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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 20 October 1911</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19111020</dc:date>
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                <p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb />
and FARM and EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Published by <lb />
REFLECTOR COMPACT, Inf. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor. <lb />
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
year. <lb />
Six months, . . . . <lb />
certain death to the club than to put <lb />
ii the lockers Really It would be a <lb />
the town to have a <lb />
club It. and it is hoped a majority <lb />
the members will see the wisdom <lb />
voting down such a proposition, <lb />
persons both in and out of the club <lb />
ho are opposed to the lockers should <lb />
use their influence against placing <lb />
in the club rooms. <lb />
rm stokes mum, <lb />
The article in another column We are glad to <lb />
rates may lie had upon <lb />
application at the business la <lb />
The Reflector Building, corner <lb />
and Third streets. <lb />
All cards of thinks <lb />
of be at i <lb />
cent per word. <lb />
es will be chained for at three <lb />
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb />
as second class matter <lb />
August at the post office at <lb />
Greenville, Carolina under <lb />
act of March <lb />
FRIDAY. OCTOBER <lb />
Carolina am. <lb />
By a vote of almost two to one. <lb />
or to be exact, to Carolina <lb />
club at a meeting held Tuesday <lb />
to consider the question, voted down <lb />
the proposition to place individual <lb />
lockers in the club rooms. The mat- <lb />
had been agitated some days and <lb />
after its defeat by so large a rote <lb />
the club almost at once took ii turn <lb />
for new activity and increased Inter- <lb />
est. It was followed by discussions <lb />
and Interesting talks, in which many <lb />
members took part, as to the best <lb />
means of adding more members- to <lb />
the club and enlarging <lb />
mm. A commercial spirit <lb />
awakened looking to better organ- <lb />
among the business men of <lb />
the town for the purpose of bringing <lb />
trade here, the establishing of more <lb />
enterprises, and the provision bet- <lb />
tar accommodations and <lb />
tor those who wait the <lb />
Something that doubtless would have <lb />
ii. every business man in town <lb />
tO hear, was the discussion <lb />
the lack of activity and <lb />
and the want hotel <lb />
by which much Is lost to the <lb />
town. <lb />
A large committee was appointed <lb />
to make an early canvass among the <lb />
business men of the town who are <lb />
withholding their support, with a <lb />
view of inducing them to become <lb />
members of the club and unite with <lb />
it in helping to advance the Interest <lb />
the community, In addition to <lb />
this soliciting committee, another <lb />
was appointed to prepare <lb />
ii circular letter to the business men <lb />
the town calling attention to the <lb />
need of the town and their duty to <lb />
Join with the club in helping to pro- <lb />
mote the welfare of the town. <lb />
Ii is certainly the duty of every <lb />
business man in the town to do this, <lb />
and the solicitation of the commit- <lb />
tees should meet an early response <lb />
Greenville Is now at that stage <lb />
when an united effort Is needed to <lb />
make the town go forward, and new <lb />
and enthusiasm in Carolina club <lb />
can be made a great factor in this. <lb />
The club has been of too great service <lb />
to the town in the past for it to <lb />
allowed to go out of existence. The <lb />
men of the should rally to it <lb />
and through it make things to <lb />
pass In Greenville. <lb />
Greenville has numerous needs, and <lb />
The Reflector from time to time calls <lb />
. . in them in the hope that <lb />
somebody able to do so will the <lb />
need and supply it. This time we are <lb />
going to speak of a need in the mer- <lb />
line, one that holds out a <lb />
splendid opportunity for those who <lb />
Invest in it to receive remunerative <lb />
returns. Greenville needs more mer- <lb />
chants who do what is called a time <lb />
business, that is those who supply <lb />
farmers and tenants through the <lb />
and summer and collect their <lb />
accounts when the crops are harvest- <lb />
ed in the fall. There is a large <lb />
amount of business done each year on <lb />
tills plan, and the number of mer- <lb />
chants doing that business at pres- <lb />
is not sufficient to meet the de- <lb />
Greenville is in the center of <lb />
a large fanning section and because <lb />
the town cannot supply all the time <lb />
trade of this territory much of It goes <lb />
to other towns, when It would come <lb />
here if the need could be supplied. <lb />
There is a splendid opening here for <lb />
one or more large time mercantile <lb />
establishments, and those who come <lb />
to engage In it will it an easy <lb />
matter secure a large trade <lb />
Another lesson that Greenville <lb />
to learn is to feel as much lo- <lb />
in home people and home <lb />
ii M enterprises as is shown to out- <lb />
The home people are the <lb />
who make tile town and pay <lb />
be They slay here and do <lb />
Daily News making its visits again <lb />
A few weeks ago the plant of the <lb />
paper was destroyed by fire, but a <lb />
new plant has been installed and the <lb />
appearance of the paper is better I <lb />
ever. <lb />
o--------- <lb />
It the order of the board of alder- <lb />
men of Greenville is put in effect <lb />
that warrants for vagrancy be issued <lb />
against delinquent tax payers <lb />
are doing nothing, some folks had <lb />
better lookout and get busy. <lb />
An Ohio man hitched his wife to <lb />
a plow her because she could <lb />
If Greenville i to receive a it man ought to be <lb />
of the good things passing around, <lb />
she must at least put herself in a re- <lb />
attitude. Enterprises and <lb />
business are like people in some re- <lb />
for an invitation. In <lb />
the pact Greenville made some <lb />
efforts along this line that did <lb />
much for the town, but we should <lb />
not rest too long on past achieve- <lb />
Be up and after something <lb />
else. The town ought to be kept go- <lb />
forward all the time without even <lb />
a let up for rainy days. <lb />
Insurance Commissioner J. R. <lb />
calling upon the people of the state <lb />
to observe October 9th as Fire Pro- <lb />
Day. is most timely. The sea- <lb />
son for cold weather is approaching <lb />
when people will begin using fires <lb />
in their homes and places of <lb />
and a little forethought to ex- <lb />
flues and chimneys to see that <lb />
they are in good condition may <lb />
vent loss. It is also wise to remove <lb />
such trash and waste as might cause <lb />
a fire. Much of the loss that occurs <lb />
each year might be prevented with <lb />
proper cave <lb />
here, and are the ones who <lb />
keep tilings going. With the <lb />
it Is not so. He conies along <lb />
i scoop up the beat everything in <lb />
reach and moves on to another pas- <lb />
. leaving behind but the <lb />
memory having been here and <lb />
i longing after what he look away. <lb />
, nothing for your town but <lb />
sup h for his own benefit. If you <lb />
any business to give out, or any <lb />
favors to show, the home folks who <lb />
Stand to your elbow- are entitled to <lb />
The municipality, the but <lb />
men and the individual should <lb />
all practice <lb />
Do you people of Greenville who are <lb />
not shareholders in the Home Build- <lb />
and Loan Association consider <lb />
seriously what that institution is do- <lb />
tor Greenville, and the <lb />
It gives you for making a good <lb />
Investment and at the same time help- <lb />
your town to grow Look around <lb />
and see the number of houses that <lb />
have been and are now being built <lb />
through the aid of this association <lb />
and see if it would not be well for <lb />
you to Join in this good work. A new <lb />
of shares will open the first <lb />
Saturday In November, and that will <lb />
be a good lime to start. <lb />
Why should the government take <lb />
such interest In the prevention of <lb />
disease, and get license and receive <lb />
revenue from the whiskey traffic <lb />
which Is a greater curse to <lb />
and destroys more people annually <lb />
than any disease By wiping out <lb />
the manufacture and sale of <lb />
liquors, more lives would be <lb />
saved, more manhood preserved, more <lb />
poverty and disease prevented than <lb />
b any other agency. <lb />
From accounts In the papers we <lb />
take it that the train of Richmond <lb />
boosters which several places <lb />
In North Carolina this week, was <lb />
principally a boost for the Richmond <lb />
liquor dealers. It was really an In- <lb />
to North Carolina, a prohibition <lb />
state, that those Richmond boosters <lb />
should have brought along a car load <lb />
of whiskey to give away as samples. <lb />
We shall not he surprised if that <lb />
trip loses rather than gains North <lb />
Carolina trade Richmond. <lb />
Though Carolina club has only be- <lb />
tween fifty and sixty members, <lb />
should be morel the entire town is. <lb />
or should be. Interested In what it <lb />
Is and what does. Because there <lb />
has for some time been shown, even <lb />
among the members themselves, a <lb />
want of Interest the club. II a <lb />
meeting not long since some one ad- <lb />
the Idea that to place <lb />
lockers In the club would arouse <lb />
more interest and cause a larger <lb />
There are advocates of this <lb />
change In the club, and there are <lb />
and to settle the question by <lb />
vote of the members a no, . <lb />
be held tomorrow night at <lb />
With cotton low and tobacco high <lb />
there may be such a change In crops <lb />
next year as to spoil prices again. <lb />
The wise farmer will plant moder- <lb />
of both the so-called money <lb />
crops, and go in heavy for grain, meat <lb />
and hay crops. To raise all the need- <lb />
d supplies should be the first thought <lb />
of the farmer who wants to come out <lb />
well at the end of the year. <lb />
to buy feed for man and beast at <lb />
high prices out of the money received <lb />
for cotton and la not a safe <lb />
way to farm, even if this advice <lb />
does come from one who never farm- <lb />
ed. <lb />
Understand that some Durham <lb />
people are talking about coming <lb />
down and looking at Pitt county's <lb />
new court house. The gentlemen will <lb />
receive a cordial welcome if they <lb />
come. can show them the best <lb />
court house and Jail In the state, and <lb />
no doubt our excellent board of <lb />
commissioners can give the Dur- <lb />
some good pointers In build- <lb />
An Important change is to take place <lb />
with the Charlotte Observer on the <lb />
of November. The Observer <lb />
Publishing Company will be <lb />
and a Interest pass to <lb />
other hands. MaJ. J. C. Hemphill, <lb />
who for many years edited he <lb />
Charleston News and Courier, will <lb />
become editor of the Observer, and <lb />
Mr. A. E. of the Columbia, <lb />
will become publisher and manager <lb />
of the paper. <lb />
Locke has made the formal <lb />
announcement of his candidacy for <lb />
governor in 1912, though that was <lb />
hardly necessary. We all regard him <lb />
as a candidate, and what is more most <lb />
of us are for him. It Is something <lb />
The Reflector very seldom does, take <lb />
sides for a candidate is <lb />
nominated but does not mind saying <lb />
that it favors Locke for gov- <lb />
time. <lb />
tied to the heels of a kicking mule <lb />
and a cannon cracker touched off <lb />
under him. <lb />
Greenville's greatest weakness is a <lb />
lack of organization and co-operation <lb />
among the business Interests. So <lb />
much could be accomplished In this <lb />
direction with the proper effort <lb />
The government is now after the <lb />
coal trust, and if the same experience <lb />
follows as with sugar it may give an <lb />
excuse for an increase in the price <lb />
fuel. <lb />
As bis family have picked out a <lb />
place In which to the <lb />
wife murderer, hope of his <lb />
getting a new trial must have been <lb />
abandoned. <lb />
The number of people reported to <lb />
have lost their lives in the dam break- <lb />
at Austin. Pa., last Saturday, has <lb />
dropped from eight hundred to less <lb />
than a hundred. <lb />
The always to do its <lb />
best for Greenville, and if Greenville <lb />
had the same spirit of trying to do <lb />
her best for herself there would be <lb />
more doing here. <lb />
When Major Hemphill becomes <lb />
editor of the Charlotte Observer. <lb />
wonder II be will still be the <lb />
Mecklenburg Declaration of <lb />
Farmers should be careful to at <lb />
least save all the peas they will need <lb />
seed and some to spare. They <lb />
should remember that last spring seed <lb />
sold for to per bushel. <lb />
Somebody wanted to know If The <lb />
Reflector had a hammer. Sure it has <lb />
and that hammer the nail on the <lb />
head oftener than It misses.<lb />
To a Deep-Sea Flower. <lb />
O. deep ocean's wave <lb />
O, dark the will beneath <lb />
Yet thou didst live and thou didst <lb />
thrive <lb />
And thou didst wait thy earth <lb />
And. dying, thou didst rise to give <lb />
A newer, finer breath. <lb />
Didst rise at word no man hath heard <lb />
To finer, final breath. <lb />
As if it were a little thing <lb />
To dwell beneath an ocean. <lb />
None come to admiration bring <lb />
Nor bear thee dreams of motion. <lb />
Where thou wast born thy foots did <lb />
cling <lb />
Mud-loved In deep-sea bottom. <lb />
Till o'er thy breast the storm should <lb />
sing <lb />
The song that the ocean. <lb />
O thou whose pulses throb the tides <lb />
Of vaster, -master <lb />
Stir thou the senseless silt that hides <lb />
Thy face from unlit leas <lb />
Move thou the muddy mass that hides <lb />
My soul in sunless leas. <lb />
Till from my breast thy mighty tides <lb />
A spirit frees <lb />
And when to what sea. <lb />
On what weird wave I ride. <lb />
In midst of what vast mystery. <lb />
On swell of what new tide. <lb />
If one who waits by sea <lb />
Should draw me to His side <lb />
By that strange beach should stoop <lb />
for me <lb />
I shall satisfied. <lb />
T. J. <lb />
Mass. July. 1911 <lb />
Automobiles have declined in price, <lb />
but they yet too high for the or- <lb />
purse without mortgaging the <lb />
home. <lb />
Grapes are about all gone, but frost <lb />
will soon put the flavor on the per- <lb />
and take the pucker out of <lb />
It. <lb />
The Investigation as to how Senator <lb />
of Wisconsin, got his seat, <lb />
Is making the public forget Senator <lb />
for the time being. <lb />
The shoveling of coal has be- <lb />
come a familiar sound and predicts <lb />
a preparation for cold weather. <lb />
Japanese <lb />
In Honor el Mr. <lb />
On Tuesday afternoon from to C <lb />
o'clock Miss en- <lb />
a large number of lady <lb />
friends at a Japanese party in honor <lb />
of her guest. Mrs. Hoskins. <lb />
High Point. <lb />
The home was decorated in <lb />
evergreens and potted <lb />
plants, the arrangement of color <lb />
on chandeliers. walls and <lb />
tables being most beautiful. <lb />
Upon arrival the guests were met <lb />
at the door by Misses Willie <lb />
and Mattie King, in <lb />
Japanese In the hall <lb />
smash was served by Misses Liz- <lb />
Moore, Ward Moore and <lb />
The guests then repaired to the <lb />
parlor where the hostess and guest <lb />
honor received. <lb />
The game of the afternoon was <lb />
progressive ft there being eight <lb />
tables of players At each <lb />
the guests were presented with <lb />
Japanese favors, these being tiny <lb />
skeletons, crabs, parasols, fans, trays, <lb />
lanterns etc. <lb />
At the conclusion -of the game <lb />
block cream and cake were served. <lb />
If the president carries out his <lb />
to take a rest, may be the <lb />
country can also get one. <lb />
every member should be present either <lb />
In person or by authorized proxy. Not <lb />
one should fall to be represented In <lb />
that meeting <lb />
The Reflector is frank to say that <lb />
it believes nothing would mean more <lb />
The leniency of Judges Is not <lb />
ways well applied nor appreciated. In <lb />
Guilford Superior court Judge O. <lb />
H Allen, before whom three young <lb />
criminals were convicted of larceny. <lb />
gave them a sentence of twelve <lb />
each, and directed that they lie <lb />
eat- serve the time .,. <lb />
the roads. Parties willing to hire <lb />
the boys were readily found, but two <lb />
of them run away the very first night <lb />
after being taken from the custody <lb />
the officers. One of them was re- <lb />
captured and put in Jail. <lb />
A South Carolinian under sentence <lb />
of death for the murder of his wife, <lb />
professed religion, and the Judge be- <lb />
fore whom he was tried ordered the <lb />
sheriff to take the prisoner to a church <lb />
where he could be It is all <lb />
right for the man to seek salvation, <lb />
but a start in that direction earlier <lb />
might have saved the life of his wife. <lb />
Georgia has bobbed up again with <lb />
a lynched This time the <lb />
will howl. <lb />
This year's like the schools, <lb />
are having the largest attendance in <lb />
their history. <lb />
The members of the North Caro- <lb />
press have a heartfelt sympathy <lb />
for Secretary J. B. editor of <lb />
the Concord Tribune. In the death of <lb />
his aged mother which occurred a <lb />
v. Those who have had <lb />
such know what he has <lb />
lost <lb />
There are some folks In Greenville <lb />
whose name ought to be changed to <lb />
The Italians have captured Tripoli. <lb />
It remains to be seen they will <lb />
do with It. <lb />
Johnson- <lb />
Wednesday at the early hour of <lb />
at the home of Mr. W. L. Hall, <lb />
just outside of town. Miss Kate <lb />
and Mr. G. H. Johnson were <lb />
quietly married by Rev. B. F. Huske, <lb />
New <lb />
Miss Whitaker. who was formally a <lb />
nurse at St. Vincent hospital. Nor- <lb />
folk, came down Sunday evening to <lb />
visit Mrs. Hall. <lb />
Mr. Johnson followed Monday with <lb />
a small party of friends, and It was <lb />
in the presence of these few that the <lb />
happy couple were made one. <lb />
They left after the ceremony for a <lb />
northern trip. <lb />
Smith- <lb />
Wright. <lb />
Announcement is made of the en- <lb />
of Prof. H. B. Smith, of <lb />
Greenville, and Miss Wright, <lb />
of the marriage to take <lb />
place the latter part of November. <lb />
Mr. Smith is a native of Greensboro, <lb />
but has lived In Greenville several <lb />
years as superintendent our grad- <lb />
ed schools. Miss Wright was once, a <lb />
teacher In this school, and is a sister <lb />
of President R. H. Wright, of East <lb />
Carolina Training school. <lb />
The announcement of this approach- <lb />
marriage Is attended with much <lb />
Interest, for both are well known and <lb />
have many friends here. <lb />
of Idle Land. <lb />
Recently Toe Wilmington Star <lb />
lamented that so much land in East- <lb />
North Carolina lay entirely idle <lb />
and unused. In similar vein the Le- <lb />
News discusses the situation <lb />
found in the western half of the state <lb />
Most Caldwell county land owners <lb />
hold much more than they t <lb />
cultivate profitably. tracts of <lb />
land in Caldwell. says Te News, <lb />
could be cut Into two, four. six. or <lb />
even eight or ten, smaller parcels and <lb />
become the more valuable with each <lb />
division. Small farms make near <lb />
neighbors, bring good schools, better <lb />
roads, more congenial and friendly <lb />
communities and are better in every <lb />
way. The progress of the times de- <lb />
intensive cultivation and <lb />
farming, and that is <lb />
employed the soil becomes more pro- <lb />
and valuable. Many land <lb />
owners In this county can afford to <lb />
most give away parcels of land in <lb />
order to get good near neighbors and <lb />
friends. Ten good live. farmers <lb />
on and properly cultivating ten <lb />
farms of acres each are much <lb />
better than one man trying to manage <lb />
and cultivate a farm of 1.000 acres. <lb />
And the division may be carried much <lb />
further, for twenty farmers make a <lb />
richer and better community than <lb />
How cheap and abundant land <lb />
make for poor cultivation every corn- <lb />
pa between American and <lb />
European farming shows. As the de- <lb />
for land grows greater and its <lb />
price rises an altogether different sort <lb />
of farming is pursued. Hence the <lb />
very cheapness and abundance of land <lb />
in the South have tended to keep <lb />
progress back. Our lands, on the <lb />
average, are decidedly more valuable <lb />
and better cultivated than they were <lb />
twenty years ago, but we still have <lb />
too much for our own present good, <lb />
whatever the future value of the <lb />
plus may be. <lb />
One particularly unfortunate result <lb />
of over-large holdings, as the <lb />
observations show, is to promote <lb />
and thereby render less de- <lb />
rural life. The isolation tends <lb />
to keep away productive settlers who <lb />
might otherwise come, to drive the <lb />
rural population into the towns be- <lb />
cause of the social hardships involved, <lb />
and to operate unfavorably In every <lb />
way. It occurs to us that the <lb />
plan of homes at the corners of <lb />
such farms as The <lb />
News recommends would go far to- <lb />
ward solving the problems presented <lb />
here. In this way the farmer and his <lb />
family live in or villages, not <lb />
alone near the center of their own <lb />
farm. Of course if the farm is not <lb />
larger than one family can properly <lb />
cultivate to dispense with a central <lb />
site would count for almost no In- <lb />
convenience at all. The farmer and <lb />
his family would gain advantages <lb />
most beyond <lb />
which they would doubtless have had <lb />
long ago by the means described but <lb />
for the excessive size of their farms. <lb />
When we get more people and more <lb />
in the them In spite <lb />
of the unattractive conditions which <lb />
few people and few farms create <lb />
farmers will at any rate live closer <lb />
together. The attractiveness of South- <lb />
farm life will be enormously In- <lb />
creased, and the special dangers that <lb />
have led many to advocate rural pa- <lb />
will almost altogether <lb />
Observer. <lb />
Any picture of a pile of debris <lb />
will do to palm off as a photograph <lb />
the Austin disaster. <lb />
Is The World Growing Better <lb />
Many things go to prove that it is. <lb />
The way thousands are trying to <lb />
help others is proof. Among them is <lb />
Mrs. W. Gould of N. H. <lb />
Finding good health by taking <lb />
Bitters, she now advises other <lb />
sufferers, everywhere, to take them. <lb />
For years I suffered with stomach <lb />
and kidney she writes. <lb />
medicine I used failed till I <lb />
took Electric Bitters. But this great <lb />
remedy helped me <lb />
They'll help any woman. They're <lb />
the best tonic and finest liver and <lb />
kidney remedy that's made. Try <lb />
them. You'll see. at all drug- <lb />
gists. <lb />
And Roosevelt Is going after a <lb />
whale. There'll be blubber over that <lb />
hunt. <lb />
Next week the great state fair at <lb />
Raleigh. <lb />
Whit goes the money Is a <lb />
problem. <lb />
Wednesday at the home of Mr. <lb />
W. L. near Simpson, his <lb />
daughter, Miss Bessie Mr. F. E. <lb />
Brooks were married. The couple <lb />
came to Greenville on the Norfolk <lb />
Southern train and took the Coast <lb />
Line here for Richmond, to attend the <lb />
fair. <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb />
executor of estate of Zeno. T. Evans, <lb />
deceased, notice Is hereby given to <lb />
all persons Indebted to the estate to <lb />
make Immediate payment to the <lb />
and all persons having <lb />
claims against the said estate will <lb />
take that they must present <lb />
the same to the undersigned for pay- <lb />
on or before the 6th day of <lb />
1912, or this notice will be <lb />
plead In bar of recovery. <lb />
This 6th day of October, 1911. <lb />
W. M. EVANS. <lb />
Executor of Zeno T. Evans. <lb />
Before slapping some people the <lb />
wrist be sure that there is a vacant <lb />
cot at the hospital. <lb />
The more they are neglected the <lb />
happier some husbands are. <lb />
have a circulation <lb />
of 1,200 among the best <lb />
people in Eastern North <lb />
Carolina and invite those <lb />
who wish to get better <lb />
acquainted with these <lb />
good people in a business <lb />
way to take a few inches <lb />
space and tell them what <lb />
you have to bring to their <lb />
attention. <lb />
are low and can be <lb />
had upon application. <lb />
is the <lb />
of Eastern <lb />
It has a population <lb />
of and is surround- <lb />
ed by the best farming <lb />
country. Industries of <lb />
all kinds are invited to <lb />
locate here for we have <lb />
everything to offer in the <lb />
way of labor capital and <lb />
tributary facilities. We <lb />
have an up-to-date job <lb />
and newspaper plant. <lb />
Is the Most <lb />
the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb />
v in. mil.<lb />
BIG SUBSCRIPTION MINE CONTEST <lb />
PUT COUNTY W we ma <lb />
AGGREGATE ME III VALUE <lb />
Contest is Now to All <lb />
Women of Greenville Pitt <lb />
Energetic Ones Will <lb />
W in These Prizes. <lb />
used as you need them, just as you <lb />
The announcement that appears on <lb />
page of The Dally Reflector <lb />
today, of the Brand prize distribution <lb />
to be made by it. baa never been <lb />
Governing Beard Getting Everything In <lb />
Readiness <lb />
I SOME ox THAT SUBJECT <lb />
wish <lb />
i FRIDAY WILL BE A SCHOOL DAY <lb />
Whatever your Station in life, what- <lb />
ever the size of your income, there is <lb />
something in this list <lb />
Which is bound to interest you. This <lb />
is your Opportunity to start your- <lb />
right with Hie world. Dame op- <lb />
equaled, either interest or Import- j knocks but once on every <lb />
by any similar announcement Moor, she is now loudly clamoring at <lb />
ever made this territory yours; but do not ask her to knock <lb />
is Ami Hew tan <lb />
I lire It. <lb />
THE HAPPENINGS <lb />
ALL AROUND <lb />
DEATH farmer. <lb />
Is tile only animal that makes him- <lb />
self ridiculous by worry. The <lb />
gists teach us <lb />
All Teachers Invited to And liability to only ii <lb />
The prizes offered for <lb />
is op- <lb />
do not. let it once <lb />
In securing subscriptions to u <lb />
the Carolina has no place in this date and <lb />
I ally Reflector and <lb />
Home and Farm and Re- <lb />
are of royal value, and the <lb />
conditions under which they will be <lb />
distributed are so liberal they <lb />
are bound to enlist a vast number of <lb />
contestants to the effort to possess <lb />
They aggregate In cash values <lb />
more than and each of these at- <lb />
live rewards will make special and <lb />
age. <lb />
Do not be bashful, enroll your name <lb />
and you can take one of the big <lb />
awards which will be given. <lb />
MEN FAIR. <lb />
of Officers and The Hoard of <lb />
enters <lb />
The Reflector has bee <lb />
Bring Their <lb />
of Agriculture Graham Will Make <lb />
Opening Address on Thursday <lb />
Fair Free to Everybody. <lb />
The governing board and township <lb />
committees of Pitt County Fair As- <lb />
held a meeting here Friday <lb />
office of President J. L. Wooten <lb />
to further discuss details for the first <lb />
county fair to be hold here on <lb />
Thursday and Friday, November <lb />
and <lb />
It was gratifying to hear that so <lb />
much Interest has been aroused all <lb />
over the county in the fair and that <lb />
there is every indication that it is <lb />
going to be a great success, both in <lb />
exhibits attendance. As <lb />
asked be <lb />
powerful appeal to ambitious young j print the names of the officers and admissions <lb />
women of the section Car- board of governor of the Pitt should <lb />
Una included within the contest Fair Association, so that persons At <lb />
its. <lb />
The contest in which these mag- <lb />
prises will be distributed is <lb />
opened to all women, married or <lb />
single, residing in Pitt county. They <lb />
do not need to be subscribers to The <lb />
Dally Reflector and financial stand- <lb />
counts for nothing. All that Is <lb />
required is that they be of <lb />
the territory included in the contest <lb />
that they be of good repute. No <lb />
of The Daily Reflector may <lb />
enter this contest nor any direct <lb />
of their families. <lb />
The Daily Reflector will give this <lb />
elaborate schedule of prizes in order <lb />
to got the mime and merits of their <lb />
before the newspaper rending <lb />
public In this section of the state. J- Cox. <lb />
persons con- <lb />
making exhibits at the <lb />
fair may know whom to look to for <lb />
Information. They <lb />
President, J. L. Wooten. <lb />
Vice President. A. J. <lb />
Treasurer, J. Tucker. <lb />
Secretary, D. J. <lb />
Hoard of R, Bunting, <lb />
W. W. Bullock. J. H. Cobb. J. W. <lb />
Crawford. J. A. G. Cox. <lb />
S. I. Fleming, J. F. Evans, B. M. <lb />
Lewis, J. C. Galloway. R. L. Little, <lb />
C. G. Little, Dr J. Morrill, J. G. <lb />
J. L. Perkins. H. G. J. P. <lb />
w. M. Moore, J. R. Turn- <lb />
age. M. T. Spear. H. A. White. Carl <lb />
Turnage, C. J. <lb />
Director of Woman's Department <lb />
animals that possess associative <lb />
Numerous experiments made <lb />
upon lower animals serve to prove <lb />
that much of their apparent <lb />
gent action is purely Instinctive, her- <lb />
They do not reason <lb />
gently. The lower forms of life seem <lb />
utterly unable to profit by experience; <lb />
they have no associative memories. <lb />
and, or course, they are not addicted <lb />
to worry. In ascending the scale <lb />
animal life Interesting problems are <lb />
encountered when we reach the ant <lb />
tribes. It seems highly probable, too, <lb />
that wasps actually possesses certain <lb />
powers of associative memory. <lb />
And so the higher we ascend in <lb />
the scale of animal life the greater <lb />
the tendency to worry, that is. to <lb />
row to look with fear and <lb />
CHRISTIAN Wm <lb />
AT TRAINING SCHOOL <lb />
Y. a. <lb />
Pros. Trees Students Work <lb />
Together in Harmony. <lb />
An impressive service for the <lb />
of new members of the Young <lb />
Woman's Christian association was <lb />
held In the assembly hall of the Train- <lb />
shot. He shot one squirrel and Miss <lb />
three, and two others in the W <lb />
tree mad,, their escape. of <lb />
Mr. died Sunday night bright talk that <lb />
People<lb />
Now it is a curious fact that man N. C. W. F. <lb />
Hart, of Morehead City, is here look- <lb />
alter some work in South Ayden. <lb />
Master Wilbur is the crack <lb />
When some men drop a hint It <lb />
sounds like a ton of coal going down <lb />
n chute. <lb />
The worst cotton pest Is the low <lb />
price. <lb />
They have resorted to this contest in <lb />
order to engrave indelibly on the <lb />
minds of the reading public of this <lb />
territory Hie name of their paper, <lb />
and this privilege they are <lb />
ling to pay royally. While the <lb />
and such a contest <lb />
is enormous, nevertheless the man- <lb />
of this newspaper feels <lb />
titled., of the great amount of <lb />
advertising which will result in the <lb />
publication. <lb />
How To Votes. <lb />
. Fill out the nomination blank which <lb />
appears in the page ad., with your <lb />
name or that of some lady friend <lb />
whom you would like to sec win the <lb />
piano, the Victor or one of <lb />
the handsome gold watches. <lb />
This nominal ion blank will count for <lb />
votes as a starter towards the <lb />
prize. <lb />
There is o coupon in each issue of <lb />
paper good for ten votes. Clip <lb />
these coupons from the paper, till <lb />
them out and bring them to the Con- <lb />
test Manager of The Daily Reflector. <lb />
As soon as you can, see the Contest <lb />
Manager and ask him for a receipt <lb />
book, then start gathering <lb />
from your friends. All the new <lb />
subscribers and old subscribers pay- <lb />
in advance, or on their arrears, <lb />
will get votes at the time of their <lb />
payment, so Instruct all your friends <lb />
to be sure and ask for their rotes, <lb />
Collect the money the spot and <lb />
bring It to the Contest Manager In <lb />
The Daily Reflector office, or mail <lb />
money order or draft to the same, <lb />
and make it payable to The Reflector <lb />
company. You will receive a vote <lb />
Coupon each subscription you <lb />
turn In. vote coupons are good <lb />
a any up to the close of the <lb />
Contest, fl you can poll them at <lb />
once or. id them in reserve to be <lb />
Any of these will give you any in- <lb />
formation possible about the fair. <lb />
They want all the people from their <lb />
respective communities to come to the <lb />
fair, and as many as can to have ex-<lb />
The Programs For Next Sunday <lb />
The Men's Prayer League an <lb />
Interesting meeting in the Presbyter- <lb />
church Sunday afternoon, with <lb />
splendid talks by Messrs. Adrian <lb />
Brown, H. B. Smith and R. M. Hearne. <lb />
The meting for next Sunday after- <lb />
noon will be held in the Christian <lb />
church. things that <lb />
the Lord <lb />
Messrs. J. F. Stokes, J. L. <lb />
Bishop and O. K. Warren. <lb />
THIS IS STRAIGHT. <lb />
Returned Ami Borrowed It <lb />
Again. <lb />
A young lady went visiting In her <lb />
neighborhood and it rained. She <lb />
rowed an umbrella to go home and <lb />
after the shower went back to re- <lb />
turn It. While on this mission she <lb />
I allied too long, another rain came <lb />
and she had to borrow the same um- <lb />
again. That time she decided <lb />
to wait until next morning to return <lb />
the umbrella. <lb />
Gives Aid to Strikers. <lb />
Sometimes liver, kidneys and bow- <lb />
time the Pitt County Fair Association, <lb />
aided by the State Board of <lb />
will give liberal premiums for <lb />
exhibits. <lb />
Those persons who are to make ex- <lb />
should let the president or sec- <lb />
of the fair know as far in ad- <lb />
as possible, so that the <lb />
space can be provided for <lb />
them. Also the most of the exhibits <lb />
should be here by Wednesday even- <lb />
November 1st, so they can be <lb />
ranged that night ready for the open- <lb />
of the fair Thursday morning, and <lb />
all exhibits should be In by <lb />
Thursday. <lb />
The fair will open to the public at <lb />
o'clock on Thursday, November <lb />
and Hon. W. A. Graham, state com- <lb />
missioner of agriculture, will deliver <lb />
the opening address at o'clock. <lb />
The board of governors at Friday's <lb />
meeting renewed the invitation to <lb />
manufacturers and dealers in farm <lb />
machinery and farm implements to <lb />
make exhibits at the fair. This Is <lb />
open to all manufacturers of and <lb />
dealers In any kind of farm <lb />
On the premium list that has been <lb />
sent out. attention has been called to <lb />
Hie omission of some crops that might <lb />
have been included, so the premium <lb />
committee decided that any merit- <lb />
article exhibited, even If not <lb />
mentioned specially In the premium <lb />
list, will be properly rewarded. <lb />
It was decided to make the second <lb />
day of the fair, Friday, a school day, <lb />
and an Invitation is extended to every <lb />
teacher In the county to bring their <lb />
schools to the fair that day. It will <lb />
be worth to the pupils to see <lb />
and learn what their county is doing. <lb />
It Is hoped to have a school parade <lb />
that morning, and details of this will <lb />
be announced later if the plans for <lb />
the parade can he perfected. <lb />
Now, If people all over the county <lb />
take hold and do their part, <lb />
and are going to be great <lb />
days for Pitt county. <lb />
The governing board will meet <lb />
again on Friday. October 27th. <lb />
You are not experimenting on your- <lb />
self when you take Chamberlain's <lb />
Cough Remedy for a cold as that prep- <lb />
has won its great reputation <lb />
els seem to go on strike and refine mid extensive sale by Its remarkable <lb />
work right. Then you need those <lb />
pleasant little <lb />
King's New Life give them <lb />
natural aid and gently compel proper <lb />
action. Excellent health soon follows. <lb />
Try them. cents all druggists. <lb />
cures of colds, can always be de- <lb />
pended upon. It Is SQUally valuable <lb />
for adults and children may be <lb />
given to young children with Implicit <lb />
confidence as It contains no harmful <lb />
drug. Sold by-all dealers. <lb />
misgiving that the future <lb />
holds In store, or to be unduly <lb />
concerning the <lb />
ties and problems of the present. <lb />
Van The Only Animal That <lb />
Of course the fact that man is the <lb />
only animal that worries is but a <lb />
demonstration of the superiority of <lb />
the human mind over that of the <lb />
lower animals. Animals are not <lb />
en to looking backward, and, as a <lb />
rule, they do not look very far into <lb />
the future; on the other hand the <lb />
mind of man sweeps back over past <lb />
ages, and. from the page of history, <lb />
as veil as from the perplexing <lb />
dents of the present, forms those con- <lb />
which cause him to look with <lb />
fear and trembling Into the future. <lb />
The causes of human worry are In- <lb />
deed varied, but in the last analysis <lb />
they are usually found to consist of <lb />
sonic form of Irritation, anxiety or <lb />
fear. It not frequently develops that <lb />
numerous habits of life and physical <lb />
practices are contributory to the <lb />
habit. The use of alcohol and <lb />
other forms of psychic and physical <lb />
transgression are often discovered to <lb />
the handmaidens of worry and <lb />
sorrow. Lack self control is an- <lb />
other great cause worry, A strong <lb />
will would cure nine-tenths of this <lb />
unnecessary form or grief. <lb />
Whatever the Immediate cause <lb />
worry a tor our own gen- <lb />
welfare, material prosperity and <lb />
mental happiness, or that of our loved <lb />
ones, must be recognized as the real <lb />
cause of all our worry. worry <lb />
lest we may lose or fail to obtain <lb />
those material blessings which will <lb />
make us and our friends happy. <lb />
The desire for happiness is gene- <lb />
ally found to the real, fundamental <lb />
cause of worry. But is It not <lb />
that we should forget that under <lb />
no circumstances can worry ever con- <lb />
tribute to our happiness On the <lb />
Other hand worry and anxiety never <lb />
Tail to detract from the enjoyment <lb />
of life, to destroy mental peace, <lb />
not Infrequently they store up for the <lb />
future that which will everlastingly <lb />
destroy the very happiness for which <lb />
arc wont to worry. <lb />
Many good people entertain the <lb />
false notion that the procession of <lb />
material riches can bestow happiness <lb />
upon the soul. They are tally <lb />
of the Idea that riches are <lb />
essential . tin joy of Accord- <lb />
they toll in anxiety, endure <lb />
hardships and experience much men- <lb />
torture In their to pro- <lb />
themselves with supposed <lb />
essentials to life happiness. <lb />
of paralysis. For a long time he has <lb />
been a prominent figure around here. <lb />
making shingles, well hollows, etc. <lb />
and at election time he was always <lb />
true as steel. The last rote he cast <lb />
was for Governor W. W. Kitchin. In <lb />
his early manhood he was married to <lb />
Miss Martha, the youngest daughter <lb />
O the late Mr. White, who with <lb />
a large Family survive him. His <lb />
remains were deposited In the family <lb />
near here today, there to <lb />
await the morning. <lb />
A lull supply hardware for mill, <lb />
gin and term. J, Smith s lire. <lb />
Mr. Barnes S. has <lb />
ed a nice touring car. <lb />
Let us gin your cotton. We win <lb />
haul It, gin it. furnish bagging and <lb />
ties, buy your seed, or exchange them <lb />
meal. L. L. <lb />
At a meeting or the stockholders <lb />
and directors or the Pitt County- Oil <lb />
mill, our townsman, Mr. L. L. KIt-j <lb />
was elected president. This, <lb />
however, will not conflict with his <lb />
work here. We congratulate Mr. <lb />
on his recognized ability and the <lb />
oil mill has made a wise choice. <lb />
We regret to learn that Mr. John A. <lb />
Branch is very sick at home near <lb />
here. <lb />
The family of Mr. J. left <lb />
Saturday morning to make their home <lb />
St Black Mountain. We are to <lb />
see them go. as they arc some of <lb />
den's oldest and most substantial <lb />
landmarks. This change was caused <lb />
by the ill health of Mr. <lb />
There Is a new arrival at Rev. Mr. <lb />
Caraway's on Fast avenue. <lb />
There is a new cotton buyer on Lee <lb />
street, young Mr. Britt. We expect to <lb />
see the fleecy staple go higher. <lb />
Rev. Lewis Is holding a <lb />
of meetings here in the new <lb />
Methodist church. He is striking <lb />
from the shoulder and holding <lb />
up the blood stained banner of King <lb />
He is doing some fine <lb />
preaching. He Is loyal to his state <lb />
as well as to his Master, and paid a <lb />
glorious tribute to Rev. Sam Jones <lb />
Sunday morning. Be is a strong. <lb />
forceful and speaker. Much <lb />
rest Is being manifested In this <lb />
meeting. <lb />
Our people are emulating the ants <lb />
and busy bees by laying in their sup- <lb />
ply fuel for winter use. <lb />
Mr. Eugene Cannon, of Ayden, and <lb />
Miss Carrie Smith, or Reedy Branch, <lb />
will be married on the 18th and take <lb />
a bridal trip Washington City and <lb />
other northern cities, Mr. Cannon is <lb />
one of our most popular merchants <lb />
and Miss Smith is one of Pitt's most <lb />
accomplished teachers. They will <lb />
make their home In Ayden. We wish <lb />
for much happiness. <lb />
We heard I here are candidates <lb />
tor Initiation In the I. O. F. This <lb />
shows that fraternity is gaining favor <lb />
in our community. <lb />
Mr. John II. Trip, spending a <lb />
days with his parents at More- <lb />
head. <lb />
Mr. Richard <lb />
Richmond to buy horses and mules <lb />
tor the Ayden market. <lb />
We bops to see ex- <lb />
come up with parts of <lb />
county fair <lb />
and If any this section has any- <lb />
thing they wish Send up and It <lb />
Is not convenient for them to send <lb />
It, leave it at J. It. Smith <lb />
store mid we will label and see it <lb />
evinced his Interest in the <lb />
development the students. He <lb />
rend a Scripture lesson. John <lb />
verse if it <lb />
seems evil with you to serve the Lord, <lb />
you this day whom ye will <lb />
serve, whether the gods which your <lb />
fathers served that were on the other <lb />
side cf the flood, or the gods of the <lb />
in whose land ye but <lb />
tor me mid my house we will serve <lb />
the <lb />
Today in this Christian land we <lb />
arc facing the same conditions that <lb />
the Jews faced each individual <lb />
must make his own choice. Every <lb />
human being is religious his <lb />
and has a natural longing for <lb />
good as well as for evil. This spirit- <lb />
side of man must he fed as well <lb />
as the physical or mental sides. In <lb />
state school conditions are such <lb />
that denominational lines cannot be <lb />
drawn, but there is rare opportunity <lb />
for working together in Christian <lb />
Is stronger than <lb />
any doctrine. Each Christian should <lb />
be a member of some church but all <lb />
should be able to work together <lb />
the full, true spirit of Christ. <lb />
He closed by saying lie hoped every <lb />
student would cast her lot among the <lb />
Y. W, C. m workers and would thus <lb />
help develop a well rounded, noble <lb />
Christian womanhood. <lb />
The music especially lining. <lb />
There were three numbers besides <lb />
the Misses Marguerite Davis <lb />
and Joyner sang a Miss <lb />
Davis a solo. and. at the close the <lb />
service, the full school sang a chorus. <lb />
Tragedy. <lb />
Timely advice given Mrs. C. <lb />
of No. <lb />
prevented a dreadful tragedy and <lb />
ed two lives. Doctors had said her <lb />
frightful cough was a <lb />
cough and could do little to help her. <lb />
After many remedies tailed, her aunt <lb />
her to take Dr. King's New Dis- <lb />
have been using It for <lb />
some she wrote, the aw- <lb />
cough has almost gone. It also <lb />
saved my little boy when taken with <lb />
a severe bronchial This <lb />
matchless medicine has no equal for <lb />
throat and lung troubles. Price SO <lb />
cents and Trial bottle free. <lb />
by nil druggists. <lb />
Married. <lb />
Rev. Mr. Spiegel united In mar- <lb />
yesterday at the parsonage <lb />
Mr. W. Bowling, of Pitt <lb />
and Miss Millie i. Crumpler, or <lb />
township. The groom is a <lb />
prominent farmer Pitt county and <lb />
the bride is highly esteemed In her <lb />
community and is a r to Mrs. <lb />
J. W. of this <lb />
Times. <lb />
properly entered. <lb />
The Seminary has recently Installed <lb />
another nice piano to accommodate <lb />
the largo music class of -Miss Jennie <lb />
Is. <lb />
Music has charms. Mr, a. F. <lb />
ban purchased a nice piano. <lb />
We have oil. lead and ready-mixed <lb />
paints and a line building material. <lb />
Cot our prices. J. R. Smith Bro. <lb />
Several left this morning for the <lb />
state fair at Raleigh. <lb />
Be sure to send something to tho <lb />
Pitt county fair, and attend yourself, <lb />
and feel proud of old Pitt. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018169_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
Free Treatment for Hookworm Disease<lb />
While Preside<lb />
a. pin have arranged to <lb />
State Board of Health, acting the Commoners of HOOKWORM DIS- <lb />
following , u ,, <lb />
BETHEL, Tuesday, October November l <lb />
FARMViLLE, Wednesday, October November <lb />
cay, October November, <lb />
Friday, October November <lb />
GREENVILLE; Saturday, October November <lb />
Dr. C. F. Hookworm Specialist, will be in A through <lb />
h Fire, and Typhoid Fever, and the <lb />
Sanitary privy FREE at the dispensary. <lb />
REMEMBER <lb />
That if you have had or dew poison within the <lb />
la Ii will repay you for you J <lb />
we ask that yon bring on your visit, a amount <lb />
55--., Take advantage of . opportunity <lb />
while i. lasts and see if have any these you <lb />
will be given yon that <lb />
change in both your feeling and your health. Instead <lb />
despondent kind of man you will be <lb />
one with a bright and active body and who go <lb />
work with . rush and a vim, always pleasure <lb />
E E these Medical <lb />
Kit County but six Each one only open one day <lb />
the week. <lb />
HOW TO TELL WHEN YOU HAVE HOOK- <lb />
WORM DISEASE <lb />
This is a family that became infected with Hookworm Disease, <lb />
and as a result lost out in the battle with the world and had to <lb />
ask the County for aid Treatment will restore them to health and <lb />
strength in a short time and they will become taxpayers instead <lb />
of depending on the county to support them. There are many <lb />
others just as had in this county and they should seek treatment. <lb />
They owe it to themselves, their families, their county and State. <lb />
Those who are not treated continue to the infection and give <lb />
it to others. This is not the kind of liberty a good citizen should J <lb />
want. <lb />
A Victim of Hookworm Described His <lb />
-HIS <lb />
feel tired all the time almost, and get tired very easily. <lb />
and have little or no energy. My spirits are low almost all the <lb />
time. I feel full after eating. My memory is poor. <lb />
T feel that I am getting weaker. I a disgust for fatly <lb />
foods. I prefer being alone rather than to be in company with others. <lb />
I have no desire even to converse with the ladies. <lb />
taking a walk I feel broken down and tired all over, feel more <lb />
like lying down than anything else. It tires me very much <lb />
length of time. In the morning when getting up I feel tired <lb />
broken down also. Under these conditions I am not able to <lb />
do justice to my <lb />
patient describing his above is a male, age , <lb />
and weighed pounds. lie was raised on a farm, had a raven- <lb />
appetite, was restless at night and dreamed. He Md <lb />
had three or four attacks of ground-itch, one of them lasting eight <lb />
I T IS ABSOLUTELY FREE <lb />
Dr. gives Symptoms-Says to par cant <lb />
who have ever gone barefooted have <lb />
an individual have a mild case, he would m d <lb />
and no signs, but should he possess a medium o. V <lb />
pus both the Signs and would be well marked Hence, <lb />
and depend upon the severity <lb />
and individual power to make and replace the blood lost and <lb />
destroyed by these blood-sucking parasites. <lb />
The Brat sign is ground-itch, toe-itch, <lb />
Jew the infection is gotten through the skin, o <lb />
a sore throat, slight bronchitis with cough and pale, <lb />
infection is gotten via the by eating on <lb />
individual complains of a severe itching and burn- <lb />
, then in a few hours the place where the worms <lb />
the skin becomes red. and in about eighteen few <lb />
watery blisters make their appearance, which soon I <lb />
E raw surface. The foot often becomes swollen m about <lb />
hours. Again watery blisters may not W- <lb />
their Stead a small vine-shaped swelling may be <lb />
p side across the bottom or over the top d the toot, <lb />
intensely so much so that <lb />
a result of the condition. I have often seen children then <lb />
feet in the hot sand t get relief. <lb />
This is one of the most common, most suggestive, and <lb />
constant and of the disease. <lb />
A slight cough, loss of appetite for a few <lb />
;. observed. If the infection be severe in <lb />
pale, weak, <lb />
,. incapacitated for work. This is known as an ease. <lb />
If the individual has several tunes m one <lb />
-8 infected for several successive <lb />
,,,,, attack, he is known to have a chrome case, which, <lb />
., of the following <lb />
presents a tallow, tan or pasty appearance, seldom <lb />
and in young men the beard is slow in appearing Often <lb />
lower Wounds heal and bleed- <lb />
g very difficult to arrest on account of hookworm poison d <lb />
the coagulating properties of the blood. <lb />
disease frequently causes both mentally and <lb />
It is not uncommon to find an undersized boy girl, <lb />
as a of this disease. I have observed <lb />
fifteen years of age, who in both size and <lb />
and, it is our blood, our best friend, our fort and army of <lb />
defense, and our very keynote to health, that the hookworm de- <lb />
in one of three ways; first, by holding fast to the of <lb />
our small bowel and sucking Mood all the second, by a con- <lb />
from places where they hold fast or let third, <lb />
poisonous substance being injected into our system which <lb />
destroys more blood than they use. This disease is . the <lb />
of having a small vessel cut and then take no steps to Breed <lb />
the blood How. but with an attitude of indifference allow our heart <lb />
to gradually pump our very life blood fro. our body to be re- <lb />
placed by water, and the redness of our cheeks be replaced by <lb />
pallor. ,. , <lb />
stop to think, and then to realize that from . <lb />
, per cent, of the children and young people under <lb />
years of age who have gone barefooted in the Eastern part of <lb />
North Carolina, are suffering with this disease, and in hundreds <lb />
Of instances with other diseases as a of the weakening <lb />
of this disease, it is time for every parent to make a study <lb />
the disease, have their children themselves if any <lb />
examine. by their family physician or the Mate Board <lb />
of Health, if the disease exists have treatment administered <lb />
until cured. <lb />
Hookworm Disease attacks the youth and weakens their con- <lb />
to such an extent as to make them quite receptive to sue <lb />
ed diseases as typhoid fever, pneumonia. <lb />
diphtheria and scarlet fever. <lb />
This is an actual <lb />
photograph of <lb />
a case <lb />
ground-itch. Note the lit- <lb />
worms crawling <lb />
through the skin. <lb />
., <lb />
through the skin. They <lb />
are fifty limes too small <lb />
to this tune but are j; <lb />
very active. If you have <lb />
ground-itch you may <lb />
have had hookworm We <lb />
also infected by <lb />
eating strawberries, fruit <lb />
or vegetable that are j. <lb />
rooked or Keep <lb />
. shod t <lb />
this infection. <lb />
An <lb />
not cost one cent. The dates and places that <lb />
Dispensaries will be but W six weeks. Each one open but one <lb />
that nearly one-half of the people of all ages have <lb />
this disease. You are probably among the half that have it. Come <lb />
and find out anyway. <lb />
man or <lb />
be about ten years of age. <lb />
suffering with this disease complains with <lb />
r joint pains in elbows shoulder knee. <lb />
. ,, out become short of breath on the slightest ex- <lb />
S and an attitude of frequently attracts the at- <lb />
of the observer. . <lb />
children either take no part in games at school or if <lb />
little enthusiasm is manifested. <lb />
cases children Buffering with medium or severe cases <lb />
make poor progress in <lb />
.,.,,.,. others the <lb />
C h k they are exhausted <lb />
keep up tin frequently <lb />
, nervous breakdown or having to give up their college work <lb />
in the firs, or second year on account poor health. . <lb />
Palpitation of the heart and indigestion with night terrors <lb />
inched or abnormal appetite <lb />
for . paper, lead pencils, wood, bark, salt grounds <lb />
,,.;,, thread is frequently observed . medium and seven <lb />
Weakness, paleness, nervousness, nigh, blindness defective <lb />
with diseased throats -an be explained by the Wood he- <lb />
c thin. That is. instead of OUT <lb />
,,.,. of red this reduce <lb />
same down to or sonic times as low <lb />
normal. The f-m to T <lb />
means, that the or won.,., boy or girl, b <lb />
to W per cent, of air and nourishment to give them <lb />
and to growth and development of the youth <lb />
blood which carries nourishment to every part of the .; <lb />
our blood which keeps the disease germs from overpowering our <lb />
tin <lb />
vent <lb />
The with the footnotes give a picture of the infection <lb />
hookworm. The cause, mode of infection and results, <lb />
cits inserted here tell even a more wonderful story. The cause <lb />
of this and other infections lie- in the use. f open -loses or no <lb />
closets at all. Whether have any ailments or not come to <lb />
the dispensaries and be examined. It wont cos, you anything and <lb />
., better for it. Build sanitary closets on your <lb />
and go barefooted for a year and the worms will <lb />
out in the soil if your neighbor doesn't bring them to you. <lb />
hi,,, to take treatment and to use sanitary closets and we Will <lb />
soon be rid of this scourge. . <lb />
Friends have acted for you and Drought this J to <lb />
now act for yourself and accept it before It is too late. <lb />
Full of pathos, full of interest, is the scene at the hookworm <lb />
dispensaries. One never realizes the number of children and eve, <lb />
men whose lives have been blighted, whose minds and bodies <lb />
been stunted by this miserable disease, until he sees the number <lb />
who come eagerly and hopefully to the Doctor to <lb />
treatment. They come in large numbers, boys and girls of <lb />
who have the appearance of years. Their colorless, lite- <lb />
loss, unambitious. Hoping against hope, they come for something <lb />
will bring life into their limbs, red blood into their veins, and <lb />
strength to their bodies. Does any one doubt this Let Inn, spend <lb />
the day at the dispensary or even pay it a short <lb />
a good sign that our people have made haste to take ad- <lb />
vantage of the treatment. It is good that there are so few <lb />
so few who are It is true, that there are some <lb />
who have the same attitude of the old farmer who went to <lb />
for the firs, time. He was an extreme and Ms <lb />
,,,,, v ,,,,., almost more shocks than it could <lb />
saw so things that were strange and the existence of which <lb />
be had always doubted that when he saw the giraffe he <lb />
dumb with the consciousness that there was such a . It- <lb />
walked around the. animal and . an awed tone <lb />
,, no such a But these are . a small y f h. <lb />
dispensaries have patients than they can handle. <lb />
did results have already been obtained, home of It <lb />
received benefits that were never dreamed of. Boys, who Ml <lb />
frames and devoid of energy, have been unable to work at <lb />
H. have bean enabled to do a man's work and feel as new beings <lb />
Democrat, Clinton, N. C. <lb />
Their <lb />
ant <lb />
AND GETS HIS SHARE OF THE FEES <lb />
What Tee farmer lifts <lb />
Money Never <lb />
Paid Back m The <lb />
my Clyde H. <lb />
WASHINGTON, Oct. IS.-President <lb />
j- la demanding to know great <lb />
what single case <lb />
, m of trade which <lb />
to be condemned could no, he <lb />
ed the Supreme courts <lb />
;, , of the law <lb />
I, the Oil and tobacco trust <lb />
, . There are who care to <lb />
with the president <lb />
average man mat the trusts <lb />
d be U govern- <lb />
would Bet om in good faith to <lb />
reach them. <lb />
vital whether <lb />
could be reached. The real <lb />
. W I, that <lb />
a single guilty trust magnate has <lb />
i gent to Jail, or even called to <lb />
justice The answer Is <lb />
the government does scad <lb />
, . . magnates to tail nor control <lb />
the. trusts the trusts control <lb />
, Republican machine, <lb />
. ,; tor fourteen years the <lb />
machine. In recognition <lb />
, . fund donations and outer <lb />
favors, has permitted special <lb />
. name the man to be in charge <lb />
l the presenting machinery the <lb />
. <lb />
XI present attorney genera <lb />
Taft Is traveling <lb />
making political <lb />
bureau in <lb />
la working overtime sending <lb />
. , , to the <lb />
, the president's i <lb />
frank. On the upper left hand corner <lb />
the Envelopes In which these <lb />
mailed is the<lb />
tor private use, <lb />
Not only has Postmaster <lb />
Hitchcock let down the bars <lb />
In this the white house <lb />
virtually been turned into a <lb />
headquarters. Clerks are busy <lb />
sending out advance copies of speech- <lb />
school This <lb />
THE <lb />
the <lb />
.------ <lb />
delivered and yet to be delivered <lb />
the president, while others see u- <lb />
,.,. various press bureaus are <lb />
supplied with sons of literature <lb />
designed to help the president In <lb />
. for <lb />
Three Million Short. <lb />
it has lost been discovered that <lb />
Washington navy yard is upwards <lb />
three million dollars short In Its <lb />
accounts. As yet. nobody has been <lb />
, of Baling anything, and tie <lb />
. g explained on the ground <lb />
that the book to system is at <lb />
fault This system, or lack of It, has <lb />
.; under one Republican <lb />
after another, and ye, <lb />
so pleases the Republicans as to <lb />
,,,,, to ridicule the Democrats tor <lb />
putting into operation a series of In- <lb />
designed to uncover, <lb />
remedy, such little matters as <lb />
million dollar <lb />
One Frightened Trust. <lb />
Chairman Hen Johnson, of the <lb />
district committee of congress. <lb />
baa discovered that the District of <lb />
Columbia once borrowed twenty-one <lb />
million dollars from the government,, <lb />
and forgo, to pay it back. He now <lb />
proposes to collect this debt. In <lb />
the Washington real es- <lb />
trust is in In the <lb />
.,,. B, attorney general is capital the government nays <lb />
r whose last act half of the city expenses, hem. <lb />
I,,. ; Si of -he govern-are low. <lb />
r , a i. by the sugar are higher any other <lb />
a movement was started of the size In the country. <lb />
to bring about a congressional <lb />
. ; f the sugar trust. Mr. <lb />
headed it oB by having <lb />
President Taft sand a message <lb />
congress advising against the <lb />
on the ground that it might <lb />
-j, I to the men higher up <lb />
otherwise the <lb />
the trust <lb />
admitted having f <lb />
the <lb />
lining it <lb />
covered, not a single one of the trust <lb />
magnates into whose pockets the <lb />
would have gone had not the <lb />
theft been discovered, was called to, <lb />
;.,. bar of justice, much less pun- <lb />
Mr. permitted an <lb />
underlying secretary and a few dock <lb />
alone stand the vengeance <lb />
the law. When American sugar <lb />
rests purchased vast tracts of <lb />
sugar lands in the in <lb />
violation of -he law, Mr. <lb />
again came to the rescue an <lb />
upholding the sale. , the men <lb />
Mr is now posing the Fair to see <lb />
the great trust buster. Ho work carried on <lb />
, he will drive the trusts out of J- , the <lb />
and some of the trusts that will be thrown <lb />
take his threat, Bu , ,,., , time during <lb />
of attorney genera ,,,, D, a <lb />
to not one that gives the people aw <lb />
As For <lb />
lag Next <lb />
The chair announced the following <lb />
New churches, A. <lb />
. j. W. W. S. <lb />
W. H B. J. P. <lb />
place and preacher tar next meeting, <lb />
D P Putnam, P. R. <lb />
S. a. Ward. u. C. Josey. J. <lb />
A. J. 1- Harris. <lb />
. order of business was <lb />
to ; E. speak on <lb />
Meredith College the Urns tor Sun- <lb />
day school report In the <lb />
Adjourned with prayer by I. w <lb />
Rose. <lb />
reconvened at <lb />
o'clock. i were <lb />
conducted by N. P. The <lb />
. of business was I <lb />
ha, general education and Sunday <lb />
, placed on the program. <lb />
K. c. Andrews I <lb />
the Pitt County <lb />
Teat i convened In the <lb />
auditorium i u Greenville graded <lb />
building at o'clock and <lb />
called to order by President <lb />
Smith. <lb />
. devotional n s were con- <lb />
i by P. C. Nye. <lb />
A was appointed by <lb />
. in to nominate officers for the <lb />
. consisting of the I <lb />
Prof. P. C. Nye, and M <lb />
and Annie Pi <lb />
T i following officers the year <lb />
, era recommended by the committee <lb />
unanimously <lb />
C. W. Wilson, <lb />
Prof. H. 1- Koonce, rice president. <lb />
Ml a Lucy Ross, secretary. <lb />
H t sec- <lb />
. f. c. Eye, n i <lb />
of he <lb />
course. <lb />
Dr. C. s. who is <lb />
the bookworm dispensaries <lb />
port on The report I present and made <lb />
by H. C. Andrews and . , teach <lb />
,. i. Betts. the duty of having the par- <lb />
,,, have their children examined <lb />
and treated for the hookworm dis- <lb />
ease. Dispensaries will be <lb />
The decided to have a <lb />
on the Biblical Recorder In- <lb />
lead of on and <lb />
Children, to be presented with the <lb />
orphanage, Foreign Mission Journal <lb />
with foreign missions, the home Held <lb />
with home business. The report on <lb />
periodicals was adopted. <lb />
T. U Vernon presented the r <lb />
on <lb />
ii presented the themselves <lb />
High <lb />
on <lb />
and more particularly <lb />
on the endowment of Meredith Col- <lb />
The association decided to <lb />
defer action until some favorable <lb />
tune on Thursday, to be recommend- <lb />
ed by the committee on order of <lb />
G. W. May presented tin report on<lb />
For Hookworm <lb />
ease at the state Fair. <lb />
People the State Fair will <lb />
I have an opportunity to know just <lb />
what a hookworm dispensary IS, as <lb />
will be at the Fair a model <lb />
Hookworm victims. hooK- <lb />
government and hookworm eggs will be o <lb />
returning it after the crime was dis- <lb />
A physician will make <lb />
tree examinations and to all who are <lb />
infected, administer free treatment <lb />
laboratory men will be there Witt <lb />
.,.,. and make <lb />
tor all who <lb />
sent specimens for examinations. <lb />
As nineteen eastern counties have <lb />
provision for these dispensaries <lb />
,,. free treatment of all <lb />
who are infected, and inasmuch as a <lb />
large number of other counties are <lb />
seriously considering opening the <lb />
it will be a matte. <lb />
within reach the different <lb />
where this treatment will <lb />
given absolutely tree charge. <lb />
Prof. R. Wright was next Intro- <lb />
He spoke OB the special <lb />
courses the Training school had <lb />
to give those who wished U <lb />
themselves of, such as follow <lb />
Pedagogy, Primary Methods. Public <lb />
G B. spoke on j Music. Hygiene and <lb />
and more particularly Manual Training. <lb />
will be given on each Saturday with <lb />
out charge. <lb />
Howell's Primer and Reed's Read- <lb />
era will be used this year in the pub <lb />
lie schools. <lb />
The attendance was good. The <lb />
prospects for n tine year were never <lb />
The The report, was ,.,.,. <lb />
by Q. W. May and <lb />
bald Johnson. It was decided to take <lb />
collection for the orphanage at the <lb />
night service. <lb />
Adjourned with prayer v, u. <lb />
. <lb />
Sight. <lb />
The association at <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
X H Shepherd conducted <lb />
exercises. H. R. of, <lb />
,. M. K. Church offered prayer. <lb />
pr. W. H. Smith of the Foreign <lb />
Mission Hoard was recognized <lb />
G. J. presented the report <lb />
roe <lb />
and <lb />
Capital Stock, <lb />
Appointed the United States; Government <lb />
Depository for <lb />
POSTAL SAVINGS BANK <lb />
Of the Greenville Post Office <lb />
North State Agricultural Fair <lb />
Raleigh, N. C. <lb />
to 1st. <lb />
For this imported occasion the <lb />
Coast Line <lb />
. i of <lb />
C, Reporter.<lb />
r. <lb />
from the <lb />
practically all other point. <lb />
be <lb />
on its line in North Carolina to R return- <lb />
sale for all train, from Oct. than Oct. <lb />
,., to reach . f<lb />
t schedules and , <lb />
WARD. Greenville. <lb />
GOBS to <lb />
South Carolina. <lb />
Mr. V. C. Ware has u <lb />
the Christian <lb />
Church for the past year, has had <lb />
I unanimous call from the church <lb />
lG South Carolina, and has <lb />
accepted. Greenwood Is a town <lb />
people, in the Piedmont<lb />
Wilmington, N. C. <lb />
On The report, <lb />
was discussed by C J. <lb />
bald and G. W. May and <lb />
adopted. <lb />
W O Biggs presented the report <lb />
on The report <lb />
section of Carolina. <lb />
this side of Atlanta. Ga. I Is a fine <lb />
City in B most healthful c <lb />
mate. <lb />
The pas. year has been great <lb />
prosperity in material advantages <lb />
SEE THAT <lb />
YOUR <lb />
on The report church here, <lb />
was discussed by C. M. Rock and W. I Ml, pas- <lb />
H Smith and was adopted. <lb />
A collection was taken for the or- <lb />
which was paid over to Ar- <lb />
Johnson. <lb />
Mr. Finch, of Rocky Mount, ad- <lb />
dressed the association on Men <lb />
and Religion Forward Movement <lb />
I, has raised during Mr. Ware's pas <lb />
about in all depart- <lb />
The indebtedness on the <lb />
building was raised In full, building <lb />
painted and guttered, with some val- <lb />
interior Improvements added, <lb />
all missionary and benevolent spoor <lb />
Religion Forward Movement. ,,.,. Sunday school <lb />
The committee on time and place ,.,,,. Rank <lb />
offered its report, of Carolina. <lb />
Weldon as the place. Tuesday after <lb />
to hope for enforcement the <lb />
law against criminal trusts <lb />
guilty trust magnates. The first <lb />
thins Mr. did upon <lb />
office was drop important <lb />
member, of the beef -rust <lb />
explanation was that he t <lb />
believe the trust officials to. <lb />
do wrong. . <lb />
The extent of Wall streets great <lb />
fear of Mr. as a prose- <lb />
of trust magnates is indicated <lb />
in the remark of J. P. Morgan, who. <lb />
when he was asked by a newspaper <lb />
man what he thought of the attorney <lb />
general's anti-trust speech which had <lb />
bean delivered more than a week <lb />
previous, don't think any- <lb />
about It; because havens <lb />
read <lb />
What The Farmer <lb />
B F president of the <lb />
Frisco railroad, has had a table of <lb />
figures prepared, showing how much <lb />
the farmer gets for products sold in <lb />
New York In one year, and how much <lb />
New York consumer pays for <lb />
those same products. Here are the <lb />
Consumer <lb />
Gets. Pays- <lb />
28.750,000<lb />
0.125.000 <lb />
8.212.000 <lb />
48,880.000<lb />
As kind of an he <lb />
of an <lb />
it will attract a good deal of at <lb />
second Sunday In October as <lb />
time. The report was adopted. <lb />
Adjourned with prayer by W. <lb />
News. <lb />
the <lb />
H. <lb />
DEATH V. f. <lb />
Bethel <lb />
An<lb />
Rice . <lb />
Cabbage . <lb />
Onions . <lb />
Milk . <lb />
Potatoes <lb />
Meat a n d <lb />
Poultry <lb />
THIS <lb />
M what ion Owe en <lb />
Is <lb />
There are a great many people <lb />
treating The <lb />
they think to pay <lb />
paying, and it is i <lb />
being needed to meet <lb />
Friends, look at the date ate, your <lb />
on the paper and come to J <lb />
us or send in a payment. Do not <lb />
make us go to the further expense <lb />
of mailing you a statement when you <lb />
can look at the date and tell what <lb />
you owe. U there is any mistake in <lb />
the date come call our attention to it <lb />
and it will be corrected. It takes a <lb />
lot of money to run this paper, and <lb />
there la no way to get it except from <lb />
those who owe It. So friends do not <lb />
us waiting, but come and do <lb />
your part toward helping the paper <lb />
improve. <lb />
ADDITIONS. <lb />
In <lb />
Charts. <lb />
A telephone message to The Re- <lb />
401,000.000 Hector from tolls of <lb />
cents dollar's h. ed h th Me <lb />
The , ., ., all in. <lb />
rag-as-. <lb />
Passes Away. <lb />
Sunday afternoon in Bethel, Mrs. F. <lb />
C. James. She was <lb />
oW and had been In bad health <lb />
expected. She was born and reared <lb />
Boston and after her marriage h, <lb />
Le years ago. came as <lb />
I Pitt county and has <lb />
was B lovely Christian char- <lb />
and had been a cons <lb />
member the Methodist church <lb />
good many years. Next to her church <lb />
she loved the work of the W. <lb />
n of which she was a charter <lb />
her. and If all of our women were as <lb />
devoted to the cause <lb />
as Mrs. James It would hardly be <lb />
to have prohibition <lb />
All Bethel will feel keenly the loss <lb />
, is devoted wife, this Christian <lb />
woman, this kind and generous <lb />
buried this <lb />
The aged and <lb />
the of the whole com- <lb />
i this, the saddest and the <lb />
hour hi. We. and may he <lb />
yet loan, to trust in who had <lb />
the guiding star of her We. <lb />
.,,. pall-bearer, were I M. M <lb />
Hammond, Messrs. Staton, s. <lb />
m. Jonas, J. u. Bunting. H. . <lb />
S T. Carson. B. V. W- <lb />
Dr. M. P. Manning, II. u <lb />
Frank <lb />
Thomas. J. J. B. ear- <lb />
J- <lb />
Mr. Ware fully to leave <lb />
with no outstanding <lb />
whatever. <lb />
The charge to which Mr. Ware goes <lb />
is an important one. and his many <lb />
friends here wish him continued <lb />
in his great calling. He Will <lb />
leave next Wednesday or Thursday <lb />
and his farewell sermons will he <lb />
preached tomorrow. <lb />
Chesapeake <lb />
To Baltimore <lb />
. Perfect Dining Service. All Out- <lb />
F- R. St Norfolk. V. <lb />
Will Have Meet- <lb />
iii <lb />
has had no more faith- <lb />
earnest and consecrated preach, r <lb />
than Rev. C. M. Bock. of Me- <lb />
church, and his <lb />
sermons cannot fa, <lb />
the Scripture are to he believed. <lb />
being productive of much advance- <lb />
Next to her Church Hosier's kingdom in this <lb />
Community. Since he came to this <lb />
church las. spring much good and <lb />
I religious uplift has already been <lb />
noted. His sermons are such as <lb />
peal strongly for the better life, or <lb />
purity in conduct, and for upright- <lb />
and honesty In dealing one with <lb />
another. Such cannot be <lb />
without benefit. <lb />
There are not many Sundays <lb />
pass without Mr. Rock receiving <lb />
members Into th church. On the <lb />
Sunday morning two were ad- <lb />
by letter and one was <lb />
as a candidate for baptism, and at <lb />
the night service there was one pro- <lb />
Mr. Book announced that <lb />
R aeries meetings will <lb />
begin the Sunday in November. <lb />
lot Ce. <lb />
Mr. J. A. formerly o <lb />
Wilmington, baa located here <lb />
and <lb />
office and b. <lb />
Norfolk Southern depot. See ad <lb />
COTTON INSURANCE <lb />
holding cotton for higher prices <lb />
Why Not let MOSELEY BROS, pro- <lb />
you with an <lb />
INSURANCE POLICY <lb />
Royster stock and Powders <lb />
by <lb />
L. P. ROYSTER, OXFORD, N. C. <lb />
best Stock and Poultry Powder used- <lb />
results. Guaranteed cholera cure for hog. Sold by <lb />
J. W. Bryan, Greenville, and other <lb />
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb />
Pulley Bowen <lb />
t-------- <lb />
down a golden harvest <lb />
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb />
formerly . <lb />
located lure to . j D f the <lb />
ad stone business. Bk D J Daily n <lb />
he near t. <lb />
Advertise in it for<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018169_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
LAND SALE. <lb />
By virtue of the power contained <lb />
In a certain mortgage deed from Jno. <lb />
A. Ricks and wife. H. Kicks. <lb />
and W. H. Ricks and wife. Bessie W. <lb />
Ricks, to Joseph Rawls. dated the 18th <lb />
day of February, and registered <lb />
in Book E-8, page of the <lb />
of deeds office of Pitt county, the <lb />
undersigned will expose for sale, for <lb />
cash, before the court house door In <lb />
Greenville, N. C, on Tuesday, the <lb />
14th day of November. 1911. the fol- <lb />
lowing described tracts of land; <lb />
One tract of laud lying and being <lb />
in Greenville township, county of <lb />
Pitt, and State of North Carolina, de- <lb />
scribed as <lb />
the land of the late Win. <lb />
Whitehead, the lands of Ben. <lb />
the lands of May and others, <lb />
and being the identical Of land <lb />
known as the Teel home <lb />
place, in Greenville township and be- <lb />
the land upon which M. Ida Teel <lb />
formerly lived, and being the <lb />
cal tract of land conveyed by K. <lb />
Ida Teel to Joseph Rawls, on the 26th <lb />
day of November. as of record <lb />
appear in office of the register of <lb />
deeds of Pitt county, ill Book M-S. <lb />
page and containing acres, <lb />
more or less. <lb />
Also another tract or parcel of <lb />
land in said township and ad- <lb />
joining the lands of M. Ida Teel. <lb />
Teel, and D. May, known as a <lb />
part the Hardy land and Polly <lb />
May land in Greenville township, <lb />
on both of the Atkinson and <lb />
Clark canal, and running with the <lb />
road to a big oak; thence south with <lb />
the road leading to the Gorham place <lb />
to thence with his line <lb />
to Ida M. line; then with Ida <lb />
line to the beginning, contain- <lb />
acres, more or less, and being <lb />
the identical tract of land conveyed <lb />
by U May and wife to Ida Teel <lb />
on the 21st day of March. 1902, U <lb />
appears of record in the register Of <lb />
deed's office of Pitt county, in Hook <lb />
1-7. page <lb />
Also another tract in said county <lb />
and township, and adjoining each <lb />
the above described tracts of land. <lb />
and beginning at a stake In said Ida <lb />
line and running Steal to I <lb />
ditch; thence with said ditch to the <lb />
Atkinson and Clark canal; thence <lb />
with the canal to Ida line, Witt <lb />
her line to the beginning, containing <lb />
about one-half acre more or less, and <lb />
lying on the Atkinson and Clark ca- <lb />
and being the Identical tract of <lb />
hind conveyed by Thus. i. May <lb />
wife to Ida Teel. by deed, dated Feb- <lb />
t. 1901, as of record appears <lb />
in the register of deed's office of <lb />
county in Hook A-T. page <lb />
This the day of October, 1911. <lb />
HARRY SKINNER, Assignee <lb />
JOSEPH RAW S. Mortgagee. <lb />
lo <lb />
a certain mortgage deed executed <lb />
by Silas Yellow on July 1911, <lb />
to R. Greene, as appears of record in <lb />
Book 0-8, page of the register of <lb />
deeds office of Pin county, and by <lb />
of the powers contained in a <lb />
other <lb />
to J. B. Greene, on the D <lb />
of 1911, as appears of rec- <lb />
Book 0-9. page and by <lb />
of the powers contained in a <lb />
mortgage executed by Silas Which- , <lb />
lowly wife, Temple on <lb />
day of December, 1897, <lb />
,,, n Skinner; and by virtue of the <lb />
In the Superior court, before <lb />
Moore, clerk. <lb />
W. J. Manning and wife, <lb />
Anna E Manning, J. T. <lb />
Turner and wife. Hattie <lb />
Turner. Jasper Manning <lb />
wife. Lucy Manning, <lb />
Clyde Carson and wife. <lb />
. . Ca --on. I <lb />
Which aid, Nine i <lb />
D C <lb />
before frees th. <lb />
Superior court clerk of Pitt county tulle <lb />
executor of estate of Zeno. T. <lb />
deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb />
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment to the <lb />
and all persons having <lb />
Great stands of specimen <lb />
chrysanthemums in yellow and gold <lb />
were effectively placed. A wedding <lb />
supper In two was served in <lb />
the dining room. The picture table <lb />
claims against the said estate will Mexican drawn-work <lb />
ard and Andrew Which- <lb />
ard. <lb />
virtue of a decree of the <lb />
to u-ll court of Pitt county. <lb />
will sell before the court house door r. 1911. the undersigned com- <lb />
for cash, on the 14th will, on <lb />
onion of the day November, 1911, o'clock, <lb />
day of November, that p <lb />
mm . . . , . <lb />
St conveyed Harry Skinner and noon, expose to public sale, before <lb />
and being de- court house door In Greenville, M <lb />
bidder tor cash, the fol- <lb />
, embracing all In said lot tract or parcel<lb />
; coma within feel adjoining the lands of ft M. <lb />
of said Silas John Manning and T. J. D. <lb />
Other words, all that is intended to and being the home place <lb />
be old time is mat which lies formerly owned by R. If. Jones, and <lb />
south, commencing feet from the <lb />
house in which Silas <lb />
lowly now resides. That is from a line <lb />
well known between <lb />
two story house and What is known <lb />
as the one-story house lot. The north- <lb />
lino of these boundaries being <lb />
Clearly indicated and understood to <lb />
be feet south of the two-story <lb />
house referred to Terms cash. <lb />
HARRY SKINNER, <lb />
Mortgagee and assignee of mortgagee. <lb />
known as the Bryant land and being <lb />
the same land described in a deed <lb />
from It If. Jones to Martha F. Jones, <lb />
Silas and others, and recorded on Book <lb />
Z-ti. page ill the register's of- <lb />
in Pitt county. Said sale is to be <lb />
made for the purpose of making par- <lb />
between the tenants in com- <lb />
panics U this cause. <lb />
This the 12th day of October. 1911. <lb />
F. C. HARDING. <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
SALE. <lb />
virtue of a decree of the Super- <lb />
of Pitt County made in <lb />
Special Proceeding -No. 1692, entitled <lb />
John H. Manning, B. F. Manning, W. <lb />
S Manning el made on <lb />
the 22nd day of September, 1911, the <lb />
u on or before the day of <lb />
lobar, 1912, or mis notice will b <lb />
plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This day of October, 1911. <lb />
w. If. EVANS. <lb />
Executor of Zeno T. Evans. <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
The undersigned having this day <lb />
as executor of the will <lb />
and testament of John H. Cherry, d. <lb />
ceased, notice is hereby given to all <lb />
persons indebted to said estate to <lb />
make immediate payment to the under- <lb />
signed ex. and all persons hold- <lb />
claims against said estate are <lb />
hereby notified to tile their claim <lb />
in twelve months from the date here- <lb />
of or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. <lb />
This the 11th day of October, 1911. <lb />
J. WILLIAMS, <lb />
Executor of the last will <lb />
of John H. Cherry. <lb />
F. C. HARDING, Attorney.<lb />
ladles, possessing those rare qualities <lb />
of hes-i and heart which peculiarly <lb />
fit her for the position of reigning <lb />
queen in the new home she goes to <lb />
help <lb />
Democrat. <lb />
SALE OF REAL ESTATE. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale con- <lb />
in a certain mortgage deed, ex- <lb />
and delivered by J. W. Allen, <lb />
Jr., and Wife, Allie Allen. H. Allen <lb />
and wife, Mary P. Allen, to J. T. Al- <lb />
dated the day of February, <lb />
1909, and duly recorded in the reg- <lb />
office in Pitt county, in Hook <lb />
undersigned Commissioner will sell tin undersigned <lb />
cash, before the court house door g,, will, on Saturday, the 18th day <lb />
In Greenville on Monday. November November, 1911, o'clock, noon, <lb />
1911, the following <lb />
1.1, Mil,. I. C. and Greenville, Tenn. <lb />
Join in Marriage. <lb />
in its beauty and <lb />
in its solemnization was the mar- <lb />
of Miss Lucy Brown and <lb />
Mr. James Burton James at <lb />
o'clock Wednesday evening at the <lb />
Presbyterian church. The officiants <lb />
were Rev. John and Dr. C. <lb />
O. Gray. <lb />
The decorations of the church were <lb />
elaborate and beautiful. A large arch <lb />
over the front of the rostrum was <lb />
lands That tract of land which <lb />
, by a deed from <lb />
Maiming to Eliza <lb />
dated Oct. 16th, and re- <lb />
corded In Hook T-E page <lb />
in Township on the <lb />
U Of Swamp <lb />
ail- <lb />
the lands of the late <lb />
ion Manning. Senior, and William <lb />
. beginning at ditch In <lb />
on William Smith's line <lb />
expose to sale, before the <lb />
court house door in Greenville, to the lavishly decorated with English ivy <lb />
highest bidder, cash, the following and white chrysanthemums and hid- <lb />
NOTICE SALE OF A VALUABLE <lb />
FARM IN FALKLAND TOWNSHIP <lb />
Under and by virtue of the author- <lb />
conferred upon me by the pro- <lb />
vision certain deed of trust ex- <lb />
i by all Wile <lb />
G. Webb, late of county. <lb />
N. C. and delivered unto R. G. Alls- <lb />
brook. Trustee, which Is duly re- <lb />
corded in office of the <lb />
of Deeds for Pitt County in Hook----- <lb />
page------. I shall on Monday the <lb />
20th day November, 1911, between <lb />
the hours of in. and I o'clock p. m <lb />
on the premises in Falkland Town- <lb />
ship, Pitt County, North Carolina, ex- <lb />
pose to public sale to the highest <lb />
bidder for cash, all that certain tract <lb />
of land situated in said county <lb />
Pitt and in Falkland Township, ad- <lb />
joining the lands of J. A. Dupree, the <lb />
Swain land and B. P. Pill and de- <lb />
scribed as follows, viz. <lb />
at an ash on Tar River bank and <lb />
running poles to B. Du- <lb />
corner, then south east <lb />
poles to a branch, thence down said <lb />
Branch to and Pitt's corm P, <lb />
a little below the old wen <lb />
north 1-2 east poles to a stake <lb />
in the corner of line, then <lb />
north poles to the River, <lb />
then up the various courses of the <lb />
river to the beginning, containing <lb />
1-2 acres, more or it being <lb />
the land bequeathed to R. W. Dupree <lb />
by his father, Jas. Dupree. and <lb />
the foregoing description is intended <lb />
to cover and convey all the land <lb />
owned by J. H. Dupree at the time <lb />
of his <lb />
Terms of Cash. Title <lb />
teed. <lb />
A fine farm located in a splendid <lb />
section, with good school nearby. <lb />
For further information, apply to the <lb />
undersigned. <lb />
This the 14th day of October, 1911. <lb />
R. G. Trustee.<lb />
described tract or parcel of land, to- <lb />
Lying and being In Pitt, county, <lb />
North Carolina, and in Greenville <lb />
township, situated on the south side <lb />
of Tar river, adjoining the lands <lb />
D. H. Alien, John Wiley <lb />
Brown, M. Williams, Robert <lb />
and Leon and being the <lb />
hand on which J. W. Allen and wife <lb />
near s sweet gum. said Smiths now reside, containing about acres <lb />
;. end running with Smiths I more u. <lb />
line west 1-2 poles to a, u, ,,.,. of October, 1911, <lb />
thence south east T T ALLEN, Mortgagee. <lb />
, , stake; thence north 1-2 west F c Attorney. <lb />
poles to the first mentioned ditch <lb />
at a bridge; thence with said ditch <lb />
to the acres <lb />
,., . or less, being the place <lb />
where Luke lived at the <lb />
bit death. <lb />
Said land being sold for partition <lb />
This Oct. 2nd 1911. <lb />
J. B. JAMES, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
T SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
County. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
North C County. <lb />
In the Superior Court, before D. C. <lb />
Mo ii-,. clerk. <lb />
Ha . Skinner, <lb />
tor mis on of <lb />
Grin es. <lb />
man Lit- <lb />
tie and n lie, Henrietta <lb />
Little, Ellison. Ed. <lb />
.-., Grimes and l <lb />
II ;. lines, Rom- <lb />
in and Julia Tel- I <lb />
fair, and all known an I <lb />
Ira of Ml <lb />
eased. <lb />
d named above, and <lb />
all known and unknown heirs of Riley <lb />
Grimes, deceased, are hereby notified <lb />
NO <lb />
It. Higgs <lb />
Nathan <lb />
Walter <lb />
Waller Rodgers. <lb />
E. It. Higgs <lb />
vs. <lb />
rs, <lb />
b and <lb />
Rodgers <lb />
named, will take notice that <lb />
special proceeding entitled as above <lb />
in,, been commenced In the superior <lb />
court of Pitt county to partition tIn- <lb />
land described In the petition filed <lb />
in the office of the clerk of said conn <lb />
And defendant will further take <lb />
notice he is required to appear <lb />
on or before the day of <lb />
1911, to answer the petition Bled <lb />
the clerk of this court de- <lb />
to the same in said special pro- <lb />
Inga or the plaintiff will apply to <lb />
the court tor the relief demanded in <lb />
Id petition. <lb />
lie day of October, 1911. <lb />
C. MOORE. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
den among the green were many <lb />
white electric lights. At the center <lb />
of the arch was hung a large bell <lb />
made of white chrysanthemums, <lb />
by yellow lights. A can- <lb />
of white and yellow <lb />
mums and ivy connected this with a <lb />
smaller arch at the rear of the <lb />
whose decorations were y-l- <lb />
low chrysanthemums, Ivy and <lb />
low lights. White tapers were in the <lb />
cathedral candelabra on each side, <lb />
their white lights starring the green. <lb />
The embankment of palms and ferns <lb />
formed an exquisite background for <lb />
the grouped bridal party. The wad- <lb />
ding music wag most artistic. <lb />
Mr, Nelson, of Knoxville, organist, <lb />
and Mr. Jackson, of Johnson City. <lb />
wedding cake, bearing on top a flow- <lb />
automobile driven by Cupid <lb />
and in Which were seated a tiny bride <lb />
and groom. Surrounding this were <lb />
, candlesticks burning white <lb />
tapers under yellow shades. Trailing <lb />
gracefully over the table were gar- <lb />
lands of The large yellow <lb />
was artistically decorated <lb />
with a wreath of yellow <lb />
mums and garlands of asparagus <lb />
ferns were hung from the ceiling. <lb />
Misses and Helen <lb />
served confections from <lb />
Silver receptacles. Misses Eunice <lb />
and Kate dispensed <lb />
a refreshing punch during the even- <lb />
Mrs. Brown, the bride's mother, <lb />
wore a handsome white satin toilette <lb />
trimmed with fringe. Mrs. <lb />
Jam.-s, mother of the groom, wore an <lb />
exquisite gray reception toilette. <lb />
Mrs. Drown was assisted in entertain- <lb />
by Mrs. Dana Harmon, Mrs. C. C. <lb />
Smith, Mrs. Charles W. Allen, Mrs. <lb />
Thomas D. and Mrs. Oscar <lb />
M. Hugger. In upstairs rooms was <lb />
shown a large and costly collection <lb />
of gifts. The bride's parents <lb />
a grand piano and the groom's <lb />
parents a chest of silver. A gorgeous <lb />
tea set was a gift from Mr. <lb />
Charles of Panama. After a <lb />
wedding journey the young people, <lb />
in whose marriage much affectionate <lb />
interest centers, will make their home <lb />
in Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Among the out-of-town guests were <lb />
Mi. and Mrs. F. G. James, of Green- <lb />
ville, C; Miss Mary C. Goodwin <lb />
Pa.; Mrs. L. C. <lb />
and daughter, Miss Dorothy of <lb />
Bristol, Mr. Jay Milligan, of <lb />
Mr. Is the junior member of <lb />
the law of f. G. James Son, <lb />
Of Greenville, N. C. He graduated <lb />
from the literary department of the <lb />
North Carolina University with the <lb />
class of 1907 and the following year <lb />
he took the law course, graduating <lb />
with high honors, was licensed th <lb />
same year and entered Immediately <lb />
upon practice of his profession. <lb />
While In Mr. James took all <lb />
active interest in athletics, four <lb />
years be was a member of <lb />
baseball team mid served <lb />
the last year as Its captain, <lb />
is a young man of scholarly attain- <lb />
is a favorite In business and <lb />
Is The World Grow In Better <lb />
Many things go to prove that it is. <lb />
The way thousands are trying to help <lb />
other is proof. Among them Is Mrs. <lb />
W. W. Gould, of Pittsfield, N H. <lb />
Finding good health by taking <lb />
Hitters, she now advises <lb />
sufferer-, everywhere, to take them. <lb />
years I suffered with stomach <lb />
and kidney she writes, <lb />
medicine I used failed till I took <lb />
Electric Bitters. But this great rem- <lb />
helped They'll <lb />
help any woman. They're the best <lb />
tonic and finest liver and kidney rem- <lb />
that's made. Try them. You'll <lb />
see. cents all druggists. <lb />
Taken <lb />
I have taken up one male hog. <lb />
black and white spotted, weight about <lb />
pounds, marked silt in left ear, <lb />
round hole in right. Owner can get <lb />
same by proving ownership and <lb />
charges. <lb />
ELIJAH CHANCE, <lb />
R F. D. No. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
is due to a disorder, ii <lb />
condition of the stomach. <lb />
Tablets are essentially a <lb />
medicine, intended especially to <lb />
Mt on that organ; to cleanse it. <lb />
strengthen It. tone and invigorate it, <lb />
to regulate the liver and to banish <lb />
positively and effectually <lb />
For sale by all dealers. <lb />
bare taken up one light colored <lb />
Jersey cow, about five years old. in <lb />
good flesh. Marked slit and under- <lb />
hit in left ear and crop in right ear. <lb />
Owner can get same, by proving <lb />
Ownership and paying charges. <lb />
W. H. HARRINGTON, <lb />
Oct. 1911. <lb />
of Ills native state. <lb />
The bride is the eldest daughter of <lb />
Mr. Mrs. Henry It. of this sale by all dialers. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
the plait tiff in the above case <lb />
has tiled petition to sell 8-4 North County, <lb />
acres land, of which the late Riley W. H. Harrington <lb />
Grimes died for assets s- <lb />
This is to notify said defendants to t A. <lb />
before Wednesday, De- court of Pitt county, in the above en-heft aisle. <lb />
appear before D. C. Moore, clerk <lb />
court county. In Green- <lb />
ville, on or <lb />
comber 15th. to file an answer to <lb />
the said petition, else judgment on <lb />
that day will be entered ordering <lb />
said laud to be sold for assets. <lb />
This the day of October. 1911, <lb />
D, C. MOORE, Clerk. <lb />
Superior court of Pitt county, <lb />
virtue of an execution directed. <lb />
u the undersigned from the Superior Mrs. R. of Greenville, <lb />
violinist, played nuptial music, <lb />
using selections from Wagner, throughout his section <lb />
v Serenade during the prayer, <lb />
the bride and groom kneeling on <lb />
white satin cushions. The bride, who <lb />
was given in marriage by her r, <lb />
Mr. Henry was very beau- <lb />
In an costume of ivory <lb />
satin combined with <lb />
lace. The court train was I <lb />
in satin and lace, and sprays of- <lb />
blossoms caught the draped <lb />
and the veil of filmy tulle <lb />
exquisite duchess lace. Her <lb />
bouquet was orchids, valley <lb />
and bride's roses, with a show- <lb />
of Chiffon ribbon and embroidered <lb />
tulle. The bride's sister, Miss <lb />
Brown, who served as maid of honor, <lb />
entered alone, followed by the <lb />
of honor, Mrs. J. R. Brown, of <lb />
S- Louis, down the right aisle, and <lb />
at <lb />
Don't trifle with a cold is good I I- <lb />
for prudent men and women. Ii <lb />
may be vital case of a child. There <lb />
Is nothing than Chamberlain's <lb />
Cough Remedy for coughs and colds <lb />
ill children. It Is safe and sure, t <lb />
sale by all dealers. <lb />
The plaster A piece of flan- <lb />
dampened with Chamberlain's <lb />
Liniment and hound on over <lb />
parts is superior to a plaster Hid <lb />
only one-tenth as much <lb />
Don't Judge A Manure <lb />
Spreader By Looks <lb />
PUBLIC SALE OF VALUABLE LAND <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the <lb />
court of Pitt county, made <lb />
t, 1911. In a certain special <lb />
proceeding therein pending, entitled <lb />
Warren and versus O. <lb />
A. and numbered as case <lb />
No. 1680, we will, on Monday, No- <lb />
1911. at o'clock, m be- <lb />
fore the court house door in Green- <lb />
ville, sell at public sale, to the high- <lb />
est bidder, that certain tract or par- <lb />
of land in the county of Pitt, on <lb />
the north aide of Tar river, adjoining <lb />
the lands of J. A. Pollard, J. C Ty- <lb />
son and others, containing about TO <lb />
acres, lying on the north side of the <lb />
canal, It being the land devised by <lb />
the late Benjamin Pollard in his last <lb />
will and testament to his grandson. <lb />
Joseph A. Lewis, and his children. <lb />
Terms of Cash. <lb />
This the 30th day of September, <lb />
1911. <lb />
ALEX L. BLOW, <lb />
J. B. JAMES, <lb />
Commissioners. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
By virtue of power and author- <lb />
contained in a decree of the <lb />
court Pitt county, in a <lb />
proceeding, entitled J. Y. <lb />
son and others, ex I will on <lb />
Saturday, Oct. II, 1911, at m sell <lb />
at public auction, for cash, at the <lb />
court house door In Pitt county, a <lb />
certain tract or parcel of land, situate <lb />
in township, being the land <lb />
conveyed to Patsy Ann Anderson by <lb />
Joseph Pollard, by deed, recorded in <lb />
Book pages and ti. of the Pitt <lb />
county registry, and therein <lb />
ed as at a water <lb />
oak stump and running north east <lb />
poles to a white oak stump at <lb />
corner of ditch; thence north east <lb />
poles to gale post In old lane; <lb />
thence north west poles to a <lb />
stake in F. Spain's line; thence <lb />
due west poles to oak stump; <lb />
thence south west poles to gum <lb />
swamp; thence with Bynum <lb />
Hue to the beginning, containing <lb />
acres, more or Said laud known <lb />
as Anderson land. <lb />
This September 1911. <lb />
W. O HOWARD, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
titled action, I will, Monday, the <lb />
day of November, 1911, at o'clock <lb />
p. m., at the court house door, in <lb />
the county of Pitt, sell to the highest <lb />
bidder, tor cash, to satisfy said ex- <lb />
all the right, title and inter- <lb />
est of the said E. A. Kline, in and <lb />
to the following described personal <lb />
property, <lb />
Two large iron pile hammers, and <lb />
one pile hammer cap. This sale will <lb />
be made for the purpose of satisfying <lb />
said execution. <lb />
This the 9th day of October. 1911. <lb />
S. I. DUDLEY, <lb />
Sheriff Pitt County.<lb />
groomsmen <lb />
The brides maids and <lb />
Miss Edith <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Letters of administration, with the <lb />
will annexed, on the estate of Sarah <lb />
C. Hanrahan, deceased, having this <lb />
day been Issued to me by the clerk <lb />
of the Superior court of Pitt county, <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persona <lb />
holding claims against said estate to <lb />
present them to me, duly <lb />
for payment on or before the <lb />
23rd day of September, 1912, or this <lb />
notice will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. All persons Indebted to <lb />
said estate are requested to make <lb />
mediate payment to me. <lb />
This the 22nd day of September, <lb />
1911. <lb />
M. L WORTHINGTON, <lb />
Administratrix, with the will annexed, <lb />
of Sarah C. deceased. <lb />
Jams Blow, Attorneys.<lb />
Mr. farmer <lb />
The report circulated through your <lb />
county that will not run my wheat <lb />
mill next year Is false. I will con- <lb />
to run and wheat In <lb />
size lots for my customer and give <lb />
them a good article of flour. Thank- <lb />
you tor past business <lb />
to have a continuance, I am. <lb />
Very respectfully, <lb />
JONATHAN HAVENS. <lb />
Ill <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having qualified before the <lb />
court clerk of Pitt county as <lb />
administrator of estate of Dr. O. <lb />
K Thigpen. deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
given to all persons Indebted to the <lb />
estate to make Immediate payment <lb />
to the undersigned; and all persons <lb />
having claims against the said estate <lb />
are notified that they must present <lb />
the same lo the undersigned for <lb />
on or before 18th of <lb />
September, 1912, or this notice will <lb />
be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
ilia 18th day of September, 1911. <lb />
ROBERT STATON, <lb />
Administrator of O. f Thigpen <lb />
J. Everett, <lb />
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. <lb />
Having this day qualified as ad- <lb />
of the of R. C. <lb />
White, deceased, late of the county <lb />
of Pitt, North this is to <lb />
notify all persona having claims <lb />
against estate to present them <lb />
to the undersigned for payment on or <lb />
before the 12th day of October. 1912, <lb />
or this notice will be plead In bar of <lb />
recovery. All persons Indebted to <lb />
said estate will please make <lb />
settlement. <lb />
October 11th, <lb />
F. M. <lb />
Administrator of the estate of R. C. <lb />
White. Deceased.<lb />
of with Mr. Stan- <lb />
of Murfreesboro, N. C, <lb />
right aisle; Miss Yeager, of <lb />
with Mr. Stable Linn, of <lb />
Salisbury, N. C, left aisle; Miss <lb />
Robinson, of Greenville, <lb />
with Mr. Charlie of <lb />
N. right aisle; Miss Mary <lb />
of Greenville, with Mr. <lb />
James Gray, Jr., of <lb />
N. C, left aisle; Miss Darwin, <lb />
of Athens, Ga., with Mr. Charles P. <lb />
of St. Louis, Mo., right aisle; <lb />
Miss Louise Bahnson, of <lb />
Salem, N. C, with Mr. Frank Skinner, <lb />
New York, left aisle. Mr. Charles <lb />
James, of Greenville, N. C, was best <lb />
man. The ushers were Messrs. Fred <lb />
and Joe Hacker, of Knox- <lb />
Thomas J. Moore, of <lb />
N. and R. F. Brown, of <lb />
Miss Brown, the maid of hon- <lb />
or, was lovely In white satin, trim- <lb />
med in crystals and pearls. Her hair <lb />
ornaments were pearls and an <lb />
She carried white <lb />
mums. <lb />
The matrons of honor wore their <lb />
beautiful wedding gowns, of white <lb />
lace over satin, and carried golden <lb />
chrysanthemums. <lb />
The maids wore satin <lb />
gowns, with over of princess <lb />
lace and gold fringe. Their <lb />
were fashioned of golden <lb />
Their hair dress <lb />
gold beaded bands fluffy tulle <lb />
bows. <lb />
the church ceremony Mr. and <lb />
Mrs. Henry R. entertained <lb />
with a reception at <lb />
Throughout the reception rooms <lb />
the beautiful home the decorations <lb />
were In the bridal white and yellow. <lb />
Ferns and graceful garlands of <lb />
ferns and Ivy made a fitting <lb />
background for white bells which <lb />
Every manure spreader is not a that looks <lb />
like one. You can't judge a manure spreader by its looks <lb />
because there are many features which are found in the <lb />
construction of one machine that are not found in others. <lb />
Cloverleaf manure spreaders are the most easily operated, <lb />
the strongest and best machines on the market. If you <lb />
will examine one critically, you will agree with us that the <lb />
Cloverleaf <lb />
is the best machine you ever looked at. Drop in. Let us <lb />
discuss the manure spreader proposition. Let us explain <lb />
the many meritorious features found in Cloverleaf con- <lb />
Better still, buy one, then you will be in a bet- <lb />
position to know why you can't judge a manure spread- <lb />
by its looks. If you are not ready to buy, call and get a <lb />
It is filled with valuable information on soil <lb />
maintenance and fertility. We are reserving one for you. <lb />
Won't you call and get it today <lb />
HART HADLEY <lb />
Greenville, N. C.<lb />
-1 <lb />
. r <lb />
The Daily Reflector<lb />
AND WHAT IT IS ALL <lb />
WHO CAN ENTER- <lb />
HOW TO <lb />
AND WHAT TO DO THEN- <lb />
AND HOW TO WIN THE PIANO <lb />
OR ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT <lb />
Rules of the Contest. <lb />
Any woman, married or single. Is entitled to inter <lb />
this contest, provided she is n resident of the territory included <lb />
the contest. <lb />
of the Hall or member of bis or her <lb />
Immediate family, will be permitted to In this contest <lb />
a candidate. <lb />
In case of a tie. the value Of the prizes will be equally <lb />
Votes once to a candidate cannot transferred to <lb />
the credit of another candidate. <lb />
Candidates and their friends are not limited to their own <lb />
particular districts In securing votes on subscriptions. <lb />
may be taken from anywhere. <lb />
Candidates till In every blank on the dally ballot plain- <lb />
their name, address and district number. <lb />
All ballots must be trimmed to uniform size, fastened to- <lb />
and sent In Hat; do not roll the <lb />
Candidates compete only against the candidate In their <lb />
own districts for the district prise, but all have a chance to win <lb />
the Piano or the <lb />
Votes cannot be bought; they be clipped from Pail <lb />
or on subscriptions. <lb />
a committee of unimpeachable public men will be chosen <lb />
tr, judge the of this contest and Will assemble for this <lb />
pose Immediately after the contest closes on Saturday. Dec <lb />
nine o'clock, p, <lb />
The contest manager will decide all questions which may <lb />
arise In the course of the contest and contestants In entering <lb />
contest agree to abide by any and all rulings which lie may <lb />
Here's your chancel <lb />
Mail or Bring to the Reflector office at once. <lb />
Nomination Blank <lb />
Good for Votes <lb />
Miss . <lb />
Address . District No. <lb />
As a candidate in the Daily Reflector Contest of Energy, <lb />
My name is . <lb />
Address . <lb />
This blank, if properly tilled out and brought or sent to the <lb />
Contest Manager of the Daily Reflector, entitles the pt son <lb />
to votes In the contest. It Is further understood that <lb />
only ONE nomination blank Will he accepted by the Contest Man- <lb />
ager. <lb />
Good for Ten Votes in the <lb />
Daily Reflector <lb />
Big Voting <lb />
Name. <lb />
This coupon is no after Oct. <lb />
IO IO <lb />
How the Prizes <lb />
will be Distributed <lb />
The town of Greenville Pitt County have been divided <lb />
into the districts, as <lb />
The town of Greenville and all of Greenville township <lb />
sides of the <lb />
District Bethel. Carolina and townships, <lb />
all towns Included In these townships. <lb />
District Falkland and Beaver Dam townships in- <lb />
all towns. <lb />
District township, embracing the towns of <lb />
and Ayden. <lb />
District and Swift Creek townships. Including the towns <lb />
of and <lb />
Price of Paper and <lb />
Schedule of Issuing Votes <lb />
DAILY. <lb />
. . 0.75 . <lb />
. . 1.50 . <lb />
. 3.00 . <lb />
. COO . <lb />
. <lb />
WEEKLY <lb />
. 0.50 . <lb />
. 1.00 . <lb />
. 2.00 . <lb />
. 5.00 . <lb />
. . <lb />
. 3.000 <lb />
50.000 <lb />
150.000 <lb />
. 2.000 <lb />
. 5.000 <lb />
12.000 <lb />
35.000 <lb />
100.000 <lb />
and each neighbor has an equal chance The prize list is most attractive and the is <lb />
in town or country, is sure an equal share with every <lb />
other locality in the winning of prizes. <lb />
FIRST GRAND PRIZE--A PIANO <lb />
The first grand prize, the prize that will be awarded to the young woman <lb />
who has the most votes in the whole contest, is a beautiful, high-grade in- <lb />
purchased from a local dealer, in whose store it will be displayed <lb />
shortly. <lb />
Gold Watches <lb />
The In each of the live of the <lb />
two Grand be five Gold Watches <lb />
ed from the Immense Block of a local Jeweler. In whose window <lb />
these handsome watches will b. displayed In the course of a day <lb />
two. These watches carry a year guarantee, are beautifully <lb />
engraved and are Indeed representative specimens of modern <lb />
Little need said about the movement of these <lb />
watches for the movement is too well known in this <lb />
country to be questioned in the least. See these watches and <lb />
know their worth. <lb />
The Second Grand Prize <lb />
a Victor Victrola <lb />
In harmony with the record-breaking scale in which this <lb />
enterprise has been launched by the Dally is the <lb />
to be given in this Contest. The Victor the last <lb />
word representing musical Instruments. Outside of Its value as <lb />
musical instrument, its beauty as an ornament would be enough <lb />
to qualify It as a most desirable object In the most handsomely <lb />
appointed home. The ten records given away with this <lb />
can be chosen by the winner from an stock <lb />
Votes will be allowed on all subscriptions to the Dally He- <lb />
and The Home and Farm and The Re- <lb />
paid In advance and on all paid during the con- <lb />
test. <lb />
Address all Subscriptions, <lb />
Inquiries, etc., regarding the <lb />
Contest to <lb />
J. A. <lb />
Contest Manager <lb />
Care The Daily Reflector, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
You can Win If Only Try<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018169_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
Again the duty of keeping <lb />
high <lb />
NOW FOR <lb />
WORLD'S SERIES <lb />
has CLASS man <lb />
of <lb />
Season. <lb />
NEW YORK. Oct. crown- <lb />
event of the professional baseball <lb />
i is At I o'clock to- <lb />
morrow afternoon Giants. <lb />
I inns Of the National league, and <lb />
Athletics, winner of <lb />
i . u-s iii the American <lb />
. rill march out on the Held <lb />
polo grounds to play the Brat <lb />
In the series for the <lb />
, ship. For the greater part <lb />
,,, eek these two lei <lb />
the country will be engaged <lb />
nerve racking grapple, the <lb />
. daily between <lb />
, j of Brotherly <lb />
s . mark the <lb />
la the <lb />
series. In the mind of the <lb />
,., . r, there <lb />
, be no question as to how the <lb />
B go. real tan la <lb />
a that his favorite team will <lb />
. can furnish <lb />
. . why the Athletics <lb />
n majority of the <lb />
. and th <lb />
, , m reasons none the <lb />
lest logical why hustlers <lb />
off with the rich plum. <lb />
p . . is not a great deal of <lb />
i In i I the two teams <lb />
Individually, tor baseball luck, team <lb />
, spirit and watchfulness t- make <lb />
the most emergencies as <lb />
will play a big part, if there <lb />
my one department In which <lb />
--Hi Is an essential it is In the <lb />
pi department. Mathewson and <lb />
are likely to do the bulk <lb />
, itching tor the Now Yorks. with <lb />
several good ones to tall back on, <lb />
Boon and Bender are likely to <lb />
be mainstays in the box. <lb />
Bach team <lb />
ager, and Mack arc both <lb />
able generals, and can be de- <lb />
pended upon to get the best work <lb />
out of his men. Hut the issue will <lb />
be decided mainly by the players <lb />
themselves, tor managerial ability is <lb />
a less Important Item In a short <lb />
The Giants have an off-hand <lb />
aggressive method Of playing, while <lb />
the Athletics are in the habit <lb />
every man to the limit. <lb />
Probably no that has ever <lb />
been played In baseball will attract <lb />
th, attention this one will, and <lb />
i no series, the weather be- <lb />
suitable, will equal In attend- <lb />
Son; thing like <lb />
will probably pay from SI to <lb />
each to sec the series of games. No <lb />
more striking evidence of the won- <lb />
increase In the popularity of <lb />
the American game can be given than <lb />
by comparing these figures with those <lb />
of when less than 5.000 people <lb />
paid from to cents each to sec <lb />
the Providence team of the Nation- <lb />
league and the Metropolitans of the <lb />
American association play for the <lb />
first world's championship. <lb />
If the attendance Is up to <lb />
the receipts for the series, if <lb />
it extends to five or six games, will <lb />
certainly run up close to a third of <lb />
a million dollars. What a time the <lb />
Giant and Athletics will have when <lb />
this great financial melon is sliced. <lb />
The gross receipts will be divided <lb />
as Ten per cent, of the <lb />
receipts of all the games will go to <lb />
National commission. Sixty per <lb />
cent, of the reminder from the first <lb />
four games will form a pool for the <lb />
of the two teams, to be <lb />
per cent, to the winner and <lb />
per cent to the loser of the contest. <lb />
After the per cent, deduction for <lb />
the commission and the per cent, <lb />
which forms the pool from <lb />
the first game, the remainder of the <lb />
gross receipts will be divided equal- <lb />
between the two clubs. At the <lb />
prices fixed for the series the win- <lb />
players pretty sure of <lb />
a rake-off of at least <lb />
each. <lb />
The players eligible to share in the <lb />
prize are. by announcement of the <lb />
commission, the <lb />
New Becker, <lb />
Snodgrass. Fletcher, Devlin, <lb />
Mathewson. Latham. <lb />
Crandall. Ames. Meyers. <lb />
Wilson. Hartley and <lb />
Paulette. <lb />
Philadelphia Thomas. <lb />
Plank. Murphy, <lb />
Morgan. Martin. Lord, Livingston. <lb />
Lapp. Derrick. Dan- <lb />
forth. Davis, Collins. Ben- <lb />
and Baker. <lb />
The umpires selected to officiate <lb />
are William and William <lb />
representing the National <lb />
league. Thomas J. and <lb />
William Deneen. representing the <lb />
league. Francis and J. i. <lb />
Taylor I rig <lb />
scorers. <lb />
All games will begin o'clock. <lb />
and will be attended by the members <lb />
of the National commission and its <lb />
rotary. The official ball of the <lb />
National league will be used In the <lb />
games In New York and the American <lb />
ague's official ball in games in Phil- <lb />
bis. <lb />
TO <lb />
The of And <lb />
i at <lb />
ti of the child from <lb />
to sixteen years <lb />
the ; led of phenomenal develop- <lb />
sad u is during this period that <lb />
the foundations arc laid of those <lb />
tors which most for success In <lb />
after well developed body. <lb />
sound and good digestion. In <lb />
. s these fall short Of the normal <lb />
just so far does the individual miss <lb />
his full effectiveness the world's <lb />
work. <lb />
, . loss lo the state of North Car- <lb />
in power from prevent- <lb />
. . such as tuberculosis, <lb />
hookworm. Is en- <lb />
even though we are already <lb />
in possession meas- <lb />
.,. ,. , , u medicine, which if <lb />
console applied to each mi m- <lb />
,,,.,. ,, would produce <lb />
;. . . <lb />
g, . g II la considered good <lb />
business <lb />
which make labor mot <lb />
there is vague or <lb />
In applying to the <lb />
PLAN REORGANIZE <lb />
CAROLINA CLUB <lb />
AMI SOCIAL. <lb />
s s s s s v <lb />
S S A <lb />
v V S <lb />
Proposed i Bring All Business In- <lb />
lulu Organization. <lb />
The meet of Carolina club last <lb />
i night and the discussions <lb />
started there have taken a turn that <lb />
It developed meant much for the <lb />
the as well as for the <lb />
advancement of the town. Hereto- <lb />
fore it has been social club. <lb />
but no It la d to give it <lb />
i t spirit also, that Is con- <lb />
It into an . I for <lb />
men both social and pleasure <lb />
and for the advancement of the com- <lb />
and Interests of the <lb />
low <lb />
a of this nature has <lb />
en d to a d approved <lb />
, board governors of Car- <lb />
. tub, and y have decided to <lb />
call a meeting the entire member- <lb />
ship Of the to consider It. This <lb />
future I nice t u beheld cm Monday night <lb />
. health saving devices which I October 23rd, <lb />
and member of th <lb />
for his <lb />
s n foundation a sound <lb />
ire Id in Infancy and <lb />
which <lb />
c without c <lb />
should be present it this club. <lb />
the remnant t I the r <lb />
what v. once the <lb />
;,.,; , neglected cannot be re- . and all business Inter- <lb />
have a problem worthy of of the town come together one <lb />
our earnest consideration. with Used aim and <lb />
we consider the cost of living out o <lb />
FROM I <lb />
LABOR WOULD s <lb />
88888888888888888888 <lb />
a federation of Labor has <lb />
been Dakota. <lb />
liter a rear's straggle <lb />
workers N. Y. <lb />
have secured the union shop. <lb />
The carpi is at Portsmouth. N. <lb />
H recently secured an Increase <lb />
ranging from to cents a clay. <lb />
Labor Commissioner Smith, of De- <lb />
has declared that women shall <lb />
be employed to work Detroit <lb />
i-. <lb />
Daring I u last I e months the <lb />
railway organized fourteen <lb />
new unions and Increased their <lb />
. i by 2.852. <lb />
The miners, transport workers and <lb />
Blast furnace men exploiting the Iron <lb />
ore mines of Island of Elba have <lb />
been on a for some time. <lb />
.;, . of the Bo- <lb />
Boiler Makers and Iron and <lb />
Shipbuilders of Great <lb />
. now Increased lo acre than <lb />
proportion to the Increase In wage <lb />
condition which enhances <lb />
rather than these hereditary <lb />
and congenial weaknesses which <lb />
many deaths In early Infancy. <lb />
The question of hygiene and <lb />
is an educational one which <lb />
will much time to get fixed <lb />
on the minds of our good people. <lb />
to do something for the ad- <lb />
of the town you will see <lb />
Greenville turn about and take cm <lb />
new life. <lb />
Caterpillar History. <lb />
The caterpillars which have been <lb />
. oil the leaves in this <lb />
section of the state have been here <lb />
We must make it plain to our door slammed shut and to hear <lb />
pie that no man has a right so to the roar of flames. He had caught <lb />
a glimpse of burning bundle of pa- <lb />
per and be had it out of the in <lb />
That is, their ancestors have <lb />
i. .- bi use or so to live his life, <lb />
i a community as to <lb />
his neighbor's health or hap-; <lb />
been here. In 1894 this writer Came <lb />
clean In physical is as <lb />
of moral cleanliness, <lb />
, i not Infinitely wiser to , <lb />
,,. our Charlotte Observer that the people <lb />
rater or to tight the result thought r <lb />
, i that pollution, as is the case with <lb />
. fever gotten by drinking <lb />
. i face water or eating food polluted <lb />
b n . ti have come In contact <lb />
. fever <lb />
Is K not <lb />
I by <lb />
i., and thereby eradicate <lb />
. i h at sent exists in <lb />
in from Wilmington with a <lb />
re. story which he published in The <lb />
j Charlotte Observer that <lb />
thought rather doubtful. <lb />
lie. lie told of the train <lb />
having been stopped near Lambert on <lb />
I by caterpillars crossing the track. <lb />
Th government thought the matter <lb />
worth Investigating and sent an agent <lb />
prevent there who more than confirmed what <lb />
sing sanitary reporter had said. This army <lb />
and eastern pan of our, <lb />
i to extent of from to <lb />
pent, than to allow this easily <lb />
disease to go on sapping <lb />
life-blood out of our beloved <lb />
dwarfing them mentally and <lb />
rally for life and In numerous <lb />
cases, directly and indirectly by other <lb />
diseases, causing death <lb />
Shall we not vaccinate all our <lb />
at a cost of cents each rather <lb />
than leave some hundreds to die an- <lb />
and other thousands to be <lb />
i a living shame <lb />
to the community <lb />
Would it not be wise to prevent <lb />
stagnant water around our homes and <lb />
thus not have a mosquito hatching <lb />
place, and our home at a <lb />
small cost against the mosquito. <lb />
which causes malaria or bilious fever. <lb />
than to allow this pest to enter our <lb />
homes and cause Illness and <lb />
death <lb />
Then we start with the lit- <lb />
ones, and after seeing that their <lb />
mothers are Instructed in the <lb />
and clothing, remove the no- <lb />
that the children must of <lb />
have measles, whooping cough <lb />
and hookworm disease, by showing <lb />
that these diseases are ideal <lb />
foundations on which to build future <lb />
woe in the shape of consumption. <lb />
The best way to tight consumption <lb />
or any other disease is with a sound <lb />
body; the boy who would grow up to <lb />
be a man of affairs must have sound <lb />
lungs, stomach, eyes, ears, teeth and <lb />
gOOd development. <lb />
Every school in the state should <lb />
have a medical supervisor or inspect- <lb />
or to Inspect the eyes, mouth, ears <lb />
and general condition of all children <lb />
in attendance, in order that disorders <lb />
may be detected at a time when they <lb />
could be cured. As an example, cross- <lb />
eyes, detected early, can be cured; <lb />
ear trouble, detected early, can be <lb />
cured; diseased tonsils, removed early <lb />
prevent rheumatism and poor health. <lb />
Hundreds of our friends are today <lb />
going through life cross-eyed, or blind <lb />
near or far or deaf, or dwarf- <lb />
ed mentally or physically from hook- <lb />
disease, as a result of not re- <lb />
attention at the proper time. <lb />
For the advancement of so import- <lb />
am issue. let us place the far- <lb />
and lasting good of this <lb />
work before our lawmakers and In- <lb />
that they at appropriate as <lb />
of their wives <lb />
and little ones as for that of their <lb />
swine, cattle and poultry. <lb />
wide and long enough to continue <lb />
the railroad track for eight <lb />
days. came up from the- direction <lb />
of Marion county. South Carolina, <lb />
moving from southwest to northwest. <lb />
The mass of crushed worms made the <lb />
rails so slippery that the engine <lb />
would simply spin around. The <lb />
old Carolina Central management bad <lb />
to send a gang Of workmen to the <lb />
scene to scrape and sand the rails <lb />
and this trouble continued during the <lb />
migration of the army. <lb />
Some years ago. after the <lb />
Capt. A. was <lb />
fanning in the section, when <lb />
the caterpillar made its appearance. <lb />
There trains were stopped in a Sim- <lb />
manner to the incident have <lb />
related. Cotton there grows ten and <lb />
twelve feet high. The caterpillars at- <lb />
tacked the upper and tenderer parts <lb />
of the plant, stripping the limbs and <lb />
barking the young bolls. These young <lb />
bolls, exposed to the sun. shriveled up <lb />
and open. Capt. <lb />
gathered them by the wagon load and <lb />
ran them through a gin. The hulls <lb />
fell where the seed usually <lb />
was not a seed in any of the bolls. <lb />
The result sixteen bales of cot- <lb />
ton or good lint, for which Capt. Tor- <lb />
ranee got the same price as for his <lb />
Undamaged <lb />
lie a Good Fighter. <lb />
What kind of a tighter are you <lb />
Not what kind of a that <lb />
goes around With a chip on your <lb />
shoulder, ready to smash some fellow <lb />
on the Jaw, but what kind of a lighter <lb />
are you when it comes to standing <lb />
up for what you think Is right and <lb />
for trying to accomplish something <lb />
in life Be t. good lighter. Have the <lb />
desire always to be a good fighter, <lb />
and let that be your <lb />
especially when things are not com- <lb />
your way. When the clouds arc <lb />
darkest and the cries of the enemy <lb />
are bitterest, grimly, resolutely and <lb />
courageously say to am <lb />
too good a fighter to give Then <lb />
go to fighting. Some one has got to <lb />
lose in the fight, of course, but don't <lb />
let It be you. What's the use of <lb />
up If you give up you lose any- <lb />
how, so stand the further chance of <lb />
winning by not giving up. You may <lb />
weaken the other fellow down, and <lb />
besides, the world admires and your <lb />
enemies soon to dread a good <lb />
lighter. Don't be narrow-minded or <lb />
. but be determined <lb />
During the first six months of the <lb />
present year the International Union <lb />
of Bricklayers has paid death <lb />
claims, amounting to about <lb />
The San Francisco <lb />
proposes to establish an <lb />
consisting exclusively of <lb />
,, ,., of organization, for the <lb />
purpose of mutual improvement. <lb />
The Winnipeg Trades and Labor <lb />
Council forty-six unions <lb />
with it. representing s member- <lb />
ship of There are also a <lb />
of unions, including <lb />
the railway brotherhoods. <lb />
The work of the label section of <lb />
the Ban Francisco Labor Council, in <lb />
pushing the use Of union brooms, <lb />
has resulted in such an increase in <lb />
demand that all the broom makers <lb />
in that city now employed. <lb />
The union Of glass workers and <lb />
glaziers of Sacramento has been <lb />
granted an increase of cents a <lb />
day under an agreement effective <lb />
November The men will receive <lb />
a day with half-holiday on <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
The San Francisco Lumber <lb />
Association, the Lumber <lb />
Union and several other labor organ- <lb />
engaged in practically the <lb />
same industry, are considering a <lb />
proposition to amalgamate under one <lb />
charter. <lb />
There are now in the building <lb />
trades alone in the United States and <lb />
Canada approximately seven <lb />
thousand men who are working <lb />
an eight-hour day and at a wage <lb />
twenty per cent, higher than the <lb />
wages fifteen years ago. <lb />
The International Association of <lb />
Machinists has Increased the per <lb />
capita tax from tents to cents <lb />
per month so as to be ready to flu <lb />
a general strike in case one <lb />
should be called. By this change the <lb />
income will be increased from <lb />
to a year. <lb />
New York's wage-earners number <lb />
of which the workers in <lb />
factories lead all the rest with a <lb />
total of 600.000. The store clerks <lb />
are next in line with 290.000. There <lb />
are 220.000 laborers and mechanics, <lb />
men in the liquor business. <lb />
Office workers. in the <lb />
printing trades. 24.000 educators. <lb />
8.000 church workers. lawyers <lb />
and physicians.<lb />
realize that often the plum <lb />
preventative at the top of tree. When things <lb />
Shall m <lb />
I very real power In our state <lb />
Or we be content to consider <lb />
it a side Issue <lb />
F. M. D. <lb />
District Director of N. C. <lb />
Hoard of Health. <lb />
arc dark to your Vision, let your <lb />
mind's eye behold the light, go <lb />
Done Dally in Cit- <lb />
Tell of II- <lb />
Nearly every reader has heard of <lb />
Moan's Kidney Pills. Their good <lb />
work In Greenville still continues, and <lb />
our citizens are constantly adding <lb />
endorsement by public testimony. No <lb />
better proof of merit can be had than <lb />
the experience of friends and neigh- <lb />
Read this <lb />
Mrs. C. Barnhill, of Greenville. N. <lb />
C says have been so greatly help- <lb />
ed by Kidney Pills that I am <lb />
pleased to recommend them. My back <lb />
and head ached and I had dizzy <lb />
spills and pains in my sides. My <lb />
kidneys did not do their work proper- <lb />
Iv and caused much suffering. <lb />
Kidney obtained at the <lb />
John L. Wooten Drug Company, re- <lb />
lit my aches and pains and <lb />
the trouble with my kidneys. <lb />
I most cheerfully this <lb />
For sale by all dealers. Trice <lb />
cents. Co. Buffalo. <lb />
battling. Like a horse, take the w York, sole agents for the United <lb />
your teeth and do something. <lb />
Be n good Dis- <lb />
patch. <lb />
States. <lb />
Remember the <lb />
take no other. <lb />
Sweater<lb />
For Ladies, Misses and Children <lb />
The. most popular colors worn this sea- <lb />
son are Cardinal. White and Black. <lb />
We can fit you in any of the latest styles <lb />
and colors. Now is the time to buy. The <lb />
very thing in looks and just what you need <lb />
for comfort and service. <lb />
Our prices range from <lb />
to <lb />
UNION SUITS <lb />
for Men, Ladies, Misses and Children <lb />
The Union Suit is rapidly in <lb />
favor. We have the Inter-Lock brand for <lb />
Men, something good that can't be beat in <lb />
price, comfort or wear. <lb />
Our E-Z Union Suits for Children, need <lb />
no description. We have them, you know <lb />
their good qualities. <lb />
Union Suits for Ladies are necessities, <lb />
and we are prepared to the Demand. <lb />
In fact we have what you want in <lb />
winter underwear. Cold weather is com- <lb />
so come to see us and prepare to keep <lb />
warm. <lb />
Condensed Statement of <lb />
The National Bank <lb />
NORTH CAR. <lb />
At Close of Business September 1911. <lb />
Loan and discounts . <lb />
Overdrafts . <lb />
U. S. bonds . <lb />
Stocks bonds . <lb />
Furniture and fixtures. . <lb />
Ex. for house------ <lb />
Cash and due from banks <lb />
per cent fund . <lb />
. <lb />
3.201.18 <lb />
. 21.000.00 <lb />
2.500.00 <lb />
. 7,136.00 <lb />
,. 33.278.02 <lb />
1.050.00 <lb />
Capital . . <lb />
Surplus . . <lb />
Profits . <lb />
Circulation . <lb />
50.000.00 <lb />
10,000.00 <lb />
1,810.55 <lb />
. <lb />
. <lb />
Dividends unpaid <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
Deposits. <lb />
21,000.00 <lb />
81,275.00 <lb />
91.42 <lb />
125.41 <lb />
Fancy China and Glassware <lb />
We have a beautiful line of Fancy China and Glass- <lb />
ware. Come in and look at these pretty goods. We have the roost <lb />
complete line of Dolls. Games, Toys, etc. in Greenville. You can <lb />
also find school books at <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON COMPANY <lb />
Agents for Victor Talking Machines. <lb />
J. S. MOORING <lb />
General Merchandise <lb />
Buyer of Cotton and Country Produce <lb />
FIVE POINTS. C. <lb />
Q You can expect good sales when you sell <lb />
with C. R. Townsend at the Plant- <lb />
Warehouse, Farmville, N. C.<lb />
THE SENATE <lb />
His Position On Vita Public <lb />
FIGHTS FOR WHAT HE BELIEVES <lb />
gone Scums Why Mr. <lb />
thinks Should Be <lb />
Elected to The lulled Stales Sen- <lb />
ate. <lb />
To the The question of <lb />
which Hie candidates for the sen- <lb />
ate is attractive personality <lb />
of no lo the people, and <lb />
its would not contribute any <lb />
thing to the advancement of the <lb />
cause of government by the people. <lb />
The opportunity Which the voters <lb />
will have Of giving expression, in some <lb />
measure, to their views on public <lb />
questions should not be neglected. <lb />
The records of the respective can- <lb />
are material in so far only <lb />
us they throw light upon their prob- <lb />
able course in the senate, if elected. <lb />
it is the purpose of this article to <lb />
et forth what seems to be the con- <lb />
trolling reasons why Judge Clark <lb />
be elected by the voters to <lb />
represent them in United States <lb />
senate. <lb />
He has the first order of ability. <lb />
He has courage and con- <lb />
His chief characteristic is that he <lb />
lights for what he believes in, and <lb />
makes DO compromise which involves <lb />
any Sacrifice of principle. <lb />
He has the most advanced views <lb />
in favor of putting human rights <lb />
above property interests; and the <lb />
most unlimited faith in the wisdom <lb />
and Justice Of direct popular gov- <lb />
He believes that we have <lb />
generally had government by the <lb />
minority, and that representative <lb />
government has failed. <lb />
His election would be regarded <lb />
throughout the country as a distinct <lb />
declaration that North Carolina stands <lb />
with New Jersey, Oregon. Wisconsin <lb />
and Mississippi for progressive <lb />
Ho believes that trusts should <lb />
have been destroyed long ago by <lb />
imprisoning those who- organized <lb />
them, and that the principles of pro- <lb />
and privileges have no proper <lb />
place in government <lb />
What he believes about public mat- <lb />
he feels with that degree of in- <lb />
that makes him effective. <lb />
He bitterly resents the machinery <lb />
Of the law that takes from the <lb />
the right and power lo choose <lb />
directly the Stales judges and <lb />
and keenly feels that no <lb />
permanent justice and equality can <lb />
exist until means are provided for <lb />
the people to initiate and veto laws. <lb />
The Idea of the president, and not <lb />
th people, passing upon the wisdom <lb />
of an act of congress is abhorrent to <lb />
him. <lb />
The nomination of men to office by <lb />
delegates and corrupt <lb />
political machines instead of by direct <lb />
of the people hi B legalized <lb />
is inconsistent his idea <lb />
of majority rule. <lb />
He is less likely to moderate his <lb />
course to appease his enemies than <lb />
almost any man in public life in this <lb />
state. <lb />
His present views are the habits <lb />
en a lifetime, and be has been train- <lb />
ed to tight to maintain and advance <lb />
them. He has never aspired to public <lb />
Office when the did <lb />
not realize his loyalty to the people, <lb />
and put Into operation their entire <lb />
political machinery to accomplish his <lb />
defeat, <lb />
ah well-Informed man doubts that <lb />
of all the candidates he Is most ob- <lb />
to the agents of privileges <lb />
Who are in politics to exploit the <lb />
under the forms of law. <lb />
When he was a candidate for chief <lb />
Justice in 1902, the agents of organ- <lb />
greed emptied their money bags <lb />
and put in motion all their political <lb />
machinery and exhausted their <lb />
of abuse to accomplish his <lb />
defeat. <lb />
He was elected over an alliance of <lb />
bolting Democrats and Republicans by <lb />
over 82.000 majority. It was then <lb />
truthfully said of all the <lb />
wrongs and blunders alleged against <lb />
him by his enemies, no one has yet <lb />
an after Ma <lb />
dates. His offense Is. that he did not <lb />
defy it. <lb />
Some of those who opposed <lb />
him for Judge assign as a reason for <lb />
opposing him for the senate that they <lb />
cannot spare him from the bench. <lb />
The battles a free government <lb />
which the voice the people shall <lb />
In- potent will be fieriest in the United <lb />
Stales Senate. The interests of the <lb />
people require that the men who rep- <lb />
resent them there shall be militant and <lb />
free from all entangling alliances, and <lb />
without sympathy of toleration for <lb />
It call be <lb />
Judge Clark, as was recently <lb />
said of Senator La the <lb />
editor of the <lb />
He has an enduring devotion for <lb />
the things he believes, and he fights <lb />
for <lb />
Speaking of Judge Clark, it was re- <lb />
said by s California <lb />
of Mr. Bryan's paper, the <lb />
man who wins iii <lb />
regardless of party, must not <lb />
only be an advocate of the Bryan <lb />
policies to which the people have been <lb />
educated, but he must be an <lb />
of the same. A recommended <lb />
candidate will not do next time. <lb />
No doubt many, if not all of the Com- <lb />
list of will meet <lb />
this requirement, one of them we <lb />
happen to know most, assuredly does, <lb />
viz. Judge Walter Clark, of North <lb />
Carolina. All classes look <lb />
alike to him. but the trust barons <lb />
and protected corporations know this <lb />
too well, and when he. or any other <lb />
true representative of the people, is <lb />
nominated a life and death struggle <lb />
by will be on as <lb />
in the memorable Bryan <lb />
Judge Clark is not a mere theorist. <lb />
He never had a theory about gov- <lb />
that his mind did not work <lb />
out some tangible and definite plan <lb />
o put It into practice. <lb />
year of his service is a rec- <lb />
of attainments. <lb />
As a senator he would not be con- <lb />
tent to protest against existing con- <lb />
but would offer and press the <lb />
passage of bills to change them. His <lb />
views as to remedies to be applied <lb />
for the evils that exist in the Federal <lb />
government are best stated In an <lb />
able address delivered by him in <lb />
Philadelphia In 1904 on the subject, <lb />
in the Constitution of <lb />
the United <lb />
It should be read by every voter. <lb />
The democracy of Ills nature, and <lb />
his sympathy for masses who <lb />
bear the burdens of government and <lb />
society, but are denied the benefit, is <lb />
shown in a long line of opinions in <lb />
the Supreme court reports. Refer- <lb />
to a few of these will sufficiently <lb />
indicate what manner of man he is. <lb />
A number Of years prior to the de- <lb />
Of the ease of vs. <lb />
Railroad, reported in the N. C. <lb />
Reports, congress had provided that <lb />
the railroads engaged in Interstate <lb />
business should abandon the use of <lb />
the dangerous link and pin eon pier. <lb />
but had provided further the <lb />
i state Commerce Commission <lb />
I. extend the time when the law <lb />
would become effective, The com- <lb />
I Ion had from year In year ex- <lb />
I, the time for the law to become <lb />
operative, and benefits were denied <lb />
to employees on railroads. <lb />
Greenlee was Injured while attempt- <lb />
to make a coupling with an old- <lb />
style coupler. Judge Clark, writing <lb />
congressional enactment and Inter- <lb />
state commission regulation require <lb />
the employer to furnish employee <lb />
soft modern appliances with <lb />
in work In place antiquated <lb />
Implements, to life <lb />
and and the failure to do so <lb />
upon Injury ensuing to the <lb />
is culpable, containing negligence on <lb />
the pan of the employer, which cuts <lb />
off the defense of contributor i <lb />
and n ace i a fellow . i <lb />
in Furniture I <lb />
n. c. Judge Clark announced <lb />
the principle for the court, that when <lb />
a child under the age prescribed by <lb />
law for working In a factory is em- <lb />
i Injured employer <lb />
must answer in damages for injury <lb />
the child, caused by defective ma- <lb />
and the employer cannot es- <lb />
cape upon the plea that the child <lb />
was negligent or assumed the risk. <lb />
Judge Clark sob of the <lb />
child in his helplessness ill I <lb />
than the strong man In his <lb />
In vs. the Yarn Mills, re- <lb />
ported In N. C. the. same <lb />
is reaffirmed, in delivering the <lb />
opinion in the later case Judge Clark <lb />
speaking for the Court <lb />
law is not fossilized, it is a <lb />
growth. It grows more just with the <lb />
growing humanity of the age and <lb />
the process of <lb />
Could there be greater mockery than <lb />
to assert that the employer is culpably <lb />
negligent and peculiarly liable if <lb />
and defective appliances are <lb />
furnished, and then to hold that if the <lb />
laborer is mangled or killed, there is <lb />
no liability because of accepting em- <lb />
the laborer has released the <lb />
employer from liability 3-8. Labor is <lb />
the basis of civilization. Let it with- <lb />
hold its hands and the forest returns <lb />
and grass grows in the silent streets. <lb />
Not so long since in labor <lb />
unions were indictable as <lb />
and the wages of labor were fixed <lb />
by Officers appointed by <lb />
and was Indictable for a laborer lo <lb />
ask or receive more. There was no <lb />
requirement that employers should <lb />
furnish safe appliances, no limitations <lb />
as to hours of labor, no age limit. With <lb />
the era of more just legislation in <lb />
both this country and England and <lb />
elsewhere, shortening the hours of la- <lb />
forbidding child labor, requiring <lb />
sanitary provisions and safe <lb />
labor has been encouraged and <lb />
the of the world in a few <lb />
years has more than equaled that of <lb />
all the centuries that are dead. <lb />
to the laborer has been to the <lb />
profit of the employer. The courts <lb />
should not be less just than the <lb />
laws. <lb />
When Hie question of the right of <lb />
the railroad companies lo refuse to <lb />
redeem mileage hooks on the trains <lb />
was being considered by the court, in <lb />
the ease of Harvey vs. Railroad, re- <lb />
ported in N. C, In a concurring <lb />
Opinion Judge Clark <lb />
not only concur In the opinion <lb />
of the court, but further, upon a point <lb />
as to which was not found Di <lb />
for the court to express Itself, i am <lb />
of opinion that the requirement that <lb />
the holder of a mileage book shall <lb />
present it and obtain a ticket thereon <lb />
is unreasonable regulation and <lb />
therefore void. <lb />
it seems that the an- <lb />
vexatious system which <lb />
has been In force here is almost <lb />
unknown outside the territory covered <lb />
by the three great railroad <lb />
this and adjacent states, ii cannot <lb />
be reasonable In any view to subject <lb />
our people longer to this annoyance, <lb />
and I think the court might well hold <lb />
it unreasonable and void in this <lb />
By Prevalent <lb />
II. Wright. <lb />
To Teachers of Pitt <lb />
I thought tor some time that <lb />
one function of the Training I <lb />
should be to help those who are en- <lb />
gaged in teaching. The Training <lb />
has established to help <lb />
provide efficient teachers for our <lb />
schools, it is here t help give i res- <lb />
Ive hers that will en- <lb />
hem in become i work- <lb />
en when the take up their life <lb />
work, teaching. But II is to do more <lb />
than that Were we to bend our en- <lb />
alone to help bring in trained <lb />
recruits to the ranks of our <lb />
our state would never have s <lb />
corps of trained teachers. Should <lb />
all the graduates from all the schools <lb />
and colleges iii our slate become <lb />
teachers, the Increased demand for <lb />
teachers due to the normal growth <lb />
Of our educational system, plus the <lb />
number who go out of the work year- <lb />
could not be met. In other words, <lb />
If North Carolina is ever to <lb />
trained teachers something must bi <lb />
done for those in the profession. To <lb />
this demand we have offered our <lb />
spring and summer course. It is in- <lb />
deed gratifying to us that these <lb />
courses have been so well attended <lb />
If the teacher, trained or <lb />
ed, wishes to keep abreast of th. <lb />
times, she must, while leaching, <lb />
carry on some line of study. This <lb />
study should be well planned and <lb />
conscientiously carried out if it is to <lb />
be of any real benefit. Our state <lb />
department of education realizes this <lb />
and has established the Reading Cir- <lb />
as a means of encouraging this <lb />
improvement. Furthermore, <lb />
while one is in the work many <lb />
problems arise she would like <lb />
to hear discussed. If several of us <lb />
could meet occasionally and discuss <lb />
our problems we would receive much <lb />
mutual benefit. Again, our problem <lb />
is never so vivid to us as while we <lb />
are attempting to solve In some <lb />
united study we get suggestions, new- <lb />
ideas, new thoughts; and If we get <lb />
these while we are teaching we can <lb />
try them out and see If they can be <lb />
applied to our individual problems. <lb />
If it could be arranged that each <lb />
teacher could, while teaching, lake <lb />
a course of study along the line she <lb />
is most interested or along line <lb />
she needs the most help, we <lb />
would find that our teachers would <lb />
gel the greatest for the amount <lb />
of study expended. <lb />
Since we teach on Saturday, <lb />
have up with our faculty, the <lb />
advisability of offering the following <lb />
courses to be given on <lb />
Pedagogy, Primary Methods, Draw- <lb />
Music. Manual Training. Hygiene <lb />
and Sanitation, and am glad ilia; <lb />
can say to you that every member <lb />
of our faculty thinks it would be a <lb />
good thing to do, provided, there are <lb />
enough teachers willing to undertake <lb />
the work. <lb />
We stand ready, fellow teachers, <lb />
to be of any and every service to you <lb />
We possibly can. If lucre is any other <lb />
cause we could give that would help <lb />
pleasure In giving <lb />
subjected thereto. <lb />
the great Pennsylvania system, <lb />
with its thousands Of miles of sub- <lb />
roads, not only is a mileage <lb />
book accepted by conductor on the <lb />
train without the previous purchase <lb />
Of a but it is good in t only for <lb />
the holder thereof, hut for every other <lb />
In- reason why this should not any of this work it our idea to <lb />
.,., . . . . <lb />
be n reckless enough to charge to <lb />
i turns made by railroad companies <lb />
him one wrong, one blunder, against themselves, it Is stated page <lb />
the people's cause of In disobedience the enactment of the law In <lb />
to the people's will. He has rev I automatic couplers <lb />
the verdicts of Juries and <lb />
the opinion of the court, laid down person traveling with him the time, <lb />
the principle that failure of a I whom lie shall designate. There can <lb />
railroad company to equip its ears. <lb />
whether passenger of freight, with <lb />
automatic couplers is negligence per <lb />
which entitled the employee who <lb />
Is injured while coupling cars by <lb />
hand to recover damages for such <lb />
injury, whether the employee was <lb />
guilty of contributory negligence or <lb />
The result Of this decision was that <lb />
Clark was denounced by the <lb />
railroads In the newspapers, but the <lb />
railroad ears in this slate were at <lb />
once equipped with automatic coup- <lb />
and all cars coming from other <lb />
companies in this slate until provided <lb />
with modern couplers, and. therefore, <lb />
all cars the country were <lb />
soon equipped with these safely <lb />
When the case of vs. Rail- <lb />
road. Involving the same point, was <lb />
decided in the N. C. Report <lb />
about a year later the court <lb />
the twelfth annual report of <lb />
Interstate Commerce Commission <lb />
published by authority of the <lb />
It. We are lure as our <lb />
school mono Indicates, it is not our <lb />
idea to give a set of lectures to those <lb />
who wish to come <lb />
but to plan out in each subject taken <lb />
a definite line of work that will be <lb />
constructive, practical and all <lb />
times, helpful, If there is a demand <lb />
The Bank of Greenville <lb />
Capital Stock 50,000.00 <lb />
N. C. <lb />
A Record of Year of Banking <lb />
out directors men who hove made a remark- <lb />
of I Having been <lb />
successful with theirs, II handle <lb />
With . <lb />
R. I. DAVIS, of R. I- A Bret . C. <lb />
A. N. C <lb />
Vt. of J. O. a . ft <lb />
R. W. Greenville. . ft <lb />
J It. General C, <lb />
MOVE, General Merchant, . ft <lb />
R. R. IT. ft <lb />
S. r. HOOKER. Prop. N. C. <lb />
R. A. of Fountain Co- Fountain, I, ft <lb />
It. W. MOSELEY, of Bros . ft <lb />
. II. Merchandise Broker, C. <lb />
U LITTLE. Greenville, C. <lb />
A small account opened now may grow in- <lb />
to a large Invited <lb />
R. L. DAVIS, President JAMES L. Cashier. <lb />
T. HOOKER. V-Pres. H D BATEMAN, Cashier. <lb />
Southern Railway <lb />
Most Line <lb />
All Points <lb />
North, South, East, West <lb />
SCHEDULES, <lb />
CLASS EQUIPMENT, <lb />
COMPLETE CAR <lb />
Through Pullman Sleepers to all Principal Cities <lb />
Principal Cities and Resorts of <lb />
Texas, California and Florida <lb />
CAN BEST BE BEACHED VIA <lb />
THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY <lb />
you are contemplating a trip, ii would be wise to con- <lb />
a representative of SOUTHERN RAILWAY, who will <lb />
gladly furnish you with any and all information as to rates, <lb />
Pullman sleeping car accommodations, etc. <lb />
J. T. P. A., <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
. U H. FENDER <lb />
S. T. HICKS <lb />
judgments of courts. His offense is, <lb />
that he did not Condemn them. He <lb />
and advised the en- <lb />
of law against the <lb />
Strong well as against weak. <lb />
His offense Is that he did not <lb />
and would not tolerate its evasion <lb />
by the strong. He has seen open and <lb />
persistent violations of the statutes <lb />
of the called attention of <lb />
the proper authorities to them <lb />
there has been a decreasing number <lb />
of Casualties. There were 1.0.14 few- <lb />
employees killed and fewer <lb />
injured during year ending June <lb />
so. than during the same period <lb />
In 1898 The importance of this sub- <lb />
will be realized when the yearly <lb />
casualties to railway employees are <lb />
compared with those which occurred <lb />
during the recent war. In the Span- <lb />
war there were kill- <lb />
ed and wounded. In there <lb />
were 1,698 killed and In- <lb />
from all causes In railway <lb />
HIs ice. From uncoupling <lb />
ears alone less were killed and <lb />
offense Is, that he did not bondage J gM <lb />
his eyes and seal his lips. He wag <lb />
upheld and defended the constitution. In delivering the opinion In the <lb />
Hie offense is, that he did not ignore case Judge Clark <lb />
the ease. other <lb />
business In the world considers the <lb />
nod convenience of its patrons <lb />
Those railroads who do not think this <lb />
their duty also should recall Unit <lb />
their charters are granted by the pub- <lb />
to the end they may operate <lb />
for the greatest comfort and con- <lb />
of public and subject to <lb />
public regulations, provided only that <lb />
their owners are allowed a reason- <lb />
able profit upon the true value of their <lb />
It was truly said of Judge Clark <lb />
When he was presented for chief <lb />
in is not an <lb />
He has been tried. He <lb />
been weighed. from the Scales <lb />
and the furnace, he stands before <lb />
people, in the noon day's sun. full- <lb />
unshaken, unmarred, <lb />
He is not an He <lb />
a living, tangible. Inspiring reality <lb />
His record from the flash of his <lb />
boyish sword in the battle days of the <lb />
sixties to this moment, is an open <lb />
hook. The people know it by heart. <lb />
His name is upon their lips. His life <lb />
is in their memory. His vindication <lb />
Is In their hearts. His triumph is in <lb />
their hopes and In their <lb />
It may be that it will develop that <lb />
since that time the people have for- <lb />
gotten how to trust him. but it is <lb />
certain the enemies of the people have <lb />
not forgotten how to fear him. <lb />
If the contest for senator is lo he <lb />
determined upon principle, and North <lb />
Carolina stands for progress and re- <lb />
form, the logic of the situation de- <lb />
the election of Judge Clark to <lb />
that tribunal where the will <lb />
be fiercest and where he can be of <lb />
the most service. <lb />
Q. K. <lb />
N. C. Sept. <lb />
One mule can stir up more <lb />
trouble than a carload of <lb />
form a class and do some <lb />
work. Take Pedagogy for example. <lb />
The Reading Circle has decided to <lb />
make a real study of How Stud ; <lb />
and Teaching How lo Study. We <lb />
could take that book as a basis for <lb />
our work and spend one period a <lb />
week for ill is year to much <lb />
age. Or. we could take up some other <lb />
line of work in Pedagogy. There <lb />
would be no charge for tuition and <lb />
no fees for any of this work. It would <lb />
cost your time, traveling expenses, <lb />
books and stationery only. We hope <lb />
you all will we are here lo <lb />
help you and that are only too <lb />
willing to be of some service. We <lb />
are always glad to have you visit our <lb />
school, and while with us to have <lb />
you visit any of our classes. <lb />
Young Man, Stay Here. <lb />
do you want to go West for <lb />
or anything said a man at the <lb />
station to a young chap who was <lb />
about to be off on a trip. are <lb />
now in best section of this <lb />
try and in the best Southern state. <lb />
When you get out there you will hear <lb />
more about move- <lb />
than anything else. The people <lb />
of the entire west and northwest have <lb />
their eyes on the South because the <lb />
Opportunities are greater than in any <lb />
other part of the Union. All sec- <lb />
except the South are <lb />
in a business way and there Is <lb />
no pioneer opportunity, You would <lb />
be better off to give your ticket away <lb />
and stay right here and go to work. <lb />
It would save you because you <lb />
will back with the rest of them <lb />
some day. High Point Enterprise. <lb />
Tr x s--- re- w <lb />
v prepuce lo o ti i, I m j <lb />
Our Mr. ii and u pal <lb />
lie in ll. i. Phi C, ml Hi <lb />
. c prepared also to the t- cf arc system <lb />
and <lb />
I Repairing Promptly Attended To. <lb />
We if to serve ii you wont coed -lone and fas fixtures installed <lb />
We will not in any other. Vie a <lb />
PENDER HICKS <lb />
Phone No. <lb />
Ha <lb />
Carpet Remnant <lb />
Rugs and <lb />
We have in our new fall stock <lb />
the prettiest line of Carpet Rem- <lb />
Carpets, Mattings, <lb />
and <lb />
Screens we have ever <lb />
shown at prices to tit any pocket <lb />
book. You are invited to call <lb />
and see them. <lb />
Yours truly, Taft Van Dyke <lb />
A silver hook is good In fishing for <lb />
compliments. <lb />
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb />
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb />
Work, and Season. See <lb />
J. J. JENKINS <lb />
Greenville. N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018169_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
O octal and <lb />
D. J. Whichard. Jr. <lb />
HE HAS A <lb />
By <lb />
Last night I lay on soft, clean bed. <lb />
With pillows to raise my head. <lb />
For awhile it seemed I could not <lb />
sleep, <lb />
Strange thoughts across my mind did <lb />
creep. <lb />
had to tramp a mile; <lb />
And then to doze awhile <lb />
A burden, too. I must needs carry. <lb />
Though worn and weary, must not <lb />
tarry. <lb />
And then seemed to wake again. <lb />
from the path of the <lb />
rain; <lb />
So rugged looked the road ahead <lb />
laid me back upon my bid. <lb />
Cumin. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hill <lb />
request the honor of your presence <lb />
at the marriage of their daughter <lb />
Annie Grist <lb />
to <lb />
Mr. Walter Seymour Green <lb />
on the morning of Wednesday, <lb />
November first <lb />
nineteen hundred and eleven <lb />
at half past seven o'clock <lb />
at their residence <lb />
Washington, North Carolina. <lb />
Mr Green is well known here, <lb />
where I few years ago he was an <lb />
operator In the Western <lb />
graph office. <lb />
But <lb />
sleep <lb />
eyes <lb />
Than stars that twinkled in <lb />
ski-. <lb />
Then thought what Can it be <lb />
That tonight so troubles me <lb />
Beautiful Marriage. <lb />
What was to have been one of the <lb />
further from my I most elaborate marriages ever sol- <lb />
; in Greenville took place <lb />
the <lb />
Then seemed to hear a faint bray <lb />
Perhaps it was a poor horse's neigh. <lb />
that sound may have been <lb />
II .- to lay on me i in. <lb />
A sin that we may all blot out <lb />
l up a better route <lb />
For the that pull <lb />
loads <lb />
t . d . <lb />
Carr <lb />
Entertains. <lb />
On Friday evening eight to <lb />
el Miss Mildred Carr delightfully <lb />
I n of friends at <lb />
. Greene bI <lb />
ti an. they w re <lb />
a by the host assisted by <lb />
II . ere served <lb />
Miss Ernestine Forbes <lb />
a Mi Brown. <lb />
Ti e of I i was hi . <lb />
Mr, Sb making <lb />
. a the pi <lb />
box of candy. <lb />
When over delicious <lb />
refreshments were served. <lb />
Wednesday night in a very quiet man- <lb />
account of recent bereave- <lb />
in the family of the <lb />
at the elegant residence of the bride's <lb />
mother, Mrs. C. J. Forbes, when our <lb />
popular townsman, Mr. Samuel T. <lb />
and the beautiful and attract- <lb />
MiSS Helen Forbes were made <lb />
one. <lb />
About the Rev. J. H. Shore <lb />
entered the tastily decorated library <lb />
followed by Miss Clara Louise Move <lb />
heavy land Miss Rosa Hadley, the <lb />
I flower then Immediately came <lb />
dame of honor. Mrs. w. I,. Beat, <lb />
r of the bride, handsomely <lb />
. in Ivory satin With pearl trim- <lb />
It gs, and white <lb />
She was followed by the maid <lb />
Of honor, pi little Miss Sophia <lb />
Sadler, of Baltimore, who never could <lb />
look . tier or s i than she I good sellers. <lb />
did in pink crepe with the workmanship, nuke <lb />
I an and bearing a bu i . if you fall to buy your next <lb />
of pink nations almost as from them. <lb />
she Th n came the groom, ac- Rev. T. H, King, of <lb />
its cousin and In to see bis <lb />
Mr, II. A. . both dressed in <lb />
you need pictures framed, see <lb />
i. <lb />
WE <lb />
AROUND WINTERVILLE <lb />
HI SIX ROTES. <lb />
Marriage a Popular Couple Took <lb />
Place Today. <lb />
WINTERVILLE, X. C. Oct. <lb />
Miss Kinds Cox. who is teaching at <lb />
spent Saturday and Sun- <lb />
day with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
A. G Cox. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. have Just <lb />
received a car load of new Royal <lb />
flour; prices cheap. <lb />
Messrs. R. L. Abbott and C. T. Cox <lb />
visited Ayden Saturday evening. <lb />
perfect wire fencing, <lb />
heights, for the farm or poultry <lb />
purposes, will shown you by the <lb />
A. G. Cox Manufacturing Company <lb />
They have a rolls of barbed Wire <lb />
on hand. <lb />
Mr O. W. Rollins and Miss Edith <lb />
Mumford, of Ayden. were In town <lb />
Sunday evening. <lb />
The A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. has been <lb />
rushed to supply the demand for their <lb />
wagons. They have been <lb />
turning them out in numbers and in <lb />
excellent shape. They are in <lb />
to build you a wagon that has <lb />
stood the lest, weighed in the balances <lb />
and not found wanting. See them or <lb />
end your orders to the A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb />
Co. Winterville. X. C <lb />
Mr. F. A. Edmondson. of <lb />
burg. spent Sunday In town with Mrs <lb />
F. a. who is spending a <lb />
short while here. <lb />
Cotton seed meal and hulls at A <lb />
W. Ange <lb />
Mr. Adrian Brown, of Greenville. <lb />
paid Winterville his regular visit <lb />
Sunday night. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. will do <lb />
your repairing on short notice and <lb />
at the lowest prices. <lb />
Mr. M. j. Bryan, of spent <lb />
Sunday with bis parents, Mrs. <lb />
M. G. Bryan, and left Monday for <lb />
Baltimore. <lb />
T buggies <lb />
by the A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. are <lb />
They lead in quality <lb />
THE FIRST ANNUAL EXHIBIT OF THE <lb />
Pitt Co. Fair Association <lb />
WILL BE HELD AT <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
-ON- <lb />
THURSDAY and FRIDAY <lb />
tali. <lb />
The Civic League met at the home <lb />
of Mrs. T. A. Person Thursday after- <lb />
noon. <lb />
A very interesting letter was read <lb />
from Mrs. R. K. also a com- <lb />
the mayor and board <lb />
of aldermen, granting their hearty <lb />
in anything the league <lb />
desires that lies in their power. <lb />
The league now issues a call to <lb />
every property and lease owner in <lb />
the town to please clean their <lb />
thoroughly on Saturday, October <lb />
Get rid of every can, bottle, all <lb />
paper and rubbish of any kind. The <lb />
town carts will take this away on <lb />
Monday, the the usual day of re- <lb />
moving trash. <lb />
We further the school children <lb />
to help in this work. <lb />
league can do good work with- <lb />
out the school children's support. <lb />
We were glad to have with us at <lb />
this meeting Mrs. Meade, of Danville. <lb />
Va who made an interesting talk of <lb />
league work in that city. <lb />
The next meeting will be held at <lb />
the home of Mrs. Frank Woolen, on <lb />
Thursday. October 26th. <lb />
PRESS REPORTER. <lb />
Surely a Pitt County Exhibit of <lb />
LIVE STOCK, POULTRY, FRUITS, FIELD CROPS, <lb />
PANTRY and DAIRY PRODUCTS <lb />
and FANCY WORK. <lb />
State Department of Agriculture offers in <lb />
Premiums for Women's Department, as as <lb />
Liberal Premiums in other Departments. <lb />
Exhibit entrances and Premiums Open only to Citizens of Pitt County. <lb />
o charge for entering exhibits-Admission Free to Everybody. <lb />
The old Pitt County Cornet Band will be specially to furnish <lb />
music at this fair. <lb />
J. D. WHICHARD, Sec'y- J. L. WOOTEN, Pres. <lb />
bride on the arm B. D F vest, at A W Co , <lb />
f . Co. . <lb />
i gowned In J. E. Gr, u r clever i B THE U FRIDAY, AW Oil. <lb />
Duchess lace and pearl . sit . Ayden ind St. WHITE FOB A M LIST. <lb />
i S ind y evening <lb />
a an i S Of I .- g you . . ; ,,;, , <lb />
led the altar and then n, Barber Co They will <lb />
were i any day. and make you some <lb />
Rev. J. n meal and Hour. <lb />
In th and eloquent Miss Sadie Barker and Mr. C. T. <lb />
manner bis. C I vi I Ayden Monday evening. <lb />
After I ice cream and carts and new cart bodies at <lb />
cake were served, and the guests Harrington. Barber shops. <lb />
which only the Immediate families <lb />
those who were to have taken <lb />
part in the wedding festivities were <lb />
invited I spent the evening looking at <lb />
the presents which were legion, and <lb />
so as to beggar description. <lb />
Mrs. J. n. Cherry and Miss <lb />
Smith added much to the pleas- <lb />
of in with their <lb />
songs. <lb />
The happy couple left on the <lb />
O'clock train for Norfolk and this <lb />
afternoon they will sail for New <lb />
York, where they will spend about a <lb />
week before returning to Greenville. <lb />
Sam Helen carry with them the <lb />
best wishes of the entire community. <lb />
Dr. B. t. Cox and wife left <lb />
day morning to attend the Raleigh <lb />
fair. <lb />
The A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. can save <lb />
you money when you buy buggy <lb />
They have a nice line and the <lb />
very latest styles. Also you should <lb />
look those buggy robes on <lb />
In their show room. <lb />
Helen Smith and Lizzie Cox <lb />
left yesterday evening for Raleigh to <lb />
attend the fair. <lb />
Miss Agnes Dixon, of Ayden, spent <lb />
last with her uncle. Mr. J. H. C. <lb />
DIxon. <lb />
Mr. Eugene Cannon and Miss Car- <lb />
Smith hitch-up today in double <lb />
i one of HI <lb />
lift In Baa year, <lb />
out . r . . , the best <lb />
j are u,,. <lb />
i ix <lb />
bas in <lb />
truly, <lb />
I. <lb />
-A,. . <lb />
Read What Mr. gargle Says <lb />
then come In let u you the t ,. <lb />
You will And just as Mr. did that <lb />
are and durable-, became are made from boiler <lb />
material and are other wagons and that'll why the <lb />
Come la and us. <lb />
T. W. Co., <lb />
Distributors <lb />
Est <lb />
I ill <lb />
hack is of the most com- <lb />
forms muscular rheumatism. <lb />
a few applications of Chamberlain's <lb />
will give relief. For sale <lb />
by all dealers. <lb />
suffered, during girlhood, from womanly <lb />
writes Mrs. Mollie Navy, of Walnut, N. C last, I was <lb />
almost bed-ridden, and had to give up. We had three <lb />
doctors. All the time, I was getting worse. I had bad <lb />
spells, that lasted from to days. In one week, after I <lb />
gave a trial, I could eat, sleep, and joke, as <lb />
anybody. In weeks, I was well. I had been an invalid <lb />
for weary years relieved me, when everything <lb />
else <lb />
TAKE The <lb />
If you are weak and ailing, think what it would mean, <lb />
to you, to recover as quickly as Mrs. Navy did. For more <lb />
than years, this purely vegetable, tonic women, <lb />
has been used by thousands of weak and ailing sufferers. <lb />
They found it of real value in aches and <lb />
pains. Why suffer longer A remedy that bas relieved <lb />
and helped so many, is ready, at the nearest drug store, for <lb />
use, at once, by you. Try it, today. <lb />
. . Dent., Co Tm <lb />
tor Special book. Home Treatment <lb />
We all wish them , long and happy <lb />
their bridal trip. We wish them much <lb />
happiness through life. <lb />
Paying your bills by check is the <lb />
simplest, and most convenient method <lb />
Try it with the Hank of Winterville. <lb />
and be convinced. <lb />
Miss Sadie Barker returned <lb />
Photograph of the <lb />
while It la a truthful illustration <lb />
home <lb />
Wednesday after a three weeks <lb />
visit to N. c. <lb />
Mr. Arden Brown of Greenville was <lb />
a pleasant In <lb />
day night. <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Co., are <lb />
selling their goods real cheap, <lb />
it will pay you see them before <lb />
buy. <lb />
Mr. m i Bryan of was <lb />
in town Thursday. <lb />
Don't get uneasy at the cold <lb />
for A. W. Ange and Co. have <lb />
plenty of heaters and blankets. <lb />
C T. Cox and Miss Sadie Darker <lb />
visited Ayden Thursday evening. <lb />
Get your repair work done at <lb />
Barber and mill. <lb />
Prof. ti. B. of <lb />
came in Thursday night to spend a <lb />
day or two. to the pleasure of his <lb />
many friends here. <lb />
if you need anything in the hard- <lb />
ware line see A. W. Ange and Co. <lb />
they have almost a complete stock. <lb />
Mrs. Fred Master Fred. <lb />
Jr. Isabel Dawson of Ayden <lb />
spent Thursday and Friday in <lb />
town attending the of services <lb />
the church. <lb />
If you are not. at present, a patron <lb />
of this hank, consider this , <lb />
personal invitation in make thin your <lb />
banking home. Bank of Winterville. <lb />
Misses Mantle and Min- <lb />
Williamson of Bethel spent <lb />
Thursday night with Miss Mamie <lb />
MORE THAN YEARS <lb />
of the stamp of approval <lb />
of hundreds of thousands of wagon <lb />
and the n can win are bad; of <lb />
-OLD The only way such a <lb />
did record could lie made Is Jut the way it <lb />
been made for the by pulling tho <lb />
very best quality of wood into every part. Ironing them <lb />
perfectly and painting handsomely and durably. <lb />
Yon make no mistake la selecting the <lb />
wagon <lb />
Made only by the KENTUCKY WAGON MFG. CO., By. <lb />
are distributors of the and Wag- <lb />
ons for Lenoir, Greene, Pitt, Jones, Craven, Onslow and counties. We <lb />
buy in car loads, get the lowest possible freight, and sell on the closest margin. <lb />
If not convenient to come to see us, write us stating size and style wanted <lb />
and we will name lowest price delivered at your nearest shipping point. Let <lb />
us have your inquiries and orders, and we will make price and terms <lb />
factory. Address, <lb />
T. W. Newborn Co., <lb />
Kinston. N. Carolina <lb />
Chapman. <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Co. will <lb />
yon some good meal out of <lb />
your corn, also some good flour out <lb />
your wheat, bring ii any day. <lb />
Prof. F. C. attended the <lb />
Association Washington <lb />
week. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co., <lb />
your hay baler, they have them <lb />
on hand now and will make It to <lb />
interest to see them before you <lb />
make a purchase. <lb />
right in town. <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Co. are <lb />
carrying a large and well selected <lb />
sunk of ii disc harrows and <lb />
mowing machines, rakes and mowing <lb />
machine repairs. <lb />
Rev. F. Smith finished the series <lb />
of services at the church <lb />
last night and left for Greenville to <lb />
lake the mid-night train for his home <lb />
in Elisabeth City. <lb />
Cannon- <lb />
Sin <lb />
Wednesday afternoon at <lb />
o'clock the homo of the bride, live <lb />
miles from Greenville, Miss Carrie <lb />
Smith and Mr. Cannon, of <lb />
Ayden, were married, Rev. J. R, <lb />
Tingle <lb />
The came lo Greenville and <lb />
lift on the train for a tour of <lb />
Northern cities. <lb />
Announcement. <lb />
desire to announce to my friends <lb />
and former customers that I am with <lb />
Mrs. P. Lee Co., and will be <lb />
glad to them call there when <lb />
in need of anything in the newest <lb />
and best <lb />
MRS. M. T. <lb />
in <lb />
Guess this Is the <lb />
prolonging white <lb />
Indian <lb />
man's kind <lb />
Don't <lb />
No one has over made a salve, <lb />
or balm to compare with <lb />
Salve. me per- <lb />
healer of cuts, corns, burns, <lb />
ed, sores, scalds, bolls, ulcers, eczema. <lb />
salt For sore eyes, sores, <lb />
chapped hands or sprains its supreme. <lb />
for piles. Try It. Only <lb />
cents at all druggists. <lb />
nave a circulation <lb />
of 1,200 among the best <lb />
people in Eastern <lb />
Carolina and invite those <lb />
who wish to get better <lb />
acquainted with these <lb />
good people in a business <lb />
way to take a few inches <lb />
space and tell them what <lb />
you have to bring to their <lb />
attention. <lb />
are low and can be <lb />
had upon application. <lb />
Una. it has a population <lb />
of and is surround- <lb />
ed by the best farming <lb />
country. Industries of <lb />
all kinds are invited to <lb />
locate here for we have <lb />
everything to offer in the <lb />
way of labor capital and <lb />
tributary facilities. We <lb />
have an up-to-date job <lb />
and newspaper plant. <lb />
In Hie Employment <lb />
V FRIDAY, OCTOBER S., <lb />
MM II IS. <lb />
i WAKE <lb />
mi i hp <lb />
. <lb />
Fores Defeats in <lb />
bi Car; <lb />
HELD IN mm HALL <lb />
CAROLINA M <lb />
DOWN BUSINESS <lb />
taking <lb />
ill II <lb />
Thai t. Kn- <lb />
the Sell lenient Within Her <lb />
Such Are <lb />
the I <lb />
WAKE Oct. a <lb />
i. go audience of students and vis- <lb />
there was held in the <lb />
mortal last Friday evening <lb />
debate. <lb />
till i ; new tiling in the debating <lb />
of the and was <lb />
i n i; in correspond to the regular <lb />
debate, which is hold in <lb />
Its object is to tarnish <lb />
further opportunity tor the develop- <lb />
of public speech. Those <lb />
ere juniors and sophomores, and <lb />
ii is sneakers are regularly elected by <lb />
two societies. <lb />
President was A. J. <lb />
Society, while P. <lb />
Campbell, the So- <lb />
the Chair of secretary. <lb />
The judges for occasion were <lb />
Prof. J. B. E. W. <lb />
and Dr. R. U. Squires. <lb />
C. Willis was the first speaker <lb />
on the affirmative, lie clearly stated <lb />
the question, outlining the argument <lb />
side and basing his speech on <lb />
the fact that the question as stated <lb />
by the query was not one of getting <lb />
new Immigrants into this country, but <lb />
making use those who arc already <lb />
lawfully admitted into the United <lb />
He dealt on the problem of <lb />
slums in relation to <lb />
Mr. Ellis opened and closed <lb />
discussion. In his ho <lb />
gentlemen to my <lb />
corns lo you with o eulogy <lb />
on blood. We admit that <lb />
n falls With pleasing effect upon <lb />
of Southerner, bin <lb />
. gentlemen, It they had proved <lb />
were populated with <lb />
have proved, and so <lb />
g . human beings respect the <lb />
,. . just God, they iii never <lb />
. the people of the South <lb />
titled in helping make <lb />
Immigration to crime <lb />
lores, r mi back on <lb />
haunches, <lb />
B worn idol of an An- <lb />
. boasting of it, <lb />
II i In ii ii were the crown- <lb />
. every <lb />
who happens to not, have <lb />
, ,., and fair skin, while the <lb />
f comes to the United <lb />
Stales at our Invitation to drift to <lb />
pig-tall alley and bells half- <lb />
i, the slums the cities near <lb />
. e pot i- <lb />
V, c, was the first speaker <lb />
He made the points <lb />
the class of Immigrants <lb />
me to the United States are <lb />
it ii,,. they are needed, and <lb />
j would even be detrimental <lb />
i i i be agricultural mid general In- <lb />
i the South. He strengthen- <lb />
i y concrete illus- <lb />
Freeman closed main <lb />
h for the affirmative. Taking up <lb />
the economic phase of the question, <lb />
to the club and making It more of <lb />
of a business men's organization. <lb />
At s meeting the club two weeks <lb />
ago a Committee was appointed to <lb />
address an appeal to the business <lb />
men of the town Invite them to <lb />
if You are You'd Closes <lb />
I This Oiler Again During <lb />
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, Oct. ATLANTA. <lb />
TAKING ADVANTAGE OF SUCH AN WILL MAKE YOU A <lb />
I Sunday morning, by has seen in years was formally <lb />
Adopts Suggestion of e to <lb />
Add It I ii ii <lb />
There was a attended and <lb />
enthusiastic meeting of Carolina <lb />
club. Monday night, lo consider the <lb />
matter of adding a commercial teat- of , but send in your <lb />
STATE <lb />
in i I Ii <lb />
THREE SEEK<lb />
Old lit it Wager a I Is <lb />
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, Oct. <lb />
;. the <lb />
Oct. <lb />
Quite a number of contestants, re- <lb />
the value of a good stall have <lb />
taken prompt advantage of the <lb />
tree vole offer which ibises next Sat- <lb />
members of the club and give u . <lb />
It their influence. This committee <lb />
work under consideration <lb />
at once. As soon as you have <lb />
made your mind to join, spread <lb />
the news with your friends. Tell <lb />
that you <lb />
am sure will lend their sup- <lb />
port, among your <lb />
ind tell them you want their <lb />
of Taking us <lb />
launched here today when the state <lb />
ibis text, Timothy Godliness executive committee met <lb />
is profitable all tilings having <lb />
to fix the dale make other <lb />
I our menu. roll . , . . for the state primaries to <lb />
. which as <lb />
;, presented and interesting who <lb />
discourse Of the power of Godliness to assume his duties a <lb />
lie sure to toil them in ask <lb />
ii, overcoming harmful <lb />
and decided that with the club having <lb />
only a social feature there was lit- <lb />
in it lo appeal to business men. <lb />
he committee reported its <lb />
back to the board of governors <lb />
I also that these votes <lb />
Over and above the regular number <lb />
given as per schedule already <lb />
published. Those votes will <lb />
make a foundation in which lo <lb />
for their vote coupons when renew- <lb />
their subscriptions. Be sides <lb />
the man and inspiring <lb />
conscience. The discourse was, <lb />
appealing and helpful to <lb />
gather all the ten-vote coupons you <lb />
and have them placed to <lb />
. ., , ,. Tile students base a large number <lb />
credit I lie milliner votes In <lb />
favor in the daily list will be a boost <lb />
Of prizes offered to encourage <lb />
and recommended calling the club to- Show wort <lb />
, consider the suggestion of of that ,,, , , fields. Three the most val- <lb />
changing the club and putting it on <lb />
a business or commercial basis, us <lb />
prize you out to win. Make your of these come under the con- <lb />
you their support I the <lb />
A Little Energy. <lb />
i foundations now. <lb />
After a start, opportunity of <lb />
well a social basis, let its <lb />
object be development and liberal <lb />
less of Greenville as well as social <lb />
pleasure to Its members. <lb />
vote offer, you will see how easy it <lb />
will be to build up. Everything needs <lb />
In and here is chance .;. <lb />
Ail you need to make you success- <lb />
in whatever you engage is just a <lb />
in of kind, <lb />
It to consider this feature and,., g one <lb />
act upon the suggestion of the com- MU <lb />
that the meeting was held Mon-;, ,,, o. <lb />
day night The matter was discussed <lb />
Is the only <lb />
North Carolina Society <lb />
Dames offers annually first prise <lb />
of and a second of tor <lb />
i papers dealing with Co- <lb />
Ms- <lb />
it of North <lb />
. . . <lb />
anything, And a little energy is all <lb />
This prize is open to any <lb />
you need to make you a winner In I <lb />
of the University, and each year <lb />
. Manager, and there seems lo be no <lb />
let up. Contestants are beginning lo <lb />
j realize a help these ten-vote <lb />
coupons are going lo lie when <lb />
; count is made. Every <lb />
should be carefully to clip <lb />
from the paper, pin them 10- <lb />
Another committee, consisting and write their names in one <lb />
Messrs. it. H. Wright, C. OH. This will be sufficient. You <lb />
C. T. II. have a host of friends who will <lb />
u. J. was appointed cheerfully give yon these coupons, <lb />
to draft rules covering the change together and mall <lb />
in the club and outline a plan of or a, to the <lb />
this contest. Do not let any of the <lb />
in number of students enter the con- <lb />
by several members of the club as <lb />
well as some outside business <lb />
who were Invited to be present, and <lb />
the recommendation of commit- <lb />
tee to add the commercial feature was <lb />
unanimously adopted. <lb />
lit a lo obstacles Dint make weak <lb />
give up. trouble you. Th it little en- <lb />
you invest will be more than <lb />
a match for them. that in- <lb />
Another prize <lb />
by the Lake <lb />
work for the under the <lb />
new feature and report to another <lb />
Contest Manager. Contestants should <lb />
not forget that coupons are dated and <lb />
meeting to be held next Monday be careful to see that <lb />
night, 30th, I they reach the contest department DO- <lb />
transacting this business part tore date of expiration, otherwise <lb />
the meeting, it seemed to j they Would be and sure., no <lb />
Itself at once Into a boosting contestant wants this to happen, <lb />
and a number short Country contestants sending In <lb />
were made on coupons and subscriptions can i <lb />
legs or university In the United States <lb />
vestment of energy Is going to win <lb />
for you and make you the owner of <lb />
a valuable prize. A prize which you I <lb />
will be proud to exhibit to <lb />
friends. A prize Unit Will give you <lb />
tin right to the title of energetic. <lb />
Schedule Votes. <lb />
who shall writs the best essay on <lb />
; I International Arbitration. The <lb />
a very complete library <lb />
on the subject, and doubtless a <lb />
Of Student will try for this prize. <lb />
There is in addition s third prize <lb />
offered your by the Good Gov- <lb />
League for the best essay <lb />
needs it what can be <lb />
through This turn In <lb />
i he meeting h an Index to what <lb />
Will billow in tilt i tub as a business <lb />
men's it shows that. <lb />
when you something before men ,,,,,,.,. j. c wait and there- <lb />
and have an Object to work tor, you <lb />
r. ii gel iii.-in Interested- <lb />
Sow, remember the meeting next <lb />
Monday night, and make that an- <lb />
other enthusiastic gathering. <lb />
The i of the Daily Reflector and I dealing with problem of city gov- <lb />
the number of votes allowed on The prize is worth <lb />
subscriptions and will be of interest to every grad- <lb />
of the university during the past <lb />
i e or fifteen years to know that <lb />
Horny-handed Henry, the veteran <lb />
bell ringer and faculty messenger has <lb />
ha p. mil iii quite an accident. While <lb />
away from tho president's <lb />
home few days ago be in some way <lb />
slipped and fell to the ground, pain- <lb />
y injuring himself. The faithful <lb />
with his stumbling, sorter <lb />
shuffle, and his notorious <lb />
always three minutes <lb />
or time, has long been <lb />
ton place yourself under a handicap to they get their of the principal objects of Inter- <lb />
Smith, who resigns next month <lb />
is United States <lb />
ii Is generally expected <lb />
the committee will select the second <lb />
week of as the time for <lb />
holding the primaries, <lb />
There are three leading candidates <lb />
in the race tor governorship. They <lb />
are former Governor Joseph M. <lb />
former State J. <lb />
pope Brown and Richard B, Russell, <lb />
Judge of the court appeals, This <lb />
is Joseph M. Brown's third race for <lb />
governor. He defeated Smith <lb />
for a second tern, in 1908, and in 1910 <lb />
was defeated for a second term by <lb />
Smith. His entry Into tin. <lb />
contest has aroused the lighting <lb />
of the Smith adherents who <lb />
look on his candidacy as part of a <lb />
plan of former Governor Terrell and <lb />
old machine to gain control of <lb />
the Georgia Democracy and defeat <lb />
Smith When he goes before the <lb />
for re-election as States <lb />
senator. <lb />
The prohibition issue is expected <lb />
to figure prominently In the campaign <lb />
Judge is to make the race <lb />
on a local option platform, while J. <lb />
Pope Brown is supporter of the <lb />
present state-wide prohibition law. <lb />
Former Governor straddles <lb />
the prohibition I <lb />
is offered an- <lb />
Peace <lb />
lure receiving same attention G months. <lb />
as that bestowed upon Greenville <lb />
town contestants. <lb />
lie Bashful. <lb />
Whatever you do, If you Intend to <lb />
mirages <lb /><lb />
ii in 1.50 <lb />
8.00 . <lb />
0.00 <lb />
. . <lb />
; 0.50 <lb />
y. 1.00 <lb />
8.00 <lb />
ye .- <lb />
In <lb />
TEACHERS <lb />
Be sure ash all <lb />
may be bard to overcome, n i when paying their <lb />
yon me in Join In of energy, the <lb />
a man is In great fear <lb />
III i <lb />
all la coming to I <lb />
is no place tor the Immigrant In th. <lb />
life of the South; the <lb />
of such foreigners as com- <lb />
corns to America would not <lb />
a iii In the social development of the <lb />
and that they would set for <lb />
us ii low standard of <lb />
and religion. <lb />
The Judges then rendered their de- <lb />
in favor Of the <lb />
The marshals for this occasion <lb />
were C. B. Parker, A. it. <lb />
Phillips, and B. P. <lb />
Lost Saturday In a bard fought <lb />
game football between Roanoke <lb />
College and Wake Forest, Wake For- <lb />
, defeated the visiting team by a <lb />
u ii. The Forest <lb />
team outclassed the team <lb />
in- dealt on the smith's need of every respect, and there was no <lb />
. He spoke of the to fear after the <lb />
for more laborers In the of the game the home team <lb />
and th need of a better class of would have little trouble In making <lb />
laborers He gave Instances . lb .-.;. ., f the <lb />
wherein the problem tie played line ball. <lb />
by the proper of sin- Today lie Wake Forest team play- <lb />
hie Immigrants. led Washington and at Lexington. <lb />
the campus. The old <lb />
Injuries ere not serious. <lb />
Bl of the Methodist <lb />
In Chapel Hill has been <lb />
CO as unsafe. A <lb />
crack was discovered In the <lb />
of Mr. Warren ago and contractors <lb />
i e sent for, Who when they <lb />
an examination with the above <lb />
IN <lb />
X October <lb />
COLORED .,, ,,, <lb />
ii i i isl Ill about The <lb />
Building And All Household ,. ,,,,,,, ,,. <lb />
, too tar to be put <lb />
Dove Davis, a colored man living . f . <lb />
S place, in ,. ,.,.,. . ,,. <lb />
Heroic work on <lb />
suit. Services will be suspended <lb />
the a for two weeks while the <lb />
mils are being made. <lb />
. ; in 1883, <lb />
rounding buildings <lb />
Ai afternoon, I lot i <lb />
III- lather <lb />
Mr w. E. Haywood left Monday <lb />
B for where be <lb />
was a telegram an- <lb />
pail lie saved Mrs. the n death of bis <lb />
nil bis household effects. An old , home Mr. T. J. Haywood. He re- <lb />
woman, aged about N A ., telegram stating his <lb />
Who was ill the at , . . , . ,. <lb />
. i,,. When the lire home a seven <lb />
, i was necessary to save . i. I little later an- <lb />
i, m , . r h. <lb />
furniture. Hi lost was about hall Only last week his was <lb />
covered by Insurance. The home <lb />
which belonged lo Mrs, Hill was in- <lb />
sured tor 1600. <lb />
The homeless families were well <lb />
ired tor the night. <lb />
The old man Who was standing iii the <lb />
door also cams near losing bis life. <lb />
B P. was the last speaker being by n score of IS <lb />
j, He showed that there to ti. <lb />
la due to a disordered <lb />
i audition of the Chamber- <lb />
Tablets are e a <lb />
especially to <lb />
. I Oil M , . I I . <lb />
strengthen It, tone and Invigorate It, <lb />
iii. the and to banish <lb />
positively null effectually, <lb />
For sale by all dealers. <lb />
Ill Greenville Visiting him. and was <lb />
then In apparent health, and <lb />
the his death so <lb />
came as a severe shock. <lb />
Pis friends with him in <lb />
I hi <lb />
Or. ii ail ,,.,, ls ,. ,,,,. <lb />
Dr. II. n. will In Hotel. <lb />
Bertha, Monday and Tuesday, No- <lb />
and 7th, to treat <lb />
of the eye. iii <lb />
A few applications of Chamberlain's <lb />
Will give roller For sale <lb />
b all dealers <lb />
Attending <lb />
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Oct <lb />
From every direction and on every <lb />
train and car throngs of <lb />
teachers came to Minneapolis today <lb />
ii attend the twenty-ninth annual <lb />
convention the <lb />
The large at- <lb />
combines with an attract- <lb />
a list of <lb />
speakers give promise of the <lb />
moat convention In the his- <lb />
in the association. <lb />
Hit b beaded by <lb />
William Bryan, who delivers the <lb />
opening i i to- <lb />
night Al the ding sessions of <lb />
the convention, continuing through to- <lb />
morrow and the speakers <lb />
will Include D i Sb Hi r <lb />
the i go; <lb />
the <lb />
of Minnesota; B K Bliss, of <lb />
Iowa i lb Eugene E, <lb />
dean of the college of <lb />
of i of <lb />
E, Maxwell, president of tho <lb />
normal i cl i I, <lb />
Mr and Mrs A I-. <lb />
request the ho you en a <lb />
the a in . <lb />
, M <lb />
Mr, Lloyd <lb />
the it W. <lb />
Hie . November <lb />
St, Church <lb />
On North Carolina. <lb />
cards in town. <lb />
The best plaster A piece of flan- <lb />
dampened with <lb />
i on over affected <lb />
parts is superior in and <lb />
costs only one tenth as much. For <lb />
sale by all dealers. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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