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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 15 March 1912</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19120315</dc:date>
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                <p>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT B <lb />
j IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb />
Authorized it i Carolina Home and Farm id he <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Jen and vicinity. <lb />
Advertising rates furnished <lb />
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT I <lb />
IN CHARGE OF COX <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and I he <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
AYDEN. N. starch . Mr. Pick Mr. one of our <lb />
Manning. Who off mo of toes countrymen was reported as very <lb />
during the last snow, is able to b Sick Monday. <lb />
out on crutches. He tells us on Dr. II. P. Loftin. of Hanrahan, was <lb />
those two toes were three awful here Tuesday on business. <lb />
corns and odds is <lb />
Mr. Richard of Winterville. SCHOOL <lb />
has moved family here and <lb />
the Nichols house at the cud for Pitt Mill lie Held Next II <lb />
of Street Mr. Hail will op- <lb />
grocery, meal <lb />
market In the Smith Bros, block, <lb />
to the United States post <lb />
We had a letter from Mr. J <lb />
Hines, who tells us they have had <lb />
about twelve snows Black <lb />
this winter and adds he is <lb />
always glad to road The Re. <lb />
Heeler and Ayden items. <lb />
A new of hardware just re- <lb />
it. Smith Bra <lb />
The alarm was sounded at <lb />
noon yesterday. The roof of the <lb />
graded school building was <lb />
on tire, but quick work of our <lb />
citizens soon had the Are subdued <lb />
with slight damage to the roof. <lb />
Our are hauling cotton <lb />
here to the gin and one would think <lb />
it September to go down to the gin <lb />
; mill, judging from the number <lb />
of loads of seed cotton. <lb />
Mr. John Willis, our house mover, <lb />
has moved his house from <lb />
street up on the hill lacing East <lb />
avenue. <lb />
We expect a large crowd here at <lb />
Week. <lb />
tin and Tuesday of next <lb />
and 12th, the Pitt County <lb />
Sunday School Convention Will meet <lb />
i the Christian church in Ayden,. <lb />
program is as <lb />
Monday. <lb />
a. in Song service; Address <lb />
C, ii. Re- <lb />
-A. t;. toward of Grifton. <lb />
a. in The County <lb />
Us Work by J Van Carter, Gen- <lb />
Secretary North Carolina Sun- <lb />
School Association. <lb />
a. m. Hound Or- <lb />
Sunday School Classes, led by <lb />
Rev B. Ci. Ayden. X. C, <lb />
Sunday <lb />
by A G. Cox, Winterville, <lb />
N. C <lb />
a. in. Enrollment of <lb />
gates, appointment on Nomination <lb />
Place of Meeting, Resolution and <lb />
Constitution. <lb />
p. in. Song service. <lb />
p. m. Our <lb />
school convent ion the n Country Need a Sunday School As- <lb />
and 12th of March. <lb />
Mr. Richard Wingate has purchased <lb />
a building lot from Mr. K. J. Gard- <lb />
up in and will <lb />
build on it soon. <lb />
Mr. Fred Smith, of has <lb />
moved his family to town and has <lb />
succeeded Mr, C. K. Jackson as dry <lb />
Rev. J. It. Carroll Prof. H. L Koontz, <lb />
Prof J EL Sawyer <lb />
p. in. <lb />
Training; Preparation of the Teach- <lb />
Prof. I,. H. Meadows East Caro- <lb />
Teach, rs Training School. <lb />
WINTERVILLE. N. C. March The latest styles of the old genuine <lb />
Mrs. M. A. spent Tuesday Mexican straw hats at A W. Ange <lb />
evening in Ayden. i Co. <lb />
Harrington. Barber Co. are now Mr. B. F. Manning, our clever cot- <lb />
up their stock of ton buyer, spent Thursday in Snow <lb />
gentlemen and children's slippers for Hill, looking after some cotton. <lb />
spring and summer, and they have It will pay you to see Harrington. <lb />
them in the latest styles. Prices are Barber A Co. for your fertilizer and <lb />
the distributors to sow it with. <lb />
Mr. Roy T. Cox had the Mrs. J. L. Rollins is spending a few <lb />
tune to hurt himself right bad days at her old home near Kinston. <lb />
day. but is now improving. We have a nice lot of chairs just <lb />
The most fancy line of dress Vt. Ange Co. <lb />
hams and quality combined ever op-, Mr. C. V. Brown, state bank ex- <lb />
up in Winterville is at liar- was in town Friday. <lb />
Barber Harrington, Barber Co. have just <lb />
Misses Annie Flowers and Elizabeth received a large shipment of <lb />
Adams Tuesday evening in dress shirts for spring and summer. <lb />
j n , a beautiful line. Conic and see thorn, <lb />
. .,. , f, ., Mr. George Herbert Cox and Miss <lb />
If need any kind <lb />
, . Johnson made a pleasant trip <lb />
sec A. W. Ange A- Co. they ,,. H <lb />
Ayden Friday evening. <lb />
CaB yOU- J,. , Mr. Hugh Smith, of Greenville. <lb />
Mr. It. has moved his J <lb />
to Ayden to live, and Mr. will . <lb />
run a market and grocery business. <lb />
attended a <lb />
Harrington. Barber ft Co. are head- at Friday night <lb />
quarters for the best paint in all the <lb />
colors. <lb />
Mr. Taylor, of near Kin- <lb />
spent Wednesday In town with <lb />
his daughter. Mrs. J. L. Rollins. <lb />
and had a very pleasant time, con- <lb />
the long, lonesome drive. <lb />
misses gent's slippers, <lb />
in all the latest styles and colors, at <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb />
STATE AND COUNTY <lb />
NEWS <lb />
squad of plain clothes officers in an <lb />
inspection of a suspicious on <lb />
the south side of Market street, be- <lb />
tween Front and Second street, and <lb />
though the attendants locked all the <lb />
doors leading Into the back part of <lb />
Wright's Trip West. building a search upstairs was re- <lb />
U. H. Wright of the Train warded by finding of barrels of <lb />
School, returned Sunday from whiskey, in pint and quart bottles, <lb />
trip west. He attended the eighth barrels of beer and seven <lb />
r of the of opened barrels that resembled those <lb />
Cincinnati a. d the meeting of the containing the A list of the <lb />
The Best Pain Rem <lb />
NOAH'S LINIMENT gives relief for all Nerve, Bone <lb />
and Muscle Aches and Pain more quickly than <lb />
other remedy known. IT PENETRATES-It is <lb />
triple strength and a powerful, speedy and sure <lb />
PAIN REMEDY. Sold by all dealers in medicine at <lb />
per bottle and money back if not satisfactory <lb />
WHAT OTHERS SAY <lb />
Cured of <lb />
with tor <lb />
throe yours. Have Noah's <lb />
that II cured me com- <lb />
Can walk better I In two <lb />
years. Rev. B. B. Cyrus, Donald, C <lb />
For Cuts and Bruise <lb />
working at my trade I <lb />
get I find <lb />
I all the out <lb />
heal immediately. Edward <lb />
Ryan, <lb />
In <lb />
the North's liniment, <lb />
It has I me greatly. I <lb />
rheumatism m my and It relieved It <lb />
right much. A. Lambert, Bea- <lb />
Dam, <lb />
in tho Back <lb />
I ten with a dreadfully <lb />
sore pain In my and tried different re- <lb />
than half a bottle of Noah's <lb />
made a perfect cure. Mrs. Rev. J. <lb />
Point Eastern, <lb />
Cured of <lb />
five years with neuralgia <lb />
an-1 In ride. Could not sleep. tried <lb />
Noah's Liniment, the first application <lb />
me feel Mrs. Martha A. <lb />
Stiff Joints and Backaches <lb />
have used for <lb />
backache, and lean <lb />
say It did than any pain <lb />
Rev W. <lb />
Bronchitis and Asthma <lb />
has been suffering with <lb />
end a very bad cough, <lb />
confine to his bod. Some ore recommended <lb />
Noah's Liniment, and rubbed his chest and <lb />
back wit h It and gave him six drops on <lb />
and he war relieved Immediately. Mrs. A. L. <lb />
Better Than Remedies <lb />
have obtained good If not better re- <lb />
Noah's Liniment than we did from <lb />
costing per bottle. Norfolk <lb />
and Transfer Co., Norfolk, <lb />
WE HAVE A <lb />
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb />
AM ON C BEST <lb />
PEOPLE IN EASTERN <lb />
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb />
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb />
A BUSINESS Y TO TAKE <lb />
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL EM WHAT YOU <lb />
HA TO BRING TO THEIR <lb />
ATTENTION. <lb />
OUR ADVERTISING <lb />
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb />
BE HAD UPON <lb />
it Messrs. Tripp, <lb />
goods salesman <lb />
Han <lb />
Mr. William Smith, of Winterville. <lb />
I us moved family to <lb />
will occupy the Morris on <lb />
Third street. Mr. Smith engage <lb />
v business. <lb />
Pumps, Ind stones, horse <lb />
c . ; .-. lime, cement, dynamite, <lb />
pistols, cartridges, all sites and <lb />
kinds. <lb />
Ii Is little bi r m- that b e have <lb />
press brick machine in town and <lb />
then out i order their <lb />
from Because <lb />
he n Is <lb />
Mr. II C. Ormond was in <lb />
Monday and tells us hi never saw <lb />
worse. <lb />
Mr. Luke Mills, a very prosperous <lb />
farmer, near Greenville, spent Wed- <lb />
ilia on <lb />
Mrs. Cells of Snow Hill, <lb />
who has been spending a few days <lb />
hers visiting her daughter. Mrs. <lb />
P. Hart, returned home Monday. <lb />
Mr. J. Alfred Gardner, who has <lb />
been off on a business trip to Rich- <lb />
and Washington. C. re- <lb />
turned home Saturday. He tells <lb />
that the boys up in the United States <lb />
senate are looking for Governor W. <lb />
W. <lb />
Miss Dora is very sick <lb />
at her home on Seminary street. <lb />
Dick Taylor, an old colored man <lb />
who lives in South Ayden, was found <lb />
unconscious on the road by Dr. Sauls <lb />
When taken home and examined he <lb />
was found to be paralyzed. <lb />
The few pretty days has put <lb />
den on a boom. <lb />
The prayer meeting was <lb />
largely attended Sunday afternoon. <lb />
Many interesting talks were made by <lb />
the brethren F. Johnson <lb />
will lead the meeting at the Chris- <lb />
Sunday. Subject, <lb />
Duly to Children <lb />
p. in. Round Table. <lb />
of increasing Attend-1 Super Division of the Na- goods was secured for future use. <lb />
led by A it Ellington, Educational Association at St. <lb />
Holding the Scholar, led by It. C. <lb />
n and <lb />
p. in Mass meeting with <lb />
musical program and address by <lb />
Van Cartel on the Organized <lb />
Receives Terrific Blow In- <lb />
Is nil ins an interest- tended for Ills <lb />
ins of his trip in his morn- Stokes and J. M <lb />
at assembly. car for the <lb />
Before stalling on the western trip Company, are being held in <lb />
THE <lb />
The Bank <lb />
AT <lb />
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, I'd, 1912. <lb />
Sunday School to Wright attended a meeting of th city prison here awaiting the re- <lb />
the Division of County suit or the injuries to Carr <lb />
at whore on the Raleigh and Southern <lb />
be presented an outline of the plans division of the Raleigh, <lb />
Devotional <lb />
Service, <lb />
Rev G. C <lb />
Kingdom of Led by Rev. K <lb />
T. Phillips. A Rev. R. <lb />
Tingle, Prof R. C. M. <lb />
C P oil <lb />
a. Address, <lb />
of Prof P. C Nye. <lb />
a, m, Rep.; Commit- <lb />
tees and General Bus n <lb />
p. Song Service. <lb />
p. in <lb />
Sunday <lb />
l ES. <lb />
Loans and 22,903.64 Capital stock paid in. <lb />
Hanking house, furniture <lb />
Surplus fund . <lb />
. <lb />
Time certificates of deposit 2,202.00 <lb />
Vance Topic; the and purposes the Training School. Southern Railroad whom they struck <lb />
ever the head with a piece of Iron <lb />
the Raleigh and Southport yards <lb />
BETHEL, N. C, March 1812. evening. They were rally after <lb />
A marriage was quietly sol- Gales <lb />
on Wednesday afternoon is said to have the <lb />
p. in., Oil home of the bride's Iron injured Bradley, <lb />
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Car- father has been summoned from Kip- <lb />
son, near Bethel, when their ling to be with him here. <lb />
Miss Carson, bees. the rile Case Will be Laid <lb />
Round Mr. Sidney Car;, of <lb />
Discus N. C. Thursday <lb />
led by Profs. W, The ceremony which was witness-1 reference to <lb />
II. II. Smith C. V. Wilson, and It t; many friends and relatives the Myrtle Hawkins case solicitor, <lb />
II Wright, and Dr. P. the popular young couple, was A. Hall Johnson tonight stated. <lb />
B. Carroll H K. Tripp, J. W. Bryan, by the Rev. D. A. have nothing to say until <lb />
I p. in, Addresses. of the Methodist at which time he has announced <lb />
Training; The Teaching of the Les- <lb />
20.00 Deposits subject to cheek. <lb />
and fixture . <lb />
Due from banks and bank- <lb />
. <lb />
Gold coin . <lb />
Silver coin, including all <lb />
minor coin currency . <lb />
National bank notes and <lb />
other S. notes . 1,607.00 Certified checks . 13.10 <lb />
Expenses . 13.113 <lb />
205.63 <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
. <lb />
199.21 <lb />
Total, <lb />
. <lb />
son Rev. B. W Rev. B. <lb />
P. Smith and Ex-Gov. T. J. <lb />
p. m. The Question Box. Any <lb />
Sunday School worker many ask any <lb />
question <lb />
Benediction E. L. Brown. <lb />
to <lb />
Marriage Licenses. <lb />
Marriage licenses were issued <lb />
during last <lb />
Whit. <lb />
E. B. Koonce and Mary White. <lb />
G. M. Campbell and Kate <lb />
N. N, and Sallie Smith. <lb />
Colored. <lb />
George Langley and Ella <lb />
Willie Jenkins and Lillie Roberson <lb />
Jerry Langley an Moore. <lb />
Win Carr Lizzie Jacques. <lb />
Joe and Rose Johnson. <lb />
REPORT OF THE <lb />
The Bank of Ayden, <lb />
AT AIDES, <lb />
in the state of North Carolina, at the close of business. February 1912. <lb />
HI lit ES. <lb />
Loans and <lb />
Overdrafts, secured and <lb />
secured . 9.00 <lb />
Hanking house, furniture <lb />
and . 1.855.80 <lb />
Due from banks and bank- <lb />
. 68.063.54 <lb />
Cash Items . 20.00 <lb />
Gold coin . 157.50 <lb />
Silver coin, including all <lb />
minor coin currency. <lb />
National bank nor-s and <lb />
other S. notes . <lb />
6,013.00 <lb />
Total. <lb />
1179,279.04 <lb />
LIABILITIES <lb />
Capital paid <lb />
Surplus fund . <lb />
Undivided profits. cur- <lb />
rent expenses and taxes <lb />
paid . <lb />
Deposits subject to check. <lb />
Savings deposits . <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
. <lb />
his intention presenting all <lb />
drawing room where the touching upon case to the <lb />
took place was beautifully grand Jury. Officers are guarding what <lb />
orated with evergreens, ferns and they have wit utmost <lb />
bride roses and the bride, entering but keen interest is felt In the <lb />
her maid of honor, Miss Blanche matter. It Is confidently expected that <lb />
Carr, of a sister of the developments will take place <lb />
groom, proceeded to the altar which during the latter part of the week, <lb />
v.-as surmounted by an arch of <lb />
where the solemn rites were <lb />
performed. The bride wore a stylish <lb />
an going away gown, with hat and <lb />
to harmonize, and carried a <lb />
bouquet of brides roses. <lb />
Miss Blanche Carr, maid of honor, <lb />
was handsomely gowned in white <lb />
meteor, trimmed with pearls and <lb />
She curried a bouquet of white <lb />
carnations. <lb />
The bridal party entered to the <lb />
strains of Lohengrin's Processional. <lb />
While the ceremony was being per- <lb />
Schubert's Serenade was <lb />
rendered and <lb />
march was played as a re- <lb />
Miss Ruth Carson, of Beth- <lb />
el acting as pianist. <lb />
Mr. James Carr, of a <lb />
of the was the best <lb />
man. The happy couple left by the <lb />
afternoon for Florida and <lb />
18.125.00 points South <lb />
I The friends of Miss Allie G Little <lb />
were most charmingly entertained <lb />
during the week at a week <lb />
93,406.9 <lb />
37.125.32 <lb />
. end party at her beautiful country <lb />
near Bethel. Among those pres- <lb />
Cheatham, Lillian Goodrich. Chris- <lb />
. 336.59 tine Jones, Mary <lb />
Of and Messrs. <lb />
Tom Andrews, M, P, Manning. <lb />
v of Best <lb />
Wool- <lb />
aid. Dr. c o Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
V. Sta- <lb />
ii ii t <lb />
Total, <lb />
Slate of Caroling Coast of Pill, <lb />
I. Hodge, Cashier the above-named bank, do solemnly swear P E, Mayo. Mr, and Mrs. I <lb />
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief, ten. Dr. and Mrs. V. A. Ward <lb />
Subscribed and sworn in before me, <lb />
ii, . . ; . <lb />
t JONES,<lb />
Mi commission expires Jan 1914 <lb />
STANCILL HODGES, Cashier. <lb />
tr <lb />
J. R. SMITH. <lb />
Ii C, CANNON, <lb />
Directors. <lb />
Nun Everett John <lb />
I nice Raided Market Street <lb />
rant <lb />
I Wilmington.--Chief of Police John <lb />
J. Fowler yesterday afternoon led a <lb />
Stale North of I'll I, <lb />
I. C. T. Cox, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb />
the above statement is to best of my knowledge and belief. <lb />
C. T. COX. Cashier. <lb />
Subscribed and sworn to before me. <lb />
this 26th day of February. 1912. <lb />
JESSE L. ROLLINS, <lb />
Notary Public. <lb />
My commission expires Jan. 1914. <lb />
J. E. GREEN, <lb />
J. P. HARRINGTON, <lb />
A. W, ANGE, <lb />
Directors. <lb />
Read The Daily Reflector for All the Mews <lb />
VOLUME <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH It, 1912. <lb />
II. <lb />
CHAPEL <lb />
GIVES WILSON <lb />
Tar Heel Students Conduct a Mock <lb />
Election <lb />
North CaroliN Elks Meet. <lb />
NEW BERN, X. C. March <lb />
city is gaily decorated in honor of <lb />
Elk who are here from all parts <lb />
of the state to intend the annual con- <lb />
of the North Carolina As- <lb />
of the Benevolent and Pro- <lb />
of the Elks which <lb />
Strength of Candidate over opened here today of a three day's <lb />
and Republicans Session. As this is also the tenth an <lb />
NEW JERSEY m FIRST CHOICE <lb />
STATE <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS FROM <lb />
ALL OVER THE OLD <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
Prove to he Strong <lb />
Chances t Heat Him. <lb />
for Their <lb />
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, March <lb />
The most interesting thing that has <lb />
happened at the University the past <lb />
aside from regular work of <lb />
the college, was the mock election for <lb />
President of the United States held <lb />
Thursday under the auspices of <lb />
the Tar Heel, the college newspaper. <lb />
The polls were opened at a. in. <lb />
and remained open until p. m. <lb />
The general voting place was at the <lb />
of the New Lodge of <lb />
order, a particularly elaborate <lb />
program of entertainments has been <lb />
by the local members. <lb />
New Owners Will Far. <lb />
on Full Time. <lb />
Dallas cotton mill, <lb />
the sale of which in pro- <lb />
was noted ill this <lb />
so your correspondent <lb />
is Informed by reliable persons, be <lb />
put into full operation again at once. <lb />
Violated a God <lb />
given <lb />
Federal Wise Raps American Sugar Co. De- <lb />
is one of the Most Extraordinary Cases <lb />
Ever Brought to Court, Not in the Nature of the <lb />
Charges, But Because of the Character of the <lb />
Men That Made Them Possible <lb />
LAWYER READS TENTH COMMANDMENT TO THE <lb />
JURY <lb />
Y. M, C. A., but the faculty had ii <lb />
voting place at the <lb />
Office. The candidates voted on <lb />
Wilson, Harmon, Underwood, Clark, <lb />
Taft. mid Debs. <lb />
Every voter was allowed to make a <lb />
first and second choice. <lb />
A total ballot was cast. <lb />
Woodrow Wilson received per <lb />
of the Democratic vote and 71.1 <lb />
per cent the total vote for first <lb />
choice. Oscar Underwood <lb />
T. L. who was the <lb />
bidder for valuable piece <lb />
of properly, having secured for <lb />
sold it Immediately to company <lb />
composed of Mr. John C. Rankin, and <lb />
S. If. Robinson Lowell. Mr. C. B. <lb />
Mason of Charlotte and others. <lb />
YORK, March <lb />
outlined its case today against <lb />
Washington II. Thomas, chairman of <lb />
th American Sugar Company; <lb />
John E. Parsons, th year old law- <lb />
who was formerly the company's <lb />
chief counsel, the three associates, all <lb />
I of whom were placed on trial, <lb />
ed with violation of the criminal <lb />
clause of the Sherman anti-trust law. <lb />
Nearly witnesses have been <lb />
subpoenaed and almost us many arc <lb />
likely to testify for the The <lb />
trial promises to last many weeks. <lb />
is one of the most <lb />
eases ever brought into <lb />
II id Federal Prosecutor Wise in his <lb />
opening address, In the nature <lb />
the charges but became of the <lb />
character of the men who allowed <lb />
themselves to engage in the acts that <lb />
shall lay before you. These defend- <lb />
WORLD <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS <lb />
FROM EVERYWHERE <lb />
TOLD BY WIRE <lb />
to Officer W. H. <lb />
Elected <lb />
Florida Tampa. <lb />
TAMPA, March the <lb />
principal business streets and <lb />
of the city are handsomely <lb />
crated with American -lags and WALK QUESTION DISCUSSED <lb />
emblem of the Knights of Pythias. I <lb />
in honor of the visiting Knights, <lb />
Sisters and member of the <lb />
form rank of the order, who have <lb />
The board of Aldermen held a spec- <lb />
meeting last night to consider <lb />
gathered here from all parts of the several matters of importance. <lb />
State to attend the annual meeting of j The to come up was in <lb />
the Grand Lodge of the Florida K. regard to the use of the Are horse by <lb />
of P, and of the affiliated town. Some time ago Hope Fire <lb />
The opening session of the Company offered to pay out of <lb />
was held treasury, provided the town would <lb />
morning the Greeson An the balance, to purchase a horse <lb />
He read the tenth commandment to <lb />
the Jury and declared that, it was the <lb />
foundation of the Sherman law with program for the used only connection with <lb />
defendant of the visiting knights and ladies fire department. After the horse <lb />
violation of which the <lb />
are charge. For twenty years, he been arranged by the three local <lb />
said, they had violated the law and <lb />
had acquired during that time control <lb />
cent of the sugar industry <lb />
the country when, in 1903, they <lb />
saw a Competitor in th form of the <lb />
Pennsylvania Refining Company, <lb />
which, at a cost of built <lb />
and a refinery at <lb />
lodges. <lb />
Hoy With <lb />
Larceny. <lb />
bole In a sack <lb />
Hour led to the arrest of Sam King. <lb />
as second choice for here today on the m not <lb />
dent. Din Of votes cast at the fat- of breaking open six freight cars L or . <lb />
precinct were Wilson. I tart tobacco and <lb />
Underwood, Harmon, for were strewn for some distance <lb />
flora the car. It is said that there <lb />
was a sprinkle of Hour from the car <lb />
ton point near the boy's home, three- <lb />
quarter of a mile distant. This <lb />
tor <lb />
Roosevelt and i The vote <lb />
for first choice the different can- <lb />
was Wilson Roosevelt <lb />
Underwood Taft Harmon <lb />
Smith vi Methodist <lb />
purchased the aldermen wanted <lb />
to use him for hauling trash of the <lb />
streets and back lots. This was <lb />
en under consideration by the Are <lb />
who agreed mat <lb />
have tho privilege hauling <lb />
of the law handed down by God <lb />
to In the tenth <lb />
THE COMMANDMENT <lb />
Clark Bryan officer followed, resulting In an <lb />
As second Choice for the presidency <lb />
Underwood received votes, <lb />
SO. Wilson Clark Taft <lb />
Roosevelt Bryan <lb />
Deb Fobs <lb />
The question which is of most <lb />
importance to the voters of <lb />
Orange county Just now is that of a <lb />
bond issue good roads. Tho <lb />
has been brought into the <lb />
controversy because of the fact that <lb />
one of the leading professor ha <lb />
written two articles for the Chapel <lb />
Hill News attacking the proposition <lb />
us unsound. statement has been <lb />
made, with this as a basis, that <lb />
per cent of the faculty is opposed to <lb />
I he progressive measure. In order <lb />
to verify this statement every <lb />
of the has been inter- <lb />
on the matter. Every one of <lb />
the with the single exception <lb />
II. H. Williams is In <lb />
favor of the bond Issue. <lb />
arrest. <lb />
Advance Change Hands. <lb />
Roberson Advance <lb />
changed hands today. Mr. Samuel <lb />
Edward sold his interest to Mr. G. <lb />
S. who will in future be <lb />
editor and proprietor. <lb />
EDITOR DANIELS IMPROVING <lb />
IS RECOVERING OPERATION <lb />
Thou shall not covet thy <lb />
neighbor's house. Hum shalt not <lb />
thy neighbor's nor <lb />
his until servant, nor his <lb />
nor his ox, nor his <lb />
nor anything is thy <lb />
neighbor's. <lb />
FARMERS HEADS LIST. <lb />
lo The Till <lb />
Fair. <lb />
Al the last muling or the Pitt <lb />
county branch of the Farmers <lb />
held the union headed the <lb />
list of premium for the next Pitt <lb />
fair with a donation of <lb />
and. Secretary It. L. writes us <lb />
the union will give more if It <lb />
is necessary. The union gave hearty <lb />
co-operation to the fair last year and <lb />
re ready to do the same thing for <lb />
the success of the next fair. <lb />
March from Evans street and the <lb />
Nearly three hundred Methodist min- lot In the immediate lire district <lb />
the southwestern part of tween the court house and Five Points, <lb />
Kansas and the northern portion or provided the town would hire a keep- <lb />
Oklahoma are in attendance at the and driver for the horse, who <lb />
thirteenth annual session of the have Bleeping quarters in the <lb />
Southwest Kansas confer- municipal building and be under tho <lb />
which opened here today at the direction the lire department <lb />
Methodist church. Bishop Rob-1 When the aldermen at the regular <lb />
en of Paul is presiding Thursday night made <lb />
i lie conference, which will for the driver, they <lb />
until Monday, <lb />
Shooters nil <lb />
NEW YORK. March <lb />
3.1 <lb />
Nobody dropped dead with surprise <lb />
when the colonel said he was a can-<lb />
also <lb />
prescribed as one of his duties the <lb />
the Are hone to the street <lb />
i sprinkler on the paved street be- <lb />
the court house and the A. C. <lb />
L railroad, The Bremen did <lb />
and of the horse being used to the <lb />
Manager of the Jersey City <lb />
team of the international be <lb />
League sailed today for Bermuda, and <lb />
where th Players will get into meet- <lb />
for the coming season. <lb />
team will spend three weeks In Ham- <lb />
ENDORSE JUSTICE CLARK <lb />
It HEEL EDITOR SLOWLY <lb />
COVERING FROM SERIOUS <lb />
OPERATION PER. <lb />
FORMED <lb />
March Editor Jo- <lb />
Daniels, of the Raleigh News <lb />
and Observer, and democratic com- <lb />
active In the preparations <lb />
Bond Issue Carries. or the approaching democratic <lb />
a campaign convention, is Improving rather <lb />
slower than w; ii hoped for from the <lb />
resembled In intensity and zeal <lb />
speakers, a presidential Issue, the <lb />
bond subscription of for the <lb />
Randolph and Cumberland Railroad <lb />
was carried today In town- <lb />
where is located. <lb />
Out of a registration of five hundred <lb />
and sixty-seven votes, about <lb />
hundred were east In favor the <lb />
issue. The bonds will not be paid <lb />
until the road Is completed to Win- <lb />
It Is expected that the <lb />
road will assist materially in <lb />
oping this section. Winston had <lb />
ready voted as her part In <lb />
subscription to the road. <lb />
lather Complicated operation ho <lb />
in Rex Hospital here two <lb />
weeks ago. However, the attend- <lb />
say there is no <lb />
for that the v. <lb />
tor anxiety as to bis <lb />
and that the fevers that have <lb />
repeatedly are due to over <lb />
exertion through reading and undue <lb />
effort to keep In touch with events <lb />
and business during the <lb />
lime he Is shut in. They hope to <lb />
him out In a couple of weeks. <lb />
GETTING BACK <lb />
EX-GOVERNOR IS GETTING READY <lb />
When you have rheumatism ill your <lb />
foot or apply Chamberlains Li- <lb />
and you will get quick relief. <lb />
II costs bin a Why <lb />
For sale by all dealers. <lb />
THEIR UNION PASSED A <lb />
TO ENDORSE THE FAX- <lb />
OF CHIEF HAL- <lb />
CLARK <lb />
RALEIGH, X. C, March The <lb />
Painters and Union held <lb />
their regular monthly meeting last <lb />
night and beside their routine work, <lb />
unanimously passed resolutions en- <lb />
Judge Walter Clark United <lb />
States senator. <lb />
This action last night was In ac- <lb />
cord with resolutions that <lb />
have been passed by several unions <lb />
in this and other cities. This union <lb />
has not been organized In this <lb />
try for any long period, but its <lb />
is considered large for a city <lb />
of this size. Another matter trans- <lb />
acted at the meeting last night was <lb />
appointment of a chairman, who <lb />
will have charge of all matters that <lb />
tome before the union relative to <lb />
Hit action of Judge Clark. <lb />
Bermuda and Will return home <lb />
ill time to play the exhibition <lb />
game with tho Giants at the <lb />
round In this city on April <lb />
PARDONS WHITSON <lb />
ESCAPED TO KENTUCKY <lb />
If you have in getting rid of <lb />
your cold you may know that you are <lb />
treating it properly. There is no <lb />
reason why a cold should bang on for <lb />
weeks and it will not if you take <lb />
For <lb />
sale by all dealers. <lb />
h BEEN BESTING <lb />
PREPARATORY TO START <lb />
SENATORIAL <lb />
CAMPAIGN <lb />
RALEIGH, March New <lb />
from ex-Governor B. is <lb />
he is rapidly gaining in health <lb />
and In preparation for get- <lb />
into an aggressive campaign for <lb />
the United States senate to succeed <lb />
railed stales Senator Simmons. The <lb />
ex-governor is in University <lb />
Philadelphia, taking special treat- <lb />
for a case of <lb />
with complications that has ham- <lb />
him for several years. <lb />
So much so that his friend have heel. <lb />
Very anxious about him. He expect <lb />
return to Raleigh within a month <lb />
ready for the campaign and will <lb />
make his opening Campaign speech <lb />
in Raleigh soon thereafter. <lb />
John W. <lb />
P., has three children and like <lb />
Children they frequently take <lb />
have tried several kinds of rough <lb />
he says, have never <lb />
found any yet that did them as much <lb />
Col. Grimes Coming. <lb />
Hon. J. Bryan Grimes, secretary of <lb />
state, will attend the next monthly <lb />
meeting of the Union of <lb />
Pitt county, which will be held on <lb />
Saturday, April 13th and address the <lb />
union. A good speech Is In store Chamberlain's Cough Rome- <lb />
all who attend that meeting. id. For sale by U dealer. <lb />
His BETRAYED AMI BROUGHT <lb />
BACK TO <lb />
CHAPTER IN CRIMINAL <lb />
HISTORY <lb />
RALEIGH, N. On March <lb />
Thomas II. whose sentence <lb />
death for murder In Mitchell <lb />
many years ago, subsequent com- <lb />
mutation to thirty years, together <lb />
with bis escape from the penitentiary <lb />
after beginning his sentence <lb />
has formed a rather romantic <lb />
in North Carolina's criminal an- <lb />
need no longer fear a Church <lb />
or business rival. He was granted the <lb />
a conditional pardon today by <lb />
nor and he may now return <lb />
to his home in Kentucky, without <lb />
danger of being surrendered to the <lb />
Mr. was convicted in the <lb />
Spring of 1892 of murder -there be- <lb />
no second degree murder <lb />
that <lb />
cold. his sentence was <lb />
ed to thirty years. Shortly after be- <lb />
sentenced be escaped from <lb />
on and went to Kentucky. Where he <lb />
lived well and became a good citizen. <lb />
A business or church rival bet rayed <lb />
Mm <lb />
night a committee was appointed to <lb />
With the aldermen and advise <lb />
against the horse and driver doing <lb />
this work. After hearing the com- <lb />
the aldermen agreed With tho <lb />
of the Bremen as best protect- <lb />
the interests of tho town in case <lb />
Ore and curtailed the work of <lb />
and driver to the trash haul- <lb />
in the lire district only. <lb />
The board took cognizance of tho <lb />
recent death of Night Policeman W. <lb />
II. in the adoption a res- <lb />
which is published in another <lb />
column. The matter or a successor <lb />
him was discussed and was de- <lb />
to go Into an election at once. <lb />
Five applicants were placed in <lb />
J. C. West. J. R. <lb />
A. Forbes. K. T, and Louis <lb />
Wilson A ballot was taken on which <lb />
1-. Ins received votes, West and <lb />
Wilson and It. A. Forbes was de- <lb />
elected night policeman. <lb />
A came to the board that <lb />
for the better convenience and com- <lb />
fort of and shoppers, <lb />
of sweeping the street in tho <lb />
business section be changed from <lb />
iii the afternoon to early in tho <lb />
morning. This brought out <lb />
the aldermen already <lb />
had change under consideration <lb />
i were only waiting for good <lb />
weather to put it Into and <lb />
th work done early in the morn- <lb />
The matter of putting the town in <lb />
condition to meet the requirement of <lb />
government department <lb />
the establishment of city mall de- <lb />
livery, something tho re- <lb />
have entitled Greenville to for <lb />
now nearly two years, was discussed <lb />
sonic length. invitation Post- <lb />
master R. C. Flanagan made an In- <lb />
talk to the board on <lb />
on 5th <lb />
v. L.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
IS <lb />
TO HAVE THAT <lb />
MODERN <lb />
IN <lb />
III ME ran <lb />
People Subscribe the Disappears After fiend is <lb />
Stock <lb />
Put Up <lb />
PROCTOR BROTHERS FURNISH REST WILSON WAN GLADLY PAYS <lb />
I PROFESSIONAL AND <lb />
BUSINESS CARDS. <lb />
NEW YORK, March careful bodies and coats airy from <lb />
study of the latest models exhibited modes. <lb />
; the noted makers of fashion the most casual at the <lb />
Fart and here leads to the conclusion ,.,. models reveals the fact that the <lb />
that the rogue of the seam tight long waist has at last It- <lb />
is approaching vanishing alter two of in- <lb />
That does not mean the There are short waists <lb />
return of the crinoline may be ex- tiny belong with certain <lb />
an day; it merely means that ,,, rock; hut the normal waist is the <lb />
the autocrat of fashion have, for the , it cornea a revival of <lb />
present, the extreme snug- girdles, of corsets clipping <lb />
i skirts and, while still clinging ., trifle more snugly at the <lb />
i,. the slender silhouettes, than has been the <lb />
mo,. is on a more conservative Si a.-, <lb />
basis, ii which <lb />
,. of movement and <lb />
,. Id to I <lb />
IS. <lb />
k,, n the tailored Bull <lb />
Mr. B. W. Moseley, one of the hotel county recently had a blind <lb />
committee, Informs us tins , . out of the ordinary. The <lb />
morning that the new hotel is latter part Mr. J. H. <lb />
ad. The committee n In . of Fountain, was i <lb />
and Mr. W. K. Proctor i warrant ch i <lb />
has accepted the proposition to put He was u o <lb />
in the other two-thirds of the amount . -id in jail. <lb />
proposed to expend on the hotel, a , ;. Moore, When on i <lb />
charter will t applied for once, , and stood <lb />
and the and plans tor Owen's bond In the i <lb />
beginning work on the building l tor preliminary <lb />
as soon thereafter as C. i. Rountree, and i I <lb />
possible. Owens was released coal i lines In Bi <lb />
T H Hector was in error In stat- When el u March arrived models. In others it assumes a <lb />
that the tenants occupying the j . Moo . bondsman, again character. The <lb />
property where th hotel is to be to Qt Owens, the defend- It Is i <lb />
i bad been notified to vacate did up. The opening <lb />
of April. II will lake a of Owens greatly disturbed discreetly Oiled, though In dress <lb />
fen months to gel all in readiness i ,, and he sough counsel frocks I u I insists <lb />
begin work and the present ten- m learn how b of chiffon or laced Bounces which <lb />
will given notice In ample the situation. II was advised I i underskirts <lb />
time when to vacate. . could ion b his paying the the Americans have never <lb />
soliciting committee, Messrs. bond, whereupon, he went to the clerk this Be of the <lb />
D. W C T. w. ,. superior court and planked up the Even where there is <lb />
Dall, Jr., did some good work In saying he was glad to rid in the new lingerie and <lb />
in n <lb />
With the lowering the line <lb />
he d v of the bell this <lb />
blouse Is once a. <lb />
Ii i u. <lb />
Mouses, cream <lb />
. with their dark skirts. <lb />
but age us figure de- <lb />
the <lb />
In colt the fall <lb />
rt turn of t be <lb />
. a less draw n <lb />
lion in the n of the blouse <lb />
is Ilk I The blouse <lb />
. i may still be <lb />
. but it w ill be absolute- <lb />
imperative. Women arc not going <lb />
back to the days of the <lb />
available for all purposes, but the <lb />
does match <lb />
skirt will be less obnoxious upon <lb />
the ordinary figure than has been. <lb />
The blouse has become <lb />
SCHEDULE <lb />
Raleigh, Jan- <lb />
B, <lb />
YEAR BOUND <lb />
a. Atlanta, Birmingham, <lb />
Mi and points West, Jackson- <lb />
ville and Florida points, <lb />
at Hamlet tor Charlotte <lb />
Wilmington. <lb />
SEABOARD <lb />
a. <lb />
with coaches and parlor car. Con- <lb />
with steamer tor Washington. <lb />
Baltimore. New Boston and <lb />
id <lb />
THE FLORIDA FAST <lb />
w. t. <lb />
Attorney at Law <lb />
Office opposite K. L. Co'S. <lb />
and next doer to John Flan- <lb />
Buggy new building. <lb />
cm Sort Carolina, <lb />
raising the 120.000 subscriptions. <lb />
North Industries. <lb />
The Chattanooga n ; <lb />
the following new Industries for the <lb />
,., ;, . M <lb />
Burlington com- <lb />
Chapel<lb />
ii n <lb />
. , etc <lb />
mo i and an air of solution of the problem <lb />
ii .-s are retained by presents is. ii when one <lb />
dilemma. <lb />
t is Bit <lb />
his bonds- length trimming lines or by lo make a blouse to match a wool cos- <lb />
,, a.,. ,,, relieve him- lines o bod and i I tame cool enough tor comfort, <lb />
la relieve Owens I perhaps running to full becoming and slightly greasy. Ms <lb />
. War- Tin crossing 1- admirable qualities will keep it in <lb />
. g anywhere in tulle bands the I evidence this season, and one <lb />
Carolina. seen i finds II In all degrees o elaboration <lb />
, sin h riding too I a h blouse In which laces, <lb />
and b, play an bu i i <lb />
i- part, to the <lb />
hi b, the dark veiling <lb />
and Si <lb />
sleepers, coaches and dinning <lb />
car els at Richmond with <lb />
c. sh with <lb />
I. O. PI <lb />
burp . points west. <lb />
THE MAIL -No. II. <lb />
p, m. Charlotte, <lb />
mini i m, his <lb />
and points cars lo <lb />
Hamlet <lb />
p. in. No. <lb />
Oxford and <lb />
Una. <lb />
p. in. No. SO to <lb />
O. for Cincinnati and points west. <lb />
Memphis, and points west, Jack- <lb />
and all Florida points <lb />
Pullman sleepers. Atlanta <lb />
a. in. <lb />
IS Richmond a. <lb />
Washington a. m. New York <lb />
p. in. mi. station. Pullman <lb />
arrive to Washington and New <lb />
York. <lb />
f. It. ;. P. A- Ya. <lb />
N. V. <lb />
at Law <lb />
Office formerly occupied by J. L, <lb />
Fleming <lb />
North Carolina, <lb />
In <lb />
j. r <lb />
at <lb />
Build on the Court <lb />
lie <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
I. Moon W. <lb />
at Law <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
v. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
II. V. M. D. <lb />
Greenville i with Dr. D. L. James <lb />
i to disease of the <lb />
Eye, liar, Nose and Throat <lb />
. N. Carolina.<lb />
Law <lb />
Office in building. st <lb />
Practices wherever his services are <lb />
desired <lb />
North <lb />
Durham company. I <lb />
milling com <lb />
pan <lb />
Lincolnton is <lb />
of cotton and <lb />
Na- i i milling i <lb />
Devi <lb />
EATING HIS <lb />
N. S. <lb />
H IS hi IN CAM <lb />
II I <lb />
i oil w n <lb />
r ii be bro <lb />
., i x girdle trick i <lb />
. i A so fed iii I <lb />
a tube In which th <lb />
line is given I <lb />
i rub I much <lb />
Frankly belted or girded is <lb />
e to the base of the <lb />
than a <lb />
., I i <lb />
. i or la Us. <lb />
a re Is, so tar, g I <lb />
Ii blouses, but <lb />
are m tire new <lb />
IT <lb />
II. M. <lb />
Civil Engineer Attorney rt Law <lb />
. i I <lb />
hosiery mill John-son, Mt. Holly, <lb />
Ronda- lumber brought to sent <lb />
Rah bank; en to bis i having <lb />
ex lint may <lb />
telephone con.- his l lie the <lb />
i s ago and went <lb />
F. D. to a numb i cities. He <lb />
company. boarded M <lb />
electric com- r tear I <lb />
company. I I was being <lb />
Jo City. He hoped to <lb />
Notice of heal Ilia city where In <lb />
We announce to our Friends and honed k <lb />
we, Pulley and Bow- <lb />
en. will by nm- home.<lb />
of us will continue in business. <lb />
Mr. Pulley occupying one store and <lb />
Mr. Bowen Hie other, each with a <lb />
line of merchandise enabling <lb />
to supply the needs of our <lb />
as before. We ask all Custom- <lb />
indebted to the firm to come in <lb />
at once and make immediate pay- <lb />
in order to close our book ac- <lb />
counts <lb />
w iii n of Ii I lies In t . I i other <lb />
show Hie Russian and and and in <lb />
March . George mentioned above although Hi<lb />
ii ii. Hoyle, paste ; a. B. Ellington, <lb />
ll. l. Bu i i <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Luring the fourteen he <lb />
i e ear be got neither food to <lb />
nor water to drink. He was locked <lb />
ill the car straight <lb />
through. When it arrived at Johnson <lb />
City and was opened. Johnson was <lb />
din a helpless condition and <lb />
unable to speak above a whisper. He <lb />
was frozen from his waist down and <lb />
when taken to the lire, blood issued <lb />
from every pore of that part of the <lb />
Thanking our friends for past pat- Ho WM medical <lb />
and trusting that we may <lb />
continue to have your trade, we are. <lb />
Respectfully yours. <lb />
PULLEY <lb />
today <lb />
attention and while he is yet in a <lb />
condition he may survive the <lb />
shock of the experience <lb />
-j <lb />
mi VI Oil <lb />
Set lei <lb />
, Ian No regular <lb />
Johns n. i ; k <lb />
l i <lb />
Rev. W. u. pastor, <lb />
Lodges and Social <lb />
Sheriff <lb />
I. Dudley. <lb />
Greenville No. A. F. A. <lb />
R. Williams, W. M.; U H. Pender, <lb />
Sec. <lb />
Sharon, No. A. F. A. M. <lb />
NIGHT EXPRESS <lb />
IN II I lit I .-1 i lilt <lb />
N. H I fig <lb />
urea published Information ONLY <lb />
am <lb />
GUI IN; HIE <lb />
East Bound <lb />
a. m. Dall, lit K Pull <lb />
She; lug i I <lb />
a in Daily, <lb />
t its ii i k B ii <lb />
Ben Ice tie ti tor all ; ti <lb />
North t <lb />
p, m. Dully, excel I B ind , <lb />
Bound <lb />
a. m. fur Wilson and <lb />
Bleeping Cat <lb />
connects Norm, and West <lb />
ti s. Ward C. C, <lb />
u N o, Greenville, <lb />
v. k E <lb />
Attorneys it Law <lb />
Practice In all the <lb />
In Woolen building on Third <lb />
Street <lb />
Attorney at law <lb />
North <lb />
Girt <lb />
M. KN <lb />
Office bi Bo r In n building, <lb />
on Third BI . court house. <lb />
Dally, for <lb />
tot <lb />
Clerk Superior C. Moore. H. Harding. W. M ; E E. S <lb />
Register of Moore. <lb />
ll. Wilson. <lb />
Chas. OIL Laughing- <lb />
house. <lb />
C. <lb />
P. D. <lb />
J. Holland. J. J. May, M. K. EvanS, V. O. L. H. Fender, R. <lb />
Wilson and <lb />
all points <lb />
p. in Dally, for Wilson nod Hal <lb />
Broiler Car service. <lb />
Greenville Chapter No. n. A. For further Information and res- <lb />
R. C. Flanagan, J. B. Wins- of Sleeping Car <lb />
low, to J- L- HASSELL, Agent, <lb />
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. O. N. C. <lb />
Tuesday night at W. R. RUMOR, W. <lb />
7-30. K. O. Flanagan. N. O., General Supt. O. P. J. <lb />
Virginia. <lb />
W, E. <lb />
Mr. T. <lb />
Many friends here were pained to <lb />
Notice learn this morning of the death of <lb />
I will he the following places to the wife of Representative John T. <lb />
the and county taxes. Thorns, of Mrs. <lb />
Meet me and save formerly Miss Bettie and <lb />
Bethel township. Bethel, March they had been married but little over Spain. C <lb />
Farmville township, Farmville, a year. Much sympathy is express- W. Tucker. <lb />
March id for in his great L. Allen <lb />
township, Ayden, March row.<lb />
Swift Creek township, Repeals Attack of Death. Baptist, O, M. <lb />
March <lb />
Falkland township, Fountain. March <lb />
Town. <lb />
M. Woolen. <lb />
C. Tyson. <lb />
L. Carr. <lb />
Chief of T. Smith. <lb />
Fire D. <lb />
E. Nobles, E, M.- <lb />
w. A. Bowen, J. s. <lb />
K. Davenport, ii. F. Tyson. Z. I. Van- <lb />
Dyke. H. C. Edwards. <lb />
Water and Light <lb />
A. C. F. S., D. W. <lb />
Treas. <lb />
Greenville Encampment No. I, <lb />
O. O. F.-D. W, C. P.; <lb />
H. Pender, Scribe. <lb />
Covenant No. I. O. O. <lb />
Drown. N. G.; L. Pender, Sec. <lb />
Tribe No. I. <lb />
W. Sachem; J. <lb />
C. of R. <lb />
ASk V in it m <lb />
of Can <lb />
Tell You All About II. <lb />
Home endorsement, the public ex- <lb />
of Greenville people, should <lb />
b evidence dispute every <lb />
Greenville reader. Surely Che <lb />
Tar River No. K. of I. of friends and neighbors, cheer- <lb />
A fully given by will carry more <lb />
K o R S than the utterances of Rims, Steel Tires <lb />
Tar River Ruling No. F. M on residing In far away places, <lb />
W, Brown, W. It.; J. W. Little. <lb />
I. Ill IS <lb />
Chronic disease a specialty, <lb />
kin-ion and Greenville. <lb />
o'er Frank Wilson's <lb />
tore. a. in. to p, in. Mon- <lb />
Wednesdays and Friday. Tel- <lb />
connection, <lb />
free. <lb />
JOHN I. SHUT, <lb />
Rocky N. c. <lb />
Send me your idea to develop. <lb />
ARC LAND <lb />
Let mo enrich your purse <lb />
I BELL LANDS <lb />
FRANCIS L. IVES <lb />
ESTATE it no it <lb />
X. <lb />
Gardner's Shop <lb />
If you want the best Cart Wheels <lb />
manufactured in County go to <lb />
Shop and ask for a pair of <lb />
DIXIE WHEELS <lb />
Hire h Hubs, split White Oak <lb />
of Death. <lb />
years ago two doctors told <lb />
me had only two years <lb />
This startling statement was made <lb />
township. Grimesland, March Green. Malachite, Col. <lb />
told me I die with consumption <lb />
township, March <lb />
township. Bell's X Roads, <lb />
March <lb />
Carolina township, Stokes, March <lb />
It was up to me then to try the best <lb />
lung medicine and I began to use <lb />
King's New Discovery. It was <lb />
well I did, for today I am working <lb />
and believe I owe my life to this <lb />
great throat and lung that has <lb />
township. Arthur. the grave another <lb />
ills folly to suffer with coughs, colds <lb />
throat and lung troubles now. Take <lb />
the cure that's cents <lb />
and Trial bottle free at all <lb />
druggists. <lb />
March <lb />
S. I. DUDLEY, <lb />
Sheriff. Pitt County. <lb />
W. C. <lb />
The most case of insomnia <lb />
is disorders of the stomach. <lb />
Rock, pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; Stomach and Liver Tablets <lb />
disorder and enable <lb />
For sale by all dealers. <lb />
C. w. Wilson, superintendent of Bun-j correct <lb />
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary. to <lb />
regular pastor. <lb />
Episcopal, St. rector it WHITE BLACK <lb />
present; H. Harding, senior warden I for quick delivery at reasonable <lb />
and secretary of Vestry; W. A. Bowen prices. R. C. Flanagan, <lb />
superintendent of Sunday school. <lb />
Stop Look Listen <lb />
THIS SPACE IS THE HOME OF <lb />
Mrs. Fannie Moore, Pitt St., <lb />
Greenville. N. C. feel very <lb />
grateful the relief have <lb />
ed from Kidney Pills. Which <lb />
I obtained from the John I. <lb />
Dug Co. Backache annoyed me and <lb />
there was much lameness and weak- <lb />
through my loins. My kidneys <lb />
did not do their work as they should <lb />
and the kidney secretions bothered <lb />
me. Kidney Pills gave me re- <lb />
lief from these symptoms of kidney <lb />
complaint and Improved my <lb />
in every <lb />
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb />
cents. Co. Buffalo, <lb />
New York, sole agents tor tile United <lb />
Stales. <lb />
pair guaranteed. <lb />
comer from the <lb />
workmen. <lb />
around the <lb />
market. <lb />
REPAIR SHOP, <lb />
Greenville. X. <lb />
FLOWERS <lb />
you want the best, remember <lb />
we are at your services. <lb />
Hoses, Carnations, <lb />
and Wedding In <lb />
the Latest Styles. <lb />
Floral offerings artistically arranged <lb />
at short notice. <lb />
I. Co. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
The Twin Stores <lb />
TO TAX-PAYERS, <lb />
Taxes for the 1911 are long <lb />
past due, and the time has almost <lb />
arrived when I will nave to collect, SILK. <lb />
Those who are yet delinquent should ., ,,,.,.,, . ,, <lb />
come ward and pay, so as to avoid <lb />
costs being added. sized ears, one mid often <lb />
All who fail lo pay by April 1st, will to the Good tor all early or it Low Prices, <lb />
hate to pay costs. late crops. Very white. <lb />
This February l-2 bushel peck Send Fifth Avenue, Broadway, old New York. <lb />
S. I. Sheriff. ,.,. , <lb />
NAPPER BROWN <lb />
I J. <lb />
Remember the Agent for <lb />
take no other. <lb />
Pattern Hat to arrive soon from <lb />
Marriage License. <lb />
Licenses were issued to tin follow <lb />
during last <lb />
bile. <lb />
Albert Jones Johnson <lb />
Vicinity. <lb />
HIM, OR <lb />
Ml Kit <lb />
ft. h. POLLARD, <lb />
C. <lb />
ONE PORTS <lb />
wanted, feet long K. It. run.,.,. <lb />
Chairman Cemetery Com. river is something of a <lb />
now. <lb />
Down own <lb />
BROWN CO., <lb />
He be i Forbes, Mgr. <lb />
Up Town <lb />
MERCHANTS, TAKE NOTICE. <lb />
That the last legislature passed an <lb />
act forbidding the sale of <lb />
that are commonly used in 22- <lb />
i lilies, can be used In 22-pistols, <lb />
Ramon Jackson and Mary Casey. paying a license tax. have <lb />
Wynn and Jones, Informed that several merchants <lb />
ll. Manning and Bessie the county are <lb />
and It is unlawful <lb />
do so. All who continue lo sell <lb />
Moore and Harris. ,,., .,,. ,, ,,. , ,,.,. <lb />
K. Fleming and Susie T. the required tax tor Belling, pistols <lb />
Colored. cartridges. <lb />
,.,,, This February <lb />
and Gardner. s , sheriff. <lb />
and Tyson. <lb />
lams.<lb />
MOTION DENIED <lb />
BEGiNS ACMES. <lb />
Woods <lb />
To <lb />
the I and <lb />
Lumber Company, b n- <lb />
j . i , <lb />
is <lb />
i by i <lb />
In plant <lb />
i are l <lb />
truck <lb />
to the woods In a c <lb />
try other evidences are conclusive <lb />
w are soon lo ill plant <lb />
full blast. <lb />
ii calculated when running <lb />
full the plant provide work tor <lb />
about one hundred or one hundred <lb />
and twenty n, the <lb />
m least i <lb />
An Inspection to I pl as it <lb />
stands gives a good idea of the <lb />
and quality of work which <lb />
can turned out and the benefit <lb />
will derive from Inn inn <lb />
a company in operation. <lb />
Around <lb />
STANDARD, March and <lb />
Mrs. Prank Nichols spent <lb />
with Mr. and Mrs. T. R. of <lb />
Miss one of the <lb />
teachers hero spent Sunday with Mr. <lb />
and Mrs. C. D. Smith of Smithtown. <lb />
Mr. Joseph Cobb went lo Green- <lb />
ville Monday evening on business. <lb />
We are sorry to hear that Tom <lb />
of near here lost his house <lb />
furniture Tuesday evening about <lb />
o'clock. Rice and family were gone <lb />
Its It VII II IN lit<lb />
FOR RE- <lb />
LEASE <lb />
N. March ANDERSON <lb />
i tor the under <lb />
. ,, ,.,, , was attacked in <lb />
Aimer and <lb />
. J. <lb />
out of th. <lb />
grand jury at j i The <lb />
for the murder ; <lb />
Myrtle H <lb />
I i . by i <lb />
I term of alive <lb />
. . . i i <lb />
brothers, also In <lb />
I held for the May ; <lb />
court <lb />
i Ir. <lb />
. i on <lb />
and led in<lb />
him <lb />
. county Jail. the head. After <lb />
is Mid, one hundred feet- on t Mr. <lb />
to overcrowded as Cheshire out <lb />
B .,, i o . j. II. i ad twice on the <lb />
Officers and and <lb />
a rd Hie ended. <lb />
in casting about tor places lo which <lb />
the knife of economy might be <lb />
Mr. R, Keen Dead. <lb />
About o'clock Thursday even- <lb />
piled. It is said that Hie House Mr. William It. Moon died at <lb />
Committee will attempt the home of his sister, Mrs. Fannie <lb />
to strike out the Moore, on Pin sine,. <lb />
daring the last two or <lb />
three years for the traveling expense.; <lb />
of the President of Halted States. <lb />
This appropriation has been made on ; <lb />
the theory the country <lb />
in poor health for several months. <lb />
Mr. Moore Was Ml years age and <lb />
is survived by three children. He <lb />
I also two Brothers and three <lb />
wanted I sisters, Mr. K. Moore and Mrs. <lb />
to the President and that <lb />
might be expended for this <lb />
pose with propriety. It is now pro- <lb />
to cut it out, but we trust that <lb />
tin- proposition will be approved. <lb />
Alter the fourth of next March <lb />
have a president of our own <lb />
in the While House and the people <lb />
of the country would like to see him <lb />
and his expenses should <lb />
be provided for. Why not let <lb />
appropriation say for next two <lb />
Moore, of Greenville being <lb />
among them. <lb />
The burial took place this afternoon, <lb />
at the old home about six miles <lb />
from town. <lb />
Re- <lb />
Ne Charlotte. <lb />
Raleigh. The I. Ford-Price <lb />
Realty Company of Charlotte was <lb />
chartered today with capital <lb />
by J. Ford. It. F. Price and C W. <lb />
for real estate development. <lb />
Another charter is to the R. P. Henry <lb />
Jewelry Company of Statesville. cap- <lb />
ital by R. F. Henry, <lb />
Stone and others. There is an amend- <lb />
i lent to the charter of the Wade <lb />
In <lb />
mined Safe <lb />
most Greensboro that <lb />
changes the name to the Hill-Stock- <lb />
Roland Hill is <lb />
developments in the Myrtle Haw- <lb />
denial of bail <lb />
three of tin- defendants and the <lb />
of George and Honey Bradley to <lb />
for safe keeping in the Bun- <lb />
county jail on an order of Judge <lb />
dent. <lb />
lo his sisters burial and on return <lb />
found his house and furniture j years at any rate <lb />
Shes. It was told us that Rice told if the economists in the <lb />
hi- an,, lo m on home and a House are really sincere in their de- <lb />
son to go on horn, and . . A. acting upon mo- <lb />
t. In- Cut lO HO <lb />
lie by the time they got then . Of Solicitor Johnson, asked <lb />
boy got -here i to save the the own . <lb />
i ,. room by the help . condition of the Renders <lb />
., received from the people had or a <lb />
got there. There was nut any in- <lb />
i mi the building or furniture. <lb />
Hie <lb />
amount they. <lb />
required to pay for Ir <lb />
be <lb />
You will protect yourself in need, <lb />
why not protect yourself <lb />
prices, Supply Company. <lb />
Mr. George W. Crawford of near <lb />
here died Wednesday morning s <lb />
O'clock, and was buried Tuesday <lb />
in the family burying ground, Mr. <lb />
flaw lord was a good citizen and a <lb />
that was loved by all who knew <lb />
while, an. would save the <lb />
many tens of thousands of <lb />
and it would prove that the <lb />
I Of Cong are <lb />
Charlotte News. <lb />
Democratic stale Convention, <lb />
The meeting of the Suite Democrat- <lb />
Executive Committee has <lb />
Jail, <lb />
worth <lb />
Alter lite Job. <lb />
There is a little hoy in town who <lb />
bis mother he was going to gel <lb />
Policeman George Clark to <lb />
from going to so many club meetings <lb />
and leaving at home. That is <lb />
a job George is not after. <lb />
; Lecture lo Lenoir Graded School. <lb />
second of a series of <lb />
at the graded schools was <lb />
red by Edmund Jones yes- <lb />
t afternoon on the subject. <lb />
Importance of Little It was <lb />
an resting and helpful lecture and <lb />
Hi i i by I a <lb />
o h i re ; The next of the <lb />
lea will be by Lieut.-Gov. w. c. <lb />
n-land. <lb />
He Laves a wife and live Chairman A. H. <lb />
to mourn Heir lOSS. Among March In Haleigh. <lb />
some of Mr. brothers that meeting is to be a most <lb />
well know of Is J. Fred, Henry, <lb />
John and Have Crawford and Hen <lb />
I rank Crawford, deceased, who lived <lb />
Arthur and passed away about <lb />
ago. Mr. Crawford was a <lb />
of the Free Will church <lb />
Grove. There is a Chair <lb />
vacant in the church and at the <lb />
home that cannot be tilled. Peace <lb />
to him. <lb />
New arrival of seed and fanning <lb />
supplies at Peoples Supply Company. <lb />
Several of the people here attended <lb />
burial of Mr. George Craw- <lb />
ford at his brother John's farm <lb />
Where the family burial grounds are. <lb />
Are you using those Greenville <lb />
i leers on your letters There are <lb />
i ore of yet The Reflector <lb />
LL VS. <lb />
DON'T SUFFER WITH <lb />
Rheumatism <lb />
It the and <lb />
of all trouble. <lb />
Nine canes out of ten can be <lb />
cured by Liniment. <lb />
Where there is no swelling <lb />
or fever a few applications will <lb />
relieve you. It penetrates <lb />
does not evaporate like other <lb />
remedies requires little <lb />
rubbing. <lb />
Noah's Is tho licit remedy for <lb />
I. . i. n, Lama Back, hi lit <lb />
Joints and Throat. Cob <lb />
Cuts, <lb />
bruises, Colin, <lb />
Neuralgia, <lb />
and <lb />
and Muscle Aches <lb />
Tho genuine has <lb />
Nosh's Ark on <lb />
and looks like <lb />
tin- cut, but <lb />
on front of Nick. <lb />
and <lb />
Ink. of <lb />
Large M <lb />
cents, and sold by all <lb />
dealers In el no. <lb />
or <lb />
refunded Noon <lb />
It y Co., Inc., <lb />
Vs. <lb />
one. of the <lb />
Committee expected to be present. <lb />
passing upon matter of <lb />
Che time and place for holding tin <lb />
Democratic Convention, the <lb />
committee is to set a common day <lb />
for holding precinct meetings and <lb />
primary elections throughout the <lb />
Slate, and a common day for holding <lb />
county conventions in each county in <lb />
the state. <lb />
A most Important matter that will <lb />
before the committee will be <lb />
dates for the United States senate <lb />
of the request of the four <lb />
tho committee recommended to <lb />
the Democratic State Convention that <lb />
it order a primary for the naming of <lb />
States senator on the day <lb />
of the general election in November, <lb />
cud that n committee named by the <lb />
Mate Committee plans for <lb />
p. ch a primary to be submitted to the <lb />
State Convention. It Is not doubted <lb />
but that Hie committee will accede to <lb />
the request and will take action with <lb />
regard to rules for such a primary. <lb />
It is well to state that Raleigh Is <lb />
anxious lo have the State Democrat- <lb />
Convention to meet hero tills year. <lb />
It is prepared to give It tile best of <lb />
accommodation and entertainment, <lb />
and it extends a warm Invitation that <lb />
It meet ill this and Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
III THE EIGHTH <lb />
H HONOR OF <lb />
OF WILSON <lb />
was mark <lb />
DELEGATES <lb />
TO CO I MY <lb />
COM KM ION <lb />
with Mrs. Coward. <lb />
tin Monday afternoon at her <lb />
home on street, Mrs. H. L. <lb />
L. Coward delightfully entertained <lb />
ten friends at com- <lb />
lo Miss Meta of <lb />
guest <lb />
N, C, March in- <lb />
gun was fired by the Republicans Wilson, who is the charming <lb />
in the campaign of at Mrs. K <lb />
today when the Stanly county con- <lb />
from <lb />
Rheumatism <lb />
Try Sloan's Liniment for your <lb />
don't lay it on <lb />
lightly. It goes straight to the sore <lb />
spot, quickens the blood, limbers up <lb />
the muscles and joints and stops <lb />
the pain. <lb />
Here's Proof <lb />
Mrs. Thomas of Jackson, <lb />
have used your <lb />
rheumatism with much <lb />
. Tunis. 16016th Are., <lb />
ion N. I , I was a <lb />
cripple with rheumatism for two i and I i not move all; had <lb />
, be carried place. tried remedies and could not <lb />
tried Sloan's Liniment, One bottle fixed me op In good snaps <lb />
. i always have a in the for my wife and children. <lb />
kills any kind of <lb />
.- <lb />
Good for Neuralgia. Toothache, Lumbago and <lb />
Cheat Pains. by all dealers. Price SOc. and <lb />
Sean's ho on Hones, Cattle, HOBS and sent tree. Art <lb />
DR. EAR SLOAN . Boston. Mass. <lb />
Court House. <lb />
-Carrying out the <lb />
st ions of Cook, made at the <lb />
last term of superior court, <lb />
the commissioners are having the in- <lb />
of court room over- <lb />
hauled and refitted, When the work <lb />
If finished the court room Will look <lb />
like a different place. It is something <lb />
more than n spring cleaning. Some <lb />
new furniture is being put In, new <lb />
being put down and the <lb />
Jury rooms and lobby for the bar <lb />
cleaned up and refurnished. Judge <lb />
Cook told the chairman of the board <lb />
lie could not compel them to do <lb />
tin hi- things,, but said lie would not <lb />
hold court here until some <lb />
Improvement were made. <lb />
Million was held. This was the Hist <lb />
county convention for the <lb />
cans to hold In North Carolina this <lb />
and a full county and legislative <lb />
ticket was named. <lb />
J. Morton, a prominent citizen <lb />
Stanly, was named for the House. <lb />
The meeting was a most enthusiastic <lb />
and a number of strong speeches <lb />
v t made. The sentiment of the con- <lb />
was strong for Roosevelt. <lb />
However, a hard tight for Taft was <lb />
made by Attorney G. U. It. Reynolds, <lb />
H. S. of New <lb />
London; Harris of <lb />
and J. K. Lee, of Norwood. <lb />
On account of this fight it is said <lb />
i In convention failed to endorse <lb />
Roosevelt and made a dog fall The <lb />
elected to the stale and <lb />
conventions were <lb />
so as presidential pref- <lb />
are concerned. <lb />
Dr. J. I. Campbell, of Norwood, was <lb />
endorsed for Congress in the Eighth <lb />
District The convention was <lb />
ed over by Mr. J. M. Tolbert, of Stan- <lb />
and the attendance was large. <lb />
One lady says tho only thing she <lb />
good a the shredded wheat <lb />
Jim Starkey's, Is more from the <lb />
same place. <lb />
News <lb />
conies from Dr. J. T. <lb />
Kan. lie not only have <lb />
cured bad cases of eczema In my pa- <lb />
with Electric Hitters, but also <lb />
cured myself by them of the same <lb />
disease. feel sure they will benefit <lb />
any case of This shows <lb />
what thousands have proved, that Fl- <lb />
Hitters is a most effective blood <lb />
purifier. Its an excellent remedy for <lb />
eczema, Bait rheum, ulcers, <lb />
hulls and running Bores. It <lb />
liver, kidneys and bowels, ex- <lb />
helps digestion, builds <lb />
up the strength. Price cents. Sat- <lb />
guaranteed by all <lb />
three- <lb />
thirty and were invited into tho <lb />
parlor where tables <lb />
were placed for and for <lb />
Enthusiastic games follow- <lb />
i d. In the midst of the games hot <lb />
tea and wafers were served. Mrs. P. <lb />
T. Anthony scored highest in the <lb />
games and was awarded a <lb />
deck of cards. Miss Smith <lb />
won the prize, a game of <lb />
which she presented to Miss <lb />
Grimes of Bethel. The guest of <lb />
honor was presented a prettily bound <lb />
book. At the conclusion of Hie games <lb />
tho hostess, assisted by Miss Nancy <lb />
Coward, served B delicious salad <lb />
course. <lb />
Witt Mrs. <lb />
On Friday afternoon Mrs. K. G. <lb />
Flanagan was hostess at a very en- <lb />
party In hon- <lb />
or of her guest. Miss of <lb />
son. <lb />
The guests arrived about three- <lb />
thirty and were cordially welcomed <lb />
by the hostess. The pretty parlor and <lb />
dining room were thrown Into one and <lb />
tables were placed for <lb />
and Mrs. C. S. Forbes <lb />
made the highest score at <lb />
Miss Smith made the <lb />
highest score at were <lb />
awarded a box of candy the hon- <lb />
was presented a pretty box of <lb />
After the games, tho <lb />
assisted by Mrs. H. L. Cow- <lb />
and Miss Nannie Howling, served <lb />
a delicious luncheon in three courses. <lb />
Selecting <lb />
Piano <lb />
Tho Talks. <lb />
At the service in the church <lb />
Sunday night, in which tho story of <lb />
was discussed, two <lb />
splendid talks were made by Profs. <lb />
W. H. C. W. Wilson. <lb />
congregation Impressed with <lb />
the service. <lb />
is of the utmost Importance and re- <lb />
quires both skill and judgment in order to <lb />
be that good tone and action are <lb />
united with Wearing Quality. <lb />
We offer you the benefit of our ex- <lb />
assure you that you may de- <lb />
our judgment. treat- <lb />
alike to purchasers or inquirers. <lb />
SAM WHITE PIANO CO. <lb />
Wholesale Robbery Nipped In <lb />
Maultsby. <lb />
colored, who came to this county re- <lb />
from Chadbourn, was caught <lb />
early tonight In the act robbing <lb />
White and store on a big <lb />
He drove his buggy into the <lb />
alley back of tho store, and. when <lb />
arrested, had the vehicle well loaded <lb />
with dry goods, shoes, clothing <lb />
I groceries. Ho was plated In <lb />
Strayed. <lb />
From my place near Cross <lb />
Roads, ii cow with heifer. Cow deep <lb />
red color with horns, marked hole <lb />
In left ear, split in right car. Heifer <lb />
Mack, marked crop and slit in right <lb />
ear, in left ear. Suitable <lb />
reward for return or information lead- <lb />
to recovery. <lb />
HILLS. <lb />
R. F. D. Ayden. N. C <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
HE CAROLINA HOME <lb />
RM and EA <lb />
REFLECTOR<lb />
Published by <lb />
Inc. <lb />
D. J. Editor. <lb />
WORTH CAROLINA <lb />
I MATTER START <lb />
With the same spirit of Justice i T e Durham Sun not long ago pub- <lb />
who think a great deal more THE STRIKE. <lb />
of dividends than they do of the Yearly we hear about strikes or- <lb />
J J comfort health and welfare of the and sometimes successfully which prompts us to publish every- its editorial <lb />
and FARM and of ,, by the <lb />
pleasure in re-printing from K <lb />
classes and yearly we arc made to we <lb />
year. <lb />
months,. <lb />
mi <lb />
their labor. <lb />
And do you what a pro- wonder as existing conditions arc the last issue of the Pitt County News <lb />
traded coal strike would brought to our attention by short editorial, which we thank <lb />
mean, even if spring and summer are into the causes leading these Brother Stokes. <lb />
so near us The material loss to several strikes. I W feel that everything he says is <lb />
those very same interests that are Some of these strikes have become ad g , our , ,,,, truth <lb />
came to town and upon stopping <lb />
in front of a grocery store was ac- <lb />
by a young fellow who In- <lb />
quired if the farmer wanted some- <lb />
body to hold his horse. The farmer <lb />
MORE THE STOCK LAW. <lb />
are in receipt of a letter from <lb />
columns a lit- one of our Pitt county farmers. This <lb />
gentleman most ably discusses the <lb />
question that brought so many farm- <lb />
together last Saturday to our <lb />
Adverting may be had <lb />
application at the business in <lb />
The Reflector Building, corner <lb />
and Third streets. <lb />
All cards of resolutions <lb />
of respect will be charged r at <lb />
cent per word. <lb />
Communications advertising <lb />
dates will be for at three <lb />
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb />
as second class <lb />
August 1910. at the post office <lb />
Greenville. North Carolina, under <lb />
act of March 1879. <lb />
FRIDAY. MARCH 1912. <lb />
their backbone, be famous. The one at present hold-, up to we are giving be was not in need of anybody <lb />
Millions of would mg sway on the Massachusetts town.,, , , own ,,. to hold his horse. The young fellow <lb />
of every seems bid fair to eclipse n connection mater when the farmer <lb />
. b- lost and the comfort <lb />
. k all others from the point of publicity i. .,,. , him back said. man. <lb />
Hen of the States would be forth the editorial from the Pitt <lb />
given it and the shocking conditions <lb />
impaired. Trains and . of <lb />
County News, we might as well say <lb />
not run with the punctuality <lb />
they do today and if the strikers <lb />
chose to stay out long enough they <lb />
would stop altogether. Commerce. <lb />
means life to a country would <lb />
panics ridiculously small would were <lb />
such as would make the money a customer, say something like the <lb />
panics ridiculously small would en- <lb />
., we have been heartily <lb />
taken to testify . . <lb />
kited by level headed citizens for the <lb />
before the committee, carry- <lb />
stand we did take in the matter. That <lb />
on a wide scope investigation. <lb />
is we contended ourselves to be <lb />
If in this country of ours a mer-i <lb />
. and circumspect. Although <lb />
to make a bargain with <lb />
e could have been very much the <lb />
A merchant to deliver customer <lb />
other way and we would have bees <lb />
Mill as much neighbors to the truth <lb />
line of goods, of a quality as we are at this minute. <lb />
A COAL <lb />
Some time ago we published the <lb />
news of a gigantic coal strike <lb />
in the and yesterday <lb />
gave the of strikes <lb />
Says the County News- <lb />
Because of the little typographical <lb />
error in notice announcing date of <lb />
meeting of the Anti-Stock law <lb />
do not need you to hold my horse, <lb />
but if you are around a little later <lb />
I may have you help start <lb />
This is a funny story. Supposed <lb />
to be funny anyway. But. Is it <lb />
Think it won't need to do it <lb />
very long ere you come to think with <lb />
us. This is the story of almost <lb />
everything. The is <lb />
needs the helping, not the <lb />
And right here in our community <lb />
tan we apply this story to the great- <lb />
court house. The writer of this let- <lb />
looks at the matter with the cool- <lb />
and judgment derived from a <lb />
thorough knowledge of his subject. <lb />
Furthermore, being a farmer, as <lb />
ready mentioned, he Is in the very <lb />
best position to discuss the question <lb />
of Stock Law. <lb />
For the benefit of the many inter- <lb />
in this issue we gladly publish <lb />
letter referred to. <lb />
Editor of A word as to <lb />
the stock law controversy. A great <lb />
deal has been said about people <lb />
but our people have decided <lb />
that the men of wealth and <lb />
shall rule your anti-stock law <lb />
men. Did you never hear that be- <lb />
fore <lb />
The most progressive and the wealth <lb />
list portions of state and county <lb />
are in the old stock law territory. <lb />
So many believe. <lb />
They have found the law a bless- <lb />
est advantage to all of us. For there to them. Consequently being be- <lb />
are so many things that we could. <lb />
citizens they naturally want <lb />
who cares to think over <lb />
can at once realize what a coal j set forth in the contract and the mer- <lb />
in this ago of steam, would i chant fails to deliver the quality of <lb />
mean. The coal operators are the goods, the contract would be declared <lb />
very first to realize it yet they are <lb />
about to deny the miners their de- <lb />
Their position, with the gov-1 <lb />
eminent at their backs does, per- manufacturers and the government , , on <lb />
laps seem to be very strong. And some time ago. The woolen was much said by several <lb />
on us, they may be right. claimed that the high citizens about the same bus. are a great many more the <lb />
Standard of living demanded by Many insisted that the interested in that fence who <lb />
. include others under the same <lb />
by any court. w would Besides they do not want to pay <lb />
Whichard came in for his part of be of such to our Greenville, more lax necessary and. of <lb />
contract was made by the woolen <lb />
the vitriolic dope that was handed <lb />
yours, etc., etc. <lb />
Of course we must not be unfair. <lb />
Anything but that, and we are glad <lb />
course, they wanted the fence short- <lb />
in order to diminish their taxes. <lb />
What can be more reasonable There <lb />
Knowing full well how <lb />
AMERICAN WORKMAN, made it <lb />
purposely made. Now organization Greenville has DO-, , the leg. <lb />
don't believe a word of it. We heard getting wiggle said It should be. than <lb />
possible for the American man ,,, gay that of the New York American, mere are who wish it to remain <lb />
in Germany and France. The on the workmen the inter- <lb />
man miners of Westphalia and m this country have gone about <lb />
French miners have struck In plans whereby some day they to produce goods and Compete openly advising people not we Dav added a it was. If the people are to <lb />
with their Hi other miners of would be in a position to tell with the foreign take the Reflector. Now we wish those our We then all interested should be <lb />
the British Isles. where he stood, and This was their plea to not do that. good ones bu, we . <lb />
Almost simultaneously with the be- really small were their rights to de- <lb />
ginning of these strikes, tho coal How far they have succeed- <lb />
miners of America have gathered to- d U well known. There is hardly <lb />
gather their complaints against the an industry in this <lb />
operators an <lb />
the government come to their rescue <lb />
, Reflector is friend and is a <lb />
thousand times more interested to the ones gotten lately and to <lb />
consulted. <lb />
The nature of the stock law in <lb />
such that it is unwise to call an <lb />
with a high protective tariff. fellow who ad- I some extent owing to the efforts ion upon the subject. <lb />
Lawrence strike is the first inkling you lo the contrary. People Carolina club members. anti-stock law men are so <lb />
unreasonable and are so determined <lb />
to have their way that It is nearly <lb />
the manufacturers proceeded county, we are brethren and j about two <lb />
d have peacefully de- that Is not totally controlled by the can't afford to let strife stand be- <lb />
tween us. On the oilier hand, we <lb />
something which right interests, yet to find a parallel of , <lb />
they should possess. As things stand workingmen s oppression you will , the acquisition of some things upon a stock law creates neighbor- <lb />
just now the coal operators will to go to countries that feel the American workmen, are employ-1 . do mg and factions, <lb />
fuse to listen to these demands and yoke of ignorance, such as Spam, in the big Lawrence nulls, and hp of our of a laundry and we threatened burning. Any <lb />
it would not be altogether wild to <lb />
Italy. Turkey, etc. <lb />
In <lb />
other countries <lb />
prophesy that the American miners are gloW- they <lb />
will join the world-wide movement Um <lb />
of the coal mining federations to oh- and be <lb />
for themselves and their families in honor truth, they <lb />
that which their needs demand. And their <lb />
as to these needs Arthur Brisbane. lo <lb />
writing in the American Press in <lb />
convincing style expresses himself his rights <lb />
then are many who having thought <lb />
Such a strike shows the pow- <lb />
the supposed high wages demand-Pf our our home and that now Something <lb />
ed by the American workmen are in of our children. Men. Men, lets v, citizen <lb />
v the very small given Men and behave ourselves like . Mi do so publicly if he happens to <lb />
small wages given of We won't say we have of near so <lb />
the foreign workmen plus the very in meeting but we will allow time to take its that there Is little danger of his be- <lb />
large profit which goes to the man- and we will see it gracing hurt, <lb />
they are our friends and all stock laws have been<lb />
that is in the workers if they <lb />
care to use it and makes though- <lb />
men possessing education or <lb />
information realize that before <lb />
very long human beings will have <lb />
to be treated as seriously as <lb />
dollars at least <lb />
The government, by <lb />
the what a change <lb />
that in sympathy with <lb />
the workers and actually takes <lb />
the ground that the welfare and <lb />
the comfort of a million Eng- <lb />
families are more import- <lb />
ant than dividends on coal mine <lb />
England is lucky and quite <lb />
safe from revolution in spite <lb />
of extreme radicalism and wide- <lb />
spread strikes because the gov- <lb />
of England keeps ahead <lb />
of popular thought Instead of <lb />
dragging behind it. <lb />
The government be- <lb />
gins to take seriously the fact <lb />
that the one important demand <lb />
In this world is a fair day's <lb />
wages and a decent living for <lb />
every man willing <lb />
They no longer try hide, as <lb />
we in America, behind the old <lb />
talk of supply and de- <lb />
and of the fittest. <lb />
They take the ground that <lb />
every workman and every one <lb />
of children HAS A RIGHT <lb />
TO SURVIVE. And they take <lb />
the ground that where there are <lb />
millions of tons of hidden <lb />
underground and millions of <lb />
men willing lo do the work the <lb />
men are more important with <lb />
their picks and their in <lb />
their hands than the gentlemen <lb />
living in London with n deed lo <lb />
the coal lands locked up In his <lb />
safe deposit vault. <lb />
England is far ahead of us In <lb />
governmental attitude toward <lb />
great questions. We are able to <lb />
drag because our land is <lb />
rich that it can stand a <lb />
of foolishness. But in we <lb />
shall have lo do some of the <lb />
thinking that Is doing <lb />
now. <lb />
And that's Just exactly the trouble even <lb />
a little ahead are willing to listen <lb />
to what they have expected to hear, <lb />
and instead of being surprised they <lb />
ready to side with the man ask- <lb />
j for what Id rightfully be of American <lb />
that helped make his clothes n <lb />
The very patriotic American man would go farther to serve them <lb />
heretofore been paying heavy prices <lb />
for his clothing. Perhaps he was <lb />
not altogether very pleased at <lb />
lo pay twice for something that <lb />
be could buy abroad for half the <lb />
money, but the idea that he was help- <lb />
along in the maintenance of a home <lb />
industry and upKeep of many <lb />
our main street and facing our ,,, nag <lb />
truly in an honorable way than we A of and always been more or less kicking for <lb />
v clean up also was spoken of by a while, but in a short time all. ex- <lb />
Rev. Rock at that time and we become <lb />
can already see in the cleaning up ed and perceive that the stock law <lb />
. Honor. , start Is profitable to the greatest number. <lb />
Something which was very much of Court House Square that a start r . <lb />
,,.,,, . towards the beautifying of Green- The average rent, r can more <lb />
the way. is to be taken where fl cheaper pork in a pen sixteen <lb />
. . been made, a substantial start to- . ,,, <lb />
it will not hurt the eye of the casual <lb />
wards this commendable task. <lb />
In this manner have the laborers <lb />
have come to his rescue <lb />
fee square, two-thirds of it shelter- <lb />
The something alluded to . , a we trust and a he <lb />
. . . ,,, the open range. know men <lb />
being the vault-building In which the . h. . .,., were , . <lb />
will never nave a stop, we were way and know <lb />
records were kept during the on of , wag the <lb />
and stood on construction of the present court lo of Lumber from a financial and <lb />
of Great Britain and Germany . h. make house. <lb />
Cooperage Co., the other day <lb />
at government posts which in strong <lb />
of the countries being ruled by a what now be to <lb />
king and an emperor they have he have <lb />
not by might, but by right. a industry, but that <lb />
The county commissioners are to . .,, d Bart I <lb />
There are few laws that do <lb />
be congratulated for this move. With I there, <lb />
as beautiful a court house as we, <lb />
not <lb />
abridge some men's liberties, but <lb />
civilized men submit to this curtail- <lb />
Start something and if whatever of their privileges on the <lb />
have and as pretty a jail. . u on greatest good to the <lb />
The British workman is to upkeep of very in probably be running <lb />
Parliament today by such . way and looked very much like w, . b . ,. j What is the good of E <lb />
as Will Crooks John Burns and , myth- what he was very black blot in the center of a bad ,. . be stop- a North <lb />
The German laborer doing the woolen and prevented from running and Carolina. A good farmer, a good <lb />
is represented in the , buy expensive It Is to be hoped that there will the ,. movement towards neighbor, a progressive A <lb />
man who allowed a law to pass that <lb />
ho honestly thought would be a <lb />
to a very considerable number <lb />
of those who voted for him and did <lb />
pure and simply. has done a great deal to set off Greenville and the to any. <lb />
The cry of the woolen the buildings in Court and an n-l Besides, everybody who knew Sen- <lb />
and we are glad to notice , . . . ,., Cotten knew him to be a stock <lb />
and honest citizen. , . . . ., .,., <lb />
Haw man. and they knew he would <lb />
ago we saw him in the ,,. only lad to <lb />
active discharge of his duties as night changed should a sufficient number <lb />
artistic treasures and ready and has to be started. <lb />
o- <lb />
such a man as Herr and others. <lb />
American workingman is diamond He and not wait the days allowed him <lb />
in Indianapolis today by fifty- , II nut the <lb />
fact all of us are bound to feel take ll out or <lb />
. . . . . ,. Already Sheriff Dudley and his <lb />
i though we had been <lb />
four indicted leaders. <lb />
And still the bull rolls. <lb />
OF OLD TIMERS. ,. AMERICAN INDUS. <lb />
Mr. G. T. Tyson, of Beaver Dam come of has clear A days i <lb />
of the many mounds of brick <lb />
is one of Pitt's best citizens. AMERICAN must have <lb />
dropped in for a Chat With the ed- found n willing echo in every Amer- <lb />
Tuesday. While he came in <lb />
and rubbish has it <lb />
to tell he was at <lb />
for us in the automobile voting <lb />
contest, be became reminiscent while <lb />
talking and look us bark over some <lb />
of the old times. <lb />
Mr. Tyson is one of thirty- <lb />
lean citizen whose heart was in the <lb />
right place. The Lawrence strike <lb />
Should likewise find an echo in every <lb />
American who thought so well of the <lb />
protective tariff, <lb />
Since the time these buildings were <lb />
erected. All is good <lb />
and no amount of encouragement <lb />
policeman of the town, and to learn petition him. The mistake these <lb />
, only five days afterwards that waR in of <lb />
., persuasion to House. <lb />
came tons with , , ., , , . i <lb />
, , , ,, , failed in this they should have <lb />
, . sudden realization the , . . . . , ,.,, <lb />
seems adequate lo men who take been quietly acquiesced and believe <lb />
such steps the beautifying of <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
things human. <lb />
With but very short Intervals Me- <lb />
would had mil some lawyer <lb />
them bad advice. A wise lawyer <lb />
Gowan served the town of Greenville g n useful citizen, but one who talks <lb />
If some of -he private citizens who ,, ,. no, me <lb />
rave properly were to take the all only the to think If the people are not <lb />
example by our very of or trouble. <lb />
readers or The Reflector and one the young ladies of the senior we reel sure that within -d throughout the twelve years <lb />
of It truest friends. Away back at f East Carolina Teachers Training very short time we would have Quite of not a blemish <lb />
the first 1882 when the paper start- school upon the success of the against the account <lb />
Cd in I small building that stood in rendered Monday night. Improvements are made we may tell, book u . <lb />
our mother's yard, he walked up as . success as a play, but a good citizen and a good bus- <lb />
while in town one day to from a financial standpoint and but the stranger come in . <lb />
words of encouragement to the handsome sum was netted. <lb />
The <lb />
Sincerely. <lb />
JUDSON HARMON, JR. <lb />
executive committee of the <lb />
boys he found at work trying to The young ladies of the school gave <lb />
a newspaper for Pitt county and left this play for a most laudable <lb />
a dollar for a year's subscription. Their predecessors, grad- <lb />
world to offer us a pair of glasses. <lb />
Press Association Will meet In <lb />
Raleigh on the 20th select the <lb />
date and place for the next meeting <lb />
of the association. Here is one who <lb />
favors Hie Atlantic hotel at More- <lb />
head City, and when it is good and <lb />
warm. <lb />
Hard did he work <lb />
at night to ensure our safely and hard <lb />
did he work part of the day to in- <lb />
I sure the life of his family; for is <lb />
Next Friday, 15th. is the dale for fa, ,., lo <lb />
that day to this his name has class of 1911. as a mark of the meeting of the Pitt County Good a of the day in duties <lb />
on subscription list and his presented the school with Association, and people of ,.,. than his in order to <lb />
date never gets behind. sum with which to establish a county ought to come together and family going. <lb />
He look occasion to go our fund to help needy young worn- do something to get roads., And now he is gone we know <lb />
again Tuesday and said it made get an education. The present Pitt county's bad roads are n heavy who will take care of him. Is card. All right. St t stay <lb />
I him feel proud that paper had will follow this worthy ex- upon the people, and It Is time be hoped the same certainly will be covered, and do not frighten away <lb />
so and that it was equipped and gave the play for were waking up lo tho entertained as to how his family i like was done in tho case or the <lb />
with such modern machinery. raising money to add to the of removing the burden. The provided for. <lb />
Pole is the big <lb />
black announcement comes on a <lb />
loan fund when they at the county will lag behind in the march <lb />
In New York they have end of the present session. No doubt of progress just as long as we have You only have lo open your eyes <lb />
some S that classes will catch this roads as now exist. <lb />
the bankers could not detect, same spirit and there is no j <lb />
this country of ours The govern- You need not be afraid of getting any the great good this fund will ac- this is spring, what <lb />
Charlotte has begun plans for a <lb />
controlled and handled by In- of them down this way. <lb />
pi <lb />
mer going to be <lb />
lo Bee necessity for good roads, great twentieth of May celebration <lb />
the ground hog seer year. The major has been con- <lb />
l- ow again tomorrow It means ten an Is right on the spot to lend <lb />
longer In the hole. a helping hand. <lb />
MM <lb />
g OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb />
Advertising rates <lb />
AYDEN. N. March for- his best and seems pleased with <lb />
get the County Sunday School old Virginia hills. <lb />
meets here next Monday and I Mr. Joe Jones of was <lb />
Tuesday. <lb />
Ayden has a swell organized <lb />
of commerce, with Mr. G, W. <lb />
here Friday on business. <lb />
Mr. Parker of Morehead is here on <lb />
a visit to M.- daughter. Mrs. Jim K. <lb />
president. Rev. J. W. Jones. <lb />
ford. Sec; Mr. C. V. Cannon, Treas. <lb />
This organization is new and <lb />
but they mean business. <lb />
Mrs. L. D. was buried <lb />
Prof. G. K. Lineberry of Meredith <lb />
college lectured at the Baptist church <lb />
here Sunday night. His address was <lb />
unusually fine. He he was look- <lb />
Win. Dennis cemetery Friday for money and girls. We are <lb />
She was youngest glad to have him visit our com <lb />
of the late She <lb />
SOUTHERN J. J, <lb />
TO BUILD BRICK WAREHOUSES <lb />
CO. LETS <lb />
CONTRACT FOR MUCK<lb />
RALEIGH. March Following <lb />
announcement recently made by <lb />
President Finley. of the Southern <lb />
railway company that modern freight <lb />
r-atOM Of <lb />
M TM<lb />
There things Hi Interesting <lb />
the question of local newspaper profits or any <lb />
Mr. Roosevelt has followed his hat Into the ring. <lb />
There is a lair prospect of this and I <lb />
. T would us and men. and that <lb />
avoid. <lb />
In New a strike takes on a new form. The powers he <lb />
say to the strikers, in substance not sand away your <lb />
be fed elsewhere, b. cause if you see Hum hungry <lb />
are apt to give up your strike, which is what we <lb />
of the kings visit to India show us groups of his <lb />
subjects singing Save the in fifty languages, <lb />
explains partly why of men can <lb />
The <lb />
Ladle of Training School a <lb />
Large a <lb />
Financially. <lb />
Had Oliver Goldsmith himself been <lb />
present in flesh at Carolina <lb />
Teachers Training School Monday <lb />
he could have expressed <lb />
but utmost satisfaction at the <lb />
presentation of his play, Stoops <lb />
by the senior class of <lb />
the school. It was a heavy play and <lb />
leaves a husband and small <lb />
Thomas Rice, an industrious colored <lb />
man, had the misfortune to gel his <lb />
and its contents burned Tues- <lb />
Mr. K. L. Turnage is again the <lb />
proud father of another baby boy. <lb />
Seed oats. Irish potatoes and on- <lb />
ion sets. J. R. Smith and <lb />
Three persons took membership <lb />
this city and at Goldsboro it is now <lb />
announced that the Southern is so-, <lb />
. occupied three hours in presentation. <lb />
bids for construction of., . , . .,. <lb />
. but character was equal to the <lb />
a brick freight warehouses and office-1 . . ., . <lb />
., . . . . ., part assigned and rendered It in a <lb />
feet long by feet wide . , . <lb />
. . . . manner that was both excellent and <lb />
to be erected in this city and has <lb />
awarded the contract <lb />
of a brick freight warehouse and <lb />
office building feet long by <lb />
feet wide at Goldsboro to J. P. Pet- <lb />
and company of Lynchburg, <lb />
Va. <lb />
The improvements to be made at <lb />
Raleigh, in addition to the building <lb />
proper, will include the <lb />
day while the family were away the Baptist church Sunday morn- <lb />
home attending a burial. He lived <lb />
near church. Mr. H. F. Jones and wife spent <lb />
The union prayer masting will be Sunday in town visiting their J. <lb />
held in the church Sunday c. Jones, <lb />
afternoon, led by Mr. J. T. Smith. Mr. Liss left Friday <lb />
We regret to learn of the death of Fayetteville. <lb />
Mr. Robert one of the mail Dr. Harvey Messrs. W. A. <lb />
Carriers out of Grifton. caused by; Darden and Fred <lb />
pneumonia. On one of his Hips for Baltimore. <lb />
the snow his horse ran R-y, Mr. has resigned his <lb />
while he was closing one of the stock pastorate here and gone to Kentucky <lb />
law gates, causing him to run some account of his feeble health, <lb />
distance to catch the horse. The family of Mr. J. H. left <lb />
very warm when he cooled off Saturday lo make their future <lb />
taken with a chill which developed home In Columbia, S. C. <lb />
the pneumonia. All sorts of hardware, mill supplies, <lb />
A prize is offered to the bells, forges, blacksmith tools. <lb />
eating the best slogan for and cement. J. R. Smith and <lb />
of Ayden by next Friday at o'clock <lb />
noon. Mr. C. V. Cannon Is chairman Messrs. A. If. Moseley and H. L. <lb />
it this committee who will decide the Coward, two of Greenville's <lb />
one to be adopted. Send your name in town Monday evening, <lb />
with your selection to Mr. Cannon j Mr. Adams delivered one of <lb />
who will see you have a trial be- sermons we ever heard in <lb />
fore the committee. All persons in n,,, church Sunday morning, <lb />
or near Ayden can enter Ibis church Financing. He said that <lb />
test. H banks and business men were lo <lb />
conduct their on the same <lb />
AYDEN, N. C. March the church they would last <lb />
Turnage, little son of Mr. F. C. Turn- a short time. We regret that <lb />
age. fell from a gate post Monday and more did, could have heard the <lb />
broke his arm. He displayed sermon. <lb />
mole nerve, walked down to Dr. Mr. Henry returned Bat- <lb />
Dixon's had his arm set and from a visit to Murry <lb />
mile from town <lb />
Charming. Of course some parts were <lb />
more difficult than others, but in all, <lb />
both major and minor, there was <lb />
such precision as filled its respective <lb />
place lo perfection. <lb />
The staging and costuming were <lb />
in keening with the period in which <lb />
the play was written, the beautiful <lb />
costumes being procured especially for <lb />
this event. <lb />
of 9.100 square feet of new platform there was so much excel- <lb />
square yards of macadam displayed In the <lb />
way the rearrangement of present of be <lb />
tracks and the construction of 1.9601 particularize without mentioning <lb />
lineal feet of new tracks. For for every one is . <lb />
new freight terminal Goldsboro <lb />
tilled to credit. Professional <lb />
square feet of new not have the <lb />
square yards of macadam drive- ,.,,,. <lb />
way and lineal feet of praise not only <lb />
tucks will be provided in addition themselves but also lo school, <lb />
building for which contract has ,, of in <lb />
been let <lb />
mm meet <lb />
everything and In this instance as in <lb />
all others, it reached the mark of per- <lb />
While the play was long it was not <lb />
at all tiresome, for the brilliant act- <lb />
kepi audience at high- <lb />
est point of Interest and the inter- <lb />
between ails was filled with <lb />
delightful old lime melodies by the <lb />
school orchestra of seven instruments <lb />
,, a <lb />
i . Piano, comet, violin, mandolin and <lb />
at has kept the , . . <lb />
,,., he audience expressed in <lb />
hearty applause its appreciation of <lb />
both the play and the music. In one <lb />
of the Intervals Miss Arlene Joyner. <lb />
lo the delight of all. sang. Last <lb />
be h. Id down by fewer than <lb />
talk the sane language and think same <lb />
thoughts, whereas the hundreds of millions talk different tongues, can't <lb />
read and hate the man of the language. A people <lb />
UNISON CAN <lb />
Scientists have learned to light and destroy cancer in mice, an soon, <lb />
beyond doubt, they will conquer the horrible disease in human beings. <lb />
A certain drug Introduced in the body attacks the cancer and nothing <lb />
Certain human beings in the United Slat. are beginning lo think <lb />
we are governed too much by our lawyers. <lb />
Every candidate for the <lb />
Every available man for the vice LAWYER. <lb />
Congress, OP OF LAWYERS. <lb />
Lawyers make our laws, sit on the bench to Interpret them, decide on <lb />
their constitutionality, and the rest of us abide by lawyer's decisions <lb />
Lawyer insult every witness in Impunity-and the <lb />
appear to enjoy it. govern us while we <lb />
DOCTORS boss us when we are born and when we die. and we think our- <lb />
selves above the that submit to rule by <lb />
Millions of Dickens that never read his books-because he would <lb />
by old now if alive. Thousands go to see the spot <lb />
was stolen-and they went to see HER when she was <lb />
there. men pay thousands for samples of an author's handwriting <lb />
and never read his books. <lb />
A woman has a cat wearing made of diamonds and her <lb />
and views on voles for women are published. <lb />
king talks-or others talk for coming to <lb />
far more than <lb />
George Washington. Patrick Henry, <lb />
arm. singing the <lb />
queer, foolish, young, half developed, childish world, and you <lb />
accomplishment <lb />
The <lb />
CS and excites many <lb />
the return of Franklin, <lb />
and Thomas Jefferson, arm in <lb />
It Is . <lb />
could go on talking of its mixture of folly and<lb />
wit- <lb />
live. <lb />
started about a <lb />
walking. <lb />
A quiet home marriage was sol- <lb />
last Thursday country <lb />
Hen eggs have taken a tumble from <lb />
to cents per dozen. <lb />
Mr. J. Alfred Gardner came home <lb />
Saturday to look after some business <lb />
home of Mr. Joyner Wingate. Sunday morning for Rich- <lb />
daughter. Miss Johnson, was and Washington city. <lb />
given in marriage to Mr. Albert Jones There was a limber tongued hook <lb />
of Rev. G. C. agent in our town Monday, selling <lb />
from a wagon to the highest bidder <lb />
Mr. D. L. Crawford, a highly es- some of his books were exceed- <lb />
teemed farmer and ex-Confederate cheap and good and our people <lb />
soldier was with proved lo him they were reading <lb />
Sis Sunday morning while his <lb />
cow lot. His family succeeded in j a full line of cook stoves and ranges <lb />
getting him in the house on the bed an repairs. J. R. Smith <lb />
before he died. His remains <lb />
laid to rest in the family ground <lb />
held burial <lb />
from 1st <lb />
subject, outlining what needed lo be <lb />
done to bring about the early <lb />
of city mail delivery. <lb />
The main obstacle <lb />
s. nice back so far is the condition <lb />
of our sidewalks and this point was <lb />
discussed mainly by aldermen. <lb />
The mailer was referred lo the street <lb />
committee to prepare some of called for <lb />
report looking to remedying this <lb />
The personal of the play was as <lb />
In this conclusion is well lo say <lb />
aldermen should have the Charles Mallow. Gen- <lb />
co-operation of the property owners lie Move Young <lb />
of the town in this matter. A Suitor for Miss <lb />
here and there would go a long I Carrie <lb />
toward pulling the sidewalks ,. Behind the Mason; <lb />
in condition lo meet the approval of Miss <lb />
the government Inspector and thus Williams; Tony Mis- <lb />
secure the mail delivery. II is not Young <lb />
all the sidewalks be <lb />
paved, they must be graded and Servants of <lb />
drained so that mail carriers would Georgia Scott; Roger. Ethel Hunter; <lb />
no have lo wade through mud and Willie Thomas. <lb />
water to make their rounds. The <lb />
property owners should get interest-1 Landlord of the Three Pig- <lb />
ed in this mailer and give alder- Scott, <lb />
men such as will hasten Frequenters at the Inn. Slang. Ruth <lb />
the establishment of city mall de- Nannie <lb />
livery. The town Is entitled to and first Fellow. Minnie B. Second <lb />
can get it with a little work. It Fellow. Hilda Critcher; Third <lb />
would not be a bad idea to hold a Nora Mason. <lb />
IS SHUT BY CHIEF <lb />
NEGRO IN COUNTY <lb />
CAUGHT B. CHIEF OP POLICE <lb />
ACT OF ATTACK- <lb />
t WHITE MAN <lb />
RESISTED <lb />
Monday, <lb />
vice. <lb />
Mess. Albert Coward and W. Al- <lb />
To Organize Roosevelt. <lb />
SEATTLE, Wash. March <lb />
mass meeting and get the people at <lb />
work together on this important mat <lb />
of Grifton are here attending the Roosevelt League has completed <lb />
Sunday school association at the for the state convention <lb />
Christian church. tomorrow, at which <lb />
Mr. Ed Brown. Jr., assistant freight plans will be discussed for an <lb />
agent for A. C. L was notified Sun- aggressive campaign In Washington <lb />
day afternoon by wire sudden in U interest the Roosevelt can- <lb />
sickness of his father, Mr. The league will oppose the <lb />
Brown of He left state organization, which <lb />
the next train but his father died be- declared for the <lb />
fore he reached home. <lb />
Dynamite, fuse, caps, guns, pistols <lb />
President Taft. <lb />
and cartridges <lb />
at J. R. Smith and <lb />
JOE ITCH ALL THE TIME <lb />
For more than years Christ- <lb />
Ointment has been <lb />
Dr. his little daughter itching humanity. cents at any <lb />
and Mrs. Annie Coward, his drug store. cents prepaid from <lb />
mother-in-law, from Vs., The Owens and Minor Drug Co., <lb />
arrived Saturday and will spend a porters and Jobbers, 1007-1001. Main <lb />
few days here. The doctor is look- St. Richmond. Va. ltd <lb />
OF OF <lb />
The Bank of Ayden, <lb />
IT <lb />
In the state of North Carolina, at the Close of business, <lb />
Jeremy, servant of <lb />
ma Harden; Mrs. Hard- <lb />
castle's Waller; Miss <lb />
their <lb />
Miss Neville, cousin to Tony <lb />
Florence Blow; Dolly, maid to Miss <lb />
Green. <lb />
The play was staged by Miss May <lb />
R. B. who was ably assisted <lb />
FREE in directing its presentation by Miss <lb />
Joyner Davis. <lb />
The orchestra was comprised <lb />
WAS ABLE TO FULL. THE of Miss Arlene Joyner, piano; <lb />
HUE OF Miss Ora Cassidy. violin; Mr. <lb />
FATE W. GOSS <lb />
DURHAM YOUTH GOES <lb />
Backdate Items. <lb />
N. C, March <lb />
P, If, went lo Ayden Friday <lb />
and returned Saturday. <lb />
Miss Callie Smith went lo <lb />
ville Saturday and returned Monday. <lb />
Hisses Nannie. Carrie Bell and Sal- <lb />
lie Smith visited the Misses <lb />
Saturday and Sunday. <lb />
Mr. Tyson visited his pa- <lb />
runs near from Friday <lb />
until Monday. <lb />
March Messrs Mills and Lloyd Smith vis- <lb />
in a drunken Stupor the Seaboard lied relatives near Farmville Sunday. <lb />
passenger station this afternoon A. Mr. C. L. Tyson of Reunion was <lb />
I. Walls, a while man from Marion, Monday. ., <lb />
C. was attacked by Jim King, also On Friday nigh,. March 22nd, there <lb />
drunk and one of the worst Will he a party at <lb />
this section when full, because the Smiths school house for the benefit <lb />
white man would not lake some of the Christian church at Arthur. <lb />
cigars offered by him. King is said AH sons of amusements will be fur- <lb />
to have knocked Watts down and was You are to guess Cinda- <lb />
kicking him in the face when Chief slipper shoot the <lb />
K, diem appeared on the scene. The tooth in the <lb />
chief King by the arm and or- n. nature, a wonder In the shape <lb />
him to desist, but Instead he of man to bee seen. Candy and pea- <lb />
struck him In the face with a bottle to eat while listening the de- <lb />
of as he went lo strike the strains of music tarnished b <lb />
second blow the chief shot In talking machine. The at- <lb />
face, the ball entering near the chin tractive lady walks off with a valuable <lb />
ranging upward out near as <lb />
the ear. After being shot he had to <lb />
he clubbed into submission. He was cream and cake will be <lb />
placed In Jail. After face was are invited lo attend <lb />
repaired he was locked up to in thus worthy cause. <lb />
Michigan Whist Tourney. <lb />
DETROIT. Mich. March <lb />
players from ell over the state <lb />
in town today lo lake part In <lb />
. the seventeenth annual tournament of <lb />
whirl- <lb />
miss- <lb />
does handsomest gen- <lb />
oysters and <lb />
All <lb />
and <lb />
NOTHING <lb />
PROVEN <lb />
Loans and <lb />
Furniture and fixtures <lb />
Demand loans . <lb />
Cash Hems . <lb />
Gold coin . <lb />
Silver coin, including <lb />
minor coin currency <lb />
National bank notes <lb />
U. S. notes . <lb />
RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. <lb />
Capital stock paid ill <lb />
2.255.115 <lb />
Surplus fund <lb />
all <lb />
043.30 . <lb />
i profits, less cur- <lb />
expenses and taxes <lb />
200.001 . <lb />
subject to check. <lb />
92.50 Savings deposits . 30.699.79 <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
. <lb />
4.177.001 <lb />
Total, <lb />
Total, <lb />
North Carolina, County of It, l <lb />
Hodges, of the a bank, do solemnly swear <lb />
that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and be- <lb />
lief. HODGES, Cashier. <lb />
Subscribed and sworn to before nth day of December, ion. <lb />
D. O. BERRY, <lb />
SMITH, Notary Public. <lb />
R. C. My Feb. 1913 <lb />
Directors. <lb />
Arthur Evans, cornet; Miss <lb />
I Nora Moore, Mandolin; Misses Ku- <lb />
Cassidy and Emma Harden and <lb />
Mr. Robert guitars. <lb />
Greenville and surrounding <lb />
try did the very creditable thing of <lb />
giving the young ladies an <lb />
audience and the financial side <lb />
play was also a line <lb />
N. March <lb />
W. of Durham, was discharged <lb />
last night by Associate Justice <lb />
Walker from custody. It being very <lb />
to all the young man had <lb />
met overwhelmingly the evidence <lb />
by the stale In mailer <lb />
tie death of the three men, <lb />
who died ill Frank Wilson's place OH <lb />
February or B, n was s o'clock last <lb />
night before the habeas corpus hear- <lb />
was concluded, and at this point <lb />
tin. justice stated that Young sufferers from skin <lb />
defense was conclusive. W. New York. -N Y. <lb />
Norris then said he would would to see It I <lb />
mend the bond, under Bent to all pans of the <lb />
Which Maynard Moseley was held, be world and I were a young woman <lb />
refunded, i would do all could to introduce it <lb />
everywhere, I have Just passed <lb />
Religious birthday and am very weak <lb />
Greensboro, Tomorrow afternoon <lb />
OINTMENT. <lb />
The following extract from a <lb />
ant letter will be of to <lb />
Wholesale Grocers Meet. <lb />
Pa. March <lb />
The Wholesale <lb />
Association began its annual <lb />
in this city today with a good the Michigan Ass <lb />
attendance of representatives of the b. this afternoon in the <lb />
wholesale grocery trade throughout <lb />
Pennsylvania. Maryland and West will <lb />
Virginia. The convention will con <lb />
its business tomorrow. <lb />
n of the Hotel Cadillac. <lb />
continue until the end of th. <lb />
The rewards for skillful play- <lb />
most sought after are the <lb />
city trophy, Ypsilanti trophy and <lb />
trophy, <lb />
alias <lb />
One surprising thing the <lb />
Held for Court. <lb />
Brewer, <lb />
John Huff, charged with the murder <lb />
of Patrolman was give,, Colonel's announcement I <lb />
a preliminary hearing this afternoon Alarm <lb />
held for superior court. . <lb />
hasn't gone off <lb />
ill o'clock hundred and fifty men <lb />
from terrible disease de- <lb />
on my face and neck dining <lb />
teal fill heal of July last and <lb />
of Greensboro will commence the your ointment cured me after <lb />
of a religious census of Greens- Are months of great suffering. <lb />
It is hoped to complete the <lb />
in an hour. This campaign is <lb />
n part of the work of the Men and Re- <lb />
Forward Movement in the city <lb />
the Information will be put In <lb />
permanent form for use In the <lb />
churches in the future. The names <lb />
of one in the city, with the <lb />
facts as to where they hold their <lb />
church membership, <lb />
Inclinations, whether or not they at- <lb />
tend Sunday school and other <lb />
information win lie obtained. <lb />
sold here or recommended by doc- <lb />
tors equals Ointment i <lb />
have sent some friends in New <lb />
California <lb />
Yours truly. <lb />
Ointment is sold at <lb />
a drug or cents <lb />
prepaid from Owens Miner Drug <lb />
Co. Importers and 1007-1009 <lb />
denominational Man Va <lb />
My Doctor Said <lb />
writes Mrs. Z. V. Spell, of Hayne. N. C <lb />
was in a very low state of and was nut able to <lb />
be up and tend to my duties. I try and soon <lb />
began to feel better. I pot able to be up and help do my <lb />
housework. continued to lake the medicine, and now I <lb />
am able to do my housework and to care for my children, <lb />
and I feel as though I could never praise enough <lb />
for the benefits I have <lb />
TAKE <lb />
Recent events in New York police <lb />
., difficult <lb />
is successful, because it is made especially for <lb />
women, and acts specifically on the womanly constitution. <lb />
does one thing, and does it well. That explains <lb />
the great success which it has bid, during the past years, <lb />
in helping thousands of weak and women back to <lb />
health and happiness. <lb />
If you are a woman, feel tired, dull, and are nervous, <lb />
cross and irritable, it's because you need a tonic. Why not <lb />
try builds, strengthens, restores, and acts <lb />
in every way as a special, tonic remedy for Test <lb />
it for yourself. Your druggist sells Ask him. <lb />
to- I Advisory Co., Tm. <lb />
tot book. I Se<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
Disc Harrow <lb />
The Bet All and Serviceable Harrow for <lb />
Orchard and Vi ; a I Work Eva Made <lb />
We the <lb />
Company <lb />
Motley Bros. <lb />
Ge <lb />
Nineteen Mile- u <lb />
-i Jar. shock or disturbance, <lb />
awful Map of our earth through <lb />
We wonder Mica <lb />
movement and so do those <lb />
, , i, Dr. King's New Ufa <lb />
a. do just thorough <lb />
brings good health and<lb />
. , <lb />
. I I<lb />
K i OF <lb />
tiler Had Spent a<lb />
KISSING <lb />
r- <lb />
This season we are es- <lb />
strong on Farm- <lb />
Implements and <lb />
Machinery. We cordial- <lb />
invite your inspection. <lb />
Come to 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 />
OLIVER 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. <lb />
.,. <lb />
II <lb />
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF <lb />
Greenville Banking Trust Company <lb />
FEBRUARY 1912 <lb />
RESOURCES <lb />
Loam Discount <lb />
Overdraft <lb />
Stocks and Bonds 6.761 <lb />
. . and 5.490.86 <lb />
C Due from <lb />
Banks 129.651.01 <lb />
Capital Stock <lb />
Undivided <lb />
Due Banks <lb />
DEPOSITS <lb />
7.331.79 <lb />
29.40 <lb />
258,519.49<lb />
II out May I, 1911, is- <lb />
I 0.00. C S. C <lb />
II I i <lb />
H. G I of Rev. <lb />
j . . n. C .<lb />
. or nurse the <lb />
. , <lb />
i . I has I<lb />
et or <lb />
figure, <lb />
with a <lb />
to on <lb />
., I rather <lb />
j with long black <lb />
i; complex ion, brunette, some- <lb />
M h d la In i Ci , w she wore <lb />
i. . Sugg, ho one to , ,.,,.,, being <lb />
. . . . I I <lb />
nit, . wore a <lb />
very dark blue or black felt hat, charge of income the <lb />
j . <lb />
i. . <lb />
March 11.- Instead court, may be referred to the <lb />
o , of one . m <lb />
. ; iv. I rs, . II Howard raft, <lb />
,. ,;.,;. i . . o tax wealth <lb />
i . i,. n He i of <lb />
has i us a come tax <lb />
my on amend- <lb />
the <lb />
constitution for an In- <lb />
necessary. I be-<lb />
Li <lb />
I rt i n tram hi about ,,., income tax, when the <lb />
hi of living. protective system <lb />
Now gel ready for old ,,,,. internal revenue tax <lb />
You do It; It's furnish income enough for <lb />
Whenever II is proposed U ,,,,., needs, can be devised, <lb />
short, and a white instead or wealth. ,,.,. n,,. of <lb />
made and in I wealth raises the question of court, will conform to the <lb />
i Washington she wore accompanied <lb />
with the <lb />
l . ,., the river, and many ,,, iii, <lb />
I could i tuft of gray l with some brown <lb />
B. King delivered an t on aide; she also wore <lb />
the close our school on one j engraved <lb />
Ion and it was a w Q N ,. ,, <lb />
and was much praised and <lb />
to <lb />
No. In time of war, and <lb />
I ht tr In time of peace <lb />
was beautiful In Us diction and liter- <lb />
and filled with the <lb />
aid inspiration of eloquence. <lb />
tin another Jar- <lb />
Before marriage, she was Miss N. <lb />
Roberta Bruegel, a daughter of <lb />
late Rev. Q. A. Bruegel. a Lutheran <lb />
clergyman, she has friends in <lb />
and X. Y. New <lb />
York city. Brooklyn, Philadelphia <lb />
tax is Every Ural class <lb />
of the toll one- <lb />
raises a of revenue lo meet <lb />
the expenses Of the ll <lb />
taxing among such nations <lb />
being Britain, Japan, Prance, <lb />
Denmark, Holland, <lb />
Australia, New <lb />
many more. <lb />
our present fiscal policy, the <lb />
Nothing In the history of American <lb />
tariff-making has so thoroughly dam- <lb />
the fallacy the high pro- <lb />
principle as testimony of <lb />
the Lawrence, <lb />
In the same where Carnegie <lb />
and Schwab told how they juggled <lb />
millions, the Rules of the <lb />
House heard fathers, mothers and <lb />
children tell how whole families were <lb />
is the grand old man of Pitt for whom <lb />
have the highest esteem, favored us <lb />
N. Y., and all through the <lb />
Valley Chunk, Allen- <lb />
town. Bethlehem, and Pa. <lb />
expense of maintaining the army and m a week <lb />
building nubile buildings u, wool- <lb />
With a most excellent address at t <lb />
close of our school. He had re- She has been in poor health <lb />
untied from Bra ill as and several months resulting from <lb />
a very beautiful breakdown, and she was very <lb />
running government, is met by <lb />
en trust. The told how <lb />
taxing the things the people must have work <lb />
In order to live. Practically all w , <lb />
for is derived M a substitute for but- <lb />
how children had to go in the <lb />
in his <lb />
educational instruction with the I s- I <lb />
one has in scaling one of th <lb />
Andean heights. Only <lb />
and oils <lb />
i, to up the <lb />
led, dangerous pathway <lb />
and In her man- <lb />
for the most of that period. <lb />
the Though of unusual intelligence, since <lb />
would at- her illness she been reticent <lb />
narrow, be- depressed, Her disappearance is <lb />
D a temporary aberration. A suit- <lb />
tax. which was substituted, <lb />
tax which was recently <lb />
and tor, <lb />
n income lax. While the hat, COala <lb />
Id shins of the masses are taxed <lb />
due, <lb />
able reward will lie paid for <lb />
, , in mountain side, <lb />
i , glory and of formation hading to discovery. <lb />
, , all communications -o the Po- <lb />
,, ,,,. e of l ll co Department. Washington, D, C, <lb />
i , and RICHARD SYLVESTER, <lb />
whatever <lb />
i I'll <lb />
loom up in Major and of Police, actually pays more toward run- <lb />
the than does a <lb />
Hints <lb />
of true i and <lb />
, r. nevi r I y those too or <lb />
to ; danger l <lb />
reach the top above the n let. So <lb />
W education only the Term, And Term <lb />
willing to dare and d i ever j ,. <lb />
the from which all the <lb />
life and duty i an be <lb />
with the exception of a a m D <lb />
the family from actual <lb />
and how the constant demand <lb />
of the mill for more and <lb />
nor speed for little children. <lb />
In the committee room some <lb />
ct the mill children. They were fresh <lb />
from the mills and a mere glance <lb />
hem told more than volumes <lb />
v. All had pinched fans. <lb />
All were poorly dressed, some of them <lb />
in lieu <lb />
in l coat. of them <lb />
had dull expressionless faces, la <lb />
there was no truce color <lb />
or All o more- <lb />
over, were slightly deaf, of <lb />
their work amid the <lb />
teller, Morgan and the <lb />
not <lb />
any in- <lb />
Ad- <lb />
other millionaires are .-. <lb />
federal government to pay any <lb />
; only a cheap sweater <lb />
coal <lb />
in all its beauty and <lb />
The County <lb />
the following to serve <lb />
millionaire bachelor. <lb />
The Democratic plan is to place <lb />
sugar in the flee list This will h. work <lb />
an annual burden of m, ,.,,,,,,.,,, that at <lb />
taxation from the table u, members almost <lb />
sad to shout to make themselves <lb />
heard. All the children looked worn <lb />
Commissioners have now home by the American people. <lb />
as Then the present corporation tax <lb />
ors for April <lb />
Cue is reminded here of Pope's , .,.,, <lb />
lines, -A little . a danger; Term <lb />
deep or ., ,,. B. T. <lb />
of be extended to include been <lb />
spring. For shallow <lb />
intoxicate the brain, hut <lb />
drinking largely sobers us <lb />
and having an an- up beyond the limit of en- <lb />
B. income of a year or <lb />
excess of income over will i <lb />
taxed one per cent, bringing Into To Others. <lb />
Yon can use Salve <lb />
oilier associations recall <lb />
may be watching you <lb />
A burglar may have watched you <lb />
hide that money. You may lose it. <lb />
Put it in this bank, where it will be <lb />
safe in our burglar and fire proof <lb />
vaults-and from which you can <lb />
withdraw it AT ANY TIME on demand. All <lb />
your neighbors do this. Why not you. <lb />
-4 <lb />
National Bank of Greenville <lb />
Resources 340,000.00 <lb />
The Home of Women's Fashions <lb />
Pulley Bowen <lb />
Greenville, . North Carolina <lb />
again, <lb />
Among . ------.--- <lb />
that the last ball i ever attended was <lb />
here. <lb />
all applied <lb />
this occasion, but the realization <lb />
Came that correctly formed <lb />
demanded a higher plain for <lb />
those imbued with ambitions and as- <lb />
of the noblest and highest <lb />
The writer once had the Impulse <lb />
lo aspire for the position of <lb />
t of Public. Instruction of <lb />
hut that his friends were fast <lb />
friends of Mr King the matter was <lb />
dropped. Mr, King succeeded Mr. <lb />
Your securing that excellent <lb />
The Teachers Training School, <lb />
a great mark of progress in your <lb />
from I attribute most <lb />
largely to the Influence of <lb />
is an institution of which <lb />
i eastern North Carolina feels proud <lb />
ind is a special adornment to Green- <lb />
magnificent court house <lb />
masterly and symmetrical in its pro- <lb />
portions, complete In all it appoint- <lb />
and finish, convenient in <lb />
equipment reminds <lb />
that It must be the realization of <lb />
Ideal of a court house projected <lb />
one of Hit and most ea- <lb />
teemed men in North Carolina. <lb />
The Court House and Training <lb />
School are grand memorials of his <lb />
and influence. <lb />
Win. J. H DALE, <lb />
J. M. O. Nelson, Charles <lb />
J. L. J. K. Lang. S. <lb />
Thomas Harris, Wiley Stancill, L. treasury between and <lb />
a year, which will cure children of eczema, rashes, <lb />
than cover the now chafing, scaly and crusted <lb />
rived annually from the sugar as las their accidental <lb />
to the consumer burns, bruises, ate. <lb />
F. Nobles, O. C. Nobles, J. J. <lb />
II. Stokes. F. O. Stokes. J. H. <lb />
White. W. J. Kittrell, A. Clark. <lb />
W. T. W. B. Edwards, J. <lb />
L Cox, John E. King. R. L. <lb />
son, J. W. Holmes, J. A. C. <lb />
W. Harvey, T. M. Hooker, Luther <lb />
Joyner, William House, C. S. Forbes, <lb />
Z. W. Brown, C. L. Stokes, O. L. Joy- <lb />
Civil Term, L. Nichols, J. <lb />
E. Pollard. J. C. Tyson, William <lb />
lings, J. R. Tyson, Waller Tyson, W. <lb />
R. L. Purvis, Jesse G. Thomas. L. L. <lb />
Ward. Sr., J. T. Bullock, Jerry Me- <lb />
Lawhorn, Vance Wall, Jesse L. Cher- <lb />
A. M. O. E. Forbes, R. <lb />
A. Parker, J. A. Gardner, James A. <lb />
Bloke. <lb />
The price of sugar <lb />
reduced <lb />
n is estimated, will then in <lb />
about 11-2 cents a pound. <lb />
Those who scout the Idea that an <lb />
income tax bill can drawn as has no equal. <lb />
o stand the test of the supreme I gists. <lb />
with perfect safety. Nothing else <lb />
heals so quickly. For boil, ulcers, <lb />
old, running or fever Bores, or piles <lb />
cents at all drug- <lb />
The REFLECTOR <lb />
Your JOB PRINTING <lb />
There's a Reason-- <lb />
free <lb />
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb />
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb />
Work, and Flues in Season, See <lb />
J. J. JENKINS <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Do you know of all the 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 a.; germ diseases. <lb />
Pneumonia and consumption are <lb />
among them. Why not take <lb />
Cough Remedy and cure your <lb />
cold while you can For Bale by all <lb />
dealers. <lb />
you do the <lb />
World's Farm <lb />
prow <lb />
method. N f <lb />
for free <lb />
To Yuck <lb />
E. A. FARM AGENCY <lb />
Barton <lb />
N. C. <lb />
A. B. Agent <lb />
Phone <lb />
C. <lb />
Conway, North Carolina. <lb />
;. A. Farm Agency. <lb />
t wish to say that I am more than <lb />
satiated with the farm purchased <lb />
winter through your agent, A. <lb />
k. Denton, located at Greenville, N. <lb />
thank you gentlemen for the <lb />
and treat- <lb />
me u <lb />
representative. am, <lb />
Yours very truly. <lb />
J. F. FUTRELL. <lb />
IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH <lb />
-TRAVEL VIA <lb />
The CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb />
DAILY SUNDAY <lb />
The new Steamers lust placed In service the OF NOR- <lb />
and are the moat elegant u <lb />
up-to-date steamers between Norfolk and <lb />
Equipped with each room, <lb />
Delicious meals served hoard. Everything <lb />
comfort and convenience. s I J <lb />
leave Norfolk p. m. dully, arriving at <lb />
a. m. following morning. <lb />
Connecting at Baltimore for point. NORTH, NORTH BAST, <lb />
Very low round trip rates to Baltimore, Washington. Phil- <lb />
New York, Atlantic City. etc. <lb />
Reservation made any Information furnished <lb />
W. T. P. A- <lb />
Norfolk, Virginia.<lb />
TWO TO <lb />
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION WINS <lb />
Civic League Asks <lb />
Health<lb />
Bl M an <lb />
TWO ARK <lb />
HOLD FIFTH <lb />
II <lb />
N. C, March -In <lb />
list of opinions <lb />
by the cowl there aw <lb />
I two In the lower <lb />
YARDS court <lb />
for and <lb />
also a case in which I hoard <lb />
Jams Memorial Church <lb />
Sixth Year <lb />
HEW BER <lb />
FIFTH EXCURSION OF N. S. SYSTEM <lb />
i tS <lb />
AT <lb />
bomb <lb />
LARGE <lb />
tip <lb />
, on i gallon the <lb />
M church <lb />
r their hand- <lb />
BERN ll.-The <lb />
i-, the mi- i <lb />
by the Norfolk <lb />
,,. . Is iii the i<lb />
o C <lb />
where <lb />
The Hoard of aldermen met in rag , <lb />
Ur monthly <lb />
. .,, the timber cat- , ., the morning <lb />
, t simple i ml <lb />
. i . <lb />
with mayor<lb />
by <lb />
. Railroad and , Rev.<lb />
iii<lb />
being i <lb />
Involved <lb />
Instructed to dollars. <lb />
; drain i ii d e state <lb />
from i<lb />
to the walk <lb />
was adopted. <lb />
The <lb />
remedy the trouble with <lb />
pipe through tho property of B. B. <lb />
v ,. la. <lb />
was rescinded and the following a- i <lb />
Thai the water and <lb />
Kin commission be Instructed to las <lb />
from <lb />
conclusion <lb />
to the con <lb />
would <lb />
II loll Of <lb />
Will from Ki is u i <lb />
i, W. R, fourteen thou<lb />
Tenth <lb />
Ninth <lb />
Th,<lb />
A justice of U e in i co asks The <lb />
publish the following tor <lb />
i their church. The <lb />
members were asked to e <lb />
views in matter, to which m feral <lb />
responded aw th- <lb />
ad raise the required amount <lb />
i a e the co <lb />
Inaugurated to each <lb />
living In the church and <lb />
i, tidy <lb />
a 6-Inch i <lb />
o streets and then up n <lb />
t ard to c. . ;. <lb />
referred allow his live stock L -The Holy by Bias Ad. <lb />
J. to run s large within the , err, was much enjoyed and her <lb />
, m, com- county, township or In . ., cultured <lb />
referred to g , v. ,., , ,,.,, in;. <lb />
and rail pursuant to law, he shall be <lb />
. ,,. . ml demeanor and lined Talk Postal System. <lb />
ill <lb />
n VanDyke, <lb />
by <lb />
, .,, on <lb />
for <lb />
Mi <lb />
excursion V <lb />
India other <lb />
and of <lb />
, , th <lb />
in on and <lb />
Williams has received many <lb />
in m prospective pi <lb />
in in, who bi <lb />
made trips here and <lb />
is tot a Clover <lb />
that one. t <lb />
by its looks because there are man;, <lb />
found in <lb />
cue machine not found in others. <lb />
SUe Spreaders are <lb />
Prated, the strongest and best on the <lb />
market. If you will examine one critically you <lb />
will with us that the<lb />
Tuna tall <lb />
take <lb />
were appointed to <lb />
a proposition D. I <lb />
of the town . i <lb />
part <lb />
r consideration <lb />
M. Clark in <lb />
commons. <lb />
Chief reported <lb />
ii, . lire company a is willing <lb />
live horse to be used tor <lb />
black lots adjoin to Evans s <lb />
,,.,. H. d t, provided <lb />
Mr. it. i-1 mi i Saturday morn- <lb />
gave the of the <lb />
I, School an Intel it- <lb />
. . , . , hi postal <lb />
Training Kate <lb />
Th, visit in Mb th I Cutler, Si c- , <lb />
of Study <lb />
In v. W, C. hi n of <lb />
the town lb to <lb />
i , OP <lb />
i . ,, presents <lb />
,;. , <lb />
Whereas, it i to n I <lb />
I a, <lb />
ii<lb />
de-<lb />
keener for T g School. In even- . , , a <lb />
would a d., ed to th, . this i ad i ;. <lb />
,; <lb />
v , r <lb />
pose of an Old horse and use I <lb />
found in Cloverleaf construction <lb />
know <lb />
its <lb />
The<lb />
Si. <lb />
and fertility. We ate <lb />
one for you. Won't you call and <lb />
horse for tho s as well b. . <lb />
In the <lb />
Bro and town <lb />
deep Insight Into the <lb />
ell In <lb />
CHEN C m <lb />
that i i i serious <lb />
t-l i th el In I <lb />
Hie,<lb />
or. upon win <lb />
The Border line compile re- <lb />
Line. I <lb />
N. V. We SI. led <lb />
h- Hi to till. <lb />
behind with <lb />
I, J. n G <lb />
f i <lb />
after- do he <lb />
or. <lb />
reserving one <lb />
it today <lb />
. t <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C<lb />
as for b <lb />
and that a driver provided <lb />
Salary of per month J of the <lb />
civic League through Aide On sand. , . ,, <lb />
. <lb />
Hall requested the lo t. Id , , , ,,.,. , ,,. n, <lb />
th. thing. will m . I ,,, , consent . <lb />
WM refer- to us. Cutler end- m . <lb />
I and I<lb />
., iii, in my t <lb />
Miss <lb />
Of an <lb />
on <lb />
col Ion yard. <lb />
the things will bring <lb />
. , <lb />
IS go to the J- J-J <lb />
T. It. Moore were presented. Laugh- I M and Kan <lb />
in Saturday <lb />
in Testimony Whereof, i have here- <lb />
to set my hand and affixed my official <lb />
11- s Raleigh, this 8th day of March. <lb />
board was ex- I'll labor body of Oil. <lb />
Officer <lb />
the <lb />
The sympathy <lb />
pressed for Policeman W. H. <lb />
who is very sick, and a commute <lb />
consisting of Aldermen Tyson and <lb />
Edwards was appointed to visit the <lb />
officer and provide for him as may he <lb />
found necessary. <lb />
J, House and X. L. were <lb />
placed in nominal Ion as driver of the <lb />
fire horse, House receiving voles <lb />
and <lb />
The officers made their report for <lb />
the past month, and bills were <lb />
proved by the committee and <lb />
ordered paid. <lb />
Saturday Mr. <lb />
Forrest went lo <lb />
Mr. Charlie <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Mr. Dudley was the . <lb />
Miss Harrow Saturday night. <lb />
Mrs. p. a. Burroughs and little <lb />
daughter, Ruby, spent a while Sat- <lb />
night at Mr. L. E Dudley's. <lb />
and Miss Edith <lb />
flood Man and N Williams . from near <lb />
M a Wife and Saturday night at Mr. <lb />
Po. <lb />
i- n A <lb />
Years. <lb />
Secretary of Slate <lb />
Find <lb />
W offer variety ; <lb />
th. In V <lb />
and price In our <lb />
Its of <lb />
Furniture <lb />
Oil Cloths, Carpets, Rugs <lb />
Twelve I Barrows. <lb />
I Mr. A. o <lb />
, was ill Ibis community Saturday even- <lb />
Mr. William Henry after same life Insurance <lb />
of pneumonia about o'clock Sun- <lb />
in South <lb />
I day morning at his home in <lb />
A He was years of ago <lb />
I that the people I in <lb />
county would be glad to show p- and was a good man and us, fill Oil <lb />
to the editor of The Daily <lb />
Reflector for his long faithful life as I About years ago Mr. <lb />
PU county an on the police force of <lb />
, wish to say to one and all, tot of ,, <lb />
h, each succeed.,,, <lb />
in the and Observer own to <lb />
test. learn the little fellow wants faithfulness, Through most of <lb />
mid he would make u a he was night policeman <lb />
business. <lb />
We me very glad lo <lb />
Bertha Mills home. She has <lb />
ill With at tin <lb />
lier Uncle, Mr- <lb />
We hope her a speedy <lb />
Miss <lb />
been <lb />
homo <lb />
Sunday <lb />
led headed. <lb />
found at his post of <lb />
even if he wag <lb />
m can going about his task cheerful- <lb />
of <lb />
,,. truly said that he gave his life in the <lb />
Lei us hear from others. I service of the town, for it no doubt <lb />
A. O. COX. I <lb />
. true <lb />
. PITT weather of this winter contracted the <lb />
COTTON CHOP OF WOT <lb />
Bales Will- passing away bring. <lb />
in the community for he bad <lb />
VI <lb />
near <lb />
recovery. <lb />
Mr. Dudley <lb />
near <lb />
Mr Johnnie Ponies and Miss Clara <lb />
Adams spent a while Saturday <lb />
at Mr. L. E Dudley's. <lb />
Mr. Jim was the guest <lb />
Miss Cora Harrow Saturday night. <lb />
Mr. Victor Williams and sister <lb />
die and Miss Stevenson wen <lb />
guests at Mr. I. E Dudley's awhile <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest were <lb />
Simmons <lb />
ex-Sh riff Tucker <lb />
I. W. Tucker, Former <lb />
duet for <lb />
In Till In. <lb />
Friends and of <lb />
are glad to loam that In bis <lb />
coming campaign he will be <lb />
la Pit county by <lb />
I. W. Tucker. <lb />
Everybody In Bounty, who is at <lb />
all declare that the choice <lb />
made by the Senator is fitful. <lb />
under his guidance the cam- <lb />
will claim a deal of in- <lb />
In Pitt county. <lb />
Before you buy, be sure you make a <lb />
and prices, see bow well <lb />
taste and pocket nook. <lb />
son our <lb />
we can suit your <lb />
Vandyke <lb />
STA OF <lb />
THE. BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb />
BUSINESS. FEBRUARY W, U <lb />
of<lb />
Mrs. Charlie <lb />
their gr <lb />
he <lb />
, i . . of friends. <lb />
Mr J a special agent <lb />
on gin He is <lb />
for the eastern half Of county, and much <lb />
sent iii his dosing report for the past for these in <lb />
season on Saturday, He advises us <lb />
that for season ending March funeral look <lb />
tor the season ending March <lb />
been ginned In this m , <lb />
Ices being conducted Rev. <lb />
the county for 1811 at <lb />
It would have been larger t <lb />
loss through Inability wore <lb />
cotton <lb />
,. Edwards, W a. Bowen, B <lb />
the of Mr. and <lb />
the exposure in the severe Sunday. <lb />
Mr. Jake was guest Bl <lb />
Miss Eva Dudley Sunday. <lb />
Miss Barrow and Miss Edith <lb />
Williams were the guests of Miss <lb />
i Dudley Sunday. <lb />
Mrs. Mollie Adams was <lb />
bl a Of Mrs. I E Dudley Saturday night <lb />
Is ex- Ml. spent Monday <lb />
he- Mr, I. Q, <lb />
Mr. Henry Harrow hail <lb />
moving Monday evening. <lb />
the <lb />
I ill III r <lb />
Minister <lb />
Honor, <lb />
to his congregation <lb />
at the Methodist church yesterday <lb />
the of Policeman W. <lb />
which had just <lb />
Rev B M. Hoyle paid an <lb />
tribute to dead officer and to the <lb />
Other Officers of the police tone, lie <lb />
said the People of owed <lb />
Mr s debt of gratitude <lb />
could never be paid. Thai <lb />
and cold Of the <lb />
RESOURCES <lb />
Loans and Discounts <lb />
Overdrafts . <lb />
Banking House <lb />
Furniture and Fixtures <lb />
Cash Items <lb />
Due from Banks . . <lb />
Cash In Vault <lb />
514.84 <lb />
4.2011.00 <lb />
4,327.32 <lb />
2,982.51 <lb />
114,446.98 <lb />
11,671.44 <lb />
Total, <lb />
Mill <lb />
Capita Stock <lb />
Profits <lb />
Deposits . <lb />
. 7,111.32 <lb />
246,381.92 <lb />
CAREFUL ATTENTION GIVEN TO <lb />
ALL BUSINESS TO US <lb />
G. M. MOORING SON <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
General <lb />
Buyer, of cotton and country produce <lb />
Central Mercantile Co. tore and will ho glad <lb />
We now occupy the former <lb />
to have our friends call <lb />
at <lb />
from hi residence, the <lb />
1st <lb />
house <lb />
through the <lb />
had been <lb />
winter nights man <lb />
making his rounds the town <lb />
In,, over and protecting us while we <lb />
slept, <lb />
Mr, <lb />
do <lb />
odd Fellows Waking <lb />
Thursday Covenant <lb />
,,, b. with bans ,. pp-i <lb />
I. This S. ,,,,. . pleas, <lb />
12.618 hales. B. M. Hoyle. I meeting night from now. <lb />
.- it w. ,,, m -j,, <lb />
hut for some loss Inability are r. r .,. <lb />
, farmers lo gel their <lb />
it is estimated that fully a <lb />
P. <lb />
IO. Q. FLANAGAN. N. Q. <lb />
I, Secretary <lb />
FOB SILK <lb />
Halt's tour-ear Prolific com <lb />
. Grown In l- tool row, <lb />
Hoyle said people general- . making it a goad <lb />
appreciate the policemen corn. W per <lb />
thee men wore bushel; i per , <lb />
risking i Grown and selected by <lb />
and tor ow protection and <lb />
Central <lb />
I la business of j <lb />
n operation and c <lb />
. . presided by a skilled i <lb />
K ; her t g <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF C. T. COX <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Winterville and vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
s ti <lb />
Idaho, voted to adopt the <lb />
plan of <lb />
Bryan Gives Views <lb />
to Convention <lb />
Mrs- at Methodist <lb />
Church <lb />
N. C . Mama I. Those men were masters of <lb />
U and Mrs Greene work and lbs result of their <lb />
spent Saturday Sunday Kill i.-ll throughout eastern North SPEAK AGAIN TONIGHT <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Barker. Mrs Carolina. A large number of the, <lb />
Craves recently her students received lecture <lb />
l alias Sarah Barker. gentlemen spoke In As announced in yesterday's Re- <lb />
Martha Cherry and Louise term of the excellent promptness Hector, Mrs. <lb />
Bed Hanks, spool Saturday and attention shown by our people. lecturer tile Women's <lb />
Sunday Miss Rev. H. one of the Union, Chicago, gave <lb />
son. secretaries the Sunday School interesting lecture on Temper- <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Co. are Hoard of the Southern Baptist at ill Methodist church last <lb />
headquarters onion sets, both volition paid his annual visit <lb />
skin and the red. Wednesday He lectured at t On account of the unsettled <lb />
Miss Daisy of Ayden. spent Baptist church Wednesday night Hun weather the attendance. <lb />
feral days In town this week. on H. V. work. He showed though select, was very scant and it <lb />
Seed peanuts and old held peas at difference In the Sunday School to be regretted that more people <lb />
A. T. and Cos. and the II. V. P. work. On not attend it. as it proved lo be <lb />
Mr. Adrian Brown, of Greenville, day morning be delivered a thrilling Bern of lectures. The subject of <lb />
was pleasant loan one address on. Help of Temperance has discussed a <lb />
tins week. ton In the Stud Of deal of late, yet never has It <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Co. have people love B. W. for they presented to us as it was b <lb />
a shipment of well selected know there is always night's lecture. <lb />
en seeds nil k. . . store for them when The evils of intemperance placed <lb />
Mrs. M. A. Adams left Thursday II. ft for his home in with the virtues of <lb />
spend several days with mil in T made the former appear <lb />
I j Lumber is being sawed for now more loathsome than had they <lb />
The cannot agree on I I which will be erected presented in any other form. <lb />
to k law, they g ,,, during spring. Forceful examples were Introduced <lb />
A. W and Co., ; Lectures has the speaker aid during the entire <lb />
and reasonable prices to library. This length did Mrs. claim the <lb />
i D C lay i. a most B undivided of her audience <lb />
to spend a few days P J. I. Olive has taken up his The lecturer will speak to- <lb />
gain having been de- night at the Methodist church <lb />
v u. a. . ad hilt . ; o and everybody try to be <lb />
Rev. R. K. Hoffman i Was .- m make up tor last night's <lb />
Mis I. ti devotional <lb />
rig . school. i is the -1 . <lb />
K We around mark In Brown and not of <lb />
Harrington, Barber Co. enrollment i Mrs. Hoyle, as we were d <lb />
latest dress i Vance Society will believe yesterday. <lb />
s for spring and rive a debate Friday evening <lb />
summer. March at o'clock public ITEM <lb />
Miss Edith Adams Friday even la cordially Invited to be present. HOUSE, X. C, March bas- <lb />
In Ayden. query i.-. Resolved, That the party which was held at Fleming <lb />
It will pay you see Harrington. Should Adopt a Na- Ellington's school house was en- <lb />
Barber and Co., for your Irish Prohibition Law. Constitution- much. <lb />
lees and fertilizers, Affirmative, w. II Saturday was <lb />
Smith, V, w. it. c. Causey. <lb />
High School Hem. Negative, J. Ii I. L. Ben- <lb />
The Sunday Institute eon- nett, G. II. Cox. President, <lb />
ed by Prof. E. I. of Secretary, Z. V. Berry; <lb />
I. Freeman of Mer- II. T. Pope. p. ii. Croom, <lb />
The Michigan State <lb />
Convention for the election of <lb />
. gales to the Baltimore convention <lb />
be held at Hay City on Hay <lb />
The national convention of the So- <lb />
which was to have been held <lb />
Oklahoma City, may be transferred <lb />
Indianapolis. <lb />
Taft has accepted an in- <lb />
to the banquet of the <lb />
League Club of Philadelphia on <lb />
April the birthday of General <lb />
Grant. <lb />
Speaker Clark has been compelled <lb />
I v the of his official duties <lb />
to decline all invitations to make <lb />
speeches in various parts of the <lb />
The Michigan Republican cam- <lb />
is to be formally with <lb />
., banquet at Hastings on March <lb />
Kith Senator William Allen Smith as <lb />
chief speaker. <lb />
John l. of <lb />
ho was Secretary of the <lb />
when Theodore Roosevelt was <lb />
secretary, has been selected <lb />
. s president of the Taft League of<lb />
Is In Favor of Initiative, Refer- <lb />
and Recall and it an <lb />
a Revolution. <lb />
O . March <lb />
Jennings Bryan gave the Ohio con <lb />
convention his views of <lb />
the making of a constitution. Bryan <lb />
favored the Initiative, referendum and <lb />
recall, saying the recall is an <lb />
rather than a revolution. <lb />
Bryan said the only difference be- <lb />
tween the recall and <lb />
is that in Impeachment the trial is <lb />
before a body of officials, while <lb />
places the decision in the hands <lb />
of the people. Championing the In- <lb />
and Bryan as- <lb />
has shown that our <lb />
government's defects are not in the <lb />
people themselves but in those, who <lb />
acting as representatives of the <lb />
embezzle power and turn to <lb />
their own advantage, the authority <lb />
given them for advancing the pub-<lb />
Concerning the recall of judges <lb />
Bryan said he believed the recall In- <lb />
stead of menacing the Independence <lb />
a the judiciary is more likely to <lb />
prove the character of those who <lb />
judiciary positions <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES. <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb />
as administrator of the estate of <lb />
E. deceased, notice If. here <lb />
by given to all persons indebted to <lb />
the estate to make immediate pay- <lb />
to the undersigned and all per- <lb />
sons having claims against the said <lb />
estate are notified to present the <lb />
same to the undersigned for payment <lb />
on or before the 2nd day cf March, <lb />
1913. or this notice will plead la <lb />
bar of recovery. <lb />
This 2nd day of March, 1912. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
of Susan E.<lb />
or in <lb />
By order of the Board of County <lb />
Commissioners. I will offer for sale <lb />
at public auction on Monday. April <lb />
1st. 1912, at noon the small <lb />
building on the court house square <lb />
which was erected for the storage of <lb />
the county records during the con- <lb />
of the new court house. <lb />
Stud building to be removed from the <lb />
premises within days after date of <lb />
at the expense of the purchaser. <lb />
Will sell at private sale before <lb />
date If offer is satisfactory. <lb />
This March 6th. 1911, <lb />
F. G. County Atty. <lb />
law till sale <lb />
day <lb />
Col and in-. P. Burroughs Robt. Leo, <lb />
Tenn. closed last Sunday. <lb />
Black Jack Item-. <lb />
BLACK JACK, March are BLACK JACK. X. C, March <lb />
i weather at this w.- are glad to see such One weather <lb />
b. plain i isl again. <lb />
t ,. Ian the ram broke them up. The farmers getting ready lo <lb />
busy work start work again. <lb />
Mas- the farm, rs say their to- <lb />
Mr. J. A. Clark i a Farm- <lb />
up. <lb />
Mrs. Randolph is visiting <lb />
mother at Scotland Neck this week, <lb />
We are very glad to hear of so many <lb />
We sorry lo hoar of Mr. <lb />
Moore being in such a <lb />
I . ell. <lb />
A Word Votes. <lb />
If friends in town of the editor, <lb />
lo saving votes for him in the News <lb />
Observer automobile contest <lb />
s l l <lb />
not been called for. will us <lb />
we will . Fro i. .- out <lb />
Ba k -t . ., I who cannot gel them to as <lb />
They . <lb />
candy <lb />
i . <lb />
I I Saturday i <lb />
lulling <lb />
r J, W. and Thomas <lb />
tit to Washington <lb />
. I at k J k Sunday. . <lb />
U Mae of C. v ,,. <lb />
T- s s ling night <lb />
Met a o. Clark and J. II. Clark <lb />
of spent with <lb />
I r father, Mr. W. L. <lb />
ft. i <lb />
We all <lb />
in nine . I to please n i m <lb />
to the contest of <lb />
the Observer, i <lb />
mis hi is <lb />
and it. <lb />
The Bad Stale of The <lb />
I The perfect husband deserted two <lb />
ago of perfections <lb />
has Anally been divorced at Oakland. <lb />
Cat. He Save his wife .-very luxury <lb />
and liberty and showed no <lb />
j Jealousy. He Dover spoke an <lb />
word or used or <lb />
co or and never kept late <lb />
hours. It he had loss perfect <lb />
In those things, she might not have <lb />
turned against And If he <lb />
only beaten or at least scolded her <lb />
in a while, she could have loved <lb />
him. <lb />
I Hut who shall judge by this <lb />
instance When a New York <lb />
kept late hours his wife com- <lb />
plained the who or- <lb />
him home at every <lb />
night and after a few days of ob.-d- <lb />
ho just as dutifully killed him- <lb />
self. Three Philadelphia wives last <lb />
went to the Magistrate with <lb />
a of various husbandly <lb />
perfections. Hill when they wore <lb />
lowed to judge eases themselves, <lb />
of them let their husbands off. <lb />
while the third her <lb />
l and lo three months in Jail. <lb />
We call judge the wife better by <lb />
these Instances than the status <lb />
. the husband under till these <lb />
he the winch . . , ti <lb />
. . . lie is not allowed to I. <lb />
perfect or Imperfect, drunk or sober, <lb />
inn nights or In. kindly or scolding. <lb />
t-ti or brutal. <lb />
It is in of that the <lb />
poet said woman is <lb />
coy, and bard to Clearly, <lb />
Representative William <lb />
chairman of the Republican con- <lb />
campaign committee, is the <lb />
owner of a network of <lb />
covering a large <lb />
of Illinois. <lb />
to an the <lb />
most prominent of the managers in <lb />
of the Tail national campaign <lb />
W. Murray Crane. States <lb />
senator from Massachusetts and J. <lb />
A. former l States <lb />
Senator from Indiana. <lb />
Senator Joseph M. manager <lb />
of the Roosevelt national campaign. <lb />
is a native of North Carolina, but <lb />
has been a resident of Montana for <lb />
years Prior to his election <lb />
the ratted States senate he <lb />
ed in Montana legislature and in <lb />
lower house of Congress. <lb />
i Governor Joseph M. Carey of <lb />
is mentioned for second <lb />
place on tile Roosevelt ticket, has <lb />
la en in public life for many years. <lb />
He Wyoming in Congress <lb />
territorial days and the <lb />
first States Senator from <lb />
now state. As limited States sen- <lb />
said to have done more to <lb />
agricultural conditions in <lb />
the West any either measure <lb />
r ill. the Federal statute <lb />
books. <lb />
Ml F. <lb />
Having qualified as administrator <lb />
Joseph deceased, late of <lb />
Pitt county. North Carolina, this is to <lb />
notify all persons boring claims <lb />
of said i <lb />
el exhibit them to undersign- <lb />
ed within months front ibis i <lb />
or this notice will be pleaded in bar <lb />
iv <lb />
All persons indebted . sit i estate <lb />
v pleas.- make Immediate i <lb />
ibis Till day of Match. <lb />
C M. A. <lb />
r. G. James a Sou. Administrator <lb />
Attorneys. <lb />
Mr. ii Arnold I in <lb />
dine sum iv. <lb />
Elder Adam Gaskins son. Fur- <lb />
i . w. to Saturday, <lb />
We are glad bear of Mr. R. M <lb />
Williams getting <lb />
Messrs. W. Iii Holier <lb />
Jodie Dixon i,, Bat- <lb />
Wen's League. <lb />
The league met in the iv <lb />
inn . i I The . i- <lb />
. bill <lb />
having D Messrs. J. I. <lb />
l. Brown and Chandler n r. <lb />
meeting next Sunday <lb />
hi Id in ll i Isl hi Church. <lb />
Truman New berry, who has been <lb />
with task of <lb />
i- Ho- financial end of the Roosevelt <lb />
national campaign, of <lb />
tie in Mr. last <lb />
He is a son of the lute Con- <lb />
what can learn we will <lb />
a wedding some ii. soon. <lb />
Mr. H. H. of ,., <lb />
through our section list week, <lb />
Mr. J. A. Clark left for Hon- <lb />
evening. <lb />
RESPECT.<lb />
raw lord <lb />
Three Crawford <lb />
in dais. They were <lb />
Ben Frank and David I. <lb />
The trio was faithful followers of <lb />
Editor<lb />
Hie Board <lb />
x. c. Mayor's <lb />
March <lb />
Text. I. John L, M <lb />
II. Ii. Bateman, and M, w. Wallace. <lb />
with two representatives from <lb />
Boy S. la tars Evans and Jack <lb />
Bryan. <lb />
in the suffragist movement to <lb />
the hope that some change to hours <lb />
cf statecraft may produce a different <lb />
result a of conduce, for ex- <lb />
ample, governed more by reason and <lb />
of , . , . , ,. , , ,, <lb />
. , . less by World. <lb />
whom he fortune j <lb />
millions. Like Colonel Roosevelt Mr. <lb />
saw active in the <lb />
war and it was <lb />
the two first became ac- <lb />
Under and by virtue of an order <lb />
iii, Superior court of Pitt county, <lb />
entitled, M. Crisp, of B. F. <lb />
deed., and ll. c. <lb />
Ex. the same being <lb />
the special proceeding docket of <lb />
said court, the undersigned <lb />
will, on Monday, the 1st day of <lb />
April o'clock noon, at tho <lb />
court house door in Greenville, North <lb />
Carolina, offer sale to the highest <lb />
bidder for cash that certain tract of <lb />
land, lying and being in the county <lb />
and stale of North Carolina, <lb />
in Falkland township, on south <lb />
side of Tar river and bounded as fol- <lb />
lows Commencing a i an <lb />
agreed starting point, in Harris Mill <lb />
Creek at John Kings line run- <lb />
nearly an course and <lb />
nearly a straight lino i .-, or <lb />
division fence between <lb />
an I n. f. and <lb />
thence with said fence in county <lb />
road leading lo Center Bluff. Wilson <lb />
Snow down the road <lb />
to <lb />
Foreman line, thence down <lb />
Branch to three gums in Willie Pierce <lb />
line, thence up the to the said <lb />
cypress at the beginning, containing <lb />
e res, more or less, and being the <lb />
land deeded lo the said n. F. <lb />
deed from <lb />
dated April 19th, 1882 and recorded <lb />
in I lie register of office of Pill <lb />
county it. book Y-3 page <lb />
I cash. <lb />
This February 9th, 1912. <lb />
s. m. CRISP, Commissioner. <lb />
Moore a Long. Attorneys, <lb />
Greenville. X. C <lb />
An Old Soldier Passes. <lb />
Mr. David L. Crawford, of Bi r <lb />
Ham Township, died a few days ago. <lb />
II,. was of age Hid w <lb />
a soldier in the Confederate army. <lb />
The Board of Aldermen of the town i;, leaves a large family. <lb />
of having been It Is that of <lb />
Lee and were th sons Calvin and of w. H. do Crawford brothers, ill of whom i . <lb />
Crawford born In Beaver Dam session lo Confederate have died with- <lb />
near Grove church, David en- bis life and services among his q the three months. <lb />
listed in the old Marlboro Company to Hie public. <lb />
four brave young stalwart brothers Whereas, W. H. for more Favor in <lb />
i hard fought battle. He engaged in twelve years occupied March in- <lb />
hat death pit of police for the said less the unexpected happens. Theo- <lb />
I and George in the which time he did faith- Roosevelt will get in his first <lb />
S C, Regiment. They too were at fully and diligently keep card over ii blow in the light for the Re- <lb />
r lives, the homes and the property, nomination hers <lb />
AH were in the trenches before Pet- fa ii was possible for man to tomorrow, when the Republicans of <lb />
George was In the sharp- Kept them from danger and will meet to name ten <lb />
hooter department, This writer has I while storm, cold and ten alternates <lb />
heard old comrades speak of him as and isolation surrounded him. but convention at Chicago, -i i, <lb />
bravest of the brave on the deadly unknown to us an. expected to <lb />
lent. These our homes and the quietness of i,. in absolute control of <lb />
though cur sleep. notwithstanding the fact that <lb />
Whereas, a sense f profound the has fought <lb />
followers of . prompts us to record up- and nail In the Interest of Pr. s- <lb />
hard t And They were true the official minutes of this Taft The delegates to the <lb />
of their neighbors deserted the That W. ll. was s most state convention instructed tor <lb />
rand old state and hid out in the and conscientious officer of volt out number the Taft delegates <lb />
the town of Greenville, holding the nearly two to one. Tho Roosevelt <lb />
confidence of entire community supporters point to this tact as one <lb />
until bis untimely death. That his of groat inn, because, they <lb />
memory holds our respect, That we declare, it represents tho first chance <lb />
lament and deplore his death as a people had to choose . <lb />
It is expected that the management <lb />
of the Tail campaign In Michigan will <lb />
be placed in the of former <lb />
Congressman J. <lb />
For a number of years Mr. <lb />
was chairman of the Republican Slate <lb />
committee of Michigan, and ho is <lb />
loWS Hunt Raise III Watt. <lb />
Iowa., March <lb />
millers from all the mining <lb />
sections of Ibis stale are gathering <lb />
la re ill largo numbers lo attend the <lb />
meeting called to In <lb />
city tomorrow, ii seems practically <lb />
foregone conclusion that the men <lb />
at their meeting will make a d. mad <lb />
tor a raise in wages of cents a <lb />
ion and of per cent for day work <lb />
Should the operator to grant <lb />
i-aid to have a boiler Increase demanded, it is said, all <lb />
tin- political Situation in In mines of state will <lb />
probably any other on April until a new wage <lb />
Ho Is s member and loader among the . tile is agreed upon. <lb />
Dutch settlers who predominate in <lb />
the southwestern part of the stale. <lb />
naturally, might be expected to <lb />
favor Colonel Roosevelt on account <lb />
of bis l ancestry. <lb />
Ills. <lb />
All had by hard work and economy <lb />
owned a plain country home and <lb />
ed urge families and died peace <lb />
with all men. They have another <lb />
brother surviving <lb />
followed the lost Hag. <lb />
Young men of the day think of the <lb />
four brave young stalwart brothers <lb />
that went out from that little log <lb />
cabin by the old plank road. <lb />
T. TYSON, <lb />
Neighbor. <lb />
Ho ion. loss community and a tho two candidates under <lb />
able calamity In his family. law. While ready to admit <lb />
they lost the light so far as the <lb />
Every citizen of Pitt county ought male convention is concerned, the <lb />
to be Interested In good roads and people believe they will be able <lb />
there should be n large attendance to capture some of the <lb />
the meeting of the good roads as- thus preventing a <lb />
To Make Ml. Vermin Trip Cheaper, <lb />
WASHINGTON, C. March <lb />
A I. re delegation of the Mount <lb />
Association, organized <lb />
to practice of charging ad- <lb />
mission in home and tomb of <lb />
George Washington, was to- <lb />
day before the Inter-Slate Commerce <lb />
Commission, when the appeal of the <lb />
association for a reduction In the <lb />
electric railway fare between Wash- <lb />
and Mount came up for <lb />
a bearing and argument Tho fare <lb />
Is now cents for tho round trip, <lb />
miles and cents of the total Is <lb />
for tho Journey back and <lb />
over of a mile <lb />
of road between <lb />
Vs., and Mount Vernon. The <lb />
demands that the charge of <lb />
forty for that short trip be <lb />
entirely. <lb />
BUBBLE <lb />
for Monuments and <lb />
Tombstones, all sizes. <lb />
All Iron <lb />
for grave lots and <lb />
cemetery purposes. <lb />
Got my prices. <lb />
SILK. <lb />
By virtue of power of sale con- <lb />
in a certain mortgage deed, ex- <lb />
and delivered by Luke <lb />
and wile in Henry C. on tho <lb />
day of May, 1910, and duly re- <lb />
folded in the register deeds <lb />
county. In Hook page <lb />
the undersigned will expose to public <lb />
before the court house door in <lb />
Greenville, to the highest bidder, on <lb />
Friday. March 1912, a certain tract <lb />
pr parcel of land, lying and being In <lb />
I the county of Pitt and state of <lb />
Carolina, and in the of Ayden, <lb />
described us <lb />
Adjoining the lands of Caleb Worth- <lb />
on the north, the Tripp Bros, <lb />
on the east. W. J. on the west <lb />
and street on Hi.- south, containing <lb />
about 1219 sq, or 1-4 of an <lb />
acre. So satisfy said mortgage. <lb />
This 27th day of February, 1912 <lb />
II. C <lb />
F. C. James Son. Mortgagee. <lb />
Attorneys. <lb />
here Friday. <lb />
volt delegation from Oklahoma. <lb />
Candidate Senator Cummins Is now <lb />
looking for the fellow who Invited <lb />
him In because water Is <lb />
Ml TO <lb />
Having duly before the <lb />
superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb />
as administrator of the estate of w. <lb />
It. Ford, deceased is hereby <lb />
given to all persons Indebted to the <lb />
to make Immediate payment <lb />
undersigned; and all persons <lb />
having claims against the estate are <lb />
notified that they must present the <lb />
lo the undersigned for payment <lb />
or before the day of March, <lb />
or this notice will he plead In <lb />
bar of recovery. <lb />
This day of March. 1912. <lb />
T. CARSON. <lb />
of W. R. Ford. <lb />
HALE <lb />
By virtue of the power of sale con- <lb />
in two certain mortgages ex- <lb />
by J. A. Gardner, to Hie Car- <lb />
Bagging Co., both recorded in <lb />
T-9, page the undersigned <lb />
win for before the <lb />
house door in on Saturday. <lb />
March 1911, the following <lb />
ed personal <lb />
duo shingle mill complete; <lb />
corn mill, both now located at <lb />
x Roads. In Pitt county; <lb />
two bay mules about years <lb />
one black mare mule about <lb />
years old; one gray mare mule about <lb />
S years old; and one black horse mule <lb />
years old. Also a largo lot <lb />
of pea-Vine hay raised during the <lb />
year on the lands of the said <lb />
J. A. Gardner, near x <lb />
Said properly is sold lo sat- <lb />
two mortgages, <lb />
This February 1911 <lb />
CAROLINA BAGGING COMPANY. <lb />
F James . Son. <lb />
It will be noted rash <lb />
Mexicans who went up against that <lb />
beef trust ranch are now Impressed <lb />
with the remarkably high cost of <lb />
SECTION OF <lb />
THE CAROLINA HOME AND FARM M THE EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. FRIDAY, MARCH 1912. <lb />
OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD FOR PRESIDENT <lb />
MATCHLESS LEADER OF A UNITED DEMOCRACY-WORTHY OF A UNITED SUPPORT <lb />
THE PROGRESS OF <lb />
A SANE YOUNG MAN <lb />
By G. <lb />
extraordinarily well qualified for the presidency of his long <lb />
m Governmental matters. Granting that Mr. Tall had long the <lb />
executive end the Government, he was u, knowledge <lb />
end; and this has been apparent a through his term. Sow. h <lb />
Roosevelt. The tragedy of the death of Major will hold is <lb />
name high among the our Presidents; but. Inn, critically <lb />
no historian at all with the facts can deny he an expert President <lb />
a capable President, a President who could secure result,, a President who <lb />
knew how to deal with the Congress make; the laws he must execute, <lb />
because of long experience service in the House. <lb />
Evening. Post, December <lb />
It was hot in Washington on Wednesday, the second of August hot <lb />
you could fry an egg on the pavement at Ninth and P if so be your taste ran <lb />
to egg A la asphalt; and it was even hotter than on that torrid comer <lb />
in the chamber the of Representative,. <lb />
Only a wilted statesmen were present at noon, and the chaplain languidly <lb />
besought that they should be purified from all guile and let it go at that. It <lb />
may have been there was a that some of those coat- <lb />
less and within the zones of of the electric fans in the various com- <lb />
have their guile removed too; for no sooner had the <lb />
chaplain concluded his thirty seconds of prayer than the absence of a quorum <lb />
was suggested. The heated statesmen came pouring in from all sorts of places, <lb />
shoving themselves into their coats, and answered to their names as <lb />
the roll called. Two hundred and thirty-three of them responded, each, <lb />
asking his <lb />
It wasn't long before they all found out. After Mr. Burke, of South Dakota, <lb />
had corrected the Record to show he voted in the negative on a certain <lb />
instead of answering Oscar W. Underwood, the Democratic I <lb />
floor-leader, and the same token the majority floor-leader, was up. <lb />
Oscar W. Underwood was cool. Two hundred and thirty-two statesmen were <lb />
moist to the point of saturation and heated to the point of but <lb />
Underwood was cool. Not a head of perspiration gemmed his brow; not a sag <lb />
was in his collar and his shirt-bosom preserved its pristine gloss. <lb />
Underwood Center of a Dramatic Scene. <lb />
He had a newspaper in his and as he rose the gasping patriots on <lb />
both sides took notice and shoved up their temperatures a degree or -0 by <lb />
clapping vigorously. , <lb />
gentleman from Alabama is said the Speaker, leaning tor- <lb />
ward eagerly as if he knew what was coming. . , , <lb />
began Underwood calmly, evenly, dispassionately and coolly <lb />
which most Speaker. I rise to a question of personal <lb />
The Democrats applauded some more. The Republicans grinned. It <lb />
was no affair of theirs, save as a show. , <lb />
He that the clerk read from the newspaper he held in his hand, and <lb />
sent a page-boy up lo the with it. The clerk read in that sing- <lb />
song manner in which all reading clerks read. It a telegraphic dispatch <lb />
from Lined. Nebraska, and it recent activity of e <lb />
Underwood in defeating the attempt by Champ Clark others to reduce the <lb />
steel and iron schedule has met with the disapproval of J. <lb />
The reading clerk paused here, as if to let the enormity of this sink into the <lb />
perceptions of the perspiring patriots, and began My <lb />
the following of Chairman under- <lb />
wood in opposing an immediate effort to reduce the iron and steel schedule; <lb />
reveals the real Underwood. Speaker Clark and other tariff reformer, <lb />
to secure the passage of a resolution instructing the Ways and Means Com-- <lb />
to secure the passage a resolution in. .,. <lb />
to take up other schedules, including the iron and steel schedule, but <lb />
Underwood am Fitzgerald, of New York, succeeded in defeating the <lb />
e was more of the statement, but that is enough to show its general <lb />
It charged Underwood with being tainted with protection and having <lb />
. ;. ;. steel business, and was a very pointed <lb />
There <lb />
tenor. It charged Underwood .- <lb />
an individual interest in the iron and steel and was a very pointed <lb />
aid persons on one Democrat by another After the clerk had <lb />
finished reading the statement there was a moment of silence. Underwood <lb />
stood looking directly the Speaker, who still leaned <lb />
up the Then Underwood began slowly, dispassionately, <lb />
and gravely. <lb />
Underwood's High Political Courage. <lb />
statements contained in that article are absolutely he said. In- <lb />
the entire Democratic side into a roar of applause <lb />
reflections that paper contains rested only on myself should not <lb />
take the time of this House V. answer them; but the statements contained in <lb />
ha article a reflection on the only body control <lb />
of this Government, and as the representative leader cm the floor of this House, <lb />
of this should be untrue to my party if I did not rise here and <lb />
stamp utterances with the brand of falsehood <lb />
Underwood continued. He asserted he had asked the committee to take up <lb />
the c I because he comes from an iron steel dis- <lb />
and appealed to his Democratic colleagues on the committee to support <lb />
his statement which did. He said the committee had deemed it wiser <lb />
to woolen the cotton schedules first because the iron and steel <lb />
been en, in the Wilson, the <lb />
wool and cotton had not been reviled for many years. <lb />
Carolina, corroborated what Underwood claimed; and U <lb />
roved his case, explaining hit connection with the iron and steel <lb />
s a stockholder in a that makes pig having <lb />
real M r. dated April twenty-third, to James which Mr. <lb />
lames In convey bis congratulations to Underwood. <lb />
there was to one thing. <lb />
Underwood a Presidential Possibility. <lb />
ti. enc is When Underwood finished that statement and sat <lb />
That one thing mis. , a candidate <lb />
V . L Mr are as common as Mr. Bryan's assaults on other people <lb />
Assaults on Mr. Bryan arc. s Alabama a presidential can- <lb />
and about as effective. g c . f courage <lb />
was , situation, <lb />
Here , , , cc, ms contention. <lb />
a delicate one , , majority, was endeavoring <lb />
chap He seems <lb />
to have stuff m him. h to laud Under- <lb />
Of course the would have Mixed on the <lb />
wood, and equally of point. The person <lb />
stance to laud him that Underwood rose to a <lb />
equation of it was negligible. The mere lac <lb />
PLAIN WORDS ON <lb />
QUESTIONS <lb />
from interview of <lb />
car W. Underwood, reported m <lb />
Staff Correspondence of the <lb />
Va York World, <lb />
-action, December <lb />
There has been no <lb />
part of the manufacturers t i <lb />
give labor its share of the <lb />
from the tariff They <lb />
have kept all the<lb />
protect profits is to protect <lb />
inefficiency and to <lb />
rather than to develop industry.<lb />
prefer to lower the tariff <lb />
taking bricks off the top of the <lb />
wall rather than by <lb />
structure at the<lb />
people have lost faith in <lb />
the Republican party because it <lb />
las not kept faith with<lb />
Sherman is en- <lb />
forced as a criminal statute it is <lb />
efficient instrument for <lb />
venting and monopoly <lb />
mid restraint of <lb />
HON. W. UNDERWOOD. <lb />
Underwood's Varied Public Service. <lb />
Now, when talk of a man as a receptive or an aggressive candidate for, <lb />
S presidential nomination you tot up his qualifications; and, no matter <lb />
Underwood's name ever gets before the convention or not, no matter it it re . <lb />
no votes save those of Alabama, the fact is he ll highly qualified . <lb />
as the mechanics of the Government is concerned. He served in the House <lb />
of Representatives for seventeen years. When he took Ins seal, in <lb />
1895, he was thirty-three years old. He was placed on Committees on Public <lb />
Lands and Expenditures on Public Buildings. In the be <lb />
was promoted to the important Committee on Judiciary, and in the <lb />
went to and Means. He was on Rules and the Irrigation of Arid <lb />
Lands in the fifty-seventh Congress, on Appropriations Md Of <lb />
Arid lands in the and in the Fifty-ninth went hack o <lb />
and Means where he has sieve remained, arriving at the chairmanship . he <lb />
Present or Sixty-second Congress, when the Democrats gained control of the <lb />
these years he has been a quiet, systematic, steady demon- <lb />
has been. He has touched all phases of the of <lb />
year resident the better things will be for the country at large <lb />
Underwood's Methods Like <lb />
reciprocity legislation, to which the <lb />
Democrats wen- favorable, the <lb />
was Democratic mainly because of the <lb />
dissatisfaction of people with the <lb />
law. election <lb />
that made the House Democratic being <lb />
the first the people had to <lb />
express dissatisfaction tangibly. <lb />
The Democrats had a majority <lb />
nearly seventy. They had n t had <lb />
-c of the House for years. <lb />
were politically hungry <lb />
thirsty. needed sustenance. <lb />
thought they had a chance elect <lb />
a president in 1912 and get full swing <lb />
at all the perquisites and prerogatives <lb />
of the and each man of <lb />
the two hundred twenty-eight Dem- <lb />
was full of schemes for making <lb />
this chance a certainty. They were all <lb />
anxious to revise the tariff in order to <lb />
keep faith with the people, but they hail <lb />
plans for revision and many <lb />
shades of opinion as to how- it should <lb />
be revised. They felt th. power and <lb />
importance. They were avid, en- <lb />
and none too <lb />
Underwood and the <lb />
Democratic Party. <lb />
Underwood was made leader of these j <lb />
men. His was to hold them in line, I <lb />
to keep them together, to get them at <lb />
work intelligently get <lb />
results. He knew that the Democratic <lb />
party, if it was to have any response <lb />
from the people in its demand for the election of a Democratic president in <lb />
1912. must -how people it is trustworthy fit for confidence lie knew <lb />
of the opinions as to what should be done with the tariff; knew of <lb />
the enthusiasm lack of judgment, the partisanship, and even the <lb />
Of some of his knew they bad been so long outside tut tie <lb />
i t the inside position might lead to excesses m legislation. He <lb />
his lieutenants well mil went at the Job. <lb />
His is not vet The President vetoed the tariff bills that were <lb />
formulated in the House under Underwood's direction and his. . <lb />
Sough changed in many particulars in the Senate and in There <lb />
will be more tariff legislation in the House in tins session. The resident has <lb />
demanded it and the Democrat, are wiling to go at it again tn their own <lb />
What Underwood must do again Is to hold his party hi line to <lb />
M complex a situation as he had to meet In the end. lo ll <lb />
sun never forget for s minute that there is a presidential election <lb />
next that will be largely decided upon the nation <lb />
he future the past, he will do it. It is situation with <lb />
of his colleague, are anxious radical <lb />
was. will no, until before the nations <lb />
,, is held The record of the present House will figure not <lb />
.,, , he fortunes of Underwood but as live t <lb />
shall be by the Democrats for president and that <lb />
candidate's success at the polls. <lb />
HIS WIFE A <lb />
Underwood has been helped and <lb />
his wife. She is proud of <lb />
and faith in his future. She <lb />
takes the utmost interest in his work <lb />
and his ambitions. She assumes <lb />
control of the domestic establishment <lb />
and leaves him free from care and con- <lb />
It is rumored she ever. <lb />
lays out his clothes for him and <lb />
bis cravat. She seeks to aid him in his <lb />
studies work of research. She is <lb />
bright, well educated, vivacious and full <lb />
of life. Not beautiful, but attractive, <lb />
wholesome and companionable. No <lb />
wonder is expressed that Mr Under- <lb />
wood's forehead and face arc free from <lb />
wrinkles. All the turbulence and nerve <lb />
suicide connected with handling a flat <lb />
arc removed from him York <lb />
August 1911. <lb />
Ration of it was sober though, <lb />
of persona privilege and me . and Con. <lb />
of the but the hi proof the fact that entire majority <lb />
manner in which he ms proM. . , , <lb />
supported as it M . and general- <lb />
this had h <lb />
ship and that had caused ,,,, to form, and <lb />
people-pushed, that good W, Democrats <lb />
in Democratic <lb />
materially before the Democratic <lb />
naturally put <lb />
National convention is held, it ,, , place favorite <lb />
some farther down he in her <lb />
sons in nomination, will send an orator mm <lb />
and present for the he , <lb />
of the Democratic <lb />
Long Legislative Experience of Great Value. <lb />
A man, <lb />
made the Constitution would have to the I<lb />
and so does ca were <lb />
legislative machine and knew how to <lb />
knew how to straighten out tangles and id t <lb />
knew when to recede and of <lb />
stock-still in a so does I. When <lb />
the tariff, for example, he knew what he was . <lb />
Underwood; but was, and his party. <lb />
of others, and is ultimate y concerned h of their <lb />
reasons why. <lb />
Underwood's Leadership Beset With Tremendous Difficulties. <lb />
Underwood to of the <lb />
Underwood Opposes Initiative, Referendum and Recall. <lb />
He is an advanced conservative in his views of n. I r <lb />
he does not favor the wide extension of the and re <lb />
that These measure have worked, I In <lb />
m w re the people the issues; hit larger <lb />
of the i are <lb />
interests of the people. <lb />
people suffer far more from the failure to enforce <lb />
laws than do from the lack of proper legislation, he says. Die <lb />
people should drive from places of power and the <lb />
and elect those who will be to the <lb />
imposed upon them. The masses of people arc <lb />
men than they are of measures, and are far more likely an <lb />
honest man than an honest <lb />
Underwood's Characteristics.<lb />
succeeded to the o. me s A M,, <lb />
Underwood was in the House, though not on the Way, and r <lb />
when -he was made and he ., ugh <lb />
the <lb />
passing <lb />
Underwood was born in Kentucky in 1862, was educated at Rugby <lb />
School in Louisville, and the University of Virginia, and was <lb />
to the in He went at once tn Birmingham. Alabama where he s <lb />
practiced law. He was first elected to Congress , and ha. been <lb />
returned since. He early took a hand In politics and served on State <lb />
committee, before he went to Washington. have ; a, <lb />
experience in the House ha- been varied and Ins advance been <lb />
He is not a man, but a He i- an orator, but <lb />
a convincing speaker. His greatest speech was in m <lb />
bill When measure was reported to the Home of es <lb />
the Republican and Means Committee in lie made M <lb />
Important speeches in advocacy of his own measure, during the extra <lb />
of the House last summer, hut none was so important or so as <lb />
that speech again-, the Payne hill. He spoke for m he <lb />
bill section and it from his information and <lb />
This one of the speeches of a season of remarkable presentment- <lb />
tariff on both sides of the House. . . <lb />
Underwood does not write his He My. he cannot <lb />
and never to make a set speech or a speech where he c <lb />
His method is to collect all the available information bearing <lb />
and arrange it in skeleton form. He sets I. out V <lb />
tonics He goes over these, classifies, divides and <lb />
of the or he not A, -vie. <lb />
when ha. nothing him hut a sheet of paper with <lb />
Topics on it, and he talks without reference to notes or to authorities <lb />
THE UNDERWOOD BOOn <lb />
Uncle Joe Cannon is quoted as saying <lb />
it Underwood of <lb />
has grown more in public <lb />
recently than any other man in the <lb />
Other leaders in both big parties are <lb />
taking notice of this able South- <lb />
who distinguished himself <lb />
the extra session of Congress a <lb />
leader in the House <lb />
Commenting upon the Underwood <lb />
lorn, the Birmingham A gt-He raid <lb />
rise of Oscar Underwood is the <lb />
i of American politics, and w. may <lb />
for its culmination in the week of <lb />
I in the good city of Baltimore. <lb />
That this distinguished is <lb />
rowing in favor in all sections of the <lb />
is plainly evident on all sides. <lb />
reprinted in the Birmingham, <lb />
Via., January, 1912. <lb />
DUTY Mia HER <lb />
THAN <lb />
Underwood Not <lb />
Must Do The <lb />
Sty. Underwood. <lb />
Congressman Oscar W. Underwood <lb />
when asked if he would be a candidate <lb />
for the Presidency, <lb />
think my friends are going pa <lb />
me the compliment of me and <lb />
that will present name ti <lb />
convention, I will be very proud <lb />
have their No man could <lb />
feel otherwise about it. <lb />
have told them that w <lb />
do they do by I <lb />
a man's work cut out f r me m <lb />
waving hi. hand In the gen <lb />
era direction Washington, and <lb />
am going to try my best to do it. I <lb />
am not going neglect u to be I can- <lb />
for the I <lb />
thing rise. , <lb />
what friends do i it <lb />
grateful. Hut what i. ll mi <lb />
will have to <lb />
Oct. 1911. <lb />
UNDERWOOD'S <lb />
BOLD PROGRAM <lb />
Politics and <lb />
The Underwood program i late. <lb />
sane reductions, not <lb />
framed so as to lighten the I <lb />
of the tariff without n <lb />
s shock to import., I <lb />
This is a sensible i <lb />
is good political <lb />
economics. Moreover. It is practical <lb />
If such a program should hi <lb />
and vetoed the Pr. ll Ml I <lb />
and the have t. <lb />
face an angry third <lb />
charged I <lb />
If Taft should u. l- <lb />
altitude and <lb />
leave the credit for tariff <lb />
to the Democratic party, and will en <lb />
him to recover none of the advantage <lb />
he has lost. <lb />
The failure of tariff <lb />
has deprived the President of even a <lb />
legitimate excuse for further vetoes, and <lb />
gives the Democrats ample reason for <lb />
going ahead without for <lb />
more resorts the same <lb />
hem, reprinted in the <lb />
tr, Jan I<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM <lb />
AND RECALL NO FIELD <lb />
IN NATIONAL POLITICS <lb />
REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT, AS CON- <lb />
BY FRAMERS OF CONSTITUTION, <lb />
ONLY SAFE BULWARK OF CIVIL LIBERTY <lb />
TIM <lb />
TO ABANDON <lb />
UNWORTHY SECTIONAL <lb />
ABASEMENT <lb />
SPEECH DELIVER D BY MR. UNDERWOOD BEFORE CATHOLIC <lb />
CLUB OF NEW YORK CITY DECEMBER 1911. <lb />
The main is the of life, liberty and prop. <lb />
B is Si <lb />
government than the enactment of new <lb />
Less than a century and a half ago the Federal was <lb />
for our Slate <lb />
world had experimented with almost every conceivable method em-cm- <lb />
who created the form of the new government were students of the <lb />
f of wE mo. <lb />
had Offered their and their fortunes in the for their country's <lb />
independence. No man can charge them with either lack of <lb />
regarding the essential principles of government, or want of hone v <lb />
of purpose to create a government that would secure to and their <lb />
Tranquil, <lb />
promote the general Welfare, and the <lb />
Blessings of Liberty to themselves and their <lb />
The most humiliating paradox in <lb />
American politics to day is the shrink- <lb />
attitude of ante of our own people <lb />
toward the presidential possibilities of <lb />
Southern men. <lb />
The civil war, the memories of which <lb />
furnished the nursery for this <lb />
sectional abasement, is at <lb />
our back. Ninety per cent of the Amer- <lb />
voters who elect a president re- <lb />
member this war and its dividing rancor <lb />
only as history. With outstretched <lb />
hands, having given even proof of view- <lb />
Mason and Dixon's line as no more <lb />
a political harrier than the <lb />
or the Rockies, the dominant generation <lb />
at the North invites the South, its pub- <lb />
men, by right of citizenship and <lb />
Danger of Departing from Path Established SCAT <lb />
by the Fathers <lb />
ft; <lb />
fail- <lb />
World's First Written Constitution. <lb />
They proclaimed to the world its first written Constitution, created a <lb />
of law in absolute contradistinction to a government of men <lb />
framers of the Federal Constitution were familiar with the repeated <lb />
area of governments based on the principle of a direct democracy, where the <lb />
were the direct law-making power and in some ultimate <lb />
power of the country. <lb />
Dangers of a Direct Democracy. <lb />
They knew from the history of the past that those governments had failed <lb />
their purpose; that the liberties of the people had been destroyed by the <lb />
extremes and excesses which marked the administration of a government where <lb />
the laws were made in the forum by the assembled multitude, and were not the <lb />
mature product of selected men especially trained for the work in hand <lb />
They knew that the failure every direct Democracy was due not to <lb />
e lack of honesty or purpose on the part of the aggregate citizenship as- <lb />
South Wanting in Boldness <lb />
What has the answer of the <lb />
least, the answer that may be <lb />
interpreted by the silence or the <lb />
of hundreds of thousands of rep- <lb />
Southerners <lb />
Obsessed by the ghost.- of half a <lb />
ago, guilty of an embarrassment <lb />
and a i- nothing <lb />
short arrant sectional cowardice, <lb />
there is a feeling among many South- <lb />
that the wraiths of the sixties <lb />
till stand between the South and the <lb />
White the Sooth and that par- <lb />
in the nation's voice, the <lb />
destiny, to which the nation is <lb />
eager to i. <lb />
The consequences of this abnegation of <lb />
common manhood could not be more <lb />
forcefully portrayed than in the words <lb />
of the Washington <lb />
in dispatch discussing the <lb />
presidential status resulting from the <lb />
episode. <lb />
writes our correspondent, canvass- <lb />
the possibilities of Oscar Under- <lb />
wood, the brilliant along <lb />
with other Southerners, the penal- <lb />
of being a Southern man. it will be <lb />
the South and not the North to ex- <lb />
act <lb />
South's Political Stage Fright <lb />
That is also an accurate delineation <lb />
of the manner in which the North views <lb />
the situation We use Underwood only <lb />
as an illustration, though his magnificent <lb />
record as House leader during the <lb />
session would, as our correspondent <lb />
declares, have assured his nomination <lb />
a he lived at the <lb />
North To the North, it makes no <lb />
where Underwood, or any other <lb />
one of the galaxy being discussed, was <lb />
horn. The representative Northerner <lb />
does not bridle at mention of Bull Run <lb />
or Gettysburg. It remains for the South <lb />
to develop political stage fright over <lb />
these diminishing chapters in our his- <lb />
The last embers of <lb />
sectional acrimony were stamped out by <lb />
the war. The last <lb />
barriers between North and South were <lb />
crumbled In-fore the achievement of <lb />
Joe Wheeler, of Lee. aid of <lb />
many of the younger generation on both <lb />
sides. <lb />
The most convincing evidence of this <lb />
fact is the manner in which the nation <lb />
received the announcement of the broad <lb />
and patriotic action of President Taft <lb />
in elevating Justice White, a <lb />
veteran, to the Chief of <lb />
the United States Supreme Court. A <lb />
protesting snarl rose here and there <lb />
from the And the voices <lb />
most bitter in denunciation of that <lb />
jaundice came Northern <lb />
press I It is only essential for the <lb />
freak firebrand to rise and at- <lb />
tempt to wave the to be <lb />
buried with ridicule, not only by his <lb />
but as well by the news- <lb />
pipers of all sections of our common <lb />
Not a Question of or <lb />
Discretion <lb />
In the face of these cumulative facts, <lb />
there are some in the South who still <lb />
question if, account of past of- <lb />
it is or <lb />
for a Southern man to offer himself for <lb />
presidential honors We insult our- <lb />
selves, we debase our manhood, we <lb />
render the rights the North is so willing <lb />
to concede us, when we permit our <lb />
course, as a people, to be so interpreted. <lb />
It is not in human nature to accord <lb />
respect, where self respect is absent <lb />
How, then, can we expect the remainder <lb />
of the nation continue to respect us, <lb />
when grove in the dust of a by- <lb />
gone era. and let go by default the <lb />
rights inherent in American manhood <lb />
For virtually half a century the South <lb />
has furnished the hewers of wood and <lb />
drawers of water for the Democratic <lb />
party. It has. faithfully with each re- <lb />
current four years, furnished the <lb />
army and its line <lb />
fully yielding command to other sections. <lb />
With a smile, it has steadily forsworn <lb />
the political loaves and fishes, content, <lb />
for the sake of the party, that they go <lb />
to doubtful and again to <lb />
States most of us knew at the time were <lb />
steel-riveted Republican. <lb />
Let Claim Our Birthright <lb />
For years we have eaten in the <lb />
political kitchen. Consistently, we have <lb />
waxed cheerful when denied even the <lb />
dubious privilege of the second table. <lb />
And to-day, when the clock of destiny <lb />
strikes, when the door of opportunity is <lb />
wide ajar, when the North actually lives <lb />
up to that prophetic utterance in the <lb />
Senate of Hen Hill. are back in the <lb />
house of our fathers, and we are here to <lb />
stay, thank Cod few of us are still <lb />
blushing and stammering, still wearing <lb />
political sackcloth and ashes, still up to <lb />
the old game of doing all <lb />
the drudgery, with none of the cakes <lb />
and ale Let's end this disgraceful <lb />
We furnish, have long furnished, <lb />
the electoral votes, the powder and shot, <lb />
of the Democratic party. <lb />
Lets assert those equal rights and <lb />
as American citizens, as the re- <lb />
of the nation fraternally bids <lb />
us to do. Let's cease the stultification <lb />
of informing the nation, our actions, <lb />
that we cannot bring forth a man <lb />
for the presidency. For the sec- <lb />
cowardice, here and there <lb />
is equivalent to that shameful <lb />
and ungrounded admission The Con- <lb />
Atlanta. Ga. January 1912 <lb />
FREE LIST BILL VETOED <lb />
BY PRESIDENT TAFT <lb />
DRAWN BY CHAIRMAN UNDERWOOD OF THE <lb />
WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE <lb />
A Bill of Direct Benefit to the Farmer, Whose <lb />
Hopes Were Dissipated by a <lb />
President <lb />
MR. UNDERWOOD THE FRIEND OF ALL CLASSES <lb />
MR. UNDERWOOD. FROM THE COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND <lb />
MEANS, SUBMITTED THE FOLLOWING REPORT <lb />
To accompany II. R, 4413.1 <lb />
w c <lb />
WAS. <lb />
tardy recognition of the righteousness of the Democratic tr <lb />
lion but that the people could not <lb />
work to a which is so deeply obligated to the <lb />
interests as is the Republican Party to the highly protected <lb />
the <lb />
the forum, but to the fact u . <lb />
desires, passions, and prejudices, and licked <lb />
hat <lb />
they were often swayed by <lb />
minute knowledge of the re- <lb />
effect of their actions <lb />
No honest man in his individual entity will controvert the Golden Rule <lb />
that all men should do unto others as they would be done but it is rarely <lb />
the case that the assembled populace can divorce itself from its selfish desires <lb />
and deal out abstract justice to those who may be temporarily in the minority. <lb />
Realizing the danger and excesses of a direct Democracy, the of <lb />
our Constitution endeavored to a government that would protect the <lb />
rights and liberties of the individual and at the same time reflect ultimately <lb />
the will of the majority in the enactment of the law of the land. <lb />
Ours a Representative Form of Government. <lb />
To accomplish this end. they established a representative form of govern- <lb />
designed to create a law-making power responsive to the will of the <lb />
people, and at the same time they wrote in the Constitution certain checks and <lb />
balances intended to prevent the more brutal force of a majority from de- <lb />
the liberty and property rights of the individual. <lb />
It must always be borne in mind that the of our Constitution were <lb />
not attempting to establish freedom of Government, for they created a Gov- <lb />
with only certain delegated powers expressly given to the Nation by <lb />
the States, reserving to the States the right to make most of the laws that <lb />
affected the liberties of the citizen. The underlying principle of the <lb />
was to guarantee the liberty of the citizen and the protection of his <lb />
property rights against the power of the Government itself. <lb />
Independent Judiciary Established. <lb />
To guard and protect these rights, an independent judiciary Ml established <lb />
to see that neither the Executive nor the Legislative branches of the Govern- <lb />
encroached upon the guaranteed rights of the individual. <lb />
It is evident that the framers of the Constitution were unwilling to trust <lb />
a selected legislative body, held in check by the veto power of the Executive; <lb />
fearing even then an unbridled abuse of the power, they <lb />
guarantees of liberty that a majority of the people could not trample <lb />
upon or the Government itself destroy. <lb />
Some may say that a majority of the people will not endanger the liberties <lb />
and rights of the individual. I wish that this were but the history of <lb />
every government has shown that at times the people, when unchecked by <lb />
constitutional guarantees, have destroyed individual rights and individual <lb />
liberty. <lb />
Unwise Changes Now Proposed. <lb />
It is now proposed by some that we shall in part abandon the representative <lb />
government enacted by our Revolutionary fathers, and adopt a system that in <lb />
the end would establish a direct democracy when the ultimate power to make <lb />
laws would be placed-directly in the bands of all the people, and the independent <lb />
judiciary intended to Constitutional guarantees of individual liberty <lb />
would subservient to the will of the majority through political com- <lb />
We may forget that Madison and Hamilton, soldiers in war for <lb />
can Independence, brought their groat minds and mature judgments to the <lb />
framing of the Constitution of the United States, but there is one whose sincere <lb />
judgment will not be doubted m to the value of a representative government <lb />
as with a direct one, even by those who doubt the sincerity of <lb />
pose and the honesty of opinion of men <lb />
Jefferson's Wise Views. <lb />
In speaking of equal right of Thomas Jefferson <lb />
times have the advantage, too, of having <lb />
the only device by which these can be secured, to Govern- <lb />
by the people, acting not in person, but by representatives chosen <lb />
by <lb />
The author of the Declaration Independence, knowing that all popular <lb />
before Ins time, resting on the direct decisions of the people, had <lb />
failed and ultimately had reverted into uncontrolled despotism, rejoiced that <lb />
the hour had come when a representative government could express the will <lb />
of a free people. is now proposed to abandon the representative principle <lb />
of government established by our fathers and revert to the direct action of <lb />
the people, to the principle of an Athenian democracy adapted to modern <lb />
conditions. <lb />
Representative Government Only Check on Excesses and Passion. <lb />
Our representative government was established to guard against the ex- <lb />
which had brought the ancient direct popular government to destruction. <lb />
and because our government does not at all times immediately re-pond to public <lb />
sentiment, there are some who insist that the principle of government is at <lb />
fault and must be changed. They do not reflect that at times they may mis- <lb />
judge real public sentiment, at other times the instrument of the govern- <lb />
whom the people can change at recurring <lb />
is at fault and not the basic principle of the government it-elf. <lb />
My experience as a legislator lends me to believe that the Congress of the <lb />
United States will always ultimately respond to the enlightened and matured <lb />
sentiment of the people <lb />
With the changing tides public sentiment, we have repeatedly experienced <lb />
changes in the exercise of the taxing powers. <lb />
We have seen the legislative branch of the government in direct response <lb />
to public sentiment in recent years enact railroad rate legislation, pure food <lb />
laws, provide for the publicity of campaign funds, national quarantine, irrigate <lb />
West and Canal. Can it be said that <lb />
the h ultimately to place on the statute books the laws that <lb />
a majority of the American were in favor of as a result of their <lb />
and deliberate <lb />
on Next <lb />
A Now Leader <lb />
From the South <lb />
President's veto, of course, de- <lb />
the Free List Bill, as well as <lb />
all the other features of the Democratic <lb />
platform. The special session, however, <lb />
was not without far-reaching results. <lb />
Its chief accomplishments were a <lb />
Congress and a resurrected <lb />
Democratic majority under a new lead- <lb />
It also emphasized the new <lb />
part which the Southern States arc now <lb />
playing in national affairs. With <lb />
Southerner as Chief Justice, a Southerner <lb />
as majority leader in Congress, and <lb />
Southerners as prominent candidates for <lb />
Democratic presidential nomination <lb />
Underwood and <lb />
nation is certainly more united than at <lb />
any time since the Civil War. No man <lb />
rejoices more over this changed <lb />
than Underwood. He is even more <lb />
interested in the solidarity of the lorry- <lb />
eight States than in the union of the <lb />
j. Hen- <lb />
in February, <lb />
Underwood <lb />
for President <lb />
The argument that he lives too far <lb />
South to be available is without weight <lb />
The country has reached that of <lb />
been so closely drawn to- <lb />
by railroad and <lb />
Alabama is brought to the door of New <lb />
York. Massachusetts and Texas are near <lb />
neighbors and even the two <lb />
of Maine and Oregon, stand within easy <lb />
hailing distance of each other. So far <lb />
as any feeling of sectionalism is con- <lb />
or any prejudice against the <lb />
of a Southern man for the <lb />
is, like Lincoln, a <lb />
native of Kentucky, and therefore as <lb />
much Northern as Southern, was born <lb />
Southern <lb />
Leaders <lb />
the men who have led the <lb />
Democrats in the House of <lb />
so successfully under trying con- <lb />
are freely mentioned at the pres- <lb />
time as possible candidates for the <lb />
presidential nomination by the Demo- <lb />
Convention. These leaders are <lb />
Champ Clark, Speaker of the House, <lb />
and Oscar W. Underwood, a new and <lb />
coming man. <lb />
are Southerners, by the way. but <lb />
in my mind there is no reason in these <lb />
days of broadening views and lessening <lb />
prejudices why a Southerner should not <lb />
their products in foreign o <lb />
associations in <lb />
years they many of <lb />
prices than at home, <lb />
Bagging and Baling Materials <lb />
September 1911 <lb />
Alabama's <lb />
Candidate <lb />
Mr. Underwood's service to the <lb />
try during nine terms in the National <lb />
House of Representatives has been most <lb />
distinguished, and has made his name a <lb />
household word in the homes of the <lb />
people. For more than JO years he has <lb />
been in the very front of his party's <lb />
battle line, a leader from his youth, and <lb />
ever faithful to his party's principles <lb />
and candidates. No Democrat can find <lb />
a flaw in his political record; no charge <lb />
of desertion in any campaign; no <lb />
of serving special interests can <lb />
lie against him. <lb />
His congressional colleagues respect <lb />
him for his sincerity, his high sense of <lb />
honor, his sagacity and his <lb />
edged ability, this in itself is an <lb />
infallible proof of his merit, for none <lb />
know so well the capabilities of a <lb />
statesman as those who have served <lb />
many years with him and noted his <lb />
conduct in days of peace and those of <lb />
political Enquirer, <lb />
October 1911. <lb />
Underwood <lb />
Timber <lb />
Mr. Underwood would make an ideal <lb />
President. He is a level- <lb />
headed citizen; he doesn't his <lb />
cogs and go off at a tangent as a <lb />
rabid exponent of revolutionary dogmas <lb />
in an effort to popularize himself; he is <lb />
uniformly courteous to all men; he be- <lb />
Up <lb />
Underwood <lb />
The years since the Civil War haw <lb />
rolled too fast and far to permit it to <lb />
be conceivable any longer that the cir- <lb />
of Southern birth should <lb />
constitute in Northern judgment a dis- <lb />
. qualification in any degree whatever. <lb />
in reducing the high cost of Both as to nomination and as to <lb />
in this country, not talking about it; lion the Southerner will be rated in <lb />
he docs not believe in destroying the <lb />
industries of the United States while at <lb />
the same time he is a thorough believer <lb />
in the principles of tariff for revenue <lb />
only.<lb />
There is no flub-dub about Mr. <lb />
lie doesn't believe in shams. <lb />
He is a big, brawny, brainy statesman, <lb />
without his lightning rod out to attract <lb />
the Democratic nomination for the pres- <lb />
and largely on that very account <lb />
he is liable to be the very man that will <lb />
get in the way of the bolt that may <lb />
elevate to the White W. <lb />
in the Mus- <lb />
Okla., October 1911. <lb />
from First <lb />
The response may not be U rapid, but it is probably more permanent and <lb />
ill-considered or bad <lb />
Cannot a committee of the Congress, composed of representative men, <lb />
initiate legislation, within the limitations of the Constitution, guard ex- <lb />
and abuses, protect tie rights of the minority, voice the of the <lb />
t t a measure who, in order <lb />
i hat they may accomplish one result, are tempted reach so far that they <lb />
leave a wake of destruction as to collateral matters the measure touches <lb />
Untrustworthiness of Petitions. <lb />
It is true that under the system proposed, a petition by a percentage of <lb />
voters would first have to be obtained. But let every man a, himself how <lb />
often he has signed petitions to please or get rid of the person who presented <lb />
the paper, to determine what thought deliberation will be exercised <lb />
the average man who signs a petition. <lb />
People Suffer More From Failure of Law Enforcement Than From <lb />
Lack of Proper Legislation. <lb />
on his individual merits. As far as th <lb />
particular Southerner, Mr. Oscar W. <lb />
I is concerned, it is agreeable <lb />
to note the absence of geography in <lb />
the regard in which he is held in all <lb />
York Sun- <lb />
tanners and have served <lb />
and combinations. <lb />
produce These duties have annoyed <lb />
principally to increase the profits of <lb />
and burdened <lb />
exacting trusts <lb />
Congress. 1st <lb />
II R. <lb />
An Act to place <lb />
on the free list <lb />
and shoes, <lb />
salt. <lb />
agricultural implements, cotton bagging, cotton e <lb />
Plows, tooth and disk harrows, headers, harvester <lb />
any <lb />
Should I stop to our government. I would say that the people suffer <lb />
far more from the failure to enforce the laws on the statute books than they -M. 1911 <lb />
do from the lack of proper legislation. How many remedial la <lb />
found on the statute books, that if fairly in forced <lb />
A FALSE POSITION <lb />
Rumors generally believed to have <lb />
emanated from the camps of men who <lb />
are or have been considered as <lb />
Democratic presidential possibilities, that <lb />
Mr. Underwood, of Alabama, could not <lb />
command the support of the North be- <lb />
cause of the fact that he is a South- <lb />
are not only poppycock, pure and <lb />
simple, but they place the men of the <lb />
in a false position in the eyes <lb />
of the people of the South and tend to <lb />
revive sectional feeling which has been <lb />
buried for many years. The effects of <lb />
such rumors arc nil in the North be- <lb />
cause the people of the North know they <lb />
have not one iota of truth, but people <lb />
in the South are apt to take them more <lb />
seriously, and there is where they may <lb />
prove harmful, not only because of their <lb />
tendency to cause dissatisfaction on the <lb />
part of Southern Democrats, but be- <lb />
cause of the effect they may have in <lb />
giving rise to sectional prejudice through <lb />
false representations of conditions which <lb />
lo not exist. No Northerner would <lb />
hesitate to support Mr. Underwood be- <lb />
cause he from the <lb />
Argus. Albany, New York, November <lb />
nagging for cotton, gunny cloth, and all similar fabric <lb />
. gunny aim all fabrics, materials or <lb />
suitable for covering and baling cotton, composed in <lb />
aft hemp Zealand tow Norwegian <lb />
tow, aloe, null waste, cotton tares, or any other materials or fibers able foe <lb />
and baRS or , par. of<lb />
or hooP or cut to lengths, punched or not <lb />
coated with pain, or any other wit <lb />
Win <lb />
or bather, boots <lb />
or hi cattle hides <lb />
and cattle skins of whatever weight, of cattle of the bovine species, including <lb />
m or or <lb />
unfinished, composed wholly or in chief value of leather; and leather cut into <lb />
lured article VamPS <lb />
Barbed fence wire, wire rods, wide strands or wire rope, wire woven or <lb />
manufactured for wire fencing, and Other kinds of wire suitable for fencing, <lb />
including wire staples. <lb />
Reef, veal, mutton, lamb, pork, and meats of all kinds, fresh, salted, pickled <lb />
smoked, dressed or undressed, prepared or preserved in any manner; <lb />
bacon, hams, shoulders, lard, lard compounds and lard substitutes; and <lb />
sausage and sausage meats. <lb />
Buckwheat flour, corn meal, wheat Hour and semolina, rye flour, bran, <lb />
middlings, and other offals of gram, oatmeal and rolled oats, and all prepared <lb />
cereal foods; and biscuits, bread, wafers, and similar articles not sweetened. <lb />
limber, sided, or squared, round timber used for spars or in build <lb />
wharves, shingles, laths, fencing sawed boards, plunk-, deals, and <lb />
other lumber, rough or dressed, except hoards, planks, deals, and other <lb />
of lignum-vitae, ebony, box, mahogany, rosewood <lb />
satinwood, and all other cabinet woods. <lb />
Sewing machines, and all parts thereof. <lb />
Salt, whether in bulk or in bags, sacks, barrels, or <lb />
Passed the House of Representatives May 1911. <lb />
packages. <lb />
are to b. <lb />
. would remedy the evils <lb />
W complain against; but it is so much easier to cry out for new legislation <lb />
than to insist our neighbor shall go to jail for violating the law we <lb />
ready have. <lb />
If there are e in our government as it today, it is not in its <lb />
organic form. It is due to the failure of those in office to honestly, fairly <lb />
and justly perform the duties i n n them. The remedy is plain <lb />
and the way is clear The people should drive from the places of power and date. Underwood stands for just those <lb />
responsibility the unfaithful servant and elect those who will be faithful and things whirl <lb />
true to the trust imposed upon them <lb />
UNDERWOOD THE flAN <lb />
have been humbugged and scared <lb />
off long enough by the of North- <lb />
prejudice against a Southern <lb />
The People and the Representatives. <lb />
You tell me the people cannot elect honest and faithful servants. I tell you <lb />
are far better judges of men than are of <lb />
that the masses of <lb />
measures, and art- <lb />
measure. <lb />
people <lb />
more likely to <lb />
recent Northern <lb />
ties have declared they <lb />
of the tariff downward and the <lb />
of special privilege. Hit <lb />
qualities of leadership have been tested <lb />
and approved. In his personality he <lb />
select an honest man than an honest j is solid, clean and sane, with the <lb />
age of a fighter and the clairvoyance of <lb />
carry <lb />
section to give us <lb />
Oak, Fla., Demo- <lb />
Montgomery Ad <lb />
1912. <lb />
Attest; <lb />
UNDERWOOD A <lb />
FORCE <lb />
The Republicans cannot agree <lb />
his tariff the country, at. <lb />
sure, will never put him into the <lb />
but assuredly he must be con- <lb />
ceded to be the ablest, the strongest, the <lb />
most influential Democrat in Congress <lb />
to-day. and he has shown a marvelous <lb />
capacity for leadership. His party <lb />
stand solidly behind him, and that <lb />
COUld not have been said of any other <lb />
man in recent years who led the Demo- <lb />
in the House of Representatives. <lb />
The shrewd Republican politicians <lb />
who predicted the Democrats in <lb />
the House would be split into a dozen <lb />
bitterly fighting factions in less than a <lb />
month, arc now amazed at Underwood's <lb />
success as a harmonizer and a <lb />
force. He has succeeded where <lb />
everybody else failed; It teems likely <lb />
that with the prestige of he will <lb />
grow larger and more powerful as time <lb />
paw We political <lb />
but it would he folly to deny his <lb />
strength and Post Fr- <lb />
N. Y. June 1911. <lb />
Clerk. <lb />
ON UNDERWOOD <lb />
Mr. John Temple Grave will be in <lb />
town soon to make us a speech. He <lb />
was in the other night and <lb />
The printed an interview <lb />
with the former Georgian, in which that <lb />
gentleman discussed Mr. Underwood as <lb />
a presidential candidate. Mr. Graves <lb />
used to be very bit- <lb />
opposed to the South, but softened <lb />
a great deal after his elevation to the <lb />
Senate. I asked Mr. if in case <lb />
Mr. Underwood is nominated for Pres- <lb />
will it make any difference to you <lb />
that he is a Southern <lb />
said Mr. <lb />
course. I cannot vote for him. as I <lb />
a Republican, but if any Republican <lb />
should get up and denounce him because <lb />
he is from the South. I would take the <lb />
stump in Underwood's i <lb />
That well, coming as it does <lb />
from s man whose antagonistic attitude <lb />
towards the South in other days gave <lb />
Mm the appellation of <lb />
Ad- <lb />
reprinted in the Birmingham. <lb />
Ala., January, 1912 <lb />
FEDERAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE <lb />
IMPROVEMENT OF OUR PUBLIC ROADS <lb />
Right and Duty of Congress Unquestioned from the <lb />
of the Government <lb />
from speech of Oscar in U. S. House Rep- <lb />
April <lb />
The House being in Committee of the Whole House on the state of the <lb />
Union, and having consideration the bill U. R. making <lb />
appropriations the Department of Agriculture for the fiscal year ending <lb />
June 1909- <lb />
Mr. Underwood <lb />
Mr. Objection is made to this appropriation looking to the <lb />
of our public-road system on the ground that it invades the re- <lb />
served powers of the States. I wish to say there is no man on the floor of <lb />
this House more jealous in his desire to protect the reserved rights of the <lb />
States than am. believe the sovereign States composing the Union have <lb />
their duties to perform and should perform them without aid or hindrance on <lb />
the part of the Federal Government. I do not believe the Central Government <lb />
should enter into the legislative fields that belong to the States, but I <lb />
believe that the Federal Government, its well-defined powers, hit its <lb />
duty to perform under the powers given it by the Constitution; that it should <lb />
give force and effect to the grants of power given it by the States, and one <lb />
of these grants of power, to use the language of the Constitution, is <lb />
post-offices and <lb />
There can be no question whatever that the Constitution carries the power <lb />
to build post-roads in the United States. To establish post-offices means to <lb />
build and to establish post-roads means to build post-roads. Gen- <lb />
may scoff at the proposition and say that the fathers did not <lb />
plate our present development and modern methods of that <lb />
they contemplated building roads to carry the mail through the wilderness and <lb />
did not dream of a time coming die mail could be delivered at every <lb />
farmer's door. But I want to say, Mr. Chairman, that the need for post-roads <lb />
in the States was no greater in days of the fathers than today.<lb />
Mr. Douglas. Where docs the gentleman find anything in the Constitution <lb />
authorizing the Federal Government to build post-roads <lb />
Mr. Underwood. Why, it is very clear. The Constitution gives the power <lb />
to the Federal Government post-offices and <lb />
Mr. Douglas. The language of the Constitution is to post-roads, <lb />
and that has been held to be a very different thing from building them. <lb />
Mr. William. That question was discussed in the Third Congress and was <lb />
decided in favor of the construction of the Cumberland road by some of the <lb />
very men who wrote the Constitution. <lb />
Mr. Underwood. The contention that is made today by the leaders of the <lb />
Republican party that the Government of the United States has no <lb />
power to aid the States in building good roads was certainly not main- <lb />
by the leading men of the nation during the first half century of our <lb />
existence as a Government. <lb />
On March 1818, the House of Representatives passed the following res- <lb />
That Congress has power under the Constitution to <lb />
money for the construction of post-roads, military and other <lb />
roads, and of canals, and for the improvement of <lb />
Thomas Jefferson said, in a letter to Mr. in <lb />
us peace till our revenues arc liberated from debt, and then, if <lb />
war be necessary, it can be carried on without a new tax or loan, and <lb />
during peace we may checker our whole country with canals, roads, <lb />
etc. This is the object to which all our endeavors should be <lb />
While Secretary of War in 1819 Mr. Calhoun made a report to the House <lb />
of Representatives on roads and canals, in which he <lb />
object of the kind is more important and there is none to which <lb />
State or individual capacity is more inadequate. It must be perfected <lb />
by the General Government or not perfected at <lb />
In addition to this. Congress has a stronger and more specific warrant for <lb />
making this appropriation, under the authority conferred by the Constitution <lb />
establish post-offices and in his book on <lb />
Law, <lb />
road within a State, including railroads, canals, turnpikes, <lb />
and navigable streams, existing or created within a State, becomes a <lb />
post-road, whenever, by the action of the Department, pro- <lb />
vision is made for the transportation of the mails upon or over <lb />
UNDERWOOD'S INTEGRITY, PURITY <lb />
CIVIC COURAGE AND ABILITY <lb />
A Southern<lb />
In the mention of Oscar Under- <lb />
wood, of Alabama, for the Democratic <lb />
Presidential nomination resides a good <lb />
deal more than a suggestion that we <lb />
have got too far away from the Civil <lb />
War era to regard a statesman as <lb />
he comes <lb />
from a commonwealth that was a <lb />
the Southern Confederacy. <lb />
Of the men now before the country <lb />
as possible or probable Democratic <lb />
candidates for the Presidency, Under- <lb />
wood is certainly one of the strongest. <lb />
He has had a line training in Congress, <lb />
and is in himself a man of natural force <lb />
and large capacity for work- <lb />
are what want in executive <lb />
He has been a member of the <lb />
House of Representative for some <lb />
teen years, and has risen by force of <lb />
merit, and nothing but merit, to a <lb />
which made it inevitable that he <lb />
should he Chairman of the Committee <lb />
on Ways and Means when the Demo- <lb />
came into control of the popular <lb />
branch of the Government He has the <lb />
youth, the environment, the enthusiasm, <lb />
the courage, the political sagacity, and <lb />
the qualities fully to justify <lb />
his consideration in connection with the <lb />
Presidential nomination. <lb />
Mr. Underwood is a conservative man. <lb />
who is capable of entertaining pro- <lb />
ideals and at the same time of <lb />
realizing fully the duty and the <lb />
conserving substantial inter- <lb />
of the community. The Democratic <lb />
party might go farther and do vastly <lb />
worse than if it nominate him <lb />
as its standard bearer of <lb />
January. 1912. <lb />
UNDERWOOD IN THE WEST <lb />
am gratified to see this State <lb />
onward in almost every line and I <lb />
note the wonderful growth of <lb />
ham. I observe that The <lb />
has kept full step with the progressive <lb />
spirit and has led in the work. <lb />
growing strength <lb />
in the minds the people <lb />
throughout the United States has given <lb />
Alabama a kind publicity that the <lb />
Stan- could obtain in no other way, <lb />
particularly on the great question of <lb />
the tariff, for it was not thought that <lb />
one would come out of Alabama with <lb />
its varied interests who would be a <lb />
David to defy the trusts. Oscar <lb />
is regarded by many men as <lb />
the best equipped, cleanest, fairest man <lb />
tO-day mentioned for the presidency. If <lb />
he is nominated, he will undoubtedly <lb />
win. If any strong sentiment of the <lb />
South demands his election he will be <lb />
nominated. Out in Colorado, with its <lb />
thousands of visitors from all parts <lb />
of the Stales, he the first man <lb />
named by most of them. The prom- <lb />
given to his candidacy by the <lb />
and the public press has <lb />
caused a strong tide to rise which I <lb />
hope and believe will carry him to the <lb />
White House. I took much pleasure <lb />
in aiding in organizing the Underwood <lb />
Club in Denver, and it is doing good <lb />
work unquestionably.-Harry Hawkins, <lb />
in the Birmingham, Ala, <lb />
Age Herald, p. <lb />
The <lb />
South <lb />
Not many days ago, it was suggested <lb />
in an editorial in this paper that the <lb />
of that section of the Union that <lb />
tried a half a century ago to break up <lb />
the Union of the States, might possibly <lb />
turn out to be the home of a <lb />
that would stand as a barrier <lb />
against a change in our scheme of gov- <lb />
that would destroy the fabric <lb />
of the Constitution adopted by our wise <lb />
forefathers, and ratified by the States <lb />
that had fought for and achieved <lb />
and freedom. <lb />
As evidence that such a thing may be <lb />
among the possibilities a paragraph is <lb />
here quoted from a speech made by <lb />
Hon. Oscar W. Underwood, of Ala- <lb />
to the Young Men's Democratic <lb />
League of St. <lb />
Democrats want to put <lb />
the initiative and referendum <lb />
plank into the national platform <lb />
of the Democratic party. I <lb />
think that would be unwise. <lb />
The initiative and referendum <lb />
as a local issue is sometimes <lb />
successful. Bid when you at- <lb />
tempt to apply it to the United <lb />
States you destroy the entire <lb />
fabric of the Constitution. We <lb />
are not a true democracy. This <lb />
is a representative Govern- <lb />
As the reader knows. Mr. Underwood <lb />
is the Chairman of the Ways and Means <lb />
Committee of the Mouse of <lb />
at Washington. But for the fact <lb />
that he is a native and a life-long <lb />
dent of the South he would stand a fine <lb />
chance to be made the Democratic can- <lb />
for President next year. Candor <lb />
compels the statement that he is as well <lb />
qualified for the performance of the <lb />
ties of the great office as any one in <lb />
his party who has been mentioned in <lb />
that connection, and it is not doubted <lb />
that if elected he would make a safe <lb />
Journal and <lb />
October 1911. <lb />
LEADER <lb />
CLEAN COURAGE, HIGH HONESTY <lb />
FAITHFUL IN HIS FRIENDSHIPS <lb />
His name is Oscar Underwood; <lb />
his years arc on the sunshine side of <lb />
fifty. As chief of the Way.-; and Means, <lb />
and chairman of the Committee on Com- <lb />
he is Speaker Clark's right arm <lb />
in the House. <lb />
Mr. Underwood's is for <lb />
revenue When Mr. Bryan, eaten <lb />
a rule-or-ruin spirit, came to Wash- <lb />
at the beginning of the special <lb />
session to the waters of party <lb />
hope with an attack upon the wool bill <lb />
II proposed by the Democrats, Mr. <lb />
in after Mr. Bryan, <lb />
his own tariff position. Said be <lb />
Democratic party stands for a <lb />
tariff for revenue. The Democratic <lb />
party does not stand for free trade, <lb />
and I do not believe the people will <lb />
be misled by the statement of Mr. <lb />
That Mr. Underwood is against pro- <lb />
and it. evinces his <lb />
age. He comes from the Birmingham <lb />
district in breeding-ground <lb />
of protection. In Mr. dis- <lb />
there are nine railroads, one <lb />
and miles of streetcar <lb />
tracks, of invested <lb />
tries an annual pig-iron output of <lb />
tons, and a production of <lb />
15.000.000 tons of coal. The city of <lb />
Birmingham has an annual pay-roll of <lb />
The Tennessee Cool Iron <lb />
Company, which is a part of the Steel <lb />
Trust, controls one-third of the prod- <lb />
district. One-third of all the <lb />
iron-ore holdings of the Steel Trust are <lb />
in and round Birmingham. Surely, at <lb />
Aral glance, a bad for a tariff <lb />
reformer I And yet Mr. Underwood <lb />
and himself with <lb />
ever climbing majorities. <lb />
It is the Underwood honesty that <lb />
it- that, and nil clean courage. <lb />
The dominant quality in Mr. Underwood <lb />
is honesty, and folk have found it out. <lb />
Honesty is among the scarcest of earth- <lb />
commodities, and when a community <lb />
has discovered it in the possession of <lb />
an individual, it guards it and works it <lb />
like a gold-mine for every final ounce. <lb />
Mr. Underwood is His <lb />
was not the work of money. He <lb />
was not chosen a the pet of the <lb />
railroads or the of the trusts. <lb />
His seat was given him by the people, <lb />
and because they believed he would fill <lb />
it to the best of public advantage. <lb />
This emanation of the popular gives <lb />
Mr. Underwood the House high ground, <lb />
and he is so far military in his genius <lb />
that he knows how-to fortify and hold <lb />
it. Prom his place as a people's <lb />
he can over-tare and keep in <lb />
cluck the Paynes and the and <lb />
the who are present mere- <lb />
by the grace of pirate money, and <lb />
dwell, therefore, on House levels much <lb />
lower than his Henry <lb />
Lewis in the Cosmopolitan, New York, <lb />
1912. <lb />
As the head of the Ways and Means <lb />
Committee, Mr. Underwood has shown <lb />
himself to be the right man in the right <lb />
place. What advances are made by the <lb />
party in will be due largely to him. <lb />
Ho knows tariff in all its schedule <lb />
windings, as a man knows the hallways <lb />
of his own house. He has wisdom. He <lb />
has temper and spirit, but is neither <lb />
unreasonable nor vindictive. I have <lb />
faith in the tariff thoroughness of Mr. <lb />
Underwood. If I owned the revenues <lb />
of the Government, I shouldn't hesitate <lb />
to employ him as night-watchman. <lb />
Alfred Henry Lewis, in the <lb />
January, 1912. <lb />
Mr. Underwood is faithful in his <lb />
friendships. To those whom he casually <lb />
meets, he is affable, albeit non-com- <lb />
keeping his own counsel. He is <lb />
never rude nor hard; never violent, <lb />
even with blood foes. the stranger <lb />
within his gates his air is gentle and <lb />
frank. He is easy to sec, and, speaking <lb />
generally, has been ever careful to keep <lb />
himself within the reach of all. News- <lb />
paper folk, sent to Mr. Underwood by <lb />
some stress of duty, never fail to like <lb />
him. He has his dignity, but there is <lb />
no reserve. He maintains no distances <lb />
between self and them. He answers <lb />
a question with a round readiness, or <lb />
says plainly that be can't answer it and <lb />
tells- why. He b the business in <lb />
hand, will even anticipate the <lb />
pose of one's coming, and put questions <lb />
to Henry Lewis, in the <lb />
Cosmopolitan, New York, January, 1912. <lb />
this morning's magazine section <lb />
if The Times our readers will find the <lb />
very interesting report of an inquiry <lb />
by a staff correspondent into the record <lb />
and repute, in his own home, of the <lb />
Hon. Oscar W. Underwood of Ala- <lb />
who has recently been discussed <lb />
as a possible Democratic candidate for <lb />
the presidency. It is needless to say <lb />
that The Times is not concerned to ad- <lb />
the interests of any gentleman <lb />
in this direction in preference to any <lb />
It is concerned only in laying <lb />
before its readers such information, <lb />
carefully gathered and impartially <lb />
as will aid in the formation of <lb />
sound public opinion and a choice that <lb />
will be to the greatest advantage of the <lb />
Nation. <lb />
We think our readers will agree that <lb />
any party may be congratulated among <lb />
whose prominent men, to whom the <lb />
eyes of the party are directed on the <lb />
eve of a presidential campaign, there <lb />
is one with such standing among those <lb />
who know him best as Mr. Underwood <lb />
has. Plainly he is a man to be trusted, <lb />
because he is trusted, for his integrity, <lb />
civic courage, and ability, by his <lb />
Whether, when the time <lb />
comes for a choice, he will be <lb />
the best man is a question which <lb />
it is now too early to decide. But there <lb />
is one element that will enter into the <lb />
problem which may well receive <lb />
even thus early It is the fact <lb />
that Mr. Underwood is a man of South- <lb />
birth, a Representative from a South- <lb />
State. There is a feeling, rather <lb />
than a definite opinion, which finds ex- <lb />
more often in his own section <lb />
than in the North, and perhaps more <lb />
often in his own party than in the op- <lb />
party, that this fact would be a <lb />
source of weakness if Mr. Underwood <lb />
were named by the Democracy. <lb />
Of course, this is a matter not easily <lb />
to be decided with confidence in ad- <lb />
There has been no occasion for <lb />
a distinct expression of public sentiment <lb />
regarding it. It is a half century since <lb />
a Southern candidate for the presidency <lb />
came before the Nation, and a good <lb />
deal longer than that since one was <lb />
elected. Great events have intervened <lb />
and left their impress on the minds <lb />
and hearts of men, the depth and <lb />
of which no one can surely es- <lb />
Our own judgment is that a <lb />
candidate from the things <lb />
being not he weaker and <lb />
might even be the stronger for that fact. <lb />
In a broad way. it may safely be said <lb />
that there is in our people now a sense <lb />
of tried and proved and established <lb />
nationality which might, and probably <lb />
would, welcome an opportunity for <lb />
manifesting itself. This sense of <lb />
has grown progressively ever <lb />
since the close of the war for the <lb />
Union. It has been steadily strength- <lb />
by the conditions of our National <lb />
life and especially by the intimate, ex- <lb />
tensive, and increasing <lb />
cation within our borders. Our people <lb />
have for forty years literally lived to- <lb />
and always more and more <lb />
closely. They have gradually ceased <lb />
to think in terms of sections, and the <lb />
South is to-day no more distinct and <lb />
apart from the East or the Middle <lb />
West or the West the minds of those <lb />
who dwell elsewhere. <lb />
In the next place, no one under sixty <lb />
has any personal experience of the <lb />
civil conflict, and that means not mere- <lb />
that the majority but that the great <lb />
body of voters are without this ex- <lb />
It is more than a quarter of <lb />
a century since the <lb />
entered even nominally into a <lb />
National contest. If it were raised <lb />
now by any party, and those who would <lb />
be influenced by it had to stand up <lb />
and be counted, we believe they would <lb />
be ludicrously few. On the other hand, <lb />
arc confident that, were the issue <lb />
made, a great many <lb />
among those who were most earnest in <lb />
their loyalty in the civil by <lb />
a common impulse of generosity and of <lb />
self-respect incline toward the Southern <lb />
candidate. If forced really to think of <lb />
the matter, and to act on their <lb />
it would seem too absurd to act <lb />
in the present on the issues long since <lb />
settled, settled in their favor, and set- <lb />
York Times, <lb />
November 1911. <lb />
INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL <lb />
DOCTRINES CONTRARY TO THE <lb />
MENTAL PRINCIPLES OF OUR GOVERNMENT <lb />
address before Young Men's Democratic League of St. Louis, Oct. <lb />
Democrats want lo put the initiative and referendum plank into the <lb />
National platform of the Democratic party. think that would be unwise. <lb />
The initiative and referendum as a local issue is sometimes successful. But <lb />
when you attempt lo apply it to the United States you destroy the entire fabric <lb />
of the Constitution. We are not a true democracy. is a representative <lb />
Knoxville Journal and Oct. 1911. <lb />
A FIGURE OF NATIONAL SIZE <lb />
The emphasis here is placed upon Mr. <lb />
Underwood's wisdom, but along with <lb />
this is mentioned his honesty. <lb />
two qualities greatly impress <lb />
every on- who comes into association <lb />
with Mr. Underwood, or who closely <lb />
follows his course in Congress and in <lb />
public life, lie is he not <lb />
disturb himself about little thing; hit <lb />
own personality is not obtruded; his <lb />
political ambitions play no part in gov- <lb />
his words and actions. He has <lb />
an eye single to the performance of <lb />
and believes that duty well per- <lb />
formed is the most urgent <lb />
If doing his duty should mar his <lb />
fortunes.-s he certainly believed it <lb />
would when he voted against the pen- <lb />
will take what comes with- <lb />
out complaining. Not every man can be <lb />
president, he thinks, hut every man can <lb />
try to do the best that is in him for <lb />
his country and for the times he lives <lb />
in. <lb />
And this is honesty. lie plays no <lb />
politics; he stands out raiding <lb />
the matter what be the ex- <lb />
he opposes his own <lb />
friends and associate quite as firmly <lb />
as he opposes his opponents when, in <lb />
his judgment, the thing proposed to be <lb />
done is not for the common good. <lb />
In a politician this would be accounted <lb />
recklessness, because patty and are <lb />
Iran lated in many minds to mean the <lb />
same thing; hut it is the highest <lb />
in a statesman. Even should it <lb />
have but partial success in controlling <lb />
a party following, it must be productive <lb />
immense good in showing that the <lb />
South in Mr. Underwood a man <lb />
who can be trusted by the <lb />
man patriotism is not limited by <lb />
small things, nor suffering from the <lb />
burden of any prejudice. <lb />
For our part, we believe that such <lb />
is of more practical value than <lb />
would be the keenest political <lb />
and that this very absence of self- <lb />
seeking, this contempt for the arts of <lb />
the politician, is working for him, while <lb />
he himself has his mind centered upon <lb />
things he regards as of more moment. <lb />
The country could do no better than <lb />
to put its entire trust in such a man ; <lb />
and there is good reason to think that it <lb />
will do so. As Mr. Lewis says, it <lb />
should not to employ him as <lb />
night This coming, not <lb />
from the South, hut from a writer whose <lb />
attitude is critical and whose atmosphere <lb />
i- of the North, is certainly a tribute <lb />
not to be its significance is <lb />
very Mobile <lb />
Register. January 1912. <lb />
From Virginia <lb />
of the avowed aspirants are <lb />
men of distinction merit, but my <lb />
individual opinion is that the party has <lb />
an opportunity to make a magnificent <lb />
selection by choosing for its standard <lb />
bearer in 1912 the wise, well-balanced <lb />
and thoroughly equipped <lb />
Hon. Oscar Underwood. <lb />
Underwood's record in states- <lb />
is a good enough guarantee <lb />
of his fitness for the White House. <lb />
He measures up to all the requirements <lb />
of the exalted position. He is fearless <lb />
and broad-minded, and there is nothing <lb />
of the demagogue in his composition. <lb />
Some will cavil at his Southern origin <lb />
and raise the oft-repeated cry that no <lb />
Southerner can be elected to the <lb />
This bugaboo is raised in spite <lb />
of the fact that all the leading papers <lb />
of the North and South and all writers <lb />
of any note have declared time and <lb />
again that sectional feeling and <lb />
dice, based on the war of have <lb />
died out completely. <lb />
that he true is there any longer <lb />
any valid reason against going to the <lb />
South for a candidate If Mr. Under- <lb />
wood's personality and public service <lb />
render him peculiarly available should <lb />
the matter of location bar him from the <lb />
nomination The idea is <lb />
Hon. A. C. of Richmond, Va <lb />
in The Baltimore Sun, 1912. <lb />
DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP <lb />
The most salient fact connected with <lb />
the story of the hill in the present Con- <lb />
is the remarkable strength of the <lb />
Democratic tactics, and the high <lb />
shown by Mr. Underwood, the leader <lb />
of the party on the floor. The <lb />
free bill was a master stroke, and <lb />
Mr. Underwood utilized it in the debate <lb />
with an effectiveness that left nothing to <lb />
be What gives real strength to <lb />
the Democratic position is that the party <lb />
is grappling with a big and difficult <lb />
question in a spirit that is at once <lb />
courageous and practical. If there is to <lb />
be an era of such leadership as that rep- <lb />
resented by Mr. Underwood, the term <lb />
be rescued from <lb />
the ignominy into which it has <lb />
and recover the to which it is <lb />
legitimately <lb />
Post, reproduced in The FA <lb />
. W I Fl M <lb />
UNDERWOOD LOOMS UP <lb />
Whether the disclaimer of <lb />
Oscar W. Underwood of <lb />
for the Democratic nomination for <lb />
president is to stand or not. there is no <lb />
question that he is looming large and <lb />
no less at the North than at <lb />
the South, as a possibility, if not this <lb />
time, then in the near future. Mr. <lb />
Underwood is making a widespread and <lb />
distinctive impression, not only as the <lb />
honest, bold, sagacious leader of the <lb />
House majority, and not only as a mas- <lb />
Southern Democrat, but as an <lb />
American publicist and <lb />
man of affairs and broad concept of <lb />
his responsibility to the whole people- <lb />
Richmond. Va Times-Dispatch, re- <lb />
printed in the Ala, Age- <lb />
Herald, January 1912. <lb />
HEARS MUCH POLITICAL TALK <lb />
traveling through the country <lb />
hear no end of political said <lb />
Fames A. Braun, sales manager of the <lb />
Chemical Company of New <lb />
York. <lb />
luring the past five or six weeks I <lb />
have heard Underwood very much dis- <lb />
cussed as a presidential proposition. I <lb />
found in the Carolinas a great deal of <lb />
Underwood sentiment. I have been <lb />
keeping up with Underwood's record <lb />
In Congress, and I believe that his <lb />
commanding position in the Democratic <lb />
party will be appreciated by the rank <lb />
and of <lb />
tier aid. Birmingham, Ala, Jan. 1912. <lb />
or Axe <lb />
That with the Democratic party <lb />
ready in power In the Mouse, and <lb />
a visible chance of corning into com- <lb />
power in the National Govern- <lb />
it is of interest to learn from <lb />
what viewpoint the actual pilot-in-charge <lb />
of the Democracy's legislative ship looks <lb />
at his task and by what stars he shapes <lb />
his course. <lb />
Are they fixed and steadfast lights <lb />
the political firmament or are they mere- <lb />
those wisps that flame up <lb />
as for this year, <lb />
only to be forgotten next year We <lb />
get a comforting light on this question <lb />
from another remark by Mr. Under- <lb />
wood <lb />
think the big question is the tariff. <lb />
It is the question of the development of <lb />
the industries and commerce of the <lb />
From a Democrat that is a remark <lb />
well-nigh startling. It exhibits such an <lb />
unusual viewpoint. It is almost like <lb />
hearing Andrew Carnegie confess that <lb />
there might be such a thing as a right- <lb />
war. Heretofore, our Democratic <lb />
statesmen have so uniformly declared <lb />
that there was nothing to the tariff <lb />
question but slopping from <lb />
robbing. <lb />
They never seemed t think of a tariff <lb />
as having anything t do with the de- <lb />
of industries and commerce. <lb />
Mr. Underwood does. He says we <lb />
should reduce our tariff because with <lb />
the settlement of the West have left <lb />
behind the days when our home market <lb />
absorbed the products of our factories <lb />
and left us no surplus for which we <lb />
needed to look for a market abroad. <lb />
He holds that our industrial develop- <lb />
has outstripped the increase in <lb />
domestic demand, and that are pro- <lb />
or at least have the existing ca- <lb />
to produce, a great surplus of <lb />
manufactures f.-r which we must And <lb />
markets in other countries Therefore, <lb />
and line cannot trade with other <lb />
people unless we permit them to trade <lb />
with reduce the tariff to a <lb />
the rates that Will <lb />
raise the revenue-, that the exigencies <lb />
of the Government <lb />
may m disagree with that <lb />
theory of tariff making me may <lb />
that its effects will be <lb />
of the industries and commerce of <lb />
the Hut at least it U a theory <lb />
consistent with itself and professing <lb />
constructive aims and not merely clam- <lb />
for destruction. , <lb />
And its proponent is no doctrinaire <lb />
fresh from academic halls with his nod- <lb />
crammed with of every- <lb />
thing. Neither is he the freak product <lb />
of passing popular delight with the latest <lb />
novelty among entertainers. <lb />
Chicago Inter-Ocean, September <lb />
ESTIMATE OH OPPONENTS <lb />
Men like Payne and Mann declare <lb />
him to be the most resourceful an- <lb />
they have found on the Demo- <lb />
side. A skillful <lb />
a good speaker, holding himself always <lb />
bl perfect control, he is a model leader, <lb />
and his following i daily increasing <lb />
Washington Correspondence in The <lb />
Bulletin. Philadelphia, Pa. <lb />
June. 1911. <lb />
A Voice <lb />
Florida <lb />
Underwood, however, has <lb />
more friends than any man mentioned <lb />
for the Democratic presidential <lb />
nation. He is more popular throughout <lb />
the country with all the Democrats than <lb />
the others. He is almost the unanimous <lb />
second choice. If you ask the Harmon <lb />
men who they would be for in case <lb />
Harmon could not be nominated they <lb />
will say Underwood; when you ask the <lb />
Wilson men the same question as to <lb />
Wilson, they reply that if Wilson can <lb />
not be the nominee. Underwood i their <lb />
choice; and the same thing is true of <lb />
the Champ Clark A. Jennings, <lb />
National from Florida, <lb />
in the Pensacola Evening Friday <lb />
evening, January 1912. <lb />
Southern Leaders <lb />
and the Tariff <lb />
No sensible man, certainly no one <lb />
friendly to the South, wishes to see the <lb />
tariff made a sectional question. The <lb />
course of Mr. Clark and Mr. Under- <lb />
wood tends to prevent this. They stand <lb />
not only with their own party through- <lb />
out the country, but with the strong <lb />
public sentiment in support of tariff re- <lb />
that has divided the Republican <lb />
party, and thrown the House into the <lb />
hands of the Democrats. When we say- <lb />
that in this they arc serving their own <lb />
section, we have in mind the important <lb />
fact that they are bringing to bear on <lb />
national affairs the intelligence and <lb />
strength of their section, and giving it <lb />
the opportunity to take a leading part <lb />
in the affairs of the Nation. They are <lb />
undermining the unfortunate section- <lb />
that has, perhaps unavoidably, <lb />
pervaded Southern politics for a lone; <lb />
time. They are ranging the South on <lb />
the side of progress and in the <lb />
of the most significant movement of <lb />
national opinion that has manifested it- <lb />
self in years. Nothing is more certain <lb />
than that our vast and intricate and <lb />
oppressive tariff system is to he <lb />
reformed, its reform is hound t <lb />
be the one task of statesmanship In the <lb />
next few years. It can be determined, <lb />
and under certain condition- it can be <lb />
led the men of the <lb />
York Times, January 1911. <lb />
Underwood <lb />
a Real Man <lb />
The Democrats of the House have <lb />
reason to be proud of their floor lead- <lb />
Chairman Underwood, of Ways <lb />
and Means Committee. Mr. Under wood <lb />
has given ample evidence of the <lb />
session of the qualities of mind <lb />
to the position. He has also <lb />
most conclusively that he is <lb />
i man who cannot be cajoled or <lb />
lied from the course he considers right. <lb />
In the debate over the Canadian rec- <lb />
bill former Speaker Cannon <lb />
made the bluff that the steel trust fa- <lb />
r the enactment of the measure. <lb />
Mr. Underwood called the bluff very <lb />
by producing a telegram <lb />
from his home district saying that the <lb />
United States Steel Corporation has <lb />
stopped work on important mills there, <lb />
giving as their reason that Underwood <lb />
stood in Congress advocating the tariff <lb />
reductions on steel included in this bill <lb />
Mr. Underwood added that two years <lb />
ago the steel trust opposed his election <lb />
because of the tariff views and threat- <lb />
to turn him out of Congress if <lb />
he voted for reductions on steel duties <lb />
voted for them just the In- <lb />
stated, they failed in their effort <lb />
to turn me out of <lb />
Underwood is every inch a man, and <lb />
the people have more respect for one <lb />
such as he than for a whole battalion <lb />
f corporation-controlled <lb />
J he Daily Banner, Florida, <lb />
1911. <lb />
MR. UNDERWOOD <lb />
Meanwhile Mr. Underwood has a <lb />
work to do in Washington for which he <lb />
has revealed a remarkable aptitude. It <lb />
is not too much to say that the existing <lb />
harmony among the Democratic <lb />
of the House, the ability they <lb />
showed at the last session to work to- <lb />
arc largely due to his skillful <lb />
leadership proposes to resume the <lb />
task of tariff revision at the point where <lb />
it was interrupted by the President's <lb />
Providence <lb />
December J. 1911. <lb />
UNDERWOOD <lb />
AND THE PAPERS <lb />
The careful reader of the newspapers <lb />
is surprised at one notable feature of <lb />
the papers from practically sec- <lb />
of the country. This feature is the <lb />
general notice and attention paid to Con- <lb />
Oscar Underwood as a <lb />
date for the Democratic presidential <lb />
nomination, and the uniform <lb />
which invariably accompanies the men <lb />
of him and his candidacy. This is <lb />
all the more surprising Mr. <lb />
maintains no press bureau. On <lb />
the other hand, prominent candidates <lb />
for the Democratic nomination like Gov <lb />
Harmon of Ohio, Governor <lb />
son of New Jersey and Speaker Clark <lb />
of Missouri, maintain large and active <lb />
bureaus, which arc continually sending <lb />
out campaign literature to the papers <lb />
of the country. <lb />
Notwithstanding this at the present <lb />
time Mr. Underwood is receiving more <lb />
attention than any other, might say <lb />
am other two, presidential candidates <lb />
i The attitude of the voter <lb />
towards Mr. I may be doubted <lb />
until that attitude is made char in an <lb />
election, but it cannot be doubted that <lb />
his record and his strong personality <lb />
arc admired the newspapers of the <lb />
country. For now he is receiving more <lb />
free and advertising than any <lb />
other public man of the. country <lb />
i Alabama Advertiser <lb />
January 1912. <lb />
Underwood Among <lb />
1912 Possibilities <lb />
The threatened breakdown of Ma- <lb />
Leader Underwood, as a result of <lb />
long hours of hard work on the tariff <lb />
in the Ways and Means Committee, put <lb />
many a Democrat in a nervous state of <lb />
mind. There developed suddenly a full <lb />
appreciation of the worth of the Ala- <lb />
Congressman as a leader. For <lb />
Mr. Underwood to become disabled or <lb />
to be removed from the scene of his <lb />
usefulness at this critical time would be <lb />
like pulling a corner post out from <lb />
under a platform on which was heaped <lb />
most of the political treasures of the <lb />
party. Democrats quite generally are <lb />
willing to admit. <lb />
Credit for the achievements of the <lb />
Democratic House bearing the stamp of <lb />
constructive statesmanship is given <lb />
readily to the majority leader. Due t <lb />
success as a legislative <lb />
ability in most tests to keep the House <lb />
the fact that <lb />
Civil War wounds have been I I <lb />
heal because of the scarcity of public <lb />
men of the type of Senator <lb />
of Idaho, a Southerner is being <lb />
considered North and South as <lb />
presidential material. The Under <lb />
movement has been at- <lb />
volunteer workers steadily <lb />
since last spring, when the newly-in <lb />
stalled Democratic House assumed <lb />
responsibilities. An Underwood <lb />
for the Democratic nomination for <lb />
President put on long trousers at the <lb />
beginning of this, the national campaign <lb />
Cunningham, in the <lb />
Antonio Express, January 1912. <lb />
This New Leader <lb />
From Alabama <lb />
But this new leader from Alabama, <lb />
with nothing meteoric or iridescent <lb />
about him; who has forged steadily <lb />
ahead during sixteen years of <lb />
service, and who has proved him- <lb />
self equal to every emergency in the acid <lb />
lest of debate on the floor of the House; <lb />
imperturbable, resourceful, sure of <lb />
himself at all times; profoundly learned <lb />
on the tariff issue he stands for; <lb />
whose impressive personality is reveal- <lb />
itself in stronger lines every day <lb />
as the searchlight of the press <lb />
upon is the Man of Destiny <lb />
the Democratic party in this year 1912 <lb />
as the campaign for the nomination <lb />
progresses. Mr. Underwood's superior <lb />
availability will come out with <lb />
clearness, and the Democratic masses <lb />
of the South will catch the inspiration <lb />
if the great fact that a Southern man <lb />
from the heart of Dixie i last in line <lb />
for the presidency alter all these weary <lb />
years of waiting. When psycho- <lb />
logical moment the <lb />
convention or before m <lb />
solid South, fused to white beat under <lb />
the enthusiasm of a genuine Southern <lb />
residential candidacy, will take Oscar <lb />
on Its shoulders, sweep away <lb />
all the well laid plans of machine politics <lb />
and rush him right to the goal, a winner <lb />
by sheer force of an overwhelming <lb />
of simple justice to the South. At <lb />
least, that's the way we want <lb />
Suwanee Democrat, December, <lb />
1911. <lb />
A PRACTICAL DEMOCRAT <lb />
St. Louis honors Oscar W. <lb />
n -I t r his chat for his achieve- <lb />
and fur his Democracy <lb />
The Chairman of the Ways ind Means <lb />
Committee is a practical His <lb />
leader-hip in the House of K; <lb />
show He ; if the <lb />
ability to enlist men of varying ideas, <lb />
plans and moods in support of <lb />
feasible objects. Men who agree <lb />
on bask principles may be involved in <lb />
bitter hostility by which in <lb />
their essence amount to little.<lb />
Mr. Underwood's example a- a leader <lb />
of Democrats in Congress is of <lb />
emulation elsewhere, H makes ft r I it- <lb />
Tolerance makes for unity. <lb />
Unity makes for progress There is no <lb />
Other way to render Democracy <lb />
The young Democrats of St. <lb />
who persuaded Mr. Underwood to be- <lb />
come their will find in his policy <lb />
as well as his principles the best hope <lb />
of achievement and party life. <lb />
The St. Louis Republic, October <lb />
mi. <lb />
CHAIRMAN <lb />
Chairman Underwood has once more <lb />
given proof of that levelness of head <lb />
and clearness of purpose which have <lb />
his leadership from the <lb />
beginning He has flatly refuse i to <lb />
countenance any coquetting with the I <lb />
idea on the wool bill. Whether <lb />
viewed as a mere announcement <lb />
program or as a bill that it is desired <lb />
and expected actually to get enacted into <lb />
law, the La proposition does <lb />
not meet the nerds of situation-- <lb />
The York st, August 1911. <lb />
THE MANNER OH MAN HI; IS <lb />
After the Southern manner, Mr. <lb />
i- democratic. He <lb />
n as one who. respecting him- <lb />
also respects them. He docs not <lb />
wear the manner of one who expects to <lb />
find his inferior. Still less would he <lb />
remind you of one who fears he may <lb />
meet his superior. Never docs he pose, <lb />
nor seek to transact hi, dignity at the <lb />
humbling expense <lb />
Henry Lewis, in Cosmopolitan, New <lb />
York, January,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018188_tn_0007" n="7" />
                <p>
HP <lb />
PROTECTION OF PROFITS, <lb />
THE INIQUITOUS POLICY OF THE <lb />
REPUBLICANS FOR HALF A CENTURY <lb />
The One Question Eternally Present is the Most Effective, the <lb />
Most Efficient and the Fairest Way of Equalizing <lb />
the Burdens of Taxation <lb />
Mr. Underwood Would Have the Question Solved with the <lb />
Determination to do the Right, Safe and <lb />
Reasonable Thing <lb />
Speech Before the New York Southern Society Dec. 1911 <lb />
kaleidoscope of political issues must and will continually change with <lb />
the changing conditions of our Republic, but there is one question that was <lb />
with us in the beginning an. will be in the end, and that is the most effective, <lb />
efficient and fairest way of equalizing the burdens of taxation that are levied by <lb />
die National Government Of all the great powers were yielded lo the <lb />
Federal Government States when they adopted the Constitution of our <lb />
country, the one indispensable to the administration of public is the <lb />
right to levy and collect taxes. Without the exercise of that power we could <lb />
not maintain an and navy; we could not establish of the <lb />
the government w . perform its function if the power to tax were <lb />
taken away from The power to tax carries with it the power to destroy, <lb />
and it is, therefore, a most dangerous governmental power as well as a most <lb />
one. <lb />
There is a dear and marked distinction between the position of the <lb />
two political parties f America as to how power to tax should be <lb />
in the inn of revenue at the custom houses . <lb />
Republicans Have Always Stood for Protection. <lb />
The Republican maintained the doctrine that taxes should not <lb />
only he levied fol a of revenue, but also for the purpose of protect <lb />
the borne manufacturer foreign competition. Of necessity protection <lb />
from competition with it a guarantee of profit. In the lad Republican <lb />
platform in the party was distinctly recognized when de- <lb />
that they not only in favor of the protection of the difference in <lb />
cost at home and abroad also a reasonable to American industries. <lb />
Democratic Party for Tariff for Revenue Only. <lb />
The party fat rs the policy of its the custom <lb />
house by a I that i levied for revenue only, which excludes the <lb />
idea g the profits. In my opinion, the dividing <lb />
line between the positions of the two great parties on tins question very <lb />
clear and easily ascertained in theory. Where the tariff balance the <lb />
difference in H II h mi abroad, including an allowance for the <lb />
in freight rates, the tariff must be competitive, and from that point <lb />
downward to the lowest tariff that can be levied it will continue to be com- <lb />
to a greater or leaf extent, Where competition is not interfered with <lb />
levying the tax above the highest competitive point, the profits of the <lb />
manufacturer are not protected. On the other hand, when the duties levied <lb />
at the custom house equalizes the difference in cost at home and abroad and <lb />
in addition thereto they are high enough to allow the American manufacturer <lb />
to make a profit before his can enter the field, we have invaded <lb />
the domain of tin- pi profits. Some men assert that the protection <lb />
of reasonable pr. tits t the h me manufacturer should be commended instead <lb />
of being condemned, but my judgment, the protection of any mu-t <lb />
of necessity have a tendency to destroy competition and create monopoly, <lb />
whether the profit protected i- reasonable or unreasonable. <lb />
Unfairness of Protection. <lb />
You should bear in mind that to establish a business in a foreign country <lb />
requires a vast outlay both in time and capital. Should the foreign <lb />
attempt to establish himself in this country he must advertise his <lb />
goods, establish selling agencies and points of distribution before he can <lb />
conduct nil After he has done so, if the home producer is <lb />
protected by a law that not only equals the difference in cost at home and <lb />
abroad, but also protect a or unreasonable profit, it is only <lb />
for him to drop s slightly below the point that the law has <lb />
fixed to protect and his competitor must retire from the country <lb />
or become a bankrupt because be would then have to sell his goods at a loss <lb />
and not a profit if he c to compete. The foreign competitor having <lb />
retired, the home could raise his prices to any level that home com- <lb />
petition would allow him and it is not probable that the foreigner who had <lb />
already been driven out of the country would again return no matter how <lb />
inviting the field as long as the law remained on the Statute Books that would <lb />
enable his competitor to again put him out of business. <lb />
Iniquity of the Protection of Profits. <lb />
Thirty or forty years ago when we had numbers of small manufacturers, <lb />
when there honest competition without an attempt being made to restrict <lb />
trade and the home market h II more than able to consume the production <lb />
of our mills and factories, the danger and the injury to the consumer of the <lb />
country was tint so gnat . r apparent as it is today when the control of <lb />
many great industries been concentrated in the hands of a few men or a <lb />
few corporations, because domestic competition was prohibited. When we <lb />
cease to have competition at home and the prohibits competition from <lb />
abroad by protecting profits, is no relief for the consumer except to cry <lb />
out for government n To my mind, there is no more reason or <lb />
justice in the government attempting to protect the profits of the <lb />
and producers of country than there would be to protect the profits <lb />
of the merchant or the lawyer, the banker or the farmer, or the wages of the <lb />
laboring man. In almost line of industry in the United States we have <lb />
as great natural resources to develop as that of any country in the world. It <lb />
is admitted by all hat our machinery and methods of doing business are in <lb />
advance of the By reason of the efficient use of American <lb />
machinery by American labor, in most of the manufactures of this country, <lb />
the labor cost per unit I pi In is no greater here than abroad. <lb />
is admitted, t the actual wage of the American laborer <lb />
is in excess of But but as to most articles we manufacture <lb />
the labor cost in count more than double the labor cost abroad. <lb />
When we consider that the average ad rate of duty levied at the <lb />
custom house or, is cotton goods is of the value of the <lb />
article and lot . r cost of the production of cotton goods <lb />
in this country <lb />
factory value of the product, that the <lb />
is only about as one is to two and <lb />
I value of the product levied at the custom <lb />
in the wage, it is apparent that our <lb />
I where they equalize the difference in cost <lb />
how far they have entered into the <lb />
the home manufacturer This is not only <lb />
n goods, but of almost every schedule in <lb />
in labor it a <lb />
that ten or per <lb />
house would . <lb />
tariff laws exceed the pair <lb />
at home and i i. H rt <lb />
domain of .- pi <lb />
true of the n. ; <lb />
the tariff bill. <lb />
To protect profits i leans to protect inefficiency. It does not <lb />
stimulate industry standing behind a tariff wall that <lb />
is protecting his n to develop his business along the lines <lb />
of greatest , it <lb />
Iron and Steel Industries. <lb />
This is of the wool and the iron and <lb />
steel duty that when worked out to <lb />
id basil I of about of the average value of all <lb />
woolen goods imp, Red States, and the duties imposed have <lb />
remained forty years. During that time the wool <lb />
industry ha- progress in cheapening the cost it- <lb />
product and methods. Dr. the other hand In the iron <lb />
and steel tin . been cut every time a tariff hill has I <lb />
written. Forty OH steel rails amounted to a ton, <lb />
today it amount- ago the tax on pig iron was a <lb />
ton, today it is true of most of the other articles in the <lb />
iron and steel I and steel industry has riot languished; <lb />
it has not been . not gone to the wall It is the most <lb />
compact, virile, I all the industries of America today, it has <lb />
long ago expanded it beyond the power of the American <lb />
to consume its output Ir I i today facing out towards the markets of <lb />
the for e trade of foreign lands where it must <lb />
meet free competition or is i the ease, pay adverse tariff rates to enter <lb />
the industrial Midi <lb />
Duty of Our Tariff Reduction to a Revenue <lb />
Basis Only. <lb />
Which course is the to The one that <lb />
demands the if profit e continued policy hot-house growth <lb />
for our Industries I if development that fol when <lb />
petition ceases, or on , the gradual and It i i <lb />
our tariff laws to a American manufacturer must meet honest <lb />
competition, where I -his business i eat and most <lb />
economic lines, when lights at home to control Ins market he is <lb />
forging the way of to extend MS <lb />
trade in the my the future <lb />
our great I .-as. A just I the burdens <lb />
of taxation and I in judgment, are economic truths; <lb />
they are not permit the laws of our country, we must face toward <lb />
them and not ft <lb />
con <lb />
,,. . <lb />
What I have laid I am in favor of going to free trade <lb />
editions or of n our legislation to legitimate <lb />
but .--v- -f has passed and the era <lb />
Birmingham Nows <lb />
Supports Underwood <lb />
In many quarters there has arisen a <lb />
that Oscar W Underwood be <lb />
bearer of the Demo- <lb />
party in the campaign that will <lb />
Le waged for the presidency in 1912 <lb />
is tin earnest hope of The <lb />
tins nay about. <lb />
Should the banner be entrusted the <lb />
keeping of Oscar W. The <lb />
thoroughly believes <lb />
that by him it will be carried to <lb />
victory, aid that it will never be <lb />
by compromise with wrong or <lb />
sullied by collusion with <lb />
News, Thursday, November <lb />
1911. <lb />
The South and <lb />
the Presidency <lb />
This to an <lb />
when it cone the <lb />
of a candidate fur the is <lb />
out place. It i a peculiar <lb />
more hen the <lb />
than anywhere in <lb />
tr. We are gelling be painfully <lb />
about <lb />
cal bar Not only that, we <lb />
act on the assumption that it be <lb />
politically Inexpedient for us to <lb />
any man who i Southern born and <lb />
bred. It is folly of the worst kit d and <lb />
only serves to alive the dying em- <lb />
of limes, <lb />
December, 1911. <lb />
A NATIONAL <lb />
WITHOUT SEEKING IT <lb />
Underwood is probably the greatest <lb />
authority on the tariff in the House of <lb />
or, for that mailer, in <lb />
Congress. <lb />
do u think of<lb />
said Bailey, the only <lb />
man hi either house of Congress who <lb />
could locked a hermetically sealed <lb />
root, for a week and em. rue from it <lb />
with a perfectly <lb />
Underwood i the example <lb />
times of a thoroughly modest <lb />
nun a reputation Without going <lb />
after it. Politics i . you <lb />
have to have a trumpet and a bugle in <lb />
order lo make anybody hear your name. <lb />
It is a rule to which there is no <lb />
that I know of except Underwood. <lb />
He sat back there in i <lb />
for sixteen years doing splendid work <lb />
and never getting his name into the pa- <lb />
Finally the crash came, the Demo- <lb />
carried the Mouse, and from sheer <lb />
merit and nothing else the man <lb />
from Alabama was made floor <lb />
and put in charge of the park's tariff <lb />
bill. And he so acquitted him-elf that <lb />
within a he became a national <lb />
and now he is quite to be <lb />
nominated fr <lb />
in Sunday Herald, <lb />
Boston, October 1911. <lb />
WHY I AM FOR <lb />
OSCAR UNDERWOOD <lb />
Because he is the strongest all <lb />
man in the field. <lb />
Because be is old enough to have <lb />
learned a deal, and yours enough <lb />
to learn more; <lb />
Because he Is a <lb />
practical <lb />
Because he lathered the Farm- <lb />
Free List Bill, which was an <lb />
stride toward trade, and a <lb />
measure that would have been <lb />
beneficial to our over-taxed people; <lb />
Because he and put <lb />
through Congress a drastic <lb />
the infamous woolen tariff; and also a <lb />
sweeping reduction in the cotton goods <lb />
schedule; <lb />
Because he had the manhood to <lb />
defy the Birmingham Hoard of Trade, <lb />
when tried to intimidate him as to <lb />
tariff reduction; <lb />
Because he has introduced a bill <lb />
to cut the steel and iron schedule <lb />
to per cent; <lb />
Because he had the courage to <lb />
oppose the Sherwood pension grab, <lb />
the shirkers and skulkers, and <lb />
deserters, and bounty-jumpers demand. <lb />
Champ Clark voted the <lb />
Bryan has not had the pluck to say a <lb />
word against it. nor has Woodrow<lb />
Because he has the sanity and <lb />
the spunk to tell the people that all this <lb />
talk about the initiative, referendum <lb />
and recall, in national politics, is <lb />
tommy-rot. Everybody should know <lb />
that the Constitution of the <lb />
States would have be radically <lb />
-hanged, before the present <lb />
representative government and <lb />
could be changed direct law- <lb />
making. <lb />
When, do you suppose, we elect <lb />
a Congress that would give people <lb />
the opportunity to vote he <lb />
Congress <lb />
When, do you suppose, the i would <lb />
he States ready to adopt the Hew <lb />
system <lb />
When, do you suppose, v, the <lb />
small States be willing to <lb />
their equality, in the Federal <lb />
When Wilson and Bryan p of a <lb />
national initiative, referendum ind re- <lb />
call, they make themselves de <lb />
tan either of them tell us h u Direct <lb />
legislation can be applied, i <lb />
in such a manner as to pr rye the <lb />
sovereign equality of the Una Males <lb />
If either of them can, I be <lb />
glad to publish their plan. <lb />
It will be time enough to i k about <lb />
national Direct legislation and lie recall <lb />
after we shall have tried it, in the <lb />
Stales <lb />
lastly, I am for Oscar <lb />
wood because his public and <lb />
private, is unstained; <lb />
and spotless; his leadership <lb />
his work and purposes patriotic <lb />
and practical; his sympathies, for the <lb />
oppressed. He doesn't -loop to <lb />
to win popular applause and he <lb />
doesn't cater to wealth and power, as <lb />
the of both parties do- <lb />
Tom Watson, in The <lb />
Thomson, January PI <lb />
UNDERWOOD AS A CANDIDATE <lb />
UNDERWOOD SOUND ON ALL PUBLIC QUESTIONS <lb />
VIEWS ON RECIPROCITY, ANTI-TRUST LEGISLATION <lb />
MERCHANT MARINE, PUBLIC SERVICE, THE TARIFF<lb />
RECIPROCITY <lb />
the U S. House of Representatives, <lb />
April <lb />
Our agricultural supply <lb />
the wants the <lb />
sir and are worn by <lb />
who many foreign languages <lb />
and tread the highway of the <lb />
Occident and the Orient, i he looms of <lb />
our clothe the people of dis- <lb />
lauds. The freight of our foreign <lb />
rivals carried to market on American <lb />
rails, drawn by American engines, across <lb />
chasms spanned by American-built <lb />
bridges. J The harvests of <lb />
our farmers feed the toiling masses of <lb />
Europe. We would be the unrivaled <lb />
masters of production and industry in <lb />
every land where free competition can <lb />
he obtained if we would but strike off <lb />
the shackles that bind us to the dead <lb />
and unnecessary economic system main- <lb />
by the Republican Party, that <lb />
creates false standards and wasteful <lb />
conditions at home. on the <lb />
Democratic side. <lb />
ANTI-TRUST LEGISLATION <lb />
Speech Before Pennsylvania So- <lb />
of New York, Dec. <lb />
it not proper for all of us, <lb />
of party, to insist that the <lb />
time has come for us to join together <lb />
in putting an end to this <lb />
and proposals for tinkering with <lb />
the law As the necessity <lb />
arises, we ran from lime to time enforce <lb />
the act, without fear or favor, but with- <lb />
out any disposition to political cap- <lb />
ital out of what we may be called upon <lb />
to do. Let our pilot and <lb />
accurate knowledge and high resolve, <lb />
and not expediency or <lb />
energy, whether proceeding from <lb />
rood or bad motives, and above all this <lb />
let us not proceed upon a crude guess <lb />
AMERICAN MERCHANT <lb />
the V. S. House of <lb />
Feb. <lb />
It is clear that there are no treaties <lb />
that stand in our way to prevent us from <lb />
enacting a discriminating tariff duty <lb />
in favor of American ships. It was the <lb />
policy of the u built up our <lb />
merchant marine from a where <lb />
it carrying per cent of our com- <lb />
to a point where it carrying <lb />
per cent American commerce in <lb />
a period of seven years. It does not <lb />
place additional burdens on the people; <lb />
it is not a policy of doubtful <lb />
; it is a policy that baa been <lb />
tried and proven effective. It is a pol- <lb />
icy by which we can restore the Amer- <lb />
to the seas and the American <lb />
-hips to our commercial trade. It is a <lb />
policy will enable us to build up <lb />
the export trade of the American <lb />
It is a policy that will enable us <lb />
to find foreign markets for our surplus <lb />
products in agriculture and <lb />
It is a policy that will restore the <lb />
balance of commerce as well as trade to <lb />
our Nation. It is a policy that will <lb />
ultimately overcome the necessity of our <lb />
paying a foreign balance in gold to <lb />
nations and will bring pros- <lb />
to all lines of industry. <lb />
Steel Corporation. As a matter <lb />
of fact, am in the iron and <lb />
steel Everything <lb />
have in the world is in the nun and <lb />
steel business except my home, but not <lb />
with the United Mates Steel Corpora- <lb />
lion. My people are independent <lb />
We meet the States. <lb />
Steel Corporation every day of our ex- <lb />
in a competitive battle on the <lb />
J industrial fields of America. My people <lb />
i have not asked me to vote for a <lb />
tariff on iron and steel. <lb />
CONVICTIONS POWER- <lb />
THAN LOCAL PRESSURE <lb />
the U. S. House of Representatives, <lb />
April <lb />
Two years ago. when the proposition <lb />
came before the to cut the tariff <lb />
on iron and steel products, in many <lb />
cases about hall, I favored the <lb />
because I it was and <lb />
fair, but of the protected interests <lb />
in my district met and <lb />
and resolved that they would re- <lb />
me if I voted lo reduce <lb />
on iron and steel. I voted to make the <lb />
reduction on the Democratic <lb />
but they did not me out of <lb />
on the Democratic <lb />
and they will not turn you out j <lb />
i Congress if you stand true to the <lb />
people yon represent. on the <lb />
Democratic side The distinguished <lb />
gentleman from Illinois <lb />
when he the Home several <lb />
ago. staled that the Stales <lb />
Steel Corporation was in this <lb />
hill and asked if I did not know it, <lb />
or if that was not the why <lb />
favored it. As I then stated to the <lb />
gentleman from Illinois, I was not in <lb />
funned as to the wishes of the United <lb />
PROTECTION'S INIQUITIES <lb />
the U. S. House of Representatives <lb />
April <lb />
The protected interests of this cow- <lb />
try know well that this bill will make <lb />
a break in the dike; that whenever the <lb />
protective tariff is removed and the <lb />
Northern farmer stands out alone with <lb />
out pretense of protection to his prod- <lb />
that he can no longer be counted <lb />
on to stand in the ranks of the <lb />
interests of this country. That is <lb />
why they are afraid of it. It is not so <lb />
much what is in the bill, but they know <lb />
that the death knell of the protection <lb />
system will have sounded- <lb />
means the protection of <lb />
profits and the creation of mo- <lb />
in this country- when the <lb />
abandons the <lb />
R publican to those who <lb />
have fattened upon bis bard-earned d ; <lb />
They are my eve-- <lb />
effort in the districts on that side of h <lb />
House and in your district, my fellow <lb />
Democrat in my district lo break <lb />
the column. I protected interest, <lb />
in my district, but I do not represent <lb />
them. I represent the great mas of <lb />
constituency who want hunt treatment <lb />
fair play. <lb />
In Mr. candidacy <lb />
South for the tune ii years <lb />
comes forward with a man with a <lb />
man with a valid claim on <lb />
Democracy for signal recognition. If <lb />
unselfish devotion, high performance, <lb />
Nation-wide breadth view, and rare <lb />
qualities for leadership entitle a man <lb />
sympathy and support in his <lb />
the nomination of Mr. Under- <lb />
wood would be a testimonial logically <lb />
bestowed. <lb />
The Southern Democracy never <lb />
wants, in or out of Congress, for <lb />
powerful champions party politics, <lb />
men who come in for honorable nun- <lb />
lion when the Presidential year rolls <lb />
round, but in Mr case <lb />
there is added a for j <lb />
and command no often <lb />
in party leaders of his For <lb />
candor compels a good word in <lb />
acknowledgment of he did in the <lb />
way of harmonizing and knitting to- <lb />
warring elements of his <lb />
in the House. Not in twenty <lb />
years has there been in Democratic <lb />
councils a leader who proved success- <lb />
in uniting all shades of opinion and <lb />
presenting a solid front on practically <lb />
every issue that came lo I vote. For <lb />
that reason, if for no other, <lb />
Availability would seem to <lb />
merit careful consideration the <lb />
hands of the Democratic <lb />
lost, October 1911. <lb />
A SOUTHERNER ON THE TICKET <lb />
Oscar Underwood of Alabama is <lb />
unquestionably of presidential His <lb />
leadership of the Democratic majority <lb />
on the floor of the House never been <lb />
excelled for skill, force and definite <lb />
It is a respectful hearing from <lb />
all over the country which Senator <lb />
of the same State will have <lb />
in naming him the Democratic <lb />
Has the time come when it is <lb />
for the i to nominate a <lb />
Southerner living in the Smith for the <lb />
presidency has been thought so <lb />
since the civil war. It has not even <lb />
been thought t l I give the South <lb />
second place on the ticket The nearest <lb />
approach to this was the naming on the <lb />
ticket in 1901 of Henry G. Davis <lb />
of West Virginia. that is <lb />
a Northern Stale. f <lb />
Kentucky had a few votes U r President <lb />
in the conventions of 1884 and 1892; <lb />
Blackburn of Kentucky and Tillman of <lb />
South in 1896; Williams of <lb />
Mississippi in 1904. they were <lb />
merely complimentary <lb />
Yet e war is over Southern <lb />
Democrat and a former Confederate <lb />
i- Chief l <lb />
Stales Supreme Court by appointment <lb />
of a Republican President. The <lb />
may not BO far off the last <lb />
traces of the sectional line will be <lb />
in American politics <lb />
October 1911. <lb />
UNDERWOOD THE MAN <lb />
OF THE HOUR <lb />
But Mr. Underwood's rise in public <lb />
favor has not been spectacular. His <lb />
is not the kind of popularity that will <lb />
decline. It dawned suddenly but its <lb />
dawning was rather the awakening of <lb />
recognition than the discovery of a new <lb />
-tar. Mr, Underwood Ids ability <lb />
had been there all the time, but they <lb />
had not been called into action. Op- <lb />
revealed the man and the <lb />
leader. <lb />
His leadership aid his qualities are <lb />
the stuff will list. He may never <lb />
be President of the Slates. He <lb />
may never be given the nomination by <lb />
his party, but his usefulness to the party <lb />
and to the people will not be destroyed. <lb />
He is hanging no hopes on the reward <lb />
that may come lo hint from the party.<lb />
Mr. Underwood's public record is <lb />
usual for its clean brilliancy. It stands <lb />
without a Haw Critics may search it <lb />
through and through and Mr. Under- <lb />
wood's smile would never waver. His <lb />
party record is just as clear. His <lb />
life is without a blemish. <lb />
He is peculiarly fitted by nature and <lb />
training for the leadership of men and <lb />
the administration of executive <lb />
He comes good stock, if <lb />
means anything in this people's <lb />
His education was thoroughly <lb />
rounded. His character well noised. <lb />
His training has been broad and wise. <lb />
He is thoroughly practical. His <lb />
education has been broadened by <lb />
well directed experience and constant <lb />
application to useful <lb />
Harper in the Birmingham Age-Herald, <lb />
January 1912. <lb />
UNDERWOOD'S RISE NO <lb />
SURPRISE TO THOSE <lb />
WHO KNOW <lb />
For years Oscar Underwood has been <lb />
recognized in his district as a man of <lb />
marked ability His broad knowledge <lb />
of the tariff displayed time and again <lb />
on the of Congress and in public <lb />
utterances on stump; his <lb />
insight into large public questions <lb />
under consideration in the national law- <lb />
making bod; his skill in debate; his <lb />
complete mastery of himself in times <lb />
of political turbulence on the floor of <lb />
Congress; his judgment as well a his <lb />
tact, have all convinced his constituents <lb />
that he was a man of force and achieve <lb />
long before be became Chairman <lb />
of the Ways and Means Committee <lb />
a tremendous task to <lb />
Ledger, 1912. <lb />
WIDE APPEAL OF CANDIDACY <lb />
UNDERWOOD OVER <lb />
The rapid rise of Oscar W. Under- <lb />
wood in discussion of Presidential <lb />
possibilities is full of significance, and <lb />
may well consternation in the <lb />
Wilson, and Harmon camps. A <lb />
a distinctive Southerner, his boom <lb />
is a menace Wilson, who <lb />
pealed strongly to the sentiment of that <lb />
section, in which he was born and spent <lb />
his early years, In tin- soundness of <lb />
his Democracy, the statesmanlike <lb />
and moderation ha in <lb />
dealing with issues the hour, <lb />
Mr. Underwood has no superior among <lb />
rivals, lie avoids <lb />
issues which Wilson <lb />
i himself somewhat <lb />
New York, <lb />
November 1911. <lb />
ALABAMA AND <lb />
HR. UNDERWOOD <lb />
But the present leader of the House <lb />
is not impulsive. In truth, that fact <lb />
explains his leadership. He is a man <lb />
calculation. Had he not been, he <lb />
could never have piloted his <lb />
through difficulties of the extra <lb />
ion. His task then called for a calm <lb />
and a single purpose. Had he- <lb />
been a spellbinder and a scatterer he <lb />
would have wasted his opportunity. <lb />
Were Mr. to set his heart <lb />
on the White House and maneuver for <lb />
a stay under that famous roof he would <lb />
play hobs with all the reputation he has <lb />
just acquired. His vision would be- <lb />
come confused, and everything would go <lb />
by the board. He could not serve two <lb />
masters, his work in the House has <lb />
first and highest claim on his at- <lb />
This docs not mean that Mr. Under- <lb />
wood's name will, as the result of his <lb />
reply to his House colleagues, <lb />
pear from the Presidential speculations <lb />
i f course, it will not. It is there to <lb />
stay, with the other names now on <lb />
many pens and tongues The matter <lb />
the is in the lap of fate, and <lb />
we shall all have to wait for the <lb />
The If Sunday Star, <lb />
December, 1911. <lb />
OSCAR EH WOOD <lb />
The appearance of Oscar <lb />
here last night, in advocacy of Dem <lb />
principles he has done so much <lb />
to advance, was an event not only highly <lb />
gratifying to his party associates in <lb />
of exceptional interest t- <lb />
c in general, <lb />
It is not often a man returns to <lb />
the scenes of his youth to speak with <lb />
authority, from m commanding a <lb />
position, won on his own merit. It has <lb />
been so long as the years i <lb />
not vet Oscar <lb />
a schoolboy here; he comes hack now <lb />
the applauded of <lb />
his party on floor of the National <lb />
House of Representatives, the head of <lb />
the great committee which shapes <lb />
fiscal legislation of the country; a new <lb />
chieftain of Democracy who has arisen <lb />
a crisis when the old party <lb />
all but <lb />
Bravo. Oscar It i a <lb />
bright day for Democrats when they are <lb />
fortunate to and quick to acclaim <lb />
such a lead, r Louisville <lb />
reprinted in Age-Herald, <lb />
ham, Ala. October 1911. <lb />
OF <lb />
CANDIDATE FOR THE <lb />
PRESIDENCY <lb />
Whoever was floor leader of the De- <lb />
was good enough for Mr. <lb />
during all the long years that <lb />
party was in the minority, and day after <lb />
day. whether that leader WIS Joseph W. <lb />
Bailey, of Texas, John Sharp Williams, <lb />
of Mississippi, or Champ Clark, of Mis- <lb />
the gentleman from Alabama was <lb />
always at his leader's elbow, ready <lb />
eager to do he could lo help <lb />
Other statesmen might try to black their <lb />
party leader's eye, but Mr. Underwood <lb />
was never known to extend anything <lb />
but the hand George E. Miller, <lb />
Staff Correspondent, in the Detroit <lb />
October 1911. <lb />
SHALL THE <lb />
NOMINATE <lb />
Congressman as house <lb />
leader of the Democrats and as chair- <lb />
man of the and Means <lb />
tee, has measured up lo the standard <lb />
true Statesmanship. He has render in <lb />
calculable service lo the of honest <lb />
tariff revision, the one great issue in <lb />
pending campaign, and by his <lb />
did poise and mastery affairs he has <lb />
exalted hi party's name in the minds <lb />
Journal, <lb />
January 1912. <lb />
That Representative Oscar W. <lb />
is rapidly crowding to the wall <lb />
all other aspirants for Democratic <lb />
nomination, is the Inform <lb />
that comes from sources close to <lb />
the Alabama leader lo-day, In fact, it <lb />
is now a subject of gossip <lb />
the House that New York State is veer- <lb />
toward the Alabama member and <lb />
that Clark. Wilson and Harm n are <lb />
ground in the chief pivotal State of <lb />
the n <lb />
A member Of the Maw Y <lb />
in the House, win is not person- <lb />
ally an advocate of candidacy of <lb />
Mr admitted in confidence <lb />
that the trend of sentiment in <lb />
city and New York State <lb />
now favors the Alabama leader. From <lb />
Representative Henry D. Clayton, of <lb />
Alabama, also, comes confirmation of <lb />
the fact that the Underwood <lb />
are receiving most reports <lb />
ii mi New York. These reports go so <lb />
far as to say that if the South will keep <lb />
Representative Underwood's name be <lb />
fore the convention, New York State <lb />
may be counted on lo fall into line after <lb />
the M or third ballot. <lb />
If the South can get over the ancient <lb />
i that a Southern man cannot <lb />
be nominated for President and if the <lb />
South will keep the name <lb />
before the convention, for i few ballots, <lb />
are many wise political observers <lb />
in Washington and New York w-ho are <lb />
confident that the New York delegation <lb />
will -wing Into line for <lb />
Washington correspondence of the <lb />
December <lb />
1911 <lb />
BOOMS UNDERWOOD <lb />
honest competition is <lb />
I-et us I solution of th problem involved with the determination <lb />
do what is right, what is safe and what is reasonable. <lb />
Mr. declaration fol- <lb />
the Underwood demonstration in <lb />
the House, Mr. <lb />
I believe Mr Underwood is the right <lb />
man presidency He ha won- <lb />
executive ability, as shown by his <lb />
management of the at this <lb />
and except for his resilience so far <lb />
feel that he is in <lb />
suitable for the place. the <lb />
Democrats could not . a more <lb />
a. <lb />
island, <lb />
Journal, August, 1911. <lb />
WIN <lb />
The Motile declares that <lb />
the relief of much millions of people <lb />
from tax extortion is the issue, and the <lb />
issue is personified in Oscar W. Under- <lb />
wood. What more lilting, therefore, <lb />
this paper, than that the man who <lb />
is the personification the issue should <lb />
-land before the President who vetoed <lb />
the bills drawn by Mr. <lb />
to give relief to the American pet <lb />
pie What more titling the can <lb />
should be Mr. stand- <lb />
for tariff reduction as against Mr <lb />
I aft standing in defense of present tariff <lb />
laws What more tilting for the Demo- <lb />
party to nominate I man who can <lb />
this is lime Democracy can <lb />
win. Powerful political leaders of <lb />
thought and those journalistic exponents <lb />
of Democracy throughout the country <lb />
should take note of Mr. <lb />
They should investigate; and party <lb />
loyalty firm-with sectional prejudice <lb />
eliminated, learn to know the man and <lb />
the principles for which he stand- The <lb />
Southern press, especially, should <lb />
with unhesitating vigor to support and <lb />
use influence for the man who has <lb />
done more than any living Democrat to <lb />
reunite and who can, as a <lb />
Southern Democrat in White House, <lb />
establish forever a reunited country. <lb />
Journal, reproduced in the <lb />
Montgomery, AU., <lb />
1912. <lb />
UNDERWOOD <lb />
Every public speech that Oscar W. <lb />
Underwood, Democratic leader of the <lb />
House of Representatives, makes brings <lb />
him closer to the people as a <lb />
possibility, What <lb />
a Republican, said of him <lb />
at the dinner of the So- <lb />
in New York on Saturday night <lb />
coming to be generally felt by the <lb />
i public. <lb />
for many said Colonel <lb />
Roosevelt's son-in-law, so forceful <lb />
a personality come to the front of his <lb />
party as the present leader of the House. <lb />
Not in my lime, certainly, and not, as I <lb />
believe, in modern limes, has the Demo- <lb />
party developed a man possessing <lb />
in so full degree the qualifications for <lb />
real leadership as it has this year in the <lb />
person of Oscar <lb />
Journal. Jersey City, N. J., <lb />
1911. <lb />
SOUTH ELECTED CLEVELAND <lb />
was due to the South that Grover <lb />
Cleveland was nominated and <lb />
said Judge Parker was due to the <lb />
South that William J. Bryan was twice <lb />
nominated, in like manner the South <lb />
Was for the nomination of <lb />
a New who speaks to you now. <lb />
I -till believe that the South is the sec- <lb />
of our country from which a <lb />
nominee could be chosen who <lb />
could quell the voices of all the Demo- <lb />
factions and he'd all breaches. <lb />
When the Democratic National <lb />
sees fit to nominate a Southerner, <lb />
believe that the Northern Democrats <lb />
will support him with their ballots <lb />
Judge Alton B Parker State <lb />
Columbia. S. C. January 1912. <lb />
UNDERWOOD A CANDIDATE <lb />
If Oscar when he VII <lb />
made Chairman of the Ways and Means <lb />
bad been as well known <lb />
throughout the country as Champ Clark <lb />
or Harmon or Woodrow Wilson <lb />
he would have gone into the Democratic <lb />
convention far in the lead, lie was at <lb />
that time, however, known and <lb />
ibis fact may give to the Speaker a pan <lb />
if the prestige that Mr. Underwood <lb />
otherwise would have had. <lb />
Mr. Underwood is well known now, <lb />
however, and will be better known be- <lb />
fore the convention meets or the Slates <lb />
elect delegates. Taking it for granted <lb />
that he will conduct the tariff fight a <lb />
well during the regular session as <lb />
the session. Mr. <lb />
will be much stronger at the end of the <lb />
regular session than he is now. If we <lb />
judge by results we must conclude <lb />
mt leader has ever had his <lb />
forces so well in hand as Mr. Under- <lb />
wood had during the last session The <lb />
Florida Jacksonville, Fla, <lb />
October 1911. <lb />
AN <lb />
destiny of the American nation, <lb />
which I think is the most wonderful in <lb />
the whole history of world, is per- <lb />
safe in the hands of such men <lb />
as your It is a pity that <lb />
we cannot have more of bis kind in <lb />
Me is one of the most <lb />
eminent men that the South has pro- <lb />
and T look with vat satisfaction <lb />
upon the plans of his Alabama friends <lb />
to give him their unanimous <lb />
for that high <lb />
Willis L Moore, Chief <lb />
U. S. Weather Bureau, in the <lb />
ham. Ala. Age-Herald. October fl <lb />
s. <lb />
GREENVILLE THE <lb />
II EMU OF EASTERN <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb />
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb />
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb />
AND ONE, AND IS <lb />
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb />
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb />
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb />
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb />
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb />
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb />
OFFER IN TUE Y OF <lb />
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb />
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb />
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb />
AND NEWSPAPER <lb />
PLANT. <lb />
k in. I Hi i. Mont H <lb />
WE HAVE A <lb />
TWELVE HUN- <lb />
AMONG THE BEST <lb />
THE EASTERN <lb />
PART OF South CARO- <lb />
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb />
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb />
A Ft INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb />
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb />
ATTENTION. <lb />
OUR A <lb />
HATES ARE LOW AND AN <lb />
BE UPON <lb />
KM I Ml <lb />
. C, <lb />
HIDING PLACE <lb />
OF ALIEN GANG <lb />
Detectives Claim They Have Corralled <lb />
Outlaws <lb />
URGE WAN TO HELP <lb />
arr in <lb />
a- lo In- <lb />
Their I <lb />
I Urn <lb />
Caftan win he <lb />
cull hull I Life. <lb />
March <lb />
on theory the <lb />
I. really in the the. <lb />
the <lb />
tin capture Of the noted outlaws. <lb />
are an attack upon the <lb />
where the Al- <lb />
be. The original baa <lb />
been reinforced citizen <lb />
STATE <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS FROM <lb />
ALL OVER THE OLD <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
Suit <lb />
case the <lb />
Southern Hallway In which <lb />
wing a large amount for <lb />
the and the plain- <lb />
lilt to recover the Hum of The <lb />
case was tried a few months In <lb />
superior court and was dismissed. <lb />
TIs, appealed to the <lb />
court and a new trial was granted. <lb />
The new trial hod not been heard. <lb />
ii contended that was <lb />
to his work at a tannery and <lb />
was walking along the railroad track <lb />
la the dark. Both of his legs had to <lb />
be amputated, <lb />
MISS DUKE WED PRINCE <lb />
WOMAN CUTS DOWN NEGRO <lb />
WORLD <lb />
HER PROMISES TO WORK HAD HEAPED INSULT ON HER<lb />
fearful washout on <lb />
He south side of the river <lb />
miles has been re- <lb />
paired and on Sunday I rains began <lb />
en. the hard tank before run. No mall reached this place <lb />
detective in ail. sixty men by rail and when the Char- <lb />
camped the lotto came our people were <lb />
i., the watch for It The postmaster <lb />
kepi over every point by which the Hue good people feel a loss if <lb />
attempt to evade the the Charlotte Observer fails to come. <lb />
cordon. <lb />
WILLIAMSON. A CAR-<lb />
AXE <lb />
NEW BERN, March was <lb />
received here yesterday of a homicide <lb />
which near Straits, Carter- <lb />
et count. Saturday afternoon. The <lb />
victim of the affair was Oscar Crow- <lb />
a and the woman who kill- <lb />
ed him Mrs. Charles Williamson, wife <lb />
of a fisherman. Early Saturday morn- <lb />
Mr. Williamson left his home for <lb />
purpose of going over <lb />
to attend to some business matters <lb />
CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS <lb />
FROM EVERYWHERE- <lb />
TOLD BY WIRE <lb />
National for lathers. <lb />
LOUIS. Much <lb />
many visitors from all <lb />
the country were present at the <lb />
opening here today of the sixteenth <lb />
bi welfare <lb />
r lie- auspices of the National Moth- <lb />
Congress and Parent <lb />
days. The program embrace, a <lb />
The session will last i <lb />
of labor, child hygiene, <lb />
juvenile home economics, pub- <lb />
playgrounds and other <lb />
physical, <lb />
TO WILL <lb />
SOON SAIL FOR hi <lb />
TO BE IN <lb />
PARIS <lb />
N. C. March <lb />
something like two weeks ago, the <lb />
of Prince <lb />
i-III to Miss Mary I. Duke, <lb />
daughter of sir. and Mrs. Benjamin <lb />
Duke of New York and Dur- <lb />
ham, N. C. was rumored a denial <lb />
authorized by Mrs. Duke. <lb />
After Prince had sailed <lb />
away for Europe yesterday on <lb />
it was learned <lb />
that close friends of his and the Duke <lb />
family had been informed that the <lb />
engagement was now a fact and that <lb />
marriage would take place within <lb />
next few days in Europe. <lb />
Mrs. Duke and her daughter, ac- <lb />
cording to present arrangements, will <lb />
sill for Europe within two weeks and <lb />
Angler Duke, the brother of Miss <lb />
Duke, is expected to go over at the <lb />
same time. Whether II. N. Duke will <lb />
go over for ceremony is not walked the room and de-l discuss plans for an organized <lb />
known. something to eat, Mr. to attract Investment cap- <lb />
There has been one placed food before him. end desirable immigrants as- <lb />
marriage growing nut of a , bar concluded the the further development of <lb />
of religion, the Prince being , h . j,,,,.,,,,., , and Northwest, Minnesota, North <lb />
Mr. D. H. Win-slow Speaks on Goad <lb />
Roads <lb />
ATTENDANCE VERY DISCOURAGING <lb />
He endeavored to persuade his wife <lb />
go with him. She told him that. <lb />
she bad a number of household <lb />
ties to perform during the day and <lb />
would be perfectly safe, if left alone. <lb />
Saturday afternoon, Crowley <lb />
Boosting the <lb />
ABERDEEN, S. D. <lb />
came to and Inquired for mammoth convention of boosters. em- <lb />
Mr. Williamson. His wife told builders, real estate men. ed- <lb />
husband was not at home, and representatives of com- <lb />
it la alleged the agricultural and Industrial <lb />
that the woman had no assembled here today <lb />
Two Durham Mail Establish <lb />
Lung Distance <lb />
Durham. Two Durham's mall <lb />
an- now failed as champion <lb />
To let out and walk 101.000 <lb />
, of Allen's homo. mile a la <lb />
about to effect i Ed- n <lb />
The shifting of interest from De <lb />
Din Spur was caused <lb />
capture Ed- <lb />
i,. phew the older Allen <lb />
for the wed ling <lb />
II <lb />
hi, mountain c about <lb />
libs Is the work of lazy man. . <lb />
. be made cm this aide, had been <lb />
patron t ens. hue . <lb />
. . . . . i d, I i II l I <lb />
the back clear, the same II. II Is a record that <lb />
rs- <lb />
i twenty-two <lb />
id at any <lb />
I will close cm the outlaw a I n <lb />
d c the <lb />
. n -I a by <lb />
. would <lb />
proposes <lb />
mountains with <lb />
. . and sin a systematic Mr. u. W. Dales, whoso 13-year-old <lb />
s, nook and us drowned in the Clinch river <lb />
placing strong guards in all the near their home at <lb />
take pi o In Pat la <lb />
The Pitt County Good <lb />
met here Saturday and was <lb />
called to order by It. K. <lb />
Rev. If. Rock was requested <lb />
to ask divine blessing upon the meet- <lb />
In the absence of Secretary EL <lb />
A. While. D. J. was <lb />
.; secretary, proton. <lb />
President explained the ob- <lb />
of the association referring to <lb />
the needs and advantages good <lb />
roads. He closed with introducing <lb />
Mr. H. Winslow. of tho United <lb />
department of road Improve- <lb />
who addressed the meeting. <lb />
Mr. Winslow referred to the- records <lb />
that North Carolina holds in corn <lb />
growing and some other matters, but <lb />
said state was far behind in tho <lb />
matter of road Improvement lie said <lb />
ii state must go forward In road <lb />
or she would Co back- <lb />
ward in agriculture. <lb />
Carolina has made wonder- <lb />
progress educationally, one school <lb />
. per day having being built in <lb />
. hue her roads <lb />
no will secure the best <lb />
a the <lb />
i per higher <lb />
, i- than in <lb />
roads The <lb />
was going to lie down. The <lb />
and Miss Duke a Protestant; <lb />
I in on Sunday arrangements ., revolver his pocket show <lb />
started here for , special dispense- h . , ,,. frightened woman, told <lb />
ion covering this question an ,,. . h,. km ,,.,. n <lb />
is understood when the Prince ,.,,,,,.,.,, , . , go, ., basin <lb />
rent I the arrange-1, .,.,. M n ,,,;, ,,,.,., , ,,,,. <lb />
d with l s room i i I <lb />
and Montana ban- n <lb />
i convention, In on to <lb />
a; chic I cities and of this <lb />
I The towel ; <lb />
V n Mrs. <lb />
G Ki t c h i n <lb />
Had . n . . <lb />
r. I-, <lb />
received a message from her brother, r r his I Quick <lb />
ind mountain passes, <lb />
authorities watch- <lb />
notifying that the body <lb />
oven d Hum the waters lo- <lb />
Senatorial Candidates Have <lb />
read to I <lb />
here name let <lb />
many e i <lb />
I up, . ,, , <lb />
b lane could be sum- <lb />
rived quickly, many <lb />
could <lb />
en., i we do not have better <lb />
highways that have <lb />
. are They <lb />
in which <lb />
. the n the <lb />
he <lb />
bro i. II <lb />
and I like <lb />
, tomorrow. Pull particulars of <lb />
boon receive d, <lb />
movements of the women re- day and that the funeral would take <lb />
of will lead lo <lb />
i of communication <lb />
bad the detective to their <lb />
hiding place <lb />
A fit I ten's posse left Mount Airy <lb />
this to Join tho detective <lb />
In Spur. <lb />
resent Went the teeming Rare. , <lb />
importance el nit Evident. <lb />
Him <lb />
Kills <lb />
S Se.-ion-. in Maine. <lb />
Me., March I lied , highways are. They are <lb />
I session r-J, ., , , ii . i <lb />
Our buildings pass <lb />
ii. <lb />
w, <lb />
Women Hound to <lb />
Arrested In Cos. <lb />
Mi rite <lb />
Heavy to <lb />
Inn oilier <lb />
mi Hen with the <lb />
I are <lb />
Before Superior <lb />
N. March <lb />
D i. i i Nora were <lb />
hi Mile OVer lo today <lb />
under t,. and 11.000 bond, re- <lb />
by Oates, <lb />
with before the <lb />
Myrtle Hawkins <lb />
whoso was found In Lake <lb />
Osceola IT <lb />
witnesses brought from Ashe- <lb />
hold.- tho defendant,, only <lb />
, were examined. <lb />
The defense no evidence. <lb />
little light was thrown on the <lb />
mystery today, not one of the <lb />
of the other defendant <lb />
being mentioned during the <lb />
tun it la believed that other <lb />
,, is res, much Important <lb />
Mr-. Break, Improving. <lb />
Monday tho Washington <lb />
Hospital Mrs. L Brooks underwent <lb />
operation and at the <lb />
the consensus of opinion was that <lb />
she would recover. Sine, then, <lb />
however, her condition Improved <lb />
in Mich an extent hopes are on- <lb />
she will scion be <lb />
Mis, is now holding her own. <lb />
is wife of Mr. E. I. Brooks, <lb />
on the popular merchant <lb />
and c o and friendship <lb />
a large number only in Wash- <lb />
elsewhere. Mrs. Brook <lb />
la a daughter tho late Colonel <lb />
Isaac Sugg, for years o leading <lb />
the bar in county. <lb />
The new of Mrs. <lb />
n e lie Is Holed With genuine are <lb />
the Dally News Washington News. <lb />
Mr, Sam T. While, head of the Sam <lb />
White Piano Co., and one our , <lb />
energetic has been appointed <lb />
represent the Interests In <lb />
county in the coming senatorial <lb />
race. <lb />
Already Mr. White has been doing <lb />
sonic- good work for governor and <lb />
Mr. knew what he was about <lb />
in appointing Mr. White to represent <lb />
Knowing the as <lb />
en., we look lo hint lo do some great <lb />
thing as tho senatorial campaign <lb />
keep pace wit lithe thermometer, <lb />
r ii Pi the members of <lb />
i of Maine <lb />
id here to revise the ,,, . ,,; ; , <lb />
in<lb />
. . <lb />
Mr. John who formally lived <lb />
here, inn about the of January <lb />
mined in a farm near <lb />
the 18th. Mr. was all <lb />
. and one of our lies <lb />
farmer. He was a man beloved by <lb />
all who knew him, a devout Chris- <lb />
and loving husband and devoted <lb />
father. His remains were laid to rest <lb />
in the Nobles cemetery, four miles <lb />
by a number <lb />
Do you know all Hi minor <lb />
ail. i. ins colds are by far tho most <lb />
H is not the cold Itself <lb />
you need to fear, but the <lb />
. , that ii often lo. <lb />
an Known as g. mi dis. i <lb />
and consumption arc <lb />
them. Why not tab <lb />
i Cough Remedy and cur, your <lb />
old w bile you I For sale by all <lb />
dealers. <lb />
defendant failed to make <lb />
II j nil <lb />
Borrowing friends. <lb />
The most ease of Insomnia <lb />
s disorder of <lb />
Hyatt will be Hotel, tar lain Stomach and Live <lb />
Tablet <lb />
Perth Monday. April lo treat those and <lb />
, . , ,, the eve. sleep. For sale by all dealers. <lb />
V. Pl <lb />
lie <lb />
in River, <lb />
The heavy up-country last <lb />
Friday have put river here on a <lb />
rapid rise again. The water Is close <lb />
lo Mood stage With a of go- <lb />
higher. <lb />
I I not Knot u Whether Mr. fleet <lb />
Hoard Alexandria, <lb />
Suicide or Whether His Death I <lb />
i. Due to an I <lb />
FOREST, March <lb />
iii fully one hundred feel from tho <lb />
. of a water tank the home of <lb />
brother-in-law, Mr. Benjamin <lb />
Fie el Board came to a terrible death <lb />
last night. Although the suicide <lb />
. has b ed as a prob- <lb />
the death, those <lb />
. tho I.-1 knew him best <lb />
in tho was <lb />
. iv accidental. <lb />
Mr. Hoard, who was a <lb />
i All Va. to- <lb />
with I Infant child, <lb />
Wake Forest t-n days ago on shortly <lb />
Mr. Board brother-in-law, <lb />
U W, II, I was <lb />
to recuperate lure from a period <lb />
a strenuous work In his business. <lb />
he occasioned <lb />
lien law, State for the <lb />
representatives to <lb />
and lo prepare something <lb />
in tic way of liquor legislation. <lb />
Mystery In <lb />
Rocky Mount <lb />
Virginia Man <lb />
Woman tin<lb />
loss of sleep and mental <lb />
far <lb />
the Court. <lb />
There is not much interest <lb />
the civil term of court now h <lb />
progress. Several cases hale com <lb />
Up but they are of only minor<lb />
Mr. William Patrick is very ill with <lb />
pneumonia. <lb />
highways are hi re for all <lb />
I ram c the same road were <lb />
built fifteen hundred ago. <lb />
When we build roads should build <lb />
I I lean. Ill iv. A hill c lit <lb />
down in a highway doe not <lb />
have to be cut down again. All <lb />
. a road is not <lb />
I the surface, pan of it <lb />
be d or it ill go to <lb />
wreck. To lo ; up the roads <lb />
of inc be dis- <lb />
among the generations g-1- <lb />
Of the I <lb />
II. ii. Beck <lb />
. Info million n I <lb />
Little Dene tor . ,,,, <lb />
N. C, March he <lb />
With III out slowly, but obtained In the time an gen- <lb />
He Prank who the aid a bond <lb />
Ills ran, W. Va., . II that <lb />
who ran I was spending ST. ., <lb />
r o'clock K to on seven hundred mile i <lb />
a the under ids was getting <lb />
her home South i i i In of good <lb />
Mount. <lb />
As I there are two He then explained how a bond <lb />
.-ion. which follow up ibis . melon build a system <lb />
knows when Frank cane or good roads, would He <lb />
Marriage License. <lb />
Marriage wore issued <lb />
e- following couple during <lb />
Nobles <lb />
Colored. <lb />
Short and Fannie Wilkins. <lb />
Warren Daniel and Clyde. Harris. <lb />
John and Annie <lb />
V. Move and <lb />
C I., and Florence Edward, <lb />
and Little. <lb />
pie tho roads but <lb />
would not com them anything <lb />
as much as ii now costs them to bars <lb />
No <lb />
where came from, the <lb />
ha ii hi had in com- <lb />
for several weeks hanging <lb />
around ibis house and the roads. Several <lb />
desiring to get rid him, attempt-1 were given lo show ibis. The <lb />
i to devise some means to do I either pa good roads <lb />
. or bad roads and as good roads <lb />
i, , d bi Kate cost less it the pan of wisdom <lb />
Si when consulted In the mat-In them. Farmers do <lb />
said that she would get rid enormous tax bad roads <lb />
him or kill him one. and that she,,., them in bill, to vehicles <lb />
went where he was and harness, to say nothing of dam- <lb />
him times, the last ego to animals Had roads <lb />
shot entering his left lung. on 5th <lb />
ISSUE <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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