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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>
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			<date>2012</date>
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DO T NOW DON'T DELAY <lb/>
PUT THE TIME, PLACE AND DATE DOWN IN YOUR MEMORANDUM THIS MINUTE, LEST YOU A. M. <lb/>
NEAR GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
MARCH 1913 <lb/>
Mammoth AUCTION SALE <lb/>
SMALL FARMS SMALL FARMS <lb/>
POSITIVELY THE GREATEST LAND SALE EVER HELD IN PITT COUNTY. <lb/>
We have subdivided into small the C. T. PLACE THE You will have an opportunity to purchase any amount of land de- <lb/>
sired, from one acre up, at YOUR OWN PRICE. <lb/>
One fourth cash, balance in equal installments due in one, two, three, four, and five years, with interest at six per cent, on the deferred payments, or a <lb/>
liberal discount for cash on the deferred payments. <lb/>
MR. You can find no better place to put your money where it will bring such a splendid return, and, at the same time, be perfectly safe. <lb/>
MR. Own your farm. It is never too late to start; it makes no difference whether you are old or young. Now is the time. You can buy some of <lb/>
splendid land, make your payments and then have as much money as you have now. In addition to that you are paying for and improving something that is your very <lb/>
own. The land will pay for itself. <lb/>
GREENVILLE is one of the most thriving little cities in Eastern North Carolina and always affords a ready market for your crops. It has good schools, churches, <lb/>
etc., the advantages which your children and yourself can enjoy, as the land is only approximately one mile from the Court House air <lb/>
PITT COUNTY FARMS WILL NEVER BE CHEAPER THAN THEY ARE TO-DAY <lb/>
No County in the Tar Heel State can boast of better soil. Do you realize that our population is always increasing, but that no more earth is being made That in <lb/>
itself calls for increased valuation every day. <lb/>
TOBACCO, COTTON, PEANUTS CORN and all kinds of truck crops grow abundantly on this BIG BARBECUE DINNER WILL BE SERVED FREE <lb/>
to all attending the sale. Hear those w a BURTON BROTHERS, Auctioneers. Excellent music by our own brass band. Get on the road to <lb/>
independence. When in doubt buy Pitt County dirt. <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST REALTY COMPANY, Inc., <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
This <lb/>
March <lb/>
PU <lb/>
RE If nil <lb/>
Admiral ion <lb/>
Grand Admiral Alfred <lb/>
1734 a signer of Imperial secretary for German <lb/>
the Declaration of navy and one of the most prominent <lb/>
cc, born In Londonderry. figures in the official life of the em-j <lb/>
Died in Philadelphia. Juno was born March He, <lb/>
1817. <lb/>
to Pharmacy for till. <lb/>
Safe, Reliable <lb/>
Your Money Hack If <lb/>
started his naval career In early <lb/>
youth and at the age of had <lb/>
en in tho service until ho <lb/>
the high post of chief of staff to the <lb/>
command of the Baltic naval station <lb/>
In 1897 he became secretary for the <lb/>
. Livingston. and year <lb/>
ho was made a minister. In 1903 <lb/>
1813 David famous mid <lb/>
and born in <lb/>
Scotland. Died in <lb/>
Africa May <lb/>
one of the early justice of the <lb/>
U. S. supremo court, died n <lb/>
Washington, I. Horn In <lb/>
New k Nov. 1757. <lb/>
given In Savannah in <lb/>
honor of General Lafayette. <lb/>
MM captured by a <lb/>
force under Sir Colin <lb/>
bell. <lb/>
1884-Gen. Godfrey to whom <lb/>
the city of Richmond 1- <lb/>
died in Philadelphia. Born <lb/>
in Nov. 1835. <lb/>
of the Keystone Na- <lb/>
Bank of Philadelphia. <lb/>
first presidential prefer- <lb/>
primary was held In Norm <lb/>
Dakota. <lb/>
he was made a Grand Admiral. He <lb/>
is a great favorite of the Emperor, <lb/>
who has a high opinion of his states- <lb/>
as well as his ability as r. <lb/>
n officer and administrator. <lb/>
Admiral as <lb/>
Camp- of as a probable successor <lb/>
of the empire. <lb/>
LEAVE <lb/>
Lib <lb/>
Otter ain't Curs <lb/>
The worst cc,. no . ho, <lb/>
re cured by the wonderful, tillable Dr. <lb/>
Oil, It relieve, <lb/>
and Heals at the sum- turn . <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
March <lb/>
Is coming to the front. The nice <lb/>
roads the convict force have <lb/>
made are such an addition, <lb/>
want to the school building paint- <lb/>
Mr. W. has been <lb/>
We glad to see him out <lb/>
again. <lb/>
Mrs. J. P. Dawson and children are <lb/>
It-Ming friends and relatives In Kin- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
shall have an organ for our <lb/>
school In a few days. We have been <lb/>
ceding It for some time. <lb/>
Mr. J. A. Smith went to Greenville <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Mr. W, K. Morris WM in Ayden to- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
The play or comic drama Aw- <lb/>
also a sketch from Oliver <lb/>
Twist, <lb/>
HI be given at the school <lb/>
Friday, 28th. All are In- <lb/>
Admission cents. <lb/>
Need To Seek Afar. The <lb/>
Is At Your Poor <lb/>
No need to to hunt <lb/>
up proof, because you have it here <lb/>
It home. The straightforward <lb/>
of a Greenville resident like that <lb/>
given below bean an interest for <lb/>
man. woman or child here <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
T. R. deputy sheriff, 91- <lb/>
street, Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
was troubled by lameness In my <lb/>
back and my kidneys did not do <lb/>
work as they should. I got <lb/>
Kidney Pills from the John L. <lb/>
Drug Co. and I had not used them <lb/>
long before I got relief. I can say <lb/>
remedy acts just as <lb/>
Now we <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co. Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Remember the name <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co. Buffalo <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the <lb/>
d States. <lb/>
Remember the <lb/>
no other. <lb/>
Adv. <lb/>
There are few remedies that gain <lb/>
the confidence of druggists as <lb/>
son's Liver Tone does. <lb/>
Pharmacy sells it and backs up the <lb/>
sale of every bottle with the money <lb/>
back guarantee that the price will <lb/>
refunded if it falls to give com- <lb/>
satisfaction. <lb/>
Tone costs cents <lb/>
a hot lie. II is the safest and best <lb/>
remedy tor torpid liver, constipation. <lb/>
biliousness, etc. that has ever been <lb/>
in this city. It takes the place <lb/>
it and does not lay <lb/>
up as a dose often <lb/>
dots. A bottle in the house is as <lb/>
pond as fifty cents in the hank. If <lb/>
t u or your family need a liver tonic <lb/>
you have medicine ready If it <lb/>
fills yon gel your money hack. <lb/>
Hi aura to Liver Tone <lb/>
when you ask for It. There are <lb/>
of II may disappoint you. <lb/>
NEW STORE<lb/>
Is Dominated With EASTER <lb/>
Arch Install Officers <lb/>
At n convocation of Greenville <lb/>
Chapter No. Royal Arch Masons, <lb/>
held Tuesday tight, Past High Priest <lb/>
It. C. Flanagan conducted the <lb/>
of the following <lb/>
F D. High Priest. <lb/>
R. II. Wright, King. <lb/>
I. It. Meadows, Scribe. <lb/>
S M. <lb/>
K. K. Griffin, <lb/>
It. Williams. Captain of tho Host. <lb/>
II. Austin, Principal <lb/>
H. Royal Arch <lb/>
W. Ward, Master Third Veil. <lb/>
W. II. Master Second Veil. <lb/>
C. C. Vines, Sentinel. <lb/>
D. J. Whichard. First Veil. <lb/>
Stops Scalp Itch <lb/>
To Cure a Cold In One Day <lb/>
Take LAXATIVE Quinine. pith. <lb/>
mod and Colo. <lb/>
refund <lb/>
. W. GROVE'S nature .,, I,. -k. <lb/>
Central Development <lb/>
The secretary of state has Issued your <lb/>
And Eva Scalp <lb/>
Cared if nick <lb/>
It Is simply wonderful how <lb/>
goes after You rub a mile <lb/>
of In with tips of the lingers. It <lb/>
gets right down into the glands. <lb/>
s them, stops the itch, and makes <lb/>
tin- load feel fine. No, it Isn't <lb/>
is a fine, clear, vanishing <lb/>
quid. You don't have to even wash <lb/>
hands after using And <lb/>
a wonder is for eczema, rash, <lb/>
pimples and skin afflictions. A <lb/>
H cent trial bottle st <lb/>
Pharmacy Is guaranteed to slop any <lb/>
charter to the Central South Develop- <lb/>
Company, of Messrs. <lb/>
B, Sugg, O. L. and others <lb/>
being tho While the <lb/>
principal -is of the company j skin irritation. <lb/>
will be buying and selling real estate. Is prepared by K. W. Rose <lb/>
both town and country, It will , Medicine Co., St. Louis. Mo., and la <lb/>
also have an eye to securing sites regularly sold by druggists at a <lb/>
for the location of factories and bottle. But to prove what it will <lb/>
development of this section of the it t expense. Is now put <lb/>
South by Inducing settlers to come up In trial bottles <lb/>
and the entire offering is brand new. Going <lb/>
into our new store just before Christmas, all <lb/>
of the stock has been purchased since then <lb/>
and with an eye to what was most stylish <lb/>
and for the season in <lb/>
and SUITS <lb/>
We have what will male you well- <lb/>
dressed and in best style. In <lb/>
COAT SUITS <lb/>
we are especially strong, and never had a <lb/>
more beautiful line. <lb/>
In Shoes, Hats and White Goods <lb/>
we can suit every taste. You never saw a <lb/>
better line of White Goods than here, and <lb/>
our Low Shoes are marvels of beauty and <lb/>
quality. <lb/>
The Big Store will Take Pleasure in Serving You <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
Reflector Advertisers are Offering Real Values <lb/>
GREENVILLE IS TEE <lb/>
AT OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED BY THE REST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
HINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE FOR WE <lb/>
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb/>
SF FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
Jo a a N I NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT. <lb/>
i- the the Mi rt-a. <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE REST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb/>
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb/>
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb/>
; At J TAINTED WITH <lb/>
GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL EM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR A D <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND <lb/>
BE HAD UPON <lb/>
VOLUME <lb/>
X. C FRIDAY if MARCH K, Mil<lb/>
CF <lb/>
TARIFF YET <lb/>
Destructive Floods and <lb/>
Heavy Snow Storm In <lb/>
Wake of Omaha Tornado <lb/>
BUS CLOSE <lb/>
Wilson is Not Prepared to Put <lb/>
K. On it <lb/>
Hut Has Left With Him by <lb/>
Omar W. <lb/>
wood. Democratic <lb/>
Leader. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, March <lb/>
dent Wilson let it be known today <lb/>
that he has not yet put his stamp of <lb/>
approval on tho tariff bill left with <lb/>
him by Representative Oscar Under- <lb/>
wood, the Democratic majority leader, <lb/>
after a three last <lb/>
Light. <lb/>
The president Indicated to his vis- <lb/>
that he had only begun to study <lb/>
tho measure but that before the Dem- <lb/>
met to decide whether <lb/>
they should revise In a sin- <lb/>
bill or by separate schedules, he <lb/>
would make known his own <lb/>
as well as his opinion of the <lb/>
bill. <lb/>
The income tax problem and its in- <lb/>
details are also being carefully <lb/>
considered by the president. He dis- <lb/>
cussed these in a general way <lb/>
Secretary of the de- <lb/>
Col. E. M. House, <lb/>
Austin, Texas, and Secretary <lb/>
who were at the white house to- <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Mr. Wilson also Is giving some at- <lb/>
to the possibility of getting a <lb/>
currency measure before the country <lb/>
during the extra session of Congress, <lb/>
and It was said that the conference <lb/>
tonight touched this subject to some <lb/>
extent. <lb/>
Diplomatic Appointments. <lb/>
Little Information was forthcoming <lb/>
today concerning diplomatic appoint- <lb/>
It became known Unit Dean <lb/>
Fine, of Princeton <lb/>
University, would not accept the am- <lb/>
to Germany, which had <lb/>
been offered him by President <lb/>
eon. Prof. Fine is now Munich <lb/>
on leave of absence and while he U <lb/>
one of the President's Intimate <lb/>
friends and has been strongly urged <lb/>
to accept, the great expense involved <lb/>
Is said to have been the reason for the <lb/>
declination. <lb/>
John K. three times mayor <lb/>
of N. Y. probably will <lb/>
be the next collector of the port of <lb/>
New York. He is said to he the molt <lb/>
likely of those under consideration. <lb/>
Shakes Hands with <lb/>
The President today received an <lb/>
army of school teachers, the usual ex- <lb/>
crowd of the Easter <lb/>
He shook hands with in thirty- <lb/>
five minutes, among them from <lb/>
Toronto, Canada, led by Dr. James I. <lb/>
Wilson, superintendent of schools in <lb/>
that place. <lb/>
Congratulations to <lb/>
Duke of St. old <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Dr. S. Luther, president of <lb/>
Trinity Hartford, Conn. <lb/>
years old today. <lb/>
Rear Admiral Albert who <lb/>
goes on the retired list of tho United <lb/>
States today, years old today. <lb/>
Dr. Hugh professor of <lb/>
theology In Union Theological <lb/>
Seminary, years old today. <lb/>
F. and Marcus <lb/>
A. Smith elected a first United <lb/>
States Senators from Arizona. <lb/>
Sever Cold Weather Adds to <lb/>
Misery of the Homeless <lb/>
DEATH LIST M W <lb/>
Morehead Thai <lb/>
Conditions Will More <lb/>
In Wreck- <lb/>
ed Zone <lb/>
KANSAS CITY, March mes- <lb/>
received here today from Leslie, <lb/>
Ark., sixty miles north of Little Rock, <lb/>
says a tornado in that vicinity last <lb/>
night killed eight or ten persons. <lb/>
I Reported Killed My Tornado <lb/>
ST. LOUIS, March per- <lb/>
sons arc reported to have been killed <lb/>
In the tornado that struck <lb/>
Ilia., miles here, <lb/>
last night. <lb/>
OMAHA, Neb., March <lb/>
from the cold and awe inspired by <lb/>
the nature of their work, scores of <lb/>
men, women and children today <lb/>
in the sow to the dead or <lb/>
injured bodies of relatives and <lb/>
who lay burled beneath the wreckage <lb/>
of their homos and buildings which <lb/>
were crumbled eggshells by th-; <lb/>
tornado Sunday, swept with <lb/>
dealing force over Nebraska and Iowa <lb/>
killing more than persons In <lb/>
Omaha alone. <lb/>
Tho latest reports this morning <lb/>
give the number of injured at <lb/>
while the death list has not Increased <lb/>
over the night report of <lb/>
Sixteen additional bodies were <lb/>
en from the a pool <lb/>
ball, this morning, making the total <lb/>
thus far recovered from that place <lb/>
The building, after being wrecked <lb/>
by the tornado, caught on fire from an <lb/>
overturned stove and burned. <lb/>
Snow Hampers Work of the <lb/>
The snow storm which seriously Is <lb/>
hampering the work of rescue, began <lb/>
shortly after midnight this morning <lb/>
Mid la continuing with gathering force. <lb/>
More than three inches of snow <lb/>
the debris In the of the city <lb/>
was struck by the cyclone, <lb/>
Privations of the storm are <lb/>
being greatly increased tho <lb/>
snow storm which is following so <lb/>
closely in tho wake of the tornado, <lb/>
Woman tugging at heavy beams, hop- <lb/>
against hope to find the living <lb/>
bodies of dear ones beneath the tons <lb/>
men gruffly cheering <lb/>
their sorrowful mates; shivering <lb/>
wrapped about with shawls and <lb/>
blankets, were the scenes which at <lb/>
sunrise this morning greeted tho fed- <lb/>
soldiers as they patrolled the <lb/>
district, aiding in the rescue <lb/>
work and the an I <lb/>
unoccupied homes from conscienceless <lb/>
looter. <lb/>
Sufferers Clothes and <lb/>
Later city officials gathered within <lb/>
the lines drawn around the district by <lb/>
the soldiers and distributed <lb/>
and other necessities among the <lb/>
More than has been sub- <lb/>
scribed their by tho <lb/>
city commissions and equal amounts <lb/>
by citizens who attended yesterday's <lb/>
meetings of commissioners and other <lb/>
Individuals. <lb/>
The Injured at hospitals are <lb/>
the best attention. <lb/>
of and Council Bluffs <lb/>
volunteered their services and <lb/>
trained nurses have willingly followed <lb/>
the example of the physicians. <lb/>
The snow which according to re- <lb/>
ports is falling with blizzard like pro- <lb/>
portions from Colorado to Central <lb/>
Iowa, has seriously Interfered with <lb/>
that slender thread of telegraphic <lb/>
communication which yesterday after- <lb/>
noon was established from Omaha to <lb/>
the outer worn. Practically no In- <lb/>
formation has been obtained this <lb/>
morning from portions of <lb/>
Nebraska an <lb/>
The fact that such Intense suffering <lb/>
is being caused here by the present <lb/>
In spite of heroic efforts be- <lb/>
made by the city to provide for <lb/>
and protect all who have been made <lb/>
dependent on it, caused Governor <lb/>
Morehead to fear that the conditions <lb/>
within the state arc in deplorable <lb/>
shape. He stated that he would hasten <lb/>
action before the state legislature to <lb/>
secure sufficient funds for the <lb/>
care of storm victims. <lb/>
Some residents of the district de- <lb/>
in their belief that at least one <lb/>
hundred bodies are burled in the ruins <lb/>
of houses and brick building., of <lb/>
amusement places which were known <lb/>
to be tilled with pleasure seekers on <lb/>
Easter Sunday, <lb/>
Torn From Arms of Mother <lb/>
Among the searchers last night an <lb/>
today is Mrs. W. W. Sherwood. Ill In <lb/>
bed Mrs. was holding her <lb/>
week old babe in her arms when the <lb/>
v descended upon her little e- <lb/>
The home was the in- <lb/>
torn from the mother's arms and <lb/>
blown away and so far It has not been <lb/>
found. In spite of her weakness and <lb/>
suffering from injuries she sustained <lb/>
In the storm, Mrs. Sherwood, aided by <lb/>
her friends Is hunting the hospitals <lb/>
the Improvised about the <lb/>
city. <lb/>
In Ralston, a suburb of this <lb/>
Edward his wife and three <lb/>
were sitting in their homo chat- <lb/>
ting on Easter Sunday when the tor- <lb/>
suddenly carried them and their <lb/>
homo to Palo Creek, one hundred <lb/>
yards away and dropped them into the <lb/>
water. Mrs. Mote was and <lb/>
her baby recovered lute yesterday <lb/>
under the wreckage the <lb/>
home. <lb/>
Die Clasped in Others Arms <lb/>
H. E. Said and wife, bride and bride- <lb/>
groom of a month, were In Ham <lb/>
house. Warned of approaching death <lb/>
by Mr. Ham, the two solace in <lb/>
each other's arms. Thus they were <lb/>
found dead. Mr. was Slightly In <lb/>
When the tornado rushed upon <lb/>
Omaha nuns were in tho <lb/>
Heart Convent. Seeing its approach <lb/>
they hurried from the live story <lb/>
and sought refuge In the home of <lb/>
just across <lb/>
the street. No sootier the last of <lb/>
women left the convent than the <lb/>
building collapsed with a crash. <lb/>
The girl students at the convent <lb/>
were spending their Easter Sunday <lb/>
their homes or with friends. <lb/>
of them In the building at the <lb/>
time. <lb/>
LINES II EAST <lb/>
Capture all the Fortified Points <lb/>
Hear <lb/>
Hope of Saving <lb/>
Virginia Clansmen is <lb/>
Abandoned <lb/>
WILLING CEASE FIGHTING <lb/>
THIS DATE IN HISTORY <lb/>
March -ill <lb/>
lodge of Odd Fellows in <lb/>
organized. <lb/>
street railway In New <lb/>
England from to Cam- <lb/>
bridge, opened. <lb/>
tho <lb/>
of tho Confederate States <lb/>
of America. <lb/>
of Representatives pass- <lb/>
ed the first Interstate commerce <lb/>
bill. <lb/>
Charles as- <lb/>
the <lb/>
Allies to Insist <lb/>
era I in are Order- <lb/>
ed Hack to their Posts of <lb/>
Duty. <lb/>
SOFIA, Bulgaria, March <lb/>
Turkish advanced positions and all the <lb/>
fortified points to the cast of the fort- <lb/>
of were captured by <lb/>
the Bulgarian besiegers this morning. <lb/>
Allies to Insist upon <lb/>
COLOGNE. Germany, March <lb/>
The reply of the allies to the <lb/>
m pram the <lb/>
will propose that the future frontier <lb/>
between Turkey and Bulgaria should <lb/>
run from on the Sea by <lb/>
way of above to th I <lb/>
Gulf of an Inlet of the Aegean <lb/>
Sea. <lb/>
In this way Bulgaria would be ex- <lb/>
from the Sea of in <lb/>
accordance with the desire of the <lb/>
powers. <lb/>
Bulgaria, however, and the other <lb/>
Balkan allies Insist on the payment <lb/>
mi Indemnity by Turkey. They are <lb/>
willing to suspend hostilities at once, <lb/>
if Turkey surrenders the fortress of <lb/>
and her <lb/>
mies. <lb/>
Turkish Ordered Hack To <lb/>
Posts <lb/>
CONSTANTINOPLE. March 25- <lb/>
The military governor of the Turkish <lb/>
capital published a notice today warn- <lb/>
all Turkish officers absent from <lb/>
any army on leave or for other <lb/>
sons to return to their posts. <lb/>
of <lb/>
BELGRADE, March <lb/>
The bombardment of is <lb/>
to have been stopped on or- <lb/>
from tho government. <lb/>
acted on the advice of the <lb/>
French and Russian ministers who <lb/>
the premier that the <lb/>
powers had to unalterable <lb/>
that must belong LO. <lb/>
the state of Albania. <lb/>
Civilians Can Leave <lb/>
Montenegro, March ts, <lb/>
-Tin- Montenegrin government In re- <lb/>
to the note, <lb/>
agreed today to permit the civilian <lb/>
population of leave the city <lb/>
This was the most radical of Austria's <lb/>
demand. <lb/>
At the panic time Montenegro In- <lb/>
forms Austria that Montenegrin <lb/>
government has a note t <lb/>
powers protesting against <lb/>
which it calls a breach <lb/>
of neutrality <lb/>
BE <lb/>
RICHMOND, Va., March <lb/>
Governor Mann's emphatic <lb/>
statement that his action is final, at- <lb/>
for the condemned Aliens, <lb/>
who have Just returned from Wash- f Cl IllS <lb/>
are today preparing to make a <lb/>
appeal to the governor, pleading <lb/>
that certain legal phases of the case <lb/>
be considered. <lb/>
Four Justice of the supreme <lb/>
the Justice <lb/>
While and Justices Hughes. <lb/>
and their pleas and <lb/>
that no question <lb/>
involved. <lb/>
It Is said today that Senator Swan, <lb/>
son after whom Claude Allen is <lb/>
ed, has approached Governor Mann <lb/>
personally asking for clemency for <lb/>
the younger Allen. <lb/>
RICHMOND, Va. March <lb/>
Greatly Stirred <lb/>
ran, <lb/>
Propose a Conference, and Eighteen <lb/>
Have Promised to Attend. Vic- <lb/>
tor Their Choice For <lb/>
Speaker. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, March <lb/>
movement to bring all Progressives <lb/>
i in the House into a compact third par- <lb/>
organization stirred up <lb/>
the Aliens, father and son, will die Progressive-Republican and In- <lb/>
electric chair Friday morning, j dependent circles of the House to an <lb/>
there is no longer doubt Their unexpected degree. Up to tonight, <lb/>
to last decree and eighteen members of House had <lb/>
lighting to the last ditch, have reach-1 notified Representative William II. <lb/>
ed the end of their rope, no of Illinois, the active lead- <lb/>
man agency will prevent the in the organization plan, that they <lb/>
lion of the law. which demands the would attend the proposed conference <lb/>
of Floyd and Claude Allen for St which Victor <lb/>
participation in the shooting up dock is to be made the Progressive <lb/>
of the court at last March, i Choice for speaker. <lb/>
The final legal effort, which was <lb/>
reeled toward saving the life of <lb/>
Claude by an appeal to the United <lb/>
Stales supremo on the plea that <lb/>
the man's life had been twice j <lb/>
thus depriving him of the <lb/>
rights guaranteed him under the con-l <lb/>
was abandoned yesterday <lb/>
after Messrs. <lb/>
Tho altitude of many of those <lb/>
Progressive-Republicans, denominated <lb/>
by Colonel <lb/>
v It. has not yet been determined. A <lb/>
partial canvass of many of these who <lb/>
been prominent in the ranks of <lb/>
the insurgent Republican forces for <lb/>
the last two congresses but who are <lb/>
had been successively turned <lb/>
Associate Justice Hughes. <lb/>
Announcing their determination ti <lb/>
carry their petition to each of the <lb/>
other seven Justices In the effort to <lb/>
secure a writ of error and a stay <lb/>
execution for the younger Allen, <lb/>
officially members of the new Pro- <lb/>
party, showed today that the <lb/>
majority of them had not decided <lb/>
whether they would take part in th- <lb/>
Progressive conference. <lb/>
While the Progressives, as <lb/>
by Mr. bale <lb/>
attorneys remained in Washington ail plied direct for recognition as a .-. p- <lb/>
day yesterday, but after a party in the distribution of <lb/>
decided that further effort was us.-- committee places, the Progressive- <lb/>
b and it. <lb/>
So far as the executive channel is <lb/>
concerned, Governor Mann sealed the <lb/>
doom of the condemned men several is the leader. Some <lb/>
weeks ago and has had no hesitation <lb/>
in stating since his official <lb/>
was Issued that it was absolutely <lb/>
Chas. <lb/>
Io Officers <lb/>
Tuesday <lb/>
Realizing almost Impossibility <lb/>
of his escaping the clutches of th- <lb/>
officers Mr who en <lb/>
night shot Mr. Will D. Smith, <lb/>
near Ayden, quietly walked Into tho <lb/>
office of the sheriff Tuesday afternoon <lb/>
surrendered to Sheriff <lb/>
Ernest Dudley who escorted him to <lb/>
the Jail where he Is now confined to <lb/>
outcome the wound in- <lb/>
by a bullet from a revolver In <lb/>
his hands, and tho day for hie trial. <lb/>
losses <lb/>
COMPANIES mill <lb/>
BREAK ALL III l <lb/>
Chicago, March <lb/>
enormous damage caused by tor- <lb/>
in Nebraska. Iowa and <lb/>
I Indiana brought out Hie State- <lb/>
from Insurance companies <lb/>
that losses thus far this year <lb/>
on Insurance breaks <lb/>
nil records, while fire losses <lb/>
are smaller than usual. <lb/>
Tornadoes do not usually <lb/>
come so. early in tho year. In- <lb/>
agents say that the <lb/>
storms In south last week <lb/>
were unusually destructive <lb/>
and that Nebraska storm <lb/>
will pile up the losses. Figures <lb/>
on the policies affected by tho <lb/>
Omaha storm are not yet <lb/>
but It Is said that many <lb/>
buildings destroyed were pro- <lb/>
by tornado Insurance. <lb/>
One eastern company collect- <lb/>
ed In premiums on <lb/>
such policies In Nebraska alone <lb/>
In <lb/>
Dr. Hyatt Coming- <lb/>
H. O. Hyatt will be at Hotel <lb/>
Republicans are still dependent upon <lb/>
tho regular Republican organization <lb/>
of which Mann of <lb/>
was added to the Progressive <lb/>
plans today by the rumor that <lb/>
the Republican leaders were Inclined <lb/>
to withdraw some of the com- <lb/>
places from the <lb/>
Republican members. <lb/>
The date for conference <lb/>
of Progressives, <lb/>
set for April was changed to- <lb/>
day Io April Representative <lb/>
will go to New York within a <lb/>
ft w days for a conference with Col- <lb/>
Roosevelt- The latter is expect- <lb/>
ed to semi a personal message to the <lb/>
Progressive gathering. A portion of <lb/>
Ms recent letter to Representative <lb/>
made public today, fol- <lb/>
Hear Judge <lb/>
for you; I am more than <lb/>
pleased with what you have done. It <lb/>
would be an thing to run <lb/>
Victor as our for <lb/>
the and I that, a <lb/>
you have suggested to him, ho will <lb/>
announce himself as willing to accept <lb/>
tho nomination of tho Progressives <lb/>
for this position. <lb/>
I think II would be a good <lb/>
thing for the Progressive party that <lb/>
our men should act together and <lb/>
should consult one another freely an-I <lb/>
In addition that they should keep in <lb/>
closest touch with <lb/>
so as to net substantially on tho <lb/>
same lines, the Idea that they <lb/>
may ultimately Join With us We<lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
Bertha Monday, April 7th, to go ahead with our organization <lb/>
diseases of the eye and fit glasses. Its a separate, distinct national party <lb/>
Don't you think this Is<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018241_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
WAR is <lb/>
IS EXPECTED OF <lb/>
m m m i i <lb/>
Penn Mutual Policies Best <lb/>
comparison of premium and values of <lb/>
i. Payment Life at the end of the third <lb/>
at age of the leading life insurance doing <lb/>
business in North a, showing Hie <lb/>
of PENS MUTUAL POLICIES. <lb/>
Turkey Entrusts Her In- Crowd Rushes forward lo Shake <lb/>
to Powers <lb/>
is Hand <lb/>
ALLIES OFFER <lb/>
Message Pr. <lb/>
Sara lurk Mi Bus <lb/>
So Hi <lb/>
rendering <lb/>
LONDON. March <lb/>
hilled Tow Him la <lb/>
A Dime Hi- It Old <lb/>
The <lb/>
Home <lb/>
CITY, March <lb/>
was the verdict returned this <lb/>
no hopes of obtaining more <lb/>
has entrusted her interest to the <lb/>
Pens Mutual <lb/>
York <lb/>
Mutual <lb/>
Mutual <lb/>
Phoenix <lb/>
Massachusetts <lb/>
State <lb/>
Connecticut <lb/>
National <lb/>
Central <lb/>
of the last week appear to make the . Dy grand Jury in the <lb/>
conclusion of Balkan war a Harden Stokeley. who killed <lb/>
t-r of only a few days. Turkey, J. Ponton a prominent young <lb/>
n. business of for re- <lb/>
fusing right a wrong done his <lb/>
rears old sister, <lb/>
good offices of the powers and the Word was <lb/>
allies have accepted the offer to the Jury <lb/>
meditation. Representatives of the an agreement and was <lb/>
powers today handed the Bulgarian ready report An immense crowd <lb/>
;. i scheme embodying has- around the court build- <lb/>
is- for meditation. Their plan in- j the day. when the <lb/>
eludes two provisions which the .,,,. to the jury and when <lb/>
allies likely will object. demand that a verdict had <lb/>
for Indemnity i.- vetoed and the pow- ,,, every inch of space In <lb/>
era that 1- must court room was parked in a <lb/>
.- i I proposals are ac- . D eager spectators. <lb/>
cc . a dramatic one. Ra- <lb/>
. however, aged father of the <lb/>
lilies will is I . i. who hail remained about the <lb/>
the terms no offered. The war has , an waiting for the <lb/>
. to a deadlock. Fight- . u.,, i lake boy <lb/>
; n Urn e ha to i Id home In <lb/>
Indecisive. which the Amid intense silence the usual for- <lb/>
proposed to reduce to sub- were gone through with and <lb/>
mission in a few days, seems to be ,.,., ,;,,, words <lb/>
holding Mi as strongly as ever . D by foreman of the Jury. <lb/>
,. and a wireless , , anal curtain in a <lb/>
m from there t lay declares . The crowd constrained <lb/>
the Turkish command I no longer. The aged father of <lb/>
thought surrendering. ; tab I ward and In a <lb/>
Terms Agreed Powers a- , clasped to his <lb/>
Basis for -i n the spectators, the ma- <lb/>
I J In sympathy with <lb/>
of the lied on On j ard also, The <lb/>
i . a and ; and of the youth, whose <lb/>
. . i been <lb/>
e a number <lb/>
of . i them. <lb/>
era take note Tl I I <lb/>
by l . ml was received with <lb/>
i and point out to I was a popular, <lb/>
i t and In fact, <lb/>
begun I the counties, was favor- <lb/>
young v. <lb/>
to I of fail young girl was <lb/>
Charges, interest daring grace period. <lb/>
Pays no dividends until the expiration of the second year. <lb/>
PENN premiums on its Nineteen- <lb/>
Life Policies are than the premiums charged <lb/>
by New York Companies on the Twenty Payment Plan. <lb/>
For further information apply to <lb/>
H. A. WHITE <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
1895 <lb/>
Evans St., Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Ion I he as <lb/>
In En <lb/>
I to I <lb/>
. i , , <lb/>
no verdict was <lb/>
more popular, j <lb/>
in i l mid gel it of<lb/>
The Bank of Greenville, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
STRENGTH <lb/>
SECURITY <lb/>
SAFETY <lb/>
f you would like to place your deposits where <lb/>
these three essentials exist, come to this bank. <lb/>
Twenty years of success by conservative manage-<lb/>
Save you <lb/>
Money on <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Don't buy the new suite or <lb/>
piece of Furniture need <lb/>
until have seen our the prices. The <lb/>
following we select at CEDAR CHEST, CLOTHES- <lb/>
HAMPERS, BED ROOM SUITS, BEDS. <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE<lb/>
Elegance in House Fur- <lb/>
Without Ex- <lb/>
Cost <lb/>
Our Furniture the Test of It u built of Best <lb/>
material. True In wood and workmanship. Good enough to <lb/>
handed down to your in as heirlooms. If your home la not <lb/>
as cozy and comfortable you like It, why not come and <lb/>
complete Us furnishings hare <lb/>
You will find the thing to give your dwelling a touch of <lb/>
luxury, without excessive <lb/>
HIGGS TAFT FURNITURE CO. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
R. L. Davis, President . S. T. Hooker, Vice-Pres., <lb/>
James L. Little, Cashier. <lb/>
n i f t n <lb/>
Sale cf Traction Company <lb/>
City <lb/>
I lion of <lb/>
shall be fixed <lb/>
Tl of l <lb/>
i n all<lb/>
i but <lb/>
in <lb/>
. in the In Pal <lb/>
DURHAM, Mar b definite <lb/>
n R. H, Wright that <lb/>
the Durham in Company ha I <lb/>
. in sold to Henry I. Doherty, or <lb/>
Xi w has hi ii the talk of the <lb/>
t; <lb/>
opinion la the <lb/>
railway of Durham, the <lb/>
i bl in <lb/>
financial the districts be <lb/>
i r to them. <lb/>
Turk, i 1- to asked i lake part <lb/>
In tin . of this <lb/>
The i at the <lb/>
Ice plant and the general electric <lb/>
lighting i by this concern will <lb/>
hall <lb/>
Called From Church And <lb/>
Murdered <lb/>
Edifice <lb/>
of steps <lb/>
level ; He of city that <lb/>
i been n i <lb/>
Mr. Wright has stated that he has <lb/>
no plans for the future, hut <lb/>
will probably spend his time looking <lb/>
after bis real estate and machinery <lb/>
business. Ha thought probably he <lb/>
would go to New York for the greater <lb/>
part of the time, but will consider <lb/>
Durham his home, since he has <lb/>
great many interests in local con- <lb/>
and in Durham real estate. <lb/>
For the past two months there have <lb/>
March out <lb/>
Of church by an usher while attend- <lb/>
divine services at <lb/>
this morning. Henry walked been all kinds of rumors about the <lb/>
Into a fusillade of bullets, fired by ,,,, Durham Traction <lb/>
Hardy Three of and the greater number of <lb/>
the bullets took effect, the thought that the would <lb/>
dying almost Instantly in front of the the Southern Power Company, <lb/>
church. Nothing could be learned till late yes- <lb/>
Witnesses state that no words pass- afternoon, when Mr. Wright <lb/>
between the two men prior to the made the signed statement announcing <lb/>
shooting. They assert that Hardy the sale for publication. The for- <lb/>
began firing as soon as his president would give no idea of <lb/>
cousin appeared in the doorway of purchase price, but the general <lb/>
the church. It is reported that the Inference around Durham Is that It <lb/>
killing is the aftermath of a violent must hate been In the neighborhood <lb/>
quarrel between the two men several a quarter of a million dollars, <lb/>
weeks ago. The slayer was arrested <lb/>
about two hours after the killing and <lb/>
lodged In the county Jail. He refuses <lb/>
t make any statement <lb/>
St. lo Honor <lb/>
ST. LOUIS. Mo., March <lb/>
Louis business men have completed <lb/>
arrangements for a big banquet to- <lb/>
six night to welcome Charles <lb/>
I have opened in The Advance Office in Ayden, a <lb/>
am prepared do nil kinds of Tailoring, Cleaning and Press- <lb/>
of top suits for Gentlemen and Ladies. <lb/>
I make a of cleaning hats and gloves. <lb/>
All work<lb/>
JACKSON, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
lino. <lb/>
AND SHEET METAL <lb/>
For Slate or Tin, Tin Repair <lb/>
Work and Flues to Season, See <lb/>
J JENKINS Greenville, NO <lb/>
Professional Cards. <lb/>
. C. Harding Chas. C. <lb/>
Lawyers <lb/>
Practicing in all the <lb/>
Wooten on <lb/>
street, fronting Court Home <lb/>
t. M. <lb/>
Lawyer <lb/>
second floor in Wooten <lb/>
on Third St. opposite house <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
JAMES L. <lb/>
at Law <lb/>
In <lb/>
from street <lb/>
Greenville, Carolina <lb/>
S. W. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
I Bee formerly ed by <lb/>
Fleming <lb/>
L. <lb/>
at <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
n on Court<lb/>
W. t, EVANS <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
In front room of the <lb/>
Just north of Court House <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
B. f. TYSON <lb/>
Life. Fire, and Accident <lb/>
Office on Fourth street, rear Frank <lb/>
. <lb/>
ALBION <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
For tho time <lb/>
months the voters of Michigan are former secretary of commerce Office In Building, Third <lb/>
to be given an opportunity on April and labor, who has returned to this <lb/>
to pass on a proposed women city to resume his law practice. The <lb/>
amendment. <lb/>
Practices wherever service <lb/>
I banquet will be a affair. <lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
North <lb/>
Took Wrong Train <lb/>
There is a good Joke on a young <lb/>
man who rooms near the Norfolk <lb/>
Southern depot. He went to bed <lb/>
Saturday night with plans all <lb/>
laid to take tho Sunday morn- <lb/>
train for Raleigh to spend <lb/>
He was dreaming about his trip <lb/>
a train coming in the station <lb/>
awoke him. He Jumped out of bed, <lb/>
began hustling into his clothes to <lb/>
catch the train. He slipped on his <lb/>
pants and coat, put his socks in his <lb/>
took a shirt and In <lb/>
his hand and reaching the <lb/>
train Just before It pulled out. He <lb/>
dodged Into the baggage car to finish <lb/>
toilet and coming out In the <lb/>
coach when a of <lb/>
about three miles had been covered, <lb/>
to discover that he had taken the one <lb/>
o'clock train bound to Norfolk. It <lb/>
looked rather far to get off and walk <lb/>
back, so he kept on to Washington <lb/>
where the trains meet and there took <lb/>
the train back to Raleigh. This <lb/>
gave him start enough to reach <lb/>
his<lb/>
and has made tens of <lb/>
millions of dollars. <lb/>
The great opportunity knocks <lb/>
but once at every man's <lb/>
door. Are you ready <lb/>
to seize your <lb/>
if it came today. Have <lb/>
you Start <lb/>
saving, be <lb/>
Commence <lb/>
today. <lb/>
The National Bank of Greenville <lb/>
Only Hank In Under <lb/>
F. G. JAMES, Put, F. J. Cashier. <lb/>
Supervisor. <lb/>
MOVEMENT OF <lb/>
Time Of Arrival And Departure <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST LINE <lb/>
Northbound Southbound <lb/>
8.18 a. m. 1.18 p. m. <lb/>
Ml p. at p. <lb/>
SOUTHERN <lb/>
1.15 a. m. 1.10 a. m. <lb/>
1.11 a. m. 7.16 a. m. <lb/>
a. m.- 4.17 p. m. <lb/>
Alleged Fratricide on Trial <lb/>
NEWARK, N. J March <lb/>
ed of slaying his brother. Joseph Fer- <lb/>
was arraigned In court today to <lb/>
stand trial on a charge of first de- <lb/>
murder. Tho two bothers <lb/>
said to have engage din a quarrel in <lb/>
the vicinity of their home Juno <lb/>
Met, which resulted in an exchange <lb/>
of blows. In self <lb/>
ed brother la to have pulled a <lb/>
revolver from his pocket and Bred <lb/>
the fatal <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
At the regular meeting of the board <lb/>
t county to be held <lb/>
he first Monday in April a <lb/>
will be presented for the <lb/>
of the public road lead- <lb/>
from Bruce to Bluff. All <lb/>
persons Interested and wishing to he <lb/>
card should be at that time. <lb/>
BELL, <lb/>
Clerk Co. Coma <lb/>
larch 1913. d-w last <lb/>
On account of Increased practice <lb/>
Dr. will stay In Greenville all <lb/>
day Mondays and Fridays but his of- <lb/>
hours will be from a. m. to <lb/>
p. m. tho will be do- <lb/>
voted to work done outside tho of- <lb/>
or by appointment. Patients <lb/>
treatment in the afternoons <lb/>
at their or at tho <lb/>
should In office hours. Phone <lb/>
connection. t <lb/>
Winterville Items. <lb/>
March W. <lb/>
L. line I hi are in <lb/>
any ea rt you up <lb/>
date. <lb/>
M. r wen lo On <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
For to mention It is <lb/>
Bl Pitt Co. Oil CO , <lb/>
close th books at once all <lb/>
to this company are or <lb/>
gently requested to make <lb/>
Tho spring and summer dress <lb/>
goods are arriving Harrington. <lb/>
r and store now, and <lb/>
it will pay you to come and see <lb/>
before you make your purchase. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Rollins made a flying <lb/>
trip to Greenville Thursday. <lb/>
We have a complete line of dry <lb/>
goods and notions Just in. A. W. <lb/>
and Co. <lb/>
Messrs, Ernest Cos and S. S. Smith <lb/>
went to Greenville Thursday. <lb/>
We the public to come and <lb/>
Inspect our line of spring goods an <lb/>
be astonished the low prices. Cox <lb/>
and House, <lb/>
Mrs. Frank of Washing- <lb/>
ton, N. C, spent several flays with Mr-, <lb/>
M. T. Spier last week. <lb/>
If you want shad. and <lb/>
barbecue, don't to sec it. w. <lb/>
and especially on Saturdays. <lb/>
Mrs. G. A. and Miss Esther <lb/>
Stone went to Ayden Thursday. <lb/>
For all kinds of groceries and shoes <lb/>
and notions, go and sec W. L. House; <lb/>
he can save you money. <lb/>
Messrs. Reba Everett <lb/>
spent Saturday and Sunday at home. <lb/>
Seed potatoes and onion sets at A. <lb/>
W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
You will save money if you will <lb/>
buy your groceries and shoes from <lb/>
Cox House. <lb/>
Miss Cox of Is spend- <lb/>
some time at her home here. <lb/>
Colo cotton planter, fertilizer <lb/>
distributors, peg harrows <lb/>
cultivators at Harrington, and <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Misses Clara and <lb/>
went to <lb/>
For those who came first the <lb/>
County oil Co. b ;. I r tons i <lb/>
prime cotton seed meal at <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Mrs. Mabel i I HI <lb/>
Cos v., to I I <lb/>
If ; f for <lb/>
R, W. he is still <lb/>
ill i I <lb/>
i ; .<lb/>
Again <lb/>
Bl Conditions <lb/>
In <lb/>
Guadalajara, March ISIS, <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
fill <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
Male. <lb/>
or Rich <lb/>
The i<lb/>
i North l <lb/>
I came here .-, to look which I <lb/>
r my Interest In and <lb/>
found the general conditions very, W, G I N C <lb/>
good; better than I have i crop I I <lb/>
seen before. n <lb/>
In the city has . affected Ibis v. k. n. C, re- <lb/>
of Hie country at all. The his <lb/>
immediately the <lb/>
president a, soon as of N. M. u. ,, ad. K. C, sold <lb/>
change. is one or the tobacco from acres for He <lb/>
cities in the re- ,,,, . ,.,.,. <lb/>
Geo. It. i. Tr. N. C <lb/>
glows tobacco for i acre I I <lb/>
sells for per a <lb/>
Ed Bass, Wilson. N, sold acres <lb/>
IS THE TIME <lb/>
public and I find the very best Hi <lb/>
Icon people here, even the lower <lb/>
class are more intelligent than other <lb/>
parts of the country, I have taken <lb/>
good rest here after my excitement <lb/>
in the capital city and am fine <lb/>
condition for business again. Washington, V <lb/>
Now, by view point of the present BOld tobacco seres <lb/>
of the country, what <lb/>
should be and what are <lb/>
to be, Is, there Is only one solution <lb/>
and this will come sooner or later. h sold for <lb/>
The country is too much divided to a <lb/>
ever gel together on a solution <lb/>
P. A. Hodges, N C. n <lb/>
per acre for tobacco <lb/>
cost Inn per acre to grow. <lb/>
V. II. Wilson, N. C, sold <lb/>
inns tobacco for <lb/>
Richard King N. made <lb/>
i profit or over from 1-2 <lb/>
acres of tobacco. <lb/>
S. W, Smith, Wilson, X. C. <lb/>
ed per for acres of <lb/>
a total return of <lb/>
S. F. Freeman, Washington. N. C, j <lb/>
received nearly from acres <lb/>
of tobacco. <lb/>
W. X. Webb, Wilson, N. C <lb/>
his crop of acres of tobacco <lb/>
c x. c sold ii <lb/>
acres or tobacco for per <lb/>
grown a cost of per acre. <lb/>
the trouble unless the power in charge <lb/>
exterminates the opposing parties, <lb/>
rebels, classes, or whatever you might <lb/>
call them. country can only he <lb/>
controlled by a ruler such as old <lb/>
and take the bead of <lb/>
every man who opposes the govern- <lb/>
Who would be an honest lead- <lb/>
what party should be In power, <lb/>
who are the rebels, bandits, etc. <lb/>
is the question of today in <lb/>
All people, foreigners, and <lb/>
I believe Mexicans of tho best class <lb/>
who really feel interested la the <lb/>
welfare of Mexico are waiting <lb/>
lo see what Wilson will say <lb/>
about tho <lb/>
I was somewhat optimist as to the <lb/>
results of the new administration, <lb/>
but they arc not killing them up fast <lb/>
enough for me, and I am afraid an- <lb/>
for all forms of <lb/>
Sciatica, Gout, <lb/>
Catarrh cad <lb/>
Asthma <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Gives <lb/>
and pi in, re- <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
He r r . in, it. <lb/>
on <lb/>
SOLD BY <lb/>
Oral <lb/>
of if ,., <lb/>
a roar <lb/>
. .<lb/>
HEW, i <lb/>
WORM, Etc., healed t tho <lb/>
SALVE <lb/>
Per Dr. <lb/>
Southern railroad. Thousands of <lb/>
acres of rich idle tobacco land, <lb/>
Nearly pounds of lo the farms referred to above. <lb/>
other big flame going to up still the coming planters and <lb/>
my mind it is bet- <lb/>
C crop of 1912, . vi raging about <lb/>
to kill them, then say. if we had <lb/>
mi they would have started <lb/>
revolution than lo them alone ,; <lb/>
for distribution among the conditions In <lb/>
a part i I served <lb/>
end afterwards it be said as It v. I I l and I <lb/>
old Q when hi . ., ,, ., <lb/>
I I , , , . <lb/>
. i <lb/>
value <lb/>
him. b, , eve. <lb/>
DI again If M hod pounds, at ago <lb/>
I first <lb/>
the et and dill not kill <lb/>
to buy Stalk Cutters, <lb/>
Disc Harrows, Drag <lb/>
Harrows, Smoothing <lb/>
Harrows, Pulverizing <lb/>
Corn Plant- <lb/>
Fertilizer <lb/>
American <lb/>
Wire Fencing, Gal- <lb/>
Roofing. <lb/>
Prices always the <lb/>
lowest. Come to see <lb/>
us for any goods you <lb/>
need. We carry a <lb/>
complete stock. <lb/>
We appreciate your <lb/>
patronage. <lb/>
I i r am <lb/>
J. K. <lb/>
I Felix . and n total <lb/>
lured in <lb/>
. i , <lb/>
en i ,<lb/>
i i <lb/>
i . . your patron- <lb/>
They also I all kinda of to control the pi ; <lb/>
age. <lb/>
country <lb/>
The Winterville High School base- <lb/>
ball team will play Ural came on <lb/>
the home grounds next a <lb/>
tie noon when Hoy cross bats with <lb/>
the strong Kinston team. We home <lb/>
boys are ill good condition and <lb/>
to put up a great game against <lb/>
their fast opponents. will <lb/>
do the twirling slant for Winterville <lb/>
and Tucker will probably do the re- <lb/>
Either or <lb/>
will pitch and Tyndall <lb/>
will catch. A fast game is expect- <lb/>
ed. Everybody come. Game called <lb/>
p. m. Admission and cents. <lb/>
The of the season for <lb/>
tills vicinity was played here <lb/>
day between tho teams of Greenville <lb/>
High School and High <lb/>
School, resulting in a score of to <lb/>
in favor of the Winterville boys. <lb/>
Doth teams played well and there <lb/>
were no special features except the <lb/>
heavy hitting or the Winterville boys. <lb/>
Tabulated score la <lb/>
ft, II. E. <lb/>
W. II. S. <lb/>
O H. S. <lb/>
Greenville, Flem- <lb/>
and Tuck- <lb/>
and <lb/>
New in Public Library <lb/>
The Heart of the Hills by John <lb/>
The Judgment House by Gilbert <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
The Amateur Gentleman by Jefferey <lb/>
The Parasite, by Helen Martin. <lb/>
Little sister by Elisabeth Rob- <lb/>
Ins. <lb/>
The Happy Warrior by <lb/>
Three of the town, Tho End <lb/>
of the Century, The Round Table and <lb/>
The San recently <lb/>
presented to library Lord's <lb/>
Light of History, S very valuable set <lb/>
Of reference books. <lb/>
The library Is open until further no- <lb/>
from to <lb/>
th people will <lb/>
ling in be kindly i <lb/>
to my friends, I am, <lb/>
Sincerely j <lb/>
II. B. T. <lb/>
era of local tobacco licit. digestion, and gel rid of all the <lb/>
above from your system. They will <lb/>
i rim lion, there Is m get you well again. at <lb/>
growing tobacco along the Norfolk l druggists, <lb/>
. .<lb/>
Hearing on storage <lb/>
NEW A, March <lb/>
The Railroad Commission of <lb/>
bi tan o hearing lo this city <lb/>
in the case of the t chamber <lb/>
of commerce and others the <lb/>
railroads doing business in Louisiana <lb/>
The purpose of the the <lb/>
roads Is to bring about establish- <lb/>
of a uniform mileage rate to <lb/>
nil points In state. <lb/>
The Original Fuller Johnson <lb/>
STEEL FRAME <lb/>
Is the only practical machine for trans- <lb/>
planting TOBACCO, Cabbage, Sweet Po- <lb/>
Tomatoes, Strawberries, Nursery <lb/>
Stock, etc., better than by hand. They start <lb/>
sooner and mature more evenly. <lb/>
Great saving in time and labor, great increase in yield per acre. Set your <lb/>
plants when wait for rain. Each plant watered at the roots, <lb/>
covered with dry earth no baking. Ever for every <lb/>
purpose, every adjustment desired. Perfect working qualities. Easily <lb/>
handled. Very light draft. <lb/>
JUST RECEIVED-A LARGE SHIP <lb/>
OF DAYTON'S <lb/>
NELL'S AND BICYCLES. <lb/>
BUYING IN LARGE QUANTITIES <lb/>
ENABLES US TO MAKE YOU A VERY <lb/>
CLOSE PRICE. <lb/>
TERMS TO SUIT YOUR <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, Phone No. <lb/>
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY FOR PITT COUNTY. <lb/>
to of far. <lb/>
consolidated tobacco <lb/>
Notice la hereby given to all per- <lb/>
sons professing to hold claims of any <lb/>
kind against tho Farmers <lb/>
ed Tobacco Co., to present the <lb/>
to II. Sugg, Auditor of the <lb/>
Greenville, X. C, examination <lb/>
payment before the day of <lb/>
April, J. This action is ; <lb/>
necessary by the fact that steps are <lb/>
being taken to close up the affairs <lb/>
the and have the <lb/>
n i. President, <lb/>
W. Dal, Jr. Secretary. <lb/>
Che only Merchant Tailor <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
Has moved rear of <lb/>
Royal store, where <lb/>
those his services will <lb/>
ready to wall on them. <lb/>
of very newest samples for <lb/>
SPRING CLOTHING <lb/>
and suits made to order promptly <lb/>
from up. <lb/>
clothing cleaned, pressed, and <lb/>
your work and get <lb/>
he beat. Phone and work will <lb/>
e for when desired. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
Stomach trouble, lazy liver and de- <lb/>
kidneys are the cause of <lb/>
Get your stomach, liver, kid- <lb/>
and bowels in healthy condition <lb/>
by Bitters and you <lb/>
ill not he troubled with lite pains <lb/>
if rheumatism, lei B, Allen, a <lb/>
. i <lb/>
In from <lb/>
rheumatism, liver <lb/>
I i. <lb/>
. II until l n , <lb/>
rs, but four i. I. won- <lb/>
. cured me <lb/>
Maybe your pains come <lb/>
and kidney <lb/>
Electric Bitters will giro you <lb/>
relief, I and Rec- <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
H. BUTTON <lb/>
Still<lb/>
The Mutual Life Insurance <lb/>
Hew <lb/>
J. C. Lanier <lb/>
AND HEAD STOKES <lb/>
AMI FENCES <lb/>
II <lb/>
d-w<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018241_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb/>
The Japanese empire baa taken of- <lb/>
at certain bills pending before People as a rule are so easily fool- <lb/>
FARM EASTERN California legislature that are ed that a man with almost any kind <lb/>
considered hostile to the Japanese in of a fake can come around and induce <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
ii <lb/>
Kill BOOKS <lb/>
There is one <lb/>
AYDEN, 22.-146 creeks, <lb/>
fact that cannot swamps and wells have all <lb/>
overflowed recently. If Mr. House la <lb/>
pass will withdraw her support from to him. <lb/>
that stale, and declares if the bills them to hand over their good money too strongly emphasized, and that Is, <lb/>
I ever going to drain Swift Creek now <lb/>
One of the slickest on the that while you want to make IS, high <lb/>
the Panama exposition, refuse to road recently visited Concord, and neighborhood a reading neighborhood, water mark. <lb/>
lac and prohibit print below what the Tribune it must be tie right sort of Nancy Haw slips, Maine grown seed <lb/>
D. Editor. <lb/>
WORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Six mouths. <lb/>
Adverting rates may b bad upon <lb/>
at the <lb/>
The corner Evans <lb/>
and Third streets <lb/>
subjects from having any con- says about him, so that if he should A semi-weekly or edition potatoes and day oats. J. R. Smith <lb/>
with the fair. strike any where in this section of some city daily, its news columns B- <lb/>
pi. may know In advance that he a, stories of suicides and <lb/>
a murders and scandals and railroad <lb/>
hay. J. R. Smith and <lb/>
The announcement comes again a I murders and scandals and railroad m left Friday taking <lb/>
n that ex-Governor Glenn and man who registered at the St and criminal trials, and its Mr w T the <lb/>
Justice will both be candidates for Hotel yesterday morning as C. advertising columns filled with shame at Mr. Hart's <lb/>
Senator place two years of Baltimore, a of patent health has been impaired for some <lb/>
distillers and <lb/>
time. <lb/>
tie stand on the street and offered for, <lb/>
H M. T. left Wednesday <lb/>
word candidates if they so desire. beautiful a paper want R q <lb/>
advertising <lb/>
tales will L at three <lb/>
per line, up to lines <lb/>
as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910. at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina, <lb/>
ad March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY. MARCH 1913 <lb/>
but we believe It will be a waste in water. Ills sample was a beau-, help you at all. Nor will a cheap for an operation. <lb/>
time and effort. The people of North <lb/>
Carolina will hardly be willing to <lb/>
see as useful a man as Senator <lb/>
put out of office. <lb/>
IT IS THE<lb/>
FIRST <lb/>
No farmer who has never owned <lb/>
or used a manure spreader can <lb/>
any adequate Idea of its real value or <lb/>
what a luxury, so to speak, it is to <lb/>
own and operate one of these ma- <lb/>
chines. With a spreader it Is so easy <lb/>
to haul out the manure and <lb/>
the same very evenly all over the <lb/>
field, and to do so v hen it ought to b <lb/>
done, as as it is made and a load <lb/>
accumulate and there Is a field ready <lb/>
lo receive it. I think more about the <lb/>
value of farmyard manure, and it <lb/>
Greenville needs more men like Mr, <lb/>
J. H. Randolph, who came back to <lb/>
this last year after an extend- <lb/>
ed sojourn In South America where <lb/>
he made a snug fortune. He is malt- <lb/>
investments that count in the Up- <lb/>
building of his old home town. A <lb/>
found a lot of shot with which ha <lb/>
filled the so as to hold it <lb/>
steadily on the bottom of the jar. <lb/>
en geranium cuttings of Wandering <lb/>
were also there. These were <lb/>
men like him would give us by <lb/>
He had It In a glass jar, and it monthly, with sensational stories and The Society at the <lb/>
looked as as could telling articles and will debate Tuesday Re- <lb/>
He did a land office business until advertisements in solved. The North was In <lb/>
about noon today, when it was freeing slaves. <lb/>
dentally discovered that his bulbs j. w. Webb has resigned as <lb/>
were pure fakes. He occupied a chief of police and Mr. J. Moore is <lb/>
yesterday at the St. Cloud Hotel the best local paper, the best farm ow billet and wearing <lb/>
In this was found this morning the papers, the best magazines, even if the <lb/>
that the flowers were I the best magazines, even if Dynamite, and per cent <lb/>
up purpose of sale There do clean, whole- and caps. Guns, pistols and cart- <lb/>
ably edited papers <lb/>
that stand for progress, for improve- <lb/>
and for high ideals. <lb/>
This Is no but Prosaic <lb/>
HANRAHAN, March After ma- <lb/>
thought and earnest <lb/>
I am truly sorry to say that I <lb/>
am forced to the conclusion that there <lb/>
are those who like to sling ink and <lb/>
put their in great big <lb/>
as as was the <lb/>
Artificial Mayflower that adorned the <lb/>
hat which took the premium at a tack <lb/>
party given at the Hanrahan school <lb/>
building some time since, and were <lb/>
the real brain manifested In <lb/>
this prided articles put In the hull <lb/>
of a mustard seed, that gray matter <lb/>
would have more space than would <lb/>
a bull frog have In the gulf of Mot <lb/>
I have watched carefully the <lb/>
articles In your paper for some time, <lb/>
and have utterly failed to see one <lb/>
that singled which dealt in person- <lb/>
at all, save one that in wind- <lb/>
up did mention the name <lb/>
of Clark and that In a praiseworthy <lb/>
hut the one who loves so dear- <lb/>
to display his name at the end of <lb/>
his cherished articles Jumps at the <lb/>
conclusion that some fellow Is hit. <lb/>
So ho begins to howl, and deplores <lb/>
fact that that was pub- <lb/>
saying It would n ten- <lb/>
a city in a short while. <lb/>
stuck on the bulb and to the flower. <lb/>
of Police was notified <lb/>
Mrs. Julia Gold, wife of Elder P. fake and promptly advised the <lb/>
D. Gold, of Wilson, died Saturday at <lb/>
gentleman to move on, which he pro- <lb/>
to do just as promptly, <lb/>
an advanced age. They recently however, until he was forced to dis- <lb/>
their golden wedding. Many, ,.,.,.,, money paid him by several <lb/>
friend throughout the state are persons who were fortunate enough <lb/>
rowed at her death. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
he around before he could get away. <lb/>
He sold hundreds of the fake bulbs <lb/>
and today. <lb/>
The Durham Sun certainly has <lb/>
me to conserve and to of kindness In its make-up s safe to say that unless <lb/>
date more of it than did before a j this little article catches up with him <lb/>
, I. In n he will find just as many in <lb/>
got a Furthermore, ma- gel me a pun,. u t ,,,,, <lb/>
in memory of her who had <lb/>
been dead more than a year. <lb/>
can be made to go twice as far. <lb/>
and will do twice as much good <lb/>
that spread by hand with a k <lb/>
Jordan IV Wells, in The Progressive Reflector's friends, the <lb/>
Farmer enterprising advertisers, are pushing <lb/>
it on toward the coveted goal of a <lb/>
TWO-HORSE MIST regular S-page paper. We hope they<lb/>
The vital need of most Southern ---------0 <lb/>
farmers is more and better A little bird tells us that some <lb/>
cry and what Impresses one most In folks are laying plans that will give <lb/>
looking over the of the south, is The Reflector an opportunity to tell <lb/>
the almost total lack of of another big enterprise for Green- <lb/>
farm machinery. The or villa many more new moons <lb/>
pound mule and Boy Dixie plow does come. <lb/>
; never can. mean good farm- <lb/>
Tho heavy mule and disk or Or. It. B. Pitt, of Old Sparta, died <lb/>
gang plow should replace them a Tuesday. He was prominent both in <lb/>
fast as profession and In politics, and <lb/>
The two-row. or check-row com several times represented <lb/>
planter and pivot-wheel riding county in the legislature. <lb/>
should replace the hand <lb/>
and one-row planters. And Saturday night a burglar broke Into <lb/>
on the level lands of the south, the the office of the Raleigh Times, but <lb/>
six or seven foot cut mower will be got Ho must have been aw- <lb/>
towns as he found in <lb/>
The place to keep your eye on is <lb/>
the one that Is progressing as Green- <lb/>
ville is doing. <lb/>
Talking about the Black Hand, you <lb/>
can find almost any small boy with <lb/>
two. <lb/>
Maybe the question mark on the <lb/>
new hats means guess the price. <lb/>
New York can also develop a scan- <lb/>
in hair. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
One of the most pliable situations <lb/>
imaginable is where a boy grows lo <lb/>
be IS to years old and finds it <lb/>
e; to work to make a living <lb/>
without ever having been required be- <lb/>
fore to do any work or <lb/>
barn any particular trade or acquire <lb/>
any oilier habit than tho habit of <lb/>
Idleness. There is in mind a case <lb/>
u ht a man was a most successful <lb/>
People not in close touch with the <lb/>
a better investment than the four or ml green to think of finding money cotton mill superintendent. Ho were life at Virginia Beach will find <lb/>
ridges. Car wire fence at J. R. Smith to help Instead of weaken the <lb/>
and one claims was hit. Well, <lb/>
The Ayden Lumber Co., are who are sadly in need of <lb/>
lug repairs lo both mill and track. helping to a higher plain of life and <lb/>
In fact. In this plan to make your long we will hear the there is anything In life that <lb/>
neighborhood a reading neighbor- whistle, which will add new life to j any Other II <lb/>
hood, very first idea to get rid of, Ayden. as they usually work feel that I have been <lb/>
n I mental in helping some fellow to a <lb/>
is that you must have cheap reading a t . <lb/>
The Hookerton Union meets at the higher lire. <lb/>
Christian church here next Saturday. I NOW, in conclusion let me say lo <lb/>
We never ran make the what lo have n town full of who Is so glib In trying <lb/>
It ought lo be, you never can make tors, delegates and ministers. w Written, <lb/>
neighborhood what it ought Ladies trimmed hats, white better get some second grade <lb/>
h. eel rid of the <lb/>
be. until the farmers I rid of the Is. And until then If he <lb/>
Idea their minds are not worth <lb/>
feeding. A man has got to believe In We will all be insured bye and bye. <lb/>
himself more than that, must have if the agents continue to work, <lb/>
more respect for his brain and his March Christian <lb/>
Church will have their union <lb/>
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
body It; to come, <lb/>
mind and his children's minds de- Mr ,, guest <lb/>
servo tho best Intellectual food he of Miss Bessie Sunday. <lb/>
can find- and plenty of It. He would Smile May Cannon and May <lb/>
not let his children go with two meals Smith returned lo Wilson Monday <lb/>
a clay when they need three. Why. <lb/>
. , , Mrs. J. A, went lo Green- <lb/>
should he compel them to get . <lb/>
along with only an occasional MUs to the <lb/>
or semi-monthly feast of C. T. T. S. Monday evening after <lb/>
food Instead of seeing to it that spending a few days here. <lb/>
the best papers to be had come to Fred Cannon <lb/>
ville Monday, <lb/>
his home every week Mr , A Md weft, <lb/>
No hard and fast rule can be laid Greenville Monday <lb/>
down, but a reasonable minimum can Misses Clara Paul and Brown <lb/>
be fixed and we would say that Saturday evening. <lb/>
man is doing right by himself or his Bo <lb/>
. Mrs. Clara has return <lb/>
family it spends less than a . <lb/>
year for papers, magazines and books s h. went to <lb/>
for each horse he for dine to preach Sunday. <lb/>
papers and for books for the one- Several of <lb/>
mind, before he can amount to any- <lb/>
thing. He must believe his own <lb/>
farmer; for papers and <lb/>
for books for the two-horse farmer, <lb/>
etc. <lb/>
Five dollars a year per horse for pa- <lb/>
a year per horse for books <lb/>
provided the right sort of papers <lb/>
were In our town Sunday. <lb/>
A QUARTER OF A Mil- <lb/>
LION DOLLARS <lb/>
AT BEACH <lb/>
fire foot Also the wide two-horse around a print shop. <lb/>
rake will do much faster work than <lb/>
the narrower S. No need of any one In the ores- <lb/>
paid lo a year salary. <lb/>
lie had a line lot of children and the <lb/>
girls grew up to be industrious and <lb/>
reliable. Ills boys were not required <lb/>
in The Progressive Farm- age being worried over de- work, at and <lb/>
of Ella Wheeler Wilcox. years old they found themselves <lb/>
that meat eating will be a thing of income other boys of their <lb/>
age had and not accustomed to work <lb/>
for wages or a salary either. The <lb/>
modem theory of prohibiting child la- <lb/>
or other labor which encourages <lb/>
done or no work during the row. <lb/>
winter should be prepared for the <lb/>
s- c ire Strain or the had spring <lb/>
The Greenville High ball a child to grow up in idleness, is one <lb/>
work. We do not expect a race- team losing the three first games <lb/>
horse or an athlete to do good work the season, is no reason tho boys <lb/>
without training and the work horse are not going to turn the table first <lb/>
ill no different In this respect. Begin thing you know. <lb/>
ti feed a little more gradually <lb/>
Increase the feed and work so ts Raleigh Is right down in earnest <lb/>
to have the animals In better lo get the commission form of gov- <lb/>
the very hard work comes It is something every <lb/>
in the spring. Many an animal is municipality of consequence ought f <lb/>
made less for tho whole sea- have. <lb/>
son with muscles soft, a long o <lb/>
coat of hair and unaccustomed to a Quite a contrast with the spring <lb/>
full ration he Is put to the hardest weather down this way. are the heavy <lb/>
worst to the modern race. This <lb/>
superintendent's son when hunting <lb/>
job, being asked what he could do, <lb/>
said in particular, but will <lb/>
Every boy ought to to <lb/>
learn trade at U or years of <lb/>
age. It should lie the business of the <lb/>
State that proper restrictions were <lb/>
put about all young apprentices, but <lb/>
to forbid them working, lo learn how <lb/>
sun of work the first warm clays of sleets of tho last few days out in t make a living in subsequent lief, is <lb/>
spring, which are always the most the west Ian everlasting injury to them and to <lb/>
trying tor man or Pro- children. No successful pa- <lb/>
Farmer. Around this way the new use tar <lb/>
try to do There is the rub j As Ur he distinguished <lb/>
when they come really lace to face under i water <lb/>
With lite and the father Is dead l <lb/>
gone. the injury that was done is a <lb/>
them in idleness is <lb/>
parts of the world and has had <lb/>
a surprise awaiting them when the <lb/>
visit tho popular resort again this <lb/>
season. <lb/>
During the quiet winter months a <lb/>
vast change has come about at tho <lb/>
pleasure Center and the visitor will <lb/>
scarce believe his own eyes when the <lb/>
enlarged and improved Virginia Beach <lb/>
greets the guest pleas- <lb/>
seeker. <lb/>
Since the close of last season with <lb/>
Its record for popularity and attend- <lb/>
more than a quarter of a mil <lb/>
lion dollars has been spent In new- <lb/>
building construction at Beach. <lb/>
years of <lb/>
handsome dwellings and bungalows, <lb/>
lave been completed, or are <lb/>
the south and go far to <lb/>
dispel the ignorance that the <lb/>
our schools has cursed <lb/>
with. No man who is not poor <lb/>
enough to starve bis body is <lb/>
enough to starve his <lb/>
Partner. <lb/>
Admiral Sir Charles Campbell <lb/>
Vice Admiral Sir Charles Campbell, <lb/>
one the distinguished veterans of <lb/>
the British navy,, was born at St <lb/>
Andrews, Scotland, March <lb/>
must spread his name the con- <lb/>
of some gob, lei him tell about <lb/>
corn his raised on one <lb/>
acre. <lb/>
Yours <lb/>
U KNOW. <lb/>
Honor Hull <lb/>
The honor roll for the public school <lb/>
King's Cross Bonds for <lb/>
month is as <lb/>
First Maggie Manning, <lb/>
Atkinson, <lb/>
Berths Little, Smith. <lb/>
Lillian Smith, Joseph Turbos, Roy <lb/>
Stunning, Joseph <lb/>
Second Addle Manning, Mar- <lb/>
Little, Julius Smith, Preston Mo- <lb/>
Third Bryan Park- <lb/>
Ethel Norman, Little, Pearl <lb/>
Norman, Mary Jane Forbes, Nannie <lb/>
Edwards, Floyd <lb/>
Fourth Robert Lee Corbett, <lb/>
Sam Eastwood. <lb/>
Fifth Susie Mamie <lb/>
Until Smith, Anna Forbes, May Hello <lb/>
Tyson, Roland Parker. <lb/>
Sixth Christine Smith, <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Seventy Smith, Leon <lb/>
J. Clifton Corbett. <lb/>
The following pupils deserve es- <lb/>
mention for having done <lb/>
good work during the <lb/>
Smith, Ethel Norman, Julius <lb/>
Suit ill. Estelle Mary Jane For- <lb/>
bes, Edwards, Smith, <lb/>
May Belle Tyson, Roland Forbes, <lb/>
Forbes and J. <lb/>
DELIA SMITH, <lb/>
NANNIE MOORS, <lb/>
Teachers. <lb/>
per- In his long career Ad- <lb/>
j n Campbell has seen service in <lb/>
It is generally conceded those <lb/>
having best public roads <lb/>
are tho most prosperous. In spite <lb/>
the hindrance caused by poor roads, <lb/>
Pitt is remarkably <lb/>
keeps but <lb/>
think how much rapid this pro- <lb/>
could be. Only a few days ago <lb/>
an auction sale of farm lauds show- <lb/>
ed prices ruling from to per <lb/>
acre and it was for laud not rated <lb/>
us extra good. True this aver- <lb/>
age laud and mil far from town, but <lb/>
county had good loads, s <lb/>
many interesting experiences. He <lb/>
made the trip around the world <lb/>
tho when that ship was <lb/>
commanded by the Duke Edinburgh, <lb/>
second sou of Queen Victoria. He <lb/>
was present at the taking of <lb/>
and the of Crete and was <lb/>
course of erection. <lb/>
In addition to <lb/>
for recent building improvements <lb/>
the Beach, the casual visitor <lb/>
not lose sight of the fact that only <lb/>
year ago the Norfolk Southern over would be equally <lb/>
mad spent over fifty thousand good, if not better, than this <lb/>
in building mammoth new Pitt has much laud as pro- <lb/>
it was connected with markets <lb/>
Cation and of which I <lb/>
opened up a choice building and <lb/>
possibility northward and by good roads, many <lb/>
will be just as acceptable as any <lb/>
e-r large Income to make it possible for <lb/>
transport officer during Lord lo ,.,,. Investors and settlers would <lb/>
campaign against ,. ,. . . . <lb/>
, , ,,., . this way. <lb/>
the course of an expedition <lb/>
to force his children to accustom <lb/>
is the name of an ex- kind. <lb/>
bright little paper published o--------- <lb/>
by Greenville High School and print- Tho Evening Times now prints <lb/>
by The The first Raleigh in capital letters. That fits <lb/>
just out is as spicy as can be. all round, for it Is capital, you know. <lb/>
Tho matter and contributions is by <lb/>
members of the class. It is the If Greenville had more working and supporting <lb/>
pose to bring out the paper monthly along with the other good things, her young men. because tho young <lb/>
young man from to to get a he <lb/>
The location of the state rifle <lb/>
at Beach and the expenditure of <lb/>
On next Tuesday Raleigh Is to vote <lb/>
along without himself working. dollars for Its <lb/>
of income every man ought; that and for nU Improvement by the state still further Ku establishing a com- <lb/>
and In the case referred to tho girls <lb/>
role action was decorated With the , f permanent mission form of government that <lb/>
state Is looking <lb/>
with interest to the <lb/>
themselves to at least enough work Distinguished Service Order. construction in tho city and the whole <lb/>
to lake care of themselves and served as aide-de-camp to <lb/>
families. girls usually do better Victoria and to King Edward. Summarizing the various expend- , , <lb/>
election. <lb/>
the outcome of the <lb/>
The sentiment of <lb/>
during school term. <lb/>
growth would be more rapid. <lb/>
---------0 <lb/>
n cannot get anything to do. It is <lb/>
a most pliable situation and must be <lb/>
extremely humiliating to the young <lb/>
From the Charlotte Observer tells A big New York swindler who was w, BaT, accustomed to live <lb/>
of a county farmer who had captured In New Orleans, Is said to on the tile ti tide of some of their <lb/>
father's salary to ultimately sag down <lb/>
and be supported by sisters. <lb/>
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb/>
so much cotton lying around his be suffering with a <lb/>
farm, that five bales of it were stolen Nothing strange about that. <lb/>
and ho did not even know of it e <lb/>
later when he went lo The waiters turn up their noses at <lb/>
mini u. W, i. some folks are the new as readily as at the, For Weakness and Lets of Appetite <lb/>
rich they do not miss it if old kind. They regard anything <lb/>
lose a little. I than a quarter as cheap. I i <lb/>
Smallest <lb/>
The smallest electric dynamo in the <lb/>
world was recently exhibited before <lb/>
an association of Paris electrical <lb/>
engineers. Tho model was perfect <lb/>
lit every detail and in working order. <lb/>
It Is so small, that Its base will bare- <lb/>
cover the of an American <lb/>
penny. Exchange. <lb/>
g the various <lb/>
by the different Interests at <lb/>
Beach, all planned and spent government for municipalities is <lb/>
In a little over a year, and we have <lb/>
the startling figure over four <lb/>
thousand dollars, nearly half c <lb/>
million, used in evidence of faith and <lb/>
that Norfolk's favored resort Is <lb/>
forging to the front at a pace gratify- <lb/>
to the most optimistic. <lb/>
The Greenville Hanking and Trust <lb/>
Another <lb/>
of Deeds W. M. Moore <lb/>
growing generally throughout the <lb/>
country. The cities are Hist adopt- <lb/>
it, and the time Is approaching <lb/>
when every town of will <lb/>
look to this as the best form of gov- <lb/>
c-i <lb/>
Piles Cured la to Days <lb/>
Your will refund money if <lb/>
fails any case of lulling. <lb/>
Blind. Protruding Pile It day. <lb/>
Company has received from the gov- has received the gratifying news that sail Rut, SOc <lb/>
a shipment of the new But- he Is a a on having been <lb/>
They tho first lo born to Mr. and Mrs. D. H. <lb/>
. <lb/>
For and children. He. come here and are quite a of <lb/>
forget the ball game <lb/>
row between Greenville and <lb/>
Conducts Another <lb/>
Big Land Sale <lb/>
The streets of our town yesterday <lb/>
reminded one of circus <lb/>
the occasion being tho sale of <lb/>
Just across the river <lb/>
by tho Atlantic Coast U. ally Com- <lb/>
a while the hour <lb/>
set for the auction of this land out <lb/>
of town people from around <lb/>
thronged tho streets and listened <lb/>
tho band of the Com- <lb/>
as paraded several streets <lb/>
of tho town, previous to their de- <lb/>
to the farm. <lb/>
sale began at o'clock <lb/>
with nearly a thousand people on the <lb/>
grounds and with the Burton Broth- <lb/>
as the company <lb/>
long disposing of the tracts sell- <lb/>
all but six. The highest pries <lb/>
paid per acre was <lb/>
Shortly after noon n lino barbecue <lb/>
dinner was served and those In <lb/>
tho Croat to the <lb/>
fullest extent. <lb/>
It Is Indeed a lo attend <lb/>
the sales conducted by <lb/>
genteel business <lb/>
methods of Rolling real <lb/>
Mr. II. S. who <lb/>
id advertising campaign for <lb/>
sale, showed his efficiency <lb/>
In drawing n crowd. <lb/>
From Pistol <lb/>
Shot <lb/>
Reports as lo the condition of Mr. <lb/>
Will Smith, who on Sunday <lb/>
was shot by Mr. Chas. <lb/>
a son of Mr. Ben about <lb/>
three miles west of Ayden, Is very <lb/>
gratifying, gad it is now thought the <lb/>
inflicted by tho pistol ball Is <lb/>
quite as serious as was first <lb/>
thought by the attending physician. <lb/>
The whereabouts of re- <lb/>
mains a mystery to Sheriff Dudley <lb/>
and his corpse of The search <lb/>
for tho would-be murderer continue <lb/>
and officers have hopes of soon round- <lb/>
him up. <lb/>
Wilson News <lb/>
Winterville Items. <lb/>
March 26- W. L. <lb/>
House can fit you up in anything in <lb/>
the hardware line at any time. It will <lb/>
pay you to him once. <lb/>
Mrs. B. C. Cox went to <lb/>
Friday, <lb/>
Lime, cement and it <lb/>
A W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Miss Jenkins of <lb/>
spent Sunday night with Miss <lb/>
Lee Spier. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your low quarter shoes. <lb/>
have them for both ladles and <lb/>
gentlemen. <lb/>
Tho new merchant next door to II. <lb/>
O. Chapman, a good place to go for <lb/>
fountain drinks, cigars and tobacco. <lb/>
Call and sea us. Cox and House. <lb/>
Miss is t of Ayden spent <lb/>
Saturday evening <lb/>
who first Pitt <lb/>
County Oil Co., has a few ions of <lb/>
prims cotton meal at attractive <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Just received a fresh lot of flour; <lb/>
It goes cheap for cash. It, W. Dall. <lb/>
H. W. Dall went to Washington <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Mrs. S. S. Wilson of near Ayden <lb/>
spent Sunday with Mrs. J. H. John- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
If you want shoes, notions and <lb/>
at the right price call in and <lb/>
see U House, he can give you <lb/>
bargains. <lb/>
Jess-- I. Rollins, John P. <lb/>
S. S. Smith went to Ayden Monday. <lb/>
Miss Johnson of Greene <lb/>
county, spent Sunday with Miss <lb/>
Johnson. <lb/>
If you want to get real out <lb/>
of your sowing buy a sewing ma- <lb/>
chine at A. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker of near <lb/>
ville was In town Sunday. <lb/>
A good price of labor saving farm <lb/>
implements, tho tooth harrow; <lb/>
get them now at Harrington, Barber <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Miss Carrie and daughter, <lb/>
Hell, of Ayden, spent Sunday <lb/>
with Mrs. H. T. Cox. <lb/>
We sell Cosby shoe. pair <lb/>
guaranteed to give satisfaction. Cox <lb/>
and House. <lb/>
For reasons useless to mention It <lb/>
Is necessary that the County Oil <lb/>
Co., close their books at once. All <lb/>
persons to this company are <lb/>
HI requested to make <lb/>
ate <lb/>
Mis. It. T. Cox and daughter, <lb/>
went to Greenville Monday. <lb/>
Messrs. R. W, Tucker and G. Tuck- <lb/>
went to Raleigh Monday. <lb/>
It. Dall buys Seattle and <lb/>
beef and fish. <lb/>
Company have bicycles <lb/>
and repairs for sale. <lb/>
Don't fa <lb/>
Don't fall to get prices on all kind <lb/>
feed stuff at Company <lb/>
before you purchase and they will <lb/>
save you money. Field peas a spec- <lb/>
WILSON, H. C March will <lb/>
again to write a few little Items. <lb/>
The fire alarms are not so frequent <lb/>
they were when I wrote before, <lb/>
I don't think we've had any since <lb/>
wrote <lb/>
Miss and Miss Mat- <lb/>
lie went to Bureau a few days <lb/>
ago and spent two or days <lb/>
relatives and friends. <lb/>
The Mr. George Smith <lb/>
held a ten days meeting at the <lb/>
Christian church which closed last <lb/>
Friday night with ill additions. Ho <lb/>
did some very good preaching. He <lb/>
seems to be over good <lb/>
preacher All enjoyed his <lb/>
and spoke In tho highest of praise to <lb/>
them <lb/>
Good Friday was somewhat a rough <lb/>
day but Sunday was <lb/>
and pleasant, enough <lb/>
lo up for It. They <lb/>
exercises by tho Sunday school <lb/>
the Christian church Sunday <lb/>
night and also at tho Methodist <lb/>
church. <lb/>
Mrs. M. II. Lewis of Middlesex is <lb/>
spending some In Wilson with <lb/>
her Mr. and Mrs. B, Mayo, <lb/>
and other relatives and friends. <lb/>
Mr. W. C. Mayo of Petersburg, a <lb/>
traveling salesman, was In town yes- <lb/>
and last night and left this <lb/>
morning for other points on tho N. <lb/>
S. road up toward Raleigh. <lb/>
I had the of meeting two <lb/>
of my friends from Pitt one day last <lb/>
week. Mr. J. R. of Greenville <lb/>
and Mr. Frank Davis of <lb/>
Miss Mary Flanagan of <lb/>
who is teaching Middlesex, <lb/>
the day Miss Little Sat- <lb/>
while on her way lo <lb/>
to pay a visit to the home folks. It <lb/>
was a very pleasant greeting to mo <lb/>
when I mot her and said <lb/>
for I think It was <lb/>
about tho first greeting of the kind <lb/>
I've had since been here, and I <lb/>
sounded very pleasant to me. <lb/>
It has rained and rained some <lb/>
more and bus kept tho ground so wit <lb/>
that my garden seeds the house <lb/>
yet and now looks like It is going <lb/>
to rain some more, but I hope It will <lb/>
wait long enough for mo to plant <lb/>
of my seeds. <lb/>
T. E. L. <lb/>
Miss Judith <lb/>
Durham <lb/>
Yesterday evening at o'clock <lb/>
at the Second Baptist parsonage, Mr. <lb/>
A. I'll and Miss <lb/>
were quietly married. On- <lb/>
a few of the intimate friends of <lb/>
the young were present, as <lb/>
the marriage a surprise lo nearly <lb/>
J. T. per- <lb/>
formed the nuptial cords. The young <lb/>
couple will make their home in this <lb/>
for the present. <lb/>
Mrs. Is one of the city's real- <lb/>
charming attractive young <lb/>
ladles. She came to Durham from <lb/>
Oxford, N. C, and since coming to <lb/>
this city has made many friends. <lb/>
Besides her friends In Durham, she <lb/>
Is also well known throughout the <lb/>
state and will receive the <lb/>
of <lb/>
Mr. holds a responsible <lb/>
with The Sun. been em- <lb/>
ployed here for tho pail two years. <lb/>
He Is one of the city's popular young <lb/>
who has many friends and <lb/>
is genial lo all. Since coming to the <lb/>
ho has made Tho Sun a very <lb/>
efficient man with all who <lb/>
will offer congratulations to him, tho <lb/>
entire Bun heartily <lb/>
him on his slop Into the field of <lb/>
sun. <lb/>
Mr. is well known to the <lb/>
of Greenville, having served <lb/>
Tho compositor nil <lb/>
manner previous to his ac- <lb/>
of a position with Dur- <lb/>
ham Sun. Not only Reflector <lb/>
force, but his large score of friends <lb/>
here for the young couple a long <lb/>
and happy voyage on sea of <lb/>
matrimony. <lb/>
Without Allowing a <lb/>
Single <lb/>
COM OLD AMERICAN NAMES <lb/>
i- Seen In News of Day In- <lb/>
New York Is Our Fore- <lb/>
most European Capital. <lb/>
In the news of one day In New York <lb/>
And that a man by tho name of Isl- <lb/>
ire Steinberg pleaded guilty lo big- <lb/>
In court of a Judge named <lb/>
that a youth named <lb/>
wag drowned; a <lb/>
named was convicted of keeping <lb/>
disorderly resort; a girl named Anna <lb/>
was a principal witness in n <lb/>
murder case; n Lo <lb/>
In domestic sensation; a <lb/>
Miss Bella brought a breach <lb/>
promise case; a Governor named <lb/>
sent a message to the legislature; <lb/>
was the star of <lb/>
n foot nice; another runner named <lb/>
Abed made a fast trial spin; <lb/>
and a Mr. Max figured In a <lb/>
hotel scandal. <lb/>
Tho names of<lb/>
stencil, Jensen, Yo- <lb/>
human. Mile- <lb/>
Waxier, <lb/>
Chert. <lb/>
and <lb/>
are the first lo assail eye on turn <lb/>
lug to n page of advertisements. <lb/>
In another generation or two these <lb/>
will be good old American names <lb/>
Meanwhile New York will to <lb/>
be our lore-most capital. <lb/>
CHAPEL March In- <lb/>
ability of the Trinity College, Con- <lb/>
baseball nine to land a sin- <lb/>
safe lilt from the twirling of the <lb/>
University of North Carolina team, <lb/>
Combined with an abundance of cost- <lb/>
errors by the lads, read <lb/>
their overwhelming defeat today by <lb/>
a score of to <lb/>
Carolina's youthful pitcher. Ben <lb/>
cock, run the gauntlet of their defeat <lb/>
throughout the nine in- <lb/>
and it was only by a bunt In <lb/>
tho second inning that a lone run was <lb/>
tallied to their credit. <lb/>
To the credit of Aycock Is the dis- <lb/>
of pitching the first no hit <lb/>
on home grounds in a couple <lb/>
of years, the last man to so <lb/>
was Stewart. <lb/>
pitching staff proved weak, and <lb/>
It was in the second Inning a <lb/>
change was made. Swift substituting <lb/>
for Warner. <lb/>
Johnson, Carolina's hefty slugger, <lb/>
nailed a bagger In the second In- <lb/>
sweeping the bases and added <lb/>
to the cosily errors commuted <lb/>
Trinity, six runs were credited to the <lb/>
Tar Heel's tally sheet in this inning. <lb/>
In the sixth inning tho only other <lb/>
Startling play of the game was re- <lb/>
corded when Captain <lb/>
bagger, followed in close <lb/>
by Johnson's second two base hit. <lb/>
Score H. H. K. <lb/>
Carolina . <lb/>
Trinity . o <lb/>
Summary Two bast hits, Johnson <lb/>
Three base hits. Stolen <lb/>
base Williams, Hart, Shel- <lb/>
ton. Murray. Base on off <lb/>
Warner off Swift <lb/>
on bases, Carolina Trinity <lb/>
Hit by pitched ball, Bailey, Leak. <lb/>
Williams. Hit. off Aycock off War- <lb/>
off Swift S. Struck out, by <lb/>
Aycock S; Warner Swift Time <lb/>
of Umpire, Henderson.<lb/>
Against Gardner <lb/>
Beaufort <lb/>
Iowa Teachers <lb/>
la., March <lb/>
The annual convention of tho North- <lb/>
eastern Iowa Teachers Association <lb/>
began hero today and will continue <lb/>
until Saturday A large attendance <lb/>
and unusually attractive program <lb/>
of papers, address and discussions <lb/>
combine to give promise of one of the <lb/>
most successful meetings In tho his- <lb/>
of the association. <lb/>
beard several men say that It <lb/>
a little about midday <lb/>
The people of the town are <lb/>
to the sessions of the confer- <lb/>
In Methodist church. <lb/>
Taming of the Shrew <lb/>
This Shakespearean play <lb/>
will be presented by tho pupils of <lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training <lb/>
School in the school auditorium next <lb/>
Monday night. 21st. It Is almost need- <lb/>
less lo advise the people of <lb/>
lend vicinity that a real feast <lb/>
them in the presentation of this play. <lb/>
Past along this line ha i <lb/>
learned them to expect something of <lb/>
a high order announcement is <lb/>
for a play at tho Training <lb/>
The students have been hard <lb/>
at work on the <lb/>
order to insure us coming up lo <lb/>
high mark by the <lb/>
Beats are being cheek- <lb/>
ed off at the store of the John I. <lb/>
Wooten Drug Co. and these who COS <lb/>
template attending should go early <lb/>
lo Insure tho best scats. <lb/>
William A. Junes <lb/>
William A. Jones, of tho few <lb/>
soldiers of tho <lb/>
now sitting in Congress, was born <lb/>
Ir the town of Warsaw, Va., March <lb/>
Near the close of the civil war. <lb/>
when he was but fifteen years of age, <lb/>
he the Virginia Military In- <lb/>
and remained until tho <lb/>
of Richmond, serving <lb/>
cadets who became fatuous In history <lb/>
for the part they took In the defense <lb/>
ct the capital city of the <lb/>
After the war Mr. Jones enter- <lb/>
ed the I of Virginia and <lb/>
graduated In Ho was admitted <lb/>
to the bar the same year and has <lb/>
since been engaged In the practice of <lb/>
law In his native state. Since <lb/>
he has been continuously a-e the con- <lb/>
representative of the First <lb/>
district of Virginia. <lb/>
SAYS ALL WOMEN ARE LIARS <lb/>
German Diplomat, Who Got the <lb/>
Declares Fair Sex <lb/>
Morally. <lb/>
women lire liars mid <lb/>
In their sense of moral <lb/>
and is the opinion of <lb/>
Baron <lb/>
la, unmarried attached lo <lb/>
German embassy at who <lb/>
rived on the recently. <lb/>
According to fellow passengers, th <lb/>
baron formed his views on <lb/>
when his attentions to Miss Katharine <lb/>
of Chicago did not meet <lb/>
hearty response, <lb/>
woman cannot recognize the <lb/>
same moral responsibility as a <lb/>
said the baron. marriage can re- <lb/>
main a happy one for more than a <lb/>
year. By that lime a mail will <lb/>
faith In his <lb/>
Than, turning to Miss the <lb/>
baron <lb/>
have had a trip. But <lb/>
to have you for a Wife If could <lb/>
You are too <lb/>
Returning to tho the <lb/>
baron <lb/>
is and <lb/>
worthy, She her mind too <lb/>
frequently. Woman has no feeding re <lb/>
quiring her to tell the truth, <lb/>
many a man and wife are comrades, <lb/>
but In Here the <lb/>
are proud and selfish and the <lb/>
men suffer for<lb/>
Eugene F. representative <lb/>
ii congress of the Eighth district of <lb/>
Jersey, years old today. <lb/>
Major General Adolphus W. <lb/>
C. S. A., retired, famous for his Arc- <lb/>
tic explorations, years old today. <lb/>
TO PITT <lb/>
TY FAIR <lb/>
lint, tire <lb/>
The no of ton Handing, <lb/>
are cure by wonderful, old able <lb/>
v in. n <lb/>
hi Meant a W Nap, Not s Wee <lb/>
After Charles Myers, a Mason <lb/>
barber, had finished up the <lb/>
he raised the chair, and his customers <lb/>
head fell over to one side. Tho barbel <lb/>
hi in up and him <lb/>
a little. <lb/>
were said Charley <lb/>
I agreed th <lb/>
gentleman In the chair. you'll <lb/>
have to come to my place am <lb/>
take one <lb/>
don't returned Charley. <lb/>
do I. I'm the new preach <lb/>
at tho First Street <lb/>
York World <lb/>
You are hereby requested to moot <lb/>
In the commissioners- room In <lb/>
County Courthouse on <lb/>
March at o'clock a. m. for tho <lb/>
purpose of electing board of <lb/>
and other officers for 1913, and <lb/>
sunk other business as may advise for <lb/>
the good of the association. <lb/>
Done by tho order of the executive <lb/>
this March 1913. <lb/>
D. J. J. U Wooten. <lb/>
President. <lb/>
and w till <lb/>
M HALF <lb/>
and half cotton seed, at per <lb/>
bushel. T. M. Moore. R. F. D. <lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
A case much interest was heard <lb/>
here afternoon, before Judge <lb/>
O. H. Allen in chamber, s <lb/>
In February, 1912, a Mr. <lb/>
merchant o. Norfolk, was assaulted In <lb/>
his store there. Mr. H. E. Gardner, <lb/>
a North Carolinian whoso home Is <lb/>
in Beaufort, was suspected of <lb/>
madS assault and a warrant <lb/>
issued for his arrest. The sup- <lb/>
position being that Gardner had gone <lb/>
is his homo in Beaufort, the warrant <lb/>
was sent to an officer there. This <lb/>
officer knowing that Gardner was at <lb/>
his home at the time of the assault <lb/>
on was alleged, declined to <lb/>
arrest him and returned Hie warrant <lb/>
Norfolk. <lb/>
Time went on and It was learned <lb/>
In Norfolk that Gardner was at work <lb/>
for the Norfolk Southern railroad la <lb/>
Requisition was made by <lb/>
the governor of Virginia on the gov- <lb/>
of North Carolina, armed <lb/>
this a special officer from Nor- <lb/>
folk went to to Gard- <lb/>
being arrested Gardner <lb/>
applied for a habeas corpus and this <lb/>
was set for a hearing here before <lb/>
Judge Allen Tuesday. <lb/>
Senator M. L. Davis of <lb/>
counsel for Gardner, Policeman <lb/>
of Beaufort, Policeman Bran of <lb/>
New and other citizens of Beau- <lb/>
fort were here to attend this hear- <lb/>
Mr. and tho Norfolk of- <lb/>
Bear also being present During <lb/>
progress of the hearing Judge Allen <lb/>
asked Mr. If he could Identify <lb/>
the man who assaulted him and <lb/>
answered that ho could, slat- <lb/>
that the man was then present <lb/>
In the court room. Being to <lb/>
point out the man. pointed at one <lb/>
in a group near by. Senator <lb/>
Davis then It. B, Gardner to <lb/>
stand up, and a different man arose <lb/>
from the one who had been pointed <lb/>
out. Senator Davis and tho others <lb/>
i Beaufort and New Bern <lb/>
declared to court that they per- <lb/>
knew- the man standing up <lb/>
to be R E. Gardner to he tho man <lb/>
who was standing up. as Mr. <lb/>
pointed out another man <lb/>
being his assailant. The <lb/>
also declared Gardner was <lb/>
at home in Beaufort the <lb/>
occurred In Norfolk. <lb/>
Judge Allen ordered Gardner re- <lb/>
leased from custody and dismissed the <lb/>
mailer. Gardner returned to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
In One Day tor- <lb/>
Victims <lb/>
OMAHA. Neb. March <lb/>
the dead and work reconstruction <lb/>
occupied tornado stricken Omaha to- <lb/>
day. Paying last rites occupied the <lb/>
time of thousands of persons. Fun- <lb/>
were held in all parts of the <lb/>
city. <lb/>
I Many of the bodies recovered from <lb/>
of Sunday's storm were car- <lb/>
ed for at undertaking establishments <lb/>
and a greater number of funerals <lb/>
j were held from those places. <lb/>
Whenever possible, friends of <lb/>
in families look care of bodies and <lb/>
had prepared for burial. <lb/>
In many instances churches were <lb/>
demolished In the districts covered by <lb/>
I the storm and others were so badly <lb/>
wrecked us to prevent thorn being <lb/>
for burial services Nearly <lb/>
funerals were held Many bodies have <lb/>
been sent to out of town relatives <lb/>
During the night the work of <lb/>
continued. Only one body was <lb/>
reported recovered, that of another <lb/>
burled In pool <lb/>
hell debris The authorities are <lb/>
slops to uncover all of the wreck- <lb/>
age <lb/>
Freckled Girls <lb/>
It is an absolute fact, that one SO cent <lb/>
of WILSON'S FRECKLE <lb/>
will either remove your freckles or cause <lb/>
them to fade and that two jars will even <lb/>
in the most cases completely <lb/>
cure them. We arc willing to personally <lb/>
guarantee to return your money <lb/>
without argument if complexion is <lb/>
not fully restored to its natural beauty. <lb/>
WILSON'S FRECKLE CREAM <lb/>
line, fragrant and absolutely harmless. <lb/>
make hair prow but will <lb/>
remove TAN, PIMPLES and <lb/>
FRECKLES. Come in today try it. <lb/>
The jars are and results absolute- <lb/>
certain. Sent mail if desired. <lb/>
Price Mammoth jars <lb/>
SON'S FAIR SKIN SOAP <lb/>
For sale by <lb/>
Skin g<lb/>
of James I of England <lb/>
and accession of Charles I. <lb/>
Bradstreet, the <lb/>
famous colonial governors of <lb/>
New England, died in Salem, <lb/>
Mass. Born in England In <lb/>
1866Th federals commenced the <lb/>
of Spanish Fort, one cf <lb/>
principal defenses of Mobile. <lb/>
B. Fall and Thomas B. <lb/>
elected first United <lb/>
States senator from Arizona. <lb/>
English poet <lb/>
laureate died. Horn In 1774. <lb/>
H. Burnett inaugurated <lb/>
first governor of California. <lb/>
and France concluded <lb/>
agreement on the Nile <lb/>
question. <lb/>
men killed In a coal mine <lb/>
explosion Okla. <lb/>
P. FITTS, IT. C. <lb/>
Greenville Hours to <lb/>
and Fridays <lb/>
Office ever Frank Wilson Store. <lb/>
connection. <lb/>
Examination is free. <lb/>
i,. <lb/>
J. V. <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
en <lb/>
North Carol <lb/>
Che only Merchant Tailor <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
Has moved in rear of <lb/>
Blue Store, where <lb/>
those needing his services will find <lb/>
him ready to on them. <lb/>
Full of very newest samples for <lb/>
CLOTHING <lb/>
and made to order promptly <lb/>
from up. <lb/>
clothing cleaned, pressed, <lb/>
your work and get <lb/>
he best. Phone and work will <lb/>
e Bent for when desired. <lb/>
n. c. march <lb/>
MESSRS. <lb/>
CO, <lb/>
X. t. <lb/>
HEAR WISH TO AGENCY FOR CHECK <lb/>
FOR I FOR TEX <lb/>
DUE HEW. POLL <lb/>
CY CARRIED WITH <lb/>
I ADVISE THE PUBLIC TO BUT <lb/>
POLICY. S. W. <lb/>
Moseley Bros., Agents <lb/>
QUININE AND IRON MOST <lb/>
EFFECTUAL TONIC <lb/>
RELIEVES PAIN AND HEALS <lb/>
AT THE SAME TIME <lb/>
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic Combines The Wonderful, Old Reliable Dr. Porter <lb/>
The Quinine drives Healing Oil. An Antiseptic <lb/>
out Malaria and the builds up <lb/>
the System. For Adults <lb/>
Children. <lb/>
You know om me taking when <lb/>
take <lb/>
TONIC, for V. v <lb/>
out the South as the Malaria, j <lb/>
Chill and Genera <lb/>
Strengthening it is a; as <lb/>
bitter t but . <lb/>
last the bitter the <lb/>
lo not dissolve in the mouth hut lo i <lb/>
in the stomach. , <lb/>
your Druggist. We mean i <lb/>
it. <lb/>
Surgical Dressing discovered by an <lb/>
Old R. R. Surgeon. Prevents Blood <lb/>
Poisoning. <lb/>
Thousands of families know it already, <lb/>
and a trial will convince that DR. <lb/>
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING <lb/>
OIL is the st remedy ever <lb/>
Wounds. Hums. Old <lb/>
Carbuncles. Granulated IX Lids, <lb/>
Son Throat, Skin or Scalp Diseases and <lb/>
nil wounds and external diseases whether <lb/>
slight or serious. Con Dually people are <lb/>
new uses for this famous old <lb/>
remedy Guaranteed your Druggist <lb/>
We mean it. <lb/>
There is Only One <lb/>
Look tor signature V. GROVE a<lb/>
Thai Is <lb/>
box CoM in Day.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018241_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Legal Notices. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
Having duly qualified <lb/>
Conn clerk of Pitt county u <lb/>
executrix t the last will mid <lb/>
of J. II. notice <lb/>
Is I to all mi t- <lb/>
to the make <lb/>
payment to and <lb/>
u I <lb/>
estate i I t I <lb/>
to the I on <lb/>
before the r <lb/>
Ibis notice will be plead In bar i<lb/>
This 6th r March, 1913. <lb/>
JEMIMA MIL P. <lb/>
S r. of J, n. <lb/>
MM Iii CREDITORS <lb/>
Having i super- <lb/>
i l c Pitt ad- <lb/>
of the of Oscar <lb/>
Johnson, d is hereby <lb/>
given to . . ii . to the <lb/>
i to <lb/>
to the and . all persons <lb/>
Inst the estate <lb/>
notified to to the <lb/>
; i or I <lb/>
the i 1914, or <lb/>
this notice v. ill bar <lb/>
i el r. <lb/>
This <lb/>
M JOHNSON, <lb/>
.-. . Oscar <lb/>
CT Hi <lb/>
cum at the mouth of a branch, <lb/>
lie Little's comer, with <lb/>
lie line north. B MM <lb/>
feet to the beginning containing <lb/>
acres, more or loss. It being In; <lb/>
No, on the map the survey at <lb/>
the Miles Little land, made by <lb/>
sad In Ms ch, 1908, <lb/>
J. <lb/>
ALBION DUNN,<lb/>
VALUABLE HI LOTS <lb/>
t public auction Saturday, April <lb/>
I n A. M. I will sell <lb/>
Public Auction on premises known <lb/>
its the Carolina Warehouse lot, <lb/>
in lots. <lb/>
This trait about one acre, <lb/>
i Is one of the finest locations In <lb/>
the City of Five lots, each <lb/>
f. fronts Heritage <lb/>
one lot l feet, fronts <lb/>
and one lot feet, <lb/>
fronts street. The right <lb/>
i served, after selling It in lots, to <lb/>
I it tor sale a whole. <lb/>
T Strictly Cash. <lb/>
Private before sale will be con- <lb/>
1-n-w A V. <lb/>
n Greenville, N. c. <lb/>
Skin Diseases <lb/>
Nearly every skin disease yields <lb/>
quickly and permanently to <lb/>
Salve, and nothing is <lb/>
better for hums or bruises. Soothes <lb/>
SALE <lb/>
By virtue the power of sale con- <lb/>
in a certain mortgage from <lb/>
J II. Miller and wife to J. R. Harvey <lb/>
and Co. dated May 11th, 1907, and and heals. Joan of <lb/>
recorded In Dock T-S, page In I Mich., says, after suffering twelve <lb/>
the register of deeds office of Pitt g skin and <lb/>
county the undersigned will sell . . ., ,, . <lb/>
cash before the court house door <lb/>
at noon on Thursday. <lb/>
April 10th. the following de- <lb/>
scribed lying and being in <lb/>
the county of Pitt and town of <lb/>
ton. and known designated as <lb/>
One lot which is fully de- <lb/>
scribed In a certain deed from C. C. <lb/>
House to J II. Miller, said deed bear- <lb/>
date April 17th. 1905, and duly <lb/>
recorded in the register of deeds <lb/>
cured him. It will help <lb/>
you. Only Recommended by all <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S <lb/>
Having qualified as administrator <lb/>
of J. S. Mooring, deceased, late of <lb/>
Pitt county, this is to notify all per- <lb/>
claims against t;. i <lb/>
1st u i to them <lb/>
to the undersigned property proven <lb/>
within IS months of this date, <lb/>
notice Will be pleaded in bar of <lb/>
n eon <lb/>
All persons Indebted to said estate <lb/>
payment. <lb/>
Us March 12th, I <lb/>
I. V. TUCKER, <lb/>
Administrator, <lb/>
r ;. JAMES and SON. <lb/>
H ltd <lb/>
mi in OF OF u. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale <lb/>
i In a certain mortgage deed <lb/>
delivered by s. P. <lb/>
ell and Lucretia to G. S. <lb/>
. J. Dixon, which said mortgage <lb/>
deed appears of record in the <lb/>
Pitt county book <lb/>
M-7. page the under signed, as <lb/>
i e, v, ill on Saturday, the <lb/>
day of April, 1918, at o'clock <lb/>
expose to public sale before the t <lb/>
house door In Greenville, to e <lb/>
I t l for cash, the follow- <lb/>
r property, to <lb/>
a tract in Swift crock town <lb/>
i ; Pin county, adjoining the Ian Is <lb/>
of j Causey, Archibald Dudley, <lb/>
an ; others, i ginning at a <lb/>
stake, ti corner and runs N <lb/>
IV to a N <lb/>
SO to n stake; n S V. <lb/>
1-J to a stake; then S K <lb/>
poles to a stake; then S its W <lb/>
s E poles to a <lb/>
stake; then s W polos to Ore <lb/>
line; then with said line to the be- <lb/>
ginning, containing acres, more<lb/>
sale will be made for the <lb/>
pose Of satisfying the terms of said <lb/>
mortgage deed, <lb/>
This the 20th day of March, 1913. <lb/>
G. S. and J. J. DIXON. <lb/>
s. <lb/>
HARDING and PIERCE, Attorneys. <lb/>
ltd<lb/>
OF <lb/>
Sheets <lb/>
the <lb/>
WHO HIS <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
North Carolina. Pitt county. <lb/>
In the superior court. <lb/>
Peter Langley vs Langley. <lb/>
The defendant above named will <lb/>
notice, that an action entitled <lb/>
flee of Pitt county May In as ,.,, commenced In the <lb/>
book M-8. page 4.9. Sold to court of Pitt county, to ob- <lb/>
I v- CO defendant will <lb/>
. further notice that she Is re- <lb/>
o Mortgagees. .,,,,,,,. t <lb/>
JAMES son. ,.,, superior court, which <lb/>
on the 28th day of April. <lb/>
t the court of Pitt county. <lb/>
In , N. C., to or de- <lb/>
TO CREDITORS <lb/>
Having duly d <lb/>
to I said action <lb/>
the plaintiff will apply to the court <lb/>
of the estate . . , . ,.,,. <lb/>
Arlen <lb/>
by given I <lb/>
the estate to<lb/>
i . <lb/>
on i F <lb/>
i ltd <lb/>
ll d . <lb/>
D C, MOORE <lb/>
i r I <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
Nor I i .<lb/>
Stomach Trouble Cured <lb/>
There Is nothing more <lb/>
than a chronic disorder of the <lb/>
It Is not surprising that many <lb/>
suffer for years with such an ailment <lb/>
when a permanent cure Is within their <lb/>
reach and may be had for a trifle <lb/>
one year says P. II f <lb/>
Beck of Mich., bought <lb/>
a package of Chamberlain's Tablets <lb/>
and since using them I have felt per- <lb/>
well, l had previously used <lb/>
any number of different medicines, <lb/>
hut none of them were of any <lb/>
For b all druggists, <lb/>
mini or i <lb/>
I . <lb/>
. N I V I, Ward <lb/>
Bi me<lb/>
the court In I <lb/>
t i N. t entitled proceed <lb/>
, , ., consent , , rein, will on Mi <lb/>
-I ; <lb/>
T. Spier the sen member of I , <lb/>
run or I Lying and being In the county and <lb/>
. . , Ms i referred to, In the town <lb/>
name. , and John <lb/>
. , . , Ward lot. being near Atlantic <lb/>
Spier and Jackson tn Coast Line railroad and described <lb/>
be paid by M. T. Spier at ill in the i i A D. Cos to John <lb/>
counts owing the firm to be paid ti book 1-7. page Pitt county <lb/>
M. T. Spier of deeds office, containing on--- <lb/>
., , . . . fourth of an acre, and with a small <lb/>
Ms the 10th day of March. 1913, i on <lb/>
A. JACKSON. This the 16th day of March, V <lb/>
M. T. SPIER. S. J. EVERETT <lb/>
ltd Commission, r. <lb/>
Mrs. Eaton Either k Held <lb/>
Or Released <lb/>
Hi About 1-2 Allies Of <lb/>
Sunday Night. <lb/>
For <lb/>
Murderer <lb/>
A shooting ended the <lb/>
of a bridal party, and will, it Is <lb/>
believed, cause the death of the groom. <lb/>
occurred Sunday night between the <lb/>
hours Of and o'clock about 1-3 <lb/>
west of when Chas. M.-- <lb/>
Lawhorn shot Will D. Smith. <lb/>
Sunday at o'clock Mr. <lb/>
daughter was married to <lb/>
Smith, and while there were no s, <lb/>
objection, the match displeased <lb/>
lather of the bride to the extent that <lb/>
ho refused to witness the ceremony, <lb/>
The young couple, knowing how Mr. <lb/>
fell as. to their marriage, <lb/>
bad planned to go to some neighbor- <lb/>
home for the ceremony, but hear- <lb/>
of their Intentions, the father Said <lb/>
he preferred that it take place at his <lb/>
home, as long as were <lb/>
ed to wed. So it was there they be- <lb/>
came man and Wife in the presence <lb/>
several friends and relatives. <lb/>
After the marriage the couple went <lb/>
to the home of the groom where a <lb/>
upper had been spread for the <lb/>
Was a frequent visitor <lb/>
to the home of young Smith as he. <lb/>
and the elder Smith <lb/>
bad for a lone while been boson <lb/>
friends, and night ho to <lb/>
tie home after a long with <lb/>
Mr. Dave Smith, the father of the <lb/>
red i room el <lb/>
bridal party and Ii wore <lb/>
, lie seen I to bi In <lb/>
1.1 nil it, <lb/>
his i In-law, <lb/>
b the root whet <lb/>
I from bis i <lb/>
i . <lb/>
; under the <lb/>
th, bull low the <lb/>
t and pi i hi <lb/>
who <lb/>
his i i of recover <lb/>
are n t at all I as the <lb/>
out d If, not II b many <lb/>
complications of diseases, would no <lb/>
doubt cause bis death. <lb/>
Immediately after the shooting. <lb/>
the would-be murderer, <lb/>
lift the room and depart, d for parts <lb/>
unknown.<lb/>
el <lb/>
A Picture of Contentment <lb/>
All men look pleased when they smoke <lb/>
this choice tobacco for all men like the rich <lb/>
quality and true, natural flavor of <lb/>
BE <lb/>
A Card <lb/>
In justice to myself and also to <lb/>
Mr. Spier I want to say to my friends <lb/>
and the public generally that the dis- <lb/>
solution of firm of Spier and <lb/>
Jackson was not caused by any dis- <lb/>
agreement or friction whatsoever be- <lb/>
tween us. on tho other hand our <lb/>
business relations has been <lb/>
pleasant and my withdraw- <lb/>
to my declining health, and I ask <lb/>
my friends and the public general- <lb/>
to give to Mr. II T. Spier the <lb/>
surviving member, the same merit <lb/>
of confidence and patronage the <lb/>
future BI in the <lb/>
A. C. JACKSON. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
MUM I PI lie SALE <lb/>
in me <lb/>
by that mot to <lb/>
me I I wife <lb/>
Little . the of- <lb/>
fer <lb/>
In I <lb/>
ll auction <lb/>
to the highest bidder at the court <lb/>
i i door in the town of <lb/>
on the 19th of April, 1913, <lb/>
o'clock, noon, the following de- <lb/>
scribed tract of real estate, lying. <lb/>
being situate in the county S <lb/>
Pitt and state of North Carolina, to <lb/>
A certain tract of land left to the <lb/>
Id Sam by bis father Miles <lb/>
Little and deeded to the said Sam <lb/>
Little by Ma.-o. Little and <lb/>
and described as Be- <lb/>
ginning at an Iron stake corner of <lb/>
Will Little, Little and Sarah <lb/>
Little, and running with Sarah Lit <lb/>
line degrees and <lb/>
seconds to a in <lb/>
creek with gum pointers. <lb/>
Sarah Little's thence down <lb/>
the run of Creek to a <lb/>
STATE OF <lb/>
Department of State <lb/>
Certificate of Dissolution <lb/>
To All to Whom These Presents May<lb/>
Whereas, It appears to my <lb/>
faction, by duly authenticated record <lb/>
cf the proceedings for the voluntary <lb/>
dissolution thereof by the unanimous <lb/>
consent of all the stockholders, de- <lb/>
posited In my office, that The John <lb/>
Flanagan Buggy Company, a <lb/>
ration of this state whose principal <lb/>
office is situate at No. <lb/>
street, in the town of Greenville. <lb/>
county of Pitt. State of North Caro- <lb/>
M. Hooker being the agent <lb/>
and in charge upon <lb/>
whom process may be <lb/>
with the requirements o <lb/>
i 1906 <lb/>
oral I <lb/>
i-suing of this Certificate of ii <lb/>
Now. Therefore, I, J. Bryan i <lb/>
of of the State <lb/>
North Carolina, do hereby certify that <lb/>
i id corporation did. on the day <lb/>
of March. in my office a <lb/>
duly executed and attested consent <lb/>
writing to the dissolution of said <lb/>
corporation, executed by all the stock- <lb/>
holders thereof, which said consent <lb/>
the record of tho proceedings <lb/>
aforesaid are now on file In my said <lb/>
office as provided by law. <lb/>
In Testimony Whereof. I have here- <lb/>
unto set my hand and affixed my <lb/>
seal, at Raleigh, this day <lb/>
or March, A. D., 1913. <lb/>
J. BRYAN GRIMES, <lb/>
Secretary of State. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Scarcity of <lb/>
Mr. L. K. a of <lb/>
township, tolls us that In <lb/>
his section, and all through from <lb/>
den to Vanceboro, there Is going to <lb/>
sin- la Charged With The math of <lb/>
The Hum <lb/>
Witnesses Will Be <lb/>
ed To <lb/>
PLYMOUTH, Mass. March <lb/>
In the case of Mrs. Jennie May <lb/>
who is charged with the <lb/>
of her husband, Rear Admiral <lb/>
Joseph G. Eaton, by administering <lb/>
poison, will be presented before the <lb/>
gland jury which will meet in spec- <lb/>
session here tomorrow. The Jury <lb/>
will determine whether the widow of <lb/>
the admiral shall be Indicted or <lb/>
lowed her liberty. <lb/>
than witnesses are expect- <lb/>
ed to appear before the grand Jury. <lb/>
Those who have been summoned In- <lb/>
the neighbors of the Eaton <lb/>
family, in the town of and <lb/>
county authorities and who <lb/>
have been concerned In the <lb/>
As intimated at the time of the <lb/>
Mrs. Baton, some of th con- <lb/>
with case believe a <lb/>
commission may be appointed <lb/>
mini hi r. <lb/>
l . v ;. ., has <lb/>
conducting th Us lion Is <lb/>
said to have l will C f <lb/>
s Q, th , re- <lb/>
; such a <lb/>
i spent today quietly at <lb/>
the county jail. She received no <lb/>
did not attend the <lb/>
in the jail. <lb/>
Si eh was continued today in an <lb/>
endeavor to locate tho source of tho <lb/>
arsenic alleged to have caused the <lb/>
death of Admiral Thus far the <lb/>
authorities admit they have not learn- <lb/>
, l where the poison was purchased. <lb/>
a scarcity of tobacco plants. He <lb/>
said that Is due to seed in the plant <lb/>
bids failing to come up and what few <lb/>
plants did come up are inferior. <lb/>
the farmers who saw no pros- <lb/>
of getting plants, conceited their <lb/>
for for tobacco. If <lb/>
this plant condition Is general It will <lb/>
mean a small tobacco crop next sea- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
Chapel Hill <lb/>
CHAPEL march <lb/>
gaging the attention of the high <lb/>
pupils of the stale and of par- <lb/>
Interest to budding young <lb/>
in all the schools for the next <lb/>
three weeks is the annual state <lb/>
championship track <lb/>
Held meet at Chapel Hill on April <lb/>
Definite plans have been out- <lb/>
lined by the Greater Council of the <lb/>
University, the Athletic Association <lb/>
and the alumni of the institution, for <lb/>
the gathering together of young <lb/>
from all sections of the state <lb/>
on the above mentioned dale. <lb/>
and literature <lb/>
bearing on the meet have been <lb/>
mailed tho principals of the high <lb/>
schools and preparatory schools of <lb/>
tho inviting in <lb/>
this the first athletic contest of Stats- <lb/>
Wide significance and scope lo high <lb/>
school lads. The purport of the meet <lb/>
Is to add to the training of <lb/>
young athletes in North Carolina and <lb/>
give additional stress to the <lb/>
the development the phys-l <lb/>
of the future citizens of the state. <lb/>
to the same degree as the <lb/>
bating of North In I <lb/>
Its recent successful con. <lb/>
at the training of the intellect In <lb/>
tactics of so does this I <lb/>
propose lo strength n the body <lb/>
high school pupils, thus <lb/>
the Whole makeup of the Individual, <lb/>
contest Is open to all the <lb/>
and secondary schools of <lb/>
the stale. The events of the meet. <lb/>
win he tin in yard dash. <lb/>
yard run, yard rim, mile. <lb/>
yard low hurdle, high Jump, broad <lb/>
pole vault, pound shot put. <lb/>
pound hammer throw. Individual <lb/>
as well as school prises will be <lb/>
swarded for the best exhibitions In <lb/>
this meet. The state championship <lb/>
will be awarded in engraved i up. <lb/>
visiting during their <lb/>
sojourn In Chapel Hill will be <lb/>
by the Greater University <lb/>
Council. <lb/>
Smoked in pipes by of <lb/>
known to smokers as <lb/>
We take pride In Duke's <lb/>
Mixture it Is our leading brand of granulated tobacco <lb/>
and every sack we make Is a challenge to all other tobacco <lb/>
manufacturers Every sack of this famous <lb/>
contains one a half ounces of choice <lb/>
tobacco. In every equal to the yon can buy at any <lb/>
price, and with each sack you a book of cigarette <lb/>
papers FREE <lb/>
If yon not smoked the Duke's Mixture made by tho <lb/>
Tobacco Co. st Durham, N. C try it now. <lb/>
Get a Camera, with the Coupons <lb/>
Save the coupons. With them you can get all sorts of <lb/>
able suitable fur young and <lb/>
Sid t men. women, girls. You <lb/>
delighted to see what you get free with- <lb/>
out one cent of cost to you. our Dew <lb/>
illustrated catalog. At a wt <lb/>
wilt mend it free daring September and <lb/>
October only. Your name and address, <lb/>
a postal will bring it to you <lb/>
from mat <lb/>
,, HORSESHOE, J T., <lb/>
NATURAL LEAK. <lb/>
TWIST. FOUR <lb/>
i PICK <lb/>
PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGAR- <lb/>
other or by <lb/>
Premium Dept. <lb/>
ST. LOUIS, MO.<lb/>
Bad Spoils <lb/>
suffered, girlhood, from womanly <lb/>
Writes Mrs. Motile Navy, of Walnut, N. C last, was <lb/>
almost and had to give We had three <lb/>
doctors. the time, I was Getting worse. I had bad <lb/>
spells, lasted from to days, one week, after I <lb/>
gave a trial, I could eat, sleep, and Joke, as well as <lb/>
anybody. In weeks, I was well. I had been an invalid <lb/>
for weary years relieved me, when everything <lb/>
else <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
Tho <lb/>
If you are weak and ailing, think what It would mean, <lb/>
to you, to recover as quickly as Mrs. Navy did. For more <lb/>
than years, this purely vegetable, tonic women, <lb/>
has been used by thousands of weak and ailing sufferers. <lb/>
They found It of real value in relieving their aches and <lb/>
pains. Why suffer longer A remedy that has relieved <lb/>
and helped so many, is ready, at the nearest drug store, for <lb/>
use, at once, by Try ft, today. <lb/>
Write Advisory Dent- Medicine Co. <lb/>
for Special book. Hoot toe <lb/>
Lanterns <lb/>
Strong and Durable <lb/>
For Fishing, <lb/>
Camping, <lb/>
and Hard <lb/>
Use Under AH <lb/>
Conditions. <lb/>
Give steady, bright light. <lb/>
Easy to clean and <lb/>
Don't blow out in the wind. <lb/>
Easy to Light. <lb/>
Don't Smoke. <lb/>
Don't Leak. <lb/>
AT DEALERS <lb/>
N . w N. <lb/>
STANDARD OIL COMPANY <lb/>
la <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
Miss Fanny Crosby, blind <lb/>
writer, years oM <lb/>
Miss Margaret only <lb/>
of Mr. Mrs Andrew Carnegie. <lb/>
years old today. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS <lb/>
RESOURCES OVER<lb/>
THE LARGEST BANK IN PITT COUNTY <lb/>
Selected as a legal depository by the State Treasurer of N. C,. also by the Treasury Depart- <lb/>
of the United States as a depository for Postal Funds. <lb/>
This Bank made the largest gain in deposits last year of any bank in Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
THERE IS A REASON WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS <lb/>
E G. Flanagan, Pres. <lb/>
E. B. Higgs, V-Pres. <lb/>
C. S. Carr, Cashier <lb/>
Social and <lb/>
Personal Mention. <lb/>
Monday's <lb/>
Mis. Hattie White returned <lb/>
day evening from <lb/>
Mr. David Dixon, of spent <lb/>
Sunday lure. <lb/>
Miss Louise Fleming went to <lb/>
Sunday evening to attend <lb/>
a party Miss Agnes Cotten <lb/>
Timberlake at the borne of her grand- <lb/>
Col. and Mrs. It, K. Cotten. <lb/>
Miss Jamie Bryan returned to <lb/>
son Sunday evening. here she is <lb/>
teaching, <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. H. S. of <lb/>
Wilson, spent Easter bore with, his <lb/>
father, Ur. Henry <lb/>
Mr. s. came <lb/>
morning from Maysville, Ky., where <lb/>
be has been engaged In tho <lb/>
s i, <lb/>
Mr. o. it. Bowling came down from <lb/>
Wilson Saturday evening to spend <lb/>
Easter with his parents. <lb/>
Mr. Wiley Drown came home <lb/>
from Wilmington Saturday evening <lb/>
to visit bis parents. <lb/>
Miss Mary Brown Came home from <lb/>
I In Greensboro to <lb/>
with her parents. <lb/>
Mr. Brown came home from <lb/>
school Durham to spend <lb/>
With his parents. <lb/>
Mr. S. J. Everett and little son <lb/>
spent Sunday with near <lb/>
Oak City. <lb/>
Messrs. Willie Gray Lang and <lb/>
Jr. spent Sunday in <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
Mrs, Rowland and Mrs. H. <lb/>
W. and little son spent Sun- <lb/>
day and today with Mrs, C. <lb/>
ard. <lb/>
Mr. R. II. Tucker, who is teaching <lb/>
at spent Saturday and <lb/>
Sunday here. <lb/>
Miss Roland Jenkins went to Win- <lb/>
Sunday evening and returned<lb/>
Mr. I. left for <lb/>
a visit in Virginia. <lb/>
Miss Mary of Baltimore, Is <lb/>
visiting Mrs. H. K. Austin. <lb/>
Miss Annie Nelson of Fail-field Is <lb/>
visiting her uncle, Mr. It. L. <lb/>
Mrs. C. W. Gold of Is <lb/>
visiting her sister, Mrs. J G. <lb/>
Colored <lb/>
Tho Colored Teachers Association <lb/>
of County held a very Interesting <lb/>
session Saturday at the colored graded <lb/>
school building, Teacher Manning <lb/>
Moore, President and Principal It. <lb/>
Kearney of School, Sure. <lb/>
conducted by Tea t <lb/>
Method of Teaching English <lb/>
mar by Principal C. M. Eppes. <lb/>
Teachers considerable <lb/>
.-t by asking questions. <lb/>
v. Cherry, <lb/>
Unwell. S. E, Hanson. <lb/>
and Brown. <lb/>
Music. <lb/>
Method of Teaching Arithmetic, by <lb/>
Principal S. Brown, Vol- <lb/>
on this were Teachers <lb/>
s. K. Dawson, Cox and . <lb/>
How t i; Tc ti r <lb/>
analysis <lb/>
i ii, s by Principal <lb/>
Mis. who was absent. Com- <lb/>
method was by <lb/>
conductor. <lb/>
Ai tin next meeting, fourth Saturday <lb/>
in April. Principals Brown and Eppes <lb/>
Dawson and <lb/>
will discuss character building and <lb/>
phonies, respectively. <lb/>
The teachers unanimously elected <lb/>
. M. Eppes association reporter. <lb/>
Great desire for an Institution <lb/>
pressed by all teachers after this very <lb/>
hi I meeting. Reporter. <lb/>
Mrs. Dudley Dies <lb/>
This afternoon the funeral <lb/>
sen ices over the body of Mrs. W. C. <lb/>
Dudley arc being held at tho <lb/>
on the coiner Third <lb/>
Pierce streets, conducted by Rev. H. <lb/>
pastor of the First <lb/>
church. <lb/>
For some time past Mrs. Dudley <lb/>
has been HI a complication of dis- <lb/>
eases, including heart trouble. She <lb/>
experienced a sudden turn for the <lb/>
worse last Thursday and in spite of <lb/>
every possible effort to prolong her <lb/>
life, she grew rapidly worse until the <lb/>
end came yesterday morning. <lb/>
Mrs. Dudley was born July <lb/>
i her maiden name being Le- <lb/>
Full es. She was born and <lb/>
ed In put county, near Greenville. <lb/>
About years ago she was married <lb/>
to Mr. Dudley, a prominent <lb/>
business man of the section. The <lb/>
family moved to Washington years <lb/>
where Mrs. Dudley has <lb/>
since. About eight years ago her <lb/>
husband died. For sometime previous <lb/>
to her death she bad resided In tho <lb/>
home of her daughter, Mrs. II. A. Wat- <lb/>
sou, at the corner of Third and Pierce <lb/>
is survived by three sons, <lb/>
Messrs, W, I. Dudley. Dudley. <lb/>
Claude Dudley, all of Washing- <lb/>
ton, and by three daughters, Mrs. <lb/>
Hugh A. Watson, Miss Pearl Dudley, <lb/>
and Miss lone Dudley and by three <lb/>
sisters in the vicinity of Greenville <lb/>
Shakespearean and Stalely <lb/>
in i a of <lb/>
Shrew <lb/>
Who does not tho songs of <lb/>
long ago Taming of tho <lb/>
will offer two delightful <lb/>
Shakespearean lyrics, Mistress <lb/>
and was a Lover and His <lb/>
The State Gavotte, danced by six <lb/>
gay cavaliers and their ladles, guests <lb/>
at the wedding least, to the measures <lb/>
Of d by Louis <lb/>
will be u most attractive <lb/>
At the Training School March <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Murder Trial Begins la <lb/>
DALLAS, Texas, March <lb/>
case of J. A. under Indict- <lb/>
for the murder of Captain J. L. <lb/>
White, was called for trial In the <lb/>
criminal district court today. <lb/>
ton is alleged to have mid fa- <lb/>
tally wounded Captain White In tho <lb/>
offices of the Republic Trust Company <lb/>
on February The victim <lb/>
of the in and <lb/>
one of beat known citizens of Dal-I <lb/>
las. One of the principal wine <lb/>
at the trial will Silvers, <lb/>
I. president the 1st <lb/>
who was shot and wound- <lb/>
ed at the same time that Captain <lb/>
White was killed. <lb/>
Means <lb/>
SCHOOL KIDS, <lb/>
Where Ike barn things to do <lb/>
and , <lb/>
and then home and make <lb/>
tin play <lb/>
For Bread mid Batter, <lb/>
and <lb/>
ill., it's u how many <lb/>
limits give them the Hist <lb/>
Baked, <lb/>
let Bakery Feed tho Kids <lb/>
WILLIAMS <lb/>
An Enjoyable Easter <lb/>
Easter Sunday us as <lb/>
weather as could wished for. <lb/>
All of the churches had large <lb/>
and the special music at <lb/>
as well as the excellent sermons, was <lb/>
greatly enjoyed. <lb/>
Subscribe to the Reflector <lb/>
On Trial for Killing Farmer <lb/>
March <lb/>
John Woodruff was arraigned tho <lb/>
circuit court here today to stand trial <lb/>
on an Indictment charging him with <lb/>
tho murder of H. last <lb/>
October. While on a hunting trip <lb/>
Woodruff and two companions are <lb/>
sold to have trespassed on the grounds <lb/>
of who was a wealthy farm- <lb/>
ed the hunters off <lb/>
Us premises and In th- that <lb/>
ensued Woodruff Is alleged to have <lb/>
shot and killed the farmer. <lb/>
Opened to <lb/>
SPOKANE, Was. March <lb/>
first parcel in a total of nearly 30.-1 <lb/>
nun acres of government land which <lb/>
will opened during the next six <lb/>
Weeks In eastern Washington was i <lb/>
public entry today. Rich <lb/>
farming, grazing and timbered lands <lb/>
are included in the area. The <lb/>
est parcel, comprising 22.114 acres of <lb/>
timber land in county <lb/>
will opened to entry May I. The <lb/>
thrown open today consists of <lb/>
1.413 acres of grazing and farming <lb/>
land Douglas county. <lb/>
Little Hoy Tries to Share <lb/>
Little Justus Everett, year old son <lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Everett, was <lb/>
Interested In watching his father shave <lb/>
The other day he slipped up <lb/>
climbed on a chair that enabled him <lb/>
to reach tho top drawer of the dress- <lb/>
got his father's razor went <lb/>
about imitating the shaving stunt. A <lb/>
scream up stairs attracted the <lb/>
of his mother hastening <lb/>
there found the little boy still stand- <lb/>
on the chair and there was blood <lb/>
on his cheek. As soon as he <lb/>
his mother he cried out me, I'm <lb/>
killed. I'm Tho blood <lb/>
quickly washed off when it was found <lb/>
that be had cut Just a little <lb/>
on his cheek, it gave him <lb/>
a fright that he will likely wait <lb/>
ho begins to grow some Heard be- <lb/>
fore trying to shave himself again. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
March 1918. <lb/>
Miss Estelle who been <lb/>
visiting her brother Florida, re- <lb/>
turned Friday. <lb/>
Mr. F. P, Savage, of Tarboro, spout <lb/>
Tn, with his sister, Mrs. J. Paul <lb/>
Davenport. <lb/>
Mrs. J. P. Fleming, accompanied <lb/>
by Miss spent Tuesday and <lb/>
Wednesday ill Greenville. <lb/>
Mrs. and <lb/>
ti r. Miss Louise, spent Tuesday In <lb/>
Washington as the guests of Mrs. g. <lb/>
Ricks. <lb/>
w. l. Nobles of Greenville, <lb/>
v in town today on business. <lb/>
Nellie Wilson is spending the <lb/>
week with Mrs. j. j. <lb/>
Messrs. Julius II. L. <lb/>
Hodges of Greenville spent Sunday <lb/>
In town. <lb/>
Messrs. J. J. and J. <lb/>
R. Davenport spent Monday in Green- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
Mrs. Ward Mr. Tom <lb/>
Moore visited Mrs. J, J. <lb/>
Tuesday. <lb/>
KS <lb/>
nit. K. is, t. <lb/>
Physician <lb/>
ill turn e limns to <lb/>
Mi and Ft <lb/>
Office ever Frank Wilson . st <lb/>
Phone connection. <lb/>
Examination is tree. -M <lb/>
Ring Found Alter Two Years <lb/>
Something like two years ago, Mrs. <lb/>
C. Tunstall lost a diamond ring, <lb/>
the jewel disappearing from a dress- <lb/>
her room. Suspicion rested up- <lb/>
on a colored girl who worked In the <lb/>
homo and when accosted she said <lb/>
did have tho ring but became <lb/>
frightened and threw it away. Search <lb/>
was made where the girl said she <lb/>
threw the ling but it was not found. <lb/>
then told several different stories <lb/>
the ring. <lb/>
Later the girl was arrested on tho <lb/>
but on the trial <lb/>
I denied nil that she had formerly <lb/>
said about the ring, saying she was <lb/>
ired and did not know- what <lb/>
and there being no evidence <lb/>
that she look ring she was ac- <lb/>
the ring was found near <lb/>
where the girl said In her story <lb/>
that she had thrown ii. The person <lb/>
finding it recalling Mrs. <lb/>
la I two years ago, took the ring to <lb/>
I it was readily Identified. Mrs. <lb/>
Tunstall was delighted to get the <lb/>
ring showed only a little in- <lb/>
jury from being burled so lone, a scar <lb/>
on the band looking like it had been <lb/>
stepped being the only damage. <lb/>
in <lb/>
WE <lb/>
OFFER YOU <lb/>
A HOME ON <lb/>
EASY TERMS <lb/>
We can you I own your own <lb/>
and the terms will be as easy, <lb/>
not easier, than lag rent. If you <lb/>
to or buy a and <lb/>
Quits do so, <lb/>
will to your to rail <lb/>
id let us r <lb/>
It'll be In your pocket. <lb/>
HOME AMI LOAN <lb/>
Finns C, <lb/>
John I. Martin, of <lb/>
national Democratic <lb/>
Is slated to be sergeant-at-arms <lb/>
of the States senate <lb/>
Cabbage Plant <lb/>
OF nit in <lb/>
FROST PROOF CABBAGE <lb/>
FOB SALE <lb/>
The following varieties Jersey Wake- <lb/>
Held, Charleston <lb/>
and Large LoU Drum Head. <lb/>
Tills selection should eon- <lb/>
headings through <lb/>
Prepared for shipment a . from <lb/>
at per thousand. <lb/>
Over at 11.00 per thousand, f. <lb/>
b. Greenville, K. C. supply <lb/>
orders say <lb/>
Count and satisfaction guaranteed <lb/>
L. C. Arthur <lb/>
H. t.<lb/>
Special <lb/>
White Sale <lb/>
Going In <lb/>
REAM MAKE DRESSES, and <lb/>
LACES AID <lb/>
At unusually Low Prices <lb/>
ALL It HIGH TOP SHOES <lb/>
are being closed out for below <lb/>
It pay you to trade <lb/>
here <lb/>
S M SCHULTZ <lb/>
Established <lb/>
Wholesale and retail and <lb/>
dealer. Cash paid for hides, <lb/>
Fur Cotton Seed Oil barrels. <lb/>
Oak bedsteads, mattresses, etc., <lb/>
Suits, carriages, go-carts, par- <lb/>
suits, tables, lounges, safes, <lb/>
and Gail Ax snuff, <lb/>
Life Key West Cheroots, Hen- <lb/>
Cigars, canned cherries. <lb/>
peaches, apples, syrup, Jelly, meat; <lb/>
flour sugar, coffee, soap, lye, magic <lb/>
food, matches, oil, cotton seed meal <lb/>
and teed Oranges, <lb/>
nuts, candles, dried apples <lb/>
peaches prunes, currants, raisins, <lb/>
glass and china ware, wooden ware, <lb/>
cakes and crackers, macaroni, cheese <lb/>
best butter, new Royal Sewing ma- <lb/>
chines and numerous other goods <lb/>
Quality and quantity cheap for cash <lb/>
Come to see me. <lb/>
S M SCHULTZ <lb/>
Shank, the Indianapolis <lb/>
who gained fame rough his <lb/>
tn reduce the high cost of <lb/>
by I . ids of i <lb/>
. i selling them in the markets <lb/>
.- coal price, announces that he will <lb/>
mi the vaudeville when his <lb/>
term expires, <lb/>
r. T. II I t h g <lb/>
Plumbing, Steam Hot <lb/>
Beating <lb/>
Gasoline Engines; <lb/>
Electric Light Outfitter <lb/>
I am prepared o do your work at <lb/>
Reasonable See me or call, <lb/>
Mo. if <lb/>
Host known Cough Remedy <lb/>
For forty-three years Dr. <lb/>
New Discovery has been known <lb/>
the world as the most <lb/>
table cough remedy. Over three mil- <lb/>
lion bottles were used last year. <lb/>
Isn't this proof It will get rid of <lb/>
cough, or will refund your <lb/>
money. J. J. Owens, of <lb/>
S C. writes the way hundreds of <lb/>
others have twenty <lb/>
ears, I find that Dr. King's New <lb/>
is the best remedy for coughs <lb/>
and colds that I have ever <lb/>
For or colds and all throat <lb/>
and lung troubles, it has no equal. <lb/>
and at all druggists. <lb/>
When Your Automobile <lb/>
mm TAKE IT TO MOTOR <lb/>
CO. FIFTH STREET M All MARKET <lb/>
ACT SEEDED REPAIRS WILL HE PROMPTLY SKILL- <lb/>
FILLY DOME. IF SOT TO CAR, <lb/>
TO MS, AND AS EXPERIENCED <lb/>
WILL BE HUM TO DO WORK. <lb/>
All Kinds of Accessories and Supplies <lb/>
IS THE WAT OF TIRES, SPARK PIMPS, AI It <lb/>
METAL POLISH, ELECTRIC SHOCK AH. <lb/>
GREASES, OILS, ETC. OS <lb/>
Gasoline per Gallon <lb/>
Greenville Motor Co. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018241_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
Mi <lb/>
Bulgarians Capture <lb/>
Turkish Stronghold <lb/>
The Allies Fairing <lb/>
Their May Into The Great Fort. <lb/>
i. At The in <lb/>
The Bayonet <lb/>
LONDON, March Pasha, <lb/>
the commander In chief, com <lb/>
mined suicide after the capture <lb/>
the city, to a news agent <lb/>
etch from Soda. <lb/>
March M- The <lb/>
fortress of taken by <lb/>
storm b; the Bulgarian this morn- <lb/>
after fighting of the most terrible <lb/>
character since Monday. <lb/>
At an early hour this morning Ares <lb/>
were in various sections <lb/>
the red city. The maddened <lb/>
population, had been <lb/>
battered by the almost Incessant <lb/>
bombardment for a period of over <lb/>
five months was fleeing about <lb/>
streets from one to another, not <lb/>
knowing where lo <lb/>
The great artillery arsenal In the <lb/>
city was burning and barracks <lb/>
lying between the hospital and the <lb/>
northern forts were also ill flames. <lb/>
The Bulgarians In strong force grad <lb/>
advanced <lb/>
the city and by rush. Infantry- <lb/>
men near enough to pr. <lb/>
pare for the b, <lb/>
On ail combine i <lb/>
of the on the ever res <lb/>
was continued. <lb/>
The Bulgarian infantry had reached <lb/>
within yards of the main tori <lb/>
five o'clock list evening. <lb/>
themselves there while am- <lb/>
munition and were brought <lb/>
op from the rear and preparation <lb/>
were made for the final assault. <lb/>
The entire line of fortress. <lb/>
finding the eastern aide of city <lb/>
was captured by the Bulgarian after <lb/>
It Will Save <lb/>
They took an ocean voyage for <lb/>
honeymoon. The second day out <lb/>
was the <lb/>
of an ocean that was guaranteed <lb/>
to be without variableness or shadow <lb/>
of turning and wondering if <lb/>
could by any human effort ; <lb/>
position abroad en <lb/>
the stateroom <lb/>
It is lunch <lb/>
have yours brought here or will vol. <lb/>
to it on <lb/>
have it lard <lb/>
will ave <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
that word Is <lb/>
refer to Dr. Liver Pills and <lb/>
HEALTH. <lb/>
Arc you <lb/>
Troubled with <lb/>
Sick <lb/>
others <lb/>
of the <lb/>
Yon <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
District Conference <lb/>
Convenes In Jarvis <lb/>
Memorial M. E. Church <lb/>
Thousands Perish In <lb/>
The Flooded District <lb/>
--0 <lb/>
I Congregation In Attendance At <lb/>
Opening Sen ire. Kev. In. S. F. <lb/>
Mercer Hill This <lb/>
Evening <lb/>
Rev. Dr. S. K. Mercer, president <lb/>
of Carolina College, Maxton, N. <lb/>
C, will preach at the Jarvis Me- <lb/>
church this evening at <lb/>
o'clock. Dr. Mercer is one <lb/>
of the first of the North <lb/>
Carolina conference and no <lb/>
will be beard by a large <lb/>
invited. <lb/>
BED BANKS ITEMS <lb/>
The forty-seventh session of the <lb/>
Washington district conference of the <lb/>
M. B. Church, South, convened in the <lb/>
Jarvis Memorial Methodist church <lb/>
o'clock with <lb/>
J. T. D. D-, the presiding <lb/>
the district, in the chair. Kev. <lb/>
K. II. Broom, secretary of the last <lb/>
conference, called the roll of the <lb/>
. i i. and lay delegates and quite <lb/>
a number answered being present. <lb/>
After the roil call several more <lb/>
arrived. By tonight nearly all <lb/>
the preachers and lay delegates will <lb/>
be in attendance. The opening d- <lb/>
services were conducted by <lb/>
presiding elder. Kev H. <lb/>
was unanimously re-elected <lb/>
committees on Quarterly con- <lb/>
records and public worship <lb/>
v ere selected. <lb/>
at o'clock tomorrow by Rev. A. D. <lb/>
Wilcox. <lb/>
Dr. F. X. Parker, professor of Bib- <lb/>
Literature at Trinity College, <lb/>
arrive tomorrow and preach at the <lb/>
night service. <lb/>
The following delegates are here in <lb/>
attendance upon the W. <lb/>
T. Phillips. J. F. Watson. T. E. <lb/>
J. R. Chancey. R. H. <lb/>
j. F. M. J. F. <lb/>
J. W. Autrey, W. J. Coving- <lb/>
ton. J. J. Lewis, T. J Williams. I. <lb/>
M. Glover. L. P. Howard. J. C. Bras- <lb/>
well. E. W. Smith. J. II. Westbrook. <lb/>
J. Thompson. H. K. Lance. J. U <lb/>
s. II. Tyson, w. H. Apple- <lb/>
white, II. Watson. J. M. Ashby, <lb/>
I,. O. Wood. R. S. Wells. H. K. <lb/>
A. C. Monk. J. T. B. J. <lb/>
A. A. Joyner, B. C. Glenn. T. It. <lb/>
Jones. A. B. R. H. <lb/>
J. W. Hoyle, M. It. Wilkinson, J. W. <lb/>
Mayo, D. W, Gaskill. A. Burgess. Q. <lb/>
s r. tar, J Edwards, H. C. <lb/>
ten, it. Bridgers, J. T. <lb/>
S. W. Andrews. R. L. Wool- <lb/>
aid. D. H. Futrell, M. O. <lb/>
. W. II. Atkinson. E. A. Darden. <lb/>
M. T. Plyler. S. K. <lb/>
leer. A. D. Wilcox. I. S. Massey. <lb/>
I Other delegates and visitors are yet <lb/>
to arrive. <lb/>
MM MAY GET <lb/>
SOME CARNEGIE MONEY <lb/>
Presidents Appeals For Help <lb/>
For Ohio And Indiana Sufferers <lb/>
Where Are <lb/>
Homeless <lb/>
DAYTON, O. March <lb/>
Is The dead <lb/>
no one can even estimate. Beneath <lb/>
the yellow sea that is, seething through <lb/>
the once gem like city may sleep <lb/>
March <lb/>
probable that after a lapse of seven <lb/>
years a heroic act of George P. <lb/>
Crutchfield. of Guilford county, will <lb/>
be awarded by the Carnegie Hero thousand drowned or mayhap too <lb/>
Fund commission A representative death list may not exceed one thous- <lb/>
the Hero Fund commission was <lb/>
in Greensboro and today So one can picture the sickening <lb/>
inquiring into of the case. <lb/>
It will be remembered that about <lb/>
years Mr. Crutchfield saved <lb/>
situation. Last night Dayton was a <lb/>
marine hill. Fires lighted the sky. <lb/>
Humiliated the rushing waters and <lb/>
death J. C. Moore, who was be- swish of rain and of rush- <lb/>
gored by a bull. Moore had been <lb/>
gored and frightfully injured by an <lb/>
Infuriated bull when Mr. <lb/>
appeared on the scene. Without count <lb/>
torrents sounded a funeral re- <lb/>
for the unknown and <lb/>
ed dead. <lb/>
Fifty thousand people jammed In <lb/>
personal cost and probably death the Upper floors of homes, <lb/>
Mr. Crutchfield attacked the bull with <lb/>
his knife. He was badly <lb/>
ed hue succeeded in severing the an- <lb/>
vein. When the people <lb/>
In the vicinity of the encounter reach- <lb/>
ed the spot, they found Mr. Moore <lb/>
badly hurt and in almost a dying con- <lb/>
Not far away in an <lb/>
gas. no fresh water, no heat, no <lb/>
food. This is the situation today. <lb/>
John H. Patterson, of the National <lb/>
Cash Register Company, car- <lb/>
building boats, ho himself <lb/>
has saved mill hers of lives. <lb/>
is under water and <lb/>
there is no food. Country people are <lb/>
scions condition was Mr. Crutchfield taking them food. Twelve hundred of <lb/>
while nearby was the bull in its death I lodged and fed in the, <lb/>
snuggle. Mr. Moore has never National Cash Register plant. Scores <lb/>
The Senior <lb/>
, The class of will present <lb/>
Committee on quarterly inference of m <lb/>
record, are R. H. Grant J W. Au-1 j, M <lb/>
,, BANKS. Ma,,. i- Several of promises to be In <lb/>
, . , , . .,,,. , . . , , . up to the Training school <lb/>
section attended the land sale . Governor T. J. Jarvis and A., . <lb/>
. , v, standard. The success of this first <lb/>
the river yesterday. B , , <lb/>
. Shakespearean drama will <lb/>
Eva Sermons has returned; to examine <lb/>
recovered, <lb/>
for life. <lb/>
He will be an invalid <lb/>
Recommendation for <lb/>
Following the announcement of <lb/>
Postmaster R. C. Flanagan's <lb/>
last Friday afternoon, three <lb/>
candidates for the position as his <lb/>
began a canvass among their <lb/>
friends, as was announced in <lb/>
day's paper. A little later Mr. John <lb/>
W. also entered as a mission. <lb/>
of automobiles and boats are carry- <lb/>
the marooned to safety at many <lb/>
points, but to o'clock this morn- <lb/>
no boat could venture Into <lb/>
heart of the city. <lb/>
Tho awful story of Dayton's de- <lb/>
can only be told when tho <lb/>
flood subsides. <lb/>
The water dropped two feet this <lb/>
morning, but there is much <lb/>
water. Not a telephone Is In <lb/>
works <lb/>
Cleared L. Cherry. <lb/>
for a direct assault en the city itself. <lb/>
LATE FLOOD <lb/>
COLUMBUS, O., March According <lb/>
to information reaching hero from <lb/>
at p. m. that town is be- <lb/>
swept away. The Y dam is re- <lb/>
potted to have been blown up. <lb/>
Frank a Baltimore and Ohio <lb/>
railroad man. of who is <lb/>
in Columbus, after a telephone com- <lb/>
with his wife in <lb/>
ville, told Governor Dix of the re- <lb/>
ported <lb/>
said his wife reported that <lb/>
are being drowned like rats <lb/>
in a <lb/>
Death Estimated Al <lb/>
Governor Cox received the follow- <lb/>
telegram from his secretary. <lb/>
George K. who to Dayton <lb/>
last <lb/>
may run as high as two <lb/>
thousand. Property loss <lb/>
four miles Difficult get <lb/>
anywhere near center of city <lb/>
up to second story of Phillips House <lb/>
Worst calamity In the country since <lb/>
Galveston. <lb/>
Village Reported Destroyed <lb/>
DELAWARE, . March <lb/>
confirmed report that the <lb/>
Stratford, five miles below here, was <lb/>
overwhelmed by the Hood and that <lb/>
about two hundred were <lb/>
owned, was brought here today by <lb/>
a farmer living on high land near <lb/>
This Is the first Information from <lb/>
Stratford since the flood. The report <lb/>
cannot be confirmed. <lb/>
Reported at Peru <lb/>
SOUTH BEND, in I. March <lb/>
official report received today by May- <lb/>
or P. of South <lb/>
Mr. Tucker was a pleas-1 <lb/>
and attractive manner by Rev. W. business management is contributing, Congressman John H. Small 1,300. According to <lb/>
Swan Quarter. N. small part in making the play came here this morning to go over tho reports it more than likely <lb/>
T. of <lb/>
speakers subject was War j assured success for Monday night, a COE- and even hundreds of persons <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Miss Olive Kittrell, from near <lb/>
sen, spent last week with her sis- <lb/>
t. r. Mrs. W. A. Cherry. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Cherry spent <lb/>
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. R. <lb/>
. Q near Simpson. <lb/>
Miss Tucker is visiting In <lb/>
Greenville this week. <lb/>
Misses Bessie Brooks and Olive Kit- <lb/>
spent Wednesday night with Mrs. <lb/>
Oscar <lb/>
Mr. Walter Cherry was another <lb/>
caller in Sunday evening. <lb/>
Mr. P. A. our singing <lb/>
teacher from near Farmville, met with <lb/>
the singing class Friday evening at <lb/>
the lied Hanks school house. Tho <lb/>
. will meet again next Sunday <lb/>
at two o'clock, we hope to <lb/>
a large attendance. The pub- <lb/>
He is cordially invited to attend. <lb/>
Mis. A. Tucker and Mrs. J. I. <lb/>
spent yesterday at Mr. J. W. <lb/>
Brooke. <lb/>
Messrs. Tucker and <lb/>
Cherry were callers in <lb/>
last evening <lb/>
of the and his text was taken; next. In no way could the class hope a of wag not counted among the dead <lb/>
from chapter and 12th to give so difficult a performance with-1 <lb/>
i. <lb/>
From the very beginning speak- <lb/>
gained the undivided attention of <lb/>
his hearers and Interest never lagged <lb/>
on the part of the listener through- <lb/>
out the discourse. The sermon was <lb/>
well prepared and handled in such a <lb/>
way as to draw and hold those who <lb/>
v ere present. Mr. Is a <lb/>
of magnetism. He is a <lb/>
worthy ambassador of the lowly <lb/>
and has a bright and <lb/>
future in. his high calling. <lb/>
After tho the conference <lb/>
went into a short business session for <lb/>
the purpose of fixing the hours of <lb/>
meeting. It was decided to meet <lb/>
a. m. and adjourn at o'clock for <lb/>
to reassemble at p. m. <lb/>
and adjourn at will. All during the <lb/>
we- k there will be public worship <lb/>
also at p. m. As already an- <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Mercer will be tho <lb/>
preacher tonight. <lb/>
This morning at o'clock Rev. <lb/>
out his general supervision, in ail <lb/>
the class feels deeply grateful to <lb/>
who In any way are lending <lb/>
their aid. <lb/>
i held in the court house. The question of in some of the country districts. <lb/>
World <lb/>
Alessandro Bond, the faced tenor, <lb/>
appeared In a concert Raleigh <lb/>
Wednesday night, before a <lb/>
a primary was freely discussed, Con- <lb/>
Small stating clearly his <lb/>
position and leaning to a primary <lb/>
it the sentiment here against <lb/>
available early this after- <lb/>
n based on these reports were as <lb/>
follows. <lb/>
Near Cincinnati, to Day- <lb/>
this ruled that no primary would be ton 1.300 to 1,500; GOO to <lb/>
held ill this Instance. Delaware to <lb/>
He then took up tho application of to Sidney to Hamilton <lb/>
tho three candidates, making most to to <lb/>
reference to the to <lb/>
very large audience. As a singer I and merit of each, and after Total, Ohio 1,890 to <lb/>
Bond is great and he kept his hear- j summing these up, stated that as to Newcastle to <lb/>
era delighted from beginning to end could receive the appointment and to I. <lb/>
of his program. In must make a selection, he would <lb/>
to his superb voice, he is of i make recommendation for the <lb/>
pleasing personality and every move-1 of Mr. D. J. as <lb/>
every expression was in keep- postmaster. <lb/>
Mr. John Allen has just complete Dr. L. Massey, editor of the <lb/>
tenant house at the same Christian Advocate, delivered an <lb/>
place he had one destroyed by fire eloquent and thoughtful discourse he- <lb/>
. i Us ago <lb/>
TABS IT IX TIME <lb/>
As Scores Of Greenville People <lb/>
Have <lb/>
Wailing doesn't pay. <lb/>
If you neglect kidney backache, <lb/>
Urinary troubles often follow. <lb/>
Donna Kidney Pills are for kidney <lb/>
backache, and for other kidney ills. <lb/>
fore a highly appreciative audience. <lb/>
The conference has already began <lb/>
its business in earnest and while <lb/>
tilings are going on smoothly they <lb/>
are being done with dispatch. The <lb/>
presiding Dr. is a mod- <lb/>
el in the chair, while firm In his ml- <lb/>
nevertheless he Is pleasant <lb/>
thoughtful. , Greenville is entertain- <lb/>
the members in royal style. The <lb/>
hangs upon the <lb/>
a warm and cordial welcome <lb/>
Greenville citizens endorse them. <lb/>
Mrs. Joseph S. Wash- greets the visitor on nil sides. <lb/>
street, Greenville, N. C, I the Washington district conference <lb/>
Bend. suffered from dull, nagging back- has a membership of church <lb/>
today that three hundred and I also had headache and property valued at <lb/>
were drowned at Peru, that no bodies through my Dizzy school enrollment of paid last <lb/>
had recovered and that there annoyed me and I noticed that rear to all purposes or <lb/>
was less than one block of the entire the kidney secretions were 17.33 per capita. <lb/>
city that was not under water. i. Kidney Pills, procured j Among the distinguished visitors <lb/>
Sewn Drowned Fremont Co attendance are Rev. Dr. Parker, <lb/>
Ohio March a professor of Biblical Literature. <lb/>
were drowned at Fremont, . College, who is scheduled to <lb/>
before. I know preach on Friday night; Rev. L. <lb/>
Pills live up to Massey. editor of the Raleigh Chris- <lb/>
this morning, according to reliable <lb/>
word n here. Wires arc down <lb/>
buildings in a big <lb/>
flood An a for help <lb/>
s. here. <lb/>
Pa., March 20.-- <lb/>
The Pennsylvania senate today take no other. <lb/>
voted 160.000 to the <lb/>
sufferers of Ohio. <lb/>
when I again <lb/>
a. t. as good as <lb/>
that Dion's Kidney <lb/>
the claims made for <lb/>
Tor sale by all dealers. <lb/>
Co. Buffalo. <lb/>
Ne York sole for the Unit- <lb/>
d States. <lb/>
Remember the <lb/>
with the singer's art. . <lb/>
The people In his <lb/>
were Mrs. S. J. Everett. Mrs. <lb/>
C. M. Rock. Mrs. Lina Baker, <lb/>
Essie <lb/>
Arlene Joyner and <lb/>
and Mr D. J. <lb/>
This appearance of Bond was on <lb/>
of the concert course under the <lb/>
if Meredith College, an <lb/>
that is doing much to <lb/>
the highest in art. <lb/>
Funeral This afternoon <lb/>
The funeral of little <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Flan- <lb/>
who died Wednesday, took <lb/>
this afternoon, the services being con- <lb/>
ducted by C. M. Rock. The pall <lb/>
bearers Messrs. C. Carr. H. <lb/>
A. White. C. S. Forbes, W. H. Ball. <lb/>
Jr. R. L. Smith, T. OH. Dupree. <lb/>
W. Ferrell, S, T. White. P. T. Anthony, <lb/>
P. S. Warren, Frank Wilson. M. L. <lb/>
Turnage, O. B. W. Hadley, L, star- <lb/>
key, A. It. Ellington. C. Laugh- <lb/>
W. I. Best, F. J. Forbes. <lb/>
L. James, K. A. Jr. F. M. <lb/>
Woolen, C. W. Wilson, E. B. Higgs, J <lb/>
II Keel and K. W. Harvey. <lb/>
POLITICS <lb/>
8888888888888888 <lb/>
President Wilson will be the guest <lb/>
of honor at the Gridiron Club dinner <lb/>
I April <lb/>
j Colonel Roosevelt is to attend n <lb/>
j Progressive conference in Albany, N, of <lb/>
C, March a,,,,,.,, Cross to send eon- <lb/>
Three of the last seven presidents <lb/>
to to Scatter- <lb/>
to <lb/>
Total, Indiana to <lb/>
Grand total, to 2.987. <lb/>
Wilson All <lb/>
cans to Aid the Sufferers <lb/>
WASHINGTON, March <lb/>
dent Wilson today issued the follow- <lb/>
appeal to the nation to help tho <lb/>
sufferers In tho Ohio and Indiana <lb/>
terrible floods In Ohio and <lb/>
Indiana have assumed the proportions <lb/>
of a national calamity. The loss of <lb/>
life the infinite suffering <lb/>
ed prompt me to issue an earnest <lb/>
peal lo all who are able, In however <lb/>
Teachers Meet at Fremont <lb/>
Advocate; Kev, Dr. Mercer, pres- <lb/>
of Carolina College. Maxton; <lb/>
Rev. E. C. Glenn, of Bar. <lb/>
It. II. Broom, of Washington, and <lb/>
The conference will be on session <lb/>
until Sunday. <lb/>
A business session of the <lb/>
b.-can at o'clock this morning, and <lb/>
after devotional exercises <lb/>
by Rev. J. W. Autrey, Interesting re <lb/>
Turk With Wife Would Be Safe. <lb/>
Montenegro is the only country In <lb/>
Europe where a wife may be regarded <lb/>
a perambulating insurance pol- <lb/>
icy. The Montenegrin Is intensely <lb/>
Respect for women Is carried Secretary of the Treasury, is one <lb/>
of tho States were sons of <lb/>
Arthur, Cleveland and <lb/>
son. <lb/>
Henry F. Is tho first Dem- <lb/>
New has sent to the <lb/>
lulled States senate In more than <lb/>
sixty years. <lb/>
Congressman Richmond P. <lb/>
Is about ready to begin his active <lb/>
campaign for the seat of States <lb/>
Senator Joseph F. Johnston of Ala- <lb/>
whose term will expire March <lb/>
1915. <lb/>
Secretary of State Bryan has ac- <lb/>
an Invitation to be the guest ; <lb/>
of honor at the second annual ban- <lb/>
in New York next month of tho <lb/>
Society of the United <lb/>
Stales. <lb/>
John Williams of Richmond, <lb/>
Va. who has been appointed <lb/>
at once to the Red <lb/>
At Washington or to the local treas- <lb/>
of society. We should make <lb/>
this a common cause. The needs of <lb/>
those upon whom this and <lb/>
disaster has come should <lb/>
quicken everyone capable of <lb/>
thy and compassion to give immediate <lb/>
aid to those who laboring to res- <lb/>
cue and relieve.<lb/>
i SI HE FOR LIVER <lb/>
to For This <lb/>
Reliable And Get <lb/>
Your Money Ruck If <lb/>
It Falls <lb/>
There are very few remedies that <lb/>
gain the confidence of druggists as <lb/>
Dodson's Liver Tone does. <lb/>
Collate Observes <lb/>
ST. PALL, Minn. March <lb/>
FREMONT, Neb. 27- Fremont twenty-fifth anniversary of found- ports were made by several of the pas- <lb/>
Is entertaining during the remainder of the agricultural college of tho tors of work in their respective <lb/>
of this week a largo number of pub- University of Minnesota was fields. <lb/>
He school teachers and ed this afternoon with Interesting ex- At o'clock an excellent sermon <lb/>
who have assembled here for crises which wire attended by many was preached by Rev. L. S. <lb/>
annual convention the East and Invited guests. Preside. editor of the Advocate <lb/>
Central Nebraska Teacher George E. Vincent of the university; This afternoon business <lb/>
The program provides for the presided and among the of the conference held, <lb/>
discussion of a wide range of were former Presidents William E. The tonight will be by Rev. <lb/>
relating to educational work. and Northrop. S. E. Mercer, of Carolina College, and <lb/>
women is .--------. t hanks 111- <lb/>
to such a that although the very of leading financiers of south. sells It and backs up th- <lb/>
word Turk affect, the native as a red For a number of years he was ores- of every bottle with he money <lb/>
rag doe a bull, yet a Turkish traveler <lb/>
finding himself in tho wilds of <lb/>
would be absolutely safe If he <lb/>
were accompanied by his wife. <lb/>
Life l patriarchal. There no <lb/>
towns, only villages. There <lb/>
of half a dozen houses, in each <lb/>
of which three and sometime four editions of the police graft <lb/>
of the Seaboard Air Lino Rail- <lb/>
road. <lb/>
the politicians In New- York <lb/>
city tho opinion la gaining <lb/>
tint if Whitman <lb/>
meet success In <lb/>
back guarantee that the price will be <lb/>
refunded If It fails to give complete <lb/>
satisfaction. <lb/>
Dodson's Liver Tone costs cents <lb/>
bottle. It is the safest and best <lb/>
for torpid liver, <lb/>
biliousness, etc., has ever been <lb/>
which aim lour , , , .,, ,.,. <lb/>
generation of a family together. . Is pretty sure to be nominated for this city. It takes the place <lb/>
Travels. In of this patriarchal mayor next fall. of ea and doe not <lb/>
life, find tho gloomy and taciturn, <lb/>
with their eyes open for treachery and <lb/>
their right hand on their revolver. <lb/>
London Dally Mirror. <lb/>
To Cure a Cold In One Day <lb/>
LAXATIVE <lb/>
and and off the <lb/>
.-unit money it it fail cure. <lb/>
. J. on <lb/>
lay you up as a dose of often <lb/>
Breaks an Arm. dues. bottle in the house is as <lb/>
Mr. Joseph Fleming, who conducts good as cents In the bank. If you <lb/>
n dairy here, met with a painful or your family need a liver tonic you <lb/>
dent a day or two ago. He was out have the medicine If it falls <lb/>
In lot driving COW to you get your money <lb/>
barn, when his became tangled Be sure yon get Liver <lb/>
in a hoop and threw him to the ground Tone when you a- k for it. There are <lb/>
with inch force to break right Imitations of It that may disappoint <lb/>
arm. you. <lb/>
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb/>
OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE <lb/>
AND AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED HY THE BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
RINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE FOR WE <lb/>
HAVE EVERY Till NO 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/>
Is the Hot, Ike Healthful, the Most t Mum- <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/>
WISH TO BET BET <lb/>
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb/>
THESE PEOPLE IN <lb/>
I BUSINESS WAY TO TARE <lb/>
I FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
RAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
ADVERT NO <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb/>
BE HAD <lb/>
MM I Ml. <lb/>
C, I. 191.1. <lb/>
AGAIN CONFER <lb/>
Aroused From Our Peaceful <lb/>
Slumber By Fire <lb/>
Alarm <lb/>
Second Conference Asked for by <lb/>
President <lb/>
STUDYING TARIFF BILL <lb/>
Wilson Has This <lb/>
Careful Consideration for <lb/>
Several <lb/>
Committee Meets. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, April <lb/>
Wilson and Representative Underwood <lb/>
were In conference for hours <lb/>
the White tonight for the <lb/>
i ii over features of the pro- <lb/>
posed tariff revision. The confer- <lb/>
was asked for by President <lb/>
con, who had been studying the new <lb/>
tariff bill for several days and <lb/>
himself with many questions <lb/>
which controversy have been <lb/>
raised in the preparation of the Dem- <lb/>
revision measure. <lb/>
Other conference which to fol- <lb/>
low with Mr. Underwood and Sen- <lb/>
chairman of the finance <lb/>
committee, will the of <lb/>
the sugar, wool and agricultural <lb/>
schedules, so far as the party leaders <lb/>
can settle them, and will decide then <lb/>
whether one general bill or <lb/>
schedule bills shall be passed by the <lb/>
house. <lb/>
Tho opponents of free sugar, chiefly <lb/>
representing tho cane growing sec- <lb/>
of the south, have made strong <lb/>
representations to the President <lb/>
the last week, tho removal <lb/>
of the duty from that product, and the <lb/>
president has been weighing the <lb/>
upon this and other tariff <lb/>
questions. <lb/>
Since his first conference with Mr. <lb/>
President Wilson has gone <lb/>
over the tariff bill in Immediate de- <lb/>
tail with Secretary of the <lb/>
department of commerce, for <lb/>
tariff views he has high regard. It <lb/>
was not thought that any detailed <lb/>
rates would be under consideration at <lb/>
tonight's conference, but that the <lb/>
general questions as to the free ad- <lb/>
mission of raw materials and the ex- <lb/>
tent to which the duly should be re- <lb/>
moved from agricultural products <lb/>
articles largely consumed by tho pub- <lb/>
were fully. <lb/>
Efforts to bring the senate and the <lb/>
house In accord before the details of <lb/>
the new tariff bill becomes public are <lb/>
to be made late this week. Senator <lb/>
Simmons will ask <lb/>
In tho Senate finance committee <lb/>
meet Friday for the preliminary con <lb/>
of the tariff. Al that time <lb/>
it is thought that a copy the bill <lb/>
prepared by the house ways and means <lb/>
committee will be submitted to the <lb/>
senators considered In <lb/>
detail. <lb/>
Should the senate committee deter- <lb/>
mine that certain features of the bill <lb/>
will not be acceptable in the senate, <lb/>
efforts will be made to have the draft <lb/>
of the bill changed by the house com- <lb/>
or by the Democratic member- <lb/>
ship of the house when It meets In <lb/>
next week, so that house and <lb/>
senate may be brought a complete <lb/>
accord as possible In support of the <lb/>
house hill. <lb/>
one o'clock <lb/>
Tuesday night, the Are department <lb/>
called to the <lb/>
section of the town. A large single- <lb/>
story fronting on Pitt <lb/>
belonging to tho heirs of Adelaide <lb/>
Foreman, colored, and occupied <lb/>
Knox, was on fire. When <lb/>
the department and citizens reached <lb/>
the scene almost the entire roof of <lb/>
tho house was burning furiously. <lb/>
While at the time it almost looked <lb/>
like the house beyond saving, <lb/>
but with two good streams quickly <lb/>
brought into play and work <lb/>
of the department, the matter of put- <lb/>
ting out the Are only a short <lb/>
time, though the roof was practically <lb/>
ruined. There was no Insurance on <lb/>
the building. <lb/>
It could not be learned how the <lb/>
fire started, but those reaching there <lb/>
first said It was burning In one of <lb/>
the rear rooms and there <lb/>
lo other rooms. <lb/>
Of Dangerous <lb/>
Explosive Unearthed By <lb/>
Flood <lb/>
FLAMES THREATEN <lb/>
FLOODED SECTION <lb/>
OF HUNTINGTON <lb/>
Ind., April <lb/>
quarts of believed to <lb/>
bare been burled by E. <lb/>
confessed dynamiter, have been <lb/>
unearthed near here by the flood <lb/>
of the White river. They were <lb/>
found yesterday along the Boyce road <lb/>
near the Lake Erie and Western <lb/>
Railroad east tho city. <lb/>
Road commissioners who were In- <lb/>
the damage to the high- <lb/>
way noticed two or three peculiar <lb/>
cans in a field. They called over a <lb/>
well digger working nearby and he <lb/>
said they contained <lb/>
Light more two-gallon cans of the ex- <lb/>
plosive were recovered. <lb/>
In his confession as- <lb/>
he buried the <lb/>
in the cinder grade of tho Big Four <lb/>
railroad east of this city. He said that <lb/>
when he returned for It the had <lb/>
disappeared and accused a union of- <lb/>
of taking It. <lb/>
The cans floated through the yards <lb/>
of the Indiana Wire and Steel Com- <lb/>
Raleigh lady is Recipient <lb/>
of a Black Hand <lb/>
Letter <lb/>
win Erect Large <lb/>
The Furniture Co. will <lb/>
begin the erection of I <lb/>
building on the corner of <lb/>
Dickinson avenue and street. <lb/>
The building will have n large glass <lb/>
front on streets <lb/>
April of <lb/>
Raleigh, the Black Hand the of <lb/>
April Is a dangerous day for was <lb/>
found scrawled on a handkerchief <lb/>
with black borders and miniature <lb/>
fin and skull and bones left In the <lb/>
I onto of n young woman In <lb/>
a suburb, today. <lb/>
The threatening omens were carried <lb/>
to Col. John In tho hope that <lb/>
he would prosecute, but as no federal <lb/>
laws were violated, the commission- <lb/>
could nothing but consolation. <lb/>
The name of the recipient of tho <lb/>
threat was withheld, but It was learn- <lb/>
ed that a married woman, who Is said <lb/>
to be Jealous of her husband, is prob- <lb/>
ably responsible for It. <lb/>
Check Spread of Dangerous Blaze <lb/>
With Dynamite <lb/>
FIRE ENGINE ON <lb/>
lieu ii People Were Rescued From <lb/>
now <lb/>
Toward the Gulf <lb/>
Stales. <lb/>
SPRINGFIELD, Ills. April L-Ad- <lb/>
General Dickson late this fore- <lb/>
noon received a telephone message <lb/>
from Major A. Parsons, cf <lb/>
Cairo that water was flowing <lb/>
the Railroad <lb/>
embankment known as tho drainage <lb/>
district levee and that the company <lb/>
had abandoned hope of preventing <lb/>
the of the district. <lb/>
The Hooding of the drainage district <lb/>
which Is above Cairo, probably will <lb/>
relieve the pressure on the levee which <lb/>
the city. It will flood a tor- <lb/>
ten miles square with from <lb/>
to feet of water. <lb/>
it probably would recede. The fall. <lb/>
he said, would be slow Bret because <lb/>
of the large amount of water above. <lb/>
Garrison Home <lb/>
CINCINNATI, April he <lb/>
had accomplished all the good be <lb/>
could in the flood district, <lb/>
of War Garrison left Cincinnati for <lb/>
Washington early today. Owing <lb/>
high water the secretary will be <lb/>
compelled to take a circuitous route <lb/>
to reach Washington. He will go by <lb/>
way of Knoxville. Tenn., Bristol and <lb/>
Lynchburg, Va. <lb/>
What Are ton Going lo Do <lb/>
HUNTINGTON. W. Va., April <lb/>
Fire broke out in the Hooded residence <lb/>
district here early today and threat- <lb/>
an entire city block, but the <lb/>
flames were checked by the use of <lb/>
dynamite. <lb/>
Eleven persons were rescued from w <lb/>
Cairo's Fate in Balance <lb/>
CAIRO, III., April Ohio riv- <lb/>
steadily through the night and <lb/>
this morning stood at a point be- <lb/>
tween 68.2 and <lb/>
The population was a stir early and <lb/>
fact that the had <lb/>
the mark caused con- <lb/>
anxiety. All expected that <lb/>
the day would prove the crucial one <lb/>
the fate of the city. <lb/>
The crest of the Heed Is expected <lb/>
to reach here today and If the <lb/>
hold it is the belief that the worst <lb/>
will be passed. Much trouble was <lb/>
experienced during the night in tho <lb/>
drainage district along the Big Four <lb/>
levee. Three times slides occurred <lb/>
and only valiant work on the part <lb/>
those watching it saved the day. <lb/>
Dozens of carloads of sandbags were <lb/>
placed about the weak spots and s <lb/>
the burning buildings Fire engines <lb/>
placed on barges pumped water on <lb/>
the flames. <lb/>
State Fire Marshall Allison direct- <lb/>
ed tho work of firemen. <lb/>
Flood Now Sweeping Toward the <lb/>
WASHINGTON, April Ohio <lb/>
river at Cincinnati this morning was <lb/>
at a stage of 69.8 feet, 19.8 feet above <lb/>
Hood stage. It will probably remain <lb/>
at about this during next <lb/>
twenty-four hours and then begin to <lb/>
fall slowly. <lb/>
At the river Tuesday <lb/>
morning was within 0.3 feet a stage <lb/>
of and still rising. The Cairo <lb/>
was 53.2 feet, 8.2 feet above <lb/>
Hood stage. Following is a statement <lb/>
of the forecast stages along the <lb/>
from Cairo to New Orleans <lb/>
made on the assumption that the <lb/>
will hold and that no more rail <lb/>
will <lb/>
Memphis feet within the next <lb/>
eight or nine days, Hood stage feet; <lb/>
Ark., a minimum stage of <lb/>
feet Greenville, Miss. to feet, <lb/>
Hood stage 4- <lb/>
slightly over. Hood feet; <lb/>
Water seeped through under the <lb/>
concrete wall and In tho main <lb/>
street of Cairo today hut the levee has <lb/>
shown no signs of weakening. A big <lb/>
force of men worked all night <lb/>
sandbags and oilier hold-backs <lb/>
along the city front. <lb/>
It is expected the mayor and sheriff <lb/>
here will give the military complete <lb/>
control of situation. Word <lb/>
received from General Wood at <lb/>
by general relief com- <lb/>
that the situation would be <lb/>
handled the same as last year. <lb/>
Refugees continued to leave the city <lb/>
all night and crowds are still walling <lb/>
at the depots to get out. <lb/>
Anxiety at Louisville <lb/>
LOUISVILLE, April <lb/>
was felt over few inches of ad- <lb/>
rise for the river <lb/>
before the crest of the Hood reaches <lb/>
hero late today or early tomorrow <lb/>
with a stage of feet. <lb/>
Major General . A. Logan, Jr. <lb/>
of quartermaster's department. <lb/>
and Lieutenant Simon II. <lb/>
Jr. and Sixteen men who arrived her <lb/>
Natchez. Miss., 50.5 to 51.5 feet, flood Hamilton, o. expected <lb/>
Lady Breaks Arm. <lb/>
This morning Mrs. Allen <lb/>
who lives in South Greenville, fell <lb/>
down mil Walking her <lb/>
and broke small bone in one arm <lb/>
Mrs. is about years of <lb/>
stage feet; Baton Rogue. 4.1 <lb/>
to feet. Hood stage feet; Donald- <lb/>
La. 32.3 to 33.3 feet, flood <lb/>
stage feet; New Orleans 19.0 <lb/>
Hood stage feet. <lb/>
The Hood is expected to reach New <lb/>
Orleans between April and April <lb/>
and at up river stations <lb/>
earlier. <lb/>
of Cairo Doomed <lb/>
Ky. April <lb/>
a break In drainage district <lb/>
at Cairo at midnight, the citizens <lb/>
committee gave the district as <lb/>
loomed and Sheriff wired <lb/>
Governor Dunne requesting mar- <lb/>
Hal law be declared, according to a <lb/>
received here Cairo <lb/>
early morning. The plan Is <lb/>
compel everyone to aid In the defense <lb/>
of city. <lb/>
The nine Rise <lb/>
CINCINNATI. April I -The Ohio <lb/>
river here rose two tenths of a foot <lb/>
during night and early today the <lb/>
-late was tin s feel. Weather Fore- <lb/>
. said he expected <lb/>
rival lo another tenth, after which <lb/>
lo have federal relief work well <lb/>
under way at lower river points before <lb/>
the swell reaches that section. <lb/>
Ohio, almost Bankrupt <lb/>
WASHINGTON. April <lb/>
Wilson received today the following <lb/>
message sent by Major T. Kennedy <lb/>
by special messenger from <lb/>
O. <lb/>
three-fourths under wale <lb/>
No very little coal, food scarce, <lb/>
financial aid. city almost bank- <lb/>
The Betel <lb/>
The stockholders of tho Proctor <lb/>
Hotel Company held their <lb/>
meeting, Tuesday night. In the office I <lb/>
of the Secretary. The report of tho <lb/>
building Committee showed that the <lb/>
entire cost. Including tho adjoining <lb/>
Stores and which belong to the <lb/>
company, will be about <lb/>
is expected to have the hotel com- <lb/>
and ready for opening by the <lb/>
first of The stockholders elect-, <lb/>
ed the hoard of directors for the <lb/>
year. <lb/>
The opportunity lo have good road. <lb/>
has been offered every township in <lb/>
tho county and each township <lb/>
now choose for Itself between the old I <lb/>
of working by taxation and <lb/>
modern method of improving its <lb/>
at once by bond Of the <lb/>
two systems much can he said, an <lb/>
a brief outline of the principal points <lb/>
of difference between the old <lb/>
lets method and the up-to-date mod- <lb/>
way will hero be given. <lb/>
the old system of Working <lb/>
the roads with the money raised each <lb/>
year by taxation we been pay-; <lb/>
fifteen cents on every 1100.00 of <lb/>
property, cents on <lb/>
poll, yet our roads In a de-1 <lb/>
condition now and have been <lb/>
almost from time Immemorial. It ls <lb/>
true a bill was passed by the <lb/>
just adjourned, making some, <lb/>
slight changes in the details of elect- <lb/>
the road supervisors and the <lb/>
labor system, but Us main <lb/>
feature an increase of the road taxi <lb/>
from cents to cents on every <lb/>
of property and from to, <lb/>
cents on every poll, or In other <lb/>
words an Increase of 2-3 per cent, <lb/>
In the present road tax Of course, <lb/>
it to reason that any increase <lb/>
in the road fund will mean <lb/>
work on the roads, but taking Green- <lb/>
ville township as an example, <lb/>
2-3 per cent increase In Its road <lb/>
tax would add to Its present <lb/>
fund only about and it Is. <lb/>
well known that little or no <lb/>
improvements could be made <lb/>
throughout the township with such a <lb/>
According to the sworn state- <lb/>
of tho county auditor the pres- <lb/>
of cents on the <lb/>
of property and cents on each polo <lb/>
will raise from the 1912 taxation <lb/>
and amount has given <lb/>
us no better roads than we had one. <lb/>
two or three years Will an In- <lb/>
crease of 2-3 per cent in the road <lb/>
added to our present fund do any <lb/>
materially for us In the way <lb/>
of permanent improvements Regard- <lb/>
the old system of working the <lb/>
roads following was made <lb/>
by the last Grand <lb/>
find that the Supervisors of <lb/>
public roads in most of the town- <lb/>
ships do not visit and Inspect the <lb/>
roads of the county as they are re- <lb/>
by law to do. Nor do <lb/>
give them that attention which they <lb/>
should receive; nor do they make <lb/>
their reports to the court as Is their <lb/>
duty to do. Only four townships <lb/>
submitted reports to this term <lb/>
of superior court, Green-1 <lb/>
Title, Beaver Dam and B 1-, <lb/>
In some of townships the Sup-1 <lb/>
report that the Overseers, <lb/>
take no Interest whatever in the pub <lb/>
lie roads and make no report to the <lb/>
supervisors. We think that some ac- <lb/>
should be taken by the <lb/>
authorities and this evil, for evil <lb/>
Is. should be remedied. <lb/>
We further state upon Information <lb/>
and observation that the general <lb/>
of the roads and public bridge, <lb/>
are in a deplorable condition. For <lb/>
slate of affairs we believe <lb/>
lime of next grand <lb/>
Jury would be well occupied in <lb/>
bills of indictment against <lb/>
persons responsible for this neglect <lb/>
of <lb/>
Now, let us consider for a moment <lb/>
the bond issue way, plan by <lb/>
which least half counties of the <lb/>
state have secured and are now en- <lb/>
good roads. To begin with I <lb/>
bond Issue does mean an i <lb/>
in the road tax one cent. It doe. <lb/>
mean, however, that borrow <lb/>
000.00 and build good roads, <lb/>
and pay ofT the debt In <lb/>
years, all on cents on the <lb/>
property and cents on the pol I <lb/>
and with no Increase whatever in the <lb/>
present tax rate. This can be done. <lb/>
As an example, suppose a man pay- <lb/>
per month f-r house rent <lb/>
would be able to borrow for <lb/>
forty years, would It not be well foe <lb/>
him lo build his own home and then <lb/>
of paying out the per <lb/>
month as rent, use It to pay Inter- <lb/>
est on the and create a sink- <lb/>
fund that would , for his <lb/>
in forty years time for which he <lb/>
had borrowed the money, pay- <lb/>
for his home with the original <lb/>
per month rent money The <lb/>
two cases are analogous, only <lb/>
difference being, good roads are per- <lb/>
improvements and will <lb/>
farmer big dividends with- <lb/>
out his having to invest one cent more <lb/>
than he already pays for road tax. <lb/>
Which Is the better, the old <lb/>
with an Increase of 2-3 in <lb/>
road tax and no permanent <lb/>
or the bond issue with <lb/>
no increase in taxes, but permanent <lb/>
hard roads to travel on. and market <lb/>
produce over <lb/>
Tho question might now be ask- <lb/>
ed, how can get this CO <lb/>
with Which to build our roads The <lb/>
answer Is very simple. Upon the <lb/>
presentation of a petition to the <lb/>
county commissioners signed by one- <lb/>
fourth of the qualified voters In any <lb/>
I the county commissioners <lb/>
will submit an election in town- <lb/>
ship to determine whether a major- <lb/>
of the qualified voters want a <lb/>
bond issue or not. If the majority <lb/>
want the bond issue the rest is <lb/>
enough. Of course, we not <lb/>
space here to go Into details, tho <lb/>
system Is nothing more than a re- <lb/>
of the matter to the people <lb/>
and as to tho procedure, refer <lb/>
you to the law. <lb/>
It had been rumored, however, <lb/>
Pitt county had been denied <lb/>
these privileges of self government <lb/>
which are given under the state <lb/>
w road law. Such rumors <lb/>
without foundation and cannot be <lb/>
substantiated. Tho law applies as <lb/>
fully to county as It does lo any <lb/>
county In the state and nothing what- <lb/>
ever passed at the legislature <lb/>
exempting from Its provisions. <lb/>
As to the road commission, or old <lb/>
system law, that seeks to increase <lb/>
the road tax to cent on the <lb/>
of property and cents on the pole, <lb/>
which has already received mention <lb/>
in this article, we beg to advise that <lb/>
Section of that law reads as fol- <lb/>
this act shall not apply to <lb/>
any township that has or may here- <lb/>
after issue bonds for the Improve- <lb/>
of the roads within its <lb/>
Of course, Is one more ob- <lb/>
yet to overcome. When the <lb/>
opposition have gone to the last <lb/>
ditch and have left not a staple <lb/>
text upon which they can interpose <lb/>
an objection, they launch back on <lb/>
ill. uppers and twisting ton- <lb/>
belch forth mellow <lb/>
word Hut in <lb/>
case It is gratifying to know- <lb/>
that not only this particular law re- <lb/>
the inspection and approval <lb/>
of Judge Council and other <lb/>
attorneys for the state, but that <lb/>
bonds have been Issued three <lb/>
or four limes under almost this <lb/>
law as a county wile Instead <lb/>
a slate wide act. <lb/>
Think or what ROADS would <lb/>
mean to yon and then think over tho <lb/>
proposition and act accordingly. We <lb/>
will be glad to answer any and <lb/>
questions for those seeking <lb/>
Res peel fully. <lb/>
D CLARK <lb/>
Concert Real Wednesday <lb/>
If yon wish to see something of tho <lb/>
work that Orphanage Is <lb/>
for orphan children, attend tho concert <lb/>
on Wednesday. April 9th. at East Car- <lb/>
Teachers Training School. <lb/>
. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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