb/>
in punishing the guilty and in re- <lb/>
covering Wilmington to this poor <lb/>
distressed, and wretched <lb/>
In the course of nine months Gen. <lb/>
Greene recovered from the British <lb/>
the three Southern states, North Car- <lb/>
and South Carolina, Georgia, <lb/>
and, at the close of 1781, had all of <lb/>
the enemy's forces below Virginia <lb/>
hemmed within the cities of Charles- <lb/>
ton and Savannah. <lb/>
Religious Ceremony Performed. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Paris, July religious mar- <lb/>
ceremony between Emma <lb/>
and Emilio was performed <lb/>
today. They will spend their honey- <lb/>
moon in Switzerland and Italy. <lb/>
Pony For Ayden. <lb/>
The express office in this city was <lb/>
called upon Tuesday to <lb/>
practically all day, a gentle <lb/>
banker shipped by express <lb/>
from Beaufort to Ayden. The pony <lb/>
was crated and gave the officials of <lb/>
the express company here all the <lb/>
fun they were looking for. All day <lb/>
was the express messenger kept busy <lb/>
repairing the damages done to the <lb/>
crate by the gently kicking and pro- <lb/>
testing pony. It was, however, got- <lb/>
ten on the train in the crate in <lb/>
which it arrived here. As to what <lb/>
happened after leaving Kinston, we <lb/>
are unable to Free <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
Edward, Prince of Wales. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Wales, July the <lb/>
six centuries old castle has <lb/>
there been the scene of ceremonies <lb/>
little less impressive than the <lb/>
nation of Prince Edward today, which <lb/>
invested him with the title of Prince <lb/>
of Wales. <lb/>
Weber <lb/>
King of all Farm Wagons. <lb/>
The man who uses Weber wagons will use <lb/>
no other. 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/>
Web rand you will get the Hit. We have <lb/>
what you want. We will be glad to see you <lb/>
any time. <lb/>
Hadley <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
YES <lb/>
THOROUGH BRED <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
A quarter pound plug of sure enough good <lb/>
chewing for cents. Got em all beat easy. <lb/>
o 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. <lb/>
SCALES CO., <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
lame <lb/>
Post Office. <lb/>
the Most M the Host Health the Host Noble Employment of Washington. <lb/>
Volume <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JULY 1811. <lb/>
Number <lb/>
NEWS THAT IS OF IN- <lb/>
TO TAR HEELS <lb/>
GATHERED FROM EXCHANGES. <lb/>
And Briefly Told for The Reflector's <lb/>
Busy Readers. <lb/>
A part of Melville and Haw River <lb/>
township held an election a few days <lb/>
ago to vote on a special tax for a <lb/>
school at Woodland. Every vote was <lb/>
in favor of the and not a <lb/>
single vote <lb/>
The town has bought eight thous- <lb/>
ands gallons of oil to be used on the <lb/>
streets. It is figured that this will <lb/>
cover the streets of the business <lb/>
portion of the town and that it will <lb/>
keep the dust down for about a year. <lb/>
The total cost is about six cents a <lb/>
gallon. It will be put down at once. <lb/>
Monroe Journal. <lb/>
in a most <lb/>
substantial way its confidence in the <lb/>
future of Wilmington, the directors <lb/>
of the Seaboard Air Line, at a recent <lb/>
meeting in New York, authorized an <lb/>
expenditure of for still fur- <lb/>
Improvements at Wilmington, the <lb/>
amount being immediately available. <lb/>
All told this will make about <lb/>
spent by the Seaboard in the en- <lb/>
and improvement of its <lb/>
terminals at this port within the past <lb/>
three years. <lb/>
The splendid new steel bridge of <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line across <lb/>
river has been completed and <lb/>
the work on the entire new route is <lb/>
about completed. Freight trains will <lb/>
begin to run over the new bridge by <lb/>
August 1st. Work is now progress- <lb/>
on the new passenger station and <lb/>
before September 1st it is expected <lb/>
that passenger trains will be running <lb/>
regularly over the new route. The <lb/>
building of this new route through <lb/>
Weldon for the Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
has been a great piece of work and <lb/>
has cost over including the <lb/>
fine new bridge and viaducts. <lb/>
MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS. <lb/>
Pitt Lumber and Manufacturing Co. <lb/>
Elect and Declare Dividend. <lb/>
The second annual meeting of the <lb/>
stockholders of the Pitt Lumber and <lb/>
Manufacturing Company was held in <lb/>
the office of the company yesterday, <lb/>
the attendance being large. Business <lb/>
has been good and a dividend of <lb/>
per cent, was declared and a good <lb/>
amount carried to the surplus fund. <lb/>
During the year many additions and <lb/>
improvements have been made, cost- <lb/>
a neat sum. Otherwise the div- <lb/>
would have been much larger. <lb/>
This was the first dividend declared <lb/>
by the company. About thirty men <lb/>
are employed and the company does an <lb/>
extensive business. <lb/>
Officers elected at this meeting for <lb/>
the ensuing year, <lb/>
E. A. Sr., president. <lb/>
F. J. Forbes, vice-president. <lb/>
T. W. Whitehurst, secretary and <lb/>
treasurer. <lb/>
THE ROANOKE UNION <lb/>
Another To Kinston Jail. <lb/>
Deputy Sheriff T. R. Moore return- <lb/>
ed yesterday from Kinston where he <lb/>
went to take a prisoner. Josh <lb/>
colored. Josh was under bond <lb/>
to answer the charge of an affray and <lb/>
some time ago skipped, but was re- <lb/>
caught and now in Jail for <lb/>
court. <lb/>
In New Office. <lb/>
Mayor F. M. Wooten has moved in- <lb/>
ti his new office, up stairs In the <lb/>
Wooten building, on Third street. Mr. <lb/>
J. L. Wooten also has his office up <lb/>
stairs. The offices on the lower <lb/>
floor are not ready for occupancy <lb/>
just yet. <lb/>
Aviators Gathering. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
London, July are <lb/>
gathering for the race from London <lb/>
to Saturday, for the <lb/>
offered by the Daily. I <lb/>
Fell Three Stories. <lb/>
Edith Young <lb/>
alive today only because when she <lb/>
fell from a third story window she <lb/>
fell in a half opened parasol. Three <lb/>
ribs were broken but they belonged <lb/>
to the parasol. The child was <lb/>
hurt <lb/>
Aviator Will Die. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Berlin, July <lb/>
fell eight hundred feet from his ma- <lb/>
chine today. He will die. <lb/>
To be Held With the Baptist <lb/>
Church, July <lb/>
Friday, July <lb/>
a. sermon <lb/>
by Rev. C. M. Rock, Greenville. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
What is it How best enforced <lb/>
C. W. Blanchard, Wilson; E. C. <lb/>
Andrews, Plymouth. <lb/>
p. Modern Baptist <lb/>
Similar to, and Dissimilar <lb/>
from the New Testament Church <lb/>
J. G. Blalock, Weldon; T. L. Vernon, <lb/>
Hobgood. <lb/>
p. should be done <lb/>
with a member who is not, and will <lb/>
not become interested in the work <lb/>
of the L. Powers, Scot- <lb/>
land Neck; Walter Daniel, Esq., <lb/>
don. <lb/>
p. by Duncan <lb/>
Whitakers. <lb/>
Saturday, July <lb/>
a. exercises <lb/>
D. F. Spring Hope. <lb/>
a. is a church truly <lb/>
fulfilling its M. Mercer, <lb/>
Rocky Mount; R. E. Hoffman, <lb/>
a. spiritual <lb/>
of the Baptism, <lb/>
W. O. Biggs, Elm City; Communion, <lb/>
J. L. Rogers, Farmville; J. A. <lb/>
van, Washington. <lb/>
a. World Alli- <lb/>
by those who were there. <lb/>
and prayer service. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
p. Sunday School; <lb/>
For its own sake, G. J. <lb/>
For the child's sake, A. V. <lb/>
Joyner, Tarboro; For the church's <lb/>
sake, N. H. Shepherd, <lb/>
Adjournment. <lb/>
Sunday, July <lb/>
a. School. <lb/>
a. sermon, by <lb/>
I. M. Mercer, Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Open discussion on all topics. <lb/>
Train Robbed. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Buffalo, N. D., July North- <lb/>
Pacific passenger train was held <lb/>
up near here last night by three ban- <lb/>
who shot engineer Olson twice <lb/>
and robbed the passengers, and then <lb/>
they escaped. <lb/>
Plunges Through Trestle. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Okla., July pas- <lb/>
train of the Midland Valley <lb/>
Railroad plunged through a trestle <lb/>
near Avant this morning, injuring <lb/>
many people. <lb/>
Robbers Get from Italians. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Janesville, Wis., July <lb/>
hundred Italian laborers on the Chi- <lb/>
and Northwestern railroad were <lb/>
held up by four robbers who obtained <lb/>
at the of pistols, <lb/>
Ex-Shah Defeated. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
St. Petersburg, July <lb/>
headed by the deposed Shah of Per- <lb/>
All were de- <lb/>
on the Persia frontier today. <lb/>
The ex-Shah escaped into <lb/>
Cholera Situation Better. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
New York. July cholera <lb/>
situation is well in hand. The Italian <lb/>
steamer, Principe Die Piedmont, has <lb/>
arrived. General quarantine is en- <lb/>
forced. <lb/>
Detectives Find No Cine. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Richmond, Va., July <lb/>
are still at sea in the Beatty <lb/>
case. <lb/>
King Reviews Boy Scouts. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
July George <lb/>
reviewed eleven thousand boy scouts <lb/>
here today. <lb/>
Gates Improves. <lb/>
By Cable to The Reflector. <lb/>
Paris, July condition <lb/>
shows marked improvement. His <lb/>
family is much encouraged. <lb/>
Store Wrecked. <lb/>
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb/>
Chicago, July failure to <lb/>
pay the black hand demands resulted <lb/>
today in a bomb wrecking the store <lb/>
of Vincent<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>