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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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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_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_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_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_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>
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