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          <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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DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
WINTERVILLE. N. C. Feb. ; Mr. M. B. Bryan, of Norfolk, spent <lb />
Rev. B. W. will lecture at Saturday night and Sunday with his <lb />
the Baptist church Wednesday night, parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Bryan <lb />
Everybody invited.<lb />
mm<lb />
ITEMS. <lb />
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. II. I <lb />
Dr. Archibald Henderson returned la sf The Beys f <lb />
last Monday from the University of <lb />
Virginia where on Friday night he <lb />
lectured before the Civic Club of that <lb />
institution on Contributions of <lb />
George Barnard Shaw to Modern So- <lb />
We have a council of the Boy Scouts <lb />
in Greenville the interest of the <lb />
boys of this town, for their good <lb />
morally and physically. A <lb />
On Saturday Dr. Header- part of the Scout oath is will keep <lb />
son addressed the Boob Club of the <lb />
same University While at the <lb />
he and Mrs. Henderson were <lb />
the guests of Dr. C. A. Smith, former- <lb />
professor at the University of North <lb />
myself men all; awake, morally <lb />
straight and physically <lb />
We trying to teach the boys the <lb />
highest principles of life. That they <lb />
may be useful to themselves and <lb />
Carolina. Besides making lectures helpful to those around them. To be <lb />
at several noted institutions of learn-kind, obedient, strong and manly In <lb />
since his return from Europe, things. Surely this town should <lb />
Miss Mantle returned give a public debate in the school <lb />
home last week, after spending a few on the 15th of March. <lb />
That Congress <lb />
The Vance Literary Society is assisted by his wife, s deeper interest in our boys if <lb />
days with Mrs. M G. Bryan. <lb />
It will pay you to see Harrington. <lb />
Barber Co. for your farm <lb />
Mr. B. F. Manning spent one day <lb />
last week at Hanrahan, In the interest <lb />
of the cotton business. <lb />
Rev. M. A. Adams spent two days <lb />
at Scotland last week. <lb />
Don't forget the reversible disc <lb />
harrows at A W. Ange <lb />
Messrs. J. R. Smith and L. L Kit- <lb />
of Ayden, spent Friday in town. <lb />
White goods, laces end embroider- <lb />
tall Come and see them at <lb />
Harrington. Barber Co. <lb />
Messrs. J, F. Harrington and S. G. <lb />
Moore returned Friday evening from <lb />
a trip to Reading, Penn. <lb />
Miss Pearl Hester spent Saturday <lb />
and Sunday with friends in and near <lb />
Ayden. <lb />
If you are need in pants, A W. Ange <lb />
Co. have a new lot Just in and cheap, <lb />
too. <lb />
Mrs. E. E. Cox returned Sunday <lb />
from a visit at Seven Springs. <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. have a <lb />
nice lot of shoes for men, women and <lb />
children. <lb />
Rev. W. J. Fulford. of Ayden, filled <lb />
his regular appointment at the <lb />
pal church both Sunday morning and <lb />
night. <lb />
just published the American edition we are to have strong, well prepared <lb />
of bis translation of the book by the men for the future, <lb />
famous French scholar, j This big meeting is to be held in <lb />
Should Enact a National Prohibition on the late American the court house February <lb />
The public is cordially in- <lb />
Rev. W. L of Middlesex, <lb />
filled Rev. M. A. pulpit here <lb />
Sunday morning and at night <lb />
Mr. J. D. Cox returned to Fair- <lb />
Monday after spending a few <lb />
days at home. <lb />
When the weather gets good it will <lb />
pay you to get a reversible disc <lb />
row and plow over your lands in or- <lb />
to make the time for planting. <lb />
Miss Myrna Height, of <lb />
has been spending a few days <lb />
with Misses Eva and Lucy Belle <lb />
Langston returned home Monday <lb />
Rev. W. J. Fulford. of Ayden. will <lb />
hold a service of Bible readings at <lb />
the Episcopal church every Thurs- <lb />
day evening at o'clock during <lb />
Lent <lb />
The trustees of Winterville High <lb />
School is to build at an early date a <lb />
central dining hall for the <lb />
of W. H. S. This will be a <lb />
great addition to the school. <lb />
James. This is but we want men, women and <lb />
contribution to Dr. <lb />
son's already large gift to the <lb />
of the country. <lb />
The Johnston County Club of the <lb />
University, consisting of about <lb />
men from that county, has recently <lb />
established a medal which is to be <lb />
given each year to that member of <lb />
the winning team between the high <lb />
schools of the The medal will <lb />
be a handsome gold one valued at <lb />
ten dollars. Stipulations for the de- <lb />
bate have already been arranged. Six <lb />
high schools will enter the contest. <lb />
Each school will furnish two teams. <lb />
Two d bates will be held on the same <lb />
night, one at home, one at some one <lb />
of the other schools, by each high <lb />
school. <lb />
The spring trip of the Glee Club <lb />
has been arranged. The schedule <lb />
a tour of tee principal <lb />
cities and towns of western North <lb />
Carolina. The troupe of twenty-five <lb />
men will leave the bill on the 26th <lb />
of February, and will visit In <lb />
Prof. J. L. who for some Greensboro. Morganton, Hick- <lb />
time has been in the hospital under- Winston. Mt. Airy, and <lb />
going an operation, returned Monday <lb />
evening and will soon be able to re- <lb />
his duties as teacher in the <lb />
school. <lb />
SHOOTING AT LANDS RECLAIMED <lb />
THREE WHITE MEN IN PISTOL ROW DOVER AND CRAVEN WORK <lb />
ton. The club has been practicing <lb />
faithfully during the entire spring, <lb />
learning new songs and Improving <lb />
the old ones. The choruses, latest <lb />
hits, and college songs, the gay or- <lb />
music, violin and piano so- <lb />
will make the program attractive <lb />
j for any Many friends of <lb />
the University and of the <lb />
reside in the towns to be vis- <lb />
These never fall to make the <lb />
to and all friends of the <lb />
boys. There will be five to ten min- <lb />
talks by prominent men of the <lb />
town. First the boys tell some- <lb />
thing of what they are doing and <lb />
what they intend doing. This will be <lb />
directed by the Assistant Scout Master <lb />
Mr. W. T. Lipscomb. Mayor F. M. <lb />
Wooten will give a short talk on the <lb />
importance of such an organization <lb />
in our town. Then Mr. F. C. Hard- <lb />
will make a five minutes address <lb />
on the future of our boys. Rev. Mr. <lb />
Hoyle will speak in behalf of the <lb />
needs In this place. Last Dr. <lb />
Charles will address <lb />
We will give him full freedom <lb />
to say what he pleases. All will be <lb />
given an opportunity to express them- <lb />
selves In some way or other. Any <lb />
talks running over time will be <lb />
ed up at one dollar per minute. We <lb />
hops to make this meeting good and <lb />
spicy for all who coma Now, let us <lb />
have a house full and show our inter- <lb />
est la the boys. The boys will march <lb />
from their hall to the court house. <lb />
The meeting will be called to <lb />
promptly at o'clock, Friday <lb />
C. M. ROCK, <lb />
Scout Master. <lb />
NEW YORK. Feb. <lb />
list of 3.300 was practically filled <lb />
when the doors of the New Grand <lb />
Palace were opened this morning <lb />
for the thirty-sixth annual exhibition <lb />
of the Kennel Club. It <lb />
is the most representative entry list <lb />
in the history of the <lb />
Twenty-one States and the Dominion <lb />
of Canada are represented. New <lb />
York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and <lb />
Pennsylvania have largest show- <lb />
but Kentucky, Missouri, Texas. <lb />
California. Washington and other dis- <lb />
states are represented. The <lb />
Canadians have made a particularly <lb />
strong showing as fifteen exhibitors <lb />
in Ontario. Quebec and Manitoba have <lb />
sent their blue-blooded over <lb />
the border to compete with the Amer- <lb />
entries. <lb />
As usual with the bench shows held <lb />
here in recent years, the collies led <lb />
the list of entries, although there <lb />
was a large array of French bull- <lb />
dogs and Boston terriers. The St. <lb />
Bernard, Great Dane and Russian <lb />
wolfhound classes were heavily fill- <lb />
ed, while the small varieties, such <lb />
as spaniels, <lb />
English toy Maltese <lb />
and toy black and tans, <lb />
ed many of the best dogs of their kind <lb />
In the country. The judging of ex- <lb />
began soon after the opening <lb />
this morning and will be continued <lb />
until the close of the show Friday <lb />
night. . Prises worth will be <lb />
distributed among the winners. <lb />
I. C <lb />
The following new industries <lb />
North Carolina are reported Is <lb />
Tradesman tor the <lb />
ending February <lb />
automobile <lb />
company. <lb />
Elisabeth <lb />
company; veneer <lb />
telephone com- <lb />
development <lb />
company. <lb />
furniture factory. <lb />
drug company. <lb />
hardware company. <lb />
drug company. <lb />
hardware com- <lb />
TO SAVE THE CHESTNUT. <lb />
Conference lo I Ways and <lb />
AS A RESULT IS THOUGHT THOUSAND ACRES OF the members of the club. <lb />
TO BE ALL WERE LANDS ARE TO HE <lb />
to Peruse Blight <lb />
Pa., Feb. re- <lb />
visits of the club most delightful. to the call issued last month <lb />
very successful trip is expected by by Governor representatives <lb />
INFLUENCE <lb />
OF <lb />
At about half past twelve Monday <lb />
night, at a place in the country about in <lb />
IN CRAVEN <lb />
county. <lb />
it. in-. <lb />
BETHEL, N. C Feb. The consider ways and means to <lb />
of a dozen of the New England and <lb />
Middle Atlantic States assembled <lb />
here today for a two day's conference <lb />
be <lb />
mile iron <lb />
NEW BERN, Feb people Invitation has been pursue in the possible control of the <lb />
blight, which has already <lb />
the vicinity of Dover. Craven Mr and , of <lb />
are making remarkable progress <lb />
H. Belcher, H. Nichols mid K. Burnett <lb />
had a little incident in which a re-along of Industrial <lb />
was used by Burnet. As a and are setting an example that <lb />
result, little hopes are entertained should be followed all over North <lb />
for the recovery of who Carolina, where agricultural lands are <lb />
though badly under the Influence of of a of <lb />
liquor, as were the others, at the time I . , <lb />
i drainage. <lb />
request the honor of your presence and now is threatening a total do- <lb />
of the shooting, was as as <lb />
a when Chief Smith of the <lb />
police, arrived on the <lb />
scene a few moments later. All men <lb />
are under custody, although Belcher <lb />
does not need much police <lb />
ion, his condition being such as to <lb />
make his death from the bullet wound <lb />
almost certain. <lb />
ASHEVILLE MAN ESCAPES <lb />
WEALTHY BLIND TIGER IS FINED <lb />
WEALTHY ASHEVILLE HAS <lb />
SENTENCE CHANGED TO <lb />
PAY TWO <lb />
ASHEVILLE, Feb. Superior <lb />
court yesterday Judge Long consent- <lb />
ed to modify the sentence heretofore <lb />
imposed on P. H. Thrash of months <lb />
Imprisonment for violation of the <lb />
prohibition laws of North Carolina. <lb />
sentence, being stricken out, and <lb />
it was adjusted that the defendant <lb />
should pay a line of into the <lb />
school fund, to execute a bond in the <lb />
sum as a guarantee of good <lb />
and appear at the criminal <lb />
of court for months; that he <lb />
he imprisoned days in the county <lb />
jail, mid it being represented to the <lb />
court that terms might be made with <lb />
fie county commissioners whereby <lb />
tie defendant might pay toward <lb />
the support of the county reform <lb />
school in lieu of the <lb />
on mint, it is left to the discretion of <lb />
the commissioners whether they shall <lb />
make, such <lb />
In the case of Walter Holland, <lb />
charged with Its murder of James <lb />
Edwards, the Jury after being out <lb />
lines yesterday morning, cane into <lb />
court and r. ported It could not <lb />
agree, The jury was polled and fl- <lb />
one juror withdrawn and <lb />
n was ordered. The d fend- <lb />
ant was ordered to give bond in tin <lb />
sum of to ape par for new <lb />
trial. <lb />
The board of drainage commission- <lb />
of the Moseley creek drainage dis- <lb />
has just awarded the contract <lb />
for the construction of about fourteen <lb />
miles of drainage canals, the purpose <lb />
of which Is to drain about ten thou- <lb />
sand acres of fertile swamp land, <lb />
at the marriage of their daughter <lb />
Ora Ethel <lb />
to <lb />
Mr. Sidney Albert Carr <lb />
on Wednesday afternoon, the twenty- <lb />
eighth of February <lb />
at half after five o'clock <lb />
at their residence <lb />
near Bethel, North Carolina. <lb />
Miss Carson, who lives near the <lb />
town of Bethel, is an attractive, <lb />
charming and accomplished young <lb />
woman with a large circle of friends, <lb />
who will wish her every pleasure and <lb />
which up to this time has been <lb />
valueless for agricultural Mr- Carr- who always resided <lb />
poses. This sail, which is to be Is has <lb />
claimed from Its score of friends who will <lb />
la as fertile as any land on the A. I gladly welcome him and his charm- <lb />
seaboard, and the In their midst, and wish <lb />
value of this Improvement can them every pleasure and <lb />
be appreciated by one who Is <lb />
familiar with the great agricultural Misses Allie G. Little, Christine <lb />
possibilities of the swamp lands of Francis Clark and Lillian <lb />
Politic. <lb />
Now that the various local cam- <lb />
are opening, we expect to <lb />
have plenty of political news until <lb />
election day. It promises to be a <lb />
red hot Senate fight and a busy <lb />
county campaign, to say nothing of <lb />
the incidental election of a president. <lb />
One good rule Is to distrust the <lb />
knocker of other candidates and pay <lb />
attention only to the positive good <lb />
points m the record of each. Abuse <lb />
the other side is rapidly going out <lb />
of fashion politically because people <lb />
are beginning to that it <lb />
is cheap. We are more interested <lb />
in finding out what the candidate or <lb />
party has done or will do, than how <lb />
crimes they can accuse the <lb />
other of committing. <lb />
Also it should be remembered that <lb />
rhetoric is the cheapest thing in the <lb />
j world and that other things being <lb />
the man who makes the shortest <lb />
with the fewest adjective Is <lb />
apt to have the most <lb />
Southerner. <lb />
Goodrich were the guests of Mrs. F. <lb />
at her home near Bethel. Mrs. <lb />
Is a charming hostess and her <lb />
guests report a delightful time. <lb />
Miss Lillian Goodrich entertained <lb />
last night the Round Dozen Club at <lb />
a Valentine in honor of her <lb />
committee appointed some friend, Miss Olive Rose, of <lb />
ago by Memorial Baptist After a unique guessing contest, and <lb />
eastern Carolina. <lb />
CHURCH BUM PIPE ORGAN. <lb />
Instrument In he I <lb />
of June. <lb />
The <lb />
weeks <lb />
church to select a pipe organ for delightful elocutionary program by <lb />
church, on Monday evening closed a guest of honor, a dainty of <lb />
contract with Mr. Geo refreshments was served, carrying <lb />
representative of the in detail the valentine scheme. <lb />
Company, of Vt- for am Among those present Mrs. N. <lb />
organ of that make. The organ is to A. Ward, Mrs. W. H. Mrs. <lb />
cost with a Ross water J. Kit, H. T. <lb />
lo operate It, and the contract <lb />
that it is to be Installed ready <lb />
for use by the 5th of June. <lb />
The had under consider- <lb />
propositions from several of the <lb />
best pipe organ manufacturers of the <lb />
country, after going carefully In- <lb />
to the details of each decided that the <lb />
would best suit the require- <lb />
of the church. The organ con- <lb />
for Is of the latest improved <lb />
pneumatic system of action, including <lb />
couplers, the scheme great <lb />
Mrs. Fred Miss Christine <lb />
Hill Little, Miss Francis <lb />
Clark. Miss Jones, Miss Jen- <lb />
Jones, Miss Kiln Grimes, Mrs. <lb />
Jessie Ward, of <lb />
W. A. Burns, Miss <lb />
HANDSOME OFFICE DESK. <lb />
One Most We Ever <lb />
One of most convenient articles <lb />
of office furniture we have seen Is a <lb />
organ, swell organ and a physician's desk which Dr. C. <lb />
on pedal. recently placed In his <lb />
The people have a wide In the desk is a complete <lb />
for building fine organs, and memorandum and filing system with <lb />
tin mistake has been made by the coin-1 alphabetical apartments for keeping <lb />
In selecting an Instrument of all data so that anything wanted can <lb />
this I be Instantly found. The Inner sec- <lb />
Three weeks ago Mr. Andrew Car- of the desk has a separate roll- <lb />
authorized the church to draw t top that doses It inside of the <lb />
on him for to complete the writing section, and another <lb />
of the forests <lb />
throughout the country. <lb />
in the conference are forestry ex- <lb />
perts of a number of states and of <lb />
the United States Department of Ag- <lb />
The blight was <lb />
to the United States until seven or <lb />
eight years ago. It was first noticed <lb />
among the chestnut trees In Central <lb />
Park In New York city. A short time <lb />
later the disease was noticeable In <lb />
New Jersey, In parts of Western Con- <lb />
and even as far south as <lb />
Pennsylvania and Maryland. By 1908 <lb />
the United States Department of <lb />
Agriculture began issuing bulletins <lb />
on the subject to apprise the public <lb />
of the spread and to enable the own- <lb />
of chestnut trees to recognize the <lb />
disease If It appeared. Incidentally <lb />
the scientific staff tried to discover <lb />
a remedy. Foresters, and <lb />
plant all took an hand <lb />
but nothing availed. <lb />
By 1909 the disease had done no <lb />
less damage In the <lb />
three states of New York, New Jersey <lb />
and Pennsylvania, according to the <lb />
estimate then made by the <lb />
Forestry Commission and tills <lb />
they regarded as a very conservative <lb />
figure. In 1911, only two years later, <lb />
the was reported by the De- <lb />
of Agriculture having <lb />
spread out until western <lb />
Virginia and West Virginia were in- <lb />
on the south, while northerly <lb />
It pushed up the Hudson River <lb />
Valley, and eastward Into <lb />
and Island. Now the. ex- <lb />
declare that, unless a remedy <lb />
is found, It Is but a question of a <lb />
short time until the disease bus <lb />
ed out nil of the chestnut trees in <lb />
the stales named and probably In <lb />
New Hampshire, Delaware, <lb />
North Carolina, South Carolina, <lb />
Georgia, Alabama, <lb />
pi, Tennessee, Ohio and Michigan. <lb />
Wore <lb />
Th action of the board of city com- <lb />
missioners In deciding not to grant <lb />
licenses to drug for the <lb />
sale f whiskey by prescription is of <lb />
course sure to cause talk. While a <lb />
will applaud the decision <lb />
a good many others will object It is <lb />
a question with many sides to it. It <lb />
i is patent that more prescriptions <lb />
have been given than were necessary <lb />
I rat how are you going to prove It <lb />
But let's sift the mailer and see If it <lb />
is really as bad as It appears. <lb />
In the statement printed In <lb />
I It Wag official <lb />
pints of whiskey were prescribed <lb />
the physicians of the city <lb />
during lust year. This Is quite <lb />
two a half gallons a day. There <lb />
are easily people In this <lb />
vicinity. But all these people <lb />
do not drink. Let's take It <lb />
way. Prescriptions were given for <lb />
pints, presumably to per- <lb />
sons. This is not a big <lb />
and a half gallons a day. Figure It <lb />
down and see the of the drink <lb />
each of these 7.134 persons will get <lb />
each <lb />
On the oilier hand some physicians <lb />
have been rather free In giving <lb />
Efforts to atop the <lb />
have been futile. <lb />
This action will no doubt please <lb />
number of the doctors who are for- <lb />
ever I'm prescriptions; they <lb />
will he delighted to he rid of It. <lb />
there is side to It. Al <lb />
in some shape is absolutely es- <lb />
in certain Instances. No one <lb />
will deny tills. Where It is needed <lb />
and needed in an emergency, <lb />
what will It's sticking the <lb />
deep In the ground. We <lb />
Bee what will happen later on. <lb />
Record. <lb />
In a letter to the editor of The <lb />
Enterprise, Chief Justice Clark <lb />
am glad lo read your <lb />
en editorial. It is brave and manly <lb />
and expresses the true opinion of a <lb />
large number of our people and of the <lb />
great mass of the old soldiers. <lb />
speak in earnest when I say that <lb />
If we bad taken this manly position <lb />
years ago all the Confederate vet- <lb />
would now be on the pension <lb />
roll on equal terms with the soldiers <lb />
from the Northern State. Why not <lb />
A Confederate soldier is now Chief <lb />
Justice of the United States. The <lb />
Southern colonels and generals have <lb />
been made Federal Judges, Congress- <lb />
men, Senators and appointed to all <lb />
other offices. The mass of the Con- <lb />
federate soldiers now living were <lb />
boys under Why should they <lb />
alone ht banned while their colonels <lb />
and generals have been drawing high <lb />
Federal pay and the people of the <lb />
South have been paying their full <lb />
share to the pensions awarded men <lb />
of other states who went into the <lb />
war for the same reason that our <lb />
boys went, i. e., because their states <lb />
called for them <lb />
am In earnest in pressing this <lb />
measure and feel absolutely <lb />
dent that if sent to the United States <lb />
Senate, I shall get every Confederate <lb />
soldier placed on the pension Hat <lb />
side by side with the Northern sol- <lb />
Tho professional politicians <lb />
this on the ground that it may <lb />
us the Presidency; that Is the <lb />
loss of the which <lb />
they wish to use to us patronage. <lb />
me there is nothing more <lb />
than this repeated <lb />
of our nearly fifty years <lb />
after the war is ended, on and <lb />
all occasions. Less humility and <lb />
more manhood accord better with the <lb />
brave spirit of tho Southern people. <lb />
hope you will keep up the fight <lb />
for justice to the South and to <lb />
neglected soldiery. <lb />
very high regards. <lb />
truly,<lb />
Waxhaw Enterprise. <lb />
Superior Court Clerk a Grandpa. <lb />
In the city of Wilmington, Thurs- <lb />
day morning, February 1912, there <lb />
born to Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Moore, <lb />
a son. This makes our esteemed <lb />
townsman, Superior Court Clerk D. <lb />
C. Moore, a grandpa for the first <lb />
time, and many friends here <lb />
him. <lb />
NOT SO SURE ABOUT SUICIDE <lb />
HINES MAY HOT HAVE JUMPED <lb />
South Carolina Mill Merger. <lb />
AIKEN, S. Feb. Initial <lb />
steps looking to the merger of three <lb />
of the largest cotton mills In the <lb />
South were taken today at a meeting <lb />
of the stockholders of the Langley <lb />
Manufacturing Company at Langley. <lb />
The three concerns which it pro- <lb />
posed to combine are the <lb />
Manufacturing Company and the <lb />
Manufacturing Company. <lb />
lit It t Mi m u h <lb />
potted sow, weight about one <lb />
pounds, mark half right. <lb />
Notify K. F. D. Win- <lb />
large The mills have a total valuation of <lb />
payment for the organ after the church I roller top doses entire desk when The combined textile en- <lb />
had raised and paid the remainder, <lb />
. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
We are sure the congregation and and It does not look like one more <lb />
of the will see that the complete for Its purpose could be <lb />
amount for the payment The color and finish are moat <lb />
w the la promptly raised. <lb />
. r . will have <lb />
a lit- <lb />
In excess of <lb />
The jail crew have almost finished <lb />
the square of rubbish. <lb />
Schedule Makers Providence. <lb />
PROVIDENCE, R. I., Feb. <lb />
reports of all the baseball clubs In <lb />
the circuit present, the schedule meet- <lb />
of the International League, for- <lb />
known us the Eastern League, <lb />
began here today. While the gather- <lb />
of the club owners and <lb />
Is primarily to adopt a schedule for <lb />
next season and the of <lb />
tho playing dates will be the chief <lb />
topic, several other matters of more <lb />
or less importance are expected to <lb />
come up for Among <lb />
things. It Is said, a plan will be <lb />
proposed and discussed tor the <lb />
to buy out the Montreal <lb />
next year, unless the attendance In <lb />
the Canadian metropolis shows a big <lb />
Improvement In 1912. <lb />
L. O. TRAVELING sales- <lb />
MAN, LEAVES NOTE THAT HE <lb />
IS ABOUT TO IT <lb />
ALL. <lb />
Feb. or not <lb />
L. has committed <lb />
by jumping from the Pied- <lb />
toll bridge, near here, Into the <lb />
Yadkin river, or whether he has at- <lb />
tempted to convey that Impression <lb />
while he makes Ills way to parts <lb />
known, In the hope of evading <lb />
rest on a charge of Mashing bogus <lb />
has given rise to much spec- <lb />
among the. authorities of Row- <lb />
an and Davidson as well <lb />
as the people upon whom Is <lb />
to have flashed the drafts. <lb />
who represented himself as <lb />
a traveling salesman for the <lb />
can Art Works, of Ohio, <lb />
is charged with having passed worth- <lb />
less drafts on Mr. R. C. Norman, pro- <lb />
of tho Hotel at <lb />
and on Amos Co., retail <lb />
furniture dealers of High Point, and <lb />
attempting to one cashed <lb />
the Spencer branch of the <lb />
Hank and Trust Co. Mr. Norman <lb />
slates that the amount secured from <lb />
him was and Mr. L. Amos <lb />
alleges that he cashed a draft for <lb />
Fifty dollars was the amount <lb />
asked for at tho Spencer bank. <lb />
ii of Three Stales. <lb />
COLUMBIA, S. Feb. <lb />
Medical Society, embracing <lb />
North and Carolina and <lb />
met In this city Was <lb />
called to by the president. Dr. <lb />
J. Way, of N. <lb />
C. The two program <lb />
for more one hundred papers <lb />
and addresses dealing with subjects <lb />
Interest lo the medical <lb />
IS THE <lb />
OF <lb />
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb />
A POPULATION OF <lb />
AND OWE, <lb />
THE BEST <lb />
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb />
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb />
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb />
HAVE TO <lb />
OFFER IN THE WAT OF <lb />
CAPITAL A <lb />
It 7.4 B FA TIES. <lb />
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb />
JO It A X I <lb />
PL A <lb />
I Mt the MM the vii,. nasal <lb />
we have a <lb />
of twelve <lb />
among the best <lb />
people ix the <lb />
part of north Caro- <lb />
AX INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IX <lb />
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb />
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb />
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb />
OUR ADVERTISING <lb />
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb />
BE HAD UPON <lb />
VOLUME <lb />
GREENVILLE, V C, FRIDAY MARCH <lb />
M . <lb />
Had M Ink <lb />
Suggestion to Postpone STATE <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS <lb />
FROM EVERYWHERE- <lb />
TOLD WiRE <lb />
To Debate Law. <lb />
em <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS FROM <lb />
ALL OVER THE OLD <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
i N. Y. Fell C. p. r r i i- .- <lb />
. Senator ct Iran <lb />
in , <lb />
in lea iii in. annual contests With Other Dem He <lb />
ts . mid by the Will Get Nomination Over Taft <lb />
mum mm <lb />
PRESIDENT <lb />
P. C. CAUSES AR <lb />
League, comprising <lb />
Hamilton College, Colgate <lb />
K. F. Each college <lb />
He I j by two teams, one <lb />
With Short on , debate at home and the other <lb />
His Held Job For abroad. The home team In each case <lb />
Five Years. uphold the negative and the <lb />
Feb. 28-11. F. affirmative of the <lb />
Rots a Hep. <lb />
Owners <lb />
ens, for nearly live years bookkeeper <lb />
That the Sherman <lb />
in the here, was arrested A <lb />
yesterday by Deputy Marshall Doyle <lb />
Confer on Horse <lb />
WASHINGTON. D. C, Feb. <lb />
the Instance of Inspector <lb />
Chaster, Mr. Stephens is charged I <lb />
with being short about four hundred Tl,,; of breeding horses for <lb />
When Indian reservations was <lb />
at a conference held <lb />
In his accounts. <lb />
before Commissioner W. H. <lb />
of agriculture today. <lb />
Among those participating In the <lb />
conference were commissioner of <lb />
Indian affairs, the chief of the bureau <lb />
, animal industry and <lb />
law, Mr. Stephens waved <lb />
and was committed to <lb />
default of bond. <lb />
The was discovered <lb />
. Mr. Stephen re <lb />
bis Inspector Ches- <lb />
and vein over situation <lb />
and without inking any <lb />
He returned today and the arrest <lb />
followed, Mr. Stephens <lb />
his once. <lb />
All <lb />
i The committee from <lb />
Rowan and boards of the coon-1 <lb />
is. together with Civil <lb />
c. M. mat in <lb />
of Leeds K H. Miller's office In MM PLEDGES TO TAFT <lb />
court house last night to open and ; <lb />
bids the construction of <lb />
steel bridge over the Yadkin river Out of Taft <lb />
. to connect the two and His Claim <lb />
DEMOCRATIC FOR JUNE A number o j Declared for De- <lb />
of bridge building dared for <lb />
with All bids were finally p i ti <lb />
disclosed that Senator ., WASHINGTON, Feb. <lb />
Hit Reason For Suggesting <lb />
That Baltimore <lb />
Should be Postponed <lb />
Bacon, <lb />
Georgia, one of the foremost meeting tomorrow of from He- <lb />
In a <lb />
Says The Time Between the ,,.,. <lb />
Contentions, One Heel, Is had Started a movement to post- representatives. This bridge <lb />
are of pone or set back the Democratic to be built Jointly by the two <lb />
Opinion, He Say. <lb />
Convention at for counties <lb />
f S <lb />
officers of the army. <lb />
Fur Life. <lb />
I Feb. The <lb />
wedding of Miss Lillian Marie Twitch- <lb />
He is a native of this county, but <lb />
laughter Mr. and Mrs. Fred F<lb />
. -ii-. . a I'll known pro- <lb />
. i. <lb />
office bad held a position in <lb />
being for win. the baseball took <lb />
Atlantic coast Line in city. Mr. J <lb />
Stephens wave bond late this evening <lb />
and was released from Jail. <lb />
Mow <lb />
A piece of flannel dampened Pa., Fob, an- J <lb />
Chamberlain's Liniment and bound bench show of the <lb />
on lo the affected parts U superior to Club opened here today <lb />
any plaster. When troubled with more than Mum entries, representing <lb />
lame back or pains In the side or chest leading kennels In all parts, of the <lb />
give It a trial and you are certain The exhibition will continue <lb />
be more than pleased with the prompt until Saturday <lb />
relief which it affords. Sold by all <lb />
dealers <lb />
THIEVES ARE ROUNDED UP <lb />
MAY STOP SERIES OF ROBBERIES <lb />
CHARLOTTE DETECT- <lb />
IVES A SUCCESSFUL <lb />
CAMPAIGN AGAINST <lb />
GANG. <lb />
the <lb />
arrest of John h <lb />
burglar of this city, the author- <lb />
now believe they have rounded <lb />
up the last of the gang of marauders <lb />
that such a stir here during <lb />
the past few months by a long string <lb />
of and other crimes. The <lb />
of crimes reached a climax In <lb />
the month of December, when every <lb />
night for weeks the <lb />
phone at police station was kept <lb />
almost In constant use by residents <lb />
reporting robberies or the presence <lb />
of a thief In their house. Mr. B. C. <lb />
Moore, councilman In charge of the <lb />
department of safety, realizing <lb />
the of the situation, <lb />
the police force and <lb />
employed Mr, L. Branch, of <lb />
Branch's National Detective <lb />
of Charlotte, to begin a systematic <lb />
campaign against the criminals. <lb />
was at the <lb />
of Detective Branch on the <lb />
charge of burglary and <lb />
of house-breaking and <lb />
The capture of Is be- <lb />
to have completed the round- <lb />
up tin gang, <lb />
ring Jim and James <lb />
Ward, alias Dave Key having <lb />
been taken Into tow by Mr. <lb />
, a <lb />
WANT FARMERS WAREHOUSE <lb />
Chairman <lb />
New fork, Feb. <lb />
is the first I have heard of <lb />
a suggestion and as yet <lb />
I set any need of n post- <lb />
said Norman B <lb />
Mack, chairman of the Demo- <lb />
National tee, <lb />
v i. ii his attention was <lb />
iv hi Bacon's <lb />
declaration In of a later <lb />
for the <lb />
convention is to be <lb />
ii Id a later than <lb />
the Republicans, and If any <lb />
emergency arose through the <lb />
action of <lb />
gathering, a postponement for <lb />
a weak of the Democratic <lb />
Con vent Ion could l- arranged <lb />
for then. While not desiring <lb />
to take any issue whatever <lb />
with senator, my personal <lb />
three weeks or a month. <lb />
The Democratic convention is now, Mrs. Robertson Dead. <lb />
for June 2.-. one week later Scotland Neck. Mrs. Thomas M. <lb />
the Republican. The movement is Robertson, of Twin Falls. Idaho, died <lb />
publican governors from the campaign <lb />
headquarters of President Taft. <lb />
The executives going on record in <lb />
favor of the president's <lb />
Minnesota; <lb />
Carroll, Iowa; Hay. Washington; <lb />
Tenner, <lb />
Pennsylvania; Hooper. Tennessee; <lb />
Utah; Delaware; <lb />
and Island. <lb />
In addition to the signed state- <lb />
made public, the Taft <lb />
claimed the support of Govern- <lb />
or Illinois; Nevada; <lb />
and Vermont <lb />
The announcement from the Taft <lb />
came here before Christmas in , . . ,. <lb />
bureau is as an the <lb />
Chicago conference seven govern- <lb />
B whose solicitation Colonel <lb />
Roosevelt baaed his formal entry to <lb />
tie j contest. <lb />
Twenty-two States now have <lb />
. publican governors and all except <lb />
two are now ace,,,,,,,,, for ill the <lb />
various statements of presidential <lb />
preferences. They are listed as fol- <lb />
Declared for Taft, . <lb />
s directly due to the announcement or the home of her sister. Misses Mary . <lb />
s in Democratic Herbert and Lizzie Smith, yesterday <lb />
circles that be will be nominated. afternoon at about one o'clock, after <lb />
Bacon baa conferred with suffering for two weeks from the <lb />
. Democratic senators and Bads of being severely burned on the <lb />
them or the same opinion as himself. 12th of the present month. Mrs. <lb />
i believe that will be Robertson, with her three children. <lb />
. .-I by the R. Henna, and <lb />
. change plan on the part of visit her relatives and friends in her <lb />
the Democrats is Imperative. old home town. <lb />
th. most striking testimony j <lb />
offered as how the Democrats Club. <lb />
view the Roosevelt announcement and Hon. <lb />
how they think will ,,. a. T. and F. s. <lb />
lake It, <lb />
s former , a Roosevelt Club for that <lb />
s said on the lines o one that <lb />
Bacon, ii imperative formed here some weeks <lb />
Democratic National committee meet Little doubt Is expressed but that it <lb />
s speedily and postpone th he successful aB it is stated by <lb />
convention three weeks or a the Roosevelt supporters that so far <lb />
Senator says he has con- only four Tuft Republicans have been <lb />
with Democratic senators and j discovered in that county. <lb />
DURHAM MAKES STRONG BID <lb />
PRESIDENT OF THE <lb />
UNION, GOES TO <lb />
TO CONFER <lb />
ABOUT IT. <lb />
DURHAM, Feb. H. Q. Alex- <lb />
president of the North Carolina <lb />
Union, will arrive In Dur- <lb />
ham Wednesday morning to discuss <lb />
with the Durham Commercial Club <lb />
the locution of the central warehouse <lb />
of the union In Durham. <lb />
The North Carolina Union <lb />
will establish In some city of the <lb />
state a central warehouse, from <lb />
which will be distributed to the local <lb />
warehouses, to be In each <lb />
of the counties, farming Implements, <lb />
and other goods used by <lb />
the farmers In their dally life on the <lb />
farm. From this central warehouse the <lb />
goods will be distributed In a whole- <lb />
sale way to the retail warehouses. <lb />
The goods are to be purchased In <lb />
large quantities and stored In the <lb />
central warehouse until they are <lb />
called for by the retail warehouses <lb />
In counties throughout <lb />
the plate. <lb />
Church. <lb />
Pa., Feb. <lb />
eighteenth annual meeting of the <lb />
Pennsylvania conference of the <lb />
bed at the <lb />
church In this city today with <lb />
a large attendance of loaders of the <lb />
denomination. The conference will <lb />
remain In for several days. <lb />
opinion is there Is no need for them of the same opinion. The <lb />
any such arrangement now. position of Senator and others <lb />
g who entertain his views, is that the <lb />
8888888888888388 Republicans arc going to nominate <lb />
BALTIMORE. Md Feb. <lb />
startling development in the political <lb />
situation came yesterday afternoon in <lb />
news from Washington, when It was <lb />
BUSINESS <lb />
and that following his <lb />
nomination the Democrats should <lb />
have time to nominate and see how LEADING DURHAM TOBACCO CONCERN <lb />
the public takes It before making <lb />
their nomination. <lb />
NEW HOTEL FOR DURHAM <lb />
CAPTAIN PARRISH TO BUILD IT <lb />
ISSUED TO CORPORA- <lb />
THE <lb />
PRINCIPAL OF <lb />
NEW <lb />
DURHAM, Feb. charter <lb />
Issued yesterday to the Arcade Hotel <lb />
Company with a capital stock of <lb />
for the purpose of conducting a <lb />
hotel In Durham, C. T. and N. D. <lb />
land, of Holland Brothers Furniture <lb />
Company, are the principal <lb />
The company leased the new <lb />
hotel which la lo be erected by Cap- <lb />
K. J. and will conduct <lb />
the business In connection with the <lb />
present Hotel. Mr. W, M. <lb />
Todd will be manager of the new <lb />
company and will have active charge <lb />
of the new hotel. <lb />
The work on the m <lb />
KINSTON CAROLINA <lb />
BETWEEN KINSTON AND PINK HILL <lb />
TWO WHITE MEN KILLED IN HEAD <lb />
ON OTHERS <lb />
IN- <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C, Feb. mes- <lb />
sage we received In this city this <lb />
morning stating a head- <lb />
last night at <lb />
O'clock on and Carolina <lb />
between and <lb />
Hill. As a result of the accident two <lb />
men are dead and several others <lb />
It is said that a passenger train <lb />
had been and the de- <lb />
Claimed by managers, <lb />
Declared for Roosevelt, <lb />
Declared Tor La <lb />
Preference not announced. <lb />
ANTI-STOCK LAW MASS MEET- <lb />
SATURDAY, MARCH <lb />
AND MYERS <lb />
CO. WILL MAKE IMPROVE- <lb />
IN DURHAM <lb />
SOON. <lb />
DURHAM. Feb. C. C. <lb />
president of the A Myers <lb />
Tobacco Co., who baa been spending <lb />
several days In Durham, announces <lb />
that the tobacco business of but com- <lb />
In Durham Is to be largely In- <lb />
creased soon as company gets <lb />
its business well under way. Under <lb />
the plan of the <lb />
A Myers company took over the Duke <lb />
Branch of the American Tobacco Com- <lb />
which manufacture <lb />
and cigarettes. <lb />
As soon as the sales department of <lb />
the new company has been thoroughly <lb />
organized, Mr. Dula that <lb />
the here will be Increased <lb />
and more storage houses erected. It <lb />
Is the Intention of the company to <lb />
make Durham the center of the en- <lb />
tire eastern territory and the <lb />
All persons who are opposed to the <lb />
stock law, and especially to the stock <lb />
law act of 1911. are requested and <lb />
invited to be present at a mass meet- <lb />
of citizens o county to be <lb />
held In the court house at Greenville, <lb />
at o'clock, on Saturday, March <lb />
1912. <lb />
If you believe In a free, Democratic <lb />
government, and to preserve In- <lb />
violate the principles of <lb />
liberty, let It be known by your pres- <lb />
at this meeting. <lb />
H. E. TRIPP. <lb />
R. L. COX, <lb />
L. EVANS, <lb />
Committee. <lb />
Inched engine of this train while en <lb />
route to met a long train In <lb />
a deep cut where the ed of tho <lb />
company are t St. <lb />
Mr. C. H. Morton of New- <lb />
port, N. C, section master of the road, <lb />
and II. F. Harper of link <lb />
Hill, were killed,. Both are white <lb />
The section master was pinned <lb />
will be begun by the cab with wood that was used <lb />
March 1st, and ll will be pushed to; H Buck was arraigned this <lb />
Over to Court. <lb />
Under a warrant recently Issued <lb />
charging him with selling whiskey. <lb />
To Wrestle for Title. <lb />
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Feb. <lb />
will defend his title of <lb />
middleweight champion wrestler in <lb />
a mat bout here tomorrow night with <lb />
Mike Yokel of Salt Lake City. An <lb />
Interesting contest Is as the <lb />
two are regarded as unusually well- <lb />
matched In strength and skill. This <lb />
will be their second meeting. Their <lb />
encounter took place In Salt <lb />
City about a year ago. when the <lb />
two men struggled for four hours <lb />
without either securing u fall. <lb />
completion. Ab soon <lb />
It will be luxuriously furnished by <lb />
the company formed yesterday and <lb />
conducted best style. <lb />
the loss n I morning before Justice of the <lb />
NEW YORK. Feb. opening <lb />
of the Woman's Industrial Exposition, <lb />
which was to have taken place today, <lb />
has been conferred for two weeks in <lb />
order that the merchants and others <lb />
M their <lb />
cut in two in one of Ms legs. He A. Mayo. The defendant waived ,,. The exhibition will be <lb />
the Hospital and the re- examination and required to give m tho Grand Central Palace and <lb />
mains were shipped this morning to bond for appearance at the next be the affair of Its kind ever <lb />
at his home In Newport. term of Superior court. in this country. <lb />
. <lb />
.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018186_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
mm <lb />
Meek <lb />
SCOTLAND NECK. N. C, Feb. <lb />
I not written for The Re- <lb />
Happenings Areas <lb />
STANDARD. N. C. Feb. <lb />
Potter, of near <lb />
pent a short while Monday with her <lb />
sister, Mrs. W. H. Elks. <lb />
Mr. and lira. C. R. of <lb />
near Arthur, who spent last <lb />
writ a little now. <lb />
We hare been having it very cold <lb />
the moat of the time since the new <lb />
. . . . , near Arthur, who spent last week <lb />
year came in and like it la In . . . , <lb />
. v w here, paid us a call Tuesday. Their <lb />
of the families have been <lb />
almost ready to suffer for the lack <lb />
of wood, but the people here are kind. <lb />
enough to keep the poor from <lb />
when its anything that they <lb />
can do to keep them from it <lb />
many friends were glad to see them <lb />
again. <lb />
Mr. H. C. Cobb, of near <lb />
Branch, was In our town a short while <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Mr. J. H. Cobb made a business <lb />
The snow that fell on Saturday . <lb />
night, of the 9th was the deep-, J over to even- <lb />
at of many winters. It was reported. <lb />
here that Washington and Gorman Cobb. the son of Mr. <lb />
had an snow; Ayden 15-inch; ad Mrs- J H- Cobb. is on the sick <lb />
Greenville 12-inch, and had only an week- We he <lb />
anew and we had the <lb />
lowest temperature of any of those Mr. Hugh L. the R. F. D. <lb />
place s. as we have heard from from Farmville, came very <lb />
Weldon is farther north, but the re- near getting hurt Tuesday about <lb />
port said there was not any snow o'clock, when he was near a canal a Democratic president. As a mat- them a way to kill off the it <lb />
there at all. The rain came Thurs- bridge. There was some children tar of fact, the business men of the tariff board. The plan Is to pass <lb />
day and it being a little warmer melt- playing in the canal which was know that a Democratic ad-through the house a bill for the <lb />
ed nearly all of the snow here. from the horse and as soon as the ministration would not harm and of a bureau of tariff statistics <lb />
Well. I'll tell you something about horse placed his foot the bridge industry. The leaders of shall he responsible to the leg- <lb />
a blind tiger story. It was reported the children raised up. scaring the house have proven branch of the government In- <lb />
not long ago that there was a bear horse and causing the animal to leap selves as safe and sane of to the executive branch alone <lb />
as any Republican leaders ever were. and shall investigate and report <lb />
SEWS FROM THE <lb />
POLITICAL WORLD <lb />
WASHINGTON, D. C, <lb />
business done by the rail- <lb />
roads, steel mills, manufacturers and <lb />
banks of the country at present <lb />
time is considerably In advance of <lb />
that of a year ago. <lb />
The business men In general are <lb />
preparing for Improvements and ex- <lb />
tensions. Financial arrangements <lb />
have recently made by several <lb />
for raising 10,000.000 to be <lb />
used In extensions. The Erie railroad <lb />
plans to expend In the <lb />
ten years for completing the double- <lb />
tracking of its main line between New- <lb />
York and Chicago. The is <lb />
arising for new work and <lb />
equipment, and other companies are <lb />
preparing to put smaller amounts In- <lb />
to Improvements. <lb />
has failed to reply. <lb />
Mr. Brown shows that the alleged <lb />
balance of 1219,118.12 at <lb />
the close of the last fiscal year to the <lb />
credit of the department In <lb />
reality does not exist at all, bat in- <lb />
stead there Is really a deficit of <lb />
000.000. <lb />
Relief From Express Companies. <lb />
A charge of cents. Instead of <lb />
11.32. for the delivery of a 11-pound <lb />
package on rural free delivery routes, <lb />
Is in prospect, as the result of the <lb />
action of Democratic members of the <lb />
house committee on and <lb />
in incorporating in the <lb />
bill provisions for a ten- <lb />
parcels post system. The com- <lb />
members also agreed upon a <lb />
Bank of Greenville <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
general domestic rate of cents and <lb />
This after a Democratic house has a maximum package of 11- pounds, <lb />
been at work a year, and on the eve This is the present international par- <lb />
of a Democratic presidential victory, I eels post rate, <lb />
does not look as if business Interests i Tariff Board to Go. <lb />
were standing still, or had any The Democrats have had suggested <lb />
in the northern suburbs of Scotland into the canal, hitting one of the <lb />
Neck, and we soon learned that the that was on the other side that <lb />
report went out to try to keep blind had not shown himself, also getting <lb />
The gross earnings of the facts to the request of the house. <lb />
first week of February were which has authority to initiate revenue <lb />
tiger hunters away from that neigh- among some wire that was near the per cent, better than a year ago. measures. There will then be no <lb />
but since the court a few, canal when all was over and the aid For the week of January for an appropriation for the <lb />
days ago sent several of the blind Mr. received from his many reports from forty-four roads tariff board, permitting that body to <lb />
fellows to the roads, It seems that; friends they found that the child gain over last year of 12.27 per cent.; die with this year. <lb />
those that are left have opened their hurt but little, being cut on the Reports for December show an in-1 <lb />
eyes and have quit being so blind as head and a broken to the bug- crease of net earnings over Lost Hi Life <lb />
used to be. They want to Mr. Hugh I. is a young of DO less than per cent. s. A. of Mason. Mich. will <lb />
their captors before they get to their fellow with lots of energy and get Hank clearing last week bet- never forget his terrible exposure to <lb />
dens. He has been in S. service for than a year ago. I. merciless Storm. gave me a <lb />
There may have been enough said four years and has made many Foreign in January was every dreadful he writes, <lb />
Mi. K. Billiard, but want Wanda on his route. large. The exports exceeded those severe pains in my chest, so it <lb />
to say just a few words, lie was at I Dr. Patrick, of Farmville, made a Of any preceding January except was hard for me to breathe. A <lb />
the church three weeks his professional visit in our little town 1908, and the imports were larger than; bar gave ma several doses of Dr <lb />
funeral was preached. He was a great Tuesday. <lb />
Sunday school worker. I was told Mr. J. S. made a business trip <lb />
that he had disease, but j to Greenville Wednesday. <lb />
strange to say that he did not suffer j .,,, to ,.,,. <lb />
as most of people do with it. And to look <lb />
the same week Mr. Milliard died <lb />
Mrs. Susan wards, a very good and <lb />
highly respected widow lady, and a <lb />
good neighbor of this place, died and Hems. <lb />
was taken cut In the country about BLACK JACK. N. C., Feb. -After <lb />
to at Lawrence, the church ,.,, ,.,,,,,. ,,. h <lb />
at which she held her membership, last .,,,, ., ape <lb />
and was buried in the cemetery there on- <lb />
for any proceeding month which <lb />
Single exception. <lb />
in other words, the <lb />
lot-casts of the s tad pat r <lb />
King's New Discovery which brought <lb />
j great relief. The I was <lb />
I on the verge of pneumonia, but to <lb />
publicans to I continue with discovery. did <lb />
Capital Stock . <lb />
To Loan on Good Commercial <lb />
Paper <lb />
f Accounts solicited and we <lb />
especially invite you to call <lb />
the end that the stagnation of business to and two battles completely cured <lb />
Immediately follow the election I only this quick, safe, <lb />
of a Democratic house, are not being liable medicine for Roughs, colds, or, <lb />
fulfilled While it is true that toy or trouble. Price SO <lb />
of the illegal trusts which have been cents and Trial bottle free. <lb />
competition and all druggists. <lb />
the of the of ,. <lb />
ere particularly THE BOY'S COBS <lb />
understands thoroughly that U <lb />
Davis, J. L Little, Cs slier <lb />
Hooker, V-Pres. <lb />
You're sure of getting the <lb />
Maximum Value in our <lb />
Furniture <lb />
Offerings <lb />
because of the <lb />
desire to retain a <lb />
that has taken long <lb />
years to build and that he <lb />
guards as one of his best assets. <lb />
See the distinctive styles here, the hon- <lb />
est thorough workmanship--the fine wood <lb />
in which you can invest safely. <lb />
in the presence of a large and Mr- T B ailed legitimate Partial List Prize. For The Years <lb />
his regular appointment here <lb />
night and Sunday and he left for <lb />
his homo Monday. <lb />
Messrs. Abram <lb />
weal to Greenville <lb />
rowing congregation. Site was a <lb />
of the Primitive Baptist <lb />
church. She was about sixty years <lb />
of age. <lb />
The Baptist people held a meeting <lb />
ii the Baptist church last Wed- <lb />
and I not being present In Several of the people at- <lb />
the day service did not learn the pro- Jack Sunday. . <lb />
gram, but at the night service the are all sorry to hear of the death <lb />
Rev. C. W. Blanchard, pastor of , <lb />
Wilson church, took the stand Thursday. His funeral was conduct- <lb />
and announced his subject that he was Elder J- s- Hotter, at the <lb />
appointed to lecture on. it was a <lb />
plan the Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Clark, of <lb />
tit association and he handled if hind Mended here Sunday, <lb />
plans <lb />
has nothing to fear from <lb />
and welcome it <lb />
Protection Tariff for Revenue, <lb />
In the co a mg <lb />
I h bi en awakened In <lb />
Workmen In Germany rig through the ; <lb />
b i tariff will clubs. In this reaped Caro- <lb />
tariff Una la . , behind, l encourages <lb />
wall. In the workers ire i . ,. . ,., , ,, ,. , <lb />
so Bricklayers In rises are contending for, <lb />
In . I on . , that comes <lb />
wet k of 1-2 hours, while the I rick- Id. <lb />
i-i n . r. This y. r ; to be n t <lb />
prize of a free ti M <lb />
ll--r comparisons city to boy making the i. . <lb />
yield t II per bushel. In <lb />
addition to this the state has been <lb />
into ten districts each of <lb />
j the of <lb />
ft Mk <lb />
and Store <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
tell their <lb />
with perfection and laid the plans Misses Ida and Dorothy <lb />
so and so plain that there was Burroughs went to <lb />
no need for any one <lb />
stand. Mr. and Mrs. I. P. Williams, of <lb />
Then came Rev. Mr. James, of Mills, Saturday and, <lb />
Richmond, to nil place of Dr. at W. I. Clark's. j <lb />
I,. and be it. having ti nice Sunday higher in Germany in <lb />
subject was and be school. We invite you to come la Sol Ditched, <lb />
done his subject Justice, lie made it help us in the good work. There has be a <lb />
so plain that I looks like all ought Mr. j. w. Harper, of era conspiracy all over the east seek- j low, and <lb />
to believe In missions. the funeral of his father lag to make the people of ti <lb />
We are having beautiful weather Sunday. believe Senator <lb />
own Ii <lb />
Gar- <lb />
land, many. <lb />
rs, i r t IS . <lb />
Filters, p. r I 7.68 <lb />
Compositors, per 6.00 <lb />
,. per week., 6.88 <lb />
And the of living <lb />
once more. <lb />
nil It-Hi-. <lb />
of the race for <lb />
offers prises of for <lb />
the best yield, for the second. <lb />
for the third, for the fourth. <lb />
much and for the <lb />
Pitt county Ii in the third district <lb />
embracing Pitt, Greene, Wayne, Le- <lb />
i- Craven, Jones. <lb />
The following rules will the <lb />
la out contest; <lb />
Large as it of new goods just <lb />
in and y u will find this store the <lb />
pi to <lb />
Our object is I j please you and give <lb />
you more than value in every <lb />
purchase at this store. Come <lb />
time and be convince <lb />
OLD FOLKS REED. <lb />
nomination . All members must be under I <lb />
president. The conspiracy was of age, August <lb />
largely successful, because many . Bach boy must plant one acre <lb />
GRIFTON. C. Feb. Some Are Younger at Than has quit, corn square doing <lb />
and wife spent Sunday in I Are Years is not kind. a; work himself, except that <lb />
Grifton. I ., . ,. ,., . He will go down lighting, small boys may hire <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. IS. T. Jackson, of <lb />
who have been visiting; <lb />
d. <lb />
L. C. HATCH, Superintendent <lb />
. -i <lb />
at their home Friday night. Then <lb />
was a large crown pies, tit and they <lb />
all seemed to enjoy <lb />
The would be glad to see <lb />
some fair weather now so that they <lb />
inn get to work on farms. <lb />
Mrs. K. P. Cox and sister, Mrs. J. <lb />
V. spent Saturday in Ayden. <lb />
Miss is visiting<lb />
So many people begin but he not run up broken <lb />
Well, I'm batting old about the white flag. <lb />
d J. v. cox. returned,,,., ff, MM worth <lb />
home Sunday Senator personally <lb />
M, and M. Joe CO gave a Each keep a <lb />
in but years. when, Wisconsin senator stands record of his work, of ma- <lb />
We hare men and women of subject of and fertilizer used and make <lb />
were really younger than report that I have withdrawn out a report on blank <lb />
are at years; were more a candidate is false, and the Will be furnished him <lb />
more up to data in everything. regarding my health are gross a. Each members must read <lb />
When your begins to fail are a Instructions sent him by depart- <lb />
yourself up with our brought to bear of agriculture. <lb />
liver and Iron remedy. contest, which For further Information or enroll- <lb />
which is a wonderful tonic undertook at a time when no Kent, address, I., o. <lb />
for all weak persons. Induced to make the Raleigh, X. <lb />
j. i i <lb />
West <lb />
Venters Cross Road Item, <lb />
X Feb. Ill Miss <lb />
Mamie from Raleigh, is visiting <lb />
Mrs. Frank Cox. near Venters <lb />
Miss Allie Cox spent last we-k <lb />
Miss Nancy Mills, near Mills. <lb />
Mr. Hyman from near <lb />
was in our section Sunday. <lb />
We Ware glad to see Mr. Cox <lb />
Miss Clara pass through our <lb />
town today. <lb />
Haddock spent week <lb />
with Miss Saddle Harris. <lb />
Mr. Jolly was in our section <lb />
Sunday. lie says he feels like years old today, <lb />
must come every to noted American <lb />
a gentleman of Allentown, Pa., <lb />
am years of age and <lb />
Vino a great medicine. It is wonder- <lb />
fully strengthening and comforting to <lb />
on request. <lb />
Thousands of feeble old people have <lb />
found to be Just what they need <lb />
to revive their Bagging strength. We <lb />
guarantee it to please you money <lb />
back If It does not. Move <lb />
I to <lb />
Ferdinand of Bulgaria, SI <lb />
years old today. <lb />
Thou, W. Boston financier, <lb />
friends. <lb />
The wedding soon be ring- <lb />
between and Venters X <lb />
Roads <lb />
light. <lb />
want delegates who are ready to There's a <lb />
win, or lose if be, ill the inter- They come, they go, I don't know <lb />
est of a cause, Lei me I How moving in and moving out <lb />
you assure the voters of North Helps, except to keep them on the go, <lb />
that I shall as always keep faith tad keep the people all in doubt. <lb />
Ii. them, and shall remain a <lb />
steadfast to the i never move, i never rove, <lb />
The Figures. i hare no fear. I have no strife. <lb />
Here business If you never change, but shove <lb />
are running your concern a big Along the same Old Mutual Life. <lb />
loss, but wish lo make the figures ii. <lb />
show a big surplus, simply put off With the Mutual Life of York <lb />
heavy bills until after the re- <lb />
ports of the receipts and expenditures , , <lb />
is of <lb />
quires <lb />
the utmost <lb />
skill and <lb />
importance <lb />
judgment in <lb />
and <lb />
order <lb />
re- <lb />
to <lb />
are made mi for the year. <lb />
This Is the system by which Post- <lb />
years old today. <lb />
French <lb />
sad writer, years <lb />
today. <lb />
as- <lb />
old <lb />
master General Hitchcock put <lb />
on a <lb />
cording to mane by W <lb />
Drown, formerly a government <lb />
You are probably aware that <lb />
always results from a cold, but <lb />
the never heard of a cold resulting <lb />
pneumonia Chamberlain's <lb />
I. was <lb />
risk when this remedy may <lb />
whose expose of the situation had for a For sale by all deal- <lb />
la so obviously true Mr. Hitchcock <lb />
be to it and action are <lb />
unite. Wearing Quality. <lb />
We benefit of our et- <lb />
n you that you m de- <lb />
oar treat- <lb />
or inquirers. <lb />
SAM WHITE PIANO CO.<lb />
ECHOES OF IKE <lb />
Two Speeches Made By Some <lb />
of Boys <lb />
WHAT THE BOYS STAND FOR <lb />
That the boys of Greenville hold <lb />
a place in the Interest of the people <lb />
was shown in the large audience that <lb />
gathered in the court house Friday <lb />
night, at the Boy Scouts mass meet- <lb />
Yet the fact that a large ma- <lb />
of this audience were women, <lb />
shows that woman Is the boy's best <lb />
friend. Possibly those men who were <lb />
not sufficiently Interested to be pres- <lb />
forgot that they were once boys <lb />
and would have been helped by a lit- <lb />
encouragement from their elders, <lb />
also that the boys who need their en- <lb />
today will be the ones <lb />
to soon succeed them In the affairs of <lb />
life. <lb />
It was an interesting meeting and <lb />
gave the boys a real uplift in their <lb />
to take an oath, and the first sentence <lb />
of this oath Is my honor I will <lb />
do ray A scout's honor is to <lb />
be trusted. If he dare to violate his <lb />
honor by telling a lie, or by cheating <lb />
or by not doing exactly a given task <lb />
when trusted on his honor, he may be <lb />
directed to hand over his scout <lb />
badge. <lb />
To live up to this principle should <lb />
call forth our best effort and high- <lb />
est endeavor. A life not governed by <lb />
honor is a failure. Men may gain <lb />
distinction and wealth, they may even <lb />
rise to the pinnacle of fame in the <lb />
eyes of the world, but if this has been <lb />
attained or acts not clothed in honor <lb />
their fame a hollow mockery. Hon- <lb />
fame as hollow mockery. Hon- <lb />
or controls our motives In every act, <lb />
the least as well as the greatest, for <lb />
as chain is no stronger than its <lb />
weakest so is the life no bet- <lb />
than is characterized in the small- <lb />
est act. If tempted by underhand <lb />
method or short cut to take <lb />
age of another, we should spurn it as <lb />
a viper, for rest assured that any <lb />
act not founded on honor is a crime <lb />
against our fellow men and a sin in <lb />
the sight of God. <lb />
Say. what is honor Tis the finest <lb />
sense of Justice which the human mind <lb />
can frame. <lb />
Intent each lurking frailty to dis- <lb />
the beat an by clean he <lb />
gets It Smoking cigarettes, cursing, <lb />
lying, stealing, etc., are things which <lb />
are detrimental to his character and <lb />
so he considers them not whenever <lb />
his face is seen, proper <lb />
is shown him and why, because he <lb />
respects himself. <lb />
So fellow citizens, we <lb />
NOTICE TO <lb />
Look at Data Soar Paper sad Let <lb />
Ts Have What Is <lb />
Since adopting the plan of printing <lb />
the name of the subscriber on his pa- <lb />
per, to avoid having to send state- <lb />
to any who are in arrears. In <lb />
k you to should not be necessary to <lb />
help us build up self-respect such a statement when all the <lb />
the Greenville <lb />
ii <lb />
Faithfulness. <lb />
subscriber has to do to know how <lb />
much he owes for the paper is to look <lb />
at the date after his name on the <lb />
paper. Though we have called <lb />
My brother scouts have given to this several times in the last <lb />
the months, and asked those owing <lb />
for the paper to the money or <lb />
come in and get a receipt, many have <lb />
faithfulness. Faithfulness is not <lb />
limited to great men and great work <lb />
alone, but It has such a wide range failed to do <lb />
so. This Is to remind <lb />
that it applied to every of It again, and those not heard <lb />
from in a reasonable time will be <lb />
work. The scouts met at their hall and guard the way of life <lb />
and after a short drill on the or done, <lb />
marched to the court house. They<lb />
Obedience. <lb />
Sir Scout Master. Ladies and Gentle- <lb />
Obedience, the keystone to success, <lb />
t la binds this world h <lb />
were greeted with applause as they <lb />
hied in their places within the bar. <lb />
After some opening words by Scout <lb />
Master C. M. Hock, prayer was of- <lb />
higher and nobler ideals, if them we <lb />
plained the of Hoy, <lb />
Scouts, that it Hist started lit <lb />
.,,,. , would achieve, is stand- <lb />
land in spread to . , <lb />
.,, , ,. ,,, ., , ; the shores time, <lb />
i world until it numbers 2.- <lb />
among its members. <lb />
is their motto, and the <lb />
boys endeavor to live up to this. He, <lb />
called on several of the boys, each <lb />
whom spoke briefly on some <lb />
pal of the organization. The talks of <lb />
of life. The lowly laborer, earning <lb />
his dally bread by the sweat of his <lb />
brow, can be as faithful to his trust, <lb />
as the man at the head of great <lb />
armies and navies and with a <lb />
destiny in hands. And we <lb />
scouts, though we may not have the <lb />
eyes of the nation upon us, can be <lb />
faithful to the trusts which may be <lb />
committed upon us. Faithful to God, to <lb />
parents, to our leader, to each other. <lb />
And If we are faithful over these little <lb />
things, if little they may be called, <lb />
we will be made ruler over more and <lb />
greater things. Faithfulness will <lb />
ways receive its reward. Every great <lb />
man in the world's history has risen <lb />
his higher position through faith- <lb />
to his lower callings. A rail <lb />
splitter was once faithful to his mean <lb />
and lowly duties and today <lb />
pages are made bright by his <lb />
mortal name. Our scout master de- <lb />
sires and richly deserves the absolute <lb />
sent a statement, and if they fail to <lb />
pay them we will have to drop their <lb />
names and take other steps to col- <lb />
what Is due. Every man who <lb />
reads a newspaper ought to pay for <lb />
it promptly, and we hope every one <lb />
who reads this will look at the date <lb />
and If he is in arrears attend to it at <lb />
once. We do not like to print calls <lb />
like this, but your failure to pay <lb />
forces us to do so. <lb />
In Cd. <lb />
The city fathers have robbed us of <lb />
our trees, and the South wind is rap- <lb />
idly sweeping up our dirt and paper, <lb />
and today the streets have a most <lb />
familiar look. <lb />
So longer do the monarch of <lb />
one time forest proudly lift their <lb />
heads to the sky; no accumulations <lb />
of paper and trash adorn the side- <lb />
of every member of building; <lb />
and we should count It but a bare wind-swept street <lb />
privilege to be able to aid in Fathers, with <lb />
doing bis best work among us. Nor your <lb />
Stay your <lb />
men on secretly, but sacredly, we forget to be faithful to all <lb />
here, Journeying our fellow creatures, especially those with <lb />
i to a better land. Here lies the secret who are less fortunate than we and To the slayer, i <lb />
I of America. To obedience does she I have been afflicted with Buffering. We hi id, lb i destroy. I so <lb />
owe her Importance. By following be faithful to our parents, or else, when I send my March <lb />
pal of the organization The s of those who. when we were unable to Wind. I will blow down so,,,, your <lb />
the showed how well they met not great- help ourselves, cared for us and loud frail structures that so long, mighty <lb />
motto. These were M a .,, can. haw protected from the force <lb />
r. , among the other nations of the world ,,., ,. owe ,,, of w, winter's and sum- <lb />
J. Whichard. Jr. <lb />
L. Humber, Jr.<lb />
King. <lb />
of today. Hut shall we like this be and it is but a <lb />
If so, she must train her to render them faithfulness, <lb />
your <lb />
lo the sweepers, she <lb />
should follow the examples of Faithfulness Is one of the to get up this dirt, or will blow it <lb />
their fathers, who climbed the of our order and one which under your eyes, and down <lb />
of success, and then crowned with as endeavoring to follow and Into lungs <lb />
V M i may elevate <lb />
Mayor P, M. Woolen spoke on If they wish their lives to ourselves ind those bout us to that; <lb />
Importance of the Scout movement ,,.,,,, on tho ,, , V , ,, ., not. and eyes and see not, on fold him Saturday to get his hair cut.<lb />
You'll find <lb />
Most all you want <lb />
if you look for it <lb />
In Greenville <lb />
If it's a can <lb />
You can get one <lb />
In any street <lb />
In Greenville <lb />
If ashes gray <lb />
You want to buy <lb />
You'll pick up <lb />
In Greenville <lb />
If awnings torn <lb />
looking for <lb />
You'll And them all <lb />
In Greenville <lb />
If rubbish old <lb />
And muddy holes <lb />
Just take a hike <lb />
To Greenville <lb />
The Recall. <lb />
If house and lot <lb />
With garden plot <lb />
find it NOT <lb />
In Greenville <lb />
Licenses. <lb />
Marriage licenses were Issued to <lb />
the following during last week; <lb />
White. <lb />
Joe and Lizzie Moore. <lb />
Frank Porter and Rosa Lee Stokes. <lb />
Ollie C. and Annie K. <lb />
Silas House and Taylor. <lb />
Colored. <lb />
Paul and Martha Barnes <lb />
David Stewart and <lb />
Joe A. Payton and Kins Cherry, <lb />
Daniel and Wilson. <lb />
W. F. EVANS <lb />
Attorney at Law <lb />
Office opposite R. L. Smith A Go's, <lb />
stables and next doer to John Flan- <lb />
Buggy Company s new building. <lb />
. . <lb />
N. W. <lb />
at Law <lb />
Office formerly occupied by L. <lb />
Fleming <lb />
Greenville, . . Aorta <lb />
J. EVERETT <lb />
Attorney at Law <lb />
In Edwards Building on the Court <lb />
House Square <lb />
. . North <lb />
L. I. Moore W. H. Long <lb />
MOORE LONG <lb />
Attorneys at Law <lb />
. . North <lb />
Washington. N. C, Greenville, N. C <lb />
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb />
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. James <lb />
limited to diseases of the <lb />
Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat <lb />
Greenville, N. Carolina. <lb />
DON <lb />
Attorney at La <lb />
Office in building. st <lb />
Practices wherever his services are <lb />
desired <lb />
. . Haifa <lb />
Ft II <lb />
four-ear Prolific corn for <lb />
sale. Grown in t l-j foot rows, <lb />
Inches In the row, miking It a good <lb />
germinating corn. per bushel; Washington X O <lb />
per per peck . <lb />
Grown and selected by <lb />
W. K. <lb />
. C, R. F. I. No. <lb />
. C. i. w. Clark <lb />
Civil Engine. I Attorney Law <lb />
Engineers and <lb />
Couldn't Stand Curl Papers. <lb />
There is a little boy whose mother <lb />
to have men dwell. <lb />
A CIVIC LEAGUER <lb />
MEN'S <lb />
The attendance of the meeting of <lb />
the Men's Prayer League in the <lb />
He didn't do it. That night when <lb />
giving him a bath the mother <lb />
with him and threatened to do <lb />
up his hair on curl papers. He broke <lb />
out crying with want to make <lb />
me look like a little nigger <lb />
He Won't Limp Now. <lb />
No more limping for Tom Moore, of <lb />
Cochran. Ga. had a bad sore on <lb />
my instep that nothing seemed to <lb />
While they who have ears, and hear <lb />
t leave on the sand of am <lb />
o Greenville and urged that every, r boys lies the future, the , where God d <lb />
encouragement be given the boys in of our nation. May they <lb />
their development. It had tilled him thy father and thy <lb />
with pride to observe their manliness mother; that thy days may he RING. JR. <lb />
as they marched in, and he saw the land which the Lord thy Loyalty, <lb />
their efforts a great future for giveth May they be taught Chairman. Ladies and <lb />
to reverence, respect, honor, but above I have been chosen by my brother There Good Music Sunday <lb />
Future of Our was to obey them. Obedience is lo tonight; and the <lb />
subject of a splendid short speech by of greatest, If not the greatest. I subject assigned me is Loyalty. <lb />
Mr. F. C. Harding. He said the that the Boy Scouts of Amer- The subject I know is a broad one; <lb />
hood and womanhood of a possess. It teaches them to obey should be loyal to all <lb />
are tho that make the parents, those who have done our friends, loyal to our presence help till I used <lb />
The manhood of today was the child- much for them, and in a lifetime, to to our club, and loyal to a g he writes, this wonder- <lb />
hood of yesterday, the boy of today them, they could never repay. for loyalty will Insure were healer soon cured Heals old <lb />
is the man of tomorrow. The future teaches them to obey those who are Be kind and gentle at all times. Mr , g running sores, ulcers, boils, burns, <lb />
of the boy of today is whatever we in authority and above all and Scouts, we must be loyal lo good Faithfulness bruises, eczema or piles. Try <lb />
make it, and depends upon how we greatest, to obey God. Show me a boy our order and we will accomplish. WM y it. Only cents at all <lb />
utilize the opportunities of today. WOO Is obedient and I will show you I much good. We young need and G. ES, Harris in short talks I <lb />
Needs of the Boys of Green-1 a man. All creatures obey some trained lo be true and faithful, and A ,,,.,,,.,, was <lb />
was a subject assigned to Rev. parlor being. The fowls of the air, we reach our loyalty, and beautiful solo by Mrs K <lb />
m. Boyle. He said this meeting th, fishes of the sea, the beasts of out in life we can look beck was assisted In the duet chorus by <lb />
Slipped up on him, as when he was Held, the I lilies of the valley, all join much Joy and pride that we were s T <lb />
other minds The It. F. Win- <lb />
was Intended to be only to the boys, with their maker, and whisper should be loyalty. We w ,, ,,,,,, ,,., N <lb />
Ms subject, however, was one that to Mini who governs this universe, this council of scouts for the <lb />
LOST -ONE RED AND BLACK <lb />
spoiled sow, weight about one <lb />
pounds, mark, half moon right. <lb />
church. Subject, Deliverer <lb />
could be spoken upon. A prime obedience. ourselves, our town, Text ll P, ; 2-l I <lb />
need of the boys is lo get a grip on May man grasp from the skies community. I am sun- n- , Messrs. I. J. Bishop <lb />
self-control, A thought put Into action and then will do as her people I- chandler and B B. <lb />
crises comes when we want to do one In with nature and repeat softly, done, us n. <lb />
thing and feel that we ought to do surely, obedience. Then once more, and be loyal lo us scouts, <lb />
another. There is danger in letting once again, there shall reign on earth <lb />
any habit master you and lose your peace, good will toward men. <lb />
self control. Other needs of the boys <lb />
mentioned by Mr. Hoyle were to heed <lb />
the cry of humanity, learn to work, <lb />
and parental restraint. His speech <lb />
was frequently applauded. <lb />
Dr. C. Laughinghouse was <lb />
called for a talk, and allowed to take <lb />
any subject he He said it <lb />
Self-Respect <lb />
Assistant Scout <lb />
The crowning virtue of all self- <lb />
respect. Without this one the others <lb />
would be of no avail. A man or a <lb />
boy who has no self-respect is a draw <lb />
back to himself and to every body <lb />
reminded him of coming In to a big; about hint, <lb />
banquet Just as the last course bad you see a person smoking <lb />
been served, and there was nothing tobacco, cursing. <lb />
left. He felt that all had been said thing which <lb />
that could be said. Hut he talked <lb />
does not become s gentleman, you <lb />
number of loaders was <lb />
ed from three to lour for this <lb />
fig. so as to include two of the Hoy <lb />
Gen. Julian S. Curr Accept-. <lb />
is announced here who promised to make talks. <lb />
Durham branch of the National <lb />
just the same, and closed with an ,. u ,,,, ,,., <lb />
peal for the boys that brought re- ,, for God, <lb />
suits. He said It was all right to give,, ,, ,, our <lb />
them but they need some- i,.,,. so corrupt that <lb />
thing more substantial. One or or no , <lb />
needs is a good gymnasium, and he respect for them, then we are beyond <lb />
would be one of ten to ten hope and might as well go off and <lb />
dollars for this purpose, or he would as far as our use- <lb />
be one and let the other nine in life is concerned, <lb />
hunted for. This brought long <lb />
Prof. H. D. Austin volunteered lo <lb />
When a boy begins his <lb />
wild he has a very good opinion <lb />
of himself. Hut if he keeps these bad <lb />
give an illustrated lecture at some habits long his self-respect slowly <lb />
ebbs away until it Is gone forever. <lb />
early date to help raise funds for tho <lb />
gymnasium, which was accepted with <lb />
applause. <lb />
Scout Master C. at Rock then made <lb />
league for the promotion of <lb />
sound banking in North Carolina <lb />
will be headed by Julian S. Carr, of <lb />
this city, who is one of the best <lb />
known business men in this stale. Mr. <lb />
Carr has notified the Southern head- <lb />
quarters of the league in Washing- <lb />
ton, that he accepted <lb />
of the local and <lb />
that he will actively lake part in tin- <lb />
work of organizing the but men <lb />
of his locality and State into the <lb />
movement for a reform of the pres- <lb />
banking and currency system, <lb />
shucking Sounds, <lb />
in the earth are sometimes beard <lb />
fore a terrible earthquake, that warn <lb />
of the coming peril. Nature's warn <lb />
are kind. That dull pain or ache <lb />
in tho back warns you the kidneys <lb />
attention if you would escape <lb />
those dangerous maladies, dropsy, <lb />
or Blight's disease. Take El- <lb />
Bitters at once and see <lb />
We see examples of this every day <lb />
the sloven drunkard, the Bringing <lb />
dope Send and dishonest fly and all your best feelings re- <lb />
a statement of what the boys had done It's a shame a disgrace, Hint there turn. received great <lb />
toward equipping is so many of such specimens, from their writes Peter <lb />
and that they were In need of surface of Gods green earth South Mich., is ., <lb />
to equip as they should. Sub- have not reaped enough for their a kidney Try <lb />
were called for and and soul to live a different life, It cents at all druggists. <lb />
total amounted to some over a bun- We should have respect enough for <lb />
died dollars. The boys were de- selves to keep doing these Prof, Urine II. <lb />
Taken <lb />
I have taken up one red sow with <lb />
black spots, unmarked. Has been in <lb />
my Held most of winter and has <lb />
found pigs. Owner can get same by <lb />
proving ownership and paying charges <lb />
February <lb />
W. A. GARRIS. <lb />
R. F. D. Greenville. N. C. <lb />
22-1 <lb />
Bale el ricked I p. <lb />
Early In January I picked up an <lb />
Unmarked bale of cotton floating In <lb />
Tar river. Owner can gel same by <lb />
proving ownership and paying the <lb />
charges. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
R. D. D. No, Greenville. N. C.<lb />
S. M. <lb />
1875 <lb />
Retail and <lb />
. dealer. Cash paid <lb />
Hide. Fur. Seed. Oil Bar- <lb />
Egg, Oak <lb />
etc. Suits, Baby Car- <lb />
Go-Carts, Pallor Suits, <lb />
Tables, Lounges, Safe. P. <lb />
Gail Ai High Life <lb />
tobacco. Key Cheroots, Hen. <lb />
it George Cherries <lb />
Apple, Syrup, Jelly, <lb />
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Soap, <lb />
Lye, Magic Food, Matches, Oil, <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Gal. <lb />
den Seed. Oranges, Apples, <lb />
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples, <lb />
Peaches. Prunes, <lb />
Glass and Wooden- <lb />
ware, Cakes and Crackers, <lb />
best Butter, New <lb />
Royal Sewing machines and <lb />
other goods. Quality and <lb />
cheap cash. Come to <lb />
me. <lb />
C. C. <lb />
N. G <lb />
Attorneys at Law <lb />
Practice in all the <lb />
in Woolen building Third <lb />
Street <lb />
. North <lb />
HARRY <lb />
Attorney Law <lb />
. . Carolina. <lb />
F. M. WOOTEN <lb />
Lawyer. <lb />
Office second floor in Wooten building, <lb />
Third St., opposite court house. <lb />
DR. F. FITTS <lb />
Osteopath <lb />
Chronic disease a specialty. <lb />
Kinston <lb />
Greenville over Frank Wilson's <lb />
store. Hours a. m. to p. m. Mon- <lb />
days. Wednesdays and Friday. Tel- <lb />
connection. Examinations <lb />
free. <lb />
JOHN C. STOUT, <lb />
Architect. <lb />
Rocky Mount, C. <lb />
Send ma your Ideas to develop. <lb />
-if ABE LAID <lb />
Lei me enrich your purse <lb />
I FARM <lb />
FRANCIS L. IVES <lb />
SEAL ESTATE <lb />
Mount, N. C. <lb />
Turkey ills <lb />
PAULINA, la. Feb. <lb />
he participated in a turkey on <lb />
last Thanksgiving day. Frank J. <lb />
until recently mayor of <lb />
this city, is lo stand trial on a charge <lb />
o at the term of the dis- <lb />
court which convened today. <lb />
Mr. resigned the <lb />
after the charges wore prefer- <lb />
red hint. His friends de- <lb />
that he will plead guilty and <lb />
pay a line. <lb />
Ml ST BELIEVE IT. <lb />
Phone Number <lb />
S. M. Schultz <lb />
Caught Shad Morning. <lb />
Oliver Wilson Lang. <lb />
Colored, succeeded ill making the <lb />
of shad for the season early <lb />
Ibis morning Atlantic Coast Line <lb />
railroad bridge they pulled two Gardner s Repair Shop <lb />
while and seven hickory shad and one <lb />
The shad were line ones. If you want the best Cart Wheel, <lb />
one selling for 91.28 and one for SO manufactured in Pitt County go made <lb />
rents. <lb />
H lien H ell- u People <lb />
Tall ll s Plainly, <lb />
When public endorsement is made <lb />
by a representative of Green- <lb />
villa the proof is positive. You must <lb />
it. Head this testimony. <lb />
backache sufferer, every man, woman <lb />
or child any kidney trouble will <lb />
in the reading. <lb />
Mrs. I,. <lb />
avenue, Greenville, N. c, <lb />
Kidney are by no means <lb />
a new remedy to i have used <lb />
I hem different occasions and have <lb />
found that they are a preparation <lb />
great merit Kidney complain <lb />
me miserable and It <lb />
Gardner's ask for a pair not until i procured Kid- <lb />
DIXIE WHEELS pi. from the John I,. Woolen <lb />
Birch Hubs, split White Oak Company, that I found relief <lb />
lighted. <lb />
d. j. trail <lb />
things If only for the reason the, Prof. Bruce ll. on <lb />
All Mighty so us He en- way, superintendent of our traded across the river. <lb />
I do wed -is with the breath of life, school who has I <lb />
win saw lit produce bed for several weeks with bronchial the next offense mean a <lb />
the principles of our v ,. mU Is very much improved, term on roads. is a <lb />
honor. To become a vile habits. physician, think he win be out to <lb />
member of the it Is A scout respects himself, he do- In n few days. <lb />
Tried for <lb />
Two colored men were tiled Rims. got a supply of this <lb />
. Gay, Axle, by strictly remedy and helped ma as <lb />
posted lands Just workmen. Fiery pair guaranteed, and effectively <lb />
I hey were lined around the Corner from For sale all dealers. Price <lb />
wen confined to each and costs, with admonition market. <lb />
,. <lb />
on posted lands. <lb />
Kit's <lb />
N. C. <lb />
I cents. . <lb />
, York, sole agents for United <lb />
Remember <lb />
take no other.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018186_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE CAROLINA <lb />
and FARM and EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Today, we special attention to seem, now assured for Brandt Id Harnett to to veto tor Remember that on Friday <lb />
an editorial we publish under case, his year sentence has to build good roads There an your presence is desired in the court <lb />
head From Other This ed- been adjudged as Inadequate by pie in Pitt county who would be house at the mass meeting of the Boy <lb />
And let us hope that his hat is is from the Raleigh News and Gerard. We are promised a frightened out of their wits at Scouts. Show your Interest in the <lb />
all that is in the ring. And if that be <lb />
what has the done with <lb />
Published by stick, his book of member- <lb />
THE COMPANY, ship blanks for the Club. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD. bis personal dictionary The one <lb />
CAROLINA. I he gets, <lb />
great etc. etc. <lb />
Observer. We need to refer investigation of the case, and a suggestion like that. Yet they go boys by attending, <lb />
reader It. have no doubt that developments will on riding over bad roads and talk about j o <lb />
If this was not enough we will not exonerate Judge who how fearful they are. <lb />
one year. <lb />
Hi months.<lb />
I Teddy the first also the <lb />
j would be a mighty uninteresting Ted- <lb />
isles may be had upon without his of per- <lb />
at the business la <lb />
The Reflector Building, corner Evans <lb />
and Third streets. <lb />
All cards of thanks resolution, <lb />
respect will be charged r at <lb />
cent per word. <lb />
Communications advertising <lb />
dates will be M three <lb />
cants per line, up lines. <lb />
as class matter <lb />
August 1910, at the post office at <lb />
Greenville, North Carolina, and <lb />
act of March <lb />
FRIDAY, MARCH 1912. <lb />
The peaceful, though <lb />
gentleman, who now in the <lb />
White House must feel mighty <lb />
with his old coming <lb />
out from bush to cop the bank. Per- <lb />
haps that was in the agreement when <lb />
Roosevelt had to go to Africa to get <lb />
photographed with a mighty foot rest- <lb />
on guns, beasties. and other <lb />
of African scenery. And perhaps <lb />
it was not. T. R. is out for <lb />
blood and by the way <lb />
lie started he went to get a scent on <lb />
Taft in own native slate. It <lb />
now remains to be seen when he will <lb />
LAW ENFORCEMENT. <lb />
The meeting of New Bern up with him. <lb />
held a few nights ago. closely follow-- Prudent, or frightened. Taft said <lb />
the Bryan murder case and a re-when he heard T. historical, for <lb />
suit of the verdict rendered by the so it is to be. phrase, don't think <lb />
jury that tried the case, has began to, that Roosevelt will go back on his <lb />
make history. , word. He did not want a third <lb />
The New Bern Sun. in its editorial. etc. That listens much like the very <lb />
column I frightened man who as he made the <lb />
morning many of time in his life spoke to the <lb />
leading business men were pursuant king of the jungle, <lb />
much surprised to have an officer Tiger Beautiful Mr. He <lb />
of the law to serve a not a to ,. <lb />
them for violating a city beautiful <lb />
Most of the arrests were tiger, nor did the pursuant <lb />
made for allowing thrash boxes slop w look u, himself in leaping <lb />
to stand on the streets overnight a brook. <lb />
It has been such a long time Twas ever thus in the world of pol- <lb />
since the ordinance was enforced <lb />
that many people did not know i <lb />
there was such a law on the <lb />
books. Another bunch of . <lb />
quote from an article by Mr. Arthur <lb />
Brisbane, which has quite recently <lb />
appeared In the American Press. <lb />
This publication is intended for ed- <lb />
and Mr. Brisbane, the foremost <lb />
editor in the world, is writing a <lb />
of articles intended for the <lb />
try editors. Mr. Brisbane <lb />
parcels post would make of <lb />
every editor's list of subscribers <lb />
a possible list of buyers for every <lb />
great successful concern in the <lb />
United States. And the LOCAL <lb />
MERCHANT WOULD BE THE <lb />
INTERMEDIARY AND <lb />
HIS PROFIT. <lb />
SPEND A KOBE. <lb />
Greenville has a good system of <lb />
water works, as good as any town its <lb />
size can show. It has a largo supply <lb />
lire hose, it has band reels and a <lb />
passed the enormous sentence. Now <lb />
it remains to be seen what will hap- <lb />
pen to for this mis- <lb />
carriage of Probably nothing <lb />
will happen to the gentleman. Some <lb />
few days ago a man was put on trial <lb />
for life for killing another man. The <lb />
case was clear against the accused, <lb />
yet the Jury after being out hours <lb />
brought In a verdict of <lb />
and walked out of the court a <lb />
free man. <lb />
What's the matter with justice It <lb />
looks as though the bandage has slip- <lb />
from the eyes to the mouth, and <lb />
where she was blind, she is now dumb. <lb />
TO <lb />
At least that is the way his manager <lb />
Senator H. made it <lb />
known to the citizens of the United <lb />
States at large and particularly to <lb />
splendid hose wagon. It has a horse Southern people, <lb />
to pull the hose wagon. It has vol- Underwood has <lb />
firemen that are just as good his campaign Quarters in the <lb />
as they are in any other town. and lo Bank <lb />
It may be said that the town has seriously, Wilson, of <lb />
ninety-five per cent of a good Are I Dot <lb />
lighting equipment. Yet for the lack have much of a show In the Southern <lb />
the other five per cent of equip- <lb />
do too much damage when <lb />
they start here, and too many houses <lb />
One thing Is the attempts <lb />
to break in houses here Is kept up <lb />
President Taft has expressed his somebody is going to make a date for <lb />
disapproval of the suggestion of Post- the undertaker, or call in a doctor <lb />
master General Hitchcock's extract bullets. <lb />
that the government buy and <lb />
operate all the telegraph lines as an <lb />
adjunct of the postal system. <lb />
A headline says Under- <lb />
wood enters race for We <lb />
thought he had been in the race <lb />
A Hickory man cleared over start. <lb />
a on the product of forty <lb />
some people think It does not pay In his silence Roosevelt sets an ex- <lb />
to raise poultry. There are that It might pay some of the <lb />
things that people could make others to follow. <lb />
more money off than <lb />
ton or tobacco. <lb />
growing cot- <lb />
States. <lb />
Underwood's claim to Southern pop- <lb />
and Southern votes is based <lb />
on his being a is <lb />
are allowed to be destroyed. Would only that mi- <lb />
ll you are afraid the robbers will <lb />
get it. put it in the banks. Plenty <lb />
The Supreme court of the United of them convenient. <lb />
States has decided against the <lb />
of the man who in 1903 <lb />
was executed In for <lb />
murder of his wife. The court <lb />
held that to be killed by the law for- <lb />
all claim in life insurance. <lb />
Greenville ought lo be the whole- <lb />
sale or distributing center for all <lb />
Pitt county. But you cannot tell <lb />
from reading Greenville's four news- <lb />
papers that the town has any whole- <lb />
sale business at all. <lb />
An exchange says of the <lb />
Sure, who wants to be <lb />
such a dead thing <lb />
This, is one time the wind how led <lb />
more noise than the kickers. <lb />
Dynamite and Closed Shop. <lb />
If the closed shop shall be <lb />
no man can earn wages with- <lb />
out a union license, and the union is <lb />
under no necessity to grant the <lb />
The right to live includes the <lb />
We heard a lady put another to earn s living. Work for the <lb />
on Greenville's slogan- <lb />
unemployed is one of the first de- <lb />
of the unions upon the so- <lb />
It not be economy on the part of the son aid no nave to at to Greenville. Yours they <lb />
aldermen to spend the other five office he now you literally true, for when to Improve by their own <lb />
cent needed for equipment and save furthermore, Wilson turned over And yet the unions would de- <lb />
A driver is needed to stay has the assurance the South- T <lb />
members. That is to Bay, the right <lb />
right with the fire horse and to see is claiming <lb />
that the horse takes the hose wagon Already the majority of the South's <lb />
If all blind tiger reports are true, <lb />
to live would depend not upon <lb />
law, but upon compliance with <lb />
out Immediately when there is an senators have expressed themselves j there are some other candidates standards and bearing of union <lb />
alarm. Then something Is needed to In favor of Wilson, and the Southern grooming for a spell on the The man unable or <lb />
give an alarm that is better than is practically unanimous in the next criminal term of court i willing to comply with union re- <lb />
and men were in court today for <lb />
violating the bicycle laws, in that <lb />
Under the title of Years of <lb />
Southern the <lb />
they were not provided with bells has as a <lb />
and lamps. This ordinance has of <lb />
also been a vagrant for some <lb />
We are glad to publish this <lb />
rial in part, because It seems to fit <lb />
our own case so well. We seem to <lb />
February 22nd, a mass of statistics <lb />
which deal with the wonderful growth <lb />
of the South in the last score and a <lb />
half years. This magnificent <lb />
is being forwarded to every <lb />
subscriber of the Rec- <lb />
hammer on a cast claiming Wilson as the best expo- comes around. <lb />
would be a social pariah, <lb />
possessing only the starve. <lb />
nobody imagine that this is some- <lb />
much as we do respect a larger <lb />
size one. Capital mistake. It is just <lb />
this disrespect for city ordinances that <lb />
breeds contempt for more serious <lb />
laws. <lb />
We allow trash to stand, not over- <lb />
night, but in some cases over many a <lb />
day. Delivery boys who make use of <lb />
bicycles to cover their territory in a <lb />
shorter time, are as guilty of the bi- <lb />
cycle law in Greenville as the men <lb />
and boys rounded up In the New <lb />
Bern court were. <lb />
Surely we are not waiting for such <lb />
chance to glance through its <lb />
pages of interesting data and <lb />
illustrations, we can appreciate <lb />
the value of such a publication to <lb />
anyone who has the interest of the <lb />
South heart and also to every cit- <lb />
of the states. <lb />
The resources, under development <lb />
or otherwise, of the great South are <lb />
sit out in figures compiled by author- <lb />
on every subject treated, and <lb />
the value of the work as a book of <lb />
reference Is unquestionable. <lb />
in this issue we pub- <lb />
oft rim of a locomotive drive wheel, Democracy has had since the <lb />
or running through the streets shoot- palmy days or great Bryan. j A man said to be years old thing which concerns only ironwork- <lb />
hag pistols and to wake up The fact that The Com- was recently found dead in Kentucky, Whoever buys anything bearing <lb />
people in hearing. Now if the alder- editor, and naturally a Bryan The item did not say what brand he union label subscribes to the theory <lb />
men will spend that other five per man. has declared for Wilson seems used nor how long he had been a of The merchant <lb />
.,, . , . ., , , l J , submits to sell such articles bows <lb />
a the of e has smoker. <lb />
fixing quarters in the municipal build- the support of the most famous Dem- million minds has decreed that open- <lb />
for a few firemen to sleep, and gel the South has produced. The business man can well afford shop articles shall not be bought, sold, <lb />
an alarm that will wake up firemen Local invariably to lay aside his business for a while or transported in inter-state corn- <lb />
over the town, the saved property will H WilBon an overwhelming major- tonight and show his Interest in the and ls now evading punish- <lb />
for criminal contempt of court <lb />
in Insisting upon as a matter of <lb />
conscience. He Is unable to <lb />
the enormity of his offense <lb />
think that just because a law is a <lb />
small one. we should not respect It we nave only a pay for the expenditures many times over his Under- boy who in a few years will succeed <lb />
over. Spend a little more equip- wood ls the race to him. <lb />
and save much In protection, j <lb />
FOR TAB RIVER. <lb />
a time, as the disrespect for such city a few <lb />
ordinances will be a regular nuisance ago and General Manager <lb />
to have proper care taken of Manufacturers Record, Mr. <lb />
On the of today rests the near against non-unionists because he la- <lb />
, . . , , under the delusion what- <lb />
We wonder how many readers of future of Greenville. That boy asks ever for g <lb />
Chronicle have noticed how fast he encouragement of your presence or everybody. Cases like his call <lb />
News was given out on Sunday that the Confederate veterans are going. court house tonight. for heroic remedies. Nothing is <lb />
the much-talked of and hard worked The majority of them are around a--------- suggested here worse than a general <lb />
for appropriation for the Improve- the infirmities of age are Because Mr. Roosevelt went to New of the meaning of the <lb />
of some of the North Carolina upon them. There is no attended to his business and <lb />
rivers and harbors had successfully to doubt that the Confederate not talk, it was flashed out that pd malice and oppression of the <lb />
gone through the stormy sea of red death roll this year and the year he on a mysterious trip. and the Innocent the dynamite <lb />
I outrages themselves. At worst there <lb />
tape and that as far as we people come will exceed all previous rec- <lb />
are concerned would have There will not be so many There ls a cry for protection were only a hundred of them, and <lb />
97.500 for the proposed Tar river after that because there will down on the Mexican border. There <lb />
be fewer veterans o safe places the criers might go to York Times. <lb />
The whole thing is a <lb />
Richard H. Edmonds. No man who <lb />
Congratulations to Representative Evening Chronicle. <lb />
need no protection. <lb />
You will gel an Idea of what the <lb />
Small for his good work. This is quite true, and it is sad to <lb />
to Senator Simmons and to all note the rapidly depleting of <lb />
already, and It is to be In the South, or thinks Washington City North Carolinians the Confederate veterans who -till all Boy Scouts mean for the boys If article entitled Fer- <lb />
that the town authorities will not have about the thousands who who are serving the Interests of the have passed away in a few years attend the meeting in the court house Our was direct- <lb />
In another column of this Issue we <lb />
are giving our readers the benefit of <lb />
started in their march southward can <lb />
Old North State. And last, but not more. How remarkable this is in <lb />
ed to same on account of the fact <lb />
that It sets out very clearly how our <lb />
farmers can utilize their won pro- <lb />
citizens that have called on their own union army who, judging by the pen-. To help your town along, either get ducts to enrich their soils. <lb />
to some of our contrast with the veterans of <lb />
to wait for a citizens mass meeting <lb />
to wake up to the possibilities for read remarks, <lb />
comfort when are entrusted to them. are the result of deeD on <lb />
together with the authority to make problems and Southern pockets to go to Washington and rolls, never die. The number before and pull or behind and It has always been our policy la <lb />
them effective. and might be called an Intro- press the necessity of the Tar river or union civil war pensioners is do not get In the middle and advocate the raising of hog and <lb />
And It would be very encouraging just again than the number of soldiers kick. on and <lb />
to have the town authorities join by Baltimore periodical. . .-., . it.- erred to appealed to us as being In <lb />
won the tight and all of us should feel the union army fifty years ago <lb />
hands with our Civic League and co- Anybody who wants to learn the proud of having such representatives <lb />
The Wilmington Star <lb />
line with this doctrine. <lb />
All of our readers who are inter- <lb />
operate in making a better looking truthful Tacts about us who dwell and such citizens as made The Norfolk Southern railroad is Hit him a In the fertilization of soils <lb />
upon the South's fertile soil, need j possible. helping to corn grown by offer- he deserves, read It. <lb />
Two days ago we published a letter turn over the pages of With a Tar river canal , feet In gold as prizes this year. are at it. <lb />
from a citizen, who seems to be en- and the best wide by feet deep, another means of This will divided for the ATTACK <lb />
ever the prospect of having ti n will be his for the reading, or communication from the outside world est on one acre, for the sec- i seem to think that, FOLLOWS A Ml III III. <lb />
Greenville look as well as It might figures, opinions by experts and be opened to Greenville and cud largest and for the third other People have no right lo their <lb />
be made to look, were everybody to foremost financiers and lauds that have been Idle will be made largest. The only restriction ls that If variance with what <lb />
think about It. and do their share. In in the country. to yield many times the amount lo it must be grown in Norfolk Southern <lb />
that letter he called attention to the; In the river improvement territory. <lb />
amount of chickens, that, without BIGHT I enterprising mind o You owe It to your boy and to your <lb />
having discovered the pole, as did, r needed support the proposition left open by One man Bays Greenville's slogan neighbor's, boy lo attend the meeting <lb />
Cook, have been granted the or assertions we make of board of aldermen some If all wrong, that It says. the tonight, <lb />
of and are page we would not have to look be form- Yours If You while he <lb />
That Been Experience <lb />
III r inn <lb />
Try <lb />
Next. <lb />
Many people lake to cure <lb />
constipation, and It docs cure II for <lb />
one day, two or three days later <lb />
they are sicker than ever. That is <lb />
one of the of <lb />
Is the why <lb />
yards and In some instances on the two weeks ago we made mention or Greenville the room and better room outside Jail from the West this way. hope will not guarantee <lb />
streets. Perhaps there is some or- Knox's tour of some South of to success. than Inside, and the people who be- II will meet en route. harmless. Hut we do guarantee <lb />
mm . i i i t one Io -1 <lb />
a Cut too. And American countries and we gave our are on the out- for Dodson's <lb />
there Is, we look upon the town for thinking this tour might .,. and <lb />
authorities to hove it enforced. that butter and eggs are both some billions attacks and keep them cured <lb />
between us and some those .,.,, . Mortimer do <lb />
HAT iv tub millionaire, Mortimer to do its best work. It Is a <lb />
Ml Not n- . a Hum ., . , <lb />
able liquid with a pleasant and <lb />
lowed select their food in front around for any length of time. About here In Greenville, and let came and got Jail. There Is more Another snow storm is heading <lb />
When strenuous Roosevelt came confirmed our fears. <lb />
tries. Not many days after other pa- of New York nearly will, u movement, than <lb />
satisfactory result tor the underdog. nit of her harmless to children a. well a. <lb />
out with that announcement, he had A later we were so bold as to a charge of burglary Ty lo Yet we need a groWn people, it livens up the liver <lb />
perhaps been <lb />
with a call. More can hotel. <lb />
A Guilford county jury is hung on <lb />
by natural methods, does not act so <lb />
strongly as to weaken the but <lb />
is and just the same. You <lb />
reading Si. Walter refer to the proposed parcels post never proven <lb />
Scott's Robb Roy Yon system. Somebody was kind enough was sent for long years. The b accomplished through providing <lb />
all remember felt when he to forward us a Southern daily In sent for long years. The lo keep her sons at home than in try- . id . <lb />
put his foot in Scotland. foot which the of such a system case was reopened at the Instance of to get them back after they hart the Greensboro trip hammer. Now pharmacy with the assurance of your <lb />
to on my native heath and my name were set forth. hew . the back If it falls In <lb />
I .<lb />
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb />
Authorized Agent Carolina Home and Farm and <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb />
Advertising rates furnished <lb />
AYDEN, N. C, Feb. Promptly at o'clock, the host- <lb />
day evening from to o'clock, around the score cards <lb />
. . . , a cherry tree and hatchet <lb />
at the home of Mr C. Noble. Misses <lb />
i By painted on them for the purpose <lb />
and Gaddy delightfully enter- L, <lb />
a few of their friends in honor Miss Moore receiving the highest <lb />
or Miss Moore, Greenville, score was presented a handsome box <lb />
and Miss Sallie Shaw, of Winston. candy by a <lb />
The east and west parlor, a <lb />
decorated with by Prof. H. L. <lb />
and national colors, this being George, <lb />
. . j At dainty refreshments, con- <lb />
one hundredth and <lb />
. . t, of cream with cake <lb />
eighteenth birthday. . <lb />
and were served. After the re- <lb />
Lucy Turnage and Mr. E. J. were disposed of, classical <lb />
Gardner received the guest at music was rendered by Miss Lucy <lb />
door, and from there they were usher-1 Wilkinson, of Alta Vista, Va. <lb />
ed to the cloak rooms, then they were This brilliant social event was <lb />
taken lo the parlors and presented to far the most enjoyable of the sea- <lb />
guests of honor. son. <lb />
Story <lb />
PLANS <lb />
com <lb />
Motto, is <lb />
tit ion tor the pardon of J. <lb />
I v was convicted of the crime of <lb />
assault with deadly weapon at <lb />
TO CREDITORS. term of MU count E <lb />
I . . . . , i court, and sentenced by <lb />
I Having as administrator Oliver H. Allen, to the <lb />
D. R. N. Joseph deceased. o three months, <lb />
of Pitt county, N, C, this is to be presented to the governor of Nona <lb />
notify all persons having claims Carolina on February the Wit <lb />
the of deceased <lb />
to to the undersigned n of said pardon. <lb />
within one year or the date or this nay be beard. <lb />
notice, or this notice will be pleaded <lb />
in bar their recovery. All persons <lb />
indebted to said estate will please <lb />
So there's the story the make immediate payment. <lb />
is the way the grower of this re- pion ear as Palm told it himself. And This 31st day of January, 1912. <lb />
markable ear of corn, Mr. Fred C. on the strength or it who will D. M. CLARK, <lb />
styles himself. Though he that Fred C Justly mer-l Administrator B. M. <lb />
is admitted to be one o lead- it the Man who Knows Julius Brown, Attorney. <lb />
corn experts in the country <lb />
one whose services are greatly in Mr. real experience as a. <lb />
demand as a judge of corn ex- farmer began about sixteen SALE PERSONAL <lb />
Mr. asks for no great- ago <lb />
honor or distinction than to be <lb />
known as a plain Hoosier <lb />
and while he openly professes a rather be an agriculturist, so <lb />
W F. <lb />
F. C HARDING, <lb />
Attorneys for J. W. Allen. <lb />
TO CREDITORS. <lb />
timing duly qualified before the <lb />
court clerk or Pitt county, <lb />
as administratrix, with the will an- <lb />
of the estate of Jane L. God- <lb />
is hereby given to all <lb />
persons indebted to the estate to <lb />
immediate payment to the <lb />
and any persons having <lb />
He had been on the road M, sale <lb />
grocery specialty salesman, when in two certain mortgages or <lb />
farmer, he took a notion that he would by J. A. Gardner, to the Car- the day January 1913 <lb />
o he Bagging Co. both recorded in or <lb />
reasonable <lb />
In the a few short courses at <lb />
Book T-9. page the undersigned <lb />
recovery. <lb />
day of 1912. <lb />
house door in Greenville, on Saturday. <lb />
LETTER FROM <lb />
WRITES <lb />
Owing to the turn affairs <lb />
we take pleasure in printing the fol- <lb />
lowing letter sent us Mexico <lb />
City by a former Greenville <lb />
MEXICO, U. F. Feb. 1912. <lb />
Editor <lb />
I will lake time to give you just a <lb />
word about the conditions down here, <lb />
or rather in the city. <lb />
IS INVEST <lb />
GAS DEATHS <lb />
Coroner Conducts the Second <lb />
Investigation <lb />
pride . .- u i for <lb />
of growing the famous ear of and rented a portion <lb />
corn which was adjudged most the farm he now occupies. March 1912. the following <lb />
ever grown, it is without years lie carefully breed- personal <lb />
a shadow of ostentation. this new variety of corn. For One shingle mill complete; one <lb />
NO SENSATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS <lb />
Two Points Mere Cleared During <lb />
Early Part of Second Investigation <lb />
Johnson Had and the <lb />
Meter Wan In Perfect <lb />
Has Hat Testified an Vet. <lb />
RALEIGH, Feb. second <lb />
investigation into tile death of Hugh <lb />
is the only time foreigners <lb />
In Mexico City have feared any <lb />
I have been here, especial- <lb />
the Americans. Something is go- <lb />
lo happen. We don't know what, <lb />
but it is going to be soon. A foreign- <lb />
not get a gun here from the <lb />
Mexican merchants for love Fred and Alton R. <lb />
money. All our office employees the three young men of <lb />
are Mexicans, and through them have begun today by Coroner <lb />
secured arum for my personal use. the hearing being held in <lb />
in case are needed. The fact is, hall, in the rear of <lb />
if all the foreigners in this city could a recess <lb />
get together in a body could at witnesses <lb />
whip every native in the city in examined and their <lb />
The Worlds Greatest Ear of Corn <lb />
Corn Flake Yellow. after winning <lb />
W. h. <lb />
A year <lb />
PARENT <lb />
Yellow Dent <lb />
Gold Standard. <lb />
DIMENSION'S-Length, 1-S inches ; 3-4 inches. <lb />
Number of SO. of kernels, 3-4 of an Width <lb />
of kernels 3-H of an Thickness of kernels, 1-6 of <lb />
Arrangement, very uniform, kernels running In rows <lb />
entire length of the ear without a misplaced grain, hold- <lb />
their length well to the ends of the ear, tip being well <lb />
with grains. Weight, ounces. Estimated pro- <lb />
portions corn, per cent; cob, cent.<lb />
NELLIE S. WILLIAMS. <lb />
or Jane L. Godwin.<lb />
mill <lb />
corn mill, both now located at <lb />
X Roads, in Pitt SALE I <lb />
two bay home mules about years By virtue two execution. <lb />
one black mare male about ed to the undersigned from the Bu- <lb />
years on- gray mare mule court of Pin county, one en- <lb />
year, old; and one black horse mule titled Hopkins against Nelson <lb />
about years old. Also a large lot Hopkins and the other entitled State <lb />
of pea-vine raised during the or North against Nelson <lb />
year 1911 on the lands the said Hopkins. Charlie Hopkins and Frank <lb />
J. A. Gardner, near X Hopkins. I will on Monday the 18th <lb />
Roads. Said property is sold to sat- or March. 1912. at o'clock m., <lb />
two mortgages. , at the court door Greenville, <lb />
This February 1912. sell to the highest bidder for cash to <lb />
CAROLINA satisfy said two executions all the <lb />
F. G. James Son. , right, title and Interest which <lb />
said Nelson Hopkins has in fol- <lb />
lowing described real <lb />
I on west side of A. <lb />
MERCHANTS, TAKE NOTICE. c. L railroad adjoining the land <lb />
That the last legislature passed an Mrs. J. L. Sugg on the north and the <lb />
act forbidding the sale or of Henry Sheppard on the west <lb />
ridge, that are commonly used in 22-j and lot of Jane Forbes on the east, <lb />
rifles, and can be used in 22-pistols. and Bonner's lane on the south, con- <lb />
without paying a license tax. I have one-fourth acre, more <lb />
informed that several merchants or leaf, and being the lot where the <lb />
the county are selling Nelson Hopkins has been <lb />
and is unlawful This the 12th day February. 1912. <lb />
it do so. All who continue to sell S. I. DUDLEY, Sheriff. <lb />
in after Ibis date will have to pay <lb />
required tax for selling <lb />
and cartridges. <lb />
This February 1912. <lb />
S. I. DUDLEY Sheriff.<lb />
TO <lb />
for the year 1911 are long <lb />
past due. the time h is almost <lb />
arrived when I will have to collect. <lb />
Those who yet delinquent should <lb />
come forward and pay, so as to avoid <lb />
hours. In case or trouble, we reel sought with a view to show- <lb />
champion ear or corn two years he planted two rows <lb />
not an accident. There be Yellow Lieut, then two <lb />
greater in the value careful Alexander's Gold Standard, <lb />
and painstaking selection or the Gold Standard. <lb />
Announcement. <lb />
Mr. J. B. Little has accepted the being added, <lb />
of position of manager of the Greenville; This February <lb />
of Real Estate and Agency, <lb />
From <lb />
ed and breeding than the rows he picked <lb />
The ears c the char-, <lb />
who thinks he stands a chance to act he wanted to reproduce. <lb />
G. M. MOORING <lb />
General <lb />
very confident that we will be able to lug men not die q mg <lb />
our selves. As long as Ma- as or their own ignorance <lb />
controls the army we are carelessness. Much of corn and by a In breeding plots and <lb />
SI WM car careful selection, so that con produce. We now op, the former <lb />
and societies parade the has fashioned even more perfectly in nine year's time he had developed ,.,,, Co. and w, be to have our friends <lb />
school boys and societies, parade but a from <lb />
Indiana man. cannot do better to Tie champion ear was <lb />
No American Capital Wanted No winner the W. K. <lb />
immigration Dome few Mary Haswell, Frank , the of Corn <lb />
Americans have already skipped out Mr Hamilton, Sallie Mann, <lb />
and others are going every day. I and other, were examined before <lb />
feel as safe and a. well satisfied as noon recess. F. W. Goss. who <lb />
If I was in the United States. In Jail as a witness, will <lb />
I feel very confident that be put on later and t ex. <lb />
things will get alright soon. have the case developed to <lb />
doubt there is going to be a big an extent that his will <lb />
somewhere, but I hope it will all the importance. The <lb />
crushed soon. Many of the points brought out today <lb />
are In sympathy with the that Alton Johnson had money <lb />
and it Is the general question among . h. possession and that the <lb />
the business at the present. meter and fixture. In Wilson's apart-1 <lb />
and his champion ear. <lb />
were ail right at the time of i <lb />
the tragedy. Solicitor Herbert <lb />
examined the witnesses care- <lb />
folly and skillfully and did not <lb />
look a point that might lead to . <lb />
clearing up of the mystery. Senator <lb />
O. A, ls assisting Mr. i <lb />
is going to No one <lb />
seems to some say one thing <lb />
and some the other. I personally <lb />
don't think will hold out for <lb />
great while. I think that the op- <lb />
position will either cause him to re- <lb />
sign, or he will be assassinated, as <lb />
there are many of the money people <lb />
here opposed to him, who do not want <lb />
any revolution and they may try most <lb />
anything In order to get clear of <lb />
Our business has been very pros- <lb />
here and this little excite- <lb />
got my brother very much <lb />
upset. We have many thousands of <lb />
dollars scattered out In this country <lb />
a long revolution would ruin us, <lb />
but as I see it, we can not have any <lb />
long time of it, if It does start. <lb />
These people now, many of them, ex- <lb />
the lulled States to come In <lb />
here any day. It has been reported Pipes. Stand Pipes, Sewer <lb />
on the streets a number of times and Farm Implements, etc <lb />
EKED C <lb />
In the first place, knows corn. <lb />
BUY DIRECT FROM M <lb />
aid the MIDDLE MAN'S PROFIT Z <lb />
pion ear, it would be enough. And <lb />
HARVARD BLACK ROOF PAINT m of this fact, here Is the story <lb />
M he told it <lb />
on the market for use in November, 1910, and we <lb />
Shingle, Felt, Canvas, Paper, harvesting our crop. The <lb />
Tin and Rubber Roofs, Cutters and had been good, but we were <lb />
Copings, Structural Iron Works. a late with harvest. The <lb />
Bridges. Subways, Tunnels, Base- were going in the usual <lb />
Fences. Towers. the corn, the harvest was <lb />
Pumps, Poles, Vaults, Tanks, Steam a promising one. <lb />
Pipes. have a sort of corn show at j <lb />
my farm all the time, and there is <lb />
handsome <lb />
silver and enamel cup made by <lb />
Tiffany or New York at a cost of <lb />
Mr. Kellogg a. the <lb />
and manufacturer of Toasted <lb />
Corn Flakes naturally has a deep <lb />
Interest in the development of the <lb />
higher grade, of corn, for the com- <lb />
of which be is president, the <lb />
Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Co., re- <lb />
quires ten thousand bushels of corn a <lb />
day for the making of its product. <lb />
Kellogg trophy was offered to <lb />
be a in annual competition <lb />
for the best single ear of corn until <lb />
won twice by the same producer. The <lb />
tact that the Kellogg product ls made <lb />
only from selected white corn, while <lb />
the winning ear was or a pronounced <lb />
yellow type, was a peculiar <lb />
look <lb />
one time published In our city paper, <lb />
that the United States had sent their <lb />
fleet to the coast of Mexico to invade <lb />
country. The natives here, <lb />
some of them don't know what they <lb />
want, and there not enough of the <lb />
better class of people to hold them <lb />
down. Some fellow a good <lb />
voice gel out and ask for followers. <lb />
flock after him. go he <lb />
leads them, and do he com- <lb />
I hem do. and Terms. It will cost you nothing <lb />
With kindest regards, and <lb />
I may have a line fro C V IF ft CO., <lb />
Leaks and Prevents Decay and always an award for exceptionally <lb />
Water-Proof, Weather good car. of sufficiently <lb />
Proof Acid-Proof. to type to permit of their being- <lb />
IVe a foil line of exhibited. There is a small box on <lb />
Heady Mixed House Paints Barn every corn wagon In which the most <lb />
Varnishes, Dryers, etc. <lb />
Our Motto -Quality a square <lb />
deal. <lb />
We Sci Hi Your for Paint <lb />
for any Purpose. <lb />
Write us for Prices, Color Cards <lb />
iS <lb />
i am, <lb />
AN BOY. <lb />
CLEVELAND, <lb />
answering ads. mention <lb />
Services Sunday. <lb />
perfect ears are thrown. These, I <lb />
when properly selected, constitute <lb />
the seed corn, and among these more <lb />
perfect ears we occasionally find an <lb />
ear that we are willing to exhibit in <lb />
the day the champion ear was <lb />
found, I was at DOUG and at <lb />
dinner I line one of the men brought <lb />
It and laid It, with a number of <lb />
other cars, upon the window sill <lb />
the well room for me lo lake and put <lb />
away in the seed house. i <lb />
I said, you think <lb />
you've a good car <lb />
It looks to mo a good at Ohio, by It. A. <lb />
TROPHY <lb />
DY i <lb />
Twice Awarded. To be Coin <lb />
for again at next I <lb />
Com Show j <lb />
The Kellogg trophy was won in <lb />
The Republican <lb />
league or Illinois Is making elaborate <lb />
preparations Its annual meeting. <lb />
which will be combined with eel Rev. L T. or LaGrange. he said. do you think of of Charleston with a <lb />
of the conduct services In the Christian picked It up and looked It over, magnificent ear of Yellow <lb />
church Sunday morning and I said finally, think It but not so perfect an ear a. <lb />
night. tho most perfect ear of corn I ever that which originally won the <lb />
it's good enough to win the and which has become known <lb />
at the banquet which will, history of the average man is A. W. Kellogg trophy this year j a. best ear of corn ever <lb />
the chief feature of the meeting. largely foot notes. at<lb />
centennial In Chicago on March <lb />
The league hopes to have President <lb />
Every Manure Spreader is not a Cloverleaf <lb />
that looks like one. You judge a Manure <lb />
Spreader by its looks because there are many <lb />
features which are found in the construction of <lb />
one machine that are not found in others. <lb />
Manure Spreaders are the most easily op- <lb />
prated, the strongest ard best machines on the <lb />
market. If you will examine one critically you <lb />
will with us that the <lb />
the best machine ever looked at. Drop in. <lb />
Let us discuss the manure spreader preposition. <lb />
Let us explain the many meritorious features <lb />
in Cloverleaf construction. Better still, <lb />
buy one, then you will be in a better position to <lb />
know why you can't judge a manure spreader by <lb />
its looks. If you are not to buy, call and <lb />
pet a Its filled with valuable <lb />
on soil maintenance and fertility. W are <lb />
reserving one for you. Won't you call and eat <lb />
it today <lb />
Hart Hadley <lb />
GREENVILLE, N.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018186_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
FINANCIAL STATEMENT <lb />
Of Claims Audited and Allowed by the Board <lb />
of County Commissioners of Pitt County, To- <lb />
with Receipts and Disbursements and <lb />
the Financial Condition of said County for <lb />
the Fiscal Year Ending December 1911 <lb />
No. <lb />
No. <lb />
IS <lb />
7- <lb />
go <lb />
SI <lb />
To Whom Issued <lb />
To Whom Issued <lb />
Virginia Atkinson <lb />
Laney Atkinson <lb />
Nancy Atkinson <lb />
Cherry<lb />
Jno. Braxton <lb />
Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
Frank Bright and wife <lb />
Pennie Burney <lb />
Sally Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
Martha Briley <lb />
Mary Ballinger <lb />
Cherry Bell <lb />
Fannie Barrett <lb />
Africa Brown <lb />
Hat tie Boyd <lb />
Bailie Briley <lb />
Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
Wm. and wife <lb />
Nancy Cox <lb />
Pennie Cox <lb />
Bell Carson <lb />
Cherry <lb />
Carney <lb />
Fannie Cobb <lb />
in Clark <lb />
cob <lb />
Dunn <lb />
Win. i<lb />
Si <lb />
Li <lb />
Linda Elka <lb />
Amos <lb />
.- Fleming <lb />
Frank <lb />
ts y Harris <lb />
Bettie Gay <lb />
Alice <lb />
Alex. Green <lb />
Jacob Gay <lb />
Mary Grimes <lb />
Laura Harris <lb />
Anthony Harris<lb />
K. Anderson <lb />
Isabella Holmes <lb />
Hardy <lb />
Hardy <lb />
Louis Hunt <lb />
C. J. Haddock <lb />
Bettie <lb />
Debbie <lb />
Obed Hardy <lb />
Jane Israel <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
Simon Johnson <lb />
Jones <lb />
Jasper <lb />
Nancy <lb />
Maggie James <lb />
Berry Lee and wife <lb />
Alphonso <lb />
Jasper Langley <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Delia Moore <lb />
Morris <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
Thorn. Morgan <lb />
J. R. Mills and wife <lb />
Lizzie <lb />
Mary <lb />
Lucy Pollard <lb />
J. J. Page and wife <lb />
Oliver Phillip <lb />
. let in <lb />
lea <lb />
ion <lb />
J. T. I ;. <lb />
Cilia <lb />
Cornelia Rogers <lb />
Mary Spain <lb />
John Sheppard <lb />
G. W. Smith <lb />
Delia Staton <lb />
Nancy Staton <lb />
Stocks <lb />
Simmons <lb />
Amanda Stevenson <lb />
Tripp <lb />
Patience Turnage <lb />
Tyson <lb />
Thigpen <lb />
Harriet Taylor <lb />
Fred Venters <lb />
Margarette Vines <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Judith Williams <lb />
Oliver Williams <lb />
Williams <lb />
Had.; <lb />
Laura Wallace <lb />
Noah Walston <lb />
Evans <lb />
Taylor Harris <lb />
Jno. White <lb />
Virginia Atkinson <lb />
Laney Atkinson <lb />
Nancy Atkinson <lb />
Cherry<lb />
Jon. Braxton <lb />
Jesse w. Braxton <lb />
Frank Bright and wife <lb />
Pennie Burney <lb />
Bailie Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
Martha Briley <lb />
Mary <lb />
c Bell <lb />
Fannie Barrett <lb />
Africa Brown <lb />
I la. tie Boyd <lb />
Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
Sarah F. <lb />
W Cannon<lb />
Pennie Cox <lb />
Bell Carson <lb />
. <lb />
Lucinda Carney <lb />
Fannie I <lb />
Reno <lb />
Jacob<lb />
Ada <lb />
Dunn <lb />
Betsy Dunn <lb />
Ain't <lb />
No. To Whom Issued <lb />
Wm. 1.50 <lb />
Henry and wife 4.00 <lb />
Davenport 3.00 <lb />
Mrs. Ed Davenport 1.50 <lb />
Susan Davenport 1.50 <lb />
Laurena Daniel 1.00 <lb />
Titus Elks 2.00 <lb />
Linda Elks 1.50 <lb />
Amos Evans 1.60 <lb />
Lucretia Evans 1.50 <lb />
Tisha Fleming 1.50 <lb />
Mary Grimes 1.50 <lb />
Frank Grimes 1.50 <lb />
Betsy Garris 1.00 <lb />
Bettie Gay 1.00 <lb />
Alice Gorham 1.00 <lb />
Alex Green 1.00 <lb />
Jacob Gay 1.00 <lb />
Dinah Gorham 1.00 <lb />
Lorena Harris 3.00 <lb />
Anthony Harris 3.00 <lb />
Adeline Holden 1.50 <lb />
K. Henderson 2.00 <lb />
Holmes 2.00 <lb />
Hardy 1.00 <lb />
Hardy 1.00 <lb />
Lowe Hunt 5.00 <lb />
C. J. Haddock 4.00 <lb />
Bettie Hales 1.00 <lb />
Debbie Ham 2.60 <lb />
Obed Hardy 1.00 <lb />
Jane Israel 1.00 <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
i ion Johnson <lb />
Jones <lb />
Millie 1.60 <lb />
Nam y <lb />
James 2.0 l <lb />
Berry Lei and wife 2.50 <lb />
Al<lb />
Nancy Moon 3.00 <lb />
Delia Moore <lb />
Morris 1.00 <lb />
Mrs. J. B Morgan 1.50. <lb />
Thomas Morgan 1.60 <lb />
J. K. Mills and wife 2.00 <lb />
Lizzie 1.00 <lb />
Mary l <lb />
Lucy Pollard 4.00 <lb />
J. Page and wife 2.00 <lb />
Bettie Phillips 1.50 <lb />
L. II. Bender 6.00 <lb />
L W. P, <lb />
Wm. Roberson 2.00 <lb />
J. T. Roberson 2.00 <lb />
Cells Reeves 1.00 <lb />
Cornelia Rogers <lb />
Mary Spain 1.60 <lb />
Jno. Sheppard 1.50 <lb />
W. Smith <lb />
Staton 1.50 <lb />
Staton 1.00 <lb />
Stocks 3.00 <lb />
Simmons 2.50 <lb />
i Amanda Stevenson <lb />
Martha Tripp 7.00 <lb />
Patience Turnage 1.00 <lb />
Tyson 1.00 <lb />
Thigpen <lb />
Harriet Taylor <lb />
Fred Venters 1.00 j <lb />
Vines <lb />
Bettie 1.601 <lb />
Judith 1.50, <lb />
Oliver Williams 1.60 <lb />
Lillie Williams 1.50 <lb />
Rachel Williams 1.50 <lb />
Laura Wallace 1.00 <lb />
Noah l <lb />
Laura Hardy <lb />
Flood 1.50 <lb />
ii . 1.60 <lb />
; Tyson 1.50 <lb />
VI Atkinson 1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
C in 1.80 <lb />
Di -y Ml 1.50 <lb />
i n it <lb />
Jno. Braxton 6.00 <lb />
. <lb />
Frank wile <lb />
Pennie Burney 1.00 <lb />
Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
Martha Briley ; <lb />
Mary Ballinger 2.00 I <lb />
Cherry Bell 1.00 <lb />
Fannie Barret 1.00 <lb />
Africa Brown 1.001 <lb />
Hattie Boyd 1.50 <lb />
Jno. S. Cannon 3.00 <lb />
Sarah F. Cannon 1.50 <lb />
Win. Cannon 2.001 <lb />
Nancy Cox 1.50 <lb />
Pennie Cox 1.00 <lb />
Bell Carson 2.00 <lb />
Cherry 1.00 <lb />
Lucinda Carson 1.00 <lb />
Fannie Cobb 2.00 <lb />
Clark 1.601 <lb />
Jacob Copper 1.60. <lb />
1.601 <lb />
Ada Crawford 2.50. <lb />
I mini <lb />
Betsy Dunn 1.501 <lb />
Wm. 1.60 <lb />
Henry Dall and wife 4.001 <lb />
Davenport 3.00 <lb />
Mrs. Ed Davenport 1.601 <lb />
Susan Davenport 1.60 <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Titus Elks <lb />
Linda Elks <lb />
Amos Evans 1.50 <lb />
Evans 1.60 <lb />
Fleming 1.60 <lb />
Mary Grimes 1.601 <lb />
Frank Grimes 1.60 <lb />
Betsy Garris <lb />
Gay 1.00 <lb />
Alice Gorham <lb />
Alex Green 1.00 <lb />
Jacob Gay <lb />
Dinah Gorham 1.00 <lb />
Lorena Harris 3.00 <lb />
Anthony Harris 3.00 <lb />
Adeline Holden I <lb />
K. Henderson 2.00 <lb />
Isabella Holmes 2.00 <lb />
Root. II <lb />
1.00 <lb />
on <lb />
C J. Haddock <lb />
H on <lb />
Debbie limn 2.50 <lb />
Obed Hardy <lb />
Jane Israel 1.00 <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
Pinion Johnson 3.00 <lb />
Jones 1.60 <lb />
no <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
6.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 I <lb />
oil <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.60 <lb />
1.511 <lb />
3.06 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
j., <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00; <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 j <lb />
3.00 <lb />
3.00, <lb />
2.00. <lb />
1.001 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00<lb />
r . <lb />
8.00 <lb />
6.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
BOO <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00<lb />
l on <lb />
on<lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
No. To Whom Issued <lb />
Millie Jasper <lb />
Nancy <lb />
Tyson <lb />
1-2 Berry Lee and wife <lb />
Delia Moore <lb />
1-2 <lb />
Morris <lb />
1-2 Jasper Langley <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
1-2 Nancy Moore <lb />
Morgan <lb />
J. R. Mills and wife<lb />
Mary <lb />
Lucy Pollard <lb />
J. J. Page and wife <lb />
Bettie Phillips <lb />
L. H. Ponder <lb />
L. W. Peeples <lb />
Wm. Roberson <lb />
J. T. Roberson<lb />
Cornelia Rogers <lb />
Mary Spain <lb />
Jno. Sheppard <lb />
G. W. Smith <lb />
Delia Staton <lb />
Nancy Staton <lb />
Stocks <lb />
Martha Simmons <lb />
Amanda Stevenson <lb />
Martha Tripp <lb />
Patience Turnage <lb />
Tyson <lb />
Thigpen <lb />
Harriet Taylor <lb />
Fred Venters <lb />
Margaret Vines <lb />
Bettie Wilson <lb />
Judith Wilson <lb />
Oliver Williams <lb />
Lillie Williams <lb />
Rachel Williams <lb />
Laura Wallace <lb />
Noah Walston <lb />
Flood <lb />
Hagar Flood <lb />
Laura Hard. <lb />
Taylor Harris <lb />
Oliver Wade <lb />
Bullock <lb />
Henry Wooten <lb />
Virginia Atkinson <lb />
Laney Atkinson <lb />
N mi V <lb />
r i y <lb />
DI U ti n <lb />
. . <lb />
Jno Bra ti n <lb />
Frank Bright and wife <lb />
. ,.; <lb />
IS Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
Manila Briley <lb />
Mary Ballinger <lb />
Cherry Bell <lb />
Fannie Barrett <lb />
Africa Brown <lb />
Hattie Boyd <lb />
Bullock <lb />
Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
Win. Cannon <lb />
Nancy Cox <lb />
Pennie Cox <lb />
Bell Carson <lb />
Cherry <lb />
Lucinda Carney <lb />
Fannie Cobb <lb />
Clark <lb />
Jacob Copper<lb />
Ada Crawford <lb />
Dunn <lb />
Betsy Dunn <lb />
Win. Dupree <lb />
Henry and wife <lb />
Sou Davenport <lb />
Mrs. Ed Davenport <lb />
Susan Davenport <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Elk <lb />
Lydia Elks <lb />
Mill Amos Evans <lb />
Evans <lb />
MiS Tisha Fleming <lb />
Flood <lb />
Hagar Flood <lb />
Frank Grimes <lb />
Garris <lb />
Bettie Gay <lb />
Alice Gorham <lb />
Alex Green <lb />
-10 Jacob Gay <lb />
Dinah Gorham <lb />
Mi Grimes <lb />
Harris <lb />
Harris <lb />
. line Holden <lb />
K. Anderson <lb />
Isabella Holmes <lb />
Robt. I <lb />
Hardy <lb />
; Lo Hunt <lb />
C. J. Haddock <lb />
Bettie Hales <lb />
Debbie Ham <lb />
Obed Hardy <lb />
Louisa Hardy <lb />
Taylor Harris <lb />
Jane Israel <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
Simon Joyner <lb />
Jones <lb />
Millie Jasper <lb />
Nancy <lb />
Berry Lee and wife <lb />
Alphonso <lb />
Jasper Langley <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Delia Moore <lb />
Morris <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
Morgan <lb />
-17 J. It. Mills and wife<lb />
Mary <lb />
Lucy Pollard <lb />
J. J. Page and wife <lb />
Bettie Phillips <lb />
L. H. Render <lb />
L. W. Peeples <lb />
Win. Roberson <lb />
J. T. Roberson<lb />
Cornelia Rogers <lb />
Mary Spain <lb />
John Sheppard <lb />
G. W. Smith <lb />
I Staton <lb />
Stocks <lb />
Simmons <lb />
Amanda Stevenson <lb />
Martha Tripp <lb />
Patience Turnage <lb />
sis Tyson <lb />
Thigpen <lb />
Harriet Taylor <lb />
Tyson <lb />
Vines <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Judith Williams <lb />
Oliver Williams <lb />
ST.; Lillie Williams <lb />
Rachel Williams <lb />
Wallace <lb />
Walston <lb />
Henry Wooten <lb />
Olivia Wade <lb />
Nancy Staton <lb />
Pilchard Jerman <lb />
Ross <lb />
Jno. T. Jones <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
No. To Whom Issued <lb />
R. M. <lb />
Hill <lb />
Virginia Atkinson <lb />
Laney Atkinson <lb />
Nancy Atkinson <lb />
Cherry <lb />
Dicey <lb />
US <lb />
Jno. Braxton <lb />
Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
Frank Brighton <lb />
Pennie Burney <lb />
Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
Briley <lb />
Mary Ballinger <lb />
Cherry Bell <lb />
Fannie Barrett <lb />
Africa Brown <lb />
Hattie Boyd <lb />
Bullock <lb />
Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
Wm. Cannon <lb />
Nancy Cox <lb />
Pennie Cox <lb />
Bell Carson <lb />
Cherry <lb />
Lucinda Carney <lb />
Fannie Cobb <lb />
Clark <lb />
Jacob Copper<lb />
Ada Crawford <lb />
Abram Dunn <lb />
Betsy Dunn <lb />
Wm. Dupree <lb />
Henry and wife <lb />
Davenport <lb />
Mrs. Ed Davenport <lb />
Susan. Davenport <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Titus Elks <lb />
Linda Elks <lb />
Amos Evans <lb />
Lucretia Evans <lb />
Tisha Fleming <lb />
Floyd <lb />
Hagar Floyd <lb />
Mary Grimes <lb />
Betsy Garris <lb />
Bettie Gay <lb />
Alice Gorham <lb />
Alex Green <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Fr Grimes <lb />
I i i I <lb />
ins Harris <lb />
2.00 Holden <lb />
2.00 k. Henderson <lb />
1.00 i. . I la Holmes <lb />
4.00 Hardy <lb />
5.00 Alonzo Hardy<lb />
C. J. Haddock <lb />
Hales <lb />
Debbie <lb />
Hardy <lb />
Louisa Hardy <lb />
Taylor Harris <lb />
Joseph Hill <lb />
Jane Israel <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
Simon Johnson <lb />
Jones <lb />
Jasper <lb />
Nancy <lb />
Jno. T. Jones <lb />
Richard Jerman<lb />
1.50 Jasper Langley <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Delia Moore <lb />
Morris <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
Morgan <lb />
J. K. Mills and wife<lb />
R. M. <lb />
Mary <lb />
Lucy Pollard <lb />
J. J. Page and wife <lb />
Bettie Phillips <lb />
L. H. <lb />
L. W. Peeples <lb />
Wm. Roberson <lb />
J. T. Roberson <lb />
Cornelia Rogers <lb />
Ross <lb />
Mary Spain <lb />
Jno. Sheppard <lb />
G. w. Smith <lb />
Delia Staton <lb />
Staton <lb />
Stocks <lb />
1.60 Simmons<lb />
Martha rip <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.11.1 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
on <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
i I <lb />
Tyson <lb />
H Taylor <lb />
J loss i Tyson <lb />
Margaret Vines <lb />
Bi-tie Wilson <lb />
Judith Williams <lb />
Oliver Williams <lb />
1.00 Lillie Williams <lb />
1.50 Rachel Williams <lb />
2.00 Laura Wallace <lb />
Noah Walston <lb />
1.00 Henry Woolen <lb />
3.00 Olivia Wade <lb />
1.50 Polly Moore <lb />
1.50 J. B. Morgan <lb />
1.50 Wm. A. Tyson <lb />
2.50 Virginia Atkinson <lb />
3.0011121 Laney Atkinson <lb />
4.00,1122 Nancy Atkinson <lb />
3.00 Cherry <lb />
2.50; <lb />
1.001 <lb />
1.50 Jno. Braxton <lb />
1.50,1127 Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
Ill's Frank Bright and wife <lb />
1.00 Pennie Burney <lb />
1.0011180 Baker <lb />
4.00 Lydia Baker <lb />
2.00 Martha Briley <lb />
1.50 Mary Ballinger <lb />
5.00 Cherry Bell <lb />
5.00 Fannie Barrett <lb />
2.00 Africa Brown <lb />
2.00 Hattie Boyd <lb />
Bullock <lb />
5.00 Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
1.60; Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
1.6011141 Wm. Cannon <lb />
1.50 Nancy Cox <lb />
1.5011143 Pennie Cox <lb />
3.00 Bell Carson <lb />
2.50 Cherry <lb />
1.00 Lucinda Carney <lb />
7.00 Fannie Cobb <lb />
1.00 Clark <lb />
1.001149 Jacob Copper <lb />
1.50 Sal lie <lb />
1.50 Ada Crawford <lb />
1.50 Dunn <lb />
Dunn <lb />
I Win. Dupree <lb />
1.60,1166 Henry and wife <lb />
1.60 Davenport <lb />
1.50 Mrs. Bid Davenport <lb />
1.50 Susan <lb />
a D. <lb />
1.00 Titus Elks <lb />
1.50 Linda Elka <lb />
2.00 Amos Evans <lb />
1.00 Lucretia Evans <lb />
1.00 Tisha Fleming <lb />
1.50 Floyd <lb />
1.50 Hagar Floyd <lb />
No. To Whom Issued <lb />
1.60 Mary <lb />
1.60 Frank Grimes <lb />
1.60 Garris <lb />
1.50 Bettie Gay <lb />
1.50 Alice Gorham <lb />
1.60 Alex Green <lb />
1.50 Jacob Gay <lb />
1.50 Dinah <lb />
6.00 Lawrence Harris <lb />
2.00 Anthony Harris <lb />
2.00 Adeline Holden <lb />
1.00 K. Henderson <lb />
4.00 Isabella Holmes <lb />
5.00 Robt. Hardy <lb />
4.00 Hardy <lb />
2.00 Hunt <lb />
1.00 C. J. Haddock <lb />
1.00 Bettie Hales <lb />
1.00 Debbie Ham <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 Louisa <lb />
3.00 Taylor Harris <lb />
1.60,1189 Joseph Hill <lb />
2.00 Jane Israel <lb />
1.50 Lawrence Joyner <lb />
Simon Johnson <lb />
2.00 Jones <lb />
1.00 Millie Jasper <lb />
1.00 Nancy <lb />
Jno. F. Jones <lb />
Alphonso <lb />
UM Jasper Langley <lb />
1.60 Nancy Moore <lb />
2.601200 Delia Moore <lb />
1-00 1201 Morris <lb />
1.60 1202 Mrs. J. T. Morgan <lb />
1.50 i 1203 . Morgan <lb />
J. R. Mills and wife<lb />
1.50 1206 R. M. <lb />
1.50 1207 Mary <lb />
1.00 1208 Lucy Pollard <lb />
2.00 1209 J. J. Page and wife <lb />
1.60 1210 Bettie Phillips <lb />
1.50 1211 L. H. Ponder <lb />
1.50 1212 L. W. Peoples <lb />
1.60 1213 Win. Roberson <lb />
1.50 1214 J. T. Roberson <lb />
1.50 1215 Cornelia Rogers <lb />
1.50 1216 Ross <lb />
1.00 1217 Mary Spain <lb />
Jno. Sheppard <lb />
1.00 1219 G. W. Smith <lb />
1.00 1220 Delia Staton <lb />
1.00 Nancy Staton <lb />
on 1222 Ii <lb />
i i-T.; Manila Simmons <lb />
1224 Amanda Stevenson <lb />
3.011 v Tripp <lb />
;. Pi l Turnage <lb />
l 1227 Tyson <lb />
2.00 I I Thigpen <lb />
l 1229 I Taylor <lb />
l 1230 Tyson <lb />
Vines <lb />
1232 Bettie Wilson <lb />
1.00 1233 Judith Williams <lb />
2.50 1234 Oliver Williams <lb />
1.00 1235 Lillie Williams <lb />
1.50 1236 Rachel Wallace <lb />
2.00 1237 Laura Wallace <lb />
1.50 Noah Waist <lb />
1.00 1239 Henry Wooten <lb />
1.00 1301 Olivia Wade <lb />
3.00 Roberson <lb />
1.50 Ely <lb />
1.50 1325 Polly Moore <lb />
1326 Win. A. Taylor <lb />
1.50 1240 Virginia Atkinson <lb />
1.00 1341 Atkinson <lb />
3.00 1342 Nancy Atkinson <lb />
4.00 1343 Cherry <lb />
3.00 1344 Dicey <lb />
2.50 1345 <lb />
1.00 1346 Jno. Braxton <lb />
1347 Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
1348 Frank Bright <lb />
2.00 1349 Penny Burney <lb />
1.00 1350 Baker <lb />
1.50 1351 Lydia Baker <lb />
1.00 1352 Martha Briley <lb />
4.00 1353 Mary Ballinger <lb />
2.00 1354 Cherry Bell <lb />
1.50 1355 Fanny Barrett <lb />
5.00 1356 Africa Brown <lb />
5.00 1357 Hattie Boyd <lb />
2.00 1388 Bullock <lb />
2.00 1359 Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
5.00 1360 Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
1.50 Wm. Cannon <lb />
1.50 1362 Nancy Cox <lb />
1868 Pennie Cox <lb />
1364 Bell Carson <lb />
1.50 1365 Cherry <lb />
1.00 1866 Carney <lb />
3.00 1367 Fannie Cobb <lb />
2.60 1368 Clark <lb />
1.00 1369 Jacob Copper <lb />
7.00 1370 <lb />
1871 Ada Crawford <lb />
1.00 . h <lb />
l 1378 Abram Dunn <lb />
1.60 1371 Betsy Dunn <lb />
1.60 Win. Dupree <lb />
1.00 1376 Henry and wife <lb />
1.50 Davenport <lb />
1.50 1378 Mrs. Ed Davenport <lb />
1.50 1379 Susan Davenport <lb />
1.50.1380 Laurena Daniel <lb />
1.50 Titus Elks <lb />
1.00 1382 Linda Elks <lb />
Amos Evans <lb />
1.50 1384 Lucretia Evans <lb />
2.00 1385 Flood <lb />
1.50,1386 Flood <lb />
1.50 1387 Tisha Fleming <lb />
1.50 1388 Mary Grimes <lb />
1.00 1389 Frank Grimes <lb />
1390 Betsy Garris <lb />
1.50 1391 Bettie Gay <lb />
1.50 1392 Alice Gorham <lb />
1.50 1393 Alex Green <lb />
1.50 1394 Jacob Gav <lb />
5.00 1395 Delia Gorham <lb />
2.00 1396 Mary <lb />
2.00 1397 Lorena Harris <lb />
1.00 Anthony Harris <lb />
4.00 1399 Adeline Holton <lb />
1400 K. Henderson <lb />
4.00 1401 Isabella Holmes <lb />
2.00.1402 Robt. Hardy <lb />
1.00 1403 Hardy <lb />
1.00 Hunt <lb />
1405 c. j. Haddock <lb />
1.50 Bettie Hales <lb />
Debbie Ham <lb />
3.00 1408 Hardy <lb />
1.50 1409 Louis Hardy <lb />
2.00 j 1410 Joseph Hill <lb />
1411 Jane Israel <lb />
Lawrence Joyner <lb />
2.00.1413 Simon Johnson <lb />
1.00 1414 Jones <lb />
1.00 1415 Millie Jasper <lb />
2.00 1416 Nancy <lb />
1.50 1417 Alphonso <lb />
1.50 1418 Jasper Langley <lb />
1.50 1419 Nancy Moore <lb />
2.50,1420 Delia Moore <lb />
1.00 1421 Morris <lb />
1.50 1422 Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
1.50 1423 Morgan <lb />
4.00 1424 J. R. Mills and wife <lb />
3.00 <lb />
R. M. Move <lb />
1.50 1427 Polly <lb />
i on Pollard <lb />
2.00 1429 J. Page tint wile <lb />
1.50 Bettie Phillips <lb />
1.50 1431 L. II. Render <lb />
1.50 1432 L. W. Peeples <lb />
1.60 1433 Win. Roberson <lb />
1434 J. T. Roberson <lb />
1.50 1435 Cornelia Rogers <lb />
No. To Whom Issued <lb />
1.60 1636 Ross <lb />
1.60 j 1437 Roberson <lb />
1.00 1438 Mary Spain <lb />
1.00 1439 Jno. Sheppard <lb />
1.00 j 1440 G. WT Smith <lb />
1.0011441 Delia Staton <lb />
1.0011442 Nancy Staton <lb />
1.00 1443 <lb />
3.00 1444 Martha Simmons <lb />
3.00.1445 Amanda Stevenson <lb />
1.60 1446 Wm. A. Tyson <lb />
2.00 1447 Martha Tripp <lb />
2.00 1448 Patience Turnage <lb />
1.00 1449 Tyson <lb />
1.00 1450 Thigpen <lb />
5.00.1451 Harriet Taylor <lb />
4.00 1452 Theophilus Taylor <lb />
1.60 1453 Margaret Vines <lb />
2.50 1454 Bettie Wilson <lb />
1.00 Judith Williams <lb />
1.50 1456 Oliver Williams <lb />
2.00 1457 Lillie Williams <lb />
1.50 1458 Rachel <lb />
1459 Laura Wallace <lb />
1460 Noah Walston <lb />
3.00 1461 Henry Wooten <lb />
1.60 1462 Olivia Wade <lb />
1.60 1490 Olivia Wade <lb />
1-50 1502 Virginia Atkinson <lb />
1503 Laney Atkinson <lb />
Jg 1504 Nancy Atkinson <lb />
1505 Cherry <lb />
1506<lb />
f'S Jno- Braxton <lb />
Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
Frank Bright <lb />
Pennie Burney <lb />
Sallie Baker <lb />
1513 Lydia Baker <lb />
Martha Briley <lb />
1515 Mary Ballinger <lb />
1516 Cherry Bell <lb />
1517 Fanny Barrett <lb />
1518 Africa Brown <lb />
1519 Hattie Boyd <lb />
1520 Bullock <lb />
1521 Jno. S. Cannon <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
M. k. <lb />
1522 Sarah F. Cannon <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1523 Win. Cannon <lb />
1624 Cox <lb />
1525 Pennie Cox <lb />
1626 Bell Carson <lb />
1627 Cherry <lb />
I- Lucinda I <lb />
Fannie Cobb <lb />
1530 Clark <lb />
Jacob Copper <lb />
1632 <lb />
1538 Ada Crawford <lb />
1534 Ell <lb />
Abram <lb />
1536 Betsy Dunn <lb />
1537 Win. Dupree <lb />
1538 Henry Dall and wife <lb />
1529 Davenport <lb />
1640 Mis. Ed Davenport <lb />
, 1541 Susan Davenport <lb />
1542 Laurena Daniel <lb />
JO 1543 Titus Elks <lb />
1544 Linda Elks <lb />
1545 Amos Evans <lb />
2.60 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
Evans <lb />
1547 Tisha Fleming <lb />
1.50 Flood <lb />
1549 Hagar Flood <lb />
1.50 1550 Mary Grimes <lb />
1.50 1551 Frank Grimes <lb />
1.00 1552 Garris <lb />
1.00 1553 Gay <lb />
1554 Alice Gorham <lb />
1.50.1555 Alex Green <lb />
1556 Jacob Gay <lb />
1557 Dinah Gorham <lb />
5.00 1358 Lorena Harris <lb />
2.00 1559 Anthony Harris <lb />
1660 Adeline Holden <lb />
1.00 1561 K. Henderson <lb />
4.00 1502 Isabella Holmes <lb />
5.00 1563 Robt. Hardy <lb />
4.00 1564 Hardy <lb />
2.00 Hunt <lb />
1.00 1566 C. J. Haddock <lb />
1.00 1567 Battle Hales <lb />
1.00 1568 Debbie Ham <lb />
1.50 1569 Obed Hardy <lb />
1570 Louis Hardy <lb />
3.00 1571 Joseph Hill <lb />
1.50 1572 Jane Israel <lb />
2.00 1573 Lawrence Joyner <lb />
1.50 1574 Simon Johnson <lb />
1.00 1676 Jones <lb />
1.00 1576 Millie Jasper <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1577 Nancy <lb />
Alphonso <lb />
1679 Jasper Langley <lb />
ire., w. <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1580 Nancy Moore <lb />
1581 Delia Moore <lb />
1582 Morris <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Morgan <lb />
1584 Thomas Morgan <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1586 J, It. Mills and wife <lb />
1.1 ; <lb />
It. M. <lb />
Polly <lb />
1589 Mary <lb />
Lucy Pollard <lb />
1591 J. J. Page and wife <lb />
1592 Phillips <lb />
1593 L. II. Pender <lb />
1587 <lb />
1588 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1594 L. W. Peeples <lb />
1595 Wm. Roberson <lb />
J. T. Roberson <lb />
1697 Cornelia Roberson <lb />
Ross <lb />
1599 Roberson <lb />
1600 Mary Spain <lb />
1601 Jno. Sheppard <lb />
1602 G. W. Smith <lb />
1603 Delia Staton <lb />
1604 Nancy Staton <lb />
1605 Stocks <lb />
1606 Simmons <lb />
1607 Amanda Stevenson <lb />
1608 Win. A. Taylor <lb />
1609 Martha Tripp <lb />
Patience Turnage <lb />
1611 Tyson <lb />
1612 Thigpen <lb />
1613 Harriet Taylor <lb />
I Theophilus Tyson <lb />
Margaret Vines <lb />
Wilson <lb />
1617 Judith Williams <lb />
1618 Oliver Williams <lb />
1619 Lillie Williams <lb />
Rachel Williams <lb />
Laura Wallace <lb />
1622 Noah Walston <lb />
1623 Henry Woolen <lb />
1624 Wade <lb />
1652 Sophie H. Buck <lb />
Virginia <lb />
1668 Laney Atkinson <lb />
1661 Nancy Atkinson <lb />
1670 Cherry <lb />
1671 <lb />
1672 <lb />
1679 Jno. Braxton <lb />
1674 Jesse W. Braxton <lb />
Frank Bright and wife <lb />
1676 Pennie Burney <lb />
Sallie Baker <lb />
Lydia Baker <lb />
5.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
Briley <lb />
1680 Mary Ballinger <lb />
1681 Cherry Bell <lb />
Barrett <lb />
i. ,., Brown <lb />
1684 Haiti,. Boyd <lb />
Bullock <lb />
Sophia H. Buck <lb />
1687 Jno. <lb />
be <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
nil <lb />
mi <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
6.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
6.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.50 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
i . <lb />
1.50 <lb />
1.60 <lb />
3.00 <lb />
THE <lb />
RIVER <lb />
aid Bill Carries <lb />
CHANNEL FEET DEEP, FEET WIDE <lb />
SEES <lb />
The Committee Considered <lb />
Demand of the Public for a Free <lb />
Waterway Should be Vet First <lb />
for the Proposed Tar <lb />
WASHINGTON. Feb. <lb />
John H. Small of North Car- <lb />
who Is a member of the River <lb />
and Harbor bill, to be reported to <lb />
the House within the next few days, <lb />
provides for the establishment of a <lb />
free waterway from Norfolk to the <lb />
North Carolina Sounds. This Is the <lb />
culmination of ten years of hard work, <lb />
and It was not thought until very re- <lb />
that anything could bed one <lb />
at the House end of the at <lb />
the present session. <lb />
The bill will carry an <lb />
of for the purchase of <lb />
HAS IT THAT THE <lb />
ABE TO A <lb />
DAILY III HAL. <lb />
HIGH SOON. <lb />
It has been said In Raleigh, Dur- <lb />
ham, and that the <lb />
are very seriously thinking of <lb />
establishing a dally paper to <lb />
sent their Ideas in the Capital City. <lb />
It has also been said the people <lb />
interested have gone far as sign- <lb />
contracts for certain press <lb />
in New York. If all this be <lb />
true, the campaign will assume a very <lb />
interesting aspect from the newspaper <lb />
point of view. <lb />
Ill THINS OF APPRECIATION. <lb />
Adopted by The of Federated <lb />
Women's Clubs. <lb />
The committee on courtesies, ac- <lb />
knowledge with deepest gratitude, <lb />
the beautiful reception tendered by <lb />
the Carolina Club. <lb />
The reception at Mrs. C. T. Mun- <lb />
ford's. where the board were so grate- <lb />
for the opportunity of meeting <lb />
womanhood of Green- <lb />
and Appurtenant property, in accord-j ville- <lb />
with an agreement made For the opportunity of speaking of <lb />
Saturday to this effect between the, our work the Training school, and <lb />
Secretary of War and the company; for the welcome and reception ac- <lb />
owning the canal. If the bill us by the faculty of this state <lb />
the canal will become of which we are so proud, <lb />
a free waterway, for the maintenance For the beautiful lunches served <lb />
of which there is a sufficient day in the Pitt county court <lb />
ion in the general River and Harbor house. For the use of the <lb />
court house, where our meetings <lb />
North Carolina, besides the been held, <lb />
and Chesapeake canal For the dinners, and teas and small- <lb />
ion, gels the following social affairs, which have been so <lb />
proving the channel of the Pamlico pleasant and brought us nearer to the <lb />
and Tar rivers It feet deep individual members. <lb />
and feet wide below Washington For rally day. where we hove been <lb />
and feet deep and feet wide above privileged to meet not only Green- <lb />
Washington to Greenville, ville club women, but the neighbors <lb />
This Is a new project. of the Greenville <lb />
For maintenance of Improvement Thanks of the council is extended <lb />
Bay. Beaufort to the Hostess Clubs, End of the <lb />
harbor, Beaufort Inlet, Century and the Round Table Clubs <lb />
City harbor, up- for the privilege of coming to <lb />
to and Chen- ville. and our hostess for <lb />
canals. fill hospitality Which we <lb />
river, Fishing creek, in their bonus. <lb />
Hay river, For the courtesy of the press, for <lb />
N. use river and Trent river the courtesy of the <lb />
Swift creek, and the general cordiality <lb />
Thai portion of island of the men of <lb />
waterway already constructed from <lb />
Sound to Beaufort Inlet, <lb />
New river, including Inland <lb />
waterways between Beaufort harbor <lb />
tad New river and between New river <lb />
Swansboro, Cape Fear <lb />
river above Wilmington, open channel social functions <lb />
work. Cape Fear river above ,.,,,. ,,,,,,,, ., ,,. <lb />
Wilmington, locks and dams. ,,. <lb />
North Carolina surveys are to J. B. and <lb />
ed as For proposed waterway L x <lb />
connecting Pamlico through Tl, .,,,,,,. wag appropriately <lb />
Goose Creel; to Bay. Shelton ,.,,,.,, hearts, <lb />
River Improvement New River evergreens. <lb />
from Jacksonville to head ,.,,.,, welcomed at the <lb />
of Navigation. i Sound, to con- hostess and her sis- <lb />
City Harbor with Chan- ,;,.,,.,,,,, K a and C. <lb />
Del Of Sound and for a turning basin g Punch was served by <lb />
in front of City. Lumber T. M. <lb />
River as far up as e .;,. ,.,. <lb />
Channel Improve approaches there- w,,.,, distributed <lb />
New-begun Hirer Improvements. the guests to their <lb />
Belhaven Harbor respective tables which were <lb />
I. with valentines, and <lb />
el nations were played <lb />
Hal Goodwin, son of ,,,.,., , were presented <lb />
Dr. J. C. Goodwin, died in Asheville bouquets of red carnations. Mrs. <lb />
Thursday morning, and his remains , c Arthur won the euchre <lb />
Lillian the nations <lb />
TO BUB, IS <lb />
THE WICKEDEST TOWS OH <lb />
FOB <lb />
RALEIGH. Feb. <lb />
nor was sitting with the <lb />
trustees yesterday afternoon, <lb />
Rev. L. Boyd, a Holy Jumper preacher, <lb />
was bombarding his door to lay be- <lb />
fore his excellency the mistreatment <lb />
according to him la the prosecution <lb />
of a campaign here. <lb />
Reverend Boyd a young, rather <lb />
good looking of ready tongue <lb />
and not illiterate. The fact Is, he Is <lb />
too literate and for every bug in his <lb />
brain he can cite Scripture. <lb />
want to see the governor and tell <lb />
him how them has been treat- <lb />
he expostulated with Col. <lb />
Alex. J. who told him that re- <lb />
disturbances were matters of <lb />
state. <lb />
Reverend Boyd withdrew from the <lb />
executive office. have been talk- <lb />
to he told Col. J. A <lb />
and a newspaper man. shore <lb />
to destroy Raleigh, He done told me <lb />
so. Last night I seen a <lb />
with six wings come down from <lb />
He opened his wings and I beg- <lb />
him not to close up. He <lb />
promised me not to do it if got <lb />
better. I tell you Just like it Is. This <lb />
the wickedest on earth. <lb />
not gunner let mistreat <lb />
to -V <lb />
W-;. <lb />
EAT, FORGET TO PAY. <lb />
Stop in <lb />
Stop the times, <lb />
Get a hustle on you; <lb />
Skirmish and gram the dimes <lb />
Bf the dollars shun you; <lb />
received <lb />
Fur Heating Their <lb />
Two youths, supposed to be never brought a dress, <lb />
the Bethel neighborhood, made their isn't in it; <lb />
way last night into the Busy Bee peepers on success, <lb />
and ordered some food. It was Then go in to win It. <lb />
ed to them and evidently Times are good <lb />
However it may have been, the Try to help them all you kin. <lb />
they might have had <lb />
lapse of memory, or they might have Don't sit round With Up, <lb />
remembered about some That is sure to floor you; <lb />
late. They both made a dash for Try to get a better grip <lb />
and around store. Per- On the work before you; <lb />
they had had too to eat, j Put some ginger in words <lb />
or, perhaps. hey were out of train-j When you greet a neighbor; <lb />
They not run very far ore Throw troubles to the birds; <lb />
Pains All Over <lb />
are says Mrs. Nora of Broken <lb />
Arrow, Okla., use my letter in any way you want to, <lb />
if it will induce some suffering woman to try I had <lb />
pains all over, and suffered with an abscess. Three <lb />
failed to relieve me. Since taking I am in <lb />
better health than ever before, and that means much to me, <lb />
because I suffered many years with womanly troubles, of <lb />
different kinds. What other treatments I tried, helped me <lb />
for a few days <lb />
Policemen Clark mill <lb />
Git right down to labor; <lb />
you'll notice, every day, <lb />
. ; <lb />
MRS. C. HOOD. <lb />
MRS, K. HAYS, <lb />
Committee. <lb />
Mrs. it. Entertains, <lb />
One of I. attractive at d en- <lb />
was a Val- <lb />
afternoons <lb />
with them and placid under <lb />
arrest for beating their bill. <lb />
When searched one of the <lb />
had a razor and a pistol. The other stop gel a hold <lb />
one was I Of the wheel and turn ii; <lb />
The police are holding pond-, You kin never handle gold, <lb />
Inquiries. Less you try to earn it. <lb />
the cobwebs n o; <lb />
The Post, j stop <lb />
Democratic members of the Will notice that skies <lb />
Alias Tl he <lb />
If you the nerve to try, <lb />
Sneak away re and die <lb />
remains <lb />
will be brought to Dunn. Mr. Good- am, <lb />
win was about twenty-three years old. j.,,.,,,, heart-shaped <lb />
and was a man of a great of re- <lb />
of promise. He wen to a smaller box as a souvenir. <lb />
two years ago to study medicine, and I At the conclusion of game re- <lb />
while there his health failed and these also <lb />
had been spending the most of his appropriate to the <lb />
time in the western pan of the state <lb />
trying to recuperate. He is survived <lb />
by his mother, father and one sis- <lb />
occasion. <lb />
Mrs. Susan <lb />
remains of Mrs. <lb />
K. Button, who died at the home <lb />
A of flannel dampened .,., Mr ,,;, Patrick, near <lb />
Liniment and In county, have been <lb />
on the affected parts is superior Moseley burying <lb />
any plaster. When troubled with Vance township. She was <lb />
lame back or pains In the side or chest years old. She had been <lb />
give it a trial and you are certain three times. She was the <lb />
be more than pleased with , of Messrs. . and <lb />
relief which it affords. Sold by all w. K. of and <lb />
dealers stepmother of Mr. L. J. <lb />
house post <lb />
decided to report a general pan-els, <lb />
system and make it to <lb />
., . ling eleven <lb />
pounds from Raleigh to Ape as Stop lake a ride <lb />
low a as it is now from In Merry carriage; <lb />
Raleigh in London. y also agreed blues <lb />
upon provisions for a trial , g .,.,,.,,, t marriage. <lb />
post that will add to value the <lb />
new plan. <lb />
The light for parcels post <lb />
been on for a score of years. It la <lb />
enjoyed every civilized country In <lb />
the world except the United <lb />
only three reasons that have <lb />
its adoption in America <lb />
he express a <lb />
which have been influential enough <lb />
to kill every measure looking lo th <lb />
parcels posit. In bis autobiography, <lb />
the late Senator of New York <lb />
said that as senator he had been able <lb />
to render some service to express <lb />
of which he was president. <lb />
Indeed he had. and so had Chauncey <lb />
and other senators whose <lb />
chief duly ill the senate was to rep- <lb />
resent the express companies and the <lb />
railroads. They hail the power to <lb />
defeat the parcels post as long as <lb />
the Republicans had sway, <lb />
though three-fourths of the people <lb />
country had earnestly petitioned <lb />
congress relieve them from the <lb />
by the express <lb />
companies. The recent exposure of <lb />
he of the express <lb />
Don't wait, until you are taken down sick, before <lb />
care of yourself. The small aches and pains, and other <lb />
symptoms cf womanly weakness and disease, always mean <lb />
worse to follow, unless given quick treatment. <lb />
You would always keep handy, if you knew <lb />
what quick and permanent relief it gives, where weakness <lb />
and disease of the womanly system makes life seem hard <lb />
to bear. has helped over a million women. Try It. <lb />
Co. <lb />
tor book, Wages, seal<lb />
as <lb />
Don't tell what you might bin, <lb />
you'd a done like <lb />
.; gait and hustle <lb />
Gil dollars for i <lb />
will then come <lb />
way. <lb />
and enjoy ii. while here <lb />
you stay, <lb />
Should Have Road Repair Force. <lb />
We would suggest to our county <lb />
commissioners the advisability of <lb />
lining a road force whose <lb />
duty it shall be to repair the <lb />
dam roads that lave been construct- <lb />
ed. As we understand It, there <lb />
has been spent in this county about <lb />
Morse ii- Grief, <lb />
i, i.-. ,. . new story <lb />
;,. . aim human traits found in <lb />
some dogs and s. it la not i <lb />
often that I n In <lb />
and tic an m I <lb />
a extent as lo <lb />
fully Impress. I on cur finite minds. <lb />
One striking Illustration that such la <lb />
ea.-e occurred in <lb />
last week. and <lb />
v.-, re a pair big strong, stylish <lb />
rel the property of Mr. C. <lb />
;. liveryman, Th <lb />
,. vi m <lb />
nil Si id n <lb />
i . ML in fact, the whole . <lb />
I I S ,. . . <lb />
same and ti d side side <lb />
an , On Bat- <lb />
Pains<lb />
lour or live hundred thousand dollars <lb />
for good roads. roads need <lb />
attention alter they are built, and <lb />
we have found that a small force <lb />
whose duty it shall be to keep these <lb />
loads in repair is the best Invest- <lb />
that can be made <lb />
If a or corporation bad an <lb />
investment of the above amount they <lb />
So ire <lb />
It mar be from overwork, but <lb />
the chances are Us from an In- <lb />
i, E R. ------k- <lb />
With a well conducted <lb />
one can do mountains t h. <lb />
without <lb />
It adds n hundred per cent ti <lb />
capacity, <lb />
by, only by <lb />
NO SUBSTITUTE. <lb />
Mrs. Annie Hatch, of Passes <lb />
to Rest. <lb />
Mrs. Annie Hatch died <lb />
this afternoon the residence of her <lb />
son, S. P, Hatch, at the advanced age <lb />
of She v as the mother of Dine <lb />
children among whom are Messrs B <lb />
P, and Hatch, of this place and <lb />
week died suddenly. <lb />
led all and the <lb />
day. although fed the most <lb />
ho ate but little and <lb />
seemed to droop and pine for Ills par-j <lb />
Last Thursday he began to <lb />
show Signs of put his nose <lb />
in the and pressing it <lb />
against the walls. Finally ha came <lb />
panics has served to Increase de- kept In repair <lb />
in oilier counties that <lb />
need ion. or else <lb />
it was protected and the front of the stall, his head on <lb />
We know by ex- the rail, nickered once twice and <lb />
for the parcels post, end the <lb />
Democrats are responding to the de- <lb />
of the people. congress <lb />
will win popular approval and do <lb />
great thing If it will give the country <lb />
the parcels post. Those merchants <lb />
who think will injure them are <lb />
mistaken. experience of other <lb />
countries shows that the parcels post <lb />
has helped business in <lb />
would see <lb />
the rail, nickered once twice <lb />
fell over dead. Mr. James and his <lb />
stable men are firmly of the o <lb />
they will rut and soon go to poor died of pure <lb />
and by expending just a small <lb />
year these valuable j Trader, <lb />
roads can be protected against decay <lb />
Sloan's is an ex- <lb />
, t I an. <lb />
th tali <lb />
. and in- <lb />
n. A v <lb />
i used . . <lb />
. . tic <lb />
Here's Free <lb />
I tan i for<lb />
-u <lb />
ti <lb />
. . <lb />
I S LO S <lb />
i m <lb />
is , . s . <lb />
bruises t steps n <lb />
once and i nu s <lb />
very <lb />
S . <lb />
Me., .- a I <lb />
c in be Harder. <lb />
OKLAHOMA city, Okla., Feb. it. <lb />
and ruin. <lb />
We offer this suggestion, <lb />
has proven a one in Other <lb />
ties, and will proVe good in tics The present week has been set <lb />
II cities, it county, as a little work in time will aside in the district court for begin <lb />
. this In States. the<lb />
nil <lb />
. i <lb />
eh News and Observer. <lb />
Durham Sun. ease. The three defendants are Mrs. <lb />
Bess Gentry, brother , Maurice <lb />
Two Children Burned to Heath. an her alleged <lb />
Al N, C, early Jesse K, The crime <lb />
o cure a cold Is a question <lb />
Dr. P. R. Hatch, of The;, ,, .,,.,, <lb />
funeral will occur Tuesday, Cough Hem- morning two children, which the are charged is the <lb />
ed by W. S. Long at Hanks chapel. ,,. Md years, of Pell and his j murder of the woman's husband, <lb />
Saw . <lb />
. . <lb />
her home church by <lb />
side of her husband, Wm. II. Hatch, <lb />
who proceeded her years. <lb />
immense sale by its remarkable cure <lb />
f colds. <lb />
upon. For sale by dealers <lb />
T. <lb />
wife, colored, were burned to death J. Gentry, Who was Shot and killed <lb />
When her child is in danger a <lb />
man will risk W life to protect it <lb />
No great act of heroism or risk of <lb />
life is necessary to a child <lb />
from croup. Give <lb />
Cough Remedy and all Is <lb />
avoided For all dealers. <lb />
II can always be depended cabin was <lb />
and his wife left the children <lb />
in the cabin while they went to feed <lb />
the pigs. The cabin caught tire and <lb />
was consumed before the children <lb />
could be rescued. <lb />
N-c-CORN <lb />
COB <lb />
Why kill pipe, when <lb />
yen the original corn cob that <lb />
-ill.,. <lb />
Five and p, <lb />
CARTER COMPANY <lb />
is soon to <lb />
pear In an one-act operetta called <lb />
Rochester. N. Y. Persian <lb />
Blamed a Worker. <lb />
blamed my heart for severe <lb />
in his home on the night of January <lb />
According to the alleged con- <lb />
of love affairs tress In my left side for two <lb />
between Mrs. and himself fur- writes W. Danville, Va., <lb />
principal motive for con- I know now It was as <lb />
to kill the A de- King's New Life Pills completely <lb />
sire to collect a life Insurance cured for stomach, <lb />
policy carried by Gentry also Is be-, and kidney troubles, constipation, <lb />
to have influenced the three headache or debility. cents at all <lb />
accused druggists.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018186_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
WiNTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF COX <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern for Winterville and vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rate on Application <lb />
WINTERVILLE. N. C. Feb. They have the Cole and <lb />
Mr. H. M. and little daughter. style, also the Cole cotton, <lb />
of Norfolk, spent one day with Mi corn and pea planters. <lb />
B. W. Tucker last week. I Misses Lizzie Cox and Mamie <lb />
Venters, accompanied by <lb />
Harrington. Barber Co. have re- Theodore, Monday <lb />
a large shipment of shoes. <lb />
something new and up to date for la- See A G Cox Manufacturing <lb />
dies, gentlemen and children. . Company for wire fencing. They <lb />
Mrs. M. A. Adams returned last nave arrangements to take care <lb />
week from Ahoskie. where she has of wants in n's particular. <lb />
been spending several weeks trustees of Winterville High <lb />
friends. school have a new ball <lb />
which will add much to the <lb />
A. W. Ange Co. arc headquarters athletic spirit of the school. At a <lb />
for all kinds of hardware. Examine mass meeting of the students on <lb />
their stock before purchasing. 16th. more than were <lb />
Miss Anna and father, by the student body on <lb />
Mr. C. L. attended a box <lb />
Jno. R. Cat roll has been elected man- <lb />
party near Fountain last week. , . , <lb />
ager of the ball team for the season. <lb />
Harrington. Barbel Co. rave re- we expect things to begin to hum <lb />
another large shipment of Roy- as goon a the weather opens. The <lb />
Hour right from the mills. enrollment has passed the mark. <lb />
Spring time in all of its beauty will work B moving along smoothly, <lb />
be here. will enjoy driving j. Wyatt been Supplying <lb />
over the hills and making study absence of Prof. J. L. Olive. <lb />
d tun when she is at her best, who underwent an operation at the <lb />
A you spin around you will learning- hospital. He will take up <lb />
make the Bowers and blossoms WOrk again next week. The mid- <lb />
if you are to a term examinations will begin today <lb />
manufactured by the A. Monday. <lb />
c. Cox Manufacturing Company, Win- Mrs. a. j, flowers, of is <lb />
f. C . place your or- her daughter, Annie who <lb />
for new buggy now. la student High <lb />
Don't forge Dr. Hess stock food school, <lb />
and Dam ea a. W, Ange A training school for Sunday school <lb />
Mamie Chapman, who has workers win be held in the Winter- <lb />
been b . ling near wile church. February lo <lb />
Came hone Saturday, her school be- March You are cordially invited, <lb />
over. Drink pencil and note book. Come to <lb />
When you need nails, both and study the Bible and ho teach it. <lb />
wire. Harrington, Barber Co. training school will be conduct- <lb />
in any sizes. j ed by E. L. Middleton. Sunday school <lb />
Rev. Mr. of Ayden, filled his secretary Baptist convention. RaJ- <lb />
regular appointment at the Methodist Or. Prince E. Burroughs, teach- <lb />
Sunday morning and secretary of the <lb />
school board, <lb />
Remember the A. Q, Cox Tenn.; Prof. L. E M. Middleton, pro- <lb />
Company carries a complete of the Bible in Meredith Col- <lb />
line of buggy harness. Raleigh; Prof. F. C. Nye. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh of of Winterville High School; and <lb />
Cox's Mill, spent Sunday in town If. A. Adams, pastor Winterville <lb />
with Mr. and Mrs. R, G. Chapman. church. A rare treat is in <lb />
It pay you lo see Harrington, store for all who Be sure to <lb />
i Co. for your fertilizer be among them. <lb />
FALLS IN HANDS <lb />
REBELS <lb />
Offered By <lb />
Troops <lb />
are for <lb />
Town Authorities, Fearing American <lb />
Intervention, City to 1- <lb />
V. Much <lb />
Hill let American <lb />
Ambassador at <lb />
EL PASO. Tex., Feb. <lb />
scant resistance to invasion. Juarez <lb />
tell Into the hands of rebel troops <lb />
soon after o'clock this forenoon. <lb />
The had been begun hardly <lb />
an hour before. Throwing a ball of <lb />
machine gun lire into the city, the <lb />
rebel adherents of <lb />
on <lb />
the city from two directions. The <lb />
troops coming from the northwest <lb />
were met by feeble firing from the <lb />
government soldiers. But this soon <lb />
Their way cleared, the in- <lb />
took complete possession of <lb />
the city. <lb />
Before ll o'clock they were march- <lb />
through streets of the town that <lb />
was the scene of a trim <lb />
ten month ago. Business houses <lb />
were closed but apparently there <lb />
no attempt at sacking. <lb />
Not long after the beginning of the <lb />
rebel advance Mexican Consul <lb />
in El Paso declared that to <lb />
vent violating of American rights the <lb />
Juarez garrison had been ordered to <lb />
offer no further and <lb />
the rebels would be permitted lo lake <lb />
the town. <lb />
At o'clock only the shots from <lb />
he rebel guns were heard. <lb />
after firing the first volley in <lb />
answer to the attack the defenders <lb />
quit. <lb />
At o'clock a part of the rebel <lb />
forces had entered the out skirts of <lb />
Juarez had opened fire. The defend- <lb />
replied. The entrance was made <lb />
at an Irrigation ditch leading into <lb />
almost parallel with the Rio <lb />
Durham Progress Organ, <lb />
bed. <lb />
DURHAM, Feb. <lb />
The Mae Qua Ken. <lb />
The efforts that are making to <lb />
relations between the <lb />
States and the <lb />
should, of course, be <lb />
Secretary tour <lb />
the South American countries, as was <lb />
that of Secretary Root some few years <lb />
. go. Is an excellent thing In its way; <lb />
so also is Mr. John Barrett's Pan- <lb />
American Society for the promotion <lb />
intercourse between the people the <lb />
two Americas. But neither of these <lb />
touches, except incidentally, the real <lb />
question of strengthening the <lb />
relations between the two-halves <lb />
of this hemisphere. International <lb />
trade is based upon something a great <lb />
deal more substantial than sentiment. <lb />
It is international barter, the exchange <lb />
of one commodity for another. So <lb />
long we by means of tariff <lb />
barriers, from our markets the things <lb />
that the republics <lb />
have to sell, so long will Latin- <lb />
American republics buy from us only <lb />
hose things which they cannot <lb />
elsewhere at all or only at great <lb />
this regardless <lb />
how much touring among them may <lb />
be done by our ministers of state or <lb />
with what persuasive eloquence Mr. <lb />
Barrett and his associates may preach <lb />
the of Pan <lb />
American union. The prime essential <lb />
the sine qua nor, to bringing to th <lb />
States of th <lb />
trade to which our <lb />
geographical location and <lb />
advantages entitle us lies in re- <lb />
moving the artificial shackles imposed <lb />
upon commerce by our <lb />
tariff duties. Unless and until that is <lb />
done, we car hope for anything <lb />
approximating maximum <lb />
of our trade opportunities in <lb />
the field; if and when <lb />
is done, much of the trade from <lb />
i fruitful territory now going <lb />
scroll the Atlantic to Great Britain. <lb />
Germany and France, will be drawn to <lb />
our shores just as naturally and just <lb />
as inevitably as the tides of the <lb />
respond to the of the moon <lb />
The fact that our commerce with <lb />
South America has more than doubled <lb />
in value in the last ten years, not- <lb />
withstanding and in spite of the tariff <lb />
handicap, shows the more <lb />
how great that expansion would <lb />
he were this handicap removed. And <lb />
certainly it is only the blindness that <lb />
will not see which can fall to discern <lb />
in our experience with limited <lb />
with Cuba and a measure of <lb />
free trade With the Philippines that it <lb />
freer trade relations which are need- <lb />
ed to Insure maximum commercial <lb />
expansion in the Held. <lb />
Reversible Disc Harrow <lb />
The Best All and Most Serviceable Harrow for <lb />
Orchard and Vineyard Work Ever Made. <lb />
ll has low frame, which will clear branches and Tines. The gang <lb />
can be act together or graduated at internals until they spread to <lb />
their extreme width on the ends of the frame. <lb />
Two each the gangs i-n be operated at angle. <lb />
The gangs can also be reversed to an <lb />
Everything about it simple ind strung, and it backed by an unqualified <lb />
guarantee. <lb />
This season we are es- <lb />
strong on Farm- <lb />
Implements and <lb />
Machinery. We cordial- <lb />
invite your inspection. <lb />
Come see us <lb />
COTTON KING CULTIVATORS <lb />
CONFEDERATE CULTIVATORS <lb />
SMOOTHING HARROWS <lb />
RIDING ATTACHMENTS FOR TWO <lb />
PLOWS <lb />
FERTILIZER <lb />
DISTRIBUTORS, etc. <lb />
We are headquarters for the <lb />
plow <lb />
Our entire line is backed by an <lb />
qualified guarantee. We have the <lb />
goods that are best by test. Therefore <lb />
we do not hesitate in backing them. <lb />
One trial of any of the above <lb />
will convert you. Give us a trial <lb />
J. R. G. MO YE <lb />
of from three to four per-, <lb />
The ii I i rear band can be lb on <lb />
ii c i. d I .- <lb />
Nothing more is required; nothing <lb />
less will <lb />
and Landmark. <lb />
tonight with a of some <lb />
More nitrogen naturally of the most prominent citizens of the Old Age. <lb />
from what he will the be found serviceable on Bandy than y, Ex-J J. Crawford Biggs , nothing is <lb />
. In bis fertilizers, I . i I i elected president and Prof. ate <lb />
. i . , ,. inorganic m <lb />
. . are number of . . . loses of this club .- to <lb />
form i obtained . <lb />
. make u thorough study of <lb />
too <lb />
and <lb />
Inorganic <lb />
hi <lb />
as- has <lb />
lo i <lb />
They will make <lb />
eighty, So-1 <lb />
RESOURCES. <lb />
principal ones may . . tad vigorous and city parka; also then <lb />
i enumerated . Sulphate . . ll . nitrogen of the <lb />
ammonia, nitrate of soda, blood, can be Incorporated the com- government In all <lb />
. cotton seed meal and fertilizer t. be used under the i later tine question <lb />
Other miscellaneous carriers drill the time of planting. submitted to the people for <lb />
of element an- In varying sulphate ammonia or nitrate of adoption at an election. <lb />
quantities on many markets, but most soda may be used for this purpose. I. <lb />
of them are low in nitrogen, and many One objection to the use of sulphate <lb />
Of them owing to the slowness with of ammonia in the fact that it instead of using one or two percent <lb />
which they become available, are gives its best results in combination to bear in mind. It may be <lb />
desirable , with and M our are low the at of <lb />
The above materials may be In this constituent, it will give its . , . <lb />
into two classes, known as results on those soils to which <lb />
and Inorganic. Cotton applications of lime are made. who have had practical experience <lb />
meal, blood, and fish not so readily available In the soil the cultivation of farm crops that <lb />
would come under the first class and as nitrate of soda and therefore, not lit is better and more desirable to <lb />
sulphate of ammonia and nitrate of likely to be leached away. If used; corporate the fertilizer with the soil <lb />
soda under the latter In the as a top dressing It should be mixed at or before the time of planting than <lb />
production of crops on soils low in i with the surface soil, whereas, put It on as side applications or <lb />
nitrogen and this Is characteristic of of soda should be put directly top dressings later In the season, <lb />
moot of the land, the availability of on top of the soil. The nitrate has can be done at the time of planting <lb />
the nitrogen is an Important matter advantage of being the most great economy and can be mix- <lb />
to consider. Organic forms of available form of nitrogen more thoroughly with the soil which <lb />
are not quite so quickly avail- have, and therefore, it the best j is an advantage to the crop grown <lb />
able as the inorganic under ordinary j adapted for the use as a top dress- on the land in that It enables the <lb />
conditions of farm practice. One though even for this roots to spread through a wider <lb />
be led to conclude from this when used early in the season, in search of rood. When mix- <lb />
statement, therefore, that the may be mixed half and half with cot- ed with the soil there Is also l <lb />
forms were to be preferred, ton seed meal with good results <lb />
In soils well supplied with vegetable <lb />
this might be true because of <lb />
the readiness and comparative ease <lb />
through the <lb />
danger of its escape <lb />
drainage water. <lb />
It would appear from the facts set <lb />
forth that cotton seed meal furnishes <lb />
nitrogen in a most satisfactory form <lb />
for farmers. Its efficiency is <lb />
the nitrogen before it has an <lb />
opportunity to escape from the soil. <lb />
Hence, organic forms <lb />
Blood is an excellent source of <lb />
and and fish scrap <lb />
also supply this material In a <lb />
which inorganic nitrogen form. The quantity of these <lb />
liable to be leached from the soil, materials available, however. Is <lb />
The forms, becoming more as compared, for Instance, with questioned. It can be applied In the <lb />
lowly available, afford the crop j cotton seed meal. Moreover, as car- cheapest and most satisfactory man- <lb />
a chance to of nitrogen they are relatively It furnishes the nitrogen In a <lb />
more costly than cotton seed meal, sufficiently quickly available form to <lb />
While the nitrogen in blood may be- meet the needs of our principal farm <lb />
of come more quickly available than crops, and it has the advantage of <lb />
should be given very careful that in cotton meal, it a home-made product which <lb />
by farmers who intend to if this is true of either costs less per pound of available <lb />
ply more or less of their plant food or scrap and when the difference at the present time than this <lb />
in the ground at the time of seeding in cost between the nitrogen In cot- element does when derived from <lb />
th crop. It will naturally arise In ton seed meal and blood Is taken desirable sources. The farmer <lb />
the some as to whether this to consideration, the use of the form- who uses cotton seed meal not <lb />
is good practice or not. It certainly will be advisable on practically has the <lb />
IT T to the highest bidder, on, <lb />
in an our expert-1 From this review of the situation enlarges the market for his seed and Friday, March MM, a certain tract <lb />
show that about two-thirds of it would appear that cotton seed meal Insures their bringing a better Parcel of land, lying and being <lb />
the fertilize should be put in the soil at its present price will furnish farm- on that account. While It is to be <lb />
unless it be areas of land that era with nitrogen In a most regretted that cotton seed meal can described North Pitt, <lb />
run high m percentage of Bind form. It becomes quickly not all be f-d so that the largest Adjoining lands of Caleb Worth I. C. T. Cox, cashier or the bank, do solemnly swear that <lb />
on that ac- enough available even In our poor- profit might be from Its on the north, the Tripp Bros, the above Statement is true to the best of my knowledge and <lb />
Capital<lb />
21,000.00 <lb />
bean shall cease <lb />
. . i ii <lb />
Wrote ill grand and <lb />
drafts <lb />
Bore off the prise of verse from U. Bonds <lb />
compeers, . .,,, <lb />
iii-n each bad numbered four score ,. . <lb />
Furniture and fixture <lb />
years; <lb />
And at four score <lb />
mid ten Exchanges clearing house 8,891.66 <lb />
Had but begun his of Cash and due from banks 134.170.34 <lb />
Chaucer, Woodstock, with the <lb />
nightingales, <lb />
CONDENSED STATEMENT <lb />
THE NATIONAL BANK <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, <lb />
At the close February 1912 <lb />
LIABILITIES <lb />
10,000.00 <lb />
2,034.22 <lb />
81,000.00 <lb />
Profits <lb />
Circulation <lb />
8.600.00 account <lb />
7,186.30 Time certificates of <lb />
1.060.001 deposit <lb />
Hue from banks 13,024.11 <lb />
Cashier's checks 342.54 <lb />
Individual deposits 144,802.24 <lb />
231.068.45 <lb />
At sixty wrote <lb />
at <lb />
last, <lb />
Completed <lb />
years were past. <lb />
Canterbury <lb />
toiling to the <lb />
when <lb />
sit Idly down <lb />
When then Shall we <lb />
and say, <lb />
The night hath come; It Is no longer <lb />
day <lb />
The night hath not yet come; we are <lb />
not quite <lb />
Cut off from labor by the falling <lb />
light; <lb />
Something remains for us to do. or <lb />
dare; <lb />
Even the oldest trees some fruit <lb />
may bear; <lb />
For age opportunity no less <lb />
Than youth itself, though In another <lb />
dress; <lb />
And as the evening twilight <lb />
away, <lb />
The sky is filled with stars, invisible <lb />
by day. <lb />
Henry Longfellow <lb />
State of North Carolina, County of <lb />
I. F. J. Forbes, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear <lb />
that the above la true to the best of my knowledge and belief. <lb />
F. J. FORBES, <lb />
Subscribed and sworn me <lb />
this 27th day of Feb. 1912. <lb />
H. D. BATEMAN, <lb />
Notary Public. <lb />
My commission Oct. 1912. <lb />
Correct <lb />
L. W. TUCKER, <lb />
E. Carrie <lb />
E. NOBLES. <lb />
G. <lb />
J. <lb />
Directors. <lb />
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb />
The Bank of Winterville <lb />
AT WINTERVILLE, <lb />
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, February <lb />
lit is. <lb />
Loans and <lb />
Hanking furniture <lb />
and fixtures . 1,782 <lb />
Due from banks and bank- <lb />
. 4.391.66 <lb />
Gold coin . 20.00 <lb />
I AMI SALE. <lb />
By virtue of the power of sale con- <lb />
In a certain mortgage deed, ex- <lb />
and delivered by Luke all <lb />
and wife to Henry C. on the I coin, including all <lb />
19th day of May, 1910, and duly re- <lb />
corded In the register of deeds office <lb />
of Pitt county, in Book 0-9. page <lb />
minor coin currency, <lb />
National bank notes and <lb />
other U. S. notes . <lb />
. <lb />
205.63 <lb />
1,607.00 <lb />
13.33 <lb />
Total, <lb />
30,983.26 <lb />
LIABILITIES. <lb />
Capital stock paid In. <lb />
Surplus fund . 3.800.0 <lb />
Time certificates of deposit 2.202.09 <lb />
Deposits subject to check. 19.708.87 <lb />
checks <lb />
. <lb />
Certified checks <lb />
199.29 <lb />
13.10 <lb />
Total, <lb />
30,923.26 <lb />
to supply the <lb />
.<lb />
on the east. W on the weal <lb />
and observation both most crops. In M <lb />
that soils will give their boat when applied to lands In bad our farmers will make no mistake So satisfy said mortgage <lb />
results where Is used with does not permit Its ready purchasing and using It as the day of February, 1912 <lb />
greater liberality than has been from the soil before the crop form of supplying the nitrogen re- . . J C <lb />
in past years. For utilize It <lb />
This Is an Important quired In mixed fertilizers. <lb />
Subscribed and sworn to before me. <lb />
this day of February. MM. <lb />
JESSE L. ROLLINS, <lb />
Notary Public. <lb />
Attorneys. <lb />
commission expires Jan. 1914 <lb />
C T Cashier <lb />
J. E. GREEN. <lb />
J. F. HARRINGTON, <lb />
A. W. ANGE. <lb />
Directors. <lb />
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb />
HE A HT OF EASTERN <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb />
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb />
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb />
AND ONE, AND IS BOB- <lb />
BOUNDED BY THE BEST <lb />
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb />
OF ALL <lb />
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb />
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb />
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb />
OFFER IN THE OF <lb />
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb />
TRIBUTARY I I TIES. <lb />
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb />
JOB AND <lb />
PLANT. <lb />
WE HAVE A <lb />
OF TWELVE IN <lb />
am on a the best <lb />
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb />
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb />
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO TO OFT BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb />
A BUSINESS WAY TO TARE <lb />
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL THEM WHAT <lb />
HAVE TO NO TO THEIR <lb />
ATTENTION. <lb />
A D <lb />
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb />
BE HAD<lb />
GREENVILLE, H. C- Ml HI II B, <lb />
M Mill <lb />
APPEAL PK m <lb />
President of Federation Attacks <lb />
Order <lb />
APPEALS TO CONGRESS <lb />
Lloyd of Missouri, <lb />
to Attacks Order Which Prevents <lb />
of <lb />
From Appeals lo Congress. <lb />
P. RITCHIE BADLY INJURED <lb />
WASHINGTON, C, March <lb />
he Department was a tar- <lb />
for prominent speakers at the <lb />
twelfth annual of the Na- <lb />
Civic Federation which began <lb />
here today. <lb />
Attacks on the order <lb />
prohibits the appeal of gov- <lb />
to Congress or <lb />
Congressman In question affecting <lb />
wages working conditions, were <lb />
by Samuel president <lb />
of tin Federation Labor, and Rep- <lb />
Lloyd Of Missouri, a <lb />
member the House Committee on <lb />
Post Roads, <lb />
Second Assistant <lb />
Stewart vigorously defended the <lb />
department and the Postmaster-Gen- <lb />
A lively colloquy which ensued <lb />
between Mr. Stewart with Mr, <lb />
and Mr over the <lb />
of as terminated <lb />
abruptly by chairman titling the <lb />
proceedings out of order. <lb />
No other department of the gov- <lb />
has dreamed carrying out <lb />
letter declared Mr. <lb />
Depart- <lb />
has not only dreamed of it but <lb />
has actually had a nightmare over <lb />
Representative Lloyd declared the <lb />
policy of appealing to Congress <lb />
through superior officers to be <lb />
IS III TO KY WHERE <lb />
is QUICKLY <lb />
MICH HOPE <lb />
CONCORD, March sensation- <lb />
shooting took place in de- <lb />
store here this afternoon <lb />
i bout o'clock when Md. Marion <lb />
Hamilton, a well-known clerk in the <lb />
St m, shot Mr. M. F. a prom- <lb />
young hardware man. and <lb />
it not wounded him. <lb />
On account of the prominence or the <lb />
and shocking suddenness of <lb />
the act, it aroused great excitement, <lb />
which soon developed into a gloom <lb />
that itself over the entire com- <lb />
misunderstanding an ac- <lb />
count aroused the trouble. Mr. Ham- <lb />
owed the Hardware Co. <lb />
fill n buggy. There arose a <lb />
between them on the In- <lb />
on the account. Mr. <lb />
Into the store this afternoon to <lb />
collect it. Mr. Hamilton was about <lb />
midway the store, behind the counter, <lb />
hen Mr. went to him. There <lb />
very few people in the store <lb />
the time and most of the clerks had <lb />
gone Mr. Hamilton says <lb />
Mr. became offended <lb />
what lie said and was him <lb />
I vi hen he pulled pistol and Bred. <lb />
Tar Heel on Money Trustee. <lb />
Probe <lb />
Committee will be Divided into two parts. One to <lb />
gate the money trust, the other to deal with Senator <lb />
Currency plan. Representative <lb />
of North Carolina is made member of the <lb />
committee to carry on close investigation <lb />
into <lb />
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS TO BE FIRST WITNESSES <lb />
BEFORE COMMITTEE <lb />
Nero <lb />
u es <lb />
Robber <lb />
Agency. <lb />
A. E. Denton, local representative <lb />
of the E. A. Farm Agency, <lb />
an advertisement In this paper call- <lb />
attention to the advantage of let- <lb />
ling him handle your real No <lb />
fact Is too small and none too large <lb />
for him to handle satisfactorily. <lb />
LEXINGTON JURY OUT <lb />
HAS NOW BEEN OUT HOURS <lb />
IS EXPECTED, THAT <lb />
IN <lb />
A VERDICT HOT <lb />
March f.-The Jury <lb />
the Leonard murder case has been <lb />
out Since yesterday evening at <lb />
o'clock and has not yet reached a <lb />
verdict This morning the Jurors re- <lb />
turned to the courtroom for <lb />
as to the weight of <lb />
evidence Juror Hedrick <lb />
Judge Ferguson that some of the <lb />
wanted to know If man could <lb />
convicted on circumstantial <lb />
and Judge entered <lb />
Into a long explanation of the various <lb />
phases of the subject, it is <lb />
rumored about town the Jury <lb />
stands nine three for acquittal. The <lb />
opinion, however, is that <lb />
jury will bring In n verdict <lb />
not early tomorrow morning <lb />
A was expected tonight, but <lb />
I hey to their rest without do <lb />
, Ming Though acquit- <lb />
is expected, there is no doubt In <lb />
the minds many the people <lb />
I , m to Leonard's guilt, ho <lb />
. i .,, . .- . <lb />
When Mr. Adolph who lives <lb />
about miles from town, got up early <lb />
morning he found that his smoke- <lb />
house bad been broken into during <lb />
the night and a quantity of meat <lb />
There were plain tracks in <lb />
the snow and slush about the smoke- <lb />
house and leading off in the direction <lb />
of Md. followed <lb />
these tracks about two miles where <lb />
they entered the house of a colored <lb />
man named Frank Wiggins. He then <lb />
came to town after Sheriff I. Dud- <lb />
and went back to Wiggins home. <lb />
The Sheriff found Wiggins in the <lb />
house and arrested him. but while <lb />
looking for meat the <lb />
broke out and ran off. <lb />
Sheriff Dudley went back to town <lb />
after Policeman Clark and the two <lb />
took up tracks again <lb />
ind followed them through woods and <lb />
fields about miles, where they found <lb />
Wiggins secreted in a house and <lb />
captured him. <lb />
Going back to where lived <lb />
they found part of the meat bid in <lb />
i hay stack and the balance of it <lb />
in his house. <lb />
Wiggins was to town and <lb />
placed in Jail. He was only recent- <lb />
released from serving u sentence <lb />
on the roads for a similar offense. <lb />
The Plans Hale Not Keen <lb />
Perfected as Is Bra the <lb />
tee Will Proceed It i- Knows that it <lb />
will he into u Committee <lb />
a Subcommittee to Work on <lb />
Different Matters. <lb />
WASHINGTON, ll. f March <lb />
It s the plan of tile banking cur- <lb />
tin house to be- <lb />
gin Investigation of the <lb />
Immediately, <lb />
The details not been worked <lb />
out, but the Inquiry been <lb />
c d. tine is lo an Inquiry into tile <lb />
money trust and tin- other a con- <lb />
currency <lb />
ii This latter committee will <lb />
so summons witnesses, its work <lb />
n lie more along the line of con- <lb />
legislation than those of <lb />
The subcommittee to Investigate the <lb />
trust will consist of <lb />
of chair- <lb />
man Representatives Brown, West <lb />
Virginia; Stephens, of Mississippi, <lb />
of North Carolina; <lb />
of Missouri, of South <lb />
Carolina, and Neely, of Kansas, Dem- <lb />
and four Republican members <lb />
who will designated by by <lb />
of New York, the <lb />
senior Republican on the committee. <lb />
The committee which will take up <lb />
the plan will consist of Rep- <lb />
Glass, Virginia, chair- <lb />
man ; of Maryland, Taylor, of <lb />
Alabama, of Indiana, Moore, <lb />
of, Texas, of Ohio, and Kin- <lb />
THIS TIME <lb />
sec. mm <lb />
I ITS <lb />
WillS TUFT <lb />
Committee In Charge Hotel Question Praises His Administration and calls it <lb />
Reports Favorably <lb />
ARE ALREADY SUBSCRIBED <lb />
Progressive <lb />
DENOUNCES RECALL OF JUDGES <lb />
Greenville is to have a modern ho- Would The Down lo <lb />
of New York, Democrats, and <lb />
three Republican. Mr. <lb />
will select these committee <lb />
i Considerable time was taken today <lb />
diSCUSSing the counsel to be selected. <lb />
It was practically decided to have two <lb />
attorneys, one to reach committee. <lb />
Toe first witness to be heard by <lb />
I Committee on the money <lb />
will be government officials, who will <lb />
ill- scribe banking and currency con- <lb />
and trace, as far as possible. <lb />
affiliations of the hanks with each <lb />
and with Industrial and other <lb />
Institutions, <lb />
i in- work will be under- <lb />
i ken simultaneously with <lb />
of qualifications of at <lb />
who are suggested us counsel <lb />
the committee. Their <lb />
With previous clients will also <lb />
lie looked into. <lb />
Prospect of another light over a <lb />
public building hill and battleship up- <lb />
i were revived today when <lb />
Burnett, of Alabama. <lb />
chairman the committee on <lb />
buildings and called a meet- <lb />
of the committee for next Friday, <lb />
and made the declaration that if a <lb />
I were restored <lb />
lo the Democratic program, there <lb />
mild also be a public building bill. <lb />
The public building bill brought <lb />
about the vote against the battleship <lb />
I appropriation In the Democratic <lb />
it pretty quick If the <lb />
committee by the president <lb />
of the Club month ago <lb />
last night. Keeps up Its good work. <lb />
have been subscribed and ac- <lb />
m report of the commit- <lb />
Welter He De- <lb />
in Hi Roosevelt's <lb />
Rests Speech. Failure <lb />
In <lb />
CHICAGO, L. <lb />
r. ii. of New York, secretary or war. <lb />
not everybody has the candidate for gov- <lb />
to take stock has of New York, in 1910, tonight <lb />
formally as to the amount declared himself rot- President Tart, <lb />
they wish to invest. while he the <lb />
The Club rel las, night In Ma reg- <lb />
meeting and alter . for <lb />
busier to <lb />
two n members Were Mr. SI entered President <lb />
cabinet last year, alter consultation <lb />
Prof, a of B. C, Mr. and with the <lb />
T had been invited understanding with <lb />
dress the members of the Club and he would be bound in no way to <lb />
kindly consented to the political activities or <lb />
of all the members who attended In o before <lb />
las, in opening his Tall dub or Illinois tonight, be <lb />
address n E. Austin said that declared his belief that President <lb />
whoever he was about to say should administration represented the <lb />
be termed as a but a talk, highest expression of progressive Re- <lb />
but before he finished everybody i policy. <lb />
greed that it was . lecture and a here tonight to sneak for the <lb />
most one. of raft, said <lb />
His subj-ct last night was Mr. am now and <lb />
By indexes meaning certain have a progressive, <lb />
characteristics outstanding am for Mr. Taft because believe <lb />
to the trained and lie has faithfully carried out the pro- <lb />
observing mind serve to indicate faith or the party; <lb />
point out to the character of the that his administration stands for or- <lb />
or thing possessing such permanent progress in our <lb />
A process of mental de- government; and t <lb />
BLIND TIGER HATES <lb />
SKIPS DOLLAR BONDS <lb />
SHOOTS AND KILLS HUSBAND <lb />
WOMAN SUBJECT TO <lb />
ho you know that of all minor <lb />
colds are by far the most <lb />
It is not the cold itself <lb />
you need to fear, but the serious <lb />
that it often leads to. Most <lb />
of these are known as germ diseases. <lb />
I Pneumonia and consumption are <lb />
i them, why not take <lb />
Cough Remedy and cure your <lb />
cold while you can For sale by ail <lb />
is <lb />
ton Panicked. <lb />
II g said there are least BOO <lb />
n still in the fields In <lb />
i- ; This <lb />
based on the <lb />
given by one of Falkland's <lb />
n b lit a or <lb />
no Mo. I of this <lb />
. i remain In the <lb />
id to . <lb />
LEAVES FOR <lb />
A R T S KNOWS <lb />
Mills I HIS <lb />
March Is reported <lb />
on reliable authority that W. C. Po- <lb />
land, th notorious blind tiger, has <lb />
Jumped his bond and is now perhaps <lb />
miles from this city and on <lb />
or his mysterious action <lb />
educational fund of Raleigh Is In- <lb />
creased by and the county is <lb />
better off. <lb />
I was convicted at Police <lb />
Watson's court for selling liquor <lb />
given a sentence on the <lb />
He appealed lo the Superior court, <lb />
Judge Watson placed his bond at <lb />
MOO. Justice of the Peace at med- <lb />
also had Poland before him on a <lb />
Similar charge and found him guilty. <lb />
also appealed and was put under a <lb />
bond. <lb />
was sail yesterday Poland <lb />
seen at ya of that <lb />
pi ice who is well acquainted with him. <lb />
In went there from Raleigh In a oar- <lb />
told this that he was <lb />
.,.,,,. have left back <lb />
i i- v. they may ha that; I am <lb />
to pans is what he <lb />
i h. ii i also <lb />
II Ml A SHORT TIME AGO <lb />
LEFT A WHERE <lb />
SHE HAD <lb />
March <lb />
morning, while apparently <lb />
from a spell of melancholia, <lb />
Mrs. W. A. Harrison shot and almost <lb />
instantly killed her husband, at <lb />
home on street. She had <lb />
recently come from a <lb />
for mental treatment. Mr. <lb />
i is in was a fireman on the Southern, <lb />
I and had an excellent record. He <lb />
i lived mar Salisbury, lie was <lb />
years of age. Ills wife was <lb />
White, whose home was in <lb />
She declared she did not <lb />
mean to kill him that she was try- <lb />
to kill herself and be tried to get <lb />
pistol when it was discharged. <lb />
She is in jail. <lb />
When you have in your <lb />
fool or instep, apply Chamberlains <lb />
and you will gel quick <lb />
ll I. For sale by all dealer <lb />
i two mileage books, each <lb />
containing. I,. miles. He evidently <lb />
lo travel 2.00 miles in-<lb />
which most benefits the <lb />
dent of at large. <lb />
For he explained, the <lb />
physical condition of certain children, <lb />
out from imperfections notice- <lb />
able to observant, denote a lack <lb />
of care in these homes <lb />
that handicap them in life. That <lb />
make a burden for teachers to <lb />
instruct them and that necessitate <lb />
their spending a longer time in <lb />
schools than it would be the case <lb />
were they in a perfect physical con- <lb />
The atmosphere of discontent and <lb />
disorder th may reign In certain <lb />
business houses or factories would <lb />
Indicate that that particular business <lb />
Is not conducted in a business-like <lb />
way. In tact you can't hardly see <lb />
anything but that U indicates to you <lb />
something else. <lb />
As Is the case with individuals, so <lb />
Is the case business houses or <lb />
factories and communities. <lb />
is Prof Austin began <lb />
lo lecture, from heart <lb />
and because Of the interest he has in <lb />
A community <lb />
has. like an. Individual in- <lb />
that will tell the stranger, as <lb />
to of the people that <lb />
make up community. This is <lb />
where a community does occasional- <lb />
look Its. in the glass, has It <lb />
other Communities that have BO <lb />
time to devote the sanitation and <lb />
purification their surroundings <lb />
mentioned certain <lb />
facts which not have escaped us. <lb />
Which certainly deserve closer <lb />
The time lies conic when <lb />
competition communities is <lb />
very strong and if communities are <lb />
to grow ail, no pains must be <lb />
spared to in kc towns and cities de- <lb />
to stranger from every <lb />
point of view. city or town beau- <lb />
is a source of pride and pleas- <lb />
to people living it. and <lb />
fuse Iii nomination on the as- <lb />
that have been made against <lb />
him. would be a blow to that progress <lb />
and would put a premium upon hasty <lb />
and unfounded <lb />
about <lb />
Two Inch Fall <lb />
Night. <lb />
Of snow storms there seems to be <lb />
no end and this section had the eighth <lb />
one of the winter Tuesday night. It <lb />
l. ran about o'clock and <lb />
to a depth of about two inches. A <lb />
cold rain followed, taking away most <lb />
of snow. The weather Is about as <lb />
bad as it could be, <lb />
W. Greensboro. <lb />
. has three children, and like most <lb />
children they frequently lake cold. <lb />
have tried several kinds <lb />
he says, have never <lb />
any yet that did them as much <lb />
good Chamberlains Cough Remedy. <lb />
Ki r sale by all dealers. <lb />
a point of view is the <lb />
Strongest drawing card to attract de- <lb />
lo that town or city. <lb />
In closing his lecture Austin <lb />
moved that the Carolina Club <lb />
point committee to federate with <lb />
similar from other Green- <lb />
organ The of <lb />
this federation committees to tin <lb />
the keeping u Ideal or a <lb />
sanitary and beautiful <lb />
Prof. An in was greatly applaud- <lb />
ed his notion a committee <lb />
be appointed for the purpose above <lb />
was sup, by every <lb />
member <lb />
ll. . Wright was appointed <lb />
delegate t Southern <lb />
to OS held In Nashville. <lb />
Tenn. the and R coming <lb />
April.<lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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