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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
WE OFFER YOU <lb/>
Summer Footwear <lb/>
Man. State Chair- <lb/>
man <lb/>
AT <lb/>
REDUCED PRICES <lb/>
A cordial invitation to inspect <lb/>
our stock is extended to all <lb/>
who desire neat, stylish and <lb/>
comfortable shoes at <lb/>
low prices. <lb/>
COME TO SEE US <lb/>
RALEIGH, Charles A. <lb/>
of tonight elected <lb/>
acclamation chairman of the stats <lb/>
Democratic and <lb/>
Walter K. Brock elected secretary, <lb/>
no oilier names coming before toe <lb/>
committee. lo be <lb/>
spirited factional fight In com- <lb/>
was apparently avoided when <lb/>
K. x. Hackett, of moved <lb/>
that one friend of each candidate <lb/>
named on a committee to consider <lb/>
set of rules submitted by T. D. War- <lb/>
of New for governing the <lb/>
senatorial primary. Judge J. <lb/>
ford Biggs, who held a proxy, pro- <lb/>
tested for Governor the <lb/>
friends of each candidate for senator <lb/>
should be allowed carefully to scan <lb/>
rules, he saying that they appeared <lb/>
but that there were minor <lb/>
I tails that needed to be worked out <lb/>
He thought the committee should ad- <lb/>
for two weeks no that the sen- <lb/>
candidates might examine the <lb/>
rules. Members of the committee <lb/>
would not consent to this, some of the <lb/>
committeemen urging hat the rules <lb/>
be disposed of section b section. <lb/>
Some of the Simmons supporters made <lb/>
the point that the friends of each can- <lb/>
should have presented rules so <lb/>
that the committee could have accepted <lb/>
the <lb/>
J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
is composed of strictly pure ingredients, carefully <lb/>
compounded, and always insures uniform results. <lb/>
lb, . <lb/>
. Insist baring ii. sell it, or will get it for <lb/>
ATLANTIC HOTEL <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
NOW OPEN <lb/>
Extensive Improvements, Sew Management, Finest Fishing In <lb/>
America. Every variety of sea and fresh water fish abound In <lb/>
abundance. The Atlantic Hotel fronts the ocean beach, <lb/>
which east and west, affording the much sought southwest- <lb/>
water front, and Its guests enjoy an Invigorating ocean <lb/>
throughout the summer. <lb/>
Here yon have more unique and exclusive advantages than can <lb/>
be found on the Atlantic upon the beautiful and <lb/>
placid Bogue Sound or the Atlantic. Still water and SURF BATH- <lb/>
Incomparable Sound and Deep Sea FISHING. Many near- <lb/>
by points of traditional interest. DANCING. TENNIS, <lb/>
H. C Bankers, Jane I. C. Bar, July 3-5; Press, <lb/>
it-it. <lb/>
ALLEN Manager, city, B. c. <lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work <lb/>
For Slate or Tin, Tin Shop Repair <lb/>
Work, and Flues in Season, See <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
I WANTED Bad Debts to Collect <lb/>
u b all portion el the experience- collection <lb/>
wanted everywhere to help n- In spare time <lb/>
E. R. Bad Debt Agency <lb/>
Box VA. MM ll <lb/>
WARRENTON HIGH SCHOOL <lb/>
X. <lb/>
Fall Session, Begins Sept <lb/>
Special attention given to English. Mathematics, sciences and <lb/>
Ly teachers of long experience For grade of preparation and <lb/>
deportment of pupils consult of the University and the col- <lb/>
Expenses moderate. For <lb/>
MIS Principal . . . . . . X. C. <lb/>
I fear Trial Ends <lb/>
at <lb/>
Eczema Try <lb/>
Has lured Worst Cases and Ton Ian <lb/>
rote II for Only Cents <lb/>
Y, s. try That's all you need <lb/>
in do and get rid of the worst case <lb/>
of eczema. You take no chance, it <lb/>
is no experiment Is positively <lb/>
guaranteed to stop itching, rash, raw, <lb/>
binding eczema, make a pimpled face <lb/>
smooth and clean. Is a wonder <lb/>
and the minute applied it sinks In, <lb/>
vanishes, leaves no evidence, doesn't <lb/>
stick, no grease, Just a pure, clean <lb/>
wonderful liquid and it cures. This <lb/>
is guaranteed, is put up by <lb/>
tho B. W, Rose Medicine Co. St. <lb/>
Louis, Mo., and sold by all druggists <lb/>
at for the large bottle and at <lb/>
cents for the liberal size trial bot- <lb/>
Try one cent bottle and be <lb/>
convinced. <lb/>
MOVES PHARMACY. <lb/>
Jurors For Special Term <lb/>
The county commissioners drew the <lb/>
following Jurors to serve during the <lb/>
special criminal term of court to be- <lb/>
gin on July <lb/>
John G. Rives. Willie Mayo. W. <lb/>
James Harris. D. H. Harris B. <lb/>
C. Mm. Roberson, R. James <lb/>
E. L. Mayo. C. B. Whitehurst. W. <lb/>
J. Smith. A. P C. IS. Wynn. <lb/>
C. Fleming, T. C. Carroll. David <lb/>
Smith, E. P. Rodgers. Nobles. <lb/>
H. A. Pierce. Fred W. Worthington, <lb/>
Rudolph W, If. Wall. W. <lb/>
B. C. H. Rodgers. G. H. <lb/>
Smith. J. R. New <lb/>
ton, S. T. Lewis, J. Y. Monk. Boy ton <lb/>
Boyce, R. N. W. G. <lb/>
E. B. E. C. Williams, <lb/>
J. F. Harris, J. A. Moore. <lb/>
Sleeping In Hot <lb/>
Nothing so fortifies one against at- <lb/>
tacks of hot weather as a good night's <lb/>
sleep. -For lots of people nothing is <lb/>
harder to get. If you have not taken <lb/>
amount of exercise, per- <lb/>
haps you don't deserve much sleep. If <lb/>
you are troubled with Indigestion, eat <lb/>
a light fruit supper, or omit It en- <lb/>
If your room or your bed Is <lb/>
hot. or If you are too warm to go to <lb/>
sleep quickly on a bot night, take a <lb/>
cool bath Just before A tub <lb/>
bath is excellent, but a cold rub down <lb/>
with a doth or sponge Is almost as <lb/>
good. After thus becoming throughly <lb/>
cleansed and cooled by such a bath, it <lb/>
is comparatively to get a good <lb/>
night's sleep in spite of the hot <lb/>
weather. <lb/>
Children who have been brought <lb/>
up as pets may never get over being <lb/>
Ledger. <lb/>
A special term of court for the trial <lb/>
of criminal cases will be held during <lb/>
the week beginning 22nd. <lb/>
July <lb/>
Who have been on trial for nearly two <lb/>
years on the charge of having murder- <lb/>
ed and his wife In <lb/>
June. 1900. were adjudged guilty in <lb/>
varying degrees. The verdict declares <lb/>
guilty of <lb/>
Mono. Antonio <lb/>
and Mariano guilty of <lb/>
murder of and <lb/>
guilty of the murder of wife. <lb/>
Alfonso, tho alleged leader of <lb/>
Giovanni DI Ma- <lb/>
and the others are convicted of <lb/>
being Instigators of the crime and <lb/>
members of the criminal <lb/>
The of the cont Immediately <lb/>
sentenced the condemned men <lb/>
LEGAL NOTICE. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb/>
Sarah K. Cox. having as <lb/>
administrator of the of George <lb/>
Cox. deceased, before D. C. Moore, <lb/>
clerk of tho superior court of Pitt <lb/>
Count notice is hereby given that <lb/>
all persons indebted to said estate <lb/>
are hereby required to make <lb/>
settlement with the undersigned <lb/>
administrator and all persons holding <lb/>
claims against said estate are hereby <lb/>
required to file claims with said <lb/>
administrator duly verified within <lb/>
twelve months from the date hereof, <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This the day of June. 1912. <lb/>
SARAH E. COX, <lb/>
Administrator of tho estate of George <lb/>
W. Cox. deceased. <lb/>
F C. HARP INC. Attorney. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. <lb/>
Having qualified as administrator <lb/>
of William Williams, deceased, late <lb/>
of county, North Carolina, this <lb/>
is to notify all persons having claims <lb/>
against the estate of said deceased to <lb/>
exhibit them to the undersigned, or <lb/>
his attorneys. F. James and Son. <lb/>
K. within twelve <lb/>
months or this notice will be plead <lb/>
in bar of their recovery <lb/>
I All persons indebted to estate <lb/>
will please make immediate payment. <lb/>
This June 19th, 1913. <lb/>
This Space is Reserved <lb/>
for <lb/>
The Greenville Banking <lb/>
and Trust Company <lb/>
i of Greenville <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
t Goes Wide its <lb/>
Mark <lb/>
J. E. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
KANSAS CITY. Mo., Illy <lb/>
in the county prosecutors office here <lb/>
today seeking a warrant for the <lb/>
rest of J. W. Heck, W. King. <lb/>
cashier for a local traction company.; <lb/>
whipped a pistol and shot four <lb/>
times, two bullets taking in <lb/>
Hick's body, the other two slightly <lb/>
wounding two deputy prosecutors and <lb/>
narrowly missing Judge Ralph S. <lb/>
of the Court. <lb/>
Earthquake Shakes Again Felt <lb/>
in Alaska <lb/>
Alaska, July con- <lb/>
with earthquake shocks of <lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday, felt <lb/>
throughout Alaska, it is now feared <lb/>
Mount is erupting. <lb/>
Wireless connection With Is- <lb/>
land is broken, navy wireless <lb/>
station hers has been unable to com- <lb/>
and Bristol Hay <lb/>
Sines the earthquake. At <lb/>
in the Copper river country, the shocks <lb/>
were heavy, Miles and fluids glaciers <lb/>
are more Ice than ever <lb/>
before. <lb/>
Another Shark Reported <lb/>
Fairbanks. Alaska. July <lb/>
shocks, mostly mild, at intervals <lb/>
of one to two hours since Sunday, a <lb/>
quake was felt today equal in violence <lb/>
to first shock reported. Interior <lb/>
towns report shocks yesterday <lb/>
with those here. <lb/>
sale <lb/>
North Carolina, County, <lb/>
In the Superior court. <lb/>
J. E. Winslow vs James ii. Hem- <lb/>
by. <lb/>
By virtue of power vested in me by <lb/>
that execution issuing to me from the <lb/>
superior court of Pitt county in the <lb/>
above entitled cause In favor of the <lb/>
plaintiff and the defendant <lb/>
and pursuant to attachment duly levied <lb/>
on tho property below described and <lb/>
by virtue of authority vested in m <lb/>
by the laws of the state of North Car- <lb/>
I shall sell for cash to the high <lb/>
eat bidder at public auction at the <lb/>
court house door of Pitt county in <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. on the first Mon- <lb/>
day in August. 1912. it being the 5th <lb/>
day of at o'clock, <lb/>
noon, all the right, title and interest <lb/>
It being a one-tenth undivided inter- <lb/>
est in the remainder in fee of the <lb/>
said James It. in and to the <lb/>
following described tract of real es- <lb/>
lying, being and situate In the <lb/>
county of Pitt and state of North Car- <lb/>
to <lb/>
Bounded by the lands of the Craw- <lb/>
ford heirs, the Elks land, Lawrence <lb/>
Anderson, J. F. King others, and <lb/>
being the land of which the late Geo. <lb/>
W. Hemby died seized and possessed <lb/>
as evidenced by certain deeds from <lb/>
A. J. R. A. Geo. <lb/>
Jefferson. Tyson and others, and <lb/>
containing 1-2 acres, more or less; <lb/>
the Interest to be sold being such <lb/>
interest was devised to the said <lb/>
James B. by Geo. W. Hem- <lb/>
by in his last Will ard Testament, the <lb/>
said James B. Hemby being one of the <lb/>
children of the said Geo. W. Hem- <lb/>
by. <lb/>
This the 1st day of July, 1912. <lb/>
S. I. DUDLEY, <lb/>
ltd Sheriff of Pitt County <lb/>
THE OLDEST BANK IN PITT COUNTY <lb/>
With its of OVER <lb/>
One Quarter a Million Dollar <lb/>
STANDS READY ITS OLD <lb/>
AND INVITES NEW ONES. <lb/>
A R. L. <lb/>
James L. Little, <lb/>
Water to <lb/>
At the 1.-st meeting the city Water <lb/>
and Light Commission in order was <lb/>
granting free to <lb/>
the churches of the town, the service <lb/>
J to necessary use of tho <lb/>
churches. This is a donation on the <lb/>
of the town that the <lb/>
will fully appreciate. <lb/>
FOR JARS, JAR <lb/>
and Caps and Jelly Glasses see<lb/>
CHASE A <lb/>
Tens and better, for <lb/>
sale by A <lb/>
will cure you. <lb/>
How To Get <lb/>
MORE OUT OF YOUR HAY <lb/>
CROP. <lb/>
WHETHER you feed or sell your hay. it should be baled. <lb/>
Haled hay takes up much less room and nets a better price <lb/>
than loose hay. It is always ready for any market at top <lb/>
price, while loose hay must be sold near borne, at whatever you <lb/>
can get. . <lb/>
I C H HAY PRESSES <lb/>
have many points of strength, and convenience found <lb/>
in no other presses. They are equipped with a compound lever <lb/>
and a toggle Joint plunger which gives th. i treat compress- <lb/>
power. A pound pull on the sweep of a H C <lb/>
press gives pounds pressure In the bale chamber. <lb/>
The bed reach is only Inches high and very The <lb/>
bale chamber is very to reach over to tie the bale. <lb/>
I H C HAT PRESSES, CLOVER LEAF MANURE <lb/>
SPREADERS, WEBER AND ALL OTHER FARM <lb/>
CALL OS <lb/>
elastic rubber roof <lb/>
superior black <lb/>
free from acid and <lb/>
will not crack in cold weather, la <lb/>
weather proof, sun proof, rust proof, <lb/>
acid proof. Try it. Sold by J. R. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
stimulate the TORPID I H <lb/>
strengthen the digestive organ, <lb/>
regulate the bowels, and are u-i- <lb/>
as an <lb/>
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, <lb/>
In malarial districts their virtues <lb/>
re widely recognized, an they <lb/>
acts peculiar properties In <lb/>
the system from that poison, <lb/>
IV sugar coated. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Hart Hadley <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb/>
HEART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE, AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED THE BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
HA EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb/>
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
JOB AND NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT. <lb/>
Agriculture la the Bout the Most Healthful, the Boil Employment of <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE 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 WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb/>
BE HAD UPON<lb/>
N. C, JULY l, <lb/>
NEGRO KILLED <lb/>
NEAR BETHEL <lb/>
Nathan Succumbs to <lb/>
Bullet <lb/>
SEEMS COLD-BLOODED MURDER <lb/>
Immediately Following a Quarrel <lb/>
an Egg, Negro Kills Bis Con- <lb/>
With a Revolver. Has <lb/>
Taken lo Tall Timbers <lb/>
What appears to be a cold blooded <lb/>
murder took place yesterday In the <lb/>
early afternoon In Saw Mill, <lb/>
near As an excuse for the <lb/>
killing-, there is an alleged fight over <lb/>
an egg. At least that is all that could <lb/>
be learned. <lb/>
Bruce Pierce and <lb/>
bud been working for a while in tho <lb/>
saw mill and until yesterday <lb/>
had happened to point out that <lb/>
there were in differences between tho <lb/>
However, alter three <lb/>
o'clock there arose a over <lb/>
the ownership of an egg and the col- <lb/>
men started to have a light with <lb/>
axes Hint they picked up. <lb/>
disarmed his opponent and there stop <lb/>
the activities. Not so with Pierce, <lb/>
who went down the road with a prom- <lb/>
of speedy return and vengeance. <lb/>
was warned that Pierce <lb/>
would keep his promise, but paid lit- <lb/>
heed to the warning. About half <lb/>
an our later Pierce did return, a pis- <lb/>
in his hand. Without making much <lb/>
fuss he stole behind and Hi- <lb/>
ed the fatal shot, the bullet enter- <lb/>
the back and drilling <lb/>
through the stomach. Pierce made <lb/>
a quick get away and died <lb/>
about an hour after the shooting. <lb/>
Several were Immediately <lb/>
organized to capture the murderer, but <lb/>
up to press-time no news of his <lb/>
whereabouts had been gathered. <lb/>
was a <lb/>
Last spring he worked for a while In <lb/>
Mr. Haywood Hall's brick yard near <lb/>
town. <lb/>
IS ARTISTIC AND FINANCIAL <lb/>
BY ALL <lb/>
The Ladles of the End of the Century <lb/>
and St. Guild Realize Beat <lb/>
Sum for I Fund <lb/>
The lawn given last night in <lb/>
Mr. B. B. beautiful lawn <lb/>
by the ladles of the Bad of the <lb/>
Club and St. Paul's Guild was <lb/>
I success from every point of view. <lb/>
A financial and artistic success is the <lb/>
proper way to the <lb/>
Promptly at p. m. the enter- <lb/>
started and by that time a <lb/>
good crowd had assembled. Every <lb/>
number of the was faithfully <lb/>
rendered and loudly appreciated by <lb/>
the audience. many little <lb/>
den that took part did splendidly and <lb/>
many were the congratulations show- <lb/>
on the performers. The <lb/>
music numbers were excellently <lb/>
and the announcer. Mr. W. Hay- <lb/>
wood Dall, Jr., did not lack friendly <lb/>
support from the audience. <lb/>
It would not he fair to say that <lb/>
such or such numbers were good. <lb/>
They were all excellent. perhaps <lb/>
Miss Hetty dancing being most <lb/>
admired. <lb/>
About were realized from the <lb/>
and this sum could hardly be <lb/>
better employed than for the cause <lb/>
it is to be used. The Ladies <lb/>
for the last night's <lb/>
entertainment are to be congratulated <lb/>
much as the performers w-ho so <lb/>
graciously consented to act. Through <lb/>
their confined efforts some worthy <lb/>
young lady will he able to secure an <lb/>
that her circumstances in <lb/>
life deny her. <lb/>
Monument, Goal of <lb/>
Pilgrimage <lb/>
fork Murder Mystery <lb/>
Clears <lb/>
NEW YORK, July <lb/>
Swartz. father of Swartz, the <lb/>
young man wanted by the police In <lb/>
connection with the murder of the <lb/>
child, Julia Connors, In the Bronx <lb/>
last week acknowledged today In a <lb/>
statement made to Assistant District <lb/>
Attorney Nott that Ilia son had con- <lb/>
fessed to that ho had killed the <lb/>
child and that he had told his son <lb/>
to go out and commit suicide. <lb/>
The father in his statement said lie <lb/>
believed the boy did as he was told. <lb/>
Today Mr. Nott summoned the <lb/>
parents of the murdered girl and Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. Swartz to the office. The <lb/>
torn and stained garments which the <lb/>
dead girl had worn were spread on <lb/>
a table and they caught the eyes of <lb/>
the two families as they entered. <lb/>
Mrs. Connors swooned and her <lb/>
band broke down, weeping. <lb/>
Mr. Swartz appeared deeply affected <lb/>
and when a moment later Mr. Nott en- <lb/>
the room cried <lb/>
My son did it. The day after the <lb/>
my boy came to me and admitted <lb/>
that he had killed the little Connors <lb/>
girl. I looked at him and then told <lb/>
Elizabeth City to Have New <lb/>
Playhouse <lb/>
CITY. July <lb/>
plans for the new are now on <lb/>
at Jewelry store <lb/>
The building will be a very hand- <lb/>
some structure, similar t the Casino <lb/>
at Ocean View, seating seven <lb/>
hundred. The managers promise to <lb/>
have the in readiness to open <lb/>
to the public October the sixth. <lb/>
mm gives fortune THREE BOYS DROWN <lb/>
IN TAR RIVER <lb/>
C. SHARE <lb/>
Wisconsin Labor Federation <lb/>
July <lb/>
la entertaining during the re- <lb/>
of the week the annual con- <lb/>
of the Wisconsin State Fed- <lb/>
of Labor. The attendance in- <lb/>
representatives of labor bodies <lb/>
throughout the state. In addition to <lb/>
transacting considerable bus- <lb/>
the convention will discuss a <lb/>
range of topics affecting the In- <lb/>
of organized labor. <lb/>
him that the only thing to do was to <lb/>
go out and commit suicide. believe <lb/>
he did so. <lb/>
hearing this statement the as- <lb/>
district attorney immediately <lb/>
took all present to the grand jury <lb/>
room. Later it was said that the <lb/>
lice knew where young Swartz was <lb/>
and that they were waiting only for <lb/>
a certified copy of the Indictment be- <lb/>
fore placing him under arrest. <lb/>
His were not revealed, <lb/>
thought it was explained that he was <lb/>
outside of the state. Ills funds are <lb/>
said to have been exhausted, making <lb/>
it Impossible for him to continue the <lb/>
flight. <lb/>
SEVERAL hundred members of the league <lb/>
are to tour Germany this summer. They are Instructors in schools <lb/>
and colleges throughout the States who arc combining pleas <lb/>
and Instruction by visiting many of large cities and centers , <lb/>
learning of Fatherland. The tour, which will last for five weeks, will <lb/>
Include the cities of Bremen, Hamburg, Cologne. <lb/>
Stuttgart, Nuremberg, Munich, Dresden, Leipzig and Berlin, In which last <lb/>
named city will be held the fortieth annual convention of the league. A <lb/>
notable feature of the pilgrimage will be the gathering of the tourists at the <lb/>
foot of the gigantic monument, opposite on the Rhine, <lb/>
commemorating the war of The pedestal, eighty-two feet in height. <lb/>
Is surmounted by a heroic size bronze of holding the imperial <lb/>
crown, typifying the founding of the German empire. Here the tourists will <lb/>
sing am and other patriotic a fervor which <lb/>
only know the German temperament can appreciate, <lb/>
. <lb/>
French Aviator Gored to <lb/>
Death <lb/>
PARIS. July Latham, <lb/>
the famous airman and <lb/>
one of the pioneers of heavier-than-air <lb/>
aviation was killed by a wild buffalo <lb/>
yesterday during a hunt in the French <lb/>
Congo. <lb/>
The governor general of French <lb/>
equatorial Africa, Martial Henri Ber- <lb/>
in telegraphing the news today to <lb/>
the Minister of the Colonies, says La- <lb/>
out with a number of <lb/>
in the forest when he shot and <lb/>
wounded a buffalo which Immediate- <lb/>
charged him and gored him and <lb/>
trampled him to death. <lb/>
death on tho <lb/>
Churl river, near the <lb/>
practically In the center of the <lb/>
Sudan, In the direction of Lake Chad. <lb/>
The date of the fatality was June <lb/>
Not But <lb/>
SPRINGFIELD, Mass., July <lb/>
plans in Conn., grew <lb/>
foil inches overnight, to <lb/>
farmers, as a result of yesterday's <lb/>
rain, the first in six weeks. P <lb/>
declare that by actual measurements <lb/>
made on their return from church yes <lb/>
tobacco in tents, known as <lb/>
shaded tobacco, had grown seven inch <lb/>
cs in forty-eight hours. If this rate <lb/>
Of growth Is maintained ladders will <lb/>
ho required to harvest the top leaves. <lb/>
Veracious farm hands who have <lb/>
been sleeping out doors during the <lb/>
high temperature complained to their <lb/>
employers today tat their slumbers <lb/>
were disturbed last night by the con- <lb/>
incident to the rap- <lb/>
Id growth of the tobacco plants. <lb/>
Armstrong <lb/>
Terms He Bequeaths <lb/>
Ills Fortune lo the Two I <lb/>
RICHMOND. Jul Arm- <lb/>
strong announced the <lb/>
terms of the disposition of his estate <lb/>
and according to his announcement <lb/>
of several months ago the University <lb/>
of Virginia and the University of <lb/>
Carolina are to be the two <lb/>
greatest beneficiaries. <lb/>
Mr, docs not Intend to dis <lb/>
pose of his at his death by <lb/>
will, but has already taken the steps <lb/>
to convey his entire property, <lb/>
mated at in trust to the <lb/>
Virginia Trust Company of Richmond <lb/>
In which he names the two above <lb/>
named as residuary <lb/>
tees, with nine other institutions In <lb/>
other several states to receive <lb/>
each. <lb/>
Control the property is retained <lb/>
by Mr. during his lifetime. <lb/>
and the right to vote stock, but he <lb/>
not to any of the real <lb/>
estate or an tho <lb/>
except for the permanent <lb/>
of his Mills proper- <lb/>
in Virginia and his New York es- <lb/>
To Columbia University of New- <lb/>
York, he leaves tho interest <lb/>
of which is to go toward Increasing <lb/>
the Chandler historical prize. The <lb/>
Virginia Military Institute, the Col- <lb/>
of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts <lb/>
of North Carolina, the town of Roan- <lb/>
Rapids, n. c. the University of <lb/>
South Carolina, tho South Carolina <lb/>
College, the Clemson Agricultural <lb/>
College, in South Carolina and the <lb/>
College of Charleston are each given <lb/>
bequeaths of The interest on <lb/>
the given to the town of Roan- <lb/>
Rapids is to be expended <lb/>
ally for n tree for the public <lb/>
children and provision is made <lb/>
for the gradual increase of the fund. <lb/>
Each child is to receive a present. <lb/>
Mr. who is a member of <lb/>
the Chandler family of New York, but <lb/>
who has restored the original spelling <lb/>
of the family name, has been adjudged <lb/>
sane by the courts of Virginia, but <lb/>
the New York courts have ever set <lb/>
aside a decree declaring him menially <lb/>
irresponsible. By the execution of the <lb/>
deed of trust in Virginia he hopes to <lb/>
secure the carrying out of the terms <lb/>
of his will, <lb/>
Theodore and Elbert Tucker and <lb/>
Robert <lb/>
BODIES FOUND SUNDAY <lb/>
Families of Yeats <lb/>
by Crowds <lb/>
on Spot Where <lb/>
Tragedy Friday <lb/>
Meet at <lb/>
N. C , July <lb/>
ville Hung the banner of Black <lb/>
cat to the breeze today in honor of <lb/>
the members of the Concatenated Or- <lb/>
of who have gathered <lb/>
here from all directions to attend their <lb/>
annual general convention. The <lb/>
of the order, Which is of a <lb/>
fraternal and social character, is con- <lb/>
fined to these engaged in the lumber <lb/>
trade or the allied Industries, Nearly <lb/>
every section of the United Slates and <lb/>
Canada is represented. <lb/>
it has been the unbroken <lb/>
custom of the order to begin its an- <lb/>
meeting at the mystic hour of <lb/>
nine on the morning of the ninth of <lb/>
the month. This year, however, it <lb/>
was decided to change the of the <lb/>
meeting from September to <lb/>
mer as it was thought tho attendance <lb/>
would be much larger. <lb/>
On Sunday was enacted the <lb/>
scene of the tragedy of Friday after- <lb/>
noon in which three boys, Theodore <lb/>
and Tucker, sons of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. S. Tucker and Robert <lb/>
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. <lb/>
lost their lives. It was on that day <lb/>
the waters of Tar river yielded <lb/>
bodies to the hands of relatives and <lb/>
friends to be transferred sorrowfully <lb/>
into the bosom of mother earth. <lb/>
Henri rending Indeed was the grief of <lb/>
the parents and families of the dead <lb/>
boys when their bodies were <lb/>
home and hundreds who had gather- <lb/>
ed mourned In sympathy with them. <lb/>
Tho particulars of the drowning <lb/>
of these three boys, as far as could <lb/>
e told, though just how they were <lb/>
drowned may never be known, have <lb/>
already been published. The two <lb/>
Tucker boys and another brother. Mil- <lb/>
ton, and Robert their cousin <lb/>
who was visiting them, left Mr. Tuck- <lb/>
house about one o'clock and sent <lb/>
to the river about a mile distant, Bali- <lb/>
Milton got tired the fishing <lb/>
about three o'clock and returned home, <lb/>
the other boys at the river. <lb/>
failed to home as dark <lb/>
drew near and Mr. Tucker sent Milton <lb/>
back to the river to call them. <lb/>
When lie reached the river he found <lb/>
only their clothes piled on the river <lb/>
bank and saw the canoe in which he <lb/>
left them Ashing pulled up on a sand <lb/>
bar with the tackle all in it. The sup- <lb/>
position is they left the boat, <lb/>
dressed on the river bank, went in <lb/>
swimming and in some way were all <lb/>
owned. <lb/>
The alarm was given and a large <lb/>
crowd gathered to begin a search for <lb/>
the bodies. This was kept up through <lb/>
Friday night, all day Saturday and <lb/>
through Saturday night. Some drag- <lb/>
the river, others walked the banks <lb/>
and watched the stream and still <lb/>
in gas boats patrolled back and <lb/>
forth for several miles below the <lb/>
scene, hoping to find the bodies. <lb/>
Saturday afternoon several ticks of <lb/>
dynamite wore exploded where <lb/>
drowning must have in tho <lb/>
hope that it would dislodge the bod- <lb/>
and cause them to rise to tho <lb/>
surface, hut accomplished <lb/>
Early Sunday morning th. first re- <lb/>
ward came to the faithful efforts of <lb/>
searchers, who had been their <lb/>
task about forty hours through two <lb/>
nights and n day. when the body of <lb/>
Robert Boated upon the water <lb/>
near the scene of the drowning. A <lb/>
few hours later the patrol boats found <lb/>
the bodies of both the Tucker boys, <lb/>
one of them a mile and the other <lb/>
about two miles down the river. <lb/>
The burial of the two Tucker boys <lb/>
took place together Sunday afternoon <lb/>
In Tucker grave yard near Salem <lb/>
church, mid about the same hour Rob- <lb/>
was burled in the grave <lb/>
yard near Red Banks church. The <lb/>
attendance both funerals was very <lb/>
large. Daily Reflector, July 15th.<lb/>
RUBBER ts. <lb/>
II<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018206_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE BEST AND STRONGEST LINE OF <lb/>
MILLINERY <lb/>
EVER SHOWN IN GREENVILLE can be found at <lb/>
W. A. BOWEN'S <lb/>
New and complete stock Coat Suits just arrived, <lb/>
the latest and best styles. <lb/>
New goods arriving every day, and in ten days our stock will <lb/>
be complete in every line. <lb/>
i. j mm- <lb/>
W. A. BOWEN <lb/>
Author of HEARTS AND <lb/>
Ox THE BOX <lb/>
Kill by COMPANY<lb/>
FURNISHED WITH- <lb/>
OUT A <lb/>
PIANO <lb/>
What adds more to the en- <lb/>
of the family than <lb/>
a PIANO in the home <lb/>
No dealer can place one in <lb/>
your home for less money <lb/>
than we can. <lb/>
Our prices and terms are <lb/>
sure to please. <lb/>
Sam White <lb/>
Piano Co. <lb/>
G. M. MOORING SON <lb/>
General <lb/>
Merchandise <lb/>
of cotton and <lb/>
duce. We now occupy the former <lb/>
Co. V. if <lb/>
rill be glad to have our <lb/>
on us. <lb/>
Drug Co. <lb/>
Leading <lb/>
the Best <lb/>
in Our <lb/>
intent <lb/>
ICE <lb/>
CREAM <lb/>
Superior to <lb/>
All Fountain <lb/>
Toilet Articles, <lb/>
Full of <lb/>
Stationery, <lb/>
Fountain <lb/>
Pen,, <lb/>
Kodak Supplies <lb/>
Telephone <lb/>
Number <lb/>
Cow a Wooten Drug Co. <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
ATLANTIC HOTEL <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Extensive Management, Finest Fishing In <lb/>
America. Every variety of sea and fresh water fish abound In <lb/>
great abundance. The Atlantic Hotel fronts the ocean beach, <lb/>
which runs east and west, affording the much Bought southwest- <lb/>
water front, and Its guests enjoy an invigorating ocean <lb/>
breeze throughout the summer. <lb/>
Here you have more unique and exclusive advantages than can <lb/>
be found on the Atlantic upon the beautiful and <lb/>
placid Bogue Sound or the Atlantic. Still water and SURF BATH- <lb/>
Incomparable Sound and Deep Sea FISHING. Many near- <lb/>
by points of traditional Interest. DANCING, TENNIS, <lb/>
N. C. Bankers, Jane Bf. C. Bar. July 8-5; K. C. Press, <lb/>
July it-it. <lb/>
ALLEN Manager, city, n. <lb/>
mm n <lb/>
Watch The Reflector Grow <lb/>
CHAPTER I. <lb/>
What's in a Name <lb/>
To possess two alien red <lb/>
corpuscles In one's blood, metaphor- <lb/>
If not In fact, two characters or <lb/>
Individualities under one epidermis. <lb/>
Is. In mom cases, a peculiar <lb/>
One hears of scoundrels and <lb/>
striving to consume one an- <lb/>
other in one body, angels and <lb/>
pies; but ofttimes, quite the contrary <lb/>
to a curse, these two Warring <lb/>
temperaments become a man's <lb/>
mate as In the case of <lb/>
George P. A. Jones, of Mortimer <lb/>
Jones, the great Oriental I <lb/>
run carpel company, all of which <lb/>
a dignified, sonorous <lb/>
George divided within himself. <lb/>
This lie would not have confessed, <lb/>
even into the trusted If battered ear <lb/>
of the Egyptian There wag, <lb/>
however, no demon-angel sparring for <lb/>
points in George's soul. The difficulty <lb/>
might be set forth in this <lb/>
On one side stood inherent common I <lb/>
sense; on the other, a boundless. <lb/>
Imagination which was like-1 <lb/>
wise kind of <lb/>
of suitable modern pattern. <lb/>
This niter ego terrified him whenever <lb/>
It raised Its strangely beautiful <lb/>
and shouldered aside his guardian- j <lb/>
angel that's what common use <lb/>
Is. argue to what end you and <lb/>
pleaded in that luminous rhetoric <lb/>
the spell of which our old friend <lb/>
often fell asleep. <lb/>
P. A., as they called him behind the <lb/>
counters, was but twenty-eight, and If <lb/>
he was vice-president In his late fa-. <lb/>
shoes he didn't round <lb/>
In them to any great extent. In a <lb/>
crowd he was not noticeable; he <lb/>
didn't stand head and shoulders above <lb/>
his fellow-men. nor would he have <lb/>
been mistaken by nearsighted per- <lb/>
sons, the for the Vatican's <lb/>
Apollo in the flesh. Ho was of me- <lb/>
height, beardless, slender, hut <lb/>
tough and wiry and enduring. You <lb/>
see his prototype on the streets <lb/>
a dozen times a day, and you may <lb/>
also pass him without turning round <lb/>
for a second view. Young men like <lb/>
P. A. must be Intimately known to <lb/>
lie admired; you did not throw your <lb/>
arm across his neck, His <lb/>
hair was brown and closely clipped <lb/>
about a bead that would have gained <lb/>
the attention of the phrenologist, If <lb/>
not that of the casual Ills <lb/>
bumps, In the phraseology of that <lb/>
science, were good ones. For the rest, <lb/>
he observed the world through a pair <lb/>
of kindly, shy, blue eyes. <lb/>
Young- girls, myopic through. <lb/>
or silliness, nothing be- <lb/>
what the eyes see. seldom gave <lb/>
a second Inspection; for he did <lb/>
not know how- to make himself at- <lb/>
tractive, and was mortally afraid of <lb/>
the opposite, or opposing sex. He <lb/>
could a sheik out of Ml cam- <lb/>
saddle-bags, but petticoats and <lb/>
lace parasols and small had <lb/>
the same effect upon him that the <lb/>
prodding stick of a boy has <lb/>
upon a retiring turtle. Hut many a <lb/>
worldly-wise woman, drawing out with <lb/>
tact and kindness the truly <lb/>
thoughts of this young man's soul, <lb/>
sadly demanded of fate why a sweet, <lb/>
clean boy like this one had not been <lb/>
Bent to her In her youth. You see, <lb/>
the worldly-wise woman knows that <lb/>
it Is invariably the lay-figure and not <lb/>
Prince Charming that a woman mar- <lb/>
and that matrimony is blind- <lb/>
man's buff In grown-ups. <lb/>
Many of lay the blame upon our <lb/>
parents. We shift the burden of won- <lb/>
why have this fault and <lb/>
lack that grace to the shoulders of <lb/>
our immediate forbears. We go to <lb/>
the office each morning denying that <lb/>
we have any responsibility; we let <lb/>
the boss do the worrying. <lb/>
never went prospecting in his soul for <lb/>
any such dross philosophy. He was <lb/>
grateful for having had so beautiful <lb/>
a proud of having had so <lb/>
honest a sire; and if either of them <lb/>
had endued him with false weights he <lb/>
did his best to even up the balance. <lb/>
The mother had been as romantic <lb/>
as any heroine out of Mrs. <lb/>
novels, while the father had owned <lb/>
to as much romance as one generally <lb/>
finds In a thorough business man, <lb/>
which Is practically none at all. The <lb/>
very name Itself Is a bulwark against <lb/>
the intrusions of romance. One can <lb/>
not lift the imagination to the pros- <lb/>
of picturing a Jones In ruffles <lb/>
and pinking a varlet In the <lb/>
midriff. It smells of sugar-barrels and <lb/>
cotton-bales, of steamships and rail- <lb/>
roads, of stolid routine In the office <lb/>
and of placid concern over the dally <lb/>
news under the evening lamp. <lb/>
Mrs. Jones, lovely, lettered yet not <lb/>
worldly, had dreamed of her boy, <lb/>
bayed and decorated, marrying the <lb/>
most distinguished woman In all Eu- <lb/>
rope, whoever she might be. Mr. <lb/>
h d had no dreams at all, and <lb/>
had put the boy to work In the ship- <lb/>
ping department a little while after <lb/>
the college threshold had been crossed, <lb/>
outward bound. The mother, while <lb/>
sweet and gentle, had a will. Iron <lb/>
velvet, and when she held out for <lb/>
Algernon and a decent <lb/>
edge of modern languages, the old <lb/>
man agreed if. on the other hand, <lb/>
the boy's first name should be George <lb/>
and that lie should learn the business <lb/>
from the cellar up. There were <lb/>
tilts over the matter, but at <lb/>
length a truce was declared. It was <lb/>
agreed that the boy himself ought to <lb/>
a word to say upon a subject <lb/>
which concerned him mole vitally <lb/>
than any one eh. So, at the age of <lb/>
fifteen, when he was starting off for <lb/>
preparatory ho was advised <lb/>
to choose for himself. He wag an <lb/>
tit sen. adoring his mother and idol- <lb/>
his father. He wrote himself <lb/>
down George Algernon <lb/>
Junes, promised to become a linguist <lb/>
and to learn the rug business from <lb/>
the cellar up. On the face of it, it <lb/>
looked like a big Job; it nil depended <lb/>
the boy. <lb/>
The first day school his misery <lb/>
began. He had signed himself <lb/>
George P. A. Jones, no small <lb/>
for a lad; but the two Initial <lb/>
standing UP like dismantled pines In <lb/>
the midst of uninteresting <lb/>
roused the curiosity of his school- <lb/>
mates. are boys the world over, <lb/>
and possess a finesse in cruelty that <lb/>
only Indians can match; and it did <lb/>
not take them long to unearth the fa- <lb/>
secret. For three years he was <lb/>
Percy and not only the boys <lb/>
laughed, but the pretty girls <lb/>
Man- a time he had returned <lb/>
to his dormitory decorated In <lb/>
accord With the fond hopes of his <lb/>
with a swollen ear, or a I <lb/>
ruddy proboscis, or a <lb/>
eye. There was a limit, and when <lb/>
they stepped over that, why, he pro- <lb/>
to the best of his ability <lb/>
solve the difficulty with his fists, i <lb/>
George was no milksop; hut <lb/>
Algernon would have been the Old <lb/>
Man of the Sea on broader <lb/>
than his. He dimly realized that had. <lb/>
he been named George Henry William <lb/>
Jones his sun would have many <lb/>
diameters larger, was a <lb/>
did quality of pluck under bis <lb/>
timidity, and he stack doggedly <lb/>
to it. He never wrote home and com- <lb/>
plained. What was good enough for <lb/>
his mother was good enough for him. <lb/>
It seemed just an ordinary <lb/>
of routine for him to pick up French <lb/>
and German verbs. He was far from <lb/>
being brilliant, but he was sensitive <lb/>
and his memory was sound. Since <lb/>
his mother's ambition was to see him <lb/>
an accomplished linguist, he applied <lb/>
himself to the task as if everything <lb/>
in the world depended upon it, just <lb/>
as he knew that when the time came <lb/>
he would apply himself as thoroughly <lb/>
to the question of rugs and carpels. <lb/>
all this filial loyalty ran the <lb/>
pure strain of golden romance, side <lb/>
by with the lesser metal of <lb/>
When he began to read the <lb/>
masters he preferred their romance's <lb/>
to their novels. He even poetry <lb/>
In secret, and when his <lb/>
the fact she cried over the <lb/>
mental verses. The father had to be <lb/>
told. He laughed and declared that <lb/>
the boy would some day into <lb/>
YOUR DAILY <lb/>
WALK WILL <lb/>
BE EASY <lb/>
When we are <lb/>
permitted t o <lb/>
prescribe for <lb/>
Your Tired Feet <lb/>
VERY DAY you will hear one <lb/>
complain of being troubled their <lb/>
feet, and during the sum- <lb/>
mer months. <lb/>
If they would consult us their troubles <lb/>
would be no more, as they would soon <lb/>
learn to appreciate the comfort of a Shoe <lb/>
that fits. <lb/>
Shoe <lb/>
MR. C. S. FORBES, FORMERLY WAS <lb/>
AGENT FOR THE <lb/>
BICYCLE <lb/>
has seen fit on account of other business en- <lb/>
to turn over the agency of this ex- <lb/>
machine to the <lb/>
John Buggy Company. <lb/>
We art also agents for the celebrated <lb/>
Indian Motor Cycle. <lb/>
THIS MACHINE IS KNOWN TO BE THE BEST <lb/>
MACHINE ON THE MARKET. <lb/>
rs <lb/>
of <lb/>
BUGGIES <lb/>
The John Flanagan <lb/>
Buggy Co. <lb/>
gents for best M <lb/>
and tires r IV , I'M, <lb/>
He Haunted the Romantic Quarter of <lb/>
the Globe; He Was Romantic. <lb/>
a good writer of advertisements. This <lb/>
laughter, unburdened as it was <lb/>
with ridicule, was enough to set <lb/>
George's muse swinging, and she <lb/>
Dover came back. <lb/>
After leaving college he was given <lb/>
a modest letter of credit and told to <lb/>
go where he pleased for a whole year. <lb/>
George started out at once In quest <lb/>
of the Holy and there are <lb/>
roads to that than there are to Rome. <lb/>
One may be reasonably lure of get- <lb/>
ting Into Rome, whereas the Holy <lb/>
Grail variable, <lb/>
is always the exact sum of a <lb/>
bunch of hay hanging before old <lb/>
bin's nose. Nevertheless, George gal- <lb/>
loped his fancies with loose rein. He <lb/>
Daunted romance, burrowed and <lb/>
plowed for It; and never his spade <lb/>
on Page <lb/>
We are prepared to do any repair work on <lb/>
biles. We have class workmen and guarantee <lb/>
our work. We also have full line of accessories, <lb/>
will be glad to order any parts to automobiles. <lb/>
We carry a Presto-O-Light tanks for sale and ex- <lb/>
change. We are agents for the <lb/>
and cars. We expect to keep new cars on hand <lb/>
for sale all the time. People wanting work done or <lb/>
Gates, Sugg, Auto Co. <lb/>
CARR ATKINS <lb/>
line of Hardware and Paints. <lb/>
Implements of best makes, Sporting <lb/>
Goods, Etc. <lb/>
If it's in the Hardware line, we have it. <lb/>
Reflector Advertisement Pay <lb/>
Try Reflector Want Column <lb/>
Announcements <lb/>
FOR THE FARMERS <lb/>
From HOME AND FARM <lb/>
For Register of Deeds <lb/>
To the Voters of Pitt <lb/>
For County Commissioner <lb/>
I hereby announce a can- <lb/>
I take this method of announcing from the South side of Tar t <lb/>
myself a candidate for the office of fiver for County Commissioner of <lb/>
A Money Mill For The Farmer <lb/>
Wherever one travels, dairy sec- <lb/>
Professional Cards <lb/>
are already <lb/>
showing excellent re- W. OUTLAW <lb/>
suits. Farmers are renewed in at Law <lb/>
ions g ,, m visible in their work and i <lb/>
ions of and prosperity The ., . . . , <lb/>
Register of of Pitt county, sub- county subject to the action and cream cheeks ,. . Fleming <lb/>
to your consideration and approval of the Democratic voters of in T <lb/>
concentrated reed adds to the evidenced. Social, moral WOOTEN <lb/>
, Large standards have been <lb/>
val. Should you nominate as your county <lb/>
candidate, I will appreciate it as I <lb/>
have for what you have done for me <lb/>
J. L <lb/>
LEV PIERCE. <lb/>
DR. JOHN F. <lb/>
Veterinary <lb/>
at A. M. <lb/>
K. C <lb/>
-North Phone Night Phone <lb/>
Will attend calls Day or Night<lb/>
For State Senator. <lb/>
Subject to approval by the Demo- <lb/>
roads, schools and other conditions <lb/>
la the past. Should you see fit to <lb/>
choose someone else, that will not Indicate that the f <lb/>
by appreciation for what you J The cannot hold his <lb/>
comfortable houses, good cooperation has been given a gig. floor m Wooten <lb/>
have already done for me and my <lb/>
love for the of Pitt county. <lb/>
Very respectfully, <lb/>
I IS T. R. MOORE. <lb/>
self a candidate for the nomination <lb/>
of State Senator for Pitt county. <lb/>
ALEX L. BLOW. <lb/>
own with the dairy row. says Farm <lb/>
and Home, because can gel more <lb/>
dollars her owner out of a ton <lb/>
Impetus. <lb/>
on Third St. opposite court house <lb/>
For Register of Deeds. <lb/>
desire to announce that I will be <lb/>
candidate for Register of Deeds be- <lb/>
fore the Democratic primary or con- <lb/>
which ever may be called for <lb/>
the county of Pitt I shall be grate- <lb/>
and appreciate the support of my <lb/>
friends and citizens of the county of <lb/>
J. J. HARRINGTON. <lb/>
II <lb/>
For Register of Deeds. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a <lb/>
for the office of Register of <lb/>
Deeds of county, subject to the <lb/>
action and approval of the Democrat- <lb/>
primary. I wish to thank my <lb/>
friends for the support given four <lb/>
years ago and earnestly ask for same <lb/>
In the coming primary. <lb/>
BELL. <lb/>
For State Senate. bay or an acre of corn. She is <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a more profitable transformer of farm <lb/>
date for the State Senate, subject to crop into money. The food that will <lb/>
the action of the Democratic primary Blake a dollar's worth of beef will <lb/>
of Pitt county. several worth of milk <lb/>
This the 29th day of May, 1912. or butter. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN. The dairy industry has undergone <lb/>
revolutions In the <lb/>
County Commissioner years. First, the shotgun <lb/>
Juicy Hothouse <lb/>
Restaurant and hotel men <lb/>
created demand <lb/>
May for young lambs weighing around <lb/>
For Register of Deeds. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a <lb/>
date for Register of Deeds of Pitt <lb/>
county, subject to the approval and <lb/>
action of the Democratic party. <lb/>
R. L. LITTLE. <lb/>
For Real liter of Deeds. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a <lb/>
date for Register of Deeds of Pitt <lb/>
county, subject to the approval and <lb/>
of the Democratic party. <lb/>
II II J. C. GASKINS <lb/>
For Constable. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a can- <lb/>
for constable of Greenville <lb/>
township, subject to the action and <lb/>
approval of the Democratic party. <lb/>
L. W. CHERRY.<lb/>
creamer <lb/>
I hereby myself a candidate and deep setting supplanted the <lb/>
for the office of County I low pan and surface skimming. Small <lb/>
of Pitt County subject the action, creameries took the place of home <lb/>
of the Democratic primary. Will dairies. Then the centrifugal <lb/>
predate the support of my friends separator and the factory system <lb/>
and Centralization has brought many ewe <lb/>
serve to the best of my ability . and handsome profits. The flock is about four years. <lb/>
FLEMING. separator has been . very of which <lb/>
sold as lambs at <lb/>
without It the dairy industry would an <lb/>
be far behind. <lb/>
pounds when dressed. There Is <lb/>
Considerable demand for them In <lb/>
L. I. Moore W. H. <lb/>
A I. <lb/>
Attorney Law <lb/>
December to North m on Third<lb/>
H. Ward C. C <lb/>
Washington. N. C. Greenville, N. C <lb/>
WARD PIERCE <lb/>
Attorneys a Law <lb/>
Practice all the <lb/>
HA SKINNER <lb/>
ton. New York and Washington. When <lb/>
horn late in the fall or early In win- <lb/>
tar, they are called hothouse lambs. F. M. WOOTEN <lb/>
In order to study the business of pro- Lawyer <lb/>
lire. Ill,,<lb/>
North <lb/>
lambs, the flock at Office 3rd St., 2nd floor Wooten Bldg. <lb/>
Cornell university since 1903. says C. <lb/>
Farm and Home, has been managed as <lb/>
a hothouse lamb flock with profitable W. C D. B. Clark <lb/>
results. <lb/>
During eight years in records <lb/>
have been kept. ewes have been <lb/>
producing hothouse lambs. The aver- <lb/>
For County Commissioner <lb/>
To the voters of Pitt <lb/>
We want to name a man for County <lb/>
Commissioner from the North side of <lb/>
the county, a man of business and that <lb/>
is fully qualified to fill the place and <lb/>
Thousands for Self-Education. <lb/>
Farmers and business men of De- <lb/>
county. recently pledged <lb/>
to promote demonstration work <lb/>
age price of The aver- <lb/>
age number of lambs from each ewe <lb/>
was 3.1. Total selling price for these <lb/>
In nibs was thus giving an an- <lb/>
income per ewe of <lb/>
Engineer Attorney at Law <lb/>
CLARK <lb/>
Civil Engineers and <lb/>
Surveyors <lb/>
H. ff. CARTER, M. D <lb/>
Practice limited to diseases of the Eye, <lb/>
Ear, Nose and Throat. <lb/>
Washington, N. C, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Office with Dr. D. L. James, Green- <lb/>
ville, day every Monday. to pin <lb/>
WEEK END AND RATES <lb/>
to <lb/>
Morehead City and Beaufort, V. C <lb/>
Sunday excursion tickets now on <lb/>
sale and week end fares will become <lb/>
effective Saturday, June 1st <lb/>
For specific rates and complete in- <lb/>
formation apply to any agent of <lb/>
Norfolk Southern railroad. <lb/>
AND OFFICIALS <lb/>
If elected will look after the interests for was <lb/>
of the county. Nominate and elect ,,. <lb/>
him and you will make no mistake. <lb/>
That man is John G. Taylor. <lb/>
MANY VOTERS. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
In <lb/>
J. EVERETT <lb/>
Court M <lb/>
Special <lb/>
Pitt <lb/>
House Square <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
For The Legislature <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a can- <lb/>
for the House of <lb/>
subject to the action and <lb/>
of the Democratic primary of <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
T. I. WILLIAMS.<lb/>
Term <lb/>
ALBION <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that a spec- Attorney at Law <lb/>
term of Pitt Superior court la building, St <lb/>
two years. There are of these <lb/>
with a total membership of farm- <lb/>
merchants and bankers. They <lb/>
were organized by the county farmers <lb/>
institute. <lb/>
The objects of those clubs, says <lb/>
Farm and Home, are to promote the <lb/>
work of farmers institutes, to W F <lb/>
more rapidly J. P. Chairman Attorney at Law <lb/>
communication and to establish com Board of County Commissioners opposite R. L. Smith Cos <lb/>
centers for the discussion of July 1912. and next door to John Flan <lb/>
been ordered to be held for one week Practices wherever bis services <lb/>
on 22nd day of July desired <lb/>
1912. for trial of criminal cases North <lb/>
defendants and witnesses <lb/>
For Constable. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a can- <lb/>
for Constable of Greenville <lb/>
township, subject to the action and <lb/>
approval of the Democratic party. <lb/>
JESSE L. WHICHARD. <lb/>
For Constable. <lb/>
I wish to announce myself a can- <lb/>
for township con- <lb/>
stable, subject to tho Democratic <lb/>
WALTER L. PATRICK, <lb/>
For Commissioner. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself as a can- <lb/>
from the north of Tar <lb/>
river for County Commissioner of Pitt <lb/>
county, subject to the action and <lb/>
of the Democratic primary of <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
MONTGOMERY T. SPIER.<lb/>
For the Legislature. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a can- <lb/>
for the House of <lb/>
subject to the action and <lb/>
of Democratic primary of <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
S. T. CARSON. <lb/>
May 10th, 1912. <lb/>
For the Legislature. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a can- <lb/>
for the House of <lb/>
subject to the action and <lb/>
of the Democratic primary of <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
D. M. CLARK. <lb/>
Hay 1912. <lb/>
For County Commissioner. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself as a can- <lb/>
for County Commissioner of <lb/>
Pitt county, subject to the action of <lb/>
the Democratic primary. <lb/>
SHADE ALLEN STOCKS. . <lb/>
For County Commissioner. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself a <lb/>
date for County Commissioner of Pitt <lb/>
county, subject to tho approval and <lb/>
action of the Democratic primary of <lb/>
the county. <lb/>
G. PORTER <lb/>
June 1912. <lb/>
For County <lb/>
to approval by the Demo- <lb/>
voters I hereby announce my- <lb/>
self a candidate for the nomination <lb/>
of County Commissioner of Pitt <lb/>
JNO. L.<lb/>
For Stale Senate <lb/>
Having been endorsed by the anti- <lb/>
ring element the Democratic party, J <lb/>
I a for <lb/>
the State Senate, subject to the ac- <lb/>
of a voting primary of the Dem- <lb/>
party under the plan of or- <lb/>
Upon the questions con- <lb/>
fronting the people I stand upon the <lb/>
platform of <lb/>
extension of the stock law <lb/>
except by a vote of the people in the <lb/>
effected. <lb/>
The repeal of the stock law leg- <lb/>
of the last legislature. <lb/>
The Improvement of the public <lb/>
without bond Issues. <lb/>
Against any bond issue in Pitt <lb/>
county for next two years except in <lb/>
towns and then only by vote of the <lb/>
effected. <lb/>
Improvement of the county home. <lb/>
A legalized primary for North <lb/>
the above principles <lb/>
upheld, I most earnestly solicit <lb/>
votes <lb/>
WILLIAM F. EVANS. <lb/>
community problems. During the last I <lb/>
two seasons about meeting have S <lb/>
been held in the county with an <lb/>
to Some <lb/>
Of the very best in the state, fr <lb/>
men who have met with unusual sue- <lb/>
in their work, have been secured <lb/>
to address the meetings. <lb/>
Loss than two years old. these clubs <lb/>
SAM SHORT <lb/>
Transfer, and Express <lb/>
Promptness <lb/>
Phone<lb/>
8888888888888888 <lb/>
Buggy Company's new building <lb/>
Greenville, . . North <lb/>
t B. F. TYSON <lb/>
Insurance <lb/>
Life, Fire, Sick and Accident <lb/>
Office, on Fourth street, rear Frank <lb/>
f Wilson's store<lb/>
S. Dudley. <lb/>
Clerk Superior C. Moore. <lb/>
Register of M. Moore. <lb/>
B. Wilson. <lb/>
Laughing- <lb/>
house. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
P. D. <lb/>
J. Holland, J. J. May, B. M. Lewis, <lb/>
W. E. Proctor.<lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
ARE PREPARED TO FURNISH THEM <lb/>
IN ANY QUANTITY at the LOWEST PRICE <lb/>
Let Us Have Your Order Early <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1871 <lb/>
S. M. Schultz <lb/>
Wholesale and retail grocer and <lb/>
dealer. Cash paid for Hide <lb/>
Fur, Colon Seed Oil, barrels, <lb/>
keys, Eggs. <lb/>
Oak bedsteads. Mattresses, <lb/>
Suits, Baby carriages, go-carts, par <lb/>
suits, tables, lounges, safes, <lb/>
and Ax snuff, High <lb/>
tobacco, Key West Cheroots, <lb/>
George cigars, canned cherries, peach <lb/>
es. apples, syrup. Jelly, Meat, flour <lb/>
sugar, coffee, soap, lye, food <lb/>
matches, oil, cotton seed meal <lb/>
bulls, seeds, oranges, apples <lb/>
nuts, candles, dried apples, peaches <lb/>
prunes, raisins, glass and <lb/>
china ware, wooden ware, cakes and <lb/>
crackers, macaroni. but- <lb/>
new Royal and <lb/>
numerous other goods. Quality an <lb/>
quantity cheap for cash. Come to set <lb/>
me. Number II. <lb/>
FLOWERS <lb/>
you want the best, <lb/>
we are at your services. <lb/>
Roses, <lb/>
Violets and Is <lb/>
the latest Styles. <lb/>
offerings artistically <lb/>
St short notice. <lb/>
J. L. Co. <lb/>
i. c. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD. <lb/>
Agent for and <lb/>
HIM. OB <lb/>
Is <lb/>
f s m i m m a I t m <lb/>
Town. <lb/>
M. Wooten. <lb/>
C. Tyson. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Chief of T. Smith. <lb/>
E. Nobles, E. B. <lb/>
W. A. Bowen, J. S. Tunstall J. <lb/>
F. Davenport. B. F. Tyson, Z. P. Van- <lb/>
Dyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Water and Light <lb/>
S. Spain, C. L. <lb/>
W. Tucker. <lb/>
Superintendent- H. L. Allen. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Churches. <lb/>
Baptist. Q M. <lb/>
Rock, pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; <lb/>
C. W. Wilson, superintendent of Sun- <lb/>
day school; J. C. Tyson, secretary. <lb/>
regular pastor. <lb/>
Episcopal, St. Dallas <lb/>
Tucker, rector. W. A. Bowen <lb/>
Superintendent of Sunday school. <lb/>
R. v. Lancaster, <lb/>
Repair P m. Johnson, clerk. <lb/>
Barber <lb/>
Edmonds, and Latham <lb/>
Proprietors <lb/>
Located in main business part <lb/>
of town. Four chairs in opera- <lb/>
and each one presided over <lb/>
by a skilled barber. Ladies <lb/>
waited on at their homes. <lb/>
J. E. WINSLOW <lb/>
Buggies <lb/>
Wagons <lb/>
If you want the beet Cart <lb/>
manufactured In Pitt County go k <lb/>
Shop and ask for a pair <lb/>
DIXIE WHEELS <lb/>
Black Birch Hubs, split White Oak <lb/>
Spokes, Pitch-pine Rims. Steel <lb/>
and Axle, made by strictly <lb/>
workmen. Every pair guarantee. <lb/>
around the corner from <lb/>
market. <lb/>
REPAIR SHOP. <lb/>
V C <lb/>
Horses and Mules <lb/>
Phone No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, North Car <lb/>
In most cases <lb/>
No man would <lb/>
Suffer the loss <lb/>
Under no <lb/>
would he <lb/>
Admit his business <lb/>
No longer needed <lb/>
Careful protection. <lb/>
Endangers it by neglect <lb/>
I represent some <lb/>
of the strongest in- <lb/>
companies <lb/>
in America. <lb/>
L Wilkinson <lb/>
If, pastor; A. II. Ellington, <lb/>
clerk; H. D. Batsman, superintend- <lb/>
school; L. H. <lb/>
secretary. <lb/>
Delphi Chapel <lb/>
Rev. W. O. pastor. <lb/>
Free Will Thomas E. <lb/>
pastor. <lb/>
Lodges. <lb/>
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
R. Williams, W. M; L. H. Pender. <lb/>
Sec. <lb/>
Sharon. No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
W. If.; E. K. Sec. <lb/>
Greenville Encampment No. I. <lb/>
O. O. W. C. P.; L. <lb/>
H. Pender, Scribe. <lb/>
Tar River No. K. of J. <lb/>
Woodward, C. C; A. It. Ellington, <lb/>
K. of R. and S. <lb/>
Greenville Chapter No. BO. R. A. M. <lb/>
J. N. Hart, II. P.; E. E. Griffin, Sec. <lb/>
I Covenant Lodge No. I. O. <lb/>
T. every Tuesday night. E. Q. <lb/>
Flanagan, N t;,; U H p. Sec. <lb/>
Tribe No. I O. <lb/>
R. Sachem; J. U <lb/>
Evans, C. of R. <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
OFFICE; Iron <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb/>
Reflector Want Ada. <lb/>
dubs. <lb/>
Lillian Carr, pres <lb/>
Miss Ward Moore, secretary. <lb/>
Daughters of T. <lb/>
J. Jan Is, president; Mrs, J. L. <lb/>
en. secretary. <lb/>
The Kings A. L. <lb/>
president; Mrs. J. O. <lb/>
Secretary. <lb/>
Sans Mrs. <lb/>
Lewis Skinner; Secretary. Mrs. W. <lb/>
I, Hall. <lb/>
Dunn, <lb/>
M. Clark, secretary. <lb/>
End of R. O. <lb/>
fries, president; Mrs. E. B. <lb/>
Secretary. <lb/>
Round f R. <lb/>
Mrs. S. J <lb/>
Civic Mrs. T. <lb/>
A. Person; Secretary, Mrs. T. B.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018206_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb/>
While we failed to Ml an; I <lb/>
. the cent <lb/>
and FARM and EASTERN deny <lb/>
i hough there must <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
COMPANY, Inc. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD. Editor. <lb/>
WORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
The Reflector is animating itself <lb/>
M She <lb/>
pi <lb/>
I c t SChOOl <lb/>
. tickets sonars a <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb/>
year. . . <lb/>
Six . M <lb/>
Adverting rates may be bad upon <lb/>
application at business <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner <lb/>
and Third street. <lb/>
and you afford to issue i . attractions, and PrO- <lb/>
no on. So toll teaser has already signed <lb/>
lo at <lb/>
r Authorized The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb/>
Flit tier n aid <lb/>
i Advertising on Application <lb/>
L. M Jackson and J. F. <lb/>
attended at Little <lb/>
Creek Sunday. <lb/>
Dr. I. It. <lb/>
for Norfolk. <lb/>
Winter, <lb/>
W INTER July<lb/>
Martin county. <lb/>
returned Wed-<lb/>
Aden. July -These be and Mies Julia Smith vis- , Cox of Mi, who <lb/>
nines with the Just no, Sunday Training school <lb/>
Mr. I. II. architect, of if one ever did hustle he has to do I Curing tobacco seems to be the or- <lb/>
tor <lb/>
near <lb/>
J. H. C. Dixon <lb/>
Van Leads <lb/>
Laurinburg Exchange. <lb/>
All card of thanks and resolution <lb/>
respect will be charged I it <lb/>
cent per word. <lb/>
. advertising <lb/>
dates will -e charged at three <lb/>
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
of day in our section. <lb/>
as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910. at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville, Carolina, under <lb/>
act of March 1873. <lb/>
FRIDAY. U <lb/>
Don't forget that good <lb/>
be nominated the legislature and spent Monday in town at tobacco housing lime. <lb/>
lie best men the for com- building committee of the Henry Grady, in bis Boston speech. Messrs. Frank Stokes and Henry <lb/>
dist church, going over the proposed believe it was, said cotton was a fool Worthington were visiting at Mr. lien- <lb/>
plans for the building. but he should have saved that epithet Sunday afternoon. <lb/>
o--------- i . apply to tobacco, but he knew morel Mr. Biggs Cannon tells us he has <lb/>
That little you are behind on your aw cotton perhaps. I been fine crops this year and he to <lb/>
Madison Herald. tobacco for years and have learn purchase one of those horseless wag- <lb/>
subscription would look mighty good are paid , about it every year. It passes his home so often. <lb/>
to us now. Talk to Stokes about the prohibition law as me my Bearing and great Messrs A. H. and S. J. Cox went <lb/>
they cannot to my eyesight and ii I tune j,, Core again Saturday and re- <lb/>
do so. they should resign and made any money out of it cant toil mined Sunday night, <lb/>
let others who call do so draw the <lb/>
And our city fathers are bound to salary, <lb/>
admit that our sidewalks are not as <lb/>
at Greenville, was visiting Misses <lb/>
and Olivia Cox on last even <lb/>
and returned this morning. <lb/>
The Fargo hog cholera remedy is <lb/>
guaranteed to cure any case of <lb/>
era. You will find a full supply at A. <lb/>
Ange and Co. One bottle will con- <lb/>
any one of its excellency <lb/>
well as the disease. <lb/>
J F. Stokes, of Greenville, was in <lb/>
our city Thursday talking insurance. <lb/>
While making tobacco flues for the <lb/>
A G. Cox Manufacturing Company. <lb/>
Mr. John Cooper accidentally got a <lb/>
HI T I POUT OF <lb/>
The beat about being a pub- <lb/>
is Hie publisher has always <lb/>
a perfect right to till up space when- <lb/>
ever lie to say something to <lb/>
Ins readers and subscribers. In <lb/>
words he can make <lb/>
without profit but almost <lb/>
always without loss. <lb/>
We are publishers, we have read- <lb/>
i ind subscribers and we make use <lb/>
of that right. <lb/>
The that more than a doz- <lb/>
en years ventured out In long <lb/>
dresses, later wore rompers, further on <lb/>
knickerbockers and has finally a <lb/>
pair of long trousers. And believe us <lb/>
we proud of them. They may <lb/>
not have an Irreproachable Breast <lb/>
down the legs, but they are not aw- <lb/>
fully baggy about the knees either. <lb/>
The trousers are held up by I pate <lb/>
of suspenders. On one side the sub- <lb/>
on the other the <lb/>
We may have to draw up the <lb/>
side or the to obtain the <lb/>
good <lb/>
as they might be. <lb/>
o------- <lb/>
in <lb/>
Mm canton Messenger. <lb/>
where it is. for I have no got it Mr. and Miss <lb/>
U. show for it. Fannie Smith were out driving Sun- <lb/>
It can work more folks to death <lb/>
nearly- than any crop ever made. I Mr. J. R. Turnage of was piece of steel lodged In his eye which <lb/>
was among the first of my section our streets last week buying <lb/>
The threshers began opera- engage in raising it and have Blinded tun. <lb/>
i, , , ; i if sub. and the Inn of the ma- ii in the curing barn from midnight till Mr. . <lb/>
. . I guaranteed for <lb/>
period of ten years without painting. <lb/>
Branch's sale by Harrington. and <lb/>
began. F. T. hauled m no some what critical at this time. <lb/>
Ural crop to squire Tyson for him to, Mr. is one of our most ex- <lb/>
it for sun as he bad men. <lb/>
Chine is heard throughout the land most every season since began <lb/>
is paid I year or so ad- Kl ,. , a , , , ,,.,. ,. i Mr. G. <lb/>
half a crop In was tobacco, perhaps Mr J- A <lb/>
season <lb/>
him severe pain. He made <lb/>
a trip to yesterday for the <lb/>
Thad Cannon and Miss Lula purpose of consulting a specialist, <lb/>
out driving Sunday after- Rubber guaranteed <lb/>
This Date in History <lb/>
July i; <lb/>
Isaac Watts, famous <lb/>
hymn writer, born. <lb/>
Nov. <lb/>
Topic. barn. About the time one all <lb/>
An effort is being made to gel an- can do tilling his barn the ill get <lb/>
local to put in a out pasture or the sheep or rows <lb/>
exchange Falls. A you have to go run them bark <lb/>
Died telephone exchange is greatly and then throws you back badly. <lb/>
ed at Granite Falls and it now looks or you rush like a ad man to the <lb/>
of Charlotte It will be only a short lime barn tiled In U early part of the <lb/>
the assassin of Marat one Is secured. week so as not to run heals on Sunday. <lb/>
Mackinaw, with Its <lb/>
son if States cap- Wake Them I p Then you have to get wet every day <lb/>
I led by a force and j;,,, Hill Record. Oiling, getting off suckers, etc ant <lb/>
Indians. why wasn't Hock Hill slop for The producer never <lb/>
states obtained full a; ,;,,, meeting In Columbia ball be should have for it <lb/>
session of Florida. When a state chamber of com- as it ruins so many cloth <lb/>
j known the lath- mere was like this troys so much wood and costs so much <lb/>
of the cotton industry in to have hail one rep- in every way. Summing up will <lb/>
Black Hems <lb/>
The farmers are getting busy cur- <lb/>
tobacco, now. <lb/>
We are still some more <lb/>
showers at time. <lb/>
Some of the boys have began to <lb/>
eat watermelons on a sly. <lb/>
Misses and Adam <lb/>
spent night and Sunday <lb/>
with Miss Arnold. <lb/>
Through the kind imitation of Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. I. L. the <lb/>
and Episcopal Sunday School <lb/>
spent a most delightful day <lb/>
day ill the grove around his tobacco <lb/>
barns. Dinner plentiful and some <lb/>
lo for they gathered up sever- <lb/>
baskets lull; after all present had <lb/>
satisfied their hunger with the good <lb/>
foods that were spread. Swings were <lb/>
inconstant use and the cream at p. <lb/>
m was exhilarating. A vote of thanks <lb/>
to Mr. and Mrs. for the <lb/>
pleasant day and their spirit of <lb/>
life pleasant for other was <lb/>
Slates, died in at least. Ha <lb/>
Horn there May ,, gone to <lb/>
1846 Remains of Daniel Boone and <lb/>
Mr. B. S. Arnold was all Hie pleasant for other w <lb/>
, . Sunday because he was with pro. by everyone. <lb/>
his best girl friend For shoes and hats, any <lb/>
Mr. M. V. Clark went to kind call on Harrington <lb/>
the good tobacco always sells Well, bill Tarboro Sunday. <lb/>
you cant make it good often, but a pleasant I <lb/>
people do. With the very best Hoy <lb/>
through our section last week with <lb/>
Venters of came <lb/>
and care you make a signal failure <lb/>
his wife removed from the In the Fable. <lb/>
tery at Mo, to Laurinburg Exchange, sometimes. My crop this year was a is <lb/>
Ky. The report is going the round that failure until the middle of June. It Annie Clark and brother. A. <lb/>
1894 President land the ,,, clerks, stenographers or some- looked as if it would not make Clark went to Nor- <lb/>
act admitting Utah to statehood. may be for pounds to the acre and I never found night and returned Mon- <lb/>
length, but oh ho hard tuba we are hunting re- out what was the matter with it <lb/>
lo the United Stales. cord during the years he baa been I had lopped most of it and laid it <lb/>
1803 A. Whistler, fa- n office. when you <lb/>
artist, died In London. Horn please pass it around. <lb/>
iii Lowell. Mass In <lb/>
To the readers of The Hector. <lb/>
we pray for <lb/>
hose suspenders to hold <lb/>
on and do their duty. The side made <lb/>
up of advertiser has been I <lb/>
to extent that inspires us <lb/>
with mi iron clad confidence. <lb/>
gel addition every almost, The <lb/>
i i aide, one composed of sub- <lb/>
also received some en- <lb/>
lately. Borne, yes, but <lb/>
not much as trousers need. <lb/>
And reader and subscriber you <lb/>
know in an <lb/>
a man finds himself, if <lb/>
r T. Duller of <lb/>
t tough and yellow looking u If regular appointment at <lb/>
bad no guano in a mile of it Tl k J night and Sun- <lb/>
trouble proved to be water. it was My. <lb/>
1911- Senator Tl <lb/>
signed from the <lb/>
senate. <lb/>
Georgia re- <lb/>
united States <lb/>
This is My Birthday <lb/>
Ilium <lb/>
Luis Munoz Bin the resident <lb/>
of at Washington, <lb/>
born at <lb/>
July and educated In the my <lb/>
public schools of his native land. In on feel<lb/>
For of to run was <lb/>
compelled, about June 1st to <lb/>
PHI County News. I soon <lb/>
notified delinquent to <lb/>
pay up A few only have responded <lb/>
and i I am not able resume <lb/>
publishing paper, nurse, <lb/>
no one is more than l for aside <lb/>
in the matter no <lb/>
more keenly <lb/>
suspenders don't bold. Mis position re founded dally newspaper <lb/>
i . , a i i In San of which he has since been <lb/>
untenable m me <lb/>
Me jive up and look for <lb/>
barrel. <lb/>
of hi obligation than <lb/>
it pains no not to be able to <lb/>
I. and <lb/>
and publisher He was one the paper lo those who kindly <lb/>
leaden In the movement which h in advance, To how- <lb/>
resulted In the of home l shall do my best lo make good <lb/>
Now iii order to impress upon the rule for while it was still other way. <lb/>
mind of our the of When I want to tell you I am <lb/>
the island passed Into the possession out business. I can't <lb/>
lance of then- support we M M for a run s o own , , Mu <lb/>
Ii, an indeed we M president of the insular cab- i,,,,, lo run one of some body else. <lb/>
with a man, whom we He served three terms In the The Reflector has needed a field man <lb/>
fully e pupped to inspire the necessity and in 1904 be founded the years and that is the Job <lb/>
Unionist party. Almost continuous- onto right now. <lb/>
has labor- improvement has come to the <lb/>
simply water hurt as v e had had very <lb/>
during May. After I <lb/>
it and Lie ram stopped <lb/>
so heavy it just leaped into the <lb/>
c I ever bad. Though for ion <lb/>
time I ruined it by topping ii too <lb/>
low. but it is repairing now and is, <lb/>
quite promising am two <lb/>
in hind some of neighbors in <lb/>
Finally, I am tired of It <lb/>
and unless I come nut fairly well <lb/>
the i believe I will real on it <lb/>
ope year. Why Mr. Editor I <lb/>
We are sorry t hear the sad news <lb/>
the death Mr. Tucker's. <lb/>
We having a nice Sunday school <lb/>
at Iliac k Jack now. We cordially <lb/>
you all to attend, <lb/>
Mr. B. L. Clark of New York city <lb/>
came home sine few days to see his <lb/>
relatives and friends Ho returned <lb/>
Saturday. Wonder when he will <lb/>
coma lo N. C. again <lb/>
size and <lb/>
Barber <lb/>
He do and Company. <lb/>
Mr. Fred of Wilmington is <lb/>
visiting here this week. <lb/>
and Mrs Dodgers of <lb/>
were here a short while yesterday. <lb/>
Miss Sac Hull of Is vis- <lb/>
Miss Olivia Cox this week. <lb/>
A. W. Ange and Company have <lb/>
moved their furniture department In- <lb/>
to the building formally occupied by <lb/>
the Hank of A car load <lb/>
furniture Just arrived. <lb/>
Miss Dell of <lb/>
den is spending a few days Miss <lb/>
Olivia Cox. <lb/>
of the Conditions of <lb/>
I OF <lb/>
Hems <lb/>
July and Mis. <lb/>
Jackson of Cash Items <lb/>
At the Close of business April, is. 1911 <lb/>
tea <lb/>
Loans and Discounts <lb/>
Overdraft <lb/>
Furniture and Fixtures <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
have time lo read only of and Sunday Mr. <lb/>
hardly take time to eat filling <lb/>
A. <lb/>
I. S The big boy said no longer <lb/>
than yesterday I need not plant <lb/>
any for him lo house for be would <lb/>
first. And the madam gets after <lb/>
me for working ill rain making It so <lb/>
I shall have to quit it looks like. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Quit a number of our people at- <lb/>
tended Church at Elm Grove Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Pauline Joyner spent Sunday <lb/>
with Miss son <lb/>
Mr. L. M, Jackson went lo <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Coin <lb/>
Bank Notes and u. s. <lb/>
Notes <lb/>
689.91 <lb/>
mi <lb/>
66918.11 <lb/>
15.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Stock <lb/>
Sin plus <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Misses Nettle, Katy and Maine Profit <lb/>
of support both from those that <lb/>
ready receive the Reflector and those <lb/>
that ought to subscribe to it. <lb/>
Indeed Menu that a lapse of <lb/>
memory has secured In some cases <lb/>
would make Rip Van Winkle's <lb/>
story listen like the gentle murmur of <lb/>
I stream. Sweet but foolish. We <lb/>
have some people on the mailing <lb/>
that must have made up their <lb/>
to their subscriptions just as soon <lb/>
as the militant William Jennings <lb/>
an pulls off that dreamed of sleep <lb/>
in the downy couch of the White <lb/>
Hon. We shudder lo think of it. <lb/>
And. listen here, how we would like <lb/>
lo have th filthy lucre In the bank. <lb/>
It would help us pay so many debts <lb/>
ind would leave us so much surplus <lb/>
even Rockefeller would look like <lb/>
a piker to us. <lb/>
In times gone by mothers used lo <lb/>
n their into I <lb/>
troubled sleep by whittling softly to <lb/>
through their front teeth <lb/>
better go to sleep or the bogey man <lb/>
will and take you <lb/>
get next and keep <lb/>
dark. John F. is after you for <lb/>
that subscription . . . and what's <lb/>
In gel <lb/>
to obtain a greater measure of paper lately and it merits a much <lb/>
Bell fur the Ricans patronage than It U getting, To <lb/>
and since he has resided in this patronage II <lb/>
Washington to keep in closer touch B,. one get out cm the bring <lb/>
with the president and congress round up the subscribers. <lb/>
Therefore I am after you right now. <lb/>
the extra coil Of putting a <lb/>
Congratulations man in the Bald II is necessary to put <lb/>
. . . the paper on a strictly <lb/>
Bishop Wilson S. Lewis, of the Math basis, which feel quite sure, <lb/>
Episcopal Church, years old must meet with your approval, <lb/>
today. So be ready to pay the cash the first <lb/>
Dr. Ulysses II. Pierce, chap- time you see me, or mail direct to me. <lb/>
lain of the United States senate. Sincerely yours, <lb/>
years old today. JOHN F. <lb/>
John Protestant Circulation Manager Carolina Home <lb/>
opal bishop of and Farm and Dally <lb/>
years old today. <lb/>
Lieut Ben. II. Que , of ,.,,,,,. <lb/>
entered Into professional baseball this <lb/>
nor of Bermuda, years old ,, ,,, <lb/>
of Virginia, with the <lb/>
You will have to hand it lo the St. Nationals; Charles <lb/>
Louis for true to of Cornell, with Buffalo.; John Boyle, <lb/>
form. Here is the July of Chicago, with the <lb/>
wins; defeats July Joseph <lb/>
Items <lb/>
HOPS WELL. July Luther <lb/>
Jackson of were <lb/>
town a short while Sunday. <lb/>
Meads. J. F. and W, <lb/>
made a business trip to Sat- <lb/>
Unpaid <lb/>
Capt. sub. to Checks <lb/>
Savings Deposit <lb/>
Cashier's Checks <lb/>
3500.00 <lb/>
15000.00 <lb/>
611.35 <lb/>
85.50 <lb/>
36254.42 <lb/>
858.89 <lb/>
If you are not satisfied with the <lb/>
with whom you have been <lb/>
heretofore we point you to <lb/>
the Bull Moose party which <lb/>
With an open door. <lb/>
wins; <lb/>
college with the Naps. Nash and <lb/>
of Brown, with Cleveland <lb/>
ad Warner f Brown with <lb/>
Several minor league their <lb/>
season. Hie team at the lop at the close <lb/>
id the first half of the season plays tho <lb/>
team winning the second half for the <lb/>
championship of the league. Among <lb/>
lie teams, tat have won their right to <lb/>
contend for the pennant at the close <lb/>
of the season are Jacksonville In the <lb/>
Magistrate to commit for South Atlantic League; in in the <lb/>
You Certainly the rob- Ohio and Pennsylvania League; Selma <lb/>
in a remarkably Ingenious way; In the Southeastern League, Cleburne <lb/>
in wit exceptional cunning the South Central League, Wichita <lb/>
The Honor, no Falls m the League <lb/>
no flattery, I begs and in the Cotton <lb/>
Sketch. League. <lb/>
I tell you we live in an age of pro- <lb/>
How now <lb/>
Now some shark has discovered that <lb/>
you kin shake oil a dog with a <lb/>
City <lb/>
MONEY <lb/>
en <lb/>
CO <lb/>
year some farmers lose money <lb/>
by buying the first is offer- <lb/>
ed them without looking over our lines <lb/>
of FARM MACHINERY. <lb/>
We carry an up-to-date line of farm <lb/>
and machines that we know will <lb/>
give you absolute satisfaction. They are <lb/>
the most practical, economical and <lb/>
on the market. <lb/>
We carry a stock of repairs for the ma- <lb/>
chines we sell, which is to be considered in <lb/>
buying machinery. <lb/>
Our desire is to give you the best service <lb/>
possible and we will do everything in our <lb/>
power to merit your patronage. See to it <lb/>
that YOU do not lose money this year. <lb/>
THINK OF <lb/>
HART HADLEY, Hardware <lb/>
GREENVILLE, North Carolina <lb/>
in <lb/>
rt <lb/>
ST<lb/>
Pi <lb/>
so <lb/>
HI<lb/>
s- <lb/>
to<lb/>
FOR THE HOME <lb/>
In Fine <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Fresh, Up-to-the- <lb/>
minute <lb/>
late models from the best manufacturers in <lb/>
ARTICLES <lb/>
A range of qualities and prices that will <lb/>
suit every buyers the offering <lb/>
today. <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE <lb/>
Want Ads <lb/>
The Daily Reflector's <lb/>
Bargain Column <lb/>
Advertisements Inserted <lb/>
under ibis head at tho rate i <lb/>
h I of per line. <lb/>
I SHARKS STOCK <lb/>
in the Consolidated <lb/>
Co. Address with offer. J. H. <lb/>
Fleming, Raleigh. C. <lb/>
AM I <lb/>
bloom. Orders for cut flowers ail- <lb/>
ed promptly. Mrs. Haskett.<lb/>
Tilt Of- <lb/>
takes orders for cares <lb/>
wedding Invitation and <lb/>
menu. can be at <lb/>
office. <lb/>
LEGAL NOTICE. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
E. Cox, having <lb/>
of the of Q <lb/>
Col, deceased, before Ii Moore, <lb/>
clerk of the superior court of Pitt <lb/>
county, notice is hereby given that <lb/>
all persons indebted to said estate <lb/>
are hereby required to make <lb/>
the undersigned <lb/>
and all persons holding <lb/>
claims said hereby <lb/>
required to file claims will, said <lb/>
administrator duly verified within <lb/>
twelve months from Hie dale hereof. <lb/>
this notice will be plead In bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
the 18th day of June. <lb/>
B cox, <lb/>
Administrator of the- estate of <lb/>
W, Cox, deceased. <lb/>
F C. HARDING, Attorney. <lb/>
C ltd <lb/>
Markets <lb/>
man yeast, it S. M. <lb/>
It WOK'S <lb/>
Having as <lb/>
of William Williams, deceased, late <lb/>
of Pitt county. North Carolina, this <lb/>
is to notify all persons having claims <lb/>
against the estate of said deceased to <lb/>
exhibit them to the undersigned, or <lb/>
his attorneys, V. O. James and Son, <lb/>
Greenville, X. c., within twelve <lb/>
mouths or notice will he plead <lb/>
in bar of recovery <lb/>
All persons indebted lo estate <lb/>
will please make Immediate payment. <lb/>
This June <lb/>
J. COBB, <lb/>
c ltd N. C.<lb/>
July . <lb/>
.<lb/>
wheat . 1-2 <lb/>
July corn . <lb/>
July ribs . <lb/>
TO OFFICE BOOK IS <lb/>
Reflector building. a <lb/>
tot FLORAL <lb/>
or Order from Mrs. Has-<lb/>
To the Democrats of Pitt <lb/>
Let's all come together and nominate <lb/>
that true Democrat and high toned <lb/>
gentleman, G. T. Tyson for one of <lb/>
the Representatives for the next Gen- <lb/>
Assembly. A man tried and true <lb/>
and will give every man a fair deal. <lb/>
What say you, county voters <lb/>
MANY VOTERS.<lb/>
THE <lb/>
haven and U nearest cottage to <lb/>
station post office and <lb/>
Ocean View. Va. an Ideal <lb/>
home. Reasonable rates. Mrs. J <lb/>
D. Latham, Proprietress <lb/>
TOMATOES FOB AT <lb/>
cents if you send for them <lb/>
D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
FIELD PEAS AT t. V. JOHNSTON'S <lb/>
Feed Store <lb/>
FIELD PEAS AT F. T. <lb/>
Feed Store <lb/>
The wants your Job work. <lb/>
FIELD PEAS AT V. V. JOHNSTON'S <lb/>
Feed Store <lb/>
EXECUTION SALE <lb/>
North Carolina. Pitt County, <lb/>
In I lie Superior court. <lb/>
J. B, vs it. Hem- <lb/>
by. <lb/>
Of power vested iii in,. b <lb/>
execution issuing to me from the <lb/>
superior of PHI county in the <lb/>
above entitled cause in favor of tile <lb/>
plaintiff and the defendant <lb/>
and pursuant to attachment duly levied <lb/>
on the properly below and <lb/>
by virtue of authority i me <lb/>
the laws of the state of North Car- <lb/>
I shall sell for lo high <lb/>
bidder at public auction at the <lb/>
house door of county in <lb/>
Greenville, K. on the Mon- <lb/>
day in August. it the 5th <lb/>
day of 1912. at o'clock, <lb/>
noon, all the right, tide and Interest <lb/>
being a undivided inter- <lb/>
est in the remainder In fie f the <lb/>
aid James II. In and to the <lb/>
following described of real es- <lb/>
lying, being and situate In the <lb/>
County of and stale of North Car- <lb/>
to <lb/>
Rounded by the lands of Craw- <lb/>
ford heirs, the land. Lawrence <lb/>
Anderson, J. V. King and others, and <lb/>
being the land of which the late Goo. <lb/>
W. died seized and possessed <lb/>
I evidenced by certain deeds from <lb/>
A. J. Move. It. A. Geo. <lb/>
Jefferson, Tyson and others, and <lb/>
containing 1-2 acres, more or less; <lb/>
the Interest to be sold being such <lb/>
as was devised to the said <lb/>
James II. by W. Hem- <lb/>
by In his last Will and Testament, the <lb/>
said James II being one of the <lb/>
children of tho said Otto, W, Hint- <lb/>
by, <lb/>
Tills the 1st day of July, 1912. <lb/>
B I. <lb/>
I ltd Sheriff of County <lb/>
Mill Currier Will Eli <lb/>
This is an age of great discoveries. <lb/>
Progress rides on tho air. Soon we <lb/>
may see Uncle Sam's mail carriers <lb/>
Hying in all directions, transporting <lb/>
mail. People take a wonderful In- <lb/>
in discovery that benefits <lb/>
them, why Dr. King's New <lb/>
for Coughs, Colds and <lb/>
throat and lung diseases Is the <lb/>
most popular America. <lb/>
cured me of a most dreadful <lb/>
writes Mrs. J. F. Davis. <lb/>
Corner, Me., doctor's <lb/>
mid all other remedies had <lb/>
for coughs, colds <lb/>
or any bronchial affection. Price <lb/>
Trial bottle free at all <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
FOB SALE- ONE SECOND <lb/>
hand LT, lip. engine and lip. <lb/>
Consolidated Tobacco <lb/>
Co, ltd w <lb/>
WANTS POSITION AS TEACH- <lb/>
in graded school, 3rd to 6th grade <lb/>
work preferred. Can tarnish good ref- <lb/>
Address <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
I HAVE A NICE FOB <lb/>
rent. Parties wishing my service <lb/>
phone Ml, night phone 91-L.<lb/>
I The WORLD in SPORTS <lb/>
PH <lb/>
Yesterday's Results in <lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
Nil ION AL I. <lb/>
Pittsburgh <lb/>
Cincinnati Philadelphia <lb/>
Chicago New York <lb/>
o AMERICAN <lb/>
New York St. Louis <lb/>
New York St. Louis <lb/>
game i. <lb/>
Detroit <lb/>
Washington Chicago <lb/>
Philadelphia Cleveland <lb/>
, LEAGUE. <lb/>
Mobile ; Atlanta <lb/>
New Orleans Chattanooga <lb/>
rain. <lb/>
Mil. <lb/>
George of the Senators <lb/>
Washington Star Shortstop Is Playing His <lb/>
Usually Consistent Game <lb/>
Petersburg<lb/>
Portsmouth <lb/>
Newport News <lb/>
Norfolk I. <lb/>
Richmond <lb/>
Jacksonville Savannah I <lb/>
Savannah <lb/>
Other games, rain. <lb/>
Thirty one players In the National <lb/>
League are hitting for or better. <lb/>
Hill Armour, the former while the American has only <lb/>
manager, is for the Saint in the select circle. <lb/>
Louis Browns. . . <lb/>
. . . Claude the former Detroit <lb/>
Shortstop the former now Minneapolis <lb/>
the hading tho American <lb/>
batting the the average of <lb/>
player, is making good <lb/>
York Highlanders.<lb/>
to <lb/>
FALLS AND <lb/>
from <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. and OLD POINT <lb/>
COMFORT <lb/>
Fur Constable <lb/>
I hereby announce myself n can- <lb/>
for constable of Beaver Dam <lb/>
township, subject to to action and <lb/>
approval of tho Democratic primary. <lb/>
J. B, NICHOLS.<lb/>
OF <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the firm <lb/>
Of Company, of Green- <lb/>
ville. North Carolina, composed of <lb/>
V. and James M. <lb/>
has this day dissolved by mu- <lb/>
consent. James M. h.-is <lb/>
purchased the entire Interest of <lb/>
V. in the business and will <lb/>
continue the business in the name of <lb/>
James If. <lb/>
the 8th day of July. <lb/>
V. <lb/>
JAMES M SINES, <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Railroad Schedules. <lb/>
via <lb/>
STEAMSHIP COM- <lb/>
PUT <lb/>
Tho Finest. Newest, Largest and Best <lb/>
Equipped Steamships Plying <lb/>
Between Norfolk and <lb/>
Baltimore <lb/>
Steamers Norfolk dally, in- <lb/>
Sunday, from foot of Jack- <lb/>
son street, at p. <lb/>
ON FOLLOWING <lb/>
B and O. Ry. la Ry. <lb/>
July July. <lb/>
July July <lb/>
Aug. Aug. <lb/>
Aug. Aug. <lb/>
Sept<lb/>
Oct. Oct. <lb/>
Final Limit Days From Hate <lb/>
of <lb/>
Very low round trip rates also on <lb/>
sale to Atlantic Baltimore, Phil- <lb/>
and all northern resorts. <lb/>
For any Information <lb/>
W. H. T. P. A. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
North- South- <lb/>
bound boon <lb/>
p. m. p. m. <lb/>
a m. 1.18 p. m. <lb/>
East <lb/>
bound <lb/>
a a m. <lb/>
a m. a. m. <lb/>
MOLES AND WARTS <lb/>
With without pain or danger, no matter how large, <lb/>
or how far raised above the surface of the skin. And they will never <lb/>
return, and no trace or scar will ho left. is applied directly <lb/>
the Mole or wart which entirely disappears In about six days, killing <lb/>
the germ and leaving the skin smooth and natural. <lb/>
Is put up only la One Dollar Bottles. <lb/>
bottle is neatly packed a plain accompanied by full <lb/>
and contains enough remedy to remove eight or ten ordinary <lb/>
Moles or Walls. We sell under a positive guarantee if fails <lb/>
to remove your Mole or Wart we will promptly refund the dollar. <lb/>
COMPANY. FLORIDA. <lb/>
Dept. <lb/>
wax <lb/>
Notice of <lb/>
North Carolina. Pitt county. <lb/>
In the Superior Court before D. C. <lb/>
Moore. Clerk. <lb/>
v. Griffin and wife, Julia f. <lb/>
M. Cherry and wife Annie F. <lb/>
Cherry and B. B. Foley <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
William f. Cherry. <lb/>
By Virtue of a decree of the Super- <lb/>
Court made by l. C. Moore. <lb/>
clerk, on the 15th day of July, 1912, <lb/>
In the above entitled special proceed- <lb/>
the undersigned commissioners <lb/>
Will, on Monday, the 16th day of An- <lb/>
till, at o'clock, noon, expose <lb/>
to public sale before the court house <lb/>
door. In North Carolina, <lb/>
I'll County, to the bidder for <lb/>
cash, the following described lot or <lb/>
parcel of land to and be- <lb/>
in the town of Greenville, North <lb/>
Carolina, situated on the North <lb/>
Of Third Street and west side of Co- <lb/>
adjoining Third Street on <lb/>
the south and on the <lb/>
east and the lot known as the W. II. <lb/>
Harrington lot on the north and the lot <lb/>
known as the lot on the <lb/>
containing about one-half acre, <lb/>
or less and being the lot on which <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Foley formerly resided <lb/>
This sale Is made for the purpose of <lb/>
making partition among the heirs at <lb/>
law of Mrs. Mary Foley. <lb/>
This the 15th day of July. 1912. <lb/>
V. C. Harding. <lb/>
ltd Commissioner. <lb/>
the absence of Manager Frank <lb/>
Cane Joe Tinker as captain and <lb/>
manager the Cubs. <lb/>
Three Ibis season the Giants <lb/>
have run up nine wins in a row be- <lb/>
sides their victories. <lb/>
The League is <lb/>
disbanded, the team icing in <lb/>
the lead when the league hit the rock. <lb/>
is living up to <lb/>
his reputation as a fence buster by <lb/>
leading Charlie Quaker in <lb/>
batting. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
The White sent Waller H. <lb/>
Johnson back to Racine and he <lb/>
Several big league scouts are <lb/>
on the work of Billy B. Swanson, tho <lb/>
clever of the <lb/>
team, in the Three I. League. <lb/>
Catcher Forrest of tho Boston <lb/>
Red is a great to tho bas- <lb/>
es. It is said that one men has stolen <lb/>
base cleanly on him this season. <lb/>
who has been <lb/>
lent back to the Denver team by <lb/>
i Red refuses to report <lb/>
to Grizzlies on account of a cut <lb/>
In salary. <lb/>
Buffalo fans arc not very strong for <lb/>
George Stalling this season. <lb/>
The team ha not been able to hold its <lb/>
own the leaders in the <lb/>
League <lb/>
SCHEDULES RAILROAD SCHEDULES RAILROAD SCHEDULES<lb/>
O L <lb/>
SCHEDULE <lb/>
Leave Raleigh, effective Jan-<lb/>
YEAR ROUND <lb/>
a. Atlanta, Birmingham <lb/>
and points Jackson- <lb/>
ville and Florida points, <lb/>
at Hamlet for Charlotte and <lb/>
Wilmington. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
with coaches and parlor car. Con- <lb/>
with steamer for Washington. <lb/>
Baltimore, New York, and <lb/>
Providence. <lb/>
THE FLORIDA FAST <lb/>
a Richmond, Wash- <lb/>
and New York <lb/>
sleepers, day and dinning <lb/>
car. Connects Richmond <lb/>
C. O. at Wash with <lb/>
railroad and B, for Pitts- <lb/>
burg and points west <lb/>
THE <lb/>
p. Atlanta, Charlotte. <lb/>
Wilmington, Memphis, <lb/>
and points west. Parlor to <lb/>
Hamlet <lb/>
p. m. No. for <lb/>
Henderson Oxford and <lb/>
p. m No. for <lb/>
for Cincinnati and points west. <lb/>
Memphis, and points west, Jack- <lb/>
and all Florida points <lb/>
Pullman steepen, Arrive Atlanta <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
Arrive Richmond a. m. <lb/>
Washington a. m., New York <lb/>
p. m Penn. station. Pullman <lb/>
arrive to Washington and New <lb/>
York. <lb/>
H. RYAN, P. a Portsmouth, Ya <lb/>
But West and Canada. <lb/>
Office. No. Main St <lb/>
J. W. BROWN, JR. <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN <lb/>
R Al <lb/>
ROUTE OF THE <lb/>
TRAINS LEAVE GREENVILLE <lb/>
EASTBOUND <lb/>
a. m. dally, <lb/>
Pullman Sleeping Car for Norfolk. <lb/>
a. m. Dally, for Plymouth, <lb/>
Elizabeth City and Norfolk. Broiler <lb/>
Parlor Car Service connects for all <lb/>
points North and West <lb/>
p. m. Dally, except Sunday for <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
WESTBOUND <lb/>
3-26 a. m. Daily for Wilson and <lb/>
Pullman Sleeping Car service. <lb/>
Connects North, South and <lb/>
a. m. Dally, except Sunday for <lb/>
Wilson and Raleigh. Connects for all <lb/>
p. m. Dally for Wilson and <lb/>
Broiler Parlor Car Service. <lb/>
For further information and <lb/>
of Sleeping Car space apply to <lb/>
J. L. Agent, Greenville. <lb/>
W. R. HUDSON, W. W. <lb/>
Pass. <lb/>
OLD BAY LINE <lb/>
Steam Packet <lb/>
Dally. Including Sunday, between <lb/>
NORFOLK AND BALTIMORE <lb/>
Mail <lb/>
Equipped with United <lb/>
Telegraphy and every mod- <lb/>
convenience. Cuisine <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Portsmouth. Sundays pm <lb/>
week days pm <lb/>
Norfolk, pm <lb/>
Old Point pm <lb/>
sold to all points North. <lb/>
Southern Railway <lb/>
CARRIER OF THE <lb/>
Direct lines to ill <lb/>
North, South, East and West <lb/>
LOW TRIP TO <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
The Laid of The <lb/>
also to <lb/>
California and all principal <lb/>
resorts <lb/>
CONVENIENT SCHEDULES. <lb/>
LIGHTED COACHES, <lb/>
COMPLETE DINING CAR SERVICE. <lb/>
If you are contemplating a trip to <lb/>
any point, before completing <lb/>
for same. It will be wise for you <lb/>
to consult a representative of the <lb/>
Southern Hallway, or write the under- <lb/>
signed, who will gladly and courteous- <lb/>
fume M you with ail Information <lb/>
as to your best and quickest <lb/>
and most comfortable way in which to <lb/>
make tho trip. <lb/>
J. O. JONES, <lb/>
Traveling Passenger Agent, <lb/>
Raleigh. N. a <lb/>
II. F. CARY, <lb/>
General Passenger Agent. <lb/>
Washington, C <lb/>
i . i <lb/>
M MM I Ii I Ml <lb/>
Now la Effect to Beaufort Kore- <lb/>
City. <lb/>
The seashore season Is now opes <lb/>
and summer excursion tickets are en <lb/>
sale at nil stations to City. <lb/>
N. d and N. C, good to <lb/>
return until October 31st <lb/>
Get complete Information from say <lb/>
gent. <lb/>
W. W. P. A. <lb/>
Norfolk. Ya.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018206_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
THE CARPET FROM <lb/>
from rage <lb/>
musically against the bidden <lb/>
treasure, never a forlorn beauty In <lb/>
distress, not so much as chapter one <lb/>
of the Golden Book offered Its <lb/>
first page. George lost some con- <lb/>
Two or three times a woman looked <lb/>
Into the young man's mind, and in <lb/>
guiltlessness they effected sundry <lb/>
holes In his letter of credit, but left <lb/>
his soul singularly untouched. The <lb/>
red corpuscle, his father's gift, though <lb/>
It lay dormant, subconsciously erected <lb/>
barrier. He was Innocent, but he was <lb/>
no foot. That one year him <lb/>
lesson, rather cheaply, too. If <lb/>
there was any romance in Ufa, It <lb/>
uninvited, and if courted and sought <lb/>
as quick on the wing as that erst- <lb/>
while poesy must. <lb/>
The year passed, and while he had <lb/>
not wholly given up the quest, the <lb/>
practical George agreed with the <lb/>
to shelve it <lb/>
He returned to New York <lb/>
with thirty-two pounds sterling out of <lb/>
the original thousand, a fact that <lb/>
his paternal parent by some <lb/>
ten years. <lb/>
that boy Is all right. <lb/>
Algernon could not kill a boy like <lb/>
Our Special Washington Letter <lb/>
COMMENT ON CURRENT EVENTS <lb/>
you mean to Infer that It ever <lb/>
Sometimes a qualm wrinkled <lb/>
her conscience. Her mother's heart <lb/>
told her that her son ought not to be <lb/>
shy and bashful, that It was not In <lb/>
the nature of his blood to suspect <lb/>
ridicule where there was none. Per- <lb/>
haps she had handicapped him with <lb/>
those names; but it was too late now <lb/>
to admit of this, and useless, since <lb/>
It would not hare remedied the evil. <lb/>
Jones hemmed and hawed for a <lb/>
pace. he answered; <lb/>
was afraid he might try to live up <lb/>
to It; and no Algernon who <lb/>
lived up to it could put his nose down <lb/>
to a Shah and tell how many <lb/>
knots It had to the square Inch. I'll <lb/>
start him In on the Job tomorrow. <lb/>
Whereupon the mother sat back <lb/>
dreamily. Now, where was the girl <lb/>
worthy of her boy Monumental <lb/>
besetting every mother, from Eve <lb/>
down. Eve, whose trials In this <lb/>
must have been heartrending <lb/>
George left the cellar In due time, <lb/>
and after that he went up the ladder <lb/>
in bounds, on his own merit, mind <lb/>
yon, for his father never stirred a <lb/>
hand to boost him. He took the In- <lb/>
In rugs that turns a buyer into <lb/>
a collector; It became a fascinating <lb/>
pleasure rather than a business. He <lb/>
became invaluable to the house, and <lb/>
acquired some fame as a judge <lb/>
an appraiser. When the chief-buyer <lb/>
retired George was given the position. <lb/>
with on Itinerary that carried him half <lb/>
way round the planet once a year, to <lb/>
Greece, Turkey, Persia, Arabia, <lb/>
India, the lands of the genii and the <lb/>
bottles, of arabesques, of temples and <lb/>
tombs, of many-colored turban and <lb/>
flowing robes and distracting tongues. <lb/>
He walked and always in a kind of <lb/>
mental enchantment. <lb/>
The and elusive Oriental, <lb/>
with his sharp practices, found bis <lb/>
match In this pleasant young man. <lb/>
who knew the history of the very <lb/>
wools and cottons and silks woven <lb/>
In a rug or carpet. So George pros- <lb/>
became known in strange <lb/>
by strange and law <lb/>
romance, light of foot and eager of <lb/>
eye, pass learned <lb/>
romance did not essentially an tail- <lb/>
In love or rescuing maidens from <lb/>
burning houses and wrecks; that, on <lb/>
the contrary, true romance was <lb/>
having more brilliant i <lb/>
than a diamond; that man <lb/>
who begins with nothing and <lb/>
with something is more wonderful <lb/>
than any excursion recounted by Sin- <lb/>
bad or any tale by Scheherazade. <lb/>
he still hoped that the Iridescent god-1 <lb/>
would some day touch his <lb/>
and lead him into that maze of I <lb/>
so peculiar to his own fancy. <lb/>
And then into this little world of <lb/>
business and pleasure came death <lb/>
and death again, leaving him alone <lb/>
and with a twisted heart. niches <lb/>
mattered little, and the sounding title <lb/>
of vice-president still less. It was <lb/>
with a distinct shock that ho realized <lb/>
the mother and the father had been <lb/>
with him so long that he had forgot- <lb/>
ten to make other friends. From <lb/>
one thing to he turned in <lb/>
hope to soothe the smart, to heal the <lb/>
wound; and after a time he drifted, <lb/>
as all shy, intelligent and Imaginative <lb/>
men drift who are friendless. Into the <lb/>
and Intimate comradeship of in- <lb/>
animate things, such as jewels, ivories, <lb/>
old metals, rare woods and ancient <lb/>
embroideries, and more com- <lb/>
than all these, good bocks. <lb/>
The proper tale of how the afore- <lb/>
said Iridescent goddess Jostled it <lb/>
scarce may he said that she him <lb/>
Into a lacking neither com- <lb/>
nor tragedy, now begins with a <lb/>
trifling bit of retrospection. One of <lb/>
those worn- who w re not good and <lb/>
who Into the clear pool of the <lb/>
boy's harmless longing <lb/>
there and ma note, hoping to find <lb/>
by her knowledge when <lb/>
cl iv arrive d. She a woman <lb/>
so H. handsome, so adroit. <lb/>
that a m. n, older and win r <lb/>
than George her mesh too <lb/>
strong for aim. Her plan matured, <lb/>
suddenly ant brilliantly, as projects <lb/>
of r of her class and <lb/>
caliber variation do. <lb/>
Late ember afternoon <lb/>
be precise, George sat on the <lb/>
of the Hotel <lb/>
In A book lay Idly upon his <lb/>
was one of yarns <lb/>
which something was happening <lb/>
other minute. As adventures <lb/>
go. George bud never had a real one <lb/>
In all twenty-eight he <lb/>
He <lb/>
Washington. July <lb/>
chairman of the House com- <lb/>
investigating the <lb/>
is experiencing a great deal <lb/>
trouble in returns from <lb/>
and private banks of questions <lb/>
asked by the committee concerning <lb/>
financial relations of hanks <lb/>
sections with certain in Wall <lb/>
street. <lb/>
A poll of the banks In this city, <lb/>
which is fairly representative of other <lb/>
communities shows that out of <lb/>
institutions only two have <lb/>
complied with the made by the <lb/>
House committee statements of <lb/>
their business. According to these <lb/>
bankers most of the financial <lb/>
of the country are awaiting fur- <lb/>
developments before taking a <lb/>
stand In the mater. <lb/>
Bankers generally have closely fol- <lb/>
lowed the controversy between Re- <lb/>
and Robot L. Fryer, <lb/>
president of the Fidelity Trust Com- <lb/>
of Buffalo, N. Y. who flatly re- <lb/>
fused to furnish the desired facts <lb/>
the ground the committee had no right <lb/>
to demand them. Mr. Fryer has not <lb/>
forced to furnish <lb/>
yet, and until he is. members of <lb/>
financial concerns here say, that bank- <lb/>
generally will take steps. <lb/>
The congressional committee has <lb/>
taken no action in the matter. Ac- <lb/>
cording to Representative they <lb/>
are awaiting the action of Congress <lb/>
on an amendment to National <lb/>
Hanking Laws which was introduced <lb/>
to give the commute power to get all <lb/>
the Information it desired from <lb/>
and other banks. This amend- <lb/>
now before the Senate <lb/>
Finance Committee. Whether it a <lb/>
be reported to the Senate <lb/>
remains to be Benn. <lb/>
ism. however, has developed against it. <lb/>
and financial concerns <lb/>
protests having been tiled by banking <lb/>
from Maine to California. <lb/>
The blanks sent out by the House <lb/>
cal tor complete <lb/>
upon every phase of a hank's <lb/>
business. The information asked I r <lb/>
Included business tip to the close <lb/>
April 1912. Included was a re- <lb/>
quest for names of all <lb/>
institutions affiliated with each bank <lb/>
and a statement of mergers of in- <lb/>
which may have been made <lb/>
to build up each bank. <lb/>
Attorneys have been engaged to re- <lb/>
in their opinion the committee has ab- <lb/>
various banking institutions <lb/>
no to force then t <lb/>
while not openly the desires of <lb/>
the committee, have declared that <lb/>
furnish the information unless they so <lb/>
and that they send no <lb/>
or statement until some- <lb/>
thing further is done. <lb/>
The Hankers of the Dis- <lb/>
of Columbia, one of the <lb/>
first served by the commit- <lb/>
I tee with blanks, has decided not to <lb/>
take any action on the mutter, <lb/>
to let individual banks treat with <lb/>
the committee as fit. <lb/>
H. H. cashier of the First <lb/>
National Capital Hank and recently <lb/>
elected president of the District Hank- <lb/>
stated that the <lb/>
take no stand in the matter. <lb/>
Personally, Mr. is of the <lb/>
ion that the committee has <lb/>
no right under law to force any <lb/>
bank or trust company to disclose the <lb/>
details of Its business. <lb/>
At the Capitol, the same general <lb/>
is evident. The commit- <lb/>
tee at present Is without <lb/>
authority to compel bankers, trust <lb/>
companies or other financial <lb/>
to fill out the blanks and sent <lb/>
them to the committee. Its powers <lb/>
are so curtailed that a hearing such <lb/>
a as contemplated at the beginning <lb/>
when the House voted for to <lb/>
conduct such an inquiry. Is impossible. <lb/>
The committee, although well supplied <lb/>
with counsel has no means at dis- <lb/>
of obtaining direct evidence. <lb/>
It can send out detectives, agents or <lb/>
any other kind of emissaries, but it is <lb/>
handicapped by not having authority <lb/>
to compel banks to disclose its general <lb/>
business books. <lb/>
Wit hot this information, it is utter- <lb/>
Impossible to get at the of <lb/>
the matter, is the opinion of a member <lb/>
of the House. <lb/>
this committee he <lb/>
declared, the backing of Congress, <lb/>
the moral support of both the Senate <lb/>
and House; otherwise this will <lb/>
and non-productive. <lb/>
we summon J. P. Morgan. John <lb/>
heads of New <lb/>
York. Chicago, Pittsburgh and <lb/>
banking concerns, do you think <lb/>
we could get much real information <lb/>
out of them if they were disposed not <lb/>
to give any. don't think SO, But <lb/>
Congress empowers this committee <lb/>
to require banks and trust companies <lb/>
as as others financial Institutions <lb/>
to make returns then we should have <lb/>
such information as will form the <lb/>
ground work of real <lb/>
If the Senate authorize and pass the <lb/>
House amendment. Congressman <lb/>
is authority for the statement that the <lb/>
hearing will be an In- <lb/>
that will show up the rot- <lb/>
of street. He is of the <lb/>
opinion that there is such a thing as a <lb/>
and that certain banks <lb/>
in New York, Chicago. Pittsburgh and <lb/>
other cities are part of a vast system <lb/>
extending coast to coast. Chair- <lb/>
man has decided views on the <lb/>
subject and takes issue with Attorney <lb/>
General of the Depart- <lb/>
of Justice who says that after <lb/>
investigation the Department of <lb/>
has been unable to unearth any <lb/>
signs that a exists. <lb/>
Dr. John M. dean of the Med- <lb/>
School of College, is <lb/>
being boomed for the Republican <lb/>
for Governor of New <lb/>
shire. <lb/>
to <lb/>
FALLS <lb/>
from <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA and OLD POINT <lb/>
COMFORT <lb/>
via <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE STEAMSHIP COM- <lb/>
run <lb/>
The Finest. Newest, Largest and Best <lb/>
Equipped Plying <lb/>
Between Norfolk and <lb/>
Baltimore <lb/>
Steamers leave Norfolk daily, In- <lb/>
Sunday, from foot of Jack- <lb/>
son street, at p. m. <lb/>
TICKETS ON FOLLOWING <lb/>
DATES; <lb/>
B and O. Ry. Ry. <lb/>
July July <lb/>
July July <lb/>
Aug. Aug. <lb/>
Aug. Aug. <lb/>
Sept<lb/>
Oct. Oct. <lb/>
Final Limit Fifteen Buys From Date <lb/>
of Sale <lb/>
Very low round trip rates also on <lb/>
sale to Atlantic City. Baltimore. <lb/>
and all northern resorts. <lb/>
For any information write, <lb/>
W. II. ELL, T. P. A. <lb/>
Norfolk. Va <lb/>
Founded <lb/>
TRINITY COLLEGE <lb/>
ITS STRENGTH LIES IX <lb/>
A LARGE. WELL TRAINED FACULTY; EXCELLENT BUILDINGS AND <lb/>
FULL. WELL-ARRANGED. COURSES;. EARNEST. HIGH- <lb/>
MINDED STUDENTS; A LARGE AND LOYAL BODY OF ALUMNI AND <lb/>
FRIENDS. NOBLE IDEALS AND TRADITIONS; AN INSPIRING. HIS- <lb/>
TORY AND ACHIEVEMENT AND SERVICE <lb/>
Session Begins September For and Illustrated <lb/>
R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, DURHAM, CAROLINA <lb/>
Trinity Park School <lb/>
ESTABLISHED <lb/>
Location excellent. Equipment first-class. Well trained Faculty <lb/>
of successful experience. Special care of the health of students. <lb/>
An instructor in each dormitory to supervise living conditions of <lb/>
boys under bis care. Excellent library and gymnasium facilities. <lb/>
Large athletic fields. Fall tern opens September <lb/>
FOR ILLUSTRATED ADDRESS <lb/>
Mi. W. PEELE, Headmaster, <lb/>
DURHAM, CAROLINA <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
COLLEGE AND <lb/>
MECHANIC ARTS <lb/>
The State's Industrial College <lb/>
Four year courses In Agriculture; <lb/>
In Civil, Electrical and Mechanical <lb/>
Engineering; in Chemistry; <lb/>
Cotton Manufacturing and Dyeing. <lb/>
Two-year courses in Mechanic Arts <lb/>
and in Textile Art. One-year and Two- <lb/>
year courses in Agriculture. These <lb/>
courses are both practical and <lb/>
for admission are <lb/>
held by the County Superintendent at <lb/>
all county seats on July 11th. <lb/>
For catalog address <lb/>
THE REGISTRAR , <lb/>
West Raleigh. N. C. <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
STATE AND <lb/>
INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE <lb/>
by the state for the <lb/>
men of North Carolina. Five regular <lb/>
courses leading to degrees. Special <lb/>
courses for teachers. Free tuition to <lb/>
those who agree to become teacher <lb/>
l-i the state. Fall session begins <lb/>
1912. For <lb/>
other information address <lb/>
Julius I. President. <lb/>
Greensboro, X. C. <lb/>
The Daily Reflector <lb/>
I of Pupils. Military, help in Man a Boys. <lb/>
A Leading Boarding School for <lb/>
ill Students. Established years. Lit- <lb/>
w Business. Normal. Music, etc. <lb/>
buildings and all advantages. Noted for Health. Near Greens- <lb/>
N. C. Three Literary Societies; College Band. Leads in <lb/>
Good board at about cost. Reasonable tuition rates. Graduates in great <lb/>
demand. Students yearly from North Carolina counties. A school that <lb/>
will satisfy you in every Beautiful with views, etc. <lb/>
Sent free. Write today. Address the <lb/>
President. W T Ph. H., <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Institute <lb/>
East Carolina <lb/>
Teachers Training School <lb/>
A State School to Train Teachers for the Pub- <lb/>
lie Schools of North Carolina. <lb/>
free to all Who Agree to Teach. Fall <lb/>
A Term Begins September 1912. For Cat- <lb/>
and Other Information, address <lb/>
ROBERT H. WRIGHT, President <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
WARRENTON HIGH SCHOOL <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Fall Session, lilt, Begins Sept. <lb/>
Special attention given to English, Mathematics, the sciences and <lb/>
lassies by teachers of long experts For grade of preparation ant <lb/>
deportment of pupils the of the University and the col- <lb/>
Expenses moderate. For cat address <lb/>
till ION. X. C.<lb/>
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. <lb/>
Magazines Magazines Magazines <lb/>
o a <lb/>
N M <lb/>
a a <lb/>
Z S<lb/>
Hearst's magazine <lb/>
Good Housekeeping <lb/>
Cosmopolitan <lb/>
u be <lb/>
u be <lb/>
r. <lb/>
z s <lb/>
a a <lb/>
Magazines <lb/>
Best Writers <lb/>
Best Illustrators <lb/>
OVER MAGAZINES <lb/>
LISTED. CLUBS WADE <lb/>
UP WITH ANY <lb/>
or WITH A SAVING IN <lb/>
PRICE OF FROM TO <lb/>
PER CENT. <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
Phone Greenville <lb/>
if <lb/>
d a <lb/>
N N <lb/>
M t;<lb/>
i S <lb/>
mines Magazines <lb/>
Stop <lb/>
But don't let the Watch <lb/>
stop until it gets into your <lb/>
pocket. <lb/>
I am overstocked with <lb/>
good timers of the best <lb/>
make, and want to convert <lb/>
the surplus into cash. Hence <lb/>
I cut the price to the <lb/>
figure. <lb/>
and be convinced <lb/>
if you want a <lb/>
Watch <lb/>
W. L. Best <lb/>
The Jeweler <lb/>
m, <lb/>
REFLECTOR ADVERTISEMENTS BRING ONE <lb/>
Oilers <lb/>
Lavish<lb/>
If I could have my choice, if I <lb/>
were a girl about to be married I <lb/>
would select any of the Bummer <lb/>
months for the event and the country <lb/>
for the place <lb/>
Nature gives so lavishly In the mat <lb/>
of floral that no win- <lb/>
bride with a big church wedding <lb/>
and staggering bills, can with <lb/>
all the outlay area approach what can <lb/>
be done without money and Without <lb/>
price if the woods and <lb/>
near. <lb/>
One of the weddings ever <lb/>
was u a little ivy covered <lb/>
church situated high on a bluff over- <lb/>
looking the Hudson The bride's girl <lb/>
to a wonderful of dais- <lb/>
friends has converted the church <lb/>
and grasses <lb/>
As the bride's name was Margaret <lb/>
the daisies or as the <lb/>
French call them, were especially <lb/>
The bride and her four attendants, <lb/>
the latter in very delicate green gowns <lb/>
and white huts, carried immense bunch <lb/>
of Queen Anne's Lace and feathery <lb/>
ferns Now do you all know what this <lb/>
Queen Anne's Lace is know many <lb/>
Who read an account of the wedding <lb/>
were ignorant of the fact that this <lb/>
high sounding title was only an- <lb/>
other name for the wild carrot <lb/>
farmers despise, but which in its ex- <lb/>
pattern has no rival for <lb/>
beauty in the floral <lb/>
rant is eliminated <lb/>
Then again, look what the hostess <lb/>
can do in the way of luncheons <lb/>
teas when the buttercups, the pond <lb/>
the wild asters and the golden <lb/>
rod in turn offer themselves as the <lb/>
motif in color scheme and arrange- <lb/>
One of the loveliest luncheon <lb/>
I ever saw was decorated only <lb/>
With ferns With white linen, whits <lb/>
china and clusters of white tolls in <lb/>
all loops set in the big mass of ferns <lb/>
that acted as the center piece, the <lb/>
was one of <lb/>
coolness and simplicity <lb/>
lit is well to bear in mind that taste <lb/>
counts more than the ample pocket <lb/>
hook, and if this commodity is coupled <lb/>
with a wealth of nature's treasures, no <lb/>
woman need grieve because she has <lb/>
not the Astor plate, the Belfast <lb/>
en, or the Copeland china with which <lb/>
to set her table <lb/>
For any occasion, the <lb/>
from weddings to church fairs, <lb/>
strawberry festivals, teas or lawn <lb/>
the country is the greatest help <lb/>
in securing those artistic effects for <lb/>
which the city dweller has to pay ex- <lb/>
and then only obtain an <lb/>
beauty that merely apes <lb/>
tho more wonderful realness of <lb/>
natural beauty <lb/>
Late Summer Millinery <lb/>
The lingerie hat has appeared in <lb/>
our midst as fresh and dainty as tine <lb/>
embroidery and cobweb lace can make <lb/>
the floppy Infantile lingerie <lb/>
hat, so different for an adult to wear, <lb/>
but simply following the lines of the <lb/>
shepherdess These are seldom trans- <lb/>
parent, the embroidery or lace being <lb/>
used over the stray or else on a <lb/>
chiffon or net foundation One model <lb/>
is a straw hat having lace used for <lb/>
the brim edge and this supported only <lb/>
by wires To carried with these <lb/>
hats, the natural accompaniment, too- <lb/>
o fa lingerie gown, are being shown <lb/>
the lingerie parasols, not. <lb/>
only very useful to protect one from <lb/>
the sun, but charming never- <lb/>
and quite practical when <lb/>
ed with plain Dresden silk, which they <lb/>
frequently are <lb/>
Closely akin to the lingerie hat is <lb/>
the hat veiled or ill part with daintily <lb/>
dowered or figured net The <lb/>
writer saw a leghorn partially I <lb/>
with pale pink chiffon, it.; motif be- <lb/>
small pink buds The trimming <lb/>
was extremely simple, being a band <lb/>
of pink picot ribbon band- <lb/>
the base of the crown and bowed <lb/>
at the side and ruffles of narrow Val- <lb/>
two lying on the brim at <lb/>
the edge of the chiffon and two <lb/>
ed around the head-size, producing a <lb/>
cap effect which is very fetching. <lb/>
Another hat having the frilled under <lb/>
cap effect was the twine colored straw, <lb/>
faced with pink chiffon gathered into <lb/>
an inch wide ruffle around the head <lb/>
size A wreath of ribbon flowers and <lb/>
green velvet foliage, each Bower be- <lb/>
one of the beautiful shades, was <lb/>
plied flat against the The <lb/>
hat was large and round and had a <lb/>
four inch crown, slightly sunken. <lb/>
round the base of which was a band <lb/>
primrose velvet ribbon in scant <lb/>
drapery and by a bow at the <lb/>
left edge one end of which drawn <lb/>
over the edge <lb/>
In the present modes, despite the <lb/>
talk of scarcity of trimming, may <lb/>
found much to encourage the <lb/>
Millinery Trade Review. <lb/>
Fill out the above blank, <lb/>
ten cents in stamps or coin, <lb/>
and mail to The Reflector Com- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
National Negro Business <lb/>
CHICAGO. July Na- <lb/>
Negro Business League is look <lb/>
forward to a record breaking at- <lb/>
at Its thirteenth annual meet <lb/>
which will be held here next <lb/>
month. Hooker T. Washington is <lb/>
founder of the league and will <lb/>
side over the sessions of the coming <lb/>
meeting. Among speakers will <lb/>
be bankers, physicians <lb/>
and business men from nearly every <lb/>
slate of the Union. <lb/>
become of that train you <lb/>
used to take into the city in the morn- <lb/>
asked the city man. <lb/>
it's been taken replied <lb/>
the suburbanite. <lb/>
must miss <lb/>
as often as I used<lb/>
IN GOOD STYLE <lb/>
AND TASTE, cost FOR <lb/>
BES AND SMALL WOKEN <lb/>
WITHOUT <lb/>
silk voile was for this <lb/>
model with bands embroidery for <lb/>
decoration, it is effective in <lb/>
brown cashmere with pipings of some <lb/>
satin. The waist shows the <lb/>
new deep is finished <lb/>
with a sleeve, worn with <lb/>
without tile long sleeve <lb/>
A round yoke facing trims the neck <lb/>
lee i i en in <lb/>
eggs one cup but- <lb/>
one cup milk, two cups flour, one <lb/>
cup two cups sugar, three <lb/>
teaspoons baking powder. <lb/>
Four eggs four cups <lb/>
gar, one half pint boiling water. Boil <lb/>
sugar and water until crispy and clear <lb/>
then pour slowly on the beaten whites, <lb/>
beating all the time; add one tea- <lb/>
of citric acid dissolved in a <lb/>
teaspoon of hot water. Flavor with <lb/>
vanilla. <lb/>
Coffee Cake <lb/>
Two cups brown sugar, one cup <lb/>
of butter, cup of molasses, one <lb/>
up of strong coffee, one teaspoon of <lb/>
two teaspoons of cinnamon, two <lb/>
teaspoons of cloves, one teaspoon of <lb/>
grated nutmeg, one pound <lb/>
one pound of currants, four cups o <lb/>
flour, four eggs <lb/>
I a Doctors H i lie Shown <lb/>
LONDON, July the in- <lb/>
cited guests at the annual convention <lb/>
the British Medical Association, <lb/>
which mil today in Liverpool, is Dr. <lb/>
Arthur W. Yale, the Pennsylvania <lb/>
physician who claims he has secured <lb/>
photographs showing the passing of <lb/>
human soul. Tho London medical <lb/>
society extended an Invitation to Dr. <lb/>
Yale to visit this city at the close <lb/>
the Liverpool meeting make <lb/>
of Ins claims <lb/>
to have <lb/>
The piece skirt has I <lb/>
seams. The cos-I have been taking <lb/>
be finished in high or normal pictures of life on your <lb/>
line. The pattern is cut in <lb/>
II. IT. Is It you catch my laborers <lb/>
requires one and one-half yards <lb/>
material for tin. year i . <lb/>
, .,,. , think so. <lb/>
A pattern tins illustration mailed <lb/>
In any address mi receipt of In j well, science is a won- <lb/>
or stamps. Life.<lb/>
K FAVORABLE introduction is gained amongst business men <lb/>
through the use of HIGH CLASS STATIONARY. A clear cut <lb/>
letter head or a comprehensible bill printed on excellent paper <lb/>
will excite favorable comment even from a business rival. For <lb/>
over years THE REFLECTOR CO., has furnished business <lb/>
men in Eastern North Carolina with business stationary of <lb/>
the worth while kind. The of its plant and the <lb/>
experience of the force has made it easy for THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
CO., to please its many patrons, one of its customers being the <lb/>
E. C. T. T. S., the finest institution of its kind in North Carolina. <lb/>
Estimates and suggestions are submitted. Work <lb/>
quickly and carefully turned out. <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR CO. <lb/>
OF THE BEST<lb/>
.-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018206_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
WE OFFER YOU <lb/>
Summer Footwear <lb/>
AT <lb/>
REDUCED PRICES <lb/>
THE CARPET FROM <lb/>
from page <lb/>
tale had mm <lb/>
rather shabbily. He didn't quite <lb/>
her reserve. No matter how <lb/>
late he wandered through the <lb/>
either here In Egypt or <lb/>
over yonder In India, nothing ever be- <lb/>
fell more exciting than an argument <lb/>
with carnage-driver. He never cat- <lb/>
small-arms, for he would not <lb/>
. known how to use then. The <lb/>
only deadly things in his hands were <lb/>
and No, <lb/>
nothing ever to yet <lb/>
MM w on <lb/>
ed for the propitious moment t which <lb/>
you and know never to <lb/>
throw off this species from <lb/>
It all very well, when you are old <lb/>
and dried up. to turn to Ivories and <lb/>
metals and precious but when <lb/>
a fellow's young can't shake <lb/>
bands an Ivory replica of the Ta; <lb/>
nor exchange peasantries with <lb/>
a Mandarin's ring, nor yet confide <lb/>
and ill Into a casket of rare <lb/>
indeed, they do hut emphasize <lb/>
loneliness. If only he had hat <lb/>
a dog; but one can not carry a dog <lb/>
half way round the world and back, at <lb/>
least not with comfort. What with <lb/>
these newfangled quarantine laws, <lb/>
duties, and fussy officers who<lb/>
A cordial invitation to inspect <lb/>
our stock is extended to all <lb/>
who desire neat, stylish and <lb/>
comfortable shoes at <lb/>
low prices. <lb/>
COME TO SEE US <lb/>
J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
El<lb/>
r M <lb/>
GREENVILLE TOBACCO <lb/>
MARKET <lb/>
OPENS, <lb/>
AUGUST <lb/>
And on that date we will be open and ready <lb/>
with our large NEW BRICK WAREHOUSE, <lb/>
built on the lot from which Ware- <lb/>
house was burned. It is the best arranged, <lb/>
best lighted and largest Brick Warehouse in <lb/>
this section. <lb/>
The members of our firm are not strangers <lb/>
to you; both are known as judges of the weed, <lb/>
and as both will run the sales, you can rest as- <lb/>
sured that you will get full value for your to- <lb/>
With the best and largest Warehouse, with <lb/>
plenty of cash to back us, and our knowledge <lb/>
of tobacco, we know we can please you, Bring <lb/>
us your first load, and if prices will hold you <lb/>
we will sell the balance of your crop. <lb/>
Gorman will still hold the leaf <lb/>
business he has always had, and with his large <lb/>
steam plant hopes to be able to care for all his <lb/>
friends tobacco. <lb/>
Drive to NEW BRICK WARE- <lb/>
HOUSE and be convinced that we are your <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
Gentry Gorman <lb/>
This Space is Reserved <lb/>
or <lb/>
he never met a man in a ship's smoke- keep the animal in <lb/>
room who hadn't run the gamut of your I raveling with a four- <lb/>
thrilling experiences. As George friend was almost an <lb/>
wasn't a liar himself, be believer all be sure, women with <lb/>
he saw and most of what he heard, , . . And then, there was <lb/>
Well, here he wad. et ft,,, knowledge <lb/>
a pocket full of money, a heart full one ever came up to him and <lb/>
of life, and as hopeless an so i, shoulder with a <lb/>
far as romance and adventure were Georgie, old sport; the <lb/>
concerned, as an old maid In a New good for the simple fact that <lb/>
, England village. Why couldn't was always bristling with <lb/>
, befall him as they did the chap In born of the fear that some one <lb/>
this book He was sure be could be- wag fun of him. <lb/>
have as well, if not better; for this perchance his mother's spirit, <lb/>
fellow was too handsome, too brave. over nm evening, might <lb/>
too strong, not to be something of have to tears. For they <lb/>
an ass once In a while. MT the ghosts of the dear <lb/>
you old fool, what's the ones are thus employed when we are <lb/>
he thought. use committing some folly, or to <lb/>
of a desire that never goes In a exploring some forgotten chamber of <lb/>
straight line, but always round and Pandora's box, or worse when <lb/>
round In a that lady intends emptying the whole <lb/>
He thrust aside his grievance and contents down upon our unfortunate <lb/>
surrendered to the never-ending won- heads. If so be. they were futile <lb/>
of the Egyptian the Nile, tears; Percival Algernon had <lb/>
riding upon perfect Its deadly purpose. <lb/>
Well, then, for the <lb/>
fit of tho children. She was a lady <lb/>
who was an intimate friend of the <lb/>
mythological gods. They her <lb/>
so well that they one day <lb/>
save her a box, casket, chest, or what- <lb/>
ever it was. to guard. By some mar- <lb/>
method, known only of gods, <lb/>
they had got together all the trials <lb/>
and tribulations of mankind some <lb/>
of the and locked them up In <lb/>
this casket. It was the Golden Age, <lb/>
as you may surmise. You recall Eve <lb/>
and the apple Well, Pandora was <lb/>
forecast of Eve; she couldn't keep her I <lb/>
eyes off the latch, and at length her <lb/>
curiosity And <lb/>
everything has been at sixes and at <lb/>
sevens since that time, Is <lb/>
eternally recurring, now- here, now <lb/>
there; is a sometimes, and <lb/>
Is n brunette; and you may <lb/>
take it from George and me that there <lb/>
is always something left In the casket. <lb/>
George closed the book and consult- <lb/>
ed his sailing-list. In a short time he <lb/>
would leave for Port Said, thence to <lb/>
Naples, Christmas there, and homo In <lb/>
January. had been ripping. <lb/>
He would be jolly glad to get homo <lb/>
again, to renew his comradeship with <lb/>
his treasures. And. by Jove there <lb/>
was one man who him on the <lb/>
shoulder, and he was no loss a person <lb/>
the genial president of the <lb/>
bis father's partner, at present his <lb/>
If the old chap had had a <lb/>
now. . . . here one conies <lb/>
at last to of the sack. He <lb/>
had only definite longing, <lb/>
The Greenville Banking <lb/>
and Trust Company <lb/>
The Bank of Greenville <lb/>
THE BANK IN PITT COUNTY <lb/>
With to of OVER <lb/>
One Quarter of a Million Dollars <lb/>
STANDS READY TO SERVE ITS OLD <lb/>
AND INVITES NEW ONES. <lb/>
R. L. <lb/>
This Girl Was Elegant, In Dress, In <lb/>
Movement, <lb/>
the date-palms, black and mo- <lb/>
against tho translucent blue <lb/>
of the sky; the amethystine prisms of <lb/>
the Pyramids, and the deepening gold <lb/>
of tho desert's brim. Ho loved the <lb/>
Orient, always so new, always so <lb/>
Strange, yet ever so and familiar. <lb/>
A carriage stopped in front, hie <lb/>
gaze naturally shifted. There is human longing, the only long- <lb/>
less attraction in about <lb/>
new-comers in a hotel, what they are, <lb/>
what they do. where they come from, <lb/>
and where they are going. A fine <lb/>
elderly man of fifty out In the <lb/>
square set of his shoulders, the flow- <lb/>
white mustache imperial. <lb/>
there was a suggestion of <lb/>
He was immediately followed by a <lb/>
young woman of twenty, certainly not <lb/>
over that age, George sighed wist- <lb/>
fully. He envied those polo-players <lb/>
and gentleman-riders and <lb/>
worth while in all this deep, wide, <lb/>
of paper in ., yes; m <lb/>
reserved a room for you, air. <lb/>
The French style rather confused <lb/>
This was not offered in irony, or <lb/>
or satire; mining in a Swiss <lb/>
brain for the saving grace of humor <lb/>
is about as remunerative as the ex- <lb/>
traction of gold from sea water. Nev- <lb/>
the Swiss has the talent of <lb/>
swiftly subtracting from a confusion <lb/>
of Ideal one point of <lb/>
there was a quality to the stranger's <lb/>
tone that decided him favorably. Ii <lb/>
was the voice of a man in tho habit <lb/>
being obeyed; and In these It <lb/>
was the power of money alone that <lb/>
obtain, d obedience to any man. Be- <lb/>
the same <lb/>
that subdued the Arabs out- <lb/>
side acted likewise Here <lb/>
was a brother. <lb/>
I will see. The manager sum- <lb/>
round old top; to love a woman and , porter. <lb/>
by her be loved. <lb/>
At exactly half after six the gentle- <lb/>
man with the reversible cuffs <lb/>
and George missed his boat. <lb/>
CHAPTER II <lb/>
The porter caught up the somewhat <lb/>
kit-bag, which In all <lb/>
received tome rough usage <lb/>
is time, and reached toward the <lb/>
Mr. Interposed. <lb/>
will see to that, my terse- <lb/>
is your do. <lb/>
Mr. of the manager. <lb/>
bureau, sir. I <lb/>
An Affable Rogue. <lb/>
Tho carriage containing tho gentle- <lb/>
man with the reversible drew up <lb/>
at the side entrance. Instantly <lb/>
ports who were Stopping at the hotel., surged and eddied <lb/>
It wouldn't be an hour after dinner him- but their clamor against <lb/>
. j, .,.,, t Minor see if you have any mall. The <lb/>
before some one of them . and out who effective as granite. The his own bureau. <lb/>
she was and spoke to her In that easy roar by , y to tell whether <lb/>
style which he concluded must He a , , aB waves <lb/>
rather than an accomplishment, i Tie proposed victim had not <lb/>
You mustn't suppose a minute that a WOrd; to the Arabs It was <lb/>
George wasn't and well-bred, in manner, subtle <lb/>
simply because his name was Jones. and indescribable, they a <lb/>
Many a Maurice or Hugh brother. He carried a long, <lb/>
might have been But, bundle wrapped in heavy paper <lb/>
no mutter. He knew Instinctively, variously secured by windings of thick <lb/>
then, what elegance was when he saw regard for bundle was <lb/>
it, and this girl was elegant, In dress, one solicitude., for he tucked <lb/>
in movement. He rather liked the, ,. arm, <lb/>
pallor or her skin, which hinted that t and waved carriage- <lb/>
she wasn't one of those athletic girls who however, permitted <lb/>
who bounced in and out of the din <lb/>
talking loudly and smoking <lb/>
cigarettes and playing bridge for six- <lb/>
penny points. She was tall. He was <lb/>
sure that her eyes were on tho level <lb/>
with his own. The veil that <lb/>
to carry In the kit-bag. <lb/>
The manager appeared. When conies <lb/>
he not upon the scene His quick, <lb/>
calculating eye was not wholly as- <lb/>
sured. The stranger's homespun was <lb/>
travel-worn and time-worn, and of a <lb/>
drooped from the rim of her simple. cut to the the <lb/>
Leghorn hat to the tip of her ob <lb/>
her eyes, so he could not know <lb/>
I that they were largo and brown and <lb/>
indefinably sad. They spoke not of <lb/>
a weariness of travel, hut of a <lb/>
of the world, more precisely, of <lb/>
the people who Inhabited it. <lb/>
year before. No fat letter of credit <lb/>
here, was the not unreasonable <lb/>
reached by the manager. Still, <lb/>
with that caution acquired by years <lb/>
of experience, which had culminated <lb/>
In what Is known as Swiss diplomacy, <lb/>
he brought Into being the accustomed <lb/>
She and her companion passed on smile and inquired If the <lb/>
Into tho hotel, and If George's eyes gentleman had written ahead for res- <lb/>
veered again toward the desert otherwise would not be <lb/>
which the stealthy purples of night to accommodate him. <lb/>
were creeping, the impulse was me- crisply. <lb/>
name. If you <lb/>
spelled R-y-a double-n e. <lb/>
you ever been In County <lb/>
The manager added a <lb/>
question with the uplift of his eye- <lb/>
brows. <lb/>
was the enlightening an- <lb/>
pronounce as they do <lb/>
Watch the Grow <lb/>
he saw In truth, <lb/>
he was lonesome, and he <lb/>
knew, moreover, no trait <lb/>
to w. tie was young; tie <lb/>
at a pinch tell a Joke as well the <lb/>
next man; and if he had never had <lb/>
what he called an adventure, he had <lb/>
ii many strange and wonderful <lb/>
things and could describe them with <lb/>
that mental afterglow which still Ta ,, ,, , <lb/>
over the sunset of our ex-, <lb/>
In poetry. there The Choice of a <lb/>
always that hydra-headed monster, important a matter for a <lb/>
ever getting about his feet, numbing a ,,, b had <lb/>
his voice, paralyzing his hands, and ., . , . I , ., ., <lb/>
,. . , . blood or foul breath. Avoid these <lb/>
never he off a head that an-, <lb/>
; other did not Instantly grow In by taking Dr. Kings New <lb/>
place. Even the sword of Perseus New strength, fine com- <lb/>
could not have saved him, since one breath, cheerful spit Its <lb/>
has to get away from an object In things that win their <lb/>
to cut ft down ,,,, Easy. safe. sure. at all <lb/>
ever tried to over <lb/>
ibis man was an American or an Bag- <lb/>
His accent was western, but <lb/>
his manner was decidedly At <lb/>
any rate, that tone and carriage must <lb/>
be by good English <lb/>
or for once his Judgment was <lb/>
at fault <lb/>
The porter dashed upstairs. Mr. <lb/>
his bundle still snug under <lb/>
his arm, sauntered over to the head- <lb/>
porter's bureau and ran his up <lb/>
and down tho columns of <lb/>
Once ho nodded with approval, <lb/>
and again he smiled, having <lb/>
that which sent a ripple across <lb/>
his sleeping sense of amusement. Ma- <lb/>
Callahan, room Fortune Chad- <lb/>
A. Jones, <lb/>
the Major smells of County <lb/>
and the finest In all <lb/>
the Isle. Fortune that Is a <lb/>
pleasing name; tinkling brooks, the <lb/>
waving green grasses In the mead- <lb/>
the in the water, the Hoot- <lb/>
shadows under the oaks; a pas- <lb/>
a bucolic name. To claim For- <lb/>
tune for mine own; a happy <lb/>
As he Uttered these poesy <lb/>
aloud, in a voice low and not <lb/>
for all that was humor- <lb/>
the bead-porter stared at with <lb/>
mingling doubt and alarm; and as If <lb/>
lo pronounce these emotions mutely <lb/>
for the benefit of the other, he per- <lb/>
bis eyes to their widest. <lb/>
tut; that's porter. I <lb/>
am with the habit of speaking <lb/>
my Inmost thoughts. Rome persons <lb/>
are afflicted with insomnia; some fall <lb/>
asleep In church; I think orally. <lb/>
habit, <lb/>
The porter then understood that he <lb/>
was dealing not with a of <lb/>
mild lunacy, but with that kind of <lb/>
light-hearted cynicism upon which <lb/>
the world porters know It I had set <lb/>
Its approving seal. In brief, he smiled <lb/>
faintly; and if he had any pleasantry <lb/>
to pass In turn, the approach of the <lb/>
manager, now clothed metaphorically <lb/>
in o., .,, relegated to <lb/>
the limbo of things thought but left <lb/>
unsaid, <lb/>
Is a letter for you, Mr. Ry <lb/>
Have you any more <lb/>
Mr. smiled. <lb/>
I pay for my room in <lb/>
Ten years ago <lb/>
manager would have blushed at <lb/>
been so misunderstood. <lb/>
room is <lb/>
you have a boy show me the <lb/>
way <lb/>
shall myself attend to that. II <lb/>
the room Is not what you wish <lb/>
may be <lb/>
room Is the one I telegraphed <lb/>
for. I am superstitions to a degree. <lb/>
On three boats have had line elate <lb/>
rooms numbered Twice the <lb/>
of my hotel room has th <lb/>
same. On the last voyage there were <lb/>
and the had <lb/>
made voyages on the <lb/>
if roulette could be played with <lb/>
such a <lb/>
Mr. sighed, bitched up hit <lb/>
bundle, which, being heavy, begin- <lb/>
Ring, to wear noon his arm. and <lb/>
ii. manager to lend the way. <lb/>
As they vanished round the cornet <lb/>
in U . lift, the head-porter studied th <lb/>
I lie had looked over it a <lb/>
i mi day, I ilia was the <lb/>
Ii an a of his being really In- <lb/>
i . d In As Ilia chin was fresh- <lb/>
t- -.- n ho bad no to stroke <lb/>
i- his mental processes; <lb/>
he II bar k, as we say, upon the con. <lb/>
His Glance Up and Down <lb/>
Columns of Visiting Cards. <lb/>
Soling ends of abundant <lb/>
but all these <lb/>
ere occupying or about to occupy <lb/>
. in rooms. There was truly <lb/>
i lining a about It, save that <lb/>
the stranger had picked out those very <lb/>
I U target for his banter. For <lb/>
tune was rather an <lb/>
Dame; hut she had arrived <lb/>
only an hour or so before, he could <lb/>
not distinctly recall her features. Ant <lb/>
then, was that word bucolic. <lb/>
mentally turned It over and over <lb/>
us physically ho was wont to do <lb/>
post-turds left in his care to malL <lb/>
He make nothing of the word, <lb/>
except that It smacked of the East <lb/>
Indian plague. <lb/>
Here he was saved from further <lb/>
cerebral agony by a timely <lb/>
A man, who was not of <lb/>
persuasion either in dress or speech, <lb/>
urban from the tips of his bleached <lb/>
lingers lo the bulb of his bibulous <lb/>
leaned across the counter and <lb/>
asked If Mr. Horace had yet <lb/>
arrived. Yes, be bad arrived; he<lb/>
IS THE ; <lb/>
A RT OF EASTER <lb/>
IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THO Us ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE, AND IS SUB- <lb/>
BOUNDED BY THE BEST <lb/>
WARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
KIN US ARE IS Y IT ED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
II AYE EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CA PI AND <lb/>
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE AX UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
JOB AX D NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT. <lb/>
la the Most the Healthful, Most of <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
. OF BUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF NORTH <lb/>
LIN A AND INVITE THOSE <lb/>
WHO WISH TO GET BET <lb/>
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb/>
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
A BUSINESS WAY TO TARE <lb/>
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HA YE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb/>
BE HAD UPON<lb/>
C, <lb/>
Ml. <lb/>
Postal Bill <lb/>
Fails to Report <lb/>
Highways <lb/>
FIRE DESTROYS <lb/>
GUILFORD PLANT <lb/>
Explosion of Night-watchman's <lb/>
tern Starts it <lb/>
Presents e <lb/>
to House. <lb/>
ion for Changed <lb/>
System <lb/>
WASHINGTON, July post- <lb/>
appropriation bill <lb/>
the good roads provision and <lb/>
a revised parcel post system with <lb/>
charges based on of distance <lb/>
was to the Senate today by <lb/>
the committee. <lb/>
The total appropriations proposed <lb/>
by the hill are above those of tin- <lb/>
House measure which carried approx-<lb/>
One of the principal Increases Is In <lb/>
the pay of railroads for transporting <lb/>
mails, the Senate committee adding <lb/>
more than 12.800,000. <lb/>
In striking out the good <lb/>
roads feature of the House bill, which <lb/>
provided for Federal Improvement of <lb/>
highways, the Senate committee by <lb/>
special commission of three I louse <lb/>
members and throe Senators and pro- <lb/>
for no highway Improvements <lb/>
until commission has reported. <lb/>
The amendment In <lb/>
House bill for the regular publication <lb/>
the names of stockholders of news- <lb/>
papers periodicals is changed to <lb/>
provide for publication ones a year <lb/>
when lists of <lb/>
when lists of stockholders are re- <lb/>
quired lo with the local post- <lb/>
The parcel post section is radically <lb/>
different from that Incorporated in <lb/>
the House bill, which provides a Hat <lb/>
rate of postage for all distances. The <lb/>
Senate provision is that of tho <lb/>
bill slightly Senator Bourne <lb/>
that third and fourth <lb/>
class mall matter he combined for the <lb/>
parcels post service; but tho bill <lb/>
makes the parcels post apply only <lb/>
to fourth class matter. <lb/>
The Senate committee struck out of <lb/>
the House hill the provision giving <lb/>
to postal the right lo combine <lb/>
in labor unions the to <lb/>
Congress for redress of their <lb/>
grievances. <lb/>
II also provided for the abolish- <lb/>
of the present system of carry <lb/>
second class mail by freight Under <lb/>
what is known as the blue tag sys- <lb/>
Under the Senate bill all second <lb/>
class would be put back Into regular <lb/>
mail cars after August <lb/>
A special Commission is also pro- <lb/>
posed to investigate the subject of <lb/>
pneumatic tube service and determine <lb/>
Whether the government shall <lb/>
chase that now in use in various cities. <lb/>
a ion thousand dollar appropriation <lb/>
is authorized for Improved mechanical <lb/>
ill-vices in the Chicago <lb/>
which is now overcrowded. <lb/>
Steel for railway mail service <lb/>
which were required by the House <lb/>
bill, is lo be In universal use by <lb/>
lean railroads by are also re- <lb/>
quired by the Senate bill. The House <lb/>
bill required the railroads to replace <lb/>
per cent of its wooden mall curs <lb/>
every year; while the Senate bill <lb/>
would give the roads one of <lb/>
and then require them to re- <lb/>
place per cent of their cars each <lb/>
year for four years. <lb/>
llano. Admittance to <lb/>
Other Near by. Wining <lb/>
Them Mas Hie <lb/>
Church and Cottages <lb/>
July the largest <lb/>
and most destructive that has ever <lb/>
In this town, originated last <lb/>
night about midnight in tin- plant of <lb/>
tin- Lumber Company, com- <lb/>
destroying the plant and a <lb/>
large portion of the lumber yard. <lb/>
Thousands of feet of rough lumber <lb/>
Stacked on the yards and the <lb/>
sheds with finished lumber ready for <lb/>
shipment. <lb/>
The loss cannot he stated accurate- <lb/>
hut at a conservative estimate it <lb/>
will be from to par- <lb/>
covered with Insurance. <lb/>
lire had its origin in the roof <lb/>
of tin- holler room, the explosion of <lb/>
a lantern used by the night watch- <lb/>
man being the cause When the Ian <lb/>
torn exploded was scattered among <lb/>
the timbers of the building, which <lb/>
were covered with dry sawdust and <lb/>
so fast did it spread that before the <lb/>
Watchman could give the alarm the <lb/>
i was in a mass of flames. <lb/>
The lumber plant was located Just <lb/>
outside the Incorporate limits but was <lb/>
near the main business section of the <lb/>
town, and had it not been for the still <lb/>
of the night the damage that <lb/>
would have been done is Inestimable <lb/>
For a time hope was had for <lb/>
saving the Presbyterian church which <lb/>
was located across the from <lb/>
B comer of the plant. <lb/>
cottages were also in danger <lb/>
but for u slight wind which turned <lb/>
the course of the flames they would <lb/>
have been destroyed also. <lb/>
The Guilford Lumber <lb/>
company is a branch of the <lb/>
horn firm of the same name. Its <lb/>
here was one of Hie largest lumber <lb/>
plans ill this section was one <lb/>
of tin largest manufacturing <lb/>
in Troy. K was located <lb/>
hare more t years ago <lb/>
been of giving <lb/>
hundreds of people, bring- <lb/>
thousands of dollars to the town. <lb/>
Should the company decide not to <lb/>
rebuild it will he a great loss to tin- <lb/>
town and Section, <lb/>
TO GET MEN <lb/>
Two Police Inspectors Mentioned in <lb/>
Case <lb/>
EVERYBODY'S DOING IT <lb/>
Tin- Benzine atmosphere live points would lie conclusive <lb/>
evidence an can afford it. at are auto- <lb/>
mail. Ami the mentioned atmosphere should not be <lb/>
a two or three minute stop at Five Points would route any suspicion <lb/>
of doubt Around from every street they swing along at <lb/>
a gait that means so per hour in gasoline lubricating oil. <lb/>
Many funny stunts happened since acquired the <lb/>
habit. Some ride slow, sum ride fast and again faster. <lb/>
Any how they all ride. the queerest thing happened ill <lb/>
Greenville auto world was p that ordinary five <lb/>
passenger car dispute a of way to a X. S. freight. You <lb/>
Should have seen the engine of tho disputing benzine wagon <lb/>
Ever heard of Anderson's goat Look up above, A staff <lb/>
photographer was on tin- job when ll, A. got a glimpse of it <lb/>
shivered his way out of sight. just believe tin camera, even <lb/>
If you don't believe II. A. <lb/>
GANG LEADER LODGED IN JAIL <lb/>
Labor Leaders Sentenced <lb/>
WASHINGTON, July Hit- <lb/>
coll. president of the American <lb/>
Federation of Labor, today was sen- <lb/>
in the District of Columbia <lb/>
Supreme Court to nine mouths <lb/>
for contempt of court, <lb/>
growing nut of Hie Stove <lb/>
Range Company case. <lb/>
An appeal was taken and bull <lb/>
furnished to abide by the of <lb/>
the upper court. <lb/>
First suffragette Ho you know <lb/>
Mrs. husband <lb/>
Suffragette i don't seem to <lb/>
remember, what was his name <lb/>
fare married <lb/>
Record. <lb/>
CAN'T FIND BODY OF MISSING <lb/>
HIS HIS BEEN <lb/>
E J VERY <lb/>
BEHIND BUS <lb/>
Mini With Whom Has Neon <lb/>
Located In Ward, Hut Re- <lb/>
fuses to Make Statement. <lb/>
CITY. N. C, July <lb/>
ten days ago the young son of <lb/>
Charles Laden, a resident of Delve- <lb/>
duo. X. left home With a man <lb/>
who seems to have undue influence <lb/>
out young boys. <lb/>
As tin- boy did not return the family <lb/>
became alarmed and parties <lb/>
have been sent out iii various <lb/>
The man with whom the boy <lb/>
lift was located in Berkley Ward. Nor <lb/>
folk but absolutely refuses to give any <lb/>
Information in regard to the <lb/>
Of the hoy. <lb/>
A brother and several relatives <lb/>
rived In this city and found the bicycle <lb/>
belonging to the boy at <lb/>
repair shop. <lb/>
Mr. stated a man <lb/>
seemed in haste asked per <lb/>
mission to leave wheel his shop. <lb/>
but failed to return for it. <lb/>
As yet there Is positively no clue <lb/>
as lo the whereabouts of the boy. <lb/>
I Observe <lb/>
SALT LAKE CITY. Utah., July <lb/>
Pioneer Day. the sixty-fifth <lb/>
of the arrival of <lb/>
and his little band of Mormon <lb/>
ill the Salt Lake valley, was <lb/>
celebrated today in all of the <lb/>
pal cities and towns throughout Utah <lb/>
l the I i i. In <lb/>
i Mb nil <lb/>
tinier Arrest <lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE, July bomb <lb/>
was thrown into the gala week <lb/>
attendant on the Bremen's state <lb/>
convention and tournament <lb/>
this afternoon when Sheriff M- h <lb/>
on leisure warrants <lb/>
rested every dealer In <lb/>
on the charge of retailing In- <lb/>
Illinois mill beer <lb/>
more of the name in their <lb/>
than by tin- law. <lb/>
Bight saloons were raided, <lb/>
their owners taken before Magistrate <lb/>
C. P. Overby placed under bonds <lb/>
ranging from to <lb/>
Hundreds of barrels of beer were <lb/>
and is bring stored in n build <lb/>
in market square which was clear- <lb/>
ed for that purpose about a wash <lb/>
ago. it is estimated that or firm <lb/>
ban-els have been soiled. <lb/>
The warrants were signed by E. <lb/>
Kennedy who is represented <lb/>
Shaw and and Newton. Her- <lb/>
ring and dates as counsel. <lb/>
Hint man Placed in <lb/>
I of t Bur and Police lie- <lb/>
Pledges Support. <lb/>
en <lb/>
YORK. July <lb/>
men wanted tor tin- killing of Gambler <lb/>
Herman are beginning to <lb/>
fall into the nets. <lb/>
Harry one o the no- <lb/>
gangsters who were in the <lb/>
murder ear the night was <lb/>
shot, surrendered himself to the <lb/>
lice morning and within ten days <lb/>
Deputy Police Commissioner Dough- <lb/>
expects to round up I he whole <lb/>
gang gun <lb/>
With the men who actually did the <lb/>
shooting in tin- toils tin- main work <lb/>
of District Attorney Whitman and <lb/>
Deputy Police Commissioner Dough- <lb/>
will commence, that of trying to <lb/>
learn the identity the conspirators <lb/>
who so greatly desired <lb/>
done with before lie <lb/>
make further revelations of the <lb/>
between the police gamblers <lb/>
Several of New prominent <lb/>
citizens have offered to pay for a <lb/>
Into the question <lb/>
i whether police partnership with <lb/>
led to the slaying of <lb/>
Commissioner Dougherty remarked <lb/>
significantly to District Whit <lb/>
man that guess agree as to who <lb/>
Is hark of Hut tin- pub- <lb/>
prosecutor does not feel Com <lb/>
Dougherty ran swing the <lb/>
Investigation Into the killing alone, as <lb/>
Ii.- is of tin- police <lb/>
will give no real <lb/>
of may <lb/>
followed by the voluntary appearance <lb/>
of the oilier gangster known lo have <lb/>
been in murder the night <lb/>
tin- killing. <lb/>
Resides there Were Harry <lb/>
best known under his gang <lb/>
name of tub the Blood, Prank, <lb/>
an Baal Sid.- gangster; Lefty Louie <lb/>
and Whitey Lewis. <lb/>
has nothing of the appear- <lb/>
a gangster the sort. <lb/>
His appearance police headquarters <lb/>
sergeant he <lb/>
had <lb/>
North Carolina Scribes it <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
Atlantic HOTEL, Morehead city. <lb/>
July Tonight the North Caro- <lb/>
Press Association WM scheduled <lb/>
to hold its opining session, but a <lb/>
of the inaugural pro- <lb/>
gram was announced on account of <lb/>
military hall given at the <lb/>
hot by the officers of the First <lb/>
of Carolina National <lb/>
Guard, <lb/>
Many Carolina editors Bra here for <lb/>
the convention and the Atlantic to- <lb/>
Is crowded. Don C <lb/>
manager of the Sew York <lb/>
World, who is tin- of honor of <lb/>
the convention, arrived tonight on <lb/>
President Norfolk Southern <lb/>
private car. The program tomorrow <lb/>
win include the usual addresses of <lb/>
welcome; response; by <lb/>
Major of tin- Ob- <lb/>
the address of President Far- <lb/>
I the by Mr. Belts. <lb/>
Durham Police Catch Up <lb/>
Eloper <lb/>
is husband <lb/>
mum; hes in the library <lb/>
wake Mm up and till him <lb/>
want to are <lb/>
DURHAM. July local <lb/>
lice have a phone message from the <lb/>
mother of H year old Lillian <lb/>
saying that she was eloping With Char <lb/>
and Intercept the couple <lb/>
could and hold the young girl until <lb/>
arrived. The officers not <lb/>
know the gill, but acting upon <lb/>
description given, tiny soon located <lb/>
couple at the union station, took <lb/>
girl to police headquarters, where <lb/>
She was detained until tho arrival of <lb/>
relatives. sent home <lb/>
pointed inn disheartened, fir kin- <lb/>
says will marry or break <lb/>
her residents of Wist <lb/>
Durham. Tin- opposition lo w, <lb/>
ding was on account of youthful- <lb/>
of girl. <lb/>
that will result in bringing to hook <lb/>
those higher up. The commissioner <lb/>
that nearly a score of play- <lb/>
ed in the plot that ended in <lb/>
killing of in from of the <lb/>
Hotel and from among <lb/>
them in to And a squealer. <lb/>
The first intimation has gone forth <lb/>
the benefit of Baal Side gang- <lb/>
that those who shot down <lb/>
will inly treated with <lb/>
if i up can be reached as <lb/>
real i ii <lb/>
District Whitman, when <lb/>
told counsel for Shapiro was <lb/>
t- chauffeur of <lb/>
murder car turn evidence <lb/>
sergeant as to his h,. would be protected it is said <lb/>
Identity before locked him up. Here is my will protect <lb/>
drew up headquarters In every man in tho case if I can t-i the <lb/>
a and loungers saw a I want against policemen. <lb/>
dressed, little chap atoned Evidence l know l ill let <lb/>
out from tho car swinging Shapiro slat, s <lb/>
a from a hand, mount it I ran net the police <lb/>
stops of Hie building. Hut I go in shown <lb/>
tell mo where the detective Oral <lb/>
bureau asked. Then There, are bigger men than Becker <lb/>
appeared before Lieutenant in this l want them. What <lb/>
gave himself up was locked has Hi.- police department, except <lb/>
up after that officer could Dougherty done Nothing. They <lb/>
an Officer. doing now Dough- <lb/>
prepared is honest and on the level, but <lb/>
lo Hi-- Hi degree ran ho swing this thing alone <lb/>
learn further of who hired Paul, the Baal Bide gambler, <lb/>
the gunmen to kill Rosenthal, That and Webber, . brought in <lb/>
some of gunmen the Supreme Court today on writs of <lb/>
some of gunmen have Hod the corpus out by their law- <lb/>
is believed by detectives who add that <lb/>
the are probably m District Attorney Whitman <lb/>
holes iii Chicago. ad ins Investigation into the <lb/>
Dougherty thinks murder ease as soon as he reach- <lb/>
from sonic gunmen he ed his office today. Mrs. <lb/>
will be able to obtain a confession will the principal witness. <lb/>
. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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