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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 25 April 1913</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 25 April 1913</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19130425</dc:date>
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                <p>
Delinquent <lb />
Tax List <lb />
For 1912 <lb />
Mrs. J. B. A Manning and lots., <lb />
lot front C. Winter. 1.65 <lb />
Allen Carr. Pitt St. 4.66 b. F. Manning lot <lb />
Pater Cherry Ayden . 9.73 <lb />
J. S. Cockerel . -76 Joe Langley. lot Winter . <lb />
G. E. Cherry, lot College . 12.85 <lb />
Bynum. lot Reed St. . 2.43 <lb />
John Brown. Jr. lot Pat- <lb />
rick. <lb />
C. M. lot Old Perkins 12.56 <lb />
4.02 <lb />
3.30 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
I have this day, levied on the fol- <lb />
lowing described Real Estate to <lb />
satisfy the taxes due to the state of <lb />
North Carolina, and the county of j <lb />
Pitt, for the year 1912, and the said <lb />
Real Estate so levied on will be <lb />
at the Court House door in the town <lb />
of Greenville. N. C, on Monday. <lb />
5th day of May, 1913, at o'clock, in., <lb />
unless said taxes and legal charges, <lb />
and expenses arising from the failure <lb />
to pay the same within the time re- <lb />
quired law, are paid by that date. <lb />
S. Sheriff. <lb />
R. <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
A. Fields, Church. Geo, <lb />
G. 46.90 <lb />
J. W. Eason, Pitt. Marlboro <lb />
Mary <lb />
B. A. and G. A. Harden, Pile 4.21 <lb />
V. C. Cotton, Maine. 3.46 <lb />
Mrs. Addle Corbett. Church St. 2.20 <lb />
KIM INK TOWNSHIP <lb />
Williams, one lot <lb />
Sarah Rodgers, one lot R. R. St. <lb />
Travis Allen, one lot, Pitt <lb />
Si. <lb />
King. 1-4. Arthur. <lb />
Delia Ann Jones. IS 1-2. J. Daniel 2.20 <lb />
B. J. Jenkins. lot, E. St., . 4.21 <lb />
J. W. Perkins, S lots, Lincoln. <lb />
lot. Dudley. I lot. Lucas; <lb />
lot, Res. lot Adams----- <lb />
Nettle. lot. Clark St. . <lb />
Phoebe Nobles. Perk. <lb />
Sam Joyner, lot, Hodges----- <lb />
Ida Jones. lot, II. <lb />
A. S. Jenkins. lot, Arthur----- <lb />
Eliza Gray. home. <lb />
Annie Collins, <lb />
John lot C. <lb />
Robt. Brown, English <lb />
Chapel, 1-4 English . <lb />
W. L. Brown, lot Rat. <lb />
j. t. Allen, l lot <lb />
Jordan Wilson, I S O. B. <lb />
Williams, lot B lane . <lb />
Louisa Williams Eat, lot, <lb />
St. <lb />
Williams. lot. Clark St. 4.6 <lb />
Mrs. M. L. Warren, lots. J. <lb />
While. <lb />
II. D. lot. St. <lb />
Mary Thigpen. lot. Clark St. <lb />
J. W. lot 2nd St. <lb />
Fernando Shivers . <lb />
Robt. Spell, lot. Perk. <lb />
Miles Short, lot Greene St. . <lb />
J. B. ft L. M. Savage, lot, <lb />
. <lb />
Ida 1-2 Fleming <lb />
J. W. Perkins, Lucas, Hos. <lb />
Lincoln. Dudley. Res., <lb />
Adams . <lb />
Win. lot. Reed St . <lb />
Jesse Peyton, <lb />
Lula Peyton, lot St. <lb />
Nettie Peyton, lot Reed <lb />
St. . <lb />
R. H. Parker. May . 10.10 <lb />
Mrs. Ella lot Ricks <lb />
lot <lb />
Frank lot 13th St. 5.7- <lb />
lot Short <lb />
St. <lb />
Nettie Move. lot Peril., . <lb />
Samuel Move, 1911, 1911 lot Per- <lb />
kins . <lb />
Mills More. lot, Perk. <lb />
Andrew Moore, Pitt <lb />
St. <lb />
Mrs. S. E. lot <lb />
cant. lot Manning. loot. <lb />
Meadows. lot Forbes, lot <lb />
Smith. lot Fleming, lot <lb />
St, lot Abbott. <lb />
Lizzie Kearney lots Clark <lb />
9.11 <lb />
6.57 <lb />
4.20 <lb />
3.10 <lb />
3.71 <lb />
7.77 <lb />
1.91 <lb />
6.7.-. <lb />
17.11 <lb />
8.33 <lb />
Till <lb />
, 3.78 <lb />
3.10 <lb />
8.8 I <lb />
3.10 <lb />
1.90 <lb />
8.01 <lb />
8.05 <lb />
8.0 <lb />
1.11 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
. I <lb />
. 2.20 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
Phillip Bynum. I Perry . MO <lb />
Emma Battle. Perry. 3.11 <lb />
Richard mount. Maine St. . 1.91 <lb />
Joseph Blount, Main St. <lb />
Hay wood Baker. N and S . 1.51 <lb />
Ed Tyson Marlboro . 7.01 <lb />
Mary Atkinson. Main St . 4.21 <lb />
Sam Williams. Parr . <lb />
T. Windham. Wilson . 16.31 <lb />
c. W, Windham, . IS. <lb />
D. Windham, Will on . 11.16 <lb />
Alice Williams, Marlboro 3.40 <lb />
W. Williams. J- Branch. 4.90 <lb />
Joe Lang lot So. Ayden <lb />
Charlie Jacobs. lot . <lb />
It. It. Johnson lot So. <lb />
Ayden. lot Ayden, lots <lb />
Winter. 9.63 <lb />
A. I. Johnson. lot. 8.03 <lb />
J. E. Jones. lot <lb />
F. F. lot Ayden . 11.30 <lb />
J. A. Griffin. near Ayden, <lb />
Iota Ayden . 57.45 <lb />
Free Will Baptist Pub. Co. lot <lb />
Ayden. 13.30 <lb />
Alfred Evans. lot Winter 2.20 <lb />
Mrs. Va. Early. lot Ayden . <lb />
John A. <lb />
Hardy Davis 1-2 Ayden . 1.91 <lb />
Alonzo Daniel. 1-2 Ayden . 1.91 <lb />
Parrot Daniel. near Ayden . 2.21 <lb />
W. B. lots Ayden 16.91 <lb />
John D. Cox. col. lot Ayden <lb />
Chapman, col., So. <lb />
David 1.68. <lb />
If, B. Barber, lot Ayden <lb />
D, W. lot 6.16 <lb />
Henry Allen, col. 1-4 So. <lb />
Ayden <lb />
Mrs. Home, <lb />
16.51 <lb />
W. H. Harrington, Johnson 9.3 <lb />
Henry Hardy . 15.06 <lb />
Delia Dawns, <lb />
Willis Downs. 1-2 D. 1.61 <lb />
Jessie Clark. 1-2 <lb />
W. S. Clark and son Creek 32.13 <lb />
Frank Battle, <lb />
Willis W. Bullock, C. <lb />
SHIFT TOWNSHIP. <lb />
M. C. White, M <lb />
Easter Smith, . <lb />
13.90 <lb />
4.90 <lb />
Oliver Smith, 4.45 <lb />
Joanna Mills. M. <lb />
Mrs. C. J. 1728.06 <lb />
Burnett H. Munger, I-and 12.10 <lb />
Mrs. Bessie Manning 1-2 . 2.43 <lb />
D. O. Moore. W. <lb />
C. G. Moore. Land . 3.10 <lb />
Richard Little. N. R. 3.71 <lb />
Shade Kirkman. <lb />
Henry 3-4 . <lb />
F. H. Faulkner. G. 10.70 <lb />
B. J. J. E. Dall, M. G. <lb />
3.54 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
Good Road <lb />
Column <lb />
W. V. N. R. <lb />
Waller Buck. <lb />
L. Co., F. II, <lb />
King. <lb />
Dock Thigpen. Marlboro . 5.11 TOWNSHIP i Fleming P. <lb />
J. T. J. Branch. 9.94 Abram Swindell. lot Fountain, M, S. <lb />
William Raspberry, . . 3.11 1.1,70. cost total Little S . <lb />
Main. Perry, Nathan Sanders, acres J <lb />
Cotton . 12.10 cost total ,,,,.,, ye <lb />
J. It. Owens. 1-2 G. . 3.11 lot Fountain, tax j Riding P B <lb />
John B. R, cost total Redding 1911 and 1912 <lb />
Marlboro. .; p Vines. tax <lb />
Fannie May and Emily coat total <lb />
Marlboro . Thomas Vines, Fountain, tax <lb />
Robt. May, E. C. cost total <lb />
G. B. Moore, Barret, Lamb S. 3-4 acres <lb />
son, Belcher, Wilson, tax cost total <lb />
Main . <lb />
Joyner, Cotton . <lb />
Joyner. Burnett. 5.71 <lb />
Lawrence Joyner, Mary <lb />
Blount Joyner, Walnut <lb />
A. L. Joyner, Burnett, N A <lb />
S. It. It. 11-83 <lb />
188.90 w. L. Horton. acres <lb />
j. K. Henderson. lots Stamps, taxes <lb />
5.36 <lb />
4.10 <lb />
6.09 <lb />
3.43 <lb />
19.30 <lb />
8.07 <lb />
11.75 <lb />
or Weakness and Less of Appetite <lb />
ionic, <lb />
Standard <lb />
up the A . lords <lb />
ant adults and <lb />
John H. Joyner, Main . <lb />
lier, Geo . <lb />
Hannah Johnson, Cotton <lb />
Joyner, <lb />
Jason Joyner II. C. Cobb, <lb />
Wilson. I <lb />
W. It. Jackson. B. W. <lb />
Matilda Hines. Main St . <lb />
j, t. Ml c. Berg. . <lb />
J A. Burnett. Wilson . <lb />
J. I. Baker. Main, Pine, . <lb />
Mrs. C. L. Barrett. Main <lb />
Robt. Atkinson. W A S. <lb />
BETHEL TOWNSHIP <lb />
lot Crawford 5.2,1 <lb />
cost total <lb />
Mrs. Margaret James, lot Home. <lb />
taxes cost total <lb />
W, I. Johnson, lot Stamps, taxes <lb />
cost <lb />
W. L. Joyner. lots Stamps, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
Gaston Bass acres cost <lb />
total <lb />
5.41 L. Long, lot Fountain, taxes. <lb />
cost total <lb />
W. H. Mercer, N. R. lot Res. <lb />
taxes cost <lb />
total <lb />
and Wooten, acres Gard- <lb />
cost total <lb />
John J <lb />
cost total <lb />
Sarah May. lot Fountain, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
J. A. Newton, acres Moseley. taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
W. R. Owen. Fountain, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
J. G. Owen. Fountain, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
9.54 <lb />
3.11 <lb />
4.61 <lb />
I 7.30 <lb />
3.11 <lb />
6.71 <lb />
12.34 <lb />
19.30 <lb />
7.91 <lb />
The following sketch of <lb />
D. M. Clark, of Pitt, is taken <lb />
from the recent legislative edition <lb />
the Raleigh News and Observer. Mr. <lb />
Clark is conducting the good roads <lb />
department now appearing in The <lb />
Reflector and through that means en- <lb />
to awaken interest <lb />
for good roads in Pitt county. <lb />
David Clark Green- <lb />
ville, representative from Pitt county, <lb />
was born in Halifax county September <lb />
Ism;, and is the son of Edward <lb />
and Margaret <lb />
.- vi <lb />
3.10 <lb />
1.61 <lb />
21.12 <lb />
3.54 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
2.43 <lb />
C, J. Parker . <lb />
West, lot Main <lb />
W. J. Taylor, Davenport <lb />
Win. lot Tarboro <lb />
J. J. Perkins, Bat, <lb />
W. M. Mocks, Home. F. II. acres Parker, taxes <lb />
Mrs. Alice V. Martin. Creek, cost total <lb />
II lot R. R. Stephen Parker, Fountain. <lb />
4.43 cost total <lb />
6.00 J. n. acres Fountain, <lb />
taxes cost total <lb />
51.00 w. II. Sheppard, lot Fountain, tax- <lb />
es, cost total 11.76. <lb />
Ell Savage. lots Fountain, taxes<lb />
St. <lb />
5.97 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
3.10 <lb />
Henry Knox, lot 1st St. <lb />
J. Robt. King. lot Clark St. <lb />
Laura King. lot 13th St. . <lb />
King. C D. <lb />
Nathan and wife. lot <lb />
Greene St. <lb />
Chas. Hanrahan. lot Perkins <lb />
W. w. Humphrey, lot Greene <lb />
Frank Hopkins, lot Res. lot <lb />
Pitt. 6.92 <lb />
Henry lot lot <lb />
Clark St. 4.72 <lb />
Mary Bard Home 5.80 <lb />
Jane lot Pitt St. 6.03 <lb />
Austin Harris, Pitt <lb />
William II 1-4 Ar- <lb />
. 5.10 <lb />
W. P H lot 14th St <lb />
lot Mil . 17.81 <lb />
W. H .--. fellow <lb />
i Poor Rouse.<lb />
I Mo <lb />
.-, v <lb />
C. H., ll <lb />
. <lb />
I'd K 10.6 <lb />
in, 1-2 <lb />
SI . <lb />
H. Foreman, 1-6 I-1 PI <lb />
D, r 1.1 1-8 P <lb />
1-1 <lb />
Si . <lb />
J. B t, lot S <lb />
Mrs. A. M. Flake. <lb />
W. A. Forbes and wife, <lb />
Forbes. 11.37 <lb />
Wm. R. Edwards, lot C. <lb />
St. 6.90 <lb />
R. II. Edwards, Brown 1.7 <lb />
1912 19.8 <lb />
Jane Hardy 14.73. cost . 6.0.11 <lb />
Frank Hopkins 16.61, cost <lb />
Jenkins. Home . <lb />
Jones, lot Pitt . <lb />
M. A. James, Home, <lb />
Bullock . <lb />
Mrs. Laura James, <lb />
A. James, Home <lb />
James. lot Main . <lb />
C. Gardner, Rollins 6.94 <lb />
John Ellison, N. R. Johnson <lb />
Melissa Elliott, lot James <lb />
S Carson N. lot Tar- <lb />
. 3.01 <lb />
Carson Heirs. lot <lb />
j, Carlyle, lot <lb />
T, II. Blount Blount 4.00 <lb />
W. J. Bryan, Jenkins I <lb />
L. <lb />
B. A. lot Pleasant . 1.58 <lb />
The following is quoted from an <lb />
article on the National Good Roads <lb />
appearing In the Saturday <lb />
Evening Post and is vouched for by <lb />
good authority. It is one of the <lb />
practical examples of the results of <lb />
good roads. <lb />
another example of good <lb />
roads. Massachusetts, previously to <lb />
found Its land rapidly <lb />
In The began to <lb />
Improved roads in 1892. As a <lb />
result, between 1891 and 1900, land <lb />
in Massachusetts showed the greatest <lb />
percentage of increase in comparison <lb />
with all other states of the Union. <lb />
roads have been Improved, <lb />
railroad have gone down. But <lb />
Increasing the <lb />
ed road.-, bring advantage to the rail- <lb />
roads. Tho more prosperous the <lb />
country tho greater the shipments, <lb />
therefore, the greater the benefit <lb />
to the railroads. <lb />
or Purdue <lb />
made an investigation that <lb />
showed an average Increase of <lb />
dollars an acre In territory where <lb />
locals have been Improved. <lb />
the farmer would he <lb />
enabled to gel labor and keep it. <lb />
boys and girls would be able to go <lb />
i their friends without <lb />
The country districts would <lb />
be more populated. As a result, the <lb />
boys and girls would stay on the <lb />
farm. <lb />
twenty-five counties in twelve <lb />
slates an average loss of population <lb />
of thirty-one hundred and twelve a <lb />
county was reported between and <lb />
1900. These counties had practical- <lb />
no good to be exact, <lb />
1.6 per cent in 1904. In twenty-five <lb />
other counties in the same slates an <lb />
average Increase of population of <lb />
thirty-one thousand and ninety-five <lb />
i was noted. These counties. when <lb />
tho population had increased, had <lb />
forty per cent of their roads <lb />
ed. Governor Mann, of Virginia, <lb />
ed that, although his stale had mad <lb />
wonderful strides along most line, <lb />
there are five hundred thousand <lb />
enriching other regions it <lb />
their brains and brawn because of a <lb />
of good roads In Virginia. <lb />
I the standpoint, <lb />
good roads would decrease the bills <lb />
wagon and harness repair. There <lb />
over half a million farm wagons <lb />
manufactured every year. Where do <lb />
tie go A prominent southern farm- <lb />
paid four hundred dollars for a <lb />
pair of mules. He refused a pair if <lb />
smaller mules at three hundred <lb />
because the larger ones could <lb />
pull a and fifty pounds more. <lb />
He refused to vote for bond Issues <lb />
It, build good roads that would have <lb />
enabled the small mules to pull one <lb />
thousand pounds more. <lb />
Report of the Condition of <lb />
THE PLANTERS BANK <lb />
at Stokes, in the state of N. C., at the <lb />
close of business April 1913 <lb />
Resources <lb />
Loans and discounts . <lb />
Overdrafts, secured, <lb />
cured . 40.66 <lb />
Hanking houses <lb />
fixtures <lb />
furniture and <lb />
. <lb />
Duo from banks and bank- <lb />
. <lb />
Cash Items . <lb />
Gold coin . <lb />
Silver coin, including <lb />
minor coin currency , <lb />
National hank notes <lb />
other U, S. notes . <lb />
all <lb />
and <lb />
2,231.75 <lb />
19,911.00 <lb />
226.85 <lb />
10.01 <lb />
158.30 <lb />
TOWNSHIP <lb />
J. O. Smith, 3.71 <lb />
Sutton. 2.21 <lb />
Maggie Sutton, Sutton . 2.01 <lb />
Maggie C. Swamp 1.41 <lb />
Lawrence Moore, . <lb />
W. Mills, W. Mills, 1-2 <lb />
Black Jack. Pot Wall . 8.64 <lb />
Arthur Mills, 1-2 Corey <lb />
Adam Mills. Cannon <lb />
Jas, II inly. C, X Roads----- 3.90 <lb />
J. Hill. T It. 7.31 <lb />
Q. Hudson. 1-2 Black Jack 18.10 <lb />
W. S. Hudson. Cat Tall 9.11 <lb />
J. L. Gibson, 80.71 <lb />
Mis. w. It. Gibson, C AG . H M <lb />
J, L. Gibson ft I. Gibson. <lb />
New Road . 1-41 <lb />
r Caw S. 1.66 <lb />
W B. Edwards. 8-18 <lb />
11.11 <lb />
. I <lb />
c. Swamp, . 1.41 <lb />
Creeping <lb />
p. 1.71 <lb />
1-2 c. s., <lb />
I .<lb />
TS. <lb />
Boyd, Br. I- W Mills . <lb />
TOWNSHIP <lb />
cost 1.30. total <lb />
W. T. Burton. N. R., lots vacant, <lb />
tax cost total <lb />
C. Bridgers, lot Fountain. <lb />
cost total <lb />
Will Barnett. acres tax 15.01, <lb />
cost. total <lb />
W, G. Craft, lots tax <lb />
cost total <lb />
I. L. D. Corbett. lot Stamps, tax <lb />
cost total <lb />
Corbett, Dupree. <lb />
cost total <lb />
Millie Dupree, lot Falkland, tax <lb />
2.94. cost total 88.14. <lb />
Tinker Dupree, lot vacant, tax, <lb />
cost total <lb />
Ben lot Webb, tax, cost <lb />
total <lb />
C. I lot vacant, tax <lb />
cost total, <lb />
Willie Fields. lot Webb, tax, <lb />
cost. total <lb />
lot Webb, tax <lb />
cost 81.80, total <lb />
cost total 8411.71 <lb />
f, l. Harries, lax 1129.71, <lb />
11.10. total 1111.01. <lb />
Henry Harries, acres II <lb />
Gay. acres Tug- <lb />
well, taxes total 8461.71 <lb />
Clark. He was educated in the <lb />
don graded schools and at the <lb />
Carolina Agricultural and <lb />
College. He is a civil engineer; <lb />
ed as county engineer for the construe <lb />
of bridges. 1908-1909; city <lb />
engineer of Greenville and Eastern <lb />
Carolina Teachers School. <lb />
1909-1911; studied law at Wake For- <lb />
est College, and admitted to the bar <lb />
In 1911, and Is now a practicing at- <lb />
Mr. Clark was elected by a <lb />
Democratic majority of 1.700. He U <lb />
a member of a number of important <lb />
House committees and has taken an <lb />
active Interest in the work of each. <lb />
To Cure a Cold in One Day <lb />
Quinine <lb />
-ii and Headache works I old. <lb />
refund money if a f . <lb />
. . s , .-c , , , <lb />
. Williams <lb />
J. E. Page, . <lb />
Home <lb />
Mi el King's Daughter <lb />
Darlington, s. C. Darlington la <lb />
entertaining for three days the <lb />
annual convention of the <lb />
South Carolina division of the In- <lb />
Order of <lb />
A I e and an <lb />
program of entertainment <lb />
to give o of one of I <lb />
heal conventions in the history f <lb />
How true Gov. Mann's words apply <lb />
to N. C. and especially Pitt <lb />
Of course, to those who wear <lb />
low glasses all things look shady. <lb />
So it Is with those who stir up <lb />
that they may become enriched at tho <lb />
expense of the other fellow. We <lb />
do not expect those people who <lb />
prompted l by selfish motives t <lb />
see our i. <lb />
The man In the face of expert <lb />
opinions of life road engineer--. <lb />
sits himself up as an authority and <lb />
dictator, and issues an edict that <lb />
put upon a sandy road ruins <lb />
Is a knave or a fool and ii <lb />
either event is unfit to advise an In- <lb />
people. <lb />
Total . <lb />
Liabilities <lb />
Capital stock paid in . <lb />
Undivided profits, less cur- <lb />
rent expenses and taxes <lb />
paid . 70.67 <lb />
Time certificates of deposit <lb />
Deposits subject to check. 18,382.55 <lb />
Due to banks and bank- <lb />
. <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
. 1.00 <lb />
Piles Cured in to Days <lb />
Your will refund if <lb />
I fails in any case Itching, <lb />
Blind, Bleeding Protruding in <lb />
Tho Aral I ind R <lb />
RATES TO PORTS <lb />
Total . <lb />
State of North Carolina, County of <lb />
Pitt, <lb />
I, J, W, Bailey, cashier of the above <lb />
named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb />
the above statement Is true to <lb />
best of my knowledge and belief. <lb />
J. Cashier. <lb />
Subscribed and sworn to before me, <lb />
this 9th day of April. 1913. <lb />
K B. J. P. <lb />
J. L. PERKINS, <lb />
W. O. STOKES. <lb />
O. <lb />
Directors.<lb />
J Wind, id Est, 1910. 1911 <lb />
and 1911, I 2.21 <lb />
I. F. . <lb />
Mrs. M. A. Tucker. <lb />
Robt. Smith. . <lb />
C It Patrick, Home, lot <lb />
Ayden. <lb />
T. it. Patrick 3-. <lb />
. ; <lb />
G. F. Morrison, lot Ayden <lb />
m m en inn <lb />
I t<lb />
. <lb />
Gray, Cobb . <lb />
William Hathaway, r I <lb />
lifted I P. Road . <lb />
Moors <lb />
David Ni P. . <lb />
Nobles, Road . <lb />
B. Smith. Smith Road . <lb />
I Joseph Parker.<lb />
8.58 TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Ned Est., II. <lb />
84.64 Abram Thigpen. K----- <lb />
16.70 A. A. Tyson. Little . <lb />
Prank Johnson, Bin . <lb />
W. G. Hathaway Hill <lb />
ii<lb />
.-, -1 <lb />
4.37; <lb />
4.07 I <lb />
1.42 <lb />
1.88 <lb />
FACT <lb />
W-. HI <lb />
Idol actual <lb />
t; external conditions, but in the <lb />
rest o ,, I a I by a <lb />
; . <lb />
Hearing On Lung And Short <lb />
CHICAGO, ill., April Inter- <lb />
phase of the Southern rate <lb />
with reference to the long an <lb />
will be given an airing lo- <lb />
Examiner of <lb />
th Interstate Commerce <lb />
will conduct a hearing on <lb />
Southern M. Ben J. Corey, a Pitt county <lb />
oilier southern . ., has been <lb />
I x In C. coma <lb />
j. a. <lb />
Mrs. Mamie K. Fleming <lb />
requests the honor of pour presence <lb />
at the marriage of her daughter <lb />
Mary Louise <lb />
to <lb />
Mr. Leon Brown Fleming <lb />
on Wednesday <lb />
April the twenty-third <lb />
nineteen hundred and thirteen <lb />
half after seven o'clock <lb />
at <lb />
House, Not Hi Carolina <lb />
h . <lb />
by t. <lb />
.-1<lb />
; a Course of <lb />
LIVER <lb />
to the <lb />
mind. They bring health and <lb />
to the <lb />
tarn to their export k and taken charge of the <lb />
freight from ., . ,, former <lb />
Ohio river and east of the i; m Mooring and <lb />
to the Gulf torts. <lb />
,, do no <lb />
a-, the points of origin for <lb />
the rates on articles f, <lb />
lbs rates on articles for <lb />
the ports of New <lb />
Pensacola other being <lb />
lower than the rates to <lb />
points.<lb />
in-t <lb />
lit. <lb />
Old sores, Wan i <lb />
The worst cams, no matter of how long standing, <lb />
in cured <lb />
, h r- <lb />
Vain sud <lb />
I n<lb />
n tit . <lb />
red <lb />
n H v. m <lb />
ht H . <lb />
awl <lb />
Free all<lb />
.<lb />
but. I<lb />
GREENVILLE IS TEE <lb />
HEART OF EASTERN <lb />
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb />
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb />
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb />
AND ONE. AND IS <lb />
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb />
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb />
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb />
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb />
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb />
HA EVERYTHING TO <lb />
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb />
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb />
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb />
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb />
JOB AND NEWSPAPER <lb />
PLANT. <lb />
Agriculture Is the Meet the Host Healthful, the Host Noble Employment of Washington. <lb />
WE HAVE A <lb />
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb />
AMONG THE BEST <lb />
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb />
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb />
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb />
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb />
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb />
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb />
ATTENTION. <lb />
OUR ADVERTISING <lb />
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb />
BE HAD UPON<lb />
s. C It, <lb />
HI <lb />
Police Kept <lb />
Busy Owing To Strike <lb />
Of School Children <lb />
Hundreds March Carrying Banners <lb />
Us Protest Against An <lb />
Official <lb />
Girl Bun Down <lb />
And Killed Hy Street Car While <lb />
In The Line Of March. <lb />
Pasties Police <lb />
PITTSBURGH, Pa., April <lb />
first fatality attending the <lb />
of school children as pro- <lb />
tests against Superintendent S. L. <lb />
occurred this morning <lb />
an unknown foreign girl marching <lb />
with a hundred or more of her com- <lb />
in Penn avenue run <lb />
down by a street car killed. <lb />
The which began yesterday <lb />
soon after Mr. who had been <lb />
acquitted of serious charges <lb />
him by a domestic in <lb />
bis family, had returned to work, <lb />
spread to a number of school build- <lb />
this morning. <lb />
Reports received from four schools <lb />
showed that scarcely per cent <lb />
the pupils were in their places, and at <lb />
other schools the said to <lb />
have been encouraged by their parents <lb />
endeavored to prevent pupils not in <lb />
sympathy with the movement from <lb />
entering the buildings. <lb />
A feature the morning the <lb />
marching through the downtown <lb />
streets of a party of several hundred <lb />
children, none of whom appeared to <lb />
be more than a dozen years old. Thy <lb />
carried banners demanding the re- <lb />
of the superintendent <lb />
In all sections of the city as the day <lb />
advanced there were repeated calls tor <lb />
additional police, and all night men <lb />
besides reserves called out. <lb />
Because of the character of the <lb />
the police were almost at a <lb />
loss to handle the situation, but in a <lb />
number of instances succeeded In dis- <lb />
some of the gatherings by <lb />
MARSHALL TO THE <lb />
YOUNG LAWYERS <lb />
lire-President Lays Down Some Bales <lb />
for Their Guidance <lb />
Washington, Apr, his speech <lb />
Saturday night at the first annual din- <lb />
of the George Washington <lb />
laid down some rules for the moral <lb />
and professional guidance of young <lb />
lawyers. They comprise a sort of <lb />
legal ten commandments. Here they <lb />
ore in condensed paraphrase of the <lb />
Vice-President's utterances. <lb />
Don't rut a fee before a just <lb />
cause. <lb />
Don't worship money to the ex- <lb />
tent of being willing to Write <lb />
a dishonest contract in or- <lb />
to get a large fee. <lb />
Be a peacemaker; that is th- <lb />
lawyer's business. <lb />
Don't chase ambulances. <lb />
Honor your profession as your <lb />
own sacred honor; therefore <lb />
do not seek or confound <lb />
Don't accept contingent fees, <lb />
Use your influence against the <lb />
system of allowing <lb />
fees In advance in divorce <lb />
cases; therein lies the evil of <lb />
the divorce laws; when that <lb />
has been half the <lb />
divorce cases will stopped. <lb />
your influence to compel a <lb />
person charged with crime <lb />
testify In the case; the <lb />
cent man cannot be harmed <lb />
thereby. <lb />
Take the part of the known <lb />
but only to see that <lb />
Is tempered with mercy. <lb />
Don't inquire to your client's <lb />
pocket book before fixing <lb />
your fee. <lb />
LADIES <lb />
A BUN. <lb />
AWAY <lb />
ACCIDENT <lb />
This morning Miss Alma Fleming, <lb />
of Hassell and Miss Daven- <lb />
port of who attended the <lb />
talking with tho older children that J marriage near House <lb />
were leaders. I came to Greenville together in a bus- <lb />
The continues to spread after crossing the <lb />
and reports are coming in from school into town, their became fright- <lb />
after that the children and run away through Pitt <lb />
refused to attend the sessions and street. Miss Fleming Jumped out of <lb />
parading about tho neighborhoods of the buggy near the crossing of <lb />
the school buildings. street, while Miss Davenport, who <lb />
Many of the parades led toward j was driving, held her place and <lb />
the center of tho city through In reining up the at <lb />
mazes of traffic while the Dickinson avenue. <lb />
OF VOTES AGAINST <lb />
Congressman Says Most Audacious <lb />
And Autocratic Trust <lb />
THROUGHOUT COUNTRY <lb />
walks are lined with grown folk <lb />
decided whether to mo indignant or <lb />
take the matter as a Joke. <lb />
Superintendent of the <lb />
Jumping from the buggy Miss <lb />
Fleming was carried to the home <lb />
Mrs. Fleming, where she has <lb />
since been In bed. A physician <lb />
Friends of United Stales Senator <lb />
Culberson of Texas he will <lb />
be appointed by President Wilson to <lb />
the first on the United States <lb />
supreme <lb />
lice, this morning said that older celled in, but does not think she i <lb />
heads Inspired the movement, pointing seriously hurt, <lb />
to the display of the Has <lb />
at tho head of the processions, while <lb />
herding the children into line were <lb />
young men whoso faces are familiar <lb />
about newspaper circulation depart- <lb />
D. B. Oliver, of the board of <lb />
in a statement this morning <lb />
is an organized and financed <lb />
movement to down the school board <lb />
and drive <lb />
A crowd of the from <lb />
North side marched across a bridge <lb />
over the Allegheny river and attempt- <lb />
ed a demonstration before the Fulton <lb />
building in which is located the offices <lb />
of tho board of education. the <lb />
of the procession hurried a mother <lb />
irate. She the crowd before <lb />
the Fulton building as several mount <lb />
feet, swung him across her lap, and <lb />
whaled him while his companions <lb />
shouted In derision. <lb />
The woman then started for some <lb />
or tho other disturbers but dis- <lb />
almost In tho twinkling of an <lb />
eye, while the police expressed <lb />
for them other. <lb />
Up to early this morning more than <lb />
fifty schools were reported as <lb />
by the movement. In some In- <lb />
and foot patrolmen were trying to stances but a handful of pupils were <lb />
disperse the shouting children elbow-1 in attendance. <lb />
her way Into the center <lb />
she grabbed a <lb />
Representative From Illinois Want <lb />
Inquiry Into National Baseball <lb />
Methods, Originated <lb />
From Ty Cobb <lb />
WASHINGTON, D. C, April <lb />
Characterizing organized baseball as <lb />
most audacious and autocratic <lb />
trust in the Representative <lb />
Gallagher, of today <lb />
ed a resolution for an exhaustive in- <lb />
Into the operations of the Na- <lb />
Commission by a special com- <lb />
of congress and would also <lb />
the attorney general to <lb />
the contract system with <lb />
a view to instituting prosecutions for <lb />
violation of the Sherman anti-trust <lb />
law. <lb />
Mr. Gallagher expressed a willing- <lb />
to co-operate with any other <lb />
member of congress interested in any <lb />
specific case and planned to confer <lb />
with Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia <lb />
who, upon, request, was forwarded a <lb />
copy of Cobb's contract with tin <lb />
Detroit club. Senator Smith wants to <lb />
examine the terms of Cobb's contract. <lb />
The resolution would direct the <lb />
speaker to appoint a special commit- <lb />
tee of seven to investigate 011- <lb />
and practices of the baseball <lb />
to ascertain <lb />
Unjust discriminations have been <lb />
practiced in favor of or against play- <lb />
whether players are now or <lb />
have been subjected, coerced, or re- <lb />
strained from the exercise of their <lb />
just rights to enter Into contracts of <lb />
a and equitable nature; whether <lb />
such a combination has been effected <lb />
among baseball magnates throughout <lb />
the country as would preclude com- <lb />
petition and operate in restraint cf <lb />
trade. <lb />
This is sought, the resolution sets <lb />
forth, because most audacious <lb />
and autocratic trust In the country <lb />
is the one which presumes to control <lb />
the game of baseball; its an- <lb />
dally through the press of <lb />
the country the dictates of a govern- <lb />
commission, how competition is <lb />
stifled; how territory and games are <lb />
how the prices are fixed <lb />
which millions must pay to witness <lb />
the sport; how men are enslaved <lb />
forced to accept salaries and terms or <lb />
forever be barred from playing, and <lb />
of other acts incident to trafficking <lb />
In a national pastime for pecuniary <lb />
Iowa Electricians Meet <lb />
la., April <lb />
large attendance marked the opening <lb />
here today of the thirteenth annual <lb />
convention of the Iowa As- <lb />
The forenoon was <lb />
pied with the work of <lb />
At the afternoon session K. M Walker <lb />
of addressed the association <lb />
on the subject of welfare and <lb />
and the, relations between employers <lb />
and The convention will <lb />
conclude tomorrow, <lb />
COURT DOCKET <lb />
OF TARIFF BILL Second Day Proceedings of Pitt <lb />
County Superior Court <lb />
Interested Persons Will Be Given <lb />
Full Opportunity <lb />
WHEN II SENATE <lb />
of From the outside districts spas- <lb />
off were reported. <lb />
Third Trial of Indicted Danker <lb />
Va., April <lb />
case of Lewis former secretary <lb />
and general manager of the defunct <lb />
Mercantile Railway Building and <lb />
Association, was culled for trial In <lb />
the corporation court here today. Toll <lb />
will be the third trial of the former <lb />
banker on indictments pending against <lb />
him connection with the collapse <lb />
in the building and loan association. <lb />
To File On its Schedule. <lb />
And Day Sessions Be Call- <lb />
ed For To Expedite Pas- <lb />
sage Of Tariff <lb />
WASHINGTON, April a <lb />
strict party vote, the Senate finance <lb />
committee today decided finally that <lb />
j no public bearings would be given on- <lb />
ion the tariff bill, when it reaches the <lb />
senate. Interested persons will be <lb />
given a full opportunity, however, to <lb />
file or statements with the com- <lb />
bearing on any of the tariff <lb />
The decision is expected to shorten <lb />
materially the time that will be con- <lb />
In getting the tariff bill before <lb />
the senate for consideration. <lb />
j Tariff debate opens in the House at <lb />
o'clock tomorrow, and, in the hope <lb />
that general debate can be limited to <lb />
five days, Democratic Leader Under- <lb />
wood will attempt to hold the <lb />
to twelve hours of continuous work <lb />
dally. Another week of <lb />
under the rule permitting amend- <lb />
will send the bill to the Senate <lb />
soon after May 6th, it is believed. <lb />
Tariff Bill Comes Bark. <lb />
The tariff bill came back to the <lb />
House today from the ways and means <lb />
committee with a vigorous support- <lb />
report from tho Democrats on the <lb />
committee and an opposing <lb />
from the Republican members. <lb />
The general debate that begins to- <lb />
morrow, will be followed by concert- <lb />
ed efforts on the part of the <lb />
cans in the House to amend the bill <lb />
in all schedules. <lb />
While the Senate finance committee <lb />
has decided that further Hearings are <lb />
unnecessary, the Democratic members <lb />
of the committee will confer tomorrow <lb />
I With Democratic Senators from Pacific <lb />
Coast slates, who are opposed to the <lb />
flee sugar and free wool provisions of <lb />
new bill. A number of western <lb />
senators, Including Senator Myers, of <lb />
Montana, Senator of Ar- <lb />
will participate In the confer- <lb />
they have decided to support <lb />
the wool and sugar program If it <lb />
is approved by the House. Tho con- <lb />
tomorrow <lb />
the strength against these features <lb />
the bill. Those who will <lb />
insist, however, that there has been no <lb />
effort to form an offensive alliance <lb />
against the measure a proof of which <lb />
they point to the fact that <lb />
and others Interested In a <lb />
change of tho free sugar and free <lb />
provisions not been included in <lb />
the conference. <lb />
Day and Sessions <lb />
Leader Underwood today decided to <lb />
call for day and night sessions of the <lb />
House beginning tomorrow, to <lb />
ate tho passage of the tariff bill. It <lb />
was his decision was In accord- <lb />
with a suggestion from the White <lb />
House that night sessions would <lb />
an desire lo secure tariff leg- <lb />
as quickly as possible With <lb />
the entire ways and means committee <lb />
in session for tho first time. Under- <lb />
work laid before It the Democratic <lb />
tariff revision bill. After receiving <lb />
vigorous opposition the six <lb />
members Victor <lb />
the new Progress member of the <lb />
committee. It was approved by the <lb />
strict party vote of to <lb />
Calendar Is Hell Filled With Such <lb />
CUM To lie Dealt With At <lb />
This I term. <lb />
Fined <lb />
The following cases have been dis- <lb />
posed of since last <lb />
Adam cruelty to animals, <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
John Price and larceny, <lb />
plead guilty, sentenced twelve <lb />
each to roads, in another case Dix- <lb />
was given an additional sentence <lb />
of twelve months. <lb />
Dick larceny, guilty, de- <lb />
bound out until he Is years <lb />
old. <lb />
Alex J, Simons and M. G. Ford, <lb />
fray, both guilty. Ford discharged, <lb />
Simons pay all costs and give bond <lb />
for good behavior. <lb />
E. C. Edwards, selling liquor, in <lb />
two cases, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
continued upon payment of costs <lb />
bond for good behavior. <lb />
Joseph Everett and Paul Everett, <lb />
selling liquor. Paul Everett pleads <lb />
guilty, judgment continued upon pay- <lb />
of costs and good behavior. <lb />
Arthur Cook, selling liquor, pleads <lb />
guilty. Judgment continued upon pay- <lb />
of costs and bond for good be- <lb />
Durham Parker, selling liquor n <lb />
two cases, pleads guilty. Judgment <lb />
continued on payment of costs aid <lb />
bond for good behavior, <lb />
Geo, P. Owens, selling liquor, pleads <lb />
guilty, Judgment continued on pay- <lb />
costs and bond for good be- <lb />
Peter Pitt. selling liquor, <lb />
pleads guilty, Judgment continued on <lb />
payment of costs and bond for good <lb />
behavior. <lb />
Arthur Cook, selling liquor, pleads <lb />
guilty, Judgment continued upon pay- <lb />
of costs and bond for good be- <lb />
C. C. Baker, selling liquor, pleads <lb />
guilty, Judgment continued on pay- <lb />
of costs and bond for good be- <lb />
Brooks, selling liquor, pleads <lb />
guilty, judgment continued on pa- <lb />
of costs and bond fur good be- <lb />
N. II. Peal, false pretense, case re- <lb />
moved to county. <lb />
The grand Jury returned a true bill <lb />
against Moses Tyson for the killing <lb />
of Wade Moore, the homicide occur- <lb />
ring the 14th, while the boys <lb />
going home from a party. <lb />
J. W. for approaching the <lb />
attempting to get a <lb />
was adjudged In contempt of <lb />
and fined . <lb />
Join Taft, larceny, pleads guilty. <lb />
Judgment continued on payment of <lb />
Juke Gay, carrying concealed <lb />
on, judgment tided on payment <lb />
Will Washington and Butter Heart, <lb />
affray, plead guilty, judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Butter Heart, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
James L. Burnett, liquor. <lb />
pleads guilty. <lb />
David TeaL with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, Judgment sub- <lb />
on payment of costs. <lb />
Albert Allen and John Ivey Tyson, <lb />
affray, plead guilty, Judgment suspend <lb />
ed upon payment of costs. <lb />
Herman Everett, rimes, <lb />
FATHER SHOOTS <lb />
SON THEN TAKES <lb />
HIS OWN LIFE <lb />
Dispute Between Aged Farmer And <lb />
Son Results In Death <lb />
HENDERSON COUNTY AFFAIR <lb />
John Aged I-, Killed in <lb />
Father, Aged Who Tarns <lb />
Gun Himself Com. <lb />
Suicide <lb />
April <lb />
H. years of age, and John <lb />
son, years old, became <lb />
involved in a dispute while at work in <lb />
a field near here this afternoon, <lb />
resulted In death to both men. <lb />
The elder returned to <lb />
house, secured his double <lb />
shot gun and, without hesitation, It is <lb />
said the gun to his shoulder <lb />
and fired, tenting away part of the <lb />
younger man's face. Turning the <lb />
gun on himself he attempted to take <lb />
his own life, but a daughter wrested <lb />
the weapon from him. The old man, <lb />
however, returned to the house the <lb />
second time, secured another gun, <lb />
loaded It, emptied the contents In- <lb />
to his own brain, dying Instantly <lb />
John died late tonight <lb />
Hendersonville hospital. <lb />
Ships May Pass Through <lb />
Panama Canal Before <lb />
Close fear <lb />
WASHINGTON, April <lb />
Goethals, chief engineer of the <lb />
ma canal, in a report to the war de- <lb />
today, reiterated the hope he <lb />
expressed some time ago that be <lb />
would pass a ship through the canal <lb />
before the close of the present year. <lb />
The statement came in response to an <lb />
inquiry from Secretary Garrison, as <lb />
to whether it would be possible lo <lb />
grant the request of Capt. <lb />
the explorer, that he be allowed to take <lb />
his ship Pram through the canal when <lb />
ho starts for the regions from <lb />
the west coast of South America <lb />
winter. <lb />
Col. Goethals <lb />
opening of the Panama canal <lb />
for the passage of vessels has always <lb />
been predicted on the question of <lb />
and tho completion of tho lock gates. <lb />
Tho present schedule contemplates <lb />
admitting the water Into Cut <lb />
early In October and the completion <lb />
of one flight of locks at end of <lb />
tho canal by that dale. Tho cf <lb />
boats then depends upon the condition <lb />
of tho slides. It Is hoped that <lb />
will be able to pass a ship before <lb />
close of the year and if this can he <lb />
accomplished tho will no <lb />
difficulty In making the transit of <lb />
canal and every facility will be <lb />
for its doing No assurance, <lb />
however, can given in the matter <lb />
at this <lb />
Milton and <lb />
ling plead guilty, Judgment suspend- <lb />
ed on payment of costs <lb />
Fleming and Eugene Moore, <lb />
affray, plead Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Arthur Tyson, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, guilty, fined <lb />
Same defendant for carrying <lb />
concealed weapon fined and eon;.,. <lb />
on <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018245_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
Gov. Craig Declares <lb />
That Good Roads Will <lb />
Transform The State <lb />
News and <lb />
la North Carolina we will Boon <lb />
have fine highways everywhere. The <lb />
spirit Is growing. Counties that <lb />
ready have them realized their val- <lb />
and know the folly of submitting <lb />
to old conditions. Counties that have <lb />
them are not coming to know that <lb />
they are lagging behind and denying <lb />
to themselves one of the greatest <lb />
of modern progress. <lb />
Good <lb />
They Improve moral <lb />
Good Road <lb />
Column <lb />
The following letter from one of <lb />
the largest and bonds firms In <lb />
the United States has just been re- <lb />
roads improve material con- In reply to an Inquiry from <lb />
con- <lb />
They make better <lb />
and better churches. They are es- <lb />
to the Improvement of our <lb />
life. They make communities of <lb />
Isolated families, and afford the <lb />
an opportunity of social Inter- <lb />
course. They enable the farmer to <lb />
market his produce at any season and <lb />
in any kind of weather, making him <lb />
a part of the current of the world's <lb />
life and stimulating in him a spirit <lb />
of emulation and ambition. <lb />
When we get good roads In North <lb />
Carolina, and we will get them in <lb />
every county and in every section, <lb />
wealth of the state will be multiplied <lb />
We will feel the Impetus of <lb />
dented progress. <lb />
The hope of North Carolina is Ml <lb />
the country districts. We rejoice <lb />
In the Improvement of our cities and <lb />
towns, but per cent, of the people <lb />
of North Carolina are born and grown <lb />
up in the country. There must be <lb />
our finest development. Thence the <lb />
strong manhood and womanhood <lb />
North Carolina will come. Good <lb />
will improve country conditions <lb />
add to the advantages and <lb />
of country life immensely. A <lb />
few years from now a transformation <lb />
will be wrought In the life and the <lb />
progress of the state. <lb />
Recently many counties and town- <lb />
ships have issued bonds for the <lb />
of roads, and next week <lb />
several counties will hold elections <lb />
In Davidson county, Mr. H. <lb />
Varner and his co-workers are carry- <lb />
on a campaign for good roads <lb />
that equals In enthusiasm the most <lb />
excited political movements. On Wed- <lb />
we traveled on a special train <lb />
through the southern section of <lb />
county. We stopped at var- <lb />
stations, and spoke to the <lb />
who listened Intently and some- <lb />
times with enthusiasm. There were <lb />
brass bands and On Thurs- <lb />
day we traveled through the northern <lb />
section in automobiles and spoke to <lb />
large and enthusiastic crowds. There <lb />
Is intense opposition to this move- <lb />
in Davidson county, but there Is <lb />
a determination among the progress- <lb />
people to win. <lb />
The last legislature appropriated <lb />
as many as convicts to grade tin <lb />
highway through Hickory Nut Gap. <lb />
This is a link in the state road be- <lb />
tween Charlotte and the south, and <lb />
and the mountain country <lb />
and the west. This Hickory Nut Gap <lb />
road is a section six miles long In one <lb />
corner of Henderson county, and will <lb />
be essentially not a neighborhood road <lb />
but a State road. It goes through a <lb />
rugged, wild country, by <lb />
Rock and the Bald Mountain. It will <lb />
he a highway unsurpassed in grandeur <lb />
and scenic beauty. The convicts <lb />
will be put to work upon this road <lb />
at once, and when It is opened thous- <lb />
ands of tourists in automobiles from <lb />
all parts of the world will travel over <lb />
it. <lb />
The United States Government has <lb />
appropriated to be expended In <lb />
the improvement of some highway In <lb />
Carolina, provided the <lb />
will expend In the Improve- <lb />
of the same highway. The gov- <lb />
is to designate the road <lb />
which the Is to be expended. <lb />
I will designate the road between Mar- <lb />
Inn. In county and the <lb />
of the Blue Ridge, provided <lb />
or Old Fort township will furnish the <lb />
Old Fort township holds an <lb />
election on the 13th of May, and there <lb />
appears to he no doubt that It will <lb />
vote the This road leads <lb />
across the Blue Ridge at the Swan- <lb />
Gap. It is a link of the <lb />
highway and the central high- <lb />
way. It Is located In a country <lb />
most The people of <lb />
that section it afford to build <lb />
But all the people of North <lb />
Van will go in the mountains In <lb />
s will travel It. This <lb />
country g e through a country of <lb />
magnificent mountain scenery. U <lb />
winds beneath the pinnacle of <lb />
Blue Ridge and in full view of the <lb />
the Black Mountains, the <lb />
highest east the Mississippi. As <lb />
it was peculiarly a state highway, and <lb />
necessary for the opening of the <lb />
highway and the national high- <lb />
way, I thought It just to designate It <lb />
for the expenditure of the <lb />
by Federal Govern- <lb />
New York, April 1913. <lb />
Mr. D. M. Clark, Ally, at Law, <lb />
Greenville, N. C, <lb />
Dear <lb />
We have your letter of April <lb />
15th and note your request that <lb />
we advise you as to the amount <lb />
of Sinking Fund that Is necessary <lb />
for the city of Greenville to pro- <lb />
to extinguish a debt of <lb />
which is to mature in <lb />
forty years and on which fund <lb />
per cent compound interest will <lb />
be paid. <lb />
reply we have to advise you <lb />
you will have to raise each <lb />
year the following <lb />
Interest on bonds <lb />
Proportion of sinking fund 526.17 <lb />
ANNOUNCEMENT <lb />
INCREASED VALUES <lb />
in <lb />
ACCIDENT DISABILITY <lb />
POLICIES <lb />
Limits of for ordinary accident <lb />
and for travel accidents, will be <lb />
given in all policies that were formerly <lb />
based on and limits issued <lb />
by the MARYLAND CASUALTY COM <lb />
Premium rates remain the same. <lb />
All renewals of policies now in force will <lb />
be given advantage of these increased val- <lb />
. ft i <lb />
MARYLAND CASUALTY POLICIES <lb />
are not filled with evasive language and <lb />
vexatious clauses. <lb />
COMPARISONS with contracts issued <lb />
by any other CASUALTY COMPANY IN <lb />
THE BEST COSTS NO MORE. <lb />
A MARYLAND POLICY. <lb />
GET <lb />
H. A. WHITE <lb />
INSURANCE <lb />
1895 <lb />
Evans St., Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Trusting that <lb />
you the desired <lb />
are, <lb />
Yours <lb />
N. W. <lb />
this will give <lb />
information, we <lb />
very truly. <lb />
HALSEY CO.<lb />
Thus it can easily be seen that out <lb />
of that we now collect each <lb />
year for the Greenville township read <lb />
tax at our present rate of taxation, <lb />
we will he <lb />
Pay interest on u road <lb />
bonds at per cent per annum <lb />
a sinking fund each <lb />
year which placed at per cent com- <lb />
pound interest will pay off the i- <lb />
ed indebtedness In forty <lb />
fund according to the above letter <lb />
will have to be <lb />
These two funds added together to- <lb />
and this amount taken <lb />
from our present yearly road fund <lb />
Will leave us with which to <lb />
maintain or keep up the roads <lb />
they are improved. This <lb />
will provide per year for the <lb />
maintenance of each mile of road. <lb />
Has ever been spent on <lb />
the roads in Greenville township ii <lb />
one year before After they have <lb />
been improved will this amount at <lb />
per mile keep them In good <lb />
repair We think so. <lb />
Summary <lb />
Interest on bonds at per cent <lb />
Sinking fund to take up bonds 626.17 <lb />
Maintenance fund after con- <lb />
. 2476.28 <lb />
Total cost of Improved up-to- <lb />
date roads . 5502.45 <lb />
Amount thrown away on our <lb />
improved sand roads each <lb />
year . 6502.45 <lb />
It Is up to you Mr, Voter. Shall <lb />
we utilize this and have good <lb />
roads, or shall we continue to throw <lb />
this money and the opportunity <lb />
and go on plowing through the sand <lb />
because our fathers did Good <lb />
roads mean prosperity and better <lb />
times. Why put It off Act now. <lb />
Coward Drug Co. <lb />
Only <lb />
bud in Our <lb />
Prescription <lb />
i . w <lb />
ICE <lb />
CREAM <lb />
Superior to on. <lb />
I Alt Fountain <lb />
Full Urn of <lb />
Stationery, <lb />
Fountain <lb />
Pens, <lb />
Kodak Supplies <lb />
Drug Co. <lb />
Sporting Goods <lb />
WE A NICE LINE OF BASEBALL <lb />
TACKLE. BEAUT FLASHLIGHTS, <lb />
WINDOWS, THE ICE CREAK Wind- <lb />
SOB WALL AND ATLAS CEMENT. <lb />
CARR ATKINS <lb />
TODAY IN HISTORY <lb />
-o <lb />
April SI <lb />
stone laid for the Ger- <lb />
the <lb />
the oldest public school in <lb />
America <lb />
Evans, who made the <lb />
first application In America of <lb />
steam power for propelling <lb />
land carriages, died In New <lb />
York. Born in Delaware, In <lb />
1755. <lb />
to blow up <lb />
When Your Automobile <lb />
NEEDS TAKE IT TO THE <lb />
CD, ON Mill HOUSE, AND <lb />
NEEDED WILL BE AND SKILL. <lb />
DONE. IF NOT CONVENIENT TO CAR, <lb />
TO THE NO. AND AN <lb />
MECHANIC WILL BE TO DO <lb />
All Kinds of Accessories and Supplies <lb />
IN WAT OF TIBER, TUBES, PLUGS, <lb />
METAL POLISH, HORNS, SHOCK AH. <lb />
OILS, KIT, CONSTANTLY OH HAND. <lb />
Gasoline per Gallon <lb />
Greenville Motor Co. <lb />
S M <lb />
Wholesale and retail and <lb />
dealer. Cash paid for bidet, <lb />
Fur Cotton Seed Oil barrels, Turkeys, <lb />
the gates <lb />
of the Welland Canal. Oak ate. <lb />
services for the Ti- Suits, Baby carriage, par- <lb />
dead were held In many suits, tables, lounges, safes, <lb />
throughout the Brit- and Gall ft Ax snuff, High <lb />
Empire and the United Ufa tobacco, Key West Cheroots, Hen- <lb />
States, it George Cigars, canned cherries. <lb />
apples, syrup, Jelly, <lb />
Drive Mick Headaches flour sugar, coffee, soap, lye, magic <lb />
Sick sour atom- food, matches, oil, cotton seed meal <lb />
Indigestion, biliousness and seed manges, <lb />
after you take Dr. King's pies, candles, dried apples <lb />
New Life Pills They the blood peaches prunes, currants. <lb />
and put new life and vigor In the glass and china ware, wooden ware, <lb />
tern. Try t. in and you will be cakes and crackers macaroni, cheese. <lb />
satisfied. Every pill helps; butter, new Hewing ma- <lb />
guaranteed. Price chines and numerous other goods <lb />
mended by all druggists. adv Quality and quantity cheap for cash <lb />
Come to see me Phone a. <lb />
has never been a spirit <lb />
and such a determination to build fatal stock In the In my yards <lb />
FOR <lb />
11.50 for Setting of Ii <lb />
Fine prize winning S. C. White Leg <lb />
horns and Black a. C <lb />
and Buff and Bar- <lb />
red mouth Rocks. of <lb />
good roads and will e <lb />
live of wonderful Improvements <lb />
i. JENKINS,<lb />
Report, from in all parts <lb />
of the country Indicate that there will <lb />
N. be a great deal of building done this whom were quite a gathering of Win <lb />
MEETING OF <lb />
CLUB OF PITT COUNTY. <lb />
Friday afternoon at o'clock In the <lb />
hall of the Society of th <lb />
High School, the Mere- <lb />
Club of Pitt County held sec- <lb />
end meeting since <lb />
gates were appointed to represent this <lb />
club at the annual meeting of Mere- <lb />
Clubs on Tuesday afternoon of <lb />
commencement week. Several other <lb />
matte. were also attended to. <lb />
At the close of the business session <lb />
a very Instructive and Interesting pro- <lb />
grain was rendered as <lb />
A brief history of Meredith College <lb />
Cog. <lb />
What Meredith has contributed to <lb />
the World, by Mrs. J. Everett <lb />
Instrumental Duet, by Misses Car- <lb />
roll <lb />
Letter from a Senior at Meredith, <lb />
read by Miss <lb />
Why go to Meredith, by Miss <lb />
on. <lb />
After the exercises a <lb />
was held at tea <lb />
sandwiches were A large <lb />
number of guests wore present, among <lb />
Attractive <lb />
THE PRICES, THE <lb />
THE <lb />
IN OUR <lb />
Furniture- <lb />
Displays <lb />
NOW IS YOUR CHANCE TO REPLACE THE SHABBY-LOOK- <lb />
WORN FURNITURE WITH LITTLE EXPENSE. <lb />
THE BEST IDEAS ARK SHOWN IN FURNITURE CON- <lb />
ELS THAT WILL SUIT YOUR <lb />
WANTS AND FIT YOUR IDEAS FOR <lb />
DECORATION AND USE. <lb />
TAFT VANDYKE <lb />
Elegance in House Fur- <lb />
Without Ex- <lb />
Our Furniture stands the Test of Time. It Is built of the Best <lb />
material. True In wood an workmanship. Good enough to be <lb />
banded down to your as heirlooms. If home la net <lb />
and comfortable you Ilka It, why not corns and <lb />
complete furnishings <lb />
You will find Just the thing to give your dwelling a touch of <lb />
luxury, without excessive <lb />
TAFT CO <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
THAT FIT <lb />
For this the fifth season I roar orders. At <lb />
undeniably evidence of the Sues I Bake, my <lb />
bare grown from to pounds material In fire jean. <lb />
Four Solid Cars <lb />
already bought for trade. Will make this <lb />
year at Liberty Warehouse. To avoid delay sot bare <lb />
order at once. <lb />
J. J. JENKINS <lb />
Phone <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
COUNTY CITY OFFICIALS <lb />
Churches, Ledges sad Social <lb />
COUNTY <lb />
I. Dudley. <lb />
Clerk Superior C. Moore. <lb />
Register of Bell. <lb />
B. Wilton. <lb />
C. <lb />
Commissioners W. L. <lb />
B. M. W. K. Proctor, If. T <lb />
Spier, J. O. Taylor. <lb />
. year <lb />
High School <lb />
TOWN <lb />
M. Wooten. <lb />
C. Tyson. <lb />
L. Carr. <lb />
Chief of T. <lb />
Aldermen B. B. <lb />
A. J. <lb />
F. Davenport, B. F. Tyson, Z. P <lb />
H. C. <lb />
Water and Light <lb />
B. Spain, C. L. <lb />
W. Tucker. <lb />
L. Allen. <lb />
Fire Chief-D D. Overton. <lb />
M. Hock, <lb />
pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; C. W. <lb />
Wilson, superintendent of <lb />
school; J. secretary. <lb />
J J. Walker, pas- <lb />
tor; B, A. <lb />
Episcopal, St. Dallas <lb />
Tucker, Roster. W. A. Bowen, <lb />
Sunday school. <lb />
Presbyterian-1 k clerk<lb />
H Hoyle, A. B. <lb />
LODGES <lb />
Ir No. A F and A. M <lb />
IT. Harriet, W. M.; L. II. Pen <lb />
clerk; H. D. Bateman, <lb />
dent Sunday I. H. <lb />
secretary.<lb />
Rev W. O. pastor. <lb />
Sharon A P. and A. at. <lb />
F. D. W. M ; B. Ml <lb />
No. I. <lb />
O. W. Harden, C. P.; L. <lb />
H. Pender, Scribe. <lb />
River No. K. of <lb />
M. Clark, CO.; A. B. Ellington, <lb />
K. of R. and S. <lb />
Chapter No R. A. M. <lb />
J. N. Hart, H. P.; R. B. <lb />
Sec. <lb />
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. O. F. <lb />
Tuesday night, F. J. <lb />
Forbes N. G.; L. H. Pender, See. <lb />
Greenville Camp No. M, W. <lb />
f A., meets every lit and Wed- <lb />
nights. Julius Brown, con- <lb />
J. F. clerk. <lb />
Tribe No. IS. L O. R. <lb />
M. every Friday J. J. <lb />
Jenkins, Sachem; J. W. Brown, of <lb />
CLUBS <lb />
Lillian Carr, <lb />
dent; Ward Moore, <lb />
Daughters of T, <lb />
president; J. L. <lb />
ea, <lb />
The Kings A. L. <lb />
Blow, J. O. <lb />
I Into New stable I <lb />
I tad and tree I <lb />
I SHORT t <lb />
Transfer <lb />
and lit f <lb />
Phone No. T. or Day I <lb />
All Train I <lb />
A. T. <lb />
Plumbing, Steam and net Water <lb />
eating <lb />
Moved to Fourth front of <lb />
R. L. Smith's stable, formerly <lb />
pied by Chinese <lb />
M. T. SPIER, <lb />
or <lb />
FAITH HEADS <lb />
MORGAN'S Will <lb />
Great Leaves Bulk <lb />
Estate to Son <lb />
EVEN SERVANTS <lb />
Legal Notices. . <lb />
North Carolina, Pitt county. <lb />
OF <lb />
Notice it hereby given that the part-; S. J. Everett, of Jno. Ward, <lb />
of Spier and of Win- j <lb />
N. C, has been dissolved by , , . . <lb />
r , . Joe Langley, Henry Ward. Tom <lb />
mutual consent and the N <lb />
no longer exists for any purpose. M. and Jane Ward. <lb />
T. the senior member of the By virtue of authority vested in me <lb />
Arm or will continue in entered by the <lb />
. . . , ., clerk of the superior court in the <lb />
business at the same stand In his own above <lb />
name. All liabilities of the said pending therein, I will on Monday <lb />
partnership of Spier and Jackson to day of April, sell to the highest <lb />
be paid by M. T. Spier and all ac- bidder for cash, the following de- <lb />
count, owing the firm to be paid U in the county and <lb />
M. T. state above referred to, In the <lb />
Thai the 10th day of March. 1913. and kn. as the John <lb />
A. C. JACKSON. I Ward lot, being near the Atlantic <lb />
Coast Line railroad and described <lb />
In Horn A. D. Cox to John <lb />
Wan, book 1-7, page Pitt county <lb />
A Card of deeds containing <lb />
In justice to myself and also to of an acre, and with a small <lb />
Mr. Spier I want to say to my friends ., . . L ., <lb />
. . ., This the day of March, 1913. <lb />
and the public generally that the g j <lb />
solution of the firm of Spier and ltd Commissioner. <lb />
Jackson was not caused by any OF SOUTH <lb />
agreement or friction whatsoever be- ,, . . . <lb />
tween us. on the other hand our ,. . , <lb />
, . . . . Certificate of involution <lb />
business relations has been . .,, . ., ,, <lb />
,, , . To All to Whom These Presents May <lb />
pleasant and my withdraw- <lb />
., . . . <lb />
to my declining health, and I ask ,. <lb />
. . . Whereas, It appears to my <lb />
my friends and the public general- . . . . . . <lb />
to give to Mr. M. T. Spier the J authenticated record <lb />
surviving member, the tame merit Proceedings for the voluntary <lb />
. , , . dissolution thereof by the unanimous <lb />
of confidence and patronage In the . . . . . . . <lb />
. . ,. consent of all the stockholders, de- <lb />
future as In the past. . . . . <lb />
A. C JACKSON lb my office, that The John <lb />
e ltd Flanagan Buggy Company, a <lb />
ration of this state, whose principal <lb />
LAND SALE <lb />
By virtue of power vested in me county f ,,, of <lb />
b, that mortgage deed executed to , M Hooker e , on <lb />
me by Sam Little and wife Annie and , <lb />
Little and duly recorded In the of- be hag <lb />
flee of the of deeds for Pit the of <lb />
county to book Q-8 at page I ,,,, ft m <lb />
sell for cash at public auction , the <lb />
to the highest bidder at the court f of <lb />
Louse door in the town of Greenville, <lb />
on the 19th day of April, 1913, at Now ,., ,, j. Bryan <lb />
o clock, noon, the following de- of of ,, Slat of <lb />
scribed tract of real estate, lying m <lb />
being and situate In the county t Bad on the ,, <lb />
Pitt state of North Carolina, to L, March n my <lb />
executed and attested consent <lb />
A certain tract of land left to the <lb />
corporation, executed by all the stock- <lb />
Lit tie and deeded to ,, <lb />
Little by Little and the record of ,, <lb />
era. and described as Be- on fl J gad <lb />
ginning at an Iron stake, corner of b , <lb />
Little. Bur Little and Sarah In whereof. , have here. <lb />
Little and running with Sarah l unto Bet band an my <lb />
tie. line north degree, and h m <lb />
went feet to a In of March A D <lb />
creek with gum pointer.,, j BRYAN <lb />
Sarah corner, thence down . Secretary of State. <lb />
the run of Creek to a j j <lb />
gum at the mouth of a branch, <lb />
succeed to the ownership cf <lb />
these I hope he will b <lb />
able, in manner be shall <lb />
think best, to make a permanent dis- <lb />
position, or from time to time per- <lb />
dispositions of them or of <lb />
such portions of them as he ma <lb />
determine which will be a <lb />
carrying out of the intention <lb />
which I have thus cherished. It <lb />
would be agreeable to me to have the <lb />
from manufacturer to HARROW ESCAPE FRO <lb />
An analysis of the earning, and <lb />
of the Southern railway. <lb />
Seaboard Air Line and Atlantic Coast <lb />
Line in North Carolina on Interstate came Dear happening this <lb />
freight for the fiscal year happen any <lb />
ending June 1912, that the <lb />
combined Income this <lb />
was Of this total <lb />
day and will happen unless there is <lb />
more careful automobile driving. A <lb />
man was walking across the <lb />
Southern earned the aDd hap- <lb />
board 13.897,500 and the Coast Una <lb />
not be looking in every <lb />
at the same time. Along came <lb />
an automobile and run squarely <lb />
man. who fortunately <lb />
Morgan memorial, which forms a <lb />
portion of the property of the Van- A cut of per cent in the earn-, <lb />
j worth at Hartford, of three roads would. <lb />
I utilized to effectuate a part of lend to color the d <lb />
purpose. I do not. however, by of the railroads that it be borne <lb />
of these wishes, intend the traffic and impair i T <lb />
and thus saved from being <lb />
run over. It was a narrow escape <lb />
Wonderful Art Collection Also I. it <lb />
To Son. Will Be Probated To. <lb />
day. Lying-in Hospital <lb />
Ml Share <lb />
NEW YORK, April commit <lb />
my soul Into the of my Savior <lb />
in full confidence that having re- <lb />
deemed It and washed it In His <lb />
blood, He will present it fault- <lb />
before the throne of my <lb />
father; and I entreat my <lb />
to maintain and defend, at ill <lb />
hazard and at any cost of personal <lb />
sacrifice, the blessed doctrine of tin; <lb />
complete atonement for sin <lb />
the blood of Jesus Christ, once of- <lb />
and through that <lb />
This It the extraordinary and <lb />
utterance which begin, the <lb />
will and testament of John <lb />
impose upon my said son or my of the but on <lb />
grandson and duty or obligation. I. of not ,,. <lb />
gal or moral, nor to qualify In because it either original <lb />
manner or In any degree his absolute the south or passes <lb />
and ownership of said through the state. This would leave <lb />
should they pass to him earnings affected, aid <lb />
this much lg n comm. <lb />
The public charitable request, reduced, the a <lb />
as was predicted by many of those would amount in fact to U ; <lb />
conversant his immense of millions, or USU <lb />
factions, during his life time <lb />
there were no <lb />
Ir the freight traffic this would in <lb />
comparatively small and are In the <lb />
direction of those objects to w. . <lb />
,, ,, , . ti be a pretty lair sum for the th <lb />
Mr. Morgan benefactions are already <lb />
well known. For Instance, In the <lb />
case of the great Lying-in hospital <lb />
roads to lose a year. Hut the <lb />
are that the rules prevailing in <lb />
Carolina have not been changed <lb />
Strait-lit at It <lb />
Is no use or out R <lb />
around the We might as well <lb />
with it first as but. We want <lb />
you to try Chamberlain's Cough Rem- <lb />
the time you have a <lb />
or cold. There Is no reason so fa <lb />
ere can see why you should not <lb />
do so. This preparation by Its re- <lb />
markable cures has gained a world <lb />
In New York, to which Mr Morgan ,,., and <lb />
gave over a million and a quarter of of ,.,, <lb />
dollars, he use. the following that m per <lb />
Imposing any duty, trust <lb />
or obligation upon my res <lb />
gate, I request he continue, <lb />
in bis judgment the same shall <lb />
In order to do the Southern <lb />
Week in Atlanta <lb />
ATLANTA. Ga., April <lb />
first began today <lb />
with every promise of being a great <lb />
success. Orchestra and hand organ- <lb />
I. be from all parts of Georgia are <lb />
to long at the city and melody Is being pro- <lb />
end hat the o far cs it It ,. <lb />
concerned was not a natural grown. <lb />
on every thing from a month- <lb />
I organ to a steam calliope. Many of <lb />
lie Little's corner, thence with SALE OF REAL ESTATE <lb />
He Little's line north E , . ,.,. , ,, <lb />
I By virtue of a power of sale <lb />
feet to the beginning and containing m a certain mortgage deed <lb />
acres, more or It being and delivered by S. Summer- <lb />
No. on the map of the survey f and to O. <lb />
Ml. Little made by <lb />
and Clark in March, 1908. , county tn book <lb />
March 16th. 1913. page the under at <lb />
J. E. Mortgagee mortgagee, will on Saturday, the 19th <lb />
ALBION DUNN, Attorney. <lb />
ltd <lb />
day of April, 1913, at o'clock in , <lb />
expose to public tale before the court <lb />
house door In Greenville, to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash, the follow- <lb />
described real property, to <lb />
a tract in Swift creek town <lb />
ship. Pitt county, adjoining the <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
North Carolina. Pitt county. <lb />
In the superior court, <lb />
Peter Langley Matilda Langley of Causey, Archibald Dudley, <lb />
The defendant above named will and others, beginning at a <lb />
take notice, that an action entitled corner and runs N <lb />
as above has been commenced In the w poles to a N <lb />
superior court of Pitt county, to ob- poles to a stake; then N E <lb />
a divorce from the bond of mat- 1-2 lo a stake; then E <lb />
and the said defendant will poles to a stake; then W <lb />
further bike notice that she Is re- pole.; then E pole, to a <lb />
quired to appear at the April term slake; then W poles to Green's <lb />
of county superior court, which line; then with said line to the be- <lb />
convenes on the 28th day of April, ginning, containing acres, more <lb />
the court house of Pitt county, or <lb />
n N. C, to answer or de- This sale will be made for the <lb />
to the complaint In action, pose of satisfying the terms of <lb />
or the plaintiff will apply to the court Mortgage deed. <lb />
for the demanded In said This the day of March, 1913. <lb />
plaint G. and J. J. DIXON, <lb />
This the 4th of March. 1913. Mortgagees. <lb />
C, MOORE, HARDING and PIERCE, Attorneys. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. lid <lb />
ltd <lb />
LAND SALE <lb />
virtue of a executed <lb />
last; whose body, heaped over with <lb />
flower, from the crowned head, of <lb />
Europe, was a fortnight later brought <lb />
back to his own land and last Mon- <lb />
day was borne to it. last resting place <lb />
at Hartford. <lb />
Ever since the funeral the <lb />
of the great financier's last will <lb />
ha. been awaited with keen <lb />
and It safe to say that of all <lb />
the interesting testaments of eminent <lb />
citizens of America, that of Mr. <lb />
to be offered for probate here <lb />
Monday morning, is by far the <lb />
interesting. <lb />
At to the amount of the estate. I <lb />
which it one of the first questions the <lb />
public naturally Is asking, there <lb />
nothing In the will give any <lb />
rate Idea and the executors declare <lb />
that no announcement will be made j <lb />
on this point until the appraisal has <lb />
been made for determining the state <lb />
inheritance tax. <lb />
The amount of bequests and <lb />
named by turns, It under <lb />
twenty million dollars, but the entire j <lb />
residue of the estate is left to J. <lb />
Morgan, Jr., who is designated by <lb />
father to become the chief heir I <lb />
only to hi. fortune, but to hi. many j <lb />
charitable and activities. <lb />
As to the will Itself It It unusual <lb />
In many of its features and, according i <lb />
to those two or three Intimate friends <lb />
who already have had a glimpse of it <lb />
II is a portrait of Mr. Morgan him <lb />
beginning with the striking con-1 <lb />
bis religious faith tide <lb />
of his character which was known <lb />
his close associate, but not to the <lb />
and running through all Its <lb />
article., duly et forth <lb />
the logical and orderly <lb />
which his friends marked all Mr. <lb />
mental <lb />
He apparently provided with <lb />
painstaking care every <lb />
ency that might family or <lb />
big banking firm, aim to his <lb />
tor., namely his John <lb />
Jr., his two <lb />
Pearson Hamilton and II. Is <lb />
lee, and his friend, Lewis Cast <lb />
yard, he gives careful director <lb />
many clauses as to alternate <lb />
courses of procedure. It Is to be <lb />
noted that hi. grandson, <lb />
Spencer Morgan, Jr., a young man of <lb />
only twenty-one, now a student at <lb />
Harvard, Is repeatedly nominated to <lb />
necessary for it. support, the same Th increase however m Many of <lb />
assistance which I have been in the are furnishing free <lb />
habit of giving during my lifetime <lb />
has been more than per cent or. <lb />
the society of the Lying-in hospital <lb />
the city of New <lb />
This annual gift here alluded to is <lb />
known as having been <lb />
It Is worthy of note that the will <lb />
was executed lately a. January <lb />
The tonnage of the Seaboard Air <lb />
Line has increased during the <lb />
ten years per cent. The tonnage <lb />
of the Atlantic Coast Line during <lb />
the same period has Increased <lb />
per cent. The earnings of the <lb />
last and a codicil was attached on board for <lb />
January only the day before <lb />
took leave of America on the <lb />
trip abroad, from which he never re- <lb />
turned. <lb />
The will to his executors the <lb />
power and authority to <lb />
and pay as among such debts <lb />
and promise or obligation by <lb />
me, verbally or otherwise, which <lb />
though not in such form that the hold- <lb />
could compel payment thereof by <lb />
my estate, my executors think prop- <lb />
to be paid In their own Judgment <lb />
or because from or vet- <lb />
directions left by mo from other <lb />
they are satisfied that It <lb />
would be my wish to have <lb />
The disposition of the estate then <lb />
follow., the first provision being that <lb />
for his own family. <lb />
DEAL <lb />
Its last annual Increased <lb />
over the earning, of the <lb />
corresponding period a year before <lb />
or per cent for six month. The <lb />
increase for this year would, there- <lb />
fore, be over per cent. <lb />
The freight earnings of the Coast <lb />
Line for the past six months <lb />
been more than for the <lb />
period a year ago, or a <lb />
per of For the year <lb />
this would make an Increase of <lb />
per cent approximately. <lb />
The Southern railway bas fared a cough medicine for <lb />
concerts and In almost every dwelling <lb />
and apartment in the city the pianos <lb />
and are being <lb />
overtime. <lb />
The Weighing Party <lb />
The weighing party conducted by <lb />
Circle No. of the Baptist church <lb />
at the home of Mrs. W. L. Rice, Fri- <lb />
day night, proved an occasion cl <lb />
much pleasure to all who wire pres- <lb />
In addition to weighing all <lb />
there was a splendid pro- <lb />
gram of vocal and instrumental mus- <lb />
and refreshments were served. The <lb />
circle realized a good sum for their <lb />
church work. <lb />
Cough Medicine for Children <lb />
Too much care cannot be used in <lb />
even better. It. freight earnings for <lb />
the past six months Increasing <lb />
over the corresponding period a <lb />
It should be pleasant to take, <lb />
contain no harmful substance and be <lb />
most effectual. Chamberlain's Cough <lb />
year ago. or a percentage of 6.63.1 Remedy meets these <lb />
Should II. business continue to with the mother, of <lb />
crease the percentage would be children everywhere. For <lb />
by all druggists. <lb />
for the ; <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb />
Having qualified as executor of the <lb />
last will and testament of Henry C. delivered by Mary Ann Caution up important duties In the eve it <lb />
Harris, deceased, late of the county Tripp, Hart and Co., on the 18th 0- death of his father, John P <lb />
of Pitt and state of North Carolina, day of March 1911 which mortgage Morgan, Jr. <lb />
In this city the question most <lb />
asked by lending citizens an <lb />
this Is lo certify all persons having In the of the reg- <lb />
the estate of de- . , , , . . <lb />
ceased to exhibit them to the under- deeds of Pitt county In book <lb />
my town- O-U, page the undersigned will learned societies been that a. to <lb />
hip, county. North Carolina, on sell for cash before tho court disposition of Mr. Morgan's won- <lb />
or <lb />
of their recovery of the art treasures. <lb />
All persons Indebted to tract or parcel of land sit-1 Mr Morgan makes perfectly plain <lb />
of Henry C. Harris will plane make get In the county of Pitt and In; what his own hopes on this point lime <lb />
Immediate payment, ,.,,., adjoining and yet hi. aim, who Ii <lb />
HENRY II. of A. Forbes, Frederick White, Ii entire <lb />
Executor of Henry C. Harris Frank Heath and W., n the matter, using the following <lb />
II ltd l containing more or significant <lb />
less, for description have been greatly Interested <lb />
JOB PRESS ,, is to said mortgage, <lb />
Hy virtue of authority of n chattel March 1913. <lb />
mortgage to mo n. U TRIPP. HART and CO. <lb />
Edward, on the <lb />
many In my <lb />
of paintings, <lb />
and other works of art and II <lb />
and duly recorded in the p, JAMES and SON. Ally., <lb />
tar's office In Pitt In Honk J ltd Sew <lb />
C-10, page to secure <lb />
of a certain bond bearing even date <lb />
Mortgagees., has been m desire and Intention <lb />
Mike some deposition of <lb />
them or of such portion, of the-1 <lb />
I I might determine, which <lb />
render <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
Herewith and the In Having as administrator the Instruction and pleasure <lb />
chattel mortgage not having been of K. Mooring, deceased, late of Hie people. of the <lb />
I shall ., p t. devote ,. has M <lb />
He auction far on Monday the mM lo ,,, ,,,, prevented my carrying this pm- <lb />
day of April, 1913, at the court u,,, properly proven Into effect. Unless I <lb />
door In Greenville, In PHI within II month. date, or this H r make some disposition <lb />
the following of these collection. In my lifetime <lb />
One Job printing press, all Indebted lo said estate AW will pa., to my J. P. Ho- <lb />
Job printing equipment to run game, vi make Immediate pan, Jr., or lo his son. Span- <lb />
new, I The I Mb, Morgan, Jr., under the <lb />
April 1st, 1913. of thin will whereby I <lb />
S. J. F SON, m Should <lb />
U It-v son or my laid grand-son <lb />
Profits of Roads Last Year <lb />
More Than <lb />
Profit. Are And Their <lb />
Lou Would Re A <lb />
Three Million <lb />
RALEIGH. April the ac- <lb />
reductions In revenue by accept- <lb />
the proposition submitted by i <lb />
state would be only for the <lb />
Southern railway, tho Seaboard Air <lb />
and tho Atlantic Coast Lino, and <lb />
that reduction, would be more, <lb />
than for In the natural <lb />
Increase of freight business are facts <lb />
that cannot be deputed, according to <lb />
Information at tho <lb />
tho North Carolina corporation com- <lb />
mission. So when tho <lb />
t veil return to Raleigh Tuesday, <lb />
April for the purpose of <lb />
their final reply to the suggestion or <lb />
rate commission and tho <lb />
corporation they will face <lb />
a situation that they must know bus <lb />
been worked out by experts. <lb />
Whether railroads will to <lb />
continue to fatten on North Carolina, <lb />
while giving to the other slates <lb />
freight rates, will <lb />
ed at the third conference. Opinions <lb />
differ as to whether the railroads will <lb />
do the right thing North Carolina, <lb />
pessimists taping that the brig it <lb />
attorney of the have learned <lb />
Just what this stale can do and will <lb />
not concede anything, while the more <lb />
optimistic claim that the carrier, will <lb />
recognize the lice, of North <lb />
Carolina claims and net accordingly. <lb />
The proposition submitted by the <lb />
calls for a reduction of approx- <lb />
per cent on Interstate <lb />
Into North other <lb />
words, what the commission has <lb />
ed for it approximately the sumo a <lb />
applying on tho main line of the <lb />
Southern railway between Lynch- <lb />
and Washington. It must <lb />
taken Into also that th l <lb />
of treble Is greater In North <lb />
Carolina than In Virginia and that <lb />
the earning, of Hie arc <lb />
much larger. Th fact of tho <lb />
Hint In Virginia the railroads <lb />
make only n reasonable profit on <lb />
freight hauled, whereat In North Car- <lb />
tho great profit,, on freight arc <lb />
matte, The roads fatten at <lb />
tho expense of North Carolina Inter- <lb />
Young Women <lb />
Read what did for Miss <lb />
Faribault, Minn. She me tell you how much <lb />
good has done me. As a young girl, always had <lb />
to suffer so much with all kind of pain. Sometimes, I was <lb />
so weak that I could hardly stand on my feel I got a <lb />
bottle of at the drug store, and as soon as had <lb />
taken a few doses, I began to feel better. <lb />
Today, I feel as well as anyone <lb />
Are you a woman Then you are subject to a large <lb />
number of troubles and Irregularities, peculiar to women, <lb />
which, In time, often lead to more serious trouble. <lb />
A tonic is needed to help you over the hard places, to <lb />
relieve weakness, headache, and other unnecessary pains, <lb />
signs of weak nerves and over-work. <lb />
For a tonic, take the woman's tonic. <lb />
You will never regret it, for it will certainly help you. <lb />
Ask your druggist about it He knows. He sells it <lb />
to Advisory Dr Co. <lb />
Mill at ind M-pt Home km J St <lb />
Lanterns <lb />
Strong and Durable <lb />
For Fishing, <lb />
Camping, <lb />
and Hard <lb />
Use Under All <lb />
Conditions. <lb />
Give steady, bright light. <lb />
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 <lb />
N. J. <lb />
STANDARD OIL COMPANY <lb />
ii mint in i<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018245_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb />
and FARM and EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Published <lb />
TO lie. <lb />
D. Editor. <lb />
WORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
I Instance, nuke a note of our <lb />
co market, our banks, our building <lb />
and loan association, our new court <lb />
our training school, and then <lb />
don't forget our folks. <lb />
The is close at <lb />
hand now, and you will soon hear <lb />
some Greenville people complain that <lb />
business is dull. It is the annual <lb />
complaint that will be heard as Ion <lb />
year. . .<lb />
rate be had upon business has lo depend mainly on <lb />
application at the business office in the sale of crops. A fact we have <lb />
To Reflector Building, corner Evans I . . , . <lb />
and Third streets out and <lb />
again, is that one of the town's <lb />
All cards of thanks and resolutions <lb />
at respect will be charged at <lb />
per word. <lb />
Communications advertising <lb />
dates will be charged for at three <lb />
cents per line, up to fifty lines. <lb />
as second class matter <lb />
August 1910, st the post flee at <lb />
Carolina, <lb />
ct of March 1879. <lb />
FRIDAY. APRIL IS, 1913<lb />
It is not the custom to take <lb />
advertisement for the subject of an <lb />
editorial note, but there Is something <lb />
in what Bishop, the laundryman, says <lb />
about sanitation that should interest <lb />
the public. There are many ways in <lb />
which disease germs are carried about <lb />
and nothing affords a means of <lb />
more than wearing apparel. Disease <lb />
can be communicated as quickly <lb />
through infected clothing as if infect- <lb />
ed persons were brought in contact <lb />
with each other. And in instances <lb />
where the from any <lb />
and all classes arc brought together, <lb />
it is certainly of utmost importance <lb />
the laundering he done in <lb />
quarters. People sometimes <lb />
wonder where their children catch <lb />
measles, whooping cough, <lb />
scarlet fever, or other contagious dis- <lb />
eases, when as apt as not they <lb />
taken to the home by the colored <lb />
wash-woman in the clothes basket <lb />
or from an uncleanly laundry. We. <lb />
have known house keepers to go care <lb />
greatest needs is factory pay rolls. <lb />
There is plenty of room for factories <lb />
and If they were here the <lb />
dullness would be a thing <lb />
unheard of, for there would be bus- <lb />
all the year around, <lb />
Some people who have been blind- <lb />
ed by prejudice and Inflamed by Ir- <lb />
responsible speech, are getting their <lb />
eyes lo the meaning of the pro- <lb />
posed election on the stock law <lb />
To go back to the old <lb />
will cost a pile of money ti <lb />
rebuild the fence and will be follow <lb />
ed by an almost endless chain of law <lb />
suits that will be Just what the <lb />
class of lawyers want. And <lb />
almost anybody ought to see that the <lb />
way sentiment for It is growing, the <lb />
next legislature will make stock <lb />
wide. <lb />
The Enterprise tells <lb />
a farmer going to that tow-n and sell- <lb />
two bales of cotton for cash. <lb />
While getting around and handling <lb />
his purse ho lost a roll of bills <lb />
amounting to nearly a hundred <lb />
i There are good banks in Al- <lb />
but no doubt the farmer <lb />
felt richer walking around with <lb />
money In his pocket than if he h-d <lb />
; deposited it in a bank. But the <lb />
I course would have saved his <lb />
money for him. <lb />
Cotton speculators are already <lb />
the prospects of the next crop <lb />
fully through the basket of clothes an of lowering the price <lb />
just brought in to be that what u on hand of the last <lb />
of the pesky things called bed bugs <lb />
came with the clothes, yet not a <lb />
thought was given as to whether any <lb />
disease germs were in them. Just <lb />
think of these things and you will <lb />
see the advantage of being careful <lb />
about your laundering. <lb />
During the recent legislature the <lb />
railroads of the state put up a sub- <lb />
front and very readily agree I <lb />
to a conference with a committee <lb />
pointed for that purpose looking to <lb />
a satisfactory adjustment of freight <lb />
rates. Since the legislature has ad- <lb />
and the opportunity <lb />
ed for passing a rate law, rail- <lb />
roads are showing a disposition to <lb />
dodge and not agree to the <lb />
in rates proposed by the com- <lb />
so as to give North Carolina <lb />
a square deal. This means that the <lb />
next legislature will have to go right <lb />
after the railroads lo bring them to <lb />
terms and put no confidence In their <lb />
crop. According to our way of think- <lb />
there is not going to be any more <lb />
cotton raised this year than there was <lb />
last year, and with the production <lb />
around a million bales short of the <lb />
supply needed for consumption <lb />
should be no lopping off In price. <lb />
And but for the speculators there <lb />
would not be. <lb />
The way the president of the,; <lb />
State's Trust Company, who was <lb />
In Birmingham, is fighting <lb />
against coming back to North Caro <lb />
Una, he must not love the state as <lb />
well as he did before he run away. <lb />
But he will come back all right and <lb />
will likely spend a good long time <lb />
in prison. <lb />
Most life Insurance policies contain <lb />
a clause that if the party insure <lb />
commit suicide, whether sane or In- <lb />
sane, within a year from the date the <lb />
policy is issued, the Insurance is <lb />
forfeited. A test case recently went <lb />
to the court of the state, and <lb />
the court upheld this clause In <lb />
policy. <lb />
Greenville's new Inn, the Proctor <lb />
Hotel, is pushing on to completion <lb />
with the hope of having it ready to <lb />
open by the first of June. If the <lb />
can be In time for the commence- <lb />
of East Carolina Teachers <lb />
Training School, it will be a flue <lb />
starting advertisement for the hotel. <lb />
Sixty prisoners In Jail In Denver <lb />
are on a hunger strike, that Is <lb />
to eat the prison fare on tho <lb />
ground that it Is not good enough <lb />
for them. They must think the city <lb />
should run a for them. <lb />
Next time they had better <lb />
the law and keep out of jail. <lb />
Spencer Is leading off with a good <lb />
example for other towns to follow <lb />
in the line of public safety. The <lb />
of that town have passed an <lb />
ordinance prohibiting the running at <lb />
large of dogs unless they are <lb />
In Tarboro four hundred and eighty <lb />
eight gallons of whiskey was arrested <lb />
and committed to Jail. The barrels <lb />
containing the liquor were marked- <lb />
and It ought to have <lb />
been dealt with for traveling under <lb />
such disguise. <lb />
In the next ten days values will <lb />
show the greatest shrinkage of any <lb />
season of the year. This is accounted <lb />
for In the fact that the first of May <lb />
marks the beginning of tax listing <lb />
time. <lb />
Wilmington Dispatch Cowan hit a <lb />
two-bagger when he calls the Webb <lb />
bill good dry <lb />
Secretary Bryan and Speaker Clark <lb />
have buried the hatchet and all If <lb />
serene once more. <lb />
In speaking of a banquet in <lb />
the Dispatch says <lb />
People living In the sections affected <lb />
by the stock law on which an <lb />
i to be held on the 10th of June, <lb />
should do some serious thinking be- <lb />
fore they vote. It will be a <lb />
and expensive blunder to change the <lb />
stock law and no man should be led <lb />
blindly into voting for the change <lb />
Just because some unscrupulous lead- <lb />
advises him to do so. <lb />
premises to be good. The railroads <lb />
ought to see that they will <lb />
bring Justice on themselves In <lb />
posing on the people. <lb />
It is only about two weeks now, <lb />
or to be exact, on tho first Saturday <lb />
In May, to the opening of a new <lb />
The reunion committee Is carrying <lb />
preparations right on for the annual <lb />
gathering of the old soldiers of Pitt <lb />
One thing for the veterans <lb />
to bear In mind. Is that because the <lb />
10th of May falls on Saturday this <lb />
year, tho reunion will not be <lb />
until the following Tuesday, 13th. W <lb />
hope to see them all here that day. <lb />
The. county the board of <lb />
commissioners has generously done <lb />
of the Homo Building and an <lb />
This new series a <lb />
. . . I crate monument on the court house <lb />
law to he the largest yet started, and <lb />
square. The must also raise <lb />
the next few days is the time <lb />
should make up their minds <lb />
shares in It. Even the small <lb />
like sum by subscriptions, and they <lb />
should loose no time In doing their <lb />
part. The movement for this <lb />
wage earner, who can spare active. <lb />
or cents a week, will find the <lb />
association n good place to and <lb />
accumulate something. Carrying one <lb />
Is the. <lb />
should stand <lb />
time when everybody <lb />
together for progress. <lb />
share putting up a week. The country Is facing an era of pros- <lb />
means a hundred dollars saved In a that can he carried to the flood <lb />
little over six years. To say nothing with co-operation. Pitt county can <lb />
of the help of the association es in get her share of this prosperity, and <lb />
building, us an Investment alone It her people should come shoulder to <lb />
Prof. Willis L. Moore, chief of tho <lb />
government weather bureau since <lb />
1895, has been dismissed. Maybe <lb />
that accounts for the recent trouble <lb />
with the weather. <lb />
Dr. D. S. of who <lb />
is on a tour through Europe and the <lb />
Holy Land Is writing some very <lb />
interesting letters to the <lb />
Enterprise. <lb />
The next fellow who wants to <lb />
know if we are going to raise tad- <lb />
poles In that hole of water on The <lb />
Reflector corner, is going to get duck- <lb />
ed. <lb />
Danville, Va., has again made Its <lb />
change and voted dry in an <lb />
election held in that city. Some <lb />
Virginia cities ought to be taking <lb />
tut same step. <lb />
Cobb to about to quit the <lb />
and go to selling automobiles. <lb />
April is now marching down <lb />
to make room for May to come up. <lb />
Not many more days before the <lb />
oyster retires for the season. <lb />
COURT PROCEEDINGS <lb />
Ivey Burnett, temporary larceny, <lb />
pleads guilty, judgment suspended on <lb />
payment of costs. <lb />
Nelson Hopkins, Jr., temporary <lb />
pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Henry Loyd, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, fined and <lb />
costs. <lb />
Henry C. C. Colley and <lb />
George Younger, gambling, pleads <lb />
guilty, judgment suspended on pay- <lb />
of costs. <lb />
R E. Belcher and Vance Belcher, <lb />
affray, plead guilty, fined each <lb />
and costs. <lb />
Henry Station, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Hinton assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
John David carrying conceal- <lb />
ed weapon, pleads guilty. Judgment <lb />
suspended upon payment of costs and <lb />
giving bond for good behavior. <lb />
J. L assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Ham Slaughter, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Edwards, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Louis King, violating search and <lb />
law. pleads guilty. <lb />
R. E. Belcher, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb />
pended on payment of costs. <lb />
Two cases of attempted bribery <lb />
have developed at this term of court. <lb />
One of them is against J. W. Eaton, <lb />
who approached Solicitor <lb />
on the street and asked him to <lb />
pros a certain case, at the time saying <lb />
got something here to <lb />
trying to slip his hand, <lb />
posed to contain money, in the tide <lb />
pocket of the solicitor's coat So- <lb />
called Chief of Po- <lb />
lice Smith to take charge of Eaton. <lb />
The matter was reported to the court <lb />
and Eason was cited to appear Wed- <lb />
and answer the charge of con- <lb />
tempt. <lb />
The other case Is against A E. <lb />
who tried to get Deputy <lb />
Sheriff Ernest Dudley to a <lb />
for a women of bad repute <lb />
with whom stood indict- <lb />
ed Jointly at January court. He of- <lb />
to pay the costs in the case and <lb />
present the deputy with if the lat- <lb />
would destroy the This <lb />
matter reported to the court and <lb />
a hearing had this morning when <lb />
Judge Allen took it under <lb />
to dispose of Wednesday at the <lb />
same time the Eason case Is beard. <lb />
J. R. J. G. <lb />
GENERAL STORE PAINTS OILS <lb />
When You Paint <lb />
Use PURE Paint and <lb />
Um Pure OIL to add <lb />
to it at one-half the cost of Paint <lb />
PURE PAINT Is made with WHITE LEAD. ZINC and <lb />
LINSEED OIL that's way M. SEMI-MIXED <lb />
REAL PAINT la made. <lb />
But ALL the OIL needful to make the L. M. PAINT <lb />
ready for use is NOT put into the Paint when it's <lb />
pared for the Consumer who buys it. <lb />
The ADDITION of OIL is put into the Paint <lb />
by the CONSUMER, as doing MONEY. <lb />
gallons of LINSEED OIL with every <lb />
gallons of L. M. PAINT <lb />
and MIX lite OIL with the PAINT. <lb />
If the Paint thus made costs more than per gallon <lb />
If the Paint as you use it is not perfectly satisfactory <lb />
return whatever you have not used, and get bad ALL you paid <lb />
tor the WHOLE Its and besides, the money you paid to the Painter. <lb />
Johnson to the Bar <lb />
CHICAGO, III., April nun <lb />
delays and <lb />
Johnson, the pugilist, <lb />
today before Judge <lb />
In the United District t <lb />
to be tried on a charge of smuggling. <lb />
The Indictment is bated on an <lb />
Success In the latter will depend ed act of Johnson In bringing a <lb />
more on his grab than on his necklace into this country with- <lb />
out paying duty. The pugilist Is also <lb />
It Is getting almost time for us to <lb />
talking of some other big enter- <lb />
prise for Greenville. Come on, folks. <lb />
and put our pencil to talking. <lb />
The Charlotte Chronicle Is trying <lb />
to force the reason In talking about <lb />
the hole tho tame day that <lb />
is frost on the house tops. <lb />
It is only a question of when <lb />
Greenville will a <lb />
if <lb />
Is not long. <lb />
pays nearly seven per cent net. <lb />
shoulder in order there may be <lb />
a constant moving forward. <lb />
Is town not very, <lb />
far distant, that Is rant than In all of business you give <lb />
Greenville. A man. whose home is first preference to the home man, <lb />
in that town, heard to remark you do that much to help make your <lb />
In Greenville. thought mi prosperous. Every <lb />
home town was the east In ten of a community Is <lb />
automobile, but Greenville appears more or less, upon every other <lb />
to given us a long of some community, hence <lb />
Friend, you will And Greenville should feel an in th- <lb />
In so in other things, too For welfare of the other. <lb />
under Indictment on a charge of vi- <lb />
the Mann White Slave Act. <lb />
His trial on this charge to set for <lb />
early next month. <lb />
Carolina Veterans at <lb />
S. C, April Tho battle <lb />
scarred flags of the old Confederacy-, <lb />
festooning of Gen Rob- <lb />
R. Lee and other leaders, were <lb />
freely In here today for the <lb />
annual reunion of the South <lb />
division of the Confederate <lb />
The Initial session was held <lb />
city, and morning with Gen. B. II. Teague, <lb />
present strides continue the time the divisional commander, presiding. <lb />
The reunion will last two days and <lb />
will lie marked by several elaborate <lb />
of entertainment. <lb />
Don't fret about the leaves on the <lb />
trees, They will reach their full fol- <lb />
on schedule time, by May 10th. <lb />
New Is having anything but a <lb />
dry judging from the reports <lb />
of whiskey shipments to town. <lb />
It It spring In name and accord- <lb />
to the calendar, but fires con- <lb />
to be <lb />
No, we are not making any <lb />
about the peach crop. Walt <lb />
June for our opinion. <lb />
Engines <lb />
Lew <lb />
For <lb />
ma the I service the <lb />
render tiny.<lb />
a. Ii I <lb />
r r- ii a as; <lb />
. -r <lb />
. A.<lb />
i,., f <lb />
f-.-t <lb />
Iran Works <lb />
Va <lb />
Belgium Government <lb />
Accept Compromise Pro- <lb />
posed By Strikers <lb />
BRUSSELS, April In <lb />
great part to the advice of the king, <lb />
the government today accepted the <lb />
compromise offered by the Liberal <lb />
leader, F. and the great strike <lb />
for manhood suffrage, which on ac- <lb />
count of the remarkable discipline <lb />
maintained, the of those who <lb />
joined in the movement and skillful <lb />
organization, Is unique in history, <lb />
will be called off <lb />
Only a week ago the Belgium <lb />
Charles De de- <lb />
government could yield to a <lb />
strike of nature. To yield would <lb />
be to <lb />
Nevertheless, the strike seems to <lb />
have made sufficient Impression on <lb />
the government to Induce It to unbend <lb />
from Its uncompromising attitude far <lb />
to ensure the termination of <lb />
a situation which has already cost the <lb />
country millions. <lb />
The decision to accept the <lb />
was reached yesterday by the <lb />
cabinet and the premier announced <lb />
in the chamber today that the govern- <lb />
had made M. motion <lb />
Its own. <lb />
At o'clock this morning at the <lb />
home of the bride's mother, lira. II. <lb />
E. Fleming, near House, Mies Louise <lb />
Fleming became the bride of Mr. Leon <lb />
B. Fleming, the being per- <lb />
formed by Rev. C. M. Rock. <lb />
Preceding the entrance of the <lb />
party Into the beautifully deco- <lb />
rated parlor Was Mary Moore <lb />
Then as Miss Lillian Carr played <lb />
the wedding march, the groom's men. <lb />
E. Fleming and Sugg Flem- <lb />
entered, followed by the bride's <lb />
maid, Mitt Lillian Stokes and Mitt <lb />
Elisabeth Harrington ring bearer. <lb />
The groom came with hit best man, <lb />
Mr. L. A. Randolph, and the bride <lb />
with her brother. Mr. V. C. Fleming, <lb />
who gave her away. <lb />
. The ring in the Impressive <lb />
ceremony the wedding ring of <lb />
the bride's grandmother, Mrs. Mar- <lb />
Moore. <lb />
The couple left on the A. C. <lb />
L. train for a trip to several Northern <lb />
cities. <lb />
Tuesday night an Informal <lb />
held at the home of <lb />
bride, attended by participants In <lb />
the marriage and a few friends. At <lb />
this reception the bride's cake was <lb />
cut amid much merriment, and r-v <lb />
were served. <lb />
Primary Concert Of High <lb />
School <lb />
On Friday, April at o'clock, <lb />
p. m. the primary department of Win- <lb />
High School will give a con- <lb />
cert under the direction of their teach- <lb />
Kate Watson . The public to <lb />
cordially Invited to be present There <lb />
will be no admission charges. <lb />
Waist makers In France work tea <lb />
hours a day and the average pay <lb />
earned by them never exceeds <lb />
cents. <lb />
The Wireless Operators union of <lb />
San Francisco, Cal., recently or- <lb />
DONATES Ml <lb />
TO MEMBER <lb />
About ten days ago Mr. S. A. Smith, <lb />
of Swift Creek lost hit <lb />
stables and feed by fire. The farm-, <lb />
era Union. In session here on tho <lb />
Inst, made up a purse of <lb />
and presented to Mr. Smith, who to j <lb />
member of the organization I <lb />
In Swift Creek <lb />
Speaking Of flood <lb />
Has It ever occurred to you that <lb />
the most unsuccessful and poorest <lb />
men In your neighborhood are among <lb />
those opposed to good roads Does <lb />
this mean that they are being led <lb />
by men too stingy to pay a few cents <lb />
more tho year to help along the farm- <lb />
who has a crop to haul to town <lb />
Does it mean that they are thinking <lb />
for themselves and have decided that <lb />
they prefer their country to go back- <lb />
ward to that good old time when a <lb />
man could moonshine with little fear <lb />
of being caught, and furnished <lb />
key to thoughtless and boys In <lb />
a community till they grew Into <lb />
drunkards and laborers for better <lb />
educated and harder headed men <lb />
Does It mean that you are Ignorantly <lb />
being led astray by talk of a <lb />
gage on your property, when since <lb />
the foundation of our government we <lb />
mortgage or whatever name you may <lb />
have had the same sort of debts, <lb />
call bonded Indebtedness Have yon. <lb />
Mr. Reader, ever felt the drag of a <lb />
United States bond There are <lb />
lions of dollars worth of them In ex- <lb />
being paid Indirectly from <lb />
the same pocket books that your good <lb />
roads will be paid from. Good roads <lb />
have no better friends than the think- <lb />
of our county and <lb />
ask for nothing more than an <lb />
of merits of the cats. <lb />
Gold Leaf. <lb />
NOTICE OF SALE <lb />
North Carolina, Pitt County <lb />
In the Superior Court, Before the <lb />
Clerk. <lb />
Ella C. Jefferson and R. V. Jefferson <lb />
vs <lb />
N. Pearl Jefferson, Ella C. Jefferson, <lb />
I. P. Jefferson, Jefferson, and <lb />
Jefferson. <lb />
By virtue of authority vetted In <lb />
me by an order made and entered In <lb />
the above entitled Special Proceeding, <lb />
will on May 6th, 1913, at o'clock, <lb />
noon, sell at. the court house door In <lb />
Greenville, to the highest bidder for <lb />
cash the following described proper- <lb />
Beginning on the north tide of <lb />
Ward as shown on said plat, <lb />
at a point one hundred and fifty feet <lb />
east of the Inter- <lb />
section of Ward and White streets, <lb />
as shown on said plat, running thence <lb />
In an easterly direction along the <lb />
north side of Ward street fifty <lb />
feet to the west line of lot No. <lb />
thence north along said line one <lb />
hundred and end 25-100 <lb />
feet to tho south side of Fourth street, <lb />
thence west along said Fourth <lb />
fifty feet to the line of Lot <lb />
No. and thence south along said <lb />
line one hundred and ninety nine <lb />
25-100 feet to tho point of beginning. <lb />
This 1st, 1911, <lb />
a J. EVERETT, <lb />
ltd Commissioner. <lb />
v Compost <lb />
SAVE MONEY <lb />
On <lb />
for our how <lb />
May It la to Comport. Heap, that <lb />
about <lb />
NOW. While a, u. <lb />
your or to get <lb />
RED DEVIL I YE <lb />
LIL <lb />
no th it you start your heap soon u <lb />
the Hook arrives, <lb />
H V In caw <lb />
II c <lb />
In raw <lb />
let all that One material <lb />
So to w am ft p t <lb />
I nil Slid and <lb />
In it <lb />
converted into the <lb />
that money can buy. <lb />
will a lot of <lb />
fertilizer It will a; <lb />
It will the must work you <lb />
or your . can do. I'll. <lb />
while you <lb />
only wilt do the <lb />
Packed In big cans, <lb />
air-tight, fail., lose, <lb />
night For Compost. <lb />
Ask your <lb />
dater for <lb />
at once. <lb />
mm <lb />
OS, M. <lb />
Delinquent <lb />
Tax List <lb />
For 1912 <lb />
I have this day, levied on the fol- <lb />
lowing described Real Estate to <lb />
satisfy due to the state of <lb />
North Carolina, and the county of <lb />
Pitt, for the year 1912, and the said <lb />
Real Estate so levied on will be sold <lb />
at the Court House door In the town <lb />
of Greenville, N. C, on Monday, tho <lb />
6th day of May, 1913, at o'clock, m. <lb />
unless said and legal charges, <lb />
and expenses arising from the failure <lb />
to pay the same within time re- <lb />
quired law, are paid by that date. <lb />
S. I. DUDLEY, Sheriff. <lb />
Mary Dupree, <lb />
B. A. and G. A. Darden, Pine 4.31 <lb />
M. C. Cotton, Maine. <lb />
Addle Corbett, Church St 2.20 <lb />
Phillip Bynum. Perry . 2.20 <lb />
Emma Battle, <lb />
Richard Blount. Maine St . <lb />
Joseph Blount, Main St. <lb />
Mary Atkinson. Main <lb />
Sam Williams, Perry. 7.02 <lb />
J. T. Wilson . 16.31 <lb />
O. W. H <lb />
D. D. <lb />
Alice Williams, Marlboro 3.40 <lb />
W. B. Williams, J. Branch. 4.90 <lb />
Dock Thigpen, Marlboro 6.41 <lb />
William Raspberry, Perry . 3.11 <lb />
Laura Main, Perry, <lb />
Cotton. 12.10 <lb />
J. R. Owens, 1-2 O. . <lb />
John E. C. R. <lb />
FALKLAND TOWNSHIP <lb />
Swindell. lot Fountain, tax <lb />
cost 11.30; total <lb />
Nathan Sanders, acres Atkinson, <lb />
tax- cost 1.30; total <lb />
Betsy lot Fountain, tax <lb />
cost total <lb />
E. F. Vines, Dupree; tax <lb />
cost total <lb />
Thomas Vines, Fountain, tax <lb />
coat total <lb />
J. K. Henderson, lots Stamps, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
Mrs. Margaret James, lot Home. <lb />
taxes cost total <lb />
W. L. Johnson, lot Stamps, <lb />
cost total <lb />
W. L. Joyner, Stamps, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
Gaston Bass GO acres cost <lb />
total <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
North <lb />
Notice is hereby given, that the <lb />
Board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
at its regular session, on the Hi st <lb />
Monday April, 1913, this being Hi <lb />
th day of April, 1913, ordered an <lb />
election to be held in the following <lb />
IN PITT COUNTY, said Election <lb />
being for the purpose of ascertaining I <lb />
QUININE AND IRON-THE MOST <lb />
EFFECTUAL GENERAL TONIC <lb />
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic Combines both <lb />
in Tasteless form. The Quinine drives <lb />
out Malaria and the Iron builds up <lb />
the System. For Adults and <lb />
Children. <lb />
You know what you are taking when <lb />
, take GROVE'S TASTELESS chill <lb />
whether the Stock Law shall be re- TONIC, recognized for years through- <lb />
pealed, or not, in said territory, as out the South as the standard Malaria, <lb />
provided by Section 1675, of chin and General <lb />
Tome. It is as strong as <lb />
GREENVILLE TOWNSHIP <lb />
4.20 <lb />
3.10 <lb />
38.71 <lb />
3.71 <lb />
7.77 <lb />
6.03 <lb />
. 9.69 <lb />
4.81 <lb />
3.93 <lb />
7.35 <lb />
Abram Williams, one lot <lb />
Sarah one lot R. R, St. 6.57 <lb />
Travis Allen, col., one lot, Pitt <lb />
St. <lb />
Bottle King, 1-4, Arthur. <lb />
Delia Ann .- 1-2, J. Daniel 2.20 <lb />
B. J. m, lot, K. St., . 4.24 <lb />
J. W. .-., lots. Lincoln, <lb />
lot, Dudley, lot Lucas; <lb />
lot Res. lot Adams . <lb />
Nettle. lot, Clark St. . <lb />
Phoebe Nobles. Perk. <lb />
Sam Joyner, lot, Hodges . <lb />
Ida Jones. lot H. <lb />
A. S. Jenkins, lot Arthur------ <lb />
Eliza Gray, home. <lb />
Annie <lb />
John lot C. <lb />
D.,. <lb />
Robt. Brown, English <lb />
Chapel, 1-4 English . 6.75 <lb />
W. L. Brown, lot Res. 17.36 <lb />
J. T. Allen, lot . 8.33 <lb />
Cells lot B lane . 3.78 <lb />
Louisa Est. lot, Pitt <lb />
3.10 <lb />
Abram lot, Clark St. 4.67 <lb />
Mrs. M. L. Warren, lots, J. <lb />
White. <lb />
K, D. lot, St <lb />
Mary Thigpen, lot, Clark St 3.10 <lb />
J. W. lot 2nd St. 6.90 <lb />
Fernando Shivers . 8.05 <lb />
Miles Short, lot Greene St. . <lb />
J. E. L. M. Savage, lot<lb />
Ida 1-2 Fleming------ 2.20 <lb />
J. W. lot Lucas, Hot. <lb />
Lincoln, Dudley, <lb />
Adams. 35.73 <lb />
Wm. Redmond, lot. Reed St . 6.84 <lb />
Peyton, <lb />
Lula Peyton, lot St 2.20 <lb />
Nettle Peyton, lot Reed <lb />
R. H. Parker, May. 10.10 <lb />
Ella lot <lb />
lot <lb />
Frank lot 13th St 6.73 <lb />
lot Short <lb />
St. 4.00 <lb />
Nettle lot Perk., . 2.43 <lb />
Samuel 1911, 1911 lot Per- <lb />
kins . 4.4 <lb />
lot. Perk. <lb />
Andrew Moore, lot Pitt <lb />
7.3 <lb />
S. E. lot <lb />
cant, lot Manning, <lb />
lot Forbes, lot <lb />
Smith, lot Fleming, lot <lb />
9th St, lot Abbott. 70.86 <lb />
Little Kearney lots Clark <lb />
Marlboro. <lb />
Fannie May and Emily Wooten, <lb />
Marlboro. <lb />
Robt. May. E. C. Ry. <lb />
Joyner, Cotton. <lb />
Edgar Joyner, Burnett . <lb />
Lawrence Joyner, Mary P. . <lb />
Blount Joyner, Walnut St . <lb />
A. L. Joyner, Burnett, N <lb />
S. R. R. <lb />
John H. Joyner, Main . <lb />
Lon Joyner, Geo. <lb />
Hannah Cotton . <lb />
Joyner, <lb />
Joyner H. C. Cobb, <lb />
Wilton.,. 7.30 <lb />
W. R. Jackson, W. 3.11 <lb />
Matilda Main St . 6.71 <lb />
J. T. Bundy, G. Berg. . 67.92 <lb />
J. A. Burnett. Wilton. 12.34 <lb />
2.20 <lb />
. 2.21 <lb />
. 6.71 <lb />
. 6.01 <lb />
11.83 <lb />
. 9.64 <lb />
. 3.11 <lb />
. 4.61 <lb />
J. I. Baker. Main. Pine. . 19.30 <lb />
Mrs. C. L. Barrett. <lb />
Robt. W S. 7.98 <lb />
TOWNSHIP <lb />
Fannie lot Crawford 6.20 <lb />
C. J. Parker . 3.10 <lb />
Z. B. lot Main . 6.66 <lb />
Wm. lot Tarboro 6.38 <lb />
J. J. Perkins, Est, 3.54 <lb />
W. M. <lb />
Alice V. Martin, Creek, <lb />
lot R. R. 12.24 <lb />
Jenkins, Homo . 4.43 <lb />
Jones, lot Pitt. 6.00 <lb />
M. A. James, Home, <lb />
Bullock . 61.00 <lb />
Laura James, 8.06 <lb />
2.84 G. L. Long, lot Fountain, taxes. <lb />
cost total <lb />
Moseley and Wooten, acres Gard- <lb />
taxes total <lb />
John Moseley J <lb />
cost total <lb />
Sarah May, lot Fountain, taxes <lb />
cost total <lb />
J. A. Newton, Moseley, taxes <lb />
coat total <lb />
W. R. Owen, Fountain, <lb />
cost total <lb />
J. G. Owen, Fountain, <lb />
cost total <lb />
F. M. acres Parker, <lb />
cost total <lb />
Stephen Parker, Fountain, taxes <lb />
total <lb />
J. B. acres Fountain, <lb />
taxes cost total <lb />
W. H. Sheppard, lot Fountain, tax- <lb />
es, total <lb />
Ell Savage, lots Fountain, <lb />
cost 1.30. total <lb />
W. T. Burton, N. R., lots vacant, <lb />
tax cost total <lb />
J. C. Bridgers, lot Fountain, <lb />
cost total <lb />
Will Barnett. acres tax <lb />
total <lb />
J. L. D. Corbett. lot Stamps, tax <lb />
total <lb />
Bettie Corbett, acres Dupree. tax <lb />
cost total <lb />
Millie Dupree, lot Falkland, tax <lb />
2.94. cost total <lb />
Tinker Dupree, lot vacant, tax, <lb />
total <lb />
of 1905, and as amended by <lb />
act of the General Assembly of 1913. <lb />
Said territory being described as <lb />
said territory being <lb />
those proportions of Greenville. Bea- <lb />
Dam. and <lb />
Swift Creek Townships, lying between <lb />
the line of tho Old Stock Law <lb />
as prescribed by Chapter of the <lb />
Public laws of 1905, as it existed <lb />
to January 1st. 1912, and the line <lb />
of new stork law fence, as sot out <lb />
Chapter of the Public <lb />
Laws of 1911. <lb />
The said election to be held on the <lb />
Second Tuesday in June, 1913. It be- <lb />
the 10th day of June. 1913. <lb />
polling places for said election to be <lb />
at Ayden, North Carolina, and Winter- <lb />
North Carolina. That the <lb />
of No. and Swift <lb />
Creek Township, embraced within th. <lb />
above described territory, Is and shall <lb />
be known as the Ayden precinct and <lb />
the Qualified voters of precinct <lb />
wishing to vote In said election, shall <lb />
vote at Ayden, North Carolina. That <lb />
the portion Beaver Dam, Greenville <lb />
and No. Town- <lb />
ships, embraced with the above <lb />
scribed territory or district. Is <lb />
the tonic, but you do not <lb />
taste the bitter because the Ingredients <lb />
lo not iii the mouth but do ii.-- <lb />
readily in the the stomach. <lb />
Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean <lb />
it. <lb />
RELIEVES PAIN AND HEALS <lb />
AT THE SAME TIME <lb />
The Wonderful, Old Reliable Dr. Porter's <lb />
Antiseptic Healing OiL An Antiseptic <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 you that DR. <lb />
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING <lb />
OIL is the most wonderful remedy ever <lb />
discovered for Wounds, Burns, Old Sores, <lb />
Ulcers, Carbuncles, Granulated Lids. <lb />
Sore Throat, Skin or Scalp Diseases and <lb />
all wounds and external diseases whether <lb />
slight or serious. Con are <lb />
finding new uses for this famous old <lb />
remedy. Guaranteed by your Druggist <lb />
There is One That is LAX <lb />
of every Cures a Cold in One Day. <lb />
Advertisers Continue to Praise The <lb />
Editor The Daily Reflector. <lb />
Greenville. N. C, <lb />
Dear <lb />
For a few days, beginning <lb />
day or Thursday of last week, I had <lb />
you publish a few- lines, stating that <lb />
we would pay return postage on <lb />
laundry packages. The was <lb />
Immediate, and very gratifying, <lb />
for tho day after the publication <lb />
packages were brought in, to be re- <lb />
turned by mall and they have been <lb />
coming In, from every point of the <lb />
compass, ever numbers of, <lb />
them coming from parties who have <lb />
never patronized us before. <lb />
I frankly confess that my <lb />
J. A. James, Home Ben Dixon, lot Webb, tax, coat <lb />
B. C. Gardner, 6.24 total <lb />
Elliott, lot James . 6.40 C. Edwards, lot vacant, tax <lb />
Sherrod Carson N. R., lot Tar- cost total, <lb />
3.04 Willie Fields, lot Webb, tax, <lb />
Carson lot cost, total <lb />
J. B. Carlyle, Gorham, lot Webb, tax <lb />
T. H. Blount Blount 4.00 <lb />
W. J. Bryan, Jenkins 16.10 <lb />
St. <lb />
9.05 <lb />
6.97 <lb />
4.1.6 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
Henry Knox, lot 1st St. <lb />
J. Robt. King, lot Clark St <lb />
Laura King, lot 13th St . <lb />
Mattie King, C D. 3.10 <lb />
Nathan and wife, lot <lb />
Greene 18.23 <lb />
Chas. Hanrahan, lot 4.78 <lb />
W. W. Humphrey, lot Greene 4.69 <lb />
Frank Hopkins, lot Res., lot <lb />
Pitt. 8.92 <lb />
Henry lot Arthur, lot <lb />
Clark St. 4.72 <lb />
Jane lot Pitt St. 6.03 <lb />
Austin lot Pitt <lb />
William 1-4 Ar- <lb />
. 6.10 <lb />
W. B. lot 14th St <lb />
lot Mill <lb />
Ed Fleming, lot Ravine------ 10.61 <lb />
Foreman lot 13th St. . 3.97 <lb />
Wm. W. Foreman, 1-2 lot Pitt <lb />
3.93 <lb />
H. E. Foreman, 1-5 lot Pitt St <lb />
D. R. Foreman, 1-5 lot Pitt St. 5.93 <lb />
Foreman 1-6 lot <lb />
Pitt St. 3.93 <lb />
E. Forrest, lot South Green- <lb />
ville. 4.411 <lb />
Mrs. A. II. Flake, D. Ave. . 8.94 <lb />
Wm. R. Edwards, lot C. <lb />
St. 6.90 <lb />
R. D. Edwards. CO Brown 6.70 <lb />
Humphrey amid 1912 <lb />
cost . 6.03 <lb />
Frank Hopkins cost <lb />
Mr. J. B. Edwards <lb />
lot front C. <lb />
Allen Carr, Pitt St. <lb />
Tater Cherry <lb />
j. s. Cockerel. 11.75 <lb />
O. E. Cherry, lot College------12.85 <lb />
Bynum. lot Reed St. . 2.43 <lb />
John Brown. Jr., lot Pat- <lb />
rick. 8.78 <lb />
If, lot OH 12.66 <lb />
TOWNSHIP <lb />
J. O. Smith, <lb />
Out Button. 2.20 <lb />
Maggie Sutton, Sutton <lb />
Maggie C. Swamp 1.41 <lb />
Lawrence Moore, 3.10 <lb />
Arthur Mills, 1-2 Corey------ 2.66 <lb />
Hardy, G X Roads . 3.90 <lb />
J. B. Hill, T R,. <lb />
O. O. Hudson, 1-2 Black Jack 16.80 <lb />
W. Cat Tall . <lb />
J. L. Gibson, <lb />
Mrs. W. B. Gibson, . <lb />
J. L. Gibson a I. J. Gibson, <lb />
New Road. <lb />
John Caw <lb />
W. B. Edwards. <lb />
Zeno T. Evans, <lb />
Mat Dixon, Sutton. 1.39 <lb />
Wm. Chapman. C. Swamp, . 1.41 <lb />
Stanley Chapman, Creeping <lb />
Sarah Cox, 1-2 C. <lb />
. 15.19 <lb />
Turner Branch, <lb />
9.21 <lb />
80.78 <lb />
, 11.06 <lb />
1.41 <lb />
2.66 <lb />
8.18 <lb />
11.11 <lb />
cost total <lb />
cost total <lb />
J. L. Harriet. tax cost <lb />
total <lb />
Henry Sr acres Home <lb />
Gay, acres Tug- <lb />
well, taxes total <lb />
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Dora Williams, Home . <lb />
J. E. Page. 2-86 <lb />
of newspaper advertising been <lb />
greatly transformed and the sooner <lb />
the people of Greenville and <lb />
shall be known as the j recognize and realize the worth <lb />
and the qualified voters an advertising med- <lb />
within the said precinct wishing u De for <lb />
to vote In said election, vote at concerned. <lb />
North Carolina. Yours very truly. <lb />
That there will be a new R- A- <lb />
for said election, and all parties <lb />
desiring to vote In said election, will a-i a <lb />
be required to register. That <lb />
Cannon has appointed Registrar <lb />
for the Ayden precinct, and <lb />
FEATURES <lb />
MORGAN'S WILL <lb />
R. la <lb />
has been appointed Reg- <lb />
for the precinct, <lb />
said Registration Books will be open- <lb />
ed on the 10th day of May, 1913, and <lb />
closed on the 31st day of May, 1913. <lb />
This the 10th day of April, 1913. <lb />
W. L, <lb />
Chairman of the Board of <lb />
of Pitt County. <lb />
BELL, Clerk. <lb />
Id <lb />
cum oil ions, otter Intuits m-i <lb />
The worst cases, no of how long standing, <lb />
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable I Jr. <lb />
Porter's Antiseptic Oil. It <lb />
Pain and at time. <lb />
BEATER TOWNSHIP <lb />
Jordan Darden, . <lb />
Lewis Forbes, <lb />
Walker O. Gray, Cobb. <lb />
William Hathaway, Nobles <lb />
Alfred P. Road <lb />
L. Moore . <lb />
David Nobles. P. Road . <lb />
Emily Nobles, P. Road. 1.76 <lb />
H. B. Smith, Smith Road . 6.80 <lb />
Joseph Parker. 2.66 <lb />
Commencement <lb />
Invitations are out for the <lb />
annual commencement of Win- <lb />
High School, April 26th, 80th <lb />
and May 1st and 2nd. The annual <lb />
sermon will be by Rev. T. W. <lb />
bless, of Wilson, and tho literary ad- <lb />
dress by Dr. Charles Lee Smith, of <lb />
Raleigh. The graduating class for <lb />
this session twelve. <lb />
Mrs. R. M. and daughter, <lb />
Miss Emma, of are visiting <lb />
relatives here. <lb />
Has Cured Worst Cases And Ton Can <lb />
Prove It For Only Cents <lb />
Yes, try That's all you <lb />
need to do to get rid of the worst <lb />
case of eczema. You take no <lb />
it is no experiment. Is <lb />
guaranteed to stop itching, <lb />
rash, raw, bleeding eczema, make a <lb />
pimpled face smooth and clean. <lb />
mo is a wonder and the minute <lb />
plied it sinks In, vanishes, leaves no <lb />
evidence, doesn't stick, no grease. <lb />
Just a pure, clean, wonderful liquid <lb />
and It cures. This Is <lb />
Is put up by the E. W. Rose <lb />
Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and told <lb />
by all druggists at for the large bot <lb />
tie and at cents for the liberal size <lb />
trial bottle. Try one cent bottle <lb />
and be convinced. <lb />
Pharmacy. <lb />
TOWNSHIP <lb />
Nat Whit field, lot 5.35 <lb />
J. L. Est, 1910, 1911 <lb />
and 1912, 2.21 <lb />
L. F. 26.84 <lb />
Mrs. M. A. Tucker, . <lb />
Robt. Smith. tN It i. <lb />
C. R. Patrick, Home, lot <lb />
Ayden. <lb />
J. B. Patrick, <lb />
T. C. Nelson, lot Winter------4.45 <lb />
Q. F. Morrison, lot Ayden . 2.50 <lb />
Manning and lots., <lb />
Winter. 1.65 <lb />
B. F. Manning lot <lb />
Ayden . 9.73 <lb />
Joe lot Winter . 4.02 <lb />
Joe Lung lot So. Ayden 3.30 <lb />
Charlie Jacobs, lot <lb />
R. M. Johnson lot So. <lb />
Ayden, lot Ayden, lots <lb />
Winter. <lb />
A. Johnson, lot. <lb />
J. E. Jones, lot Ayden . <lb />
F. F. Guthrie, lot Ayden . <lb />
I J. A. Griffin. near Ayden, <lb />
Ayden. 67.45 <lb />
Will Baptist Pub. Co., lot <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Ned Eat, H. 4.37 <lb />
Abram Thigpen, K. 6.86 <lb />
J Frank Johnson, <lb />
O. Hathaway Hill . 1.93 <lb />
Mrs. Home, <lb />
16.51 <lb />
Henry Hardy . 15.06 <lb />
Downs, 1-2 D. 1.61 <lb />
Clark. 1-2 <lb />
S. Clark and son Creek 12,13 <lb />
Frank Battle, Hill. 1.43 <lb />
Willis W. Bullock, C. <lb />
2.20 <lb />
8.63 <lb />
10.31 <lb />
11.30 <lb />
SWIFT CREEK TOWNSHIP. <lb />
If. C. White, II. 13.90 <lb />
Oliver Smith, <lb />
Joanna Mills, M. <lb />
Mrs. C. J. . <lb />
II. Munger, Land . <lb />
Mrs. Manning 1-2 . <lb />
O. Moore, W. C. <lb />
C. O. Land. <lb />
Richard Little, N. R. <lb />
Shade <lb />
Henry Forties, 3-4. <lb />
F. H. Faulkner. O. <lb />
E. J. E. M. O. . <lb />
W. V. N. R. <lb />
Ives L. Co., F. M. <lb />
King. 5.36 <lb />
J.<lb />
W. Eason. Pitt, Marlboro 7.30 <lb />
Ayden. <lb />
Evans, lot Winter------ 2.20 <lb />
Mrs. Va. Early, lot Ayden . <lb />
A. <lb />
Hardy Davis 1-2 Ayden . 1.91 <lb />
Alonzo Daniel, 1-2 . 1.91 <lb />
Parrot Daniel, near Ayden . 2.24 <lb />
W. B. Dennis, lots Ayden 16.91 <lb />
John D. Cox, col., lot Ayden 6.65 <lb />
Abram Chapman, col., So. 6.92 <lb />
David <lb />
M. II. Barber, lot Ayden . 2.20 <lb />
D. W. lot 6.16 <lb />
Henry Allen, col., 1-1 So.<lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Fleming P. . <lb />
Ed Hill 1911 and 1912, <lb />
Morris S <lb />
Robt. J . <lb />
High Paul W <lb />
J. J. Redding P B <lb />
b. II. Redding 1911 and 1912 <lb />
Piles Cured In to Days <lb />
Your will refund money if <lb />
ST Mia lo ran l Itching, <lb />
Blip. <lb />
The application gives Last and Real. <lb />
LAND SALE <lb />
By virtue of a mortgage executed <lb />
and delivered by C R Cannon and <lb />
wife to Richard Wingate on the 6th <lb />
day of October, 1910, which mortgage <lb />
recorded In office of the reg- <lb />
of deeds of Pitt county In book <lb />
R-9, page the undersigned will <lb />
sell for cash at public auction be- <lb />
fore the court house door in Green- <lb />
ville on Wednesday. May 14th, the <lb />
following described of land sit- <lb />
in the county of Pitt and in <lb />
at <lb />
Howell corner In Conetoe <lb />
creek and runs with hit line north <lb />
west poles to the main road, <lb />
thence with the road south east <lb />
to a stake near T. A gate <lb />
poles, thence south east <lb />
poles along a ditch east poles, <lb />
thence south poles, thence south <lb />
east poles, thence south east <lb />
poles to the main run of Conetoe <lb />
creek at an ash, thence with the <lb />
creek to the beginning, containing <lb />
acres more or and being the <lb />
land conveyed to the said C. R. Can- <lb />
by the said Richard Wingate and <lb />
this mortgage was taken to secure <lb />
the purchase money. <lb />
This April 12th. 1913. <lb />
RICHARD WINGATE, <lb />
Mortgagee <lb />
F. O. JAMES and SON, <lb />
ltd It <lb />
Stray Taken Up <lb />
I have taken up male red hog <lb />
weight about pounds, mark <lb />
crop, silt In loft ear, <lb />
and In right ear. Owner <lb />
can got by Identifying pay- <lb />
charges. If not called for in <lb />
twenty days the hog will sold. <lb />
J. W. <lb />
R. F. D. N. C, <lb />
signed January <lb />
1913. <lb />
Codicil signed January 1913 <lb />
Son, J. P. Morgan, Jr., Ia <lb />
made chief legatee. <lb />
Art treasures go to son, to be <lb />
disposed of at hie opinion, but <lb />
hope is expressed he will <lb />
pass them to the public <lb />
Son and other executors to <lb />
on testator's charities. <lb />
Word of his partner to be <lb />
en on settling up their affairs. <lb />
Bequests and trust funds <lb />
than to son aggregate <lb />
000.000. <lb />
trust set aside for <lb />
wife, who has the use of his <lb />
New York residence, together <lb />
with underground passage to <lb />
street. <lb />
each given to two <lb />
sons-in-law. <lb />
given to son out- <lb />
right. <lb />
Daughters each receive in- <lb />
come from funds. <lb />
Dr. family physician, <lb />
gets yearly Income of <lb />
Miss Green, his librarian, gets <lb />
Miss assist- <lb />
librarian, captain <lb />
of bis yacht private <lb />
secretary, and hit valet <lb />
Servants all receive and <lb />
each of house <lb />
gets a year's salary. <lb />
Roads <lb />
Editor <lb />
Since X. Y. Z. wrote his let- <lb />
he been very much pleased <lb />
with road prospects, having taken a <lb />
trip across our county. I have also <lb />
been very much grieved after hear- <lb />
such news as cutting fence, dig- <lb />
up tobacco beds, etc. This I <lb />
will have something to say about be- <lb />
low. I saw all of the convict force <lb />
at work. It looked Just like they <lb />
were heading for Greenville. They <lb />
had already passed Hanrahan. Now, <lb />
brother U Know, throw the end <lb />
a long line this way and let's get <lb />
ready to make a strong pull for <lb />
Greenville. Now, If some one <lb />
pens to think we are all pulling for <lb />
Greenville we will Just turn our face <lb />
to and then pull. Ayden and <lb />
and everybody else get <lb />
right hold of this line and let's all <lb />
pull together have this road re- <lb />
paired from Greenville to this <lb />
year, and right now while the con- <lb />
are on this road. <lb />
Now these crimes that have <lb />
been committed In this county are a <lb />
shame and it Is being felt all over <lb />
the county. I think the fence <lb />
will have to be left out and all <lb />
good citizens will have to vote to re- <lb />
store citizenship. will call <lb />
to some facts concerning this. <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Lino railroad and <lb />
the Norfolk Southern are doing all <lb />
they can to bring home seekers here. <lb />
It has been my pleasure meet about <lb />
fifty of these people at one <lb />
These are good people and know how <lb />
to do things, they will not pitch <lb />
their tents too near Sodom. They <lb />
are with our climate and <lb />
soil but they do not think much of <lb />
our roads and <lb />
X. Y. at, <lb />
QUICKLY HEALED <lb />
So Tired <lb />
It may be from overwork, but <lb />
the arc Its from an in- <lb />
LIVER. <lb />
With a well conducted <lb />
one can do mountains of <lb />
without fatigue <lb />
It adds hundred per cent to <lb />
ones capacity. <lb />
t can tie kept 1.1 <lb />
by, and only by <lb />
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. <lb />
Another New More <lb />
W. M. Bunions has Just opened a <lb />
new store with an entire new- stock <lb />
Ho occupies of the Proctor H-y- <lb />
tel stores, just South of tho <lb />
hotel. The page advertisement to- <lb />
tells about the opening of thin <lb />
new store and elves an idea of the <lb />
pedal prices which goods can <lb />
bad there. <lb />
Four Cart Hue Iron. <lb />
I, J. the tinner and flue <lb />
recently received a shipment of <lb />
four cars of Hue Iron for this <lb />
season's orders. Mr. Jenkins makes <lb />
a largo quantity of tobacco fines <lb />
nil other work turned out by him, <lb />
they are the best to had. His <lb />
force Is busy at tho Liberty warehouse <lb />
making lilies to fill the largo number <lb />
of orders booked. <lb />
To Cure a Cold In One Day <lb />
rake LAX Ii <lb />
Cough and and works oil Cold. <lb />
money if it fails to <lb />
on<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018245_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
NOW <lb />
IS THE TIME <lb />
to buy Stalk Cutters, <lb />
Disc Harrows, Drag <lb />
Harrows, Smoothing <lb />
Harrows, Pulverizing <lb />
Harrows, Corn Plant- <lb />
Fertilizer <lb />
American <lb />
Wire Fencing, Gal- <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 />
J. <lb />
I EVERYDAY <lb />
FOR A WEEK <lb />
at Pharmacy will <lb />
be Wide Open Days <lb />
Commencing Monday, 21st, and continuing <lb />
through the week, every day be a Open <lb />
Day, when straight votes will be given with <lb />
every Cents purchase on any article on store. <lb />
Contestants for the automobile can add many <lb />
votes to their score by being during this <lb />
Wide Open Week. The Contest now has but a <lb />
month longer to and no time should be lost in <lb />
getting votes. <lb />
PHARMACY <lb />
April Term Superior Court <lb />
Opened today, Judge <lb />
Allen Presiding <lb />
The April term of Pitt Superior <lb />
court, the trial of criminal cases. <lb />
cm Monday morning with Judge O. <lb />
h. Allen presiding and Solicitor C. <lb />
representing the stale. <lb />
The grand jury for the term is as <lb />
W. K. Tucker, foreman, H. <lb />
B. Greene Manning, II <lb />
M. Stokes, W. R. Bullock. W. A. <lb />
Chance, Matthew <lb />
Jesse W. L. <lb />
J. A. Hodges, John T. C. <lb />
James, L. F. Corey, R. H. Parker . <lb />
J. C Brown. R. D. <lb />
wards. <lb />
Judge Allen has several limes held <lb />
court here and as <lb />
limes delivered charges to the grand <lb />
Juries, and always gives them clear <lb />
as to their duties. Ho <lb />
said today that where offenses against <lb />
public morals exist, somebody on Um <lb />
grand Jury should be aware of <lb />
and if the grand Jurors and <lb />
do their duty these matters will he <lb />
cleared up. It Is next to an <lb />
for crimes not to be <lb />
to light If full duty Is done by those <lb />
having oversight of the laws. <lb />
Judge Allen instructed the grand <lb />
Jury if they knew of any men boast- <lb />
Scotland, the Land of Song n <lb />
One Every <lb />
SO. m COTTAGE <lb />
1913. by The Associated Newspaper School, Inc. <lb />
You can get a beautiful Intaglio re- <lb />
production of the above picture with <lb />
five others, equally attractive. x <lb />
Inches In size, with this week's <lb />
In the a well-known <lb />
authority covers the subject of the <lb />
pictures and stories of the week. Read- <lb />
of the Reflector and the <lb />
will know art. literature, history, <lb />
science, and travel, and own exquisite <lb />
pictures. On sale at the <lb />
and Ellington's Book store, pries <lb />
Ten cents. Write today to the Re- <lb />
for booklet explaining the As- <lb />
Newspaper School plan. <lb />
Mr. J. W. Martin Loses Hi <lb />
Home With Contents <lb />
by Fire <lb />
Few singing In dialect become <lb />
world famous This Is true for th-j <lb />
simple reason that a dialect poet is <lb />
likely to be write of local <lb />
avoid the universal. But <lb />
Robert as re- <lb />
think of the exception. <lb />
en also many times. <lb />
His fortune fell very low In 1781, <lb />
and he intended to sail for the West <lb />
Indies, there to try to better them. <lb />
Hut his first volume of poetry prov- <lb />
ed to be such a great success that <lb />
ha did not go. His poems took <lb />
people by storm. Every one read <lb />
that they could buy all the liquor Who does not know Lang them. He was Invited to Edinburgh <lb />
where he became the lion of the hoar. <lb />
But all this did not bring him In <lb />
much money. Finally in 1789 he got <lb />
a position as excise officer. But i s <lb />
years went on, and he grew wilder <lb />
enough left to keep the court busy . of Scotland. On January MS, <lb />
two days. Crime producing evils opened his eyes In a small cottage from His only corn- <lb />
were the ones the grand Jury should about miles from In those of <lb />
look especially after. land. His father only a small <lb />
As to the thief and gambler, Judge farmer and Robert got very little ed- At on knew <lb />
wanted, it was duty to have <lb />
such men summoned before them <lb />
investigation. He said If all CUM <lb />
on the docket that are there by <lb />
son of liquor, were disposed <lb />
of, there would not be <lb />
and all that it means Or who has <lb />
not said to on his own <lb />
man's a man for that <lb />
Robert Burns could not help but <lb />
be a poet of the <lb />
He was born close to the <lb />
Allen put them upon the same but lots of hard work. <lb />
that he was dying. He wrote <lb />
On Friday night the home of Mr. <lb />
J W. Martin, near Mill, was <lb />
destroyed by fire. The family had <lb />
gone out for supper to the dining <lb />
room which was Just In the rear of <lb />
but attached lo the body of the <lb />
A lamp was left In one of <lb />
the front rooms, and the door between <lb />
this room and the hall, as well as <lb />
the front door, were standing open, <lb />
while the rear hall door leading out <lb />
to the dining room was closed. <lb />
When supper was over one of Mr. <lb />
Martin's sons was the first to <lb />
back In the house. As he opened tho <lb />
rear hall door to enter he was met <lb />
by flames of fire that were swept- <lb />
through the hall by the draft from <lb />
the front. This son sprang up <lb />
stairway to try to save some clothing <lb />
and valuables from his room, but the- <lb />
fire followed rapidly that he had <lb />
to Jump out the second story window <lb />
and could save nothing. <lb />
Almost like a flash the flames spread <lb />
throughout the entire building, and <lb />
nothing of consequence could be <lb />
ed. Besides the building and all <lb />
household and kitchen furniture and <lb />
the clothing of the family being de- <lb />
Mr. Martin lost all of his <lb />
valuable papers and about in <lb />
money. <lb />
It Is supposed that the fire started <lb />
from tho explosion of the lamp In <lb />
the front room, this probably being <lb />
caused by a gust of wind <lb />
the open doors. <lb />
Mr. Martin had some insurance <lb />
the Pitt county branch of the Farm- <lb />
Mutual Fire Insurance <lb />
but not more than covering a <lb />
third of his loss which will reach <lb />
fully His home had but re- <lb />
We can assist you to own your . i, <lb />
Lome and the terms will easy. <lb />
if easier, than paying rent. If you <lb />
want to build or buy home and <lb />
quite enough money to do so <lb />
It will be to your advantage to call <lb />
and let us explain how we can assist <lb />
you. It'll be money In your pocket <lb />
HOME BUILDING AND LOAN <lb />
ASSOCIATION <lb />
V. W. C. A. Services <lb />
At Y. C. A. services Sunday even- <lb />
Mr. C. W. Wilson made a <lb />
spiritual and personal talk. His sub- <lb />
was through this <lb />
world with or without He <lb />
said Is Impossible to do our best <lb />
Work without must bring <lb />
and religion Into our dally <lb />
lives and In representing <lb />
Christ as a friend, he named two <lb />
worth and self-sacrifice. <lb />
The deeply religious of th. <lb />
women of the association. <lb />
Evans St, <lb />
N. C <lb />
t C Heroine Ohm. C.<lb />
Lawyers <lb />
Practicing In all the Courts <lb />
In Wooten <lb />
fronting Court Home <lb />
Reduction In, Salt Capital <lb />
JERSEY CITY, N. J. April <lb />
their annual meeting here today <lb />
stockholders of the International Salt <lb />
Company the proposal of <lb />
the directors to the com- <lb />
capital stock. The present <lb />
authorized Is of <lb />
which 918.231.390 Is outstanding. Tim <lb />
amount It is now to <lb />
lo <lb />
ALBION DUNN <lb />
Attorney at Law <lb />
Office Ir. Building. Third B <lb />
wherever his services <lb />
North Carolina <lb />
In that both get the property of an- However, he managed to learn to bis cousin for the <lb />
other without working for it. And read and used to carry his books in- of to have him <lb />
the man who buys the farmers cot- to the fields with him to snatch . days in Jail. <lb />
Ion at a specified delivery in the moments reading during the on the twenty-first of July, <lb />
is gambling and cheating the mealtimes he sat with a spoon <lb />
for he has pledged himself against a book in the other. The Burns cottage near Is rev- <lb />
loss through an arrangement with H liked best the ballads of Scot- preserved as a memorial l. <lb />
Wall Street, while the man who bar- old songs of the the poet. Here is the little room <lb />
gains his cotton away does not have But 1871 he went to Irvine where he was born and here are to <lb />
this protection. i learn the trade of a flax-dresser. found many mementos associated <lb />
Judge Allen said some people was here that he Indulged life- This cot, built of clay <lb />
heard complaining that the i habits that clung to him all the rest b father, Is a shrine for those <lb />
law is violated, therefore Is non-of and falling the memory of the <lb />
effective. We have had the Ten Com-1 love. For the poet was a boon <lb />
thousands of years and Pinion at a feast and a great heart-1 Every day a different human inter- <lb />
yet there are violations of the law his own heart was eat story will appear In the Reflector. I been remodeled. <lb />
against stealing. We have had the <lb />
prohibition law only about two years <lb />
and congratulation BO <lb />
that so much reformation has been J <lb />
brought about under It in this short J <lb />
time. When you hear a man talking. J <lb />
the prohibition law, you MO <lb />
mark it down that he is directly or <lb />
indirectly Interested in the sale of <lb />
liquor. Morally, educationally and <lb />
commercially the state Is making <lb />
great strides and prohibition has <lb />
aided In bringing this condition. <lb />
Judge Allen asked the grand <lb />
to see if there are competent over- <lb />
seers and superintendents of the pub- <lb />
roads, and If they are doing their <lb />
duty, also If the county convict force <lb />
Is conducted as It be. <lb />
Judge Allen said that every prison <lb />
ought to be a reformatory, and that <lb />
even In a convict camp the men <lb />
should be given an opportunity to <lb />
reform. He wondered If they had the <lb />
privileges of newspapers, of books <lb />
and of going to church occasionally. <lb />
He wanted to see the day come when I <lb />
stripes are not put on convicts to <lb />
humiliate degrade them, and that <lb />
every Influence be brought to bear <lb />
to reform the convict and make <lb />
a better man. <lb />
He also urged the grand Jury to <lb />
give close attention to the county <lb />
home and to see that It Is Indeed <lb />
home with proper comforts for the <lb />
unfortunate ones there. <lb />
Judge Allen paid a high <lb />
to Pitt county and said If the <lb />
people would Just sweep out a <lb />
Impurities he had called attention <lb />
to. there would he no bounds to their <lb />
prosperity and happiness. <lb />
WE BEG TO ANNOUNCE the t r I- <lb />
between the E r k of <lb />
Greenville The Berk Greenville <lb />
effective May 1st, 1913, continued <lb />
under the Charter of <lb />
National Bank <lb />
of Greenville <lb />
KITS <lb />
NEW <lb />
NORFOLK, Va., April <lb />
Southern Railroad. II Is announced In <lb />
York, tins <lb />
d box cars. flat cars, <lb />
cars. cabooses, i passenger cars. S <lb />
nail baggage cars, B <lb />
locomotives, traveler cars for <lb />
service and tor- <lb />
rick car, the contracts being <lb />
bated among the <lb />
Vernon Car and Manufacturing <lb />
Co., Locomotive Works. Phil- I <lb />
and the American Car mil <lb />
Foundry Co., Industrial Works, <lb />
City. Mich.; Southern Car Co., <lb />
Point. N. C, <lb />
We cordially the customers and friends of both Banks <lb />
to join in making this the largest and strongest Bank in <lb />
Carolina. . <lb />
Thanking you for your patronage, we remain, <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
THE NATIONAL BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb />
OFFICERS <lb />
J. L. LITTLE, President. F. G. JAMES, <lb />
W. E. PROCTOR, Vice-Pres. F. J. FORBES, Cashier. <lb />
M. L. TURNAGE, CHAS. JAMES, Teller. <lb />
Missionary Sermon <lb />
Rev. C M. delivered a <lb />
did sermon on the subject of missions <lb />
lb Memorial church Sunday. <lb />
An Interesting finale lo the sermon <lb />
was a recitation on the u <lb />
by seven each <lb />
currying a banner with the name <lb />
the country represented. The entire <lb />
was Impressive. <lb />
DIRECTORS <lb />
F. G. JAMES <lb />
R. L. DAVIS <lb />
J. L. PERKINS <lb />
L. W. TUCKER <lb />
J. E. NOBLES <lb />
R. WILLIAMS <lb />
E. A. MO YE <lb />
B. W. <lb />
W. E. PROCTOR <lb />
J. P. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
O. E. HARRIS <lb />
O. W HARRINGTON <lb />
J. L. LITTLE <lb />
F. HARDING <lb />
REAL BATTLE <lb />
OF TARIFF BILL <lb />
ON IS WEEK <lb />
Dill Openly Appear Or The Floor <lb />
Of The House <lb />
SUCCESS ALMOST ASSURED <lb />
Experts Son Working On Tariff Kill <lb />
In Behalf Of Democratic And <lb />
Republican Divisions Of <lb />
Senate Finance <lb />
WASHINGTON, April <lb />
weeks of tariff debate behind closed <lb />
floors will be followed early this <lb />
week by the opening of the real tight <lb />
over the Democratic tariff bill on <lb />
the floor of the house. Backed by <lb />
the favorable decision of the Demo- <lb />
house caucus and bearing the <lb />
approval of President Wilson, the <lb />
Underwood tariff bill will re-appear <lb />
on the floor of the house by the mid- <lb />
of the week ready for the fight <lb />
that Is to be waged there over Its <lb />
passage. The success of the <lb />
In the house Is assured at the outset, <lb />
according to Democratic supporters <lb />
of the bill. The party majority of <lb />
over enough to carry the tar- <lb />
program through, It Is claimed, <lb />
without danger of a change. The <lb />
Republican forces, led by members of <lb />
the ways and means committee who <lb />
denounce the Underwood bill In a <lb />
minority report made public tonight, <lb />
will again attempt to upset the free <lb />
wool and free sugar in three years <lb />
plane of the President which carried <lb />
through Democratic caucus by a large <lb />
vote. It is believed, however, that <lb />
the Republicans cannot secure <lb />
Democratic allies seriously to threat- <lb />
cu the bill at any point. <lb />
From the time the measure comes <lb />
back to the house this week, tariff de- <lb />
bate is expected to rage at both ends <lb />
of the For at least two <lb />
weeks the bill probably will rest <lb />
the house while general debate is in- <lb />
in across aisle that <lb />
the Republican and Demo- <lb />
forces. <lb />
At the end of that time the meas- <lb />
will be brought forward for de- <lb />
tailed reading with the opportunity <lb />
or amendment. The Republicans are <lb />
preparing now to attack many of the <lb />
Democratic reductions and to at- <lb />
tempt to amend the bill and restore <lb />
some of the protective rates which the <lb />
Democrats have abandoned or severe- <lb />
modified. <lb />
The demand made by Republican <lb />
senators last week that hearings <lb />
should be allowed on the bill after It <lb />
reaches the senate has not moved <lb />
the Democratic members of the fin- <lb />
committee to change their orig- <lb />
plans. No oral hearings will be <lb />
given. All industries and persons <lb />
likely to be affected by the change n <lb />
tariff are being given an opportunity <lb />
however, to file further statements <lb />
with the committee, if they have new <lb />
information that was not furnished <lb />
to the ways and means committee last <lb />
January. <lb />
Experts are now working on the <lb />
tariff bill In behalf of both the Dem- <lb />
and Republican divisions of <lb />
the finance committee. <lb />
As the debate proceeds In <lb />
house the senate committee will com- <lb />
its amendment to the bill <lb />
will be prepared to act on meas- <lb />
within a short time after It Is <lb />
received from the house. <lb />
Other legislative matters probably <lb />
will be forced Into the background <lb />
with the opening of the tariff fight <lb />
this week. Important hearings and <lb />
committee meetings which have been <lb />
arranged at the senate side will give <lb />
the basis for preparation of <lb />
that may be brought to the <lb />
front before the special session ad- <lb />
A ground work for currency reform <lb />
legislation Is to be laid Tuesday <lb />
when a meeting of full member- <lb />
ship of the senate banking and cur- <lb />
committee will be held. <lb />
Advocates of woman suffrage will <lb />
be heard during the week, the hear- <lb />
opening tomorrow and will urge <lb />
that a amendment for <lb />
women suffrage be approved at this <lb />
session of congress. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. John Richard <lb />
invite you to present <lb />
at the marriage of their daughter <lb />
to <lb />
Mr. James Harry White <lb />
on the morning of Wednesday <lb />
thirtieth of April <lb />
one thousand nine hundred and <lb />
teen <lb />
at eight o'clock <lb />
First Episcopal Church, <lb />
South <lb />
Rocky Mount. North Carolina <lb />
Secretary Daniels Will send <lb />
Entire Atlantic fleet lo <lb />
Mediterranean <lb />
WASHINGTON, April <lb />
Daniels announced today that <lb />
next winter practically the entire At- <lb />
fleet would be sent on a three <lb />
month's cruise to the Mediterranean. <lb />
This will be the new secretary's pol- <lb />
icy to make the navy, In times <lb />
peace, a great educational force for <lb />
the enlisted men and to afford then <lb />
opportunity to enjoy the broadening <lb />
of first hand knowledge <lb />
the great countries of the world. <lb />
The secretary believes such a <lb />
will add greatly to the sailor's <lb />
believe we should of- <lb />
fer to the enlisted man every <lb />
which lies In our power to ob- <lb />
knowledge of other countries <lb />
from personal he said <lb />
today. cruise will be so timed <lb />
as to give every man In the fleet bore <lb />
leave at every port of <lb />
Mr. Daniels also appreciates the ad- <lb />
vantages from a technical standpoint <lb />
that the officers of the fleet will gain <lb />
In a long cruise of this kind where <lb />
maneuvers can be carried out <lb />
and many experiments can be <lb />
ed actual service conditions. <lb />
Instead of the usual winter man- <lb />
at Guantanamo, Cuba, the <lb />
whole fleet. Including the torpedo boat <lb />
destroyers and auxiliaries will make <lb />
the foreign cruise. There will be at <lb />
least battleships probably <lb />
the new dreadnoughts Texas and <lb />
New York, with an aggregate ton- <lb />
of about tons. <lb />
The fleet will leave about the first <lb />
of and cross the Atlantic, <lb />
probably stopping at the Azores or <lb />
to Gibraltar. There the ships <lb />
will be divided into squadrons and <lb />
sent to visit the principal ports of <lb />
the Mediterranean. The exact dates <lb />
and details of the voyage have not <lb />
been definitely determined. <lb />
WORDS <lb />
Many A Greenville Household <lb />
Find Them So <lb />
To have the pains and aches of a. <lb />
bad hack be entirely free <lb />
from annoying, dangerous urinary <lb />
orders, Is enough to make any kidney <lb />
sufferer grateful. The following ad- <lb />
vice of one who has suffered will <lb />
prove comforting words to hundreds <lb />
of Greenville readers. <lb />
J. B, Peed, E. Second St. Washing-1 <lb />
ton, N. C, bothered i <lb />
me and there were pains across my <lb />
loins. These of kidney- <lb />
trouble showed that something must <lb />
be done. The kidney secretions were <lb />
Irregular In passage and contained <lb />
sediment. I used two boxes of <lb />
Kidney Pills as directed and they en- <lb />
relieved me. There has <lb />
been a sign of complaint i <lb />
For sale by all dealers. Price <lb />
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb />
New York, sole agents for the Unit-1 <lb />
d States. <lb />
Remember the <lb />
take no other. <lb />
Adv. <lb />
Marriage Licenses <lb />
Last week Register of Bell <lb />
Issued marriage licenses to the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
WHITE <lb />
S. W. Phillips and Rosa Barrow. <lb />
Raymond and Nina <lb />
COLORED <lb />
Charlie Clements and Carrie Best. <lb />
Preston Price and Viola Foreman. <lb />
S. E. Joyner and Anna Bradley. <lb />
Carr and Hattie Clark. <lb />
His Brother Dead <lb />
Mr. J. S. received a <lb />
gram Sunday afternoon announcing <lb />
the death of his brother, Mr. J. J. <lb />
Tunstall, which about <lb />
at his home In Washington, D. C. <lb />
Wanted <lb />
Salespeople Wanted, <lb />
experience not <lb />
Apply at once. <lb />
B. <lb />
OF <lb />
Of Arrival And <lb />
ATLANTIC COAST LINE <lb />
Southbound <lb />
8.18 a. in. 1.18 p. m <lb />
HI a. an, 1.11<lb />
1.16 a in a m <lb />
a m a m <lb />
s m 4.17 p. <lb />
On account of Increased practice <lb />
Dr will stay In Greenville all <lb />
day Mondays and Fridays but bis of- <lb />
hours will be from a m. to <lb />
p. in. as the afternoon will be de- <lb />
voted to work done outside the <lb />
or by appointment. Patients wish- <lb />
treatment In the afternoon <lb />
tn their homes or at the office should <lb />
In hours. Phone <lb />
r If. <lb />
the spring a young man's fancy <lb />
Lightly turns to thoughts of <lb />
And it seems at this same season <lb />
An old man's ponders o'er the <lb />
cooing dove <lb />
And the plaintive song of <lb />
As she sat on garden's rough paling <lb />
And whistled for me <lb />
We want to talk to our young <lb />
maidens and our boys and girls, <lb />
for surely our heart Is big enough <lb />
to have a very tender spot for each <lb />
and every one of you. This is not <lb />
the story, nor Is it the of <lb />
an unwritten story that we hope to <lb />
tell you. if we shall be allowed <lb />
tell It in our own simple way. As <lb />
you can see from the lines that are <lb />
at the beginning of article, some <lb />
the scenes of the intended story <lb />
will be laid among haunts of by- <lb />
gone days. We shall claim no merit <lb />
for this story a true <lb />
except the faint hope that <lb />
may help some struggling, though <lb />
faint-heated boy, or despondent <lb />
we are right much on the <lb />
Quaker order. We were partially <lb />
raised among these people <lb />
and as we weer young we <lb />
some of their ways. They only do <lb />
things as the spirit, not spirits, move <lb />
them. There Is a certain mood in <lb />
which I let me use this in- <lb />
stead of we I must feel ere I can dull <lb />
a pencil or make the printer think <lb />
at that, that spirit would be quench- <lb />
ed. answers are ever <lb />
yea, year, and nay, nay. They <lb />
take the Scriptures and especially the <lb />
New Testament, for their guide, <lb />
much so that one athlete chanced <lb />
to be taking with another one day. <lb />
and he In some unguarded way In- <lb />
the man and he, the man, <lb />
gave the Quaker a heavy blow on <lb />
the right cheek whereupon the <lb />
ed gave him a tremendous blow and <lb />
felled him to the ground and when <lb />
the fellow regained his conscious- <lb />
he said to Quaker thought <lb />
your Bible taught that if a man smote <lb />
on thy right cheek thee <lb />
turn they said the <lb />
friend thee didst not <lb />
read for enough in that same chapter, <lb />
for it also says with whatsoever <lb />
measure ye mete, the same should <lb />
he measured unto so now, my <lb />
friend, here is other But <lb />
e were no more blows passed. <lb />
Then the Quaker said friend, if <lb />
thee are satisfied, let us carry out <lb />
the injunction of Paul, Met not <lb />
sun go down on thy and <lb />
they made up and were good friends. <lb />
Now, if there are any who would <lb />
Ike for me to write this story run- <lb />
through several Issues, let them <lb />
hold up their bands. I see one girl's <lb />
Land start up, but now she hesitates <lb />
and says I really do enjoy <lb />
some of the serve that you write m; <lb />
when away, but when you write for <lb />
the paper you Bay things that <lb />
sound so Well, will <lb />
soon have the honor of being the <lb />
first graduate from the Grifton grad- <lb />
ed school, and she says things a lit- <lb />
different from her papa. I would <lb />
say still bow sucks the <lb />
She would put it thus reticent <lb />
female Is most successful <lb />
In the refuse of the <lb />
I sometimes Bay to her <lb />
woman had a fit and her muscles <lb />
Jerked and that she was senseless <lb />
and had no feeling. But she, my girl, <lb />
has learned a few medical phrases <lb />
from medical almanac, I suppose, <lb />
it Is thus she would put <lb />
an had an acute affection of the ma- <lb />
tract of nervous system, char- <lb />
by tonic and con- <lb />
tractions of the muscles, unconscious <lb />
I hope ere <lb />
long she will think meas <lb />
et But if necessary to <lb />
express it in an ordinary <lb />
she will simply say, I saw my <lb />
folly and conquered it. <lb />
Think not that I Intended any re- <lb />
on the Grifton school we <lb />
have as good a graded school there <lb />
as there Is anywhere, but <lb />
little learning is a dangerous <lb />
deep or taste not the Persian <lb />
spring <lb />
U KNOW. <lb />
Hanrahan, N. C, April <lb />
kidneys were deranged and my <lb />
liver did not work right I suffered <lb />
much, but Electric Bitters was rec- <lb />
and I Improved from the <lb />
first dose. I now feel like a new <lb />
It will Improve you, too. On- <lb />
and Recommended by <lb />
all druggists. <lb />
Opportunity <lb />
purchased the stock of Merchandise formerly owned by M. <lb />
Mooring Son, we beg to announce to the public that the entire stock <lb />
is rapidly being converted into dependable merchandise. A portion of the stock <lb />
has been withdrawn from sale, while some new stock is being added. <lb />
This stock consists principally of Shoes, Dry Goods, Notions and Farm <lb />
Supplies, of the staple variety, and will be offered to the buying public at a <lb />
SACRIFICE. <lb />
We will not conduct a sensational cost sale, but our stock will be sold on <lb />
MERIT alone. <lb />
Turnage Brothers <lb />
For Barns, Braises and Sores <lb />
The quickest and surest cure for <lb />
burns, bruises, bolls, sores, <lb />
and all skin diseases In Buck- <lb />
Salve. In four days It <lb />
cured L. H. it Iredell, Tex., <lb />
of a sore on his ankle which pained <lb />
him so he could hardly walk. Should <lb />
be In every house. Only Rec- <lb />
by all druggists, <lb />
adv<lb />
H. <lb />
Still <lb />
-Old <lb />
The Life Insurance C. <lb />
of <lb />
Hew Tori. <lb />
J. C. Lanier <lb />
AND HEAD STONES <lb />
AND IRON FENCES <lb />
MIRTH CAROLINA <lb />
d-w <lb />
For all Kinds <lb />
of Shoe Repair- <lb />
call on Flow- <lb />
Shoe Shop. <lb />
PHONE <lb />
Old Bay Line <lb />
Steam Packet <lb />
Dally. Including Sunday, between <lb />
AND BALTIMORE <lb />
Mail steamers <lb />
Equipped Unit- <lb />
ed Wireless Telegraphy and every <lb />
convenience. Cuisine <lb />
passed <lb />
Portsmouth, Sundays, . pro <lb />
Portsmouth, week days pm <lb />
Norfolk, dally . pis <lb />
Old Point . pm <lb />
Tickets sold lo points north. <lb />
and <lb />
Work Shirts <lb />
for Men and Boys, the <lb />
kind that is guaranteed <lb />
not to rip, last the long- <lb />
est, and fit the best. <lb />
Why not get the kind <lb />
that lasts the longest <lb />
For <lb />
Quality Shop <lb />
Bicycles <lb />
The name of has been associated with the best of <lb />
bicycles for fifteen years. It lb one-third easier to propel than the <lb />
ordinary wheel, and Its crank-hanger bears a clear guarantee for <lb />
three years. We have the exclusive agency for this section and <lb />
carry a large stock at all times. Prices gladly furnished on <lb />
cation. Come to see us. <lb />
THE JOHN FLANAGAN <lb />
BUGGY COMPANY <lb />
To be successful, a store must be above all things <lb />
honest. If we would be successful in our bid for <lb />
your patronage must offer you something you <lb />
have not been used to getting at the store where <lb />
you have been dealing. <lb />
We must either base our plea on a higher <lb />
quality for the same price you've been <lb />
used to paying or by offering the same <lb />
quality at a lower price o o o o <lb />
Since the establishment of this business we <lb />
have built our reputation on quality. We have <lb />
made it our hobby and our rapidly increasing bus- <lb />
is due entirely t its influence. <lb />
In selecting our stocks we insist upon only the <lb />
very best of leathers for upper and <lb />
must be right and the styles in perfect keep- <lb />
with the season's fancies. <lb />
QUALITIES IN SHOES IS THE ES <lb />
POOR SHOE AT ANY <lb />
IS A COSTLY INVESTMENT. <lb />
A FEAT TO KIT FEET <lb />
GREENVILLE HP <lb />
Let the Reflector Advertise Your Wan<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018245_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
VALVE <lb />
ESTATE <lb />
NEW YORK. April la <lb />
An Expression <lb />
To the Editor of the Gold <lb />
The Ides has gone abroad la <lb />
to the road bonds, that they may <lb />
be purchased by wealthy men <lb />
and are free from taxes <lb />
the will of J. P. Morgan made public , , , . , <lb />
. lute a mortgage on all the <lb />
yesterday centered today In the , ,. , . ,,,., <lb />
. . . , i In the country may be sold If the <lb />
Question of the value of the , . <lb />
i bonds are not paid at maturity. <lb />
tier's estate and In what disposition <lb />
his son would make of the vast col-j <lb />
or Morgan art treasures. <lb />
Less than was <lb />
d for the specific bequests made t.-1 <lb />
Mr. Morgan, the rest being the <lb />
portion left to the son without <lb />
mention of the amount <lb />
Some estimates made today <lb />
the total estate as high as <lb />
but according to a member of <lb />
the firm of J. P. Morgan and Co., not <lb />
even the son himself can tell within <lb />
many millions the actual value of <lb />
fortune. <lb />
day. but up to this time Ur. Small <lb />
has not received the final count <lb />
STATE OF CAROLINA <lb />
Department of State <lb />
Of <lb />
To all whom the presents may come <lb />
Whereas, it arrears to my <lb />
faction, by duly authenticated record <lb />
eyes of Ignorance. Is It possible the proceedings for the voluntary <lb />
what marvelous and <lb />
doing scan be seen through the <lb />
any one capable of evolving such a <lb />
theory should be informed that these <lb />
bonds, if held by persons or <lb />
rations In Vance county, will be list- <lb />
ed for taxes to the full amount of their <lb />
value, dollar for dollar <lb />
It Is. of course, full true, that the <lb />
county must pay these bonds, but Is <lb />
paid by a sinking fund which <lb />
from year to year by setting <lb />
dissolution thereof by the unanimous <lb />
consent of the stockholders, deposit- <lb />
ed In my office, that the Davis Motor <lb />
Company, a corporation of this state, <lb />
principal office is situated in <lb />
the town of county of Pitt, <lb />
state of North Carolina R. Davis <lb />
being the agent therein and In charge <lb />
thereof, upon whom process may be <lb />
has complied with the re- <lb />
one per cent of the amount of of Chapter of <lb />
I the bonds. Any property In tho entitled <lb />
re- <lb />
appraised by the state for the,, , <lb />
Monday in May. 1913. for your last <lb />
year's taxes if you to <lb />
them, This has been the case since <lb />
before the oldest man In the com- <lb />
can and will <lb />
ways be so. <lb />
There Is nothing new, dangerous <lb />
or hazardous in the matter present- <lb />
ed to you. And if any citizen <lb />
such rumors and reports seriously, it <lb />
is his duty to investigate the grounds <lb />
fears and find what the real <lb />
tax the question will <lb />
main open. <lb />
J. P. Morgan declined to say today <lb />
anything in regard to the disposition <lb />
of the art treasures, but it was In- <lb />
that he might have a state- <lb />
some time this week. <lb />
The treasurers were left to the son <lb />
with the hope he will be able <lb />
In such a manner as he thinks best to <lb />
make a permanent disposition or dis- <lb />
positions of them or such portions of j Gold Leaf, <lb />
them as will he a substantial carrying <lb />
out of the intentions which I have <lb />
cherished to render them <lb />
permanently available for the pleas- <lb />
and instruction of the American <lb />
J. P. Morgan, the testator's son. Hr <lb />
Godwin Says There Is <lb />
Doubt lint That 4th Post- <lb />
Hill He Filled By <lb />
Democrats <lb />
WASHINGTON, April <lb />
i several conferences with <lb />
L. P. Hamilton. that , not <lb />
his sons-in-law and Lewis Case Lei- <lb />
yard, the Morgan attorney, tiled their <lb />
oaths as executors today. Mrs. <lb />
the widow, and three daughters. <lb />
Miss Morgan. Mrs. and Mrs. <lb />
Hamilton, and J. P. Morgan have <lb />
waived citation and tho will prob- <lb />
ably will be admitted to probate to- <lb />
morrow. <lb />
The petition to the makes <lb />
the formal declaration that the value <lb />
of the real estate and personal DU <lb />
arty Involved In would to the <lb />
each case. <lb />
to the Issuing of this <lb />
of <lb />
Now, Therefore. I, J. Bryan Grimes, <lb />
Secretary of State of the state of <lb />
North Carolina, do hereby certify that <lb />
the said corporation did, on the 17th <lb />
day of April, 1913, file In my <lb />
a duly executed and attested consent <lb />
in writing to tho dissolution of I <lb />
corporation, executed by all the stock- <lb />
holders thereof, which said consent <lb />
and the record of the proceedings <lb />
aforesaid are now on in my said <lb />
office as provided by law. <lb />
In Testimony Whereof. I have here- <lb />
to set my hand and affixed my official <lb />
seal, at Raleigh, this 17th day of <lb />
April, A. D., 1913. <lb />
J. BRYAN GRIMES. <lb />
of State. <lb />
Enters Suit Against Aliens <lb />
have the slightest doubt that every j ROANOKE, Va April civil <lb />
fourth class post office in the suits for damages for tho widows and <lb />
try would be filled by Democrats orphans of the officers of the Carroll <lb />
when the department final- <lb />
got through with the arrangement <lb />
of the postal service. <lb />
Mr. Godwin said that Postmaster <lb />
county circuit court, shot up March <lb />
of last year by the Allen clan, have <lb />
been docketed in the Wayne <lb />
circuit court to be heard by Judge <lb />
Mr. Morgan's will was filed for pro- <lb />
bate shortly before o'clock this <lb />
morning. <lb />
General told him that while I Walter R. Staples at the July term, <lb />
some kind of an examination would be Judge Staples presided at the <lb />
held for fourth class postmasters, of the Aliens and sentenced Floyd <lb />
that examination would be so easy and Claude to die In the electric chair. <lb />
and Sentence was passed September <lb />
but the death penalty was not inflicted <lb />
until last <lb />
Tho suits for damages are to<lb />
NARROWLY <lb />
AVERTED <lb />
am in favor of filling every <lb />
class in the United States I cover money from the estates of Floyd <lb />
with said Mr. Godwin.; and Claude Allen and Wesley <lb />
filling these offices with Demo- Edwards. The families of Judge <lb />
will place me In the class of <lb />
the then I am a <lb />
of the rankest <lb />
Mr. Godwin said if the postmaster <lb />
Thornton L. <lb />
Attorney William Foster and Sheriff <lb />
Lew Webb are plaintiffs In the <lb />
Attorney R. H. Willis, of the <lb />
Arm of and <lb />
principal counsel for the Aliens In <lb />
This morning while to <lb />
Greenville from his home In general had left the doubt ;. <lb />
township, Mr. John Rives, with his I his mind about ousting the Republican , . <lb />
wife and little daughter, narrowly es- j fourth class postmaster he would not their long fight for life and liberty <lb />
caped a serious accident when Just have given out the above Interview, j following tho tragedy, said <lb />
across the other side of the riv-r never was more confident of any-1 that It is likely he will submit to Pros- <lb />
bridge. Mr. Rives, with the thing than I am that these Stuart of <lb />
of his family, was In a buggy and cans will be ousted when the Anal county, tho document now in his <lb />
was met by a runaway log team of test said Mr. Godwin Mr. session, in which Attorney L. O. Wen- <lb />
two mules. In attempting to clear i Godwin said he was opposed to the of Richmond, sets forth <lb />
e rear wheel was hit by the plan of holding any kind of grounds on which Dexter Goad, clerk <lb />
for the fourth class offices, but of the Carroll court, may be <lb />
after going over the proposed for his part In the courthouse bat- <lb />
wagon and torn off, throwing Mr. <lb />
Rives and his little daughter out. Ho <lb />
received slight bruises on right leg <lb />
bat the little girl escaped Injury. <lb />
Always To and Over The Precipice <lb />
with Mr. he was perfectly <lb />
satisfied that the offices would be <lb />
filled by Democrats regardless of the <lb />
examinations. <lb />
Mr. Godwin called at the treasury <lb />
The tragedy in Goldsboro Is too department today and secured the <lb />
savory, too pathetic to dwell upon, promise of the supervising architect <lb />
bat It should not be passed without that work would be started on the <lb />
once again holding up the moral of Wilmington custom house within <lb />
certain punishment for unrighteous- day. Mr. Godwin had the <lb />
and reward for righteousness, ton project advanced to the class of <lb />
Through its vale of tears the tragedy largest building projects which <lb />
lands as a warning. It should the department believes will make It <lb />
press upon the minds of those who possible to start work on the <lb />
would sin in such manner that shame building Some time during <lb />
is linked to torture Just as It Is <lb />
for the night to give away <lb />
to the day, and vice versa. The pleas- <lb />
of evil-doing Is hut temporary. <lb />
It soon tilts away and then the <lb />
July at the latest. <lb />
Representative Small said today he <lb />
would recommend for appointment as <lb />
Mr. Willis said that because of th <lb />
press of other business he had not <lb />
yet examined the opinion <lb />
carefully. He said, however, that it is <lb />
likely the paper will be submitted <lb />
Stuart Campbell, prosecuting attorney <lb />
for county, with a summary of <lb />
evidence on which it is based, and <lb />
pointed out where witnesses can be <lb />
reached who will testify In support of <lb />
the version of Goad's part n <lb />
the courthouse fight and the <lb />
stances leading up to It. <lb />
Annual Meeting Bf Stock- <lb />
holders <lb />
The annual meeting of tho stock- <lb />
holders of the Farmers Consolidated <lb />
Tobacco Company was held today in <lb />
tho Star warehouse, with a large at- <lb />
At this meeting a <lb />
was adopted the <lb />
dissolution of the company in <lb />
with steps taken at previous <lb />
meetings, and a distribution <lb />
of assets, amounting to per cent, <lb />
was paid to the stockholders, the <lb />
being reserved until some <lb />
affecting the company Is set- <lb />
It is expected that an addition- <lb />
per cent or more will be paid <lb />
as soon as these matters are ad- <lb />
justed. <lb />
The dissolution of this company, <lb />
being carried on for ten years, <lb />
in which time the original <lb />
were paid per cent in <lb />
is to be regretted, and many of <lb />
the farmers connected with it were <lb />
heard to so express themselves. Still <lb />
there had arisen conditions under <lb />
which it was not wise to continue <lb />
without a change in policy, and op- <lb />
position arising to a proposed <lb />
of tho company on a some- <lb />
what different basis, dissolution was <lb />
considered as tho best step under <lb />
these circumstances. <lb />
Mr. O. L. who was <lb />
dent of the company during its <lb />
and who at personal sacrifice <lb />
threw his whole energy into building <lb />
It up, labored unceasingly for Its <lb />
and the large benefit the farm- <lb />
derived from it was due mainly <lb />
to his efforts. No one more <lb />
than he that a lack of earnest co- <lb />
operation led to the dissolution of the <lb />
company. It Is cause for <lb />
to the farmers, however, that <lb />
in the sale of the property Mr. Joyner <lb />
purchased one of the warehouses, the <lb />
Star, and will continue to run it. His <lb />
association with the business will <lb />
mean much for the strength and ad- <lb />
of the tobacco market. <lb />
Not Halting on Lumber Dealers <lb />
Mr. G. B. W. Hadley started out <lb />
on a plan not to be delayed in the <lb />
building of his new residence. In- <lb />
stead of having to depend on the <lb />
dealers to get material when they <lb />
felt Inclined to deliver it, he sent <lb />
out to bis own land and had the <lb />
cut and extra good quality and <lb />
plenty of it. As a result the work <lb />
on his house is proceeding rapidly. <lb />
Auto Cuts Down Pole <lb />
Sunday Dr. T. O. and his <lb />
wife took an auto trip over near <lb />
Whichard to visit friends. In the <lb />
Mrs. took another <lb />
I lady out for a ride. In crossing tie <lb />
I railroad track the car stalled. The <lb />
la-lies intending to crank the <lb />
car so it would go on. A man at <lb />
station near by vent to assist than. <lb />
The man got d the car and <lb />
it a push, when off the <lb />
started right by itself. The car struck <lb />
line for a telephone pole and <lb />
cut it down. No damage resulted ex- <lb />
for the telephone pole. <lb />
April <lb />
Roland Jenkins, of Greenville spent <lb />
Wednesday night with Miss Fannie <lb />
Lee <lb />
Fresh corned herrings on hand at <lb />
A. W. Ange and Company. <lb />
Mr. A. II. Braxton made a flying trip <lb />
to Greenville Monday. <lb />
See Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb />
for your summer dress goods, <lb />
ladies and gents silk hose. <lb />
Miss Fannie Lee spent Wed- <lb />
in Greenville with friends. <lb />
Mrs. Charlie of Ayden <lb />
spent Friday in town visiting friends. <lb />
We have a plenty of peanuts and <lb />
field peas on hand. Get our prices be- <lb />
fore you buy. A. W. Ange and Com- <lb />
Misses Selma Fannie <lb />
son and Harriet Leary went to Green- <lb />
ville Thursday afternoon, also ac- <lb />
companied by Prof, F. C. ye. <lb />
Mr. Jack Holton of W. H. S. went <lb />
to his home near Ayden Friday. <lb />
Seed peanuts, seed field peas, at <lb />
Harrington, Barber and Company. <lb />
Miss of Green- <lb />
ville, was in town Friday afternoon, <lb />
to attend the Meredith Club held In <lb />
the Literary hall. <lb />
Died <lb />
Mrs. wife of Mr. J. <lb />
who moved here about the <lb />
first of the year from Greene county, <lb />
died Sunday night. The funeral took <lb />
place Monday afternoon. <lb />
Buys Interest In Store. <lb />
Mr. H. L. Hodges has purchased <lb />
the Interest of Mr. S. L. Stough In <lb />
the Shoe Co., and is now as- <lb />
as a partner in the firm with <lb />
Mr. George He Invites all <lb />
his friends to call there when they <lb />
want anything in the shoe line. <lb />
Automobiles <lb />
Mr. W. H. Dall, Jr., has completed <lb />
his new stable and garage building <lb />
postmaster of Elizabeth City Dr. An-, on Ninth street, and has Just filled <lb />
drew L. Pendleton. Dr. Is his garage with a car load of <lb />
alterable, the cold and harsh climax engaged in the practice of mobiles. Tho Ford Sales Co <lb />
must he raced. Degradation, bitter- profession. The also received a car load of new a i- <lb />
suffering all just In Mr. Small's district Is this week at their <lb />
varnish of sin, and it Is The for this office Washington street. <lb />
Intense <lb />
beneath <lb />
only a matter of a few days be preferential <lb />
tho Is scratched off and the It has been agreed that the man <lb />
ugly, horrible surface revealed. vote , and j p r Snow <lb />
the wages of sin Is test will be recommended by Mr. are among the visiting attorneys at <lb />
Small, The election was held court. <lb />
in <lb />
in HARDWARE <lb />
and FARM <lb />
MACHINERY <lb />
That's the point <lb />
in Its <lb />
the quality of our goods <lb />
and Machines that has won for us thousands of satisfied customers. <lb />
You can buy an inferior grade of seed, sow it and reap half a crop. <lb />
You can save a dollar or two on the purchase price of some Binders, Mow- <lb />
Rakes or Cultivators but you are running just as big a risk as when you <lb />
buy inferior seed. Why not buy the BEST at first <lb />
Nothing but in <lb />
We carry nothing but the in in Farm Machinery and <lb />
as well as Hardware, and we know our goods will give you absolute <lb />
satisfaction. We carry a stock of repairs for the machines we sell and our de- <lb />
sire is to give you the best service possible. Let us show you our Mowers, <lb />
Rakes, Binders, Cultivators, Planters, Weeders, Harrows, Distributors, Wag- <lb />
ons, Cutters, etc., and we know you will become one of our satisfied customers. <lb />
Messrs. W. A. Darden. of Farm- <lb />
Is no Dispatch. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, Phone No. <lb />
PIN YOUR FAITH TO <lb />
A GROWING BANK <lb />
that led all other banks in this section in increase in business during the <lb />
just <lb />
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST CO., <lb />
Started in 1901 and has been going forward ever since <lb />
AND THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA DEPOSIT WITH <lb />
WE WANT BUSINESS <lb />
O. II. AN, E. B. II I S, V r r o, ., C. S. CARR, Cashier. <lb />
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb />
HEART OF EASTERN <lb />
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb />
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb />
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb />
AND ONE. AND IS <lb />
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb />
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb />
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb />
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb />
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb />
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb />
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb />
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb />
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb />
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb />
JOB AND NEWSPAPER <lb />
PLANT. <lb />
VOLUME <lb />
Agriculture Is the Moat the Most Healthful, the Moat employment of <lb />
N. C FRIDAY MAY i. ISIS <lb />
WE HAVE A <lb />
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb />
AMONG THE BEST <lb />
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb />
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb />
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb />
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb />
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb />
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb />
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb />
FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb />
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb />
HA TO BRING TO THEIR <lb />
ATTENTION. <lb />
OUR ADVERTISING <lb />
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb />
BE HAD UPON <lb />
M. Mil hit <lb />
IT. <lb />
mm pal <lb />
Suspected Him of Squealing to <lb />
District Attorney <lb />
Fire Ballets His <lb />
Murder Occurred Two Blocks <lb />
From Where <lb />
Was Slain <lb />
NEW YORK, April <lb />
of to the district <lb />
Jerry known as <lb />
the met his appointed <lb />
death on 41st street near Broadway <lb />
early today. <lb />
He was shot down by gangsters <lb />
who sent bullets Into his body. <lb />
The occurred only a couple <lb />
of blocks away from the of the <lb />
murder of Herman Rosenthal last <lb />
July, but the gunmen had less luck <lb />
than the Rosenthal murder crew. <lb />
Five policemen who were In the <lb />
mediate vicinity heard the shots and <lb />
pounced upon five men whom they <lb />
accused of tho killing. The police <lb />
allege that the men they caught are <lb />
members of the Paul Kelly band of <lb />
gangster of which Jerry was an <lb />
adherent. They saw that Jerry had <lb />
recently fallen under suspicion, how <lb />
e'er, that he was thought to be re <lb />
vealing the gang's secrets to District <lb />
Attorney Chas. S. Whitman. <lb />
None of the men caught were arm- <lb />
ed but witnesses said they had seen <lb />
them throw revolvers away and three <lb />
of the guns were found in a garbage <lb />
can nearby. <lb />
James one of tho prisoners, <lb />
was severely beaten by the officer <lb />
who caught him. The police say that <lb />
another prisoner, was <lb />
under arrest two years ago In con- <lb />
with the murder of another <lb />
member of the gang under similar <lb />
circumstances. <lb />
Tarboro Business Man Sen- <lb />
lo Twelve <lb />
Road <lb />
TARBORO. April H. Den- <lb />
ton, one of prominent <lb />
business men, was Monday sentenced <lb />
by Recorder Fender to twelve <lb />
months on the roads for selling <lb />
the sentence following the <lb />
raid ever made in the state, it <lb />
Is declared. Thirty-nine barrels cl <lb />
liquor were found at livery <lb />
the stuff being valued at <lb />
appealed to the <lb />
court and his <lb />
bond at <lb />
When the officials <lb />
When tho Tarboro officials <lb />
ed to a raid on place, <lb />
they thought they would find a <lb />
couple of suit cases full of liquor, <lb />
as they suspected a by the <lb />
name of The astonishment <lb />
of the officers was tremendous when <lb />
they uncovered thirty-nine barrels of <lb />
liquor and saw evidence of the <lb />
of hundreds of bottles of the stuff. <lb />
explained that ha lent <lb />
Bryan the money to buy the stuff t <lb />
a satisfactory rate of Interest, and <lb />
then put in a claim tor the <lb />
It contended on part of <lb />
his attorneys, Messrs. F. <lb />
of Rocky Mount and Henry A. <lb />
of Tarboro, the liquor was <lb />
Joseph Kills His Cousin <lb />
Claude In <lb />
Greene County <lb />
April today <lb />
from Snow Hill tells of the killing In <lb />
Greene county of Claude by a <lb />
kinsman, Joseph The <lb />
good friends and were almost <lb />
inseparable, but were under the In- <lb />
of intoxicants at the time of <lb />
the killing. The men sat from <lb />
o'clock in the evening until midnight <lb />
the home of Joseph At <lb />
c clock Joseph bade Claude good <lb />
night and went to the dining room, <lb />
a short distance removed from the <lb />
dwelling, to eat. Upon returning he <lb />
saw through the window, It is <lb />
ed, Claude making Improper advances <lb />
toward his wife, who was attired for <lb />
the night and seated before the fire, <lb />
having the care of a sick baby, which <lb />
In bed In the room. Not heed- <lb />
the repulses of Mrs. <lb />
remonstrances of Joseph, who order- <lb />
ed the offender from the house, <lb />
Claude angrily the right <lb />
of the husband to Interfere with <lb />
conduct and started to attack the lat- <lb />
Joseph, it Is alleged, seized a <lb />
shotgun and tired at Claude, Inflict- <lb />
fatal injuries. He died at <lb />
o'clock. Joseph sent neighbors <lb />
a physician and the sheriff, five <lb />
miles distant. A magistrate <lb />
ed a bond of the slayer, which <lb />
the coroner's jury deemed sufficient. <lb />
The were cousins and well <lb />
known farmers In Greene county. <lb />
OVER TARIFF BILL <lb />
But Progress of Measure <lb />
Sim <lb />
CLARK'S VIGOROUS SPEECH <lb />
GO TO PRISON <lb />
All Hope For Asheville Men Has <lb />
Vanished <lb />
Asheville Street Railway Will <lb />
To Operate Cars <lb />
Today<lb />
SI SATURDAY <lb />
A large advertisement today calls <lb />
attention to tho opening of the <lb />
series of The Home Building <lb />
and Loan Association next Saturday. <lb />
Already a large number of shares <lb />
have been spoken for in the coming <lb />
series and it is going to be the <lb />
est in the history of the association. <lb />
This Is Just as It should be, for there <lb />
Is no Institution doing more for the <lb />
community than this association. In <lb />
two matured series It has paid stock- <lb />
holders about In cash fend <lb />
mortgages, and It Is earn- <lb />
C 1-2 per cent net. As an aid <lb />
to people in building or buying a <lb />
or business house, nothing <lb />
equals It, for the money that would <lb />
to be paid for rents is very near- <lb />
enough to make all payments <lb />
to carry it through the build- <lb />
and loan association, and In a <lb />
little over six years the obligation <lb />
Is wiped out and the property be- <lb />
longs to tho owner. And as to a <lb />
savings Investment, the fact that It <lb />
pays such a large net per cent on <lb />
so small weekly deposits should <lb />
peal to every one. <lb />
Go right now to the secretary's of- <lb />
or phone him, and have your <lb />
registered for shares In the <lb />
series. You will be glad If you do <lb />
this. <lb />
Operation on Darkest <lb />
LONDON. April second ab- <lb />
operation was today perform <lb />
on the Duchess of wife <lb />
of the Governor General of Canada <lb />
and aunt of King George. Her con- <lb />
Is <lb />
ordered shipped and stored prior <lb />
to April I, when the blind tiger <lb />
and seizure act became <lb />
and that Denton could not <lb />
hi held under this law. The re- <lb />
however, took the opposite <lb />
position and sentenced to <lb />
twelve months. <lb />
m be watched with In- <lb />
through Its several stages. If <lb />
Denton out In the <lb />
the case will likely be carried <lb />
to the supreme court. <lb />
Through The Republicans Offer, <lb />
ed Amendments To The Various <lb />
Paragraphs In Chem- <lb />
Schedule <lb />
WASHINGTON, C, April 29.- <lb />
debate and heated wrangle <lb />
today marked the beginning of the <lb />
reading of the Democratic tariff bill <lb />
in the House for amendment. <lb />
on the perfection of the meas- <lb />
was slow, but the talk was <lb />
and on one occasion brought <lb />
Speaker Clark on the floor with a <lb />
speech. <lb />
All day the Republicans offered <lb />
amendments to the various paragraphs <lb />
in the chemical schedule and every <lb />
amendment was voted down by the bis <lb />
Democratic majority. Several amend- <lb />
offered by the ways and means <lb />
committee to correct the phraseology <lb />
of bill were adopted. <lb />
Tariff Commission <lb />
Most of the talk of the day turned <lb />
on the records of the Democratic and <lb />
Republican sides of the House on the <lb />
question of creating a tariff <lb />
Republicans, led by <lb />
Mann, of began <lb />
attacks on the various provisions <lb />
tie first of the bill, the chem <lb />
schedule, by declaring that tho <lb />
in the rates showed the <lb />
need of the investigations of a tariff <lb />
board. <lb />
Republicans In the <lb />
shouted Mr. Murdock, the Re- <lb />
publicans In this chamber now, were <lb />
only pretending to be for a tariff <lb />
commission. They had their chance <lb />
to write that bill Into law then and <lb />
failed. They will never have <lb />
The Republicans grew excited and <lb />
Representative Gardner shouted there <lb />
was no foundation for Mr. <lb />
that the Republican leaders <lb />
were In a conspiracy to defeat the <lb />
tariff commission <lb />
Wrangle <lb />
Gesticulating wildly, Mr. Gardner <lb />
the opinion of <lb />
Shirley of Kentucky, as to the <lb />
truth of the charge. Mr. Shirley be- <lb />
most of the Republicans op- <lb />
posed the bill. <lb />
Then Representative Gardner, <lb />
a finger at Speaker Clark, de- <lb />
to know whether ho believed <lb />
the charge. The Speaker strode to <lb />
the center of the hall of the House and <lb />
Judgment la that there never <lb />
was a Republican leader In this House <lb />
really in favor of a tariff <lb />
Mr. Gardner sat down and <lb />
Speaker went on. He declared he <lb />
against a tariff commission reporting <lb />
to and responsible to the President. <lb />
the House that should have <lb />
he said. <lb />
of the chemical schedule <lb />
was completed shortly after six <lb />
clock and the was recessed till <lb />
April demand <lb />
for adequate protection for its strike- <lb />
breakers and property, made to <lb />
city and county authorities by tho <lb />
Power and Light company, <lb />
a reply by the mayor that he and the <lb />
police authorities stood ready to meet <lb />
all demands made upon them and <lb />
Claim Health Is an announcement by the street car <lb />
AND <lb />
TO <lb />
SOLVE ATLANTA <lb />
Poor And That will Refer <lb />
Live Out His Two Years <lb />
In <lb />
company tonight that it would op- <lb />
Its cars tomorrow with <lb />
men were the chief develop- <lb />
WASHINGTON. April 29.-Attorney of the day of the <lb />
of motormen and conductors <lb />
General will not on street <lb />
a pardon for W. K. company was <lb />
nor both of on , , <lb />
were convicted and sentenced to two p and g <lb />
years each In the penitentiary for , , business <lb />
Irregular banking methods which I <lb />
resulted in the failure of the First I request of the street <lb />
national Bank of Asheville nearly company a special session of the <lb />
years ago. It was stated at the de- i <lb />
tonight that every word Of <lb />
the evidence had been weighed care- and ho <lb />
fully and the department officials k J <lb />
convinced that no mistake had been <lb />
made, and they were determined that was their men and <lb />
the law should take its course. of car <lb />
Carried <lb />
of bordered; Girl <lb />
Factory by Negro <lb />
FINDS GARMENT <lb />
in Feeble Condition <lb />
The report of the physicians who <lb />
from mob violence. <lb />
It is reported on apparently good <lb />
authority that strikebreakers are <lb />
made an examination of to do- quartered in the company's <lb />
whether his physical condition car a week's provisions <lb />
such as to warrant a This afternoon a <lb />
of pardon was received at the feet high was erected <lb />
department today. The doctors say car yards only <lb />
I is in a feeble condition, of a single track being left open. <lb />
and that it is their opinion that he company officials stated tonight that <lb />
could not live out his two they arc not anticipating any <lb />
if sent to the penitentiary. from they be <lb />
don Attorney Finch said it would not for any emergency. <lb />
be necessary for Breese to remain hi is unchanged, <lb />
prison the full two years. With and the company main- <lb />
good behavior he will be entitled to <lb />
ask for a parole in months. Hence <lb />
tho department officials do not <lb />
the report of Asheville physicians <lb />
warrant them recommending <lb />
ency In the case of Breese. <lb />
Taft Refused to Pardon Men <lb />
Former President Taft refused to <lb />
their original attitude. <lb />
offers of arbitration have been <lb />
made by Interested citizens but so <lb />
far without result Union officials <lb />
stale that they are still willing and <lb />
anxious to submit their claims to a <lb />
board of arbitration. <lb />
Beyond small gatherings of the cu- <lb />
Bad Weather For Berries <lb />
WILMINGTON. April cold <lb />
rain, coupled with hall In the Chad- <lb />
operated against the <lb />
picking of and cur- <lb />
tailed the day's movement, If It did <lb />
not also greatly damage crop. <lb />
To what e-tent damage was <lb />
has not been learned. The <lb />
movement was cars in the <lb />
Carolina berry territory. <lb />
pardon Breese and Dickerson unless; and of <lb />
K could shown that they were In are quiet tonight, and <lb />
a state of health that their of do not an- <lb />
would put their lives v any trouble tomorrow, when <lb />
Jeopardy. The only hope which has th car Its <lb />
been held for men Is now gone. caTS strikebreakers. <lb />
they must serve time in the pen- j <lb />
Representative has re- <lb />
J. I. for <lb />
as postmaster at <lb />
Stuart W, Cramer, of Charlotte, who <lb />
was recently elected president of <lb />
American Cotton Manufacturer's As- <lb />
said tonight that he Is yet <lb />
hopeful that the Underwood tariff bill covenant Lodge <lb />
will be modified so as not to make No , F celebrated <lb />
such a radical reduction In the cotton tile 94th anniversary of the order. A <lb />
schedules. Mr. Cramer said if the <lb />
bill is passed In its present form I <lb />
would be very disastrous to the mil- <lb />
ling Industry the state. <lb />
Odd Fellows Celebrate <lb />
Anniversary last <lb />
Hun And Three <lb />
WILSON, April <lb />
about twelve o'clock at Saratoga, In <lb />
this county, while Mr. Isaac Rogers <lb />
and three boys were sitting under a <lb />
shelter watching the progress of a <lb />
storm, lightning struck near the <lb />
Mr. Rogers was burned about <lb />
the face and hair was singed and <lb />
he had to be taken home on a bag- <lb />
The boys were stunned for a <lb />
while. <lb />
The storm continued for twenty <lb />
minutes and during Its progress <lb />
came down In torrents, hall as Mg <lb />
as marbles peppered down, thunder <lb />
very Interesting program, as <lb />
e a day or two ago, was well car- <lb />
out under the direction of Noble <lb />
Grand F. J. Forbes. Thia embraced <lb />
some good speeches and splendid <lb />
tongs. Mr. P, G. Morris represented <lb />
Phalanx Lodge of Washington, and <lb />
was among the speakers. <lb />
A feature of tho exorcises that <lb />
could not carried out as <lb />
planned, because of the Inability of <lb />
principal to be present, was the <lb />
presentation of the veteran's medal. <lb />
Dr. D. L. James, lo whom was as- <lb />
signed the presentation speech, ex- <lb />
plained that the lodge was present- <lb />
the medal to Mr. J. J. Cherry, <lb />
the oldest member of lodge. Mr. <lb />
Cherry has been an Odd El <lb />
years and was a member of the old <lb />
bore before Covenant Lodge was <lb />
originated. Dr. James re- <lb />
A Shirt At The Home Of Negro Jan- <lb />
Believed Police To <lb />
Worn The Right <lb />
Of <lb />
ATLANTA, Ga April <lb />
of tho police to establish the identity <lb />
of the person or persons who billed <lb />
year old Mary and placed <lb />
her body in the basement of Na- <lb />
Pencil Company's factory here, <lb />
where It was discovered early Sun- <lb />
day morning, have so far been <lb />
and tonight the case is as <lb />
of a mystery as ever. <lb />
events of Interest in con- <lb />
with the case occurred this <lb />
afternoon. First came the arrest of <lb />
Leo M. Frank, superintendent of the <lb />
pencil company, on a blanket <lb />
of suspicion. Frank is allowed the <lb />
freedom of the police station, having <lb />
employed a policeman as special <lb />
guard. <lb />
The second of the <lb />
was the finding by <lb />
of blood-stained shirt at home <lb />
of the Newt Lee. night watch- <lb />
man. Who reported the of <lb />
the girl's body to police. It Is said that <lb />
Leo admitting owning the garment, <lb />
but claimed not to have seen it <lb />
more than a year. police con- <lb />
tend that the blood-stains are com- <lb />
fresh. In support of the <lb />
theory that the carried the <lb />
body to the basement, detectives <lb />
point out that the stains on <lb />
beck of the shirt. <lb />
Equally worthy of note was the <lb />
transfer, late this afternoon, on a <lb />
writ of habeas corpus, of J. It Grant, <lb />
bookkeeper, charged with <lb />
murder, to the custody of the <lb />
and his removal to the county Jail <lb />
It was alleged by Grant's lawyers that <lb />
their client was being subjected to <lb />
and <lb />
at the station, from <lb />
which he would be relieved If us- <lb />
charge of the sheriff. <lb />
Detectives are said tonight to be <lb />
working upon a possible clue furnish- <lb />
ed by tho discovery of finger prints <lb />
upon the sleeve of dress worn by <lb />
Miss when she was killed. It <lb />
is stated that these prints are clearly <lb />
outlined and may prove of Importance <lb />
In establishing the Identity of the <lb />
murderer. <lb />
Senior Day K. C. T. T. <lb />
Today Is at East Car- <lb />
Teachers Training School. The <lb />
assembly exercises this morning were <lb />
conducted by them; this afternoon <lb />
they are planting the senior tree with <lb />
due and tonight <lb />
and Mrs. Wright will give a <lb />
to tho Seniors. The entire school <lb />
and town is filled with the spirit <lb />
of the class of 1913. <lb />
rolled and nasties of to Mr. Cherry taking pail In <lb />
it is feared many Initiation years ago. and how <lb />
plants In the tone of the storm from that day to this he had <lb />
are killed. the principles of the order ex- <lb />
pounded by this <lb />
At tho conclusion of the <lb />
program refreshment served <lb />
and the assembly spent a while to <lb />
social mingling. During this one of <lb />
Mr. A. It Ellington's largo <lb />
gave musical selections. <lb />
Quite a number of attend- <lb />
ed th- <lb />
Odd Fellowship Is strong in Green- <lb />
ville, and the lodge is constant-<lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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