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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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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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<p>
. mm <lb/>
Prospects For Training <lb/>
School Summer Term <lb/>
Is Brighter Than Ever <lb/>
On the 17th of June the Summer <lb/>
Term begins at the East Carolina <lb/>
Teachers Training School. Every <lb/>
summer since this school was <lb/>
it has had its doors wide open <lb/>
to those who are in the school <lb/>
teaching during the regular term. <lb/>
than a thousand teachers were <lb/>
In the of North Carolina <lb/>
the present school year who have <lb/>
largely by those who teach. An <lb/>
usually strong faculty has been <lb/>
cured for the coining summer term. <lb/>
The following compose faculty <lb/>
and the officers for this <lb/>
Robt. H. Wright. <lb/>
Director of Summer C. <lb/>
Wilson, Regular Faculty. <lb/>
Educational and <lb/>
Harold Barnes, Supervisor <lb/>
received more or less training at this; Elementary Education, , <lb/>
splendid Institution. The prospects <lb/>
for the coming term are brighter than <lb/>
ever before. Every room in the <lb/>
has been engaged with full <lb/>
Philadelphia. <lb/>
E. C. Brooks, Chair of <lb/>
Education. Trinity College. <lb/>
H. E. Austin, Regular <lb/>
eight week since the 14th day <lb/>
of April. One hundred and E. D. Pusey, Goldsboro <lb/>
applications have been received since City Schools. <lb/>
then and had to be turned down for <lb/>
want of room. The town has <lb/>
thrown open its homes and the <lb/>
number of those attending this sum- <lb/>
mer will be limited by the capacity <lb/>
both of the school and the town. <lb/>
These summer terms are in truth <lb/>
Just one of the terms of the school. <lb/>
They ere run Just as the regular terms <lb/>
with same time for work and <lb/>
The looks taught in II e public <lb/>
schools are supplied to the tea <lb/>
The Infirmary Is kepi open Just as In <lb/>
the regular term. In fact the <lb/>
class of work is done and the same <lb/>
L. It. Meadows, Regular <lb/>
Faculty. <lb/>
School W. H. Rags- <lb/>
dale, Regular Faculty. <lb/>
Miss Mabel M, Com- <lb/>
fort. Teachers College, X. Y. <lb/>
Mathematics and Miss <lb/>
Birdie Schools. <lb/>
Miss Kate W. Lewis, <lb/>
Faculty. <lb/>
Primary May Bar- <lb/>
Regular Faculty. <lb/>
Miss Alice Wilson, F. <lb/>
College, Greensboro. <lb/>
May H. B, Reg- <lb/>
rules and regulations apply as during Faculty. <lb/>
regular term. Credit is given for Miss Daisy B. <lb/>
work done during the summer courses lad Faculty. <lb/>
and a student may by continuous at- Critic Miss Miriam Mac- <lb/>
for sufficient time complete Regular Faculty, <lb/>
these courses and get credit for the <lb/>
same. <lb/>
Certificates of attendance are given <lb/>
to all who attend stating how long <lb/>
they have been present and this at- <lb/>
fulfills the requirements of <lb/>
the law. Those certificates are re- <lb/>
anywhere In the state. <lb/>
The course in <lb/>
bids fair <lb/>
to be much more largely attended this <lb/>
year than in previous years. The <lb/>
school is to be congratulated that it <lb/>
has brought such a course to our very <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Lady Mrs. Kate R. Beck- <lb/>
Miss Emma It. Jones. <lb/>
Librarian and Custodian of Rec- <lb/>
Miss Ola S. Jones. <lb/>
Superintendent of Miss <lb/>
R. <lb/>
Miss Mary <lb/>
Dr. Chas. OH. Laugh <lb/>
can for better <lb/>
teachers In our schools since the doors <lb/>
of our state institution are being <lb/>
doors and thus saved the expense of thrown open to them each summer. <lb/>
having to get it at a high cost some <lb/>
where else far removed from us. <lb/>
The work of a school Is measured <lb/>
teacher can afford to lay behind. <lb/>
to do so means to take the train- <lb/>
now offered them. <lb/>
Congregation of 1,200 <lb/>
Has Narrow Escape; <lb/>
Storm Wrecks Tent <lb/>
GREENSBORO, Juno after <lb/>
the first song had been sung at the <lb/>
Holiness tent meeting of Silver Run <lb/>
avenue last night, the storm struck <lb/>
the tent and leveled it to the ground. <lb/>
Tho plate was crowded, some 1,200 <lb/>
people being inside, tint not a soul <lb/>
so far as would be discovered <lb/>
night was seriously hurt, though the <lb/>
entire congregation received a <lb/>
ducking from the rain, which <lb/>
was pouring in torrents. There was <lb/>
no warning of the accident, except <lb/>
that tho lights went out again a <lb/>
moment and then flared up again. Then <lb/>
tho tents collapsed and the ensuing <lb/>
excitement it was reported that several <lb/>
had been killed, but the reports prov- <lb/>
ed to be erroneous. The services <lb/>
will be continued at this after- <lb/>
neon and at tonight in the <lb/>
of the Bible <lb/>
The Injured, so far as was known, <lb/>
last night, were Robt. Melvin, badly <lb/>
bruised by falling across a pole, <lb/>
Mr. Leonard, quite an old man, also <lb/>
bruised and shaken up. <lb/>
An unknown young man. elbow in- <lb/>
The occupants of the tent had seen <lb/>
tho cloud approaching and had lower- <lb/>
ed the side curtains and strengthened <lb/>
the guy ropes enough to stand any <lb/>
ordinary gale. Indeed, the ropes <lb/>
held as It was. but the middle section <lb/>
c f the tent, which was about years <lb/>
old, tore and when the wind got <lb/>
It, ripped clear apart, letting in a <lb/>
deluge of water. <lb/>
There was an instant stampede for <lb/>
the entrances, and shouts and screams <lb/>
and rent the air as the great <lb/>
tent slowly careened, the audience <lb/>
spilling out of every crevice. The <lb/>
paused momentarily in Its down- <lb/>
ward course, and most of those inside <lb/>
reached the open air. then suddenly <lb/>
every light in the place went out and <lb/>
the tent came to earth With a swoop, <lb/>
burying the least nimble of the con- <lb/>
in its folds. It <lb/>
roved fortunate then that tho <lb/>
wires had pulled apart before the <lb/>
struck tho earth, else the mix- <lb/>
of the and the wet can- <lb/>
might have proved serious indeed <lb/>
to those who had been unable to <lb/>
cape. There was still light enough <lb/>
for those outside to see how to <lb/>
assistance to the ones pinned <lb/>
the cloth, and they were soon ex- <lb/>
from their uncomfortable <lb/>
and toll of the Injured <lb/>
The tent was feet and the <lb/>
cost. new. What the injuries <lb/>
will amount to could be ascertain- <lb/>
ed definitely, but certainly the middle <lb/>
section Is ruined and It Is feared that <lb/>
one of ends Is also unfit for fur- <lb/>
use. <lb/>
PLAYS AD PLATERS. <lb/>
May Irwin will Widow by <lb/>
Proxy next season. <lb/>
Margaret next season will <lb/>
be In Shakespearean roles, <lb/>
Godfrey Mathews is playing with <lb/>
a stock company at Youngstown. O. <lb/>
George M. Cowan will continue next <lb/>
season with <lb/>
Eddie Foy will appear in vaudeville <lb/>
next season with bis seven children. <lb/>
Clark Is to star in a <lb/>
stock company in St. Louis this sum- <lb/>
mer. <lb/>
Arnold Daly going to play a <lb/>
stock engagement In <lb/>
Ohio. <lb/>
Texas may be given as a <lb/>
tabloid production with music next <lb/>
season. <lb/>
Among the plays which Arthur Hop <lb/>
kins will produce next season is <lb/>
Julia Dean, It is reported has obtain <lb/>
el a divorce from her husband, <lb/>
Louis Mann appear in <lb/>
ville in a condensed version of <lb/>
Elliott Dexter, who played the role <lb/>
Is to produce a new play. <lb/>
Helene the young daughter <lb/>
of the famous is appearing <lb/>
in London in light opera. <lb/>
Vera the daughter of Full r <lb/>
has Joined the stock <lb/>
Company with her father, <lb/>
An ordinance of the Chicago City <lb/>
Council provides a fine for suggestive <lb/>
and costumes that city. <lb/>
David will have a number <lb/>
of new plays and several new stars ti <lb/>
exploit in next season of 1913-14. <lb/>
W. A. Brady and George W. <lb/>
will produce a play next August, in <lb/>
Chicago, In which Thomas W. Ross <lb/>
will star. <lb/>
Brandon Tynan, who been play- <lb/>
lug Joseph in and his <lb/>
is to a starring engagement <lb/>
in Salt Lake City. <lb/>
Julian who closed her <lb/>
most season, will travel <lb/>
during the summer and prepare for his <lb/>
new romantic play next season. <lb/>
Madge Tyrone have the lead- <lb/>
feminine role next season with <lb/>
Fiske in a new- Irish play. In <lb/>
which the singing comedian will <lb/>
pear. <lb/>
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree Is said <lb/>
to be with David <lb/>
for the appearance in London of Dav- <lb/>
id Warfield In a of his chief <lb/>
WHEN TACT WON OUT <lb/>
By NELLIE GILMORE. <lb/>
A Hank a Hank <lb/>
is Squire C. D. <lb/>
tree asked the reporter as he pointed <lb/>
to a building. <lb/>
sir, Is a was the re- <lb/>
ply. <lb/>
what is the squire again <lb/>
asked to something <lb/>
on the edge of the sidewalk. <lb/>
that is a pile of sand, <lb/>
that is another he re- <lb/>
bank before a bank, to call <lb/>
attention that this Is a hank. <lb/>
And we've been fanning ever since. <lb/>
Health Department <lb/>
The of <lb/>
Cheer up. season is here, and the <lb/>
summer tight is on in earnest. The <lb/>
man that hasn't his screens up by this <lb/>
time eats at the second table to his <lb/>
guest, tho manure pile fly. you <lb/>
may not like to look at it that way. <lb/>
but that is the truth Just the same. <lb/>
If you like your guests, your <lb/>
low boarders, or your <lb/>
ion, a mighty good thing to do Is to <lb/>
put up screens. the doors and <lb/>
window's are well screened you can <lb/>
easily get rid of the occasional In- <lb/>
by means of sticky paper <lb/>
and swatters. <lb/>
In tho country a man's files are <lb/>
of his own household. That Is. <lb/>
each householder is largely <lb/>
for his own crop of flies. But in <lb/>
and <lb/>
shows up the Board of Health. If <lb/>
town has few files they have a live. <lb/>
board of health, but if <lb/>
tiles are thick you can set it down <lb/>
that the board of health Is asleep, and <lb/>
a town is usually Just about us dead <lb/>
or as wide-awake as Its board of <lb/>
health. <lb/>
Tho whole thing narrows down, <lb/>
therefore, so that you can Judge a <lb/>
town by number of its Hies. <lb/>
Do throw waste material on a <lb/>
pile in the back yard to be blown In- <lb/>
to tho street by the first wind, or to <lb/>
lit there in a decaying heap to breed <lb/>
files and give off foul odors. <lb/>
Hid your premises of any rubbish, <lb/>
old paper, tin cans, and refuse cf any- <lb/>
kind that may have accumulated <lb/>
the winter. <lb/>
There was a man in our town,<lb/>
He helped to keep the typhoid down <lb/>
By swatting all the files. <lb/>
A Chain of Taxes <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
I have enjoyed the different <lb/>
written by Y. on stock <lb/>
law and Can't help but believe he is <lb/>
on side of progress. I have Just <lb/>
read his last article in which he re- <lb/>
to voting the fence back <lb/>
a chain of taxes. <lb/>
I had not heard of this kind of <lb/>
taxes, so I began to think what he <lb/>
meant by chain of taxes and this <lb/>
answer came to <lb/>
If it cost twenty thousand dollars <lb/>
to put the fence back and pay the <lb/>
suits and right of way, as many per- <lb/>
sons think, the interest on the <lb/>
thousand would be twelve <lb/>
at the end of the first year. If <lb/>
we value the of this money like <lb/>
we value the money we use to buy <lb/>
a home it would double itself In about <lb/>
twelve years. And so this chain of <lb/>
taxes would be forty thousand <lb/>
at the end of twelve years, and <lb/>
in twelve years it would be <lb/>
double again and that would <lb/>
eighty thousand dollars and at the <lb/>
end of thirty-six years it would be one <lb/>
hundred and sixty thousand dollars, <lb/>
that would be saved or lost to the <lb/>
generation of thirty-six years to <lb/>
come. <lb/>
Some young men have learned this <lb/>
rule and when they think about <lb/>
spending five cents for a cigar or <lb/>
cold drink, they say to themselves <lb/>
am going to save that five cents <lb/>
and put It on interest and In thirty- <lb/>
six years I will have forty cents. <lb/>
This rule well kept Is the way some <lb/>
young men grow wealthy in old age. <lb/>
you only a few days to <lb/>
decide this question, whether or not <lb/>
to put the fence hack. Are you going <lb/>
vote for or against progress Are <lb/>
you going to vote for or against this <lb/>
and the rising generation If you <lb/>
can't vote to save money for this and <lb/>
the coming generation don't vole at <lb/>
Tell your neighbor about this. <lb/>
A. FARMER <lb/>
Hartley's pen raced furiously over <lb/>
the paper. Then with resolute fingers <lb/>
be folded and addressed the letter, lay- <lb/>
it aside to be posted. <lb/>
Afterwards, he arose, took one or <lb/>
two impatient turns up and down the <lb/>
room; then came back and sat down <lb/>
again, thinking deeply. Some abrupt <lb/>
whim prompted him to reopen the en- <lb/>
and read it over before sending <lb/>
It It <lb/>
Dear I have know for a <lb/>
long time that yon oared nothing for <lb/>
me, and that you did care for that <lb/>
man. The enclosed clipping may not <lb/>
come as a direct <lb/>
cation of my present course. This <lb/>
much, let me say, in regard to your <lb/>
latest hereafter It will not <lb/>
be necessary that you exert yourself <lb/>
toward further deception, since it is <lb/>
my unalterable determination to put <lb/>
nil thought of you forever out of my <lb/>
life. As to he Is not worth <lb/>
the sacrifice of powder and shot <lb/>
to eliminate his vile existence. <lb/>
I am making all preparation to dis- <lb/>
pose of the home immediately; your <lb/>
personal effects will be shipped to <lb/>
whatever address you may wish to <lb/>
indicate. Please spare mo the annoy- <lb/>
once of any reply, and tho pain of a <lb/>
future meeting. All can <lb/>
arranged through our lawyers. <lb/>
Hartley went over the with <lb/>
scorching checks. Surely he bad not <lb/>
been so great a fool to heap insults <lb/>
like these upon a possibly Innocent <lb/>
woman <lb/>
With a gesture of disgust he tore <lb/>
tho letter into and flung It into <lb/>
the fire. Next morning ho bought a <lb/>
ticket for tho <lb/>
Elsie Hartley was in one of her <lb/>
moods when the surrey drove up <lb/>
and left her husband standing on the <lb/>
sidewalk before the <lb/>
A minute before she had believed <lb/>
him hundreds of miles away, tugging <lb/>
at the pile of briefs he bad declared <lb/>
It Impossible for to leave under a <lb/>
fortnight. <lb/>
Then they both laughed, and after- <lb/>
wards he went up to her suite to brush <lb/>
up a little, as it was almost the hour <lb/>
for dinner. <lb/>
His wife's noncommittal attitude <lb/>
had left him more in the dark than <lb/>
ever. Two days ago he would have <lb/>
sworn that was guilty; today he <lb/>
would have taken an oath of Just the <lb/>
reverse. Yet there were the damning <lb/>
bits of evidence that no amount of <lb/>
over- <lb/>
come. Should he trust <lb/>
The sudden appearance of a waiter <lb/>
announcing dinner Interrupted his <lb/>
reverie. He put aside all personal re- <lb/>
and changed his clothes with <lb/>
dispatch. A few moments later he had <lb/>
started toward the door. On the way <lb/>
out his eyes fell by accident upon a <lb/>
crumpled sheet of closely written note <lb/>
paper. The writing was in his wife's <lb/>
hand, unmistakably. He read with a <lb/>
suffocating <lb/>
There was a time <lb/>
when I believed that I had <lb/>
given my heart to you, and that <lb/>
I should never be able to live happily <lb/>
away from you. But, thank heaven, <lb/>
knowledge of my true feelings has <lb/>
come to me before it was too lute. I <lb/>
am sending this to you to stop you in <lb/>
New York. Do not come here, for If <lb/>
you do I shall decline to <lb/>
you. My husband is an honest <lb/>
and honorable man, and In every way <lb/>
is far above the average. Should he <lb/>
ever learn of my meanness, I fear that <lb/>
It would the end of everything for <lb/>
me. You see it has come to this that <lb/>
I fully realize now how deep and <lb/>
is the feeling I have always had <lb/>
for him, notwithstanding this miser- <lb/>
able affair between us. It was, I as- <lb/>
sure you, entirely brought about by a <lb/>
fancy on my part that he was begin- <lb/>
to neglect me. I am repenting <lb/>
most keenly this ridiculous folly, and <lb/>
with the help of God I mean to be for- <lb/>
ever true and honorable. Don't try to <lb/>
dissuade me. for I was never <lb/>
determined In my <lb/>
When Hartley looked up from the <lb/>
letter his eyes were blurred and <lb/>
Her only had been her <lb/>
weakness, and for that ho himself was <lb/>
doubtless In part responsible. <lb/>
He walked over to the mantel and <lb/>
deliberately struck a match, applying <lb/>
the flame to the crumpled sheet of <lb/>
paper. When It had to black <lb/>
bits over the hearth ho turned. For <lb/>
reason he had not heard the <lb/>
door open softly, and the blood flamed <lb/>
over his face as ho encountered bis <lb/>
wife's eyes fixed full upon him. <lb/>
An awkward silence fell between <lb/>
them. Hartley passed an arm about <lb/>
her and bent swiftly to kiss <lb/>
her. <lb/>
Had she seen him destroy the letter, <lb/>
and did she know that he had read <lb/>
and knew it all Ho would have <lb/>
the answer to that question, but the <lb/>
warm touch of tho lips she lifted to <lb/>
his caress solved all future problems <lb/>
for them both. <lb/>
by Dully Story Pub. <lb/>
HEIGHT OF FORK OF TREES PETRIFIED FALLS IN ALGERIA <lb/>
It Never Grows Higher Than the Point <lb/>
Where First Noted, Declares <lb/>
an Authority. <lb/>
Some people through car. less ob- <lb/>
believe that the fork cf a <lb/>
forest tree will gradually higher <lb/>
from the ground. If they would in <lb/>
It would be found that the <lb/>
forks and of fruit trees at at <lb/>
exactly the same point where they <lb/>
were when first noted. <lb/>
The state forester in Inspecting lo- <lb/>
and catalpa groves throughout the <lb/>
state, says the Indiana Farmer, has <lb/>
found owners who have not removed <lb/>
one part of the fork of those trees <lb/>
that have formed forks below the fence <lb/>
post length, believing that in years <lb/>
the fork would grow up and a fence <lb/>
post could be cut below the fork. This <lb/>
erroneous belief is the cause of much <lb/>
of the delay and neglect of pruning in <lb/>
early life of street and roadside trees- <lb/>
It should be remembered that the <lb/>
j base of a fork or a branch of a tree <lb/>
will always remain at the same dis- <lb/>
I above the ground. The side <lb/>
branches of some trees, such as the <lb/>
elm. usually continue to grow upward, <lb/>
while those of other trees, such as <lb/>
the maples, incline upward when <lb/>
young and as the tree grows older <lb/>
tho weight of the branches gradually <lb/>
brings It to the horizontal. The latter <lb/>
often makes the removal of large <lb/>
branches necessary, which not only <lb/>
spoils tho symmetry of the tree, but <lb/>
usually starts decay, which soon kills <lb/>
the tree. <lb/>
No street or roadside tree should be <lb/>
permitted to form a fork below ten <lb/>
feet and all of the side branches to the <lb/>
same height should be removed so that <lb/>
they will the crop less. <lb/>
If this Is done the tree in time will <lb/>
grow a saw log below the branches. <lb/>
Since he landed in Australia. Harry <lb/>
ran inn Rn inn int <lb/>
defeated Johnny Summers and Hock <lb/>
Those Prolific Hens. <lb/>
Angry Purchaser -Didn't you tell <lb/>
me that you had got as many as <lb/>
twelve eggs in one day from <lb/>
sight hens that you sold met <lb/>
Poultry ma'am. <lb/>
Angry why is It <lb/>
that I'm never able to get more than <lb/>
two from them and sometime <lb/>
not so many In one day <lb/>
Poultry know, <lb/>
ma'am, unless it's because look <lb/>
eggs too often. If look <lb/>
I. i n -i i quite <lb/>
positive th you will get Just us <lb/>
eggs in one d as I did. <lb/>
Remarkable Mineral Formation Which <lb/>
Called The <lb/>
Bath of <lb/>
With all the beauty of a cataract of <lb/>
living water, there is in Algeria a re- <lb/>
markable petrified waterfall which re- <lb/>
has been engaging the attention <lb/>
of scientists. <lb/>
This is the <lb/>
which means Bath of the <lb/>
and Is located miles from <lb/>
on the site of the ancient <lb/>
town of This solidified cascade <lb/>
Is the production of calcareous de- <lb/>
posits from <lb/>
mineral springs, issuing from the <lb/>
depths of the earth at a temperature <lb/>
of degrees Centigrade. <lb/>
Bath of the even from <lb/>
a near viewpoint, looks for all the <lb/>
world like a great wall of water <lb/>
Into a swirling pool at its foot, yet <lb/>
Its gleaming, graceful curves and the <lb/>
apparently swirling eddies at its base <lb/>
are as fixed and Immovable as if <lb/>
carved from the face of a granite <lb/>
cliff. <lb/>
Many centuries have, of course, gone <lb/>
lo the making of the deposits, and the <lb/>
springs were well known to the an- <lb/>
Romans. The name <lb/>
was given to the stone <lb/>
cataract in an allusion to a legend <lb/>
that tho waterfall was petrified by <lb/>
Allah, punishing the Impiety of <lb/>
i by turning all the members of <lb/>
tribe into stone. At night, so tho <lb/>
runs, its stone dwellers of the <lb/>
past are freed from their <lb/>
Strange fetters, come to life and re- <lb/>
their normal shapes. <lb/>
SECRET OF TRUE HAPPINESS <lb/>
Make Up Your Mind That It Is Fun <lb/>
to Live and Enjoyment Is <lb/>
Yours. <lb/>
Whether you are happy or not de- <lb/>
pends upon whether you fling out <lb/>
what Whitman calls flag of your <lb/>
to the breeze, and arc <lb/>
ready to be pleased by what repine <lb/>
and be querulous whether in a palace <lb/>
or a dungeon; others would And roses <lb/>
growing in the middle of the Arabian <lb/>
desert and behold the sunshine rather <lb/>
than the back-yard squalor from the <lb/>
garret window. eye sees what <lb/>
It brings the means of Make <lb/>
your mind that it Is fun to live <lb/>
and you will find reasons sprouting <lb/>
like mushrooms on every hand to con- <lb/>
firm your theory. But If you decide <lb/>
that tho game Isn't worth the candle, <lb/>
every hour will provide you with a <lb/>
fresh excuse for a gloomy face and a <lb/>
bitter speech or still more bitter <lb/>
The men and women <lb/>
and the useful ones are those who re- <lb/>
and our God for that <lb/>
they served his <lb/>
CAUSE OF TRAGEDY <lb/>
Tramp Tells Philanthropist Harrow- <lb/>
Tale Illustrating the Fatal <lb/>
Effects of <lb/>
you not from <lb/>
your ow n personal experience recall <lb/>
tragic deaths due directly to liquor <lb/>
One time me me <lb/>
partner, on a long weary <lb/>
for work, ye know <lb/>
found two big bottles of We <lb/>
each took one, we strapped <lb/>
about our necks for convenience in <lb/>
Our pockets was worn<lb/>
we come to a bridge with a <lb/>
rotten plank, both went through, <lb/>
me partner was drowned. Yes, <lb/>
sir, that there big bottle <lb/>
weighed so he Just Bank like a <lb/>
stone. Poor He was as fine a <lb/>
man <lb/>
you had a bottle about your <lb/>
neck, <lb/>
emptied <lb/>
Excusable at Times. <lb/>
Those aging, bereft victims of thin- <lb/>
locks may need to supplement <lb/>
but there Is no need for girls to <lb/>
spoil their beauty and become <lb/>
This Is not caustic talk. Were that <lb/>
being given, actual comment over- <lb/>
heard In public would be quot- <lb/>
ed. It is plain fact, and so Is this, that <lb/>
the gaze which follows the girl or <lb/>
woman Is more often of be- <lb/>
wonder, disapproval, than <lb/>
of admiration. <lb/>
A few years ago tho woman or girl <lb/>
who was as conspicuous as <lb/>
a lone church against blue sky, <lb/>
and people shied from her. <lb/>
Now there pass scores, wearing <lb/>
tints of roseate hue, the <lb/>
rest of the world wonders at this <lb/>
happy In tho belief that such <lb/>
only It is, and that It has not come to <lb/>
York Telegram. <lb/>
One Black Sheep Needed, <lb/>
A r of religion was in <lb/>
In a town where Peter, Paul and <lb/>
Join- were dealers. John was the <lb/>
first In come under the influence of <lb/>
very eloquent preaching. He <lb/>
and sincere about it and joined <lb/>
the church. A week later Paul was <lb/>
influenced to abandon the world and <lb/>
the th, and he, to, became an en- <lb/>
of tho good work. <lb/>
however, held aloof from the <lb/>
meetings. None of the Invitations of <lb/>
or brothers seemed to have <lb/>
any effect. Finally the clergyman <lb/>
called and made a personal appeal. <lb/>
was rough and Ignorant and a <lb/>
little inclined to profanity, but honest <lb/>
and frank in speech if not in act. <lb/>
He finally clinched his negative <lb/>
with the when in <lb/>
reply to a question he <lb/>
has become a Christian and Paul has <lb/>
become a Christian and if I join your <lb/>
church who the, excuse me, par- <lb/>
son, will weigh the <lb/>
Prophetic Retort. <lb/>
The governor of Virginia, at a time <lb/>
when Washington as a mere youth <lb/>
ventured to remonstrate against the <lb/>
Injustice of a certain decree, turned <lb/>
fiercely upon the young man and in- <lb/>
who tho dickens are you, <lb/>
With a cold but courteous bow, the <lb/>
young Virginian drawing himself up <lb/>
to his proud height, frigidly <lb/>
In particular Just now, but <lb/>
for the future, somebody in gen- <lb/>
The haughty emphasis on the word <lb/>
general. It is said, sent a cold chill <lb/>
running up and down the governor's <lb/>
spine, which it required seven mint <lb/>
Juleps and six bottles of port to re- <lb/>
Got In a Quiet Knock. <lb/>
When Miller, the Poet of <lb/>
tho Sierras, edited the Eugene Regis- <lb/>
be ran a Joke column that is <lb/>
remembered among Eugene vet- <lb/>
said aged <lb/>
to like to roast the coal man. <lb/>
Thus, I remember how, in a <lb/>
of a wedding, be once <lb/>
presents offered the bride <lb/>
were unusually sumptuous and <lb/>
among them was <lb/>
a ton of coal. This won general ad- <lb/>
and approval by reason of Its <lb/>
quaint, old-fashioned massiveness, it <lb/>
being much heavier than the tons of <lb/>
coal of the present <lb/>
Crusoe's Problem. <lb/>
Robinson Crusoe bent and looked <lb/>
at the footprint In the sands. <lb/>
said he to himself, in- <lb/>
that Friday is somewhere <lb/>
Then his brow knit in perplexity. <lb/>
what In thunder am I going to <lb/>
do to keep the reader's attention for <lb/>
the next four <lb/>
He began kicking Band into the <lb/>
footprint. <lb/>
ho murmured, Is <lb/>
Monday, all <lb/>
Lobsters That Do Not Boil Red. <lb/>
Native French lobsters are growing <lb/>
scarce as the result of a series of <lb/>
and an attempt is being made <lb/>
to introduce those from <lb/>
Hungary and Russia. Hut these for <lb/>
lobsters have little flesh on them <lb/>
and turn a dull color when they are <lb/>
boiled. <lb/>
To give them If possible the attract- <lb/>
scarlet tint, appetizing odor and <lb/>
delicious taste of the native Professor <lb/>
is making researches In his lab- <lb/>
oratory of In the <lb/>
of Grenoble, and he hopes, In <lb/>
naturalizing the foreign species, to <lb/>
give them some at least of tho French <lb/>
characteristics. <lb/>
Paradise for Grouches. <lb/>
A new game for of grouches i <lb/>
has been started up at <lb/>
It is called Cave of <lb/>
The proprietor has an endless supply <lb/>
of crockery, and for cents you can <lb/>
much china with three bolls <lb/>
as your aim permits. <lb/>
A crowd la about the booth all day, <lb/>
and many sour-faced men go <lb/>
wearing broad York Sun. <lb/>
From Noah. <lb/>
The smaller a nation the longer the <lb/>
pedigree of the native. Thus every <lb/>
Scotsman of decent lineage is de- <lb/>
from the every Irish- <lb/>
man from the Red Kings and every <lb/>
Welshman from Noah. The last claim <lb/>
has been made for the family of the <lb/>
late Lord writing In <lb/>
when touring in <lb/>
wrote that de- <lb/>
rived origin of the Morgans from <lb/>
the third son but that there <lb/>
.- a division of opinion in favor of <lb/>
first. <lb/>
HI <lb/>
MM <lb/>
GREENVILLE THE <lb/>
HEART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
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/>
Agriculture Is the Most the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb/>
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb/>
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb/>
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb/>
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
A BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
A FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb/>
BE HAD UPON<lb/>
C, <lb/>
Si <lb/>
Simmons Denies Report <lb/>
Circulated by Enemies <lb/>
Wilson Administration <lb/>
Senator Goes to the Defense of <lb/>
President Wilson <lb/>
HIS WAS ASKED <lb/>
And President Expressed Strong <lb/>
Views Regarding The Free <lb/>
Listing Of Wool <lb/>
And Sugar <lb/>
WASHINGTON, June <lb/>
Simmons tonight denied <lb/>
the report freely circulated by <lb/>
enemies of Wilson administration <lb/>
that Mr. Wilson hod used bis influence <lb/>
as to Democratic sen- <lb/>
into line in voting for a tariff <lb/>
bill In accordance with bis own views. <lb/>
much has been said in the <lb/>
said Senator Simmons, <lb/>
the president's alleged con- <lb/>
with certain amendments rec <lb/>
o by certain subcommittees <lb/>
of finance committee that is mis- <lb/>
leading and in order that <lb/>
the public understand the real <lb/>
facts, I wish to say that while the <lb/>
president has expressed to the <lb/>
of finance committee as be <lb/>
l reported to have expressed to <lb/>
and means committee when the <lb/>
Mil was In the house, strong views <lb/>
and convictions with respect to <lb/>
on the free list both wool and <lb/>
sugar, he has not, so far as I know, <lb/>
expressed any views as to the other <lb/>
provisions of the bill except when bis <lb/>
opinion has been asked, and has not <lb/>
In any way attempted to dictate to the <lb/>
committee. <lb/>
view current in the <lb/>
to the effect a subcommittee <lb/>
of the finance committee had decided <lb/>
to recommend that wheat and live <lb/>
stock well as meat and flour should <lb/>
go on the free list at the Instance <lb/>
and dictation of the president not <lb/>
correct. far as I know the <lb/>
dent has no opinion with <lb/>
respect to this matter except that <lb/>
when told of the probable of <lb/>
the subcommittee putting these <lb/>
in the free list In response to <lb/>
an Inquiry as to his opinion upon the <lb/>
be approval. <lb/>
Is It true that <lb/>
tee adopted the countervailing proviso <lb/>
with respect to wheat and flour at <lb/>
the president's dictation much <lb/>
discussion, as has been represented. <lb/>
On contrary, be has expressed no <lb/>
views so far I know on this sub- <lb/>
and the subcommittee's action <lb/>
with reference to the countervailing <lb/>
on these articles was taken at <lb/>
the same time It was decided to <lb/>
mend that they be put on the free <lb/>
W. M. GOODMAN, <lb/>
Director General the National Con- <lb/>
Exposition. <lb/>
is killed <lb/>
IN A RIOT <lb/>
IPSWICH, Mass., June <lb/>
woman was shot and killed, <lb/>
others were wounded by bullets and <lb/>
many others Including policemen, were <lb/>
hurt by flying In a strike riot <lb/>
outside the Ipswich Hosiery Mills <lb/>
tonight Fifteen persons, Including <lb/>
of the Industrial Workers of <lb/>
world, were arrested. <lb/>
Has Blood Poisoning <lb/>
N. R., June <lb/>
W. Gibson, who Is charged with the <lb/>
murder of is under tho <lb/>
care of a at the Jail <lb/>
here. has blood poisoning In one <lb/>
foot. No serious results are expect- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Mr. Goodman conceived the Idea of <lb/>
a big national exposition tor the South, <lb/>
exposition that typify the <lb/>
progress South In making in all <lb/>
lines of endeavor, and one that at the <lb/>
same time should teach the lesson of <lb/>
conservation. When gates of the <lb/>
exposition are thrown open on <lb/>
in Tenn., one of the <lb/>
great dreams of Mr. Goodman's life <lb/>
will have become a reality. <lb/>
Nearly Five Thousand Hear <lb/>
Secretary Bryan at <lb/>
Drivers, Va. <lb/>
Saves life of Girl When <lb/>
Attacked by <lb/>
Rattler <lb/>
ROGERS, Ark., June <lb/>
Graham, of Monte, Ne., here related <lb/>
a remarkable escape of a girl from <lb/>
being bitten by a large rattlesnake. <lb/>
The girl stumbled over a stone <lb/>
and fell headlong. Her face struck <lb/>
only a short distance from rat- <lb/>
with its mouth wide open, ready <lb/>
to sink Its deadly fangs into her <lb/>
cheeks. <lb/>
The young woman was chewing <lb/>
gum and her fall caused it to fall <lb/>
out of her mouth, striking the snake <lb/>
squarely In the mouth. The snake <lb/>
quickly closed down on it and while <lb/>
the reptile was In this position the <lb/>
girl sprang to her feet and killed It. <lb/>
The snake had sixteen rattles and <lb/>
a button. A visitor at Ne <lb/>
gave the girl for the rattles and <lb/>
a doctor paid for the carcass. <lb/>
P. Unfortunately the girl's name <lb/>
la not mentioned, probably through <lb/>
an oversight of the press agent <lb/>
Commencement Marshals <lb/>
marshals deserve highest <lb/>
for their efficient service <lb/>
throughout the commencement. Much <lb/>
of the success of the occasion was duo <lb/>
them. They were as Chief, <lb/>
11.1-1 Everett, Society; Assist- <lb/>
Poe <lb/>
Mary Weston, Emma <lb/>
Bessie <lb/>
Margaret Ross, and <lb/>
Adding More Room <lb/>
To better take care of their growing <lb/>
Insurance business, Bros, <lb/>
have taken another room to their suite <lb/>
In The Reflector building. A com- <lb/>
door was to lead <lb/>
from their former quarters to the add- <lb/>
DRIVERS, Va., June <lb/>
of State Bryan arrived here at <lb/>
p. today and for forty-five <lb/>
minutes before people. He en- <lb/>
Joyed the occasion and people were <lb/>
with his presence. Mr. <lb/>
an stepped from the naval tug Mohawk <lb/>
at Lee's wharf on tho <lb/>
river at p. in. was driven rapidly <lb/>
across the country In automobile <lb/>
to Driver. escort consisted of <lb/>
twenty boys of the Driver Corn <lb/>
Club on horseback, a brass band <lb/>
and twenty-two automobiles with a <lb/>
citizen's reception committee. <lb/>
Those who arrived on the Mohawk <lb/>
with Secretary were Congress- <lb/>
men E. E. Holland, Professor De- <lb/>
principal of the Driver <lb/>
school; J. G. A. G. Darden <lb/>
and John Bond of the school board of <lb/>
Sleep Hole district of <lb/>
county which the Driver school <lb/>
is located; former Mayor <lb/>
Myers of Norfolk and Rev. Dr. W. V. <lb/>
Savage of <lb/>
Mr. Bryan began speaking at <lb/>
clock. Lee superintendent of <lb/>
schools of county, <lb/>
e Rev. Dr. W. V. made the <lb/>
opening prayer and introduced Col- <lb/>
Holland who Introduced Mr. <lb/>
an. The speaking occurred on an <lb/>
especially erected platform. The <lb/>
were attractive and every- <lb/>
thing was in fine shape for the big <lb/>
celebration . graduates of <lb/>
Driver school received their diplomas <lb/>
and medals from the hands of Mr. <lb/>
Bryan. <lb/>
The weather was clear but some- <lb/>
what blustery. Mr. Bryan will reach <lb/>
Old Point Comfort at S p. m. The <lb/>
Brazilian battleship <lb/>
will arrive there at p. m. <lb/>
THE NATIONAL BANK <lb/>
PATS SECOND DIVIDEND <lb/>
In April the National Bank of <lb/>
Greenville paid its stockholders a <lb/>
semi-annual dividend of i per cent, <lb/>
making per cent for the fiscal year. <lb/>
This was Just before the consolidation <lb/>
of that bank with the Bank Green- <lb/>
ville. After the consolidation of the <lb/>
two banks there was a surplus <lb/>
with charged to <lb/>
and fixtures. In the last few <lb/>
days a further dividend of 1-2 per <lb/>
cent has been paid out to the <lb/>
to the National Bank stockholders. <lb/>
This still leaves a good surplus and <lb/>
puts the old and new stockholders, <lb/>
the latter being those coming In from <lb/>
the former Bank of Greenville, on <lb/>
the same footing as to value of stock. <lb/>
It Is also fitting to say that In the <lb/>
last five and a half years, during <lb/>
which time Mr. F. J. Forbes has been <lb/>
cashier of the National Bank, that <lb/>
the earnings of the bank have reach- <lb/>
ed an amount almost equal to the cap- <lb/>
ital stock <lb/>
EXPECTS TO MEET PATE <lb/>
OP LATE OF SPAIN <lb/>
Showers of Visitors at <lb/>
Plums For Finals of the <lb/>
Tar Heels <lb/>
latter <lb/>
fitted up for a private office. <lb/>
MADRID, June It became <lb/>
known here today that King Alfonso <lb/>
fully expects to be slain by an as- <lb/>
When the news of the recent <lb/>
of the King of was con- <lb/>
to King Alfonso the latter <lb/>
quietly remarked that he was not in <lb/>
the least surprised and that In all <lb/>
probability ho would be the next <lb/>
arch to meet his death In similar <lb/>
fashion. <lb/>
He was then to <lb/>
abroad only when attended by a strong <lb/>
was thoroughly <lb/>
characteristic. <lb/>
If I am not to be allowed to go <lb/>
about as I no said. <lb/>
don't mind how soon my end <lb/>
WASHINGTON, June <lb/>
Wilson today appointed another North <lb/>
Carolinian to a high and responsible <lb/>
position in the Federal government <lb/>
when he sent to the senate the <lb/>
nation of Charles M. Galloway to be <lb/>
civil service commissioner. <lb/>
Though charged to South Carolina, <lb/>
Galloway was born and lived the ear- <lb/>
lier part of bis life in county . <lb/>
When ah of Galloway studied <lb/>
His first Job was at <lb/>
where he was operator <lb/>
and lineman. went from there <lb/>
Wilmington, where he for the <lb/>
A. C. L. Railway In the general office <lb/>
and from there to Columbia, S. C, for <lb/>
the Associated Press. Later he ac- <lb/>
a place on the Columbia State <lb/>
as reporter, and when Ellison Smith <lb/>
was elected as United States Senator <lb/>
Galloway was appointed bis private <lb/>
secretary, a place which he now holds. <lb/>
Other nominations sent to the sen- <lb/>
ate today W. L. Res- <lb/>
City; E. H. East Du-r <lb/>
ham; W. F. Flowers, Fremont; A. H. <lb/>
Hues, H. D. Lambeth, <lb/>
Elon College; W. G. Rose <lb/>
Hill; O. W. Hill, P. J. <lb/>
dell, St. Paul; E. T. <lb/>
A. N. Bulla, Randleman; J. <lb/>
W. Noel I, Roxboro; D. J. Kerr, Can- <lb/>
ton; Robert S. Chapel Hill; <lb/>
H. Lane. J. H. Carter, <lb/>
Mt. C. D. Osborne. Oxford; L <lb/>
M. Sheffield, Spray; S. S. Lockhart, <lb/>
Wadesboro; J, H. Bowen, West Dur- <lb/>
ham. <lb/>
Brazilian Premier Is <lb/>
Welcomed By <lb/>
Secretary <lb/>
OLD POINT COMFORT, Va., June <lb/>
by a division of Amer- <lb/>
battleships and destroyers the <lb/>
Brazilian dreadnought <lb/>
with Dr. Laure Muller, Minister <lb/>
Affairs of the South American <lb/>
Republic, and a special commission <lb/>
on board passed in the Virginia Capes <lb/>
at o'clock this afternoon. <lb/>
Dr. Muller, who Is coming to Amer- <lb/>
to return a visit paid by Senator <lb/>
Root when he was Secretory of <lb/>
was met In the Roads and cordially <lb/>
welcomed by Secretary William J. <lb/>
Bryan and other members of <lb/>
dent Wilson's cabinet and a <lb/>
party of Washington officials <lb/>
representing all branches of the gov- <lb/>
Earlier in tho afternoon Mr. Bryan <lb/>
went to Driver, where he ad- <lb/>
dressed the pupils of the Second Dis- <lb/>
Agricultural School. <lb/>
After disembarking at Old Point <lb/>
where the welcoming ceremonies <lb/>
curred, Dr. Muller left for Washing- <lb/>
ton, accompanied by Mr. and <lb/>
party and will tomorrow be the guest <lb/>
of President Wilson. <lb/>
Virginia Pennant 1- liaised <lb/>
ROANOKE, June bale- <lb/>
ball championship; for the <lb/>
season of 1912, won from Petersburg <lb/>
by the narrow margin of two points <lb/>
the last game of the season of <lb/>
1912. was raised today <lb/>
ceremonies and a short address <lb/>
by Mayor who <lb/>
winning pitcher in the final game <lb/>
that decided the championship, war <lb/>
presented with a pair of gold cuff but- <lb/>
tons after Petersburg <lb/>
to pound for four safeties, send- <lb/>
him to the and scoring four <lb/>
HIM III first Petersburg <lb/>
The following is a partial list of <lb/>
out of town people who attended E. <lb/>
. T. T. S. Mesdames <lb/>
G. T. Gardner, J. R. Harvey, R. J. <lb/>
Day, Dora Mary E. Daniel, J. <lb/>
Perry, S. M. Taylor. L. T. Smith, <lb/>
j W. T. W. A. B. Branch, <lb/>
I Its W. D. Croom and M. M. <lb/>
Moore; Misses Estelle Davis, <lb/>
rite Davis, Minnie Best Sara <lb/>
Waller, Hunter, Emma Harden, <lb/>
Mamie Williams, Mabel Jones, Agnes <lb/>
I Smith, Ruth Lula <lb/>
Lida Annie Belle <lb/>
I White, Pauline Perry, Sadie Taylor <lb/>
Better Taylor, Daisy Smith, Mary <lb/>
Cotton and Maggie Murphy; <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Freeman; Messrs. <lb/>
T. H, Pritchard, B. H. Stephens, C. <lb/>
M. and J. R. Smith, R. E. <lb/>
G. C. Weeks, Robt. Ev- <lb/>
John Hooker, J. A. and An- <lb/>
drew Whichard J. H. Vaughn, Clay <lb/>
Vaughn, S. and F. R. T. <lb/>
Fountain. Frank Savage, O. P. Shell, <lb/>
Julian Hassell, Milton Sexton, Her- <lb/>
H. M. Taylor, R. H. <lb/>
Lucas, Hardy Thompson, O. W. Quinn <lb/>
and Grady Coppedge; Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
J. T. and Mr. and Mrs. J. <lb/>
VALIDITY <lb/>
NEWSPAPER LAW <lb/>
Supreme Court Decision Announced <lb/>
By Chief Justice <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
won, to <lb/>
Omitted Features <lb/>
In the report o C. T. T. com- <lb/>
In yesterday's Reflector <lb/>
certain features connected with the <lb/>
presentation of the portraits were ac- <lb/>
omitted. Pres. Wright read <lb/>
the resolutions by the two <lb/>
Literary Societies. Miss <lb/>
Weeks, president of Edgar Allan <lb/>
Poe Literary Society for pres- <lb/>
the portrait of Gov. and <lb/>
Miss Willie Day, president of <lb/>
the Sidney Lanier Literary Society for <lb/>
1912-13, presented that of Mr. Rags- <lb/>
dale, State Superintendent J. Y. <lb/>
Joyner, Chairman of the Board <lb/>
Trustees, accepted the portraits. <lb/>
VIRGINIA BEACH <lb/>
SWEPT FIRE <lb/>
NORFOLK, June early this <lb/>
morning swept all of the con- <lb/>
cessions east the Casino at <lb/>
Beach. wind was in favor <lb/>
of the and the handsome <lb/>
Casino structure was saved. <lb/>
The buildings destroyed were as fol <lb/>
The swimming pool, the merry- <lb/>
go-round, Graces bath the <lb/>
adjoining hotel and all of the <lb/>
south of the pavilion. <lb/>
The hotel was occupied by Mr. Ed <lb/>
wards of and his family. <lb/>
They had of <lb/>
They and several of boarders are <lb/>
reported to have had narrow escapes. <lb/>
All of the destroyed structures are <lb/>
understood to be the property of Mr. <lb/>
Groves and associates and were leas- <lb/>
ed Mr. Edwards and The <lb/>
loss could not be ascertained <lb/>
night. <lb/>
The the Casino <lb/>
and adjoining buildings by keeping <lb/>
the Colonnade drenched, being fa- <lb/>
by the winds. <lb/>
Will Their Respects <lb/>
WASHINGTON, June Congress <lb/>
man Stedman has secured the <lb/>
of the route from <lb/>
to so as to Include <lb/>
Major Madman and <lb/>
of Internal Revenue Osborn have an <lb/>
with President Wilson to- <lb/>
morrow morning. They will call to <lb/>
pay their respects to the chief <lb/>
H. C and John Hampton <lb/>
of Lansing, William Knight, of <lb/>
Washington, are here. <lb/>
The Law Requires AH Publications <lb/>
to File Sworn Statement <lb/>
Annually With Local <lb/>
Postmaster. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, June val- <lb/>
of <lb/>
law, enacted in 1912 as a provision <lb/>
of the postal appropriation act, was <lb/>
pIn Id today by unanimous <lb/>
of the supreme court of the United <lb/>
States. Chief Justice White <lb/>
id the court's decision. <lb/>
This law requires every newspaper, <lb/>
magazine or other publication file <lb/>
semi-; with gen- <lb/>
and local postmaster, a <lb/>
statement of the names of <lb/>
editors, mangers, owners, <lb/>
and bondholders and in case <lb/>
dally newspapers of the average <lb/>
dally circulation. Publication <lb/>
these statements is required and for <lb/>
failure to comply with any of <lb/>
provisions the publication shall be <lb/>
denied the of the <lb/>
A second paragraph provides that <lb/>
pair for editorial or reading matter <lb/>
of any shall be <lb/>
marked under pen- <lb/>
of a fine or imprisonment. <lb/>
About per cent of the newspapers <lb/>
already have complied with law, <lb/>
many under protest. The Lewis Pub- <lb/>
Company and Journal of <lb/>
Commerce and Commercial Bulletin, of <lb/>
New York, led attack upon the <lb/>
statute, bringing suits for <lb/>
In the federal district court of south- <lb/>
New York. When the law was up- <lb/>
held there they appealed to the high- <lb/>
est court. claimed that law <lb/>
to and <lb/>
to enforce a censorship of the press. <lb/>
In reply former Solicitor General <lb/>
contented a <lb/>
of the provision Into two <lb/>
typographical paragraphs by the sen- <lb/>
ate, after the measure was passed by <lb/>
the the law was only one para- <lb/>
graph, Imposing conditions upon <lb/>
tee of low second class mall rates <lb/>
accorded newspapers and magazines. <lb/>
supreme court today adopted <lb/>
Mr. Interpretation. The <lb/>
in tho act of tho word a <lb/>
technical word employed only as to <lb/>
second class mail matter, showed, <lb/>
Chief Justice White held that con- <lb/>
In passing the law, had in mind <lb/>
only the second class mall and not <lb/>
the right to use the mall as a whole. <lb/>
The nae of the words st <lb/>
the the chief justice took to <lb/>
be a positive to second <lb/>
class mail because the great ad- <lb/>
vantages newspapers were granted <lb/>
under the second class over other <lb/>
classes of mail in order to <lb/>
the of current <lb/>
He said congress did not <lb/>
Intend to exclude papers not comply- <lb/>
with the provisions from the use <lb/>
of tho mail, other than tho second <lb/>
Kills <lb/>
KINGSTON. June H. <lb/>
Peters chief mechanical engineer of <lb/>
Winston and Co., contractors <lb/>
charge of the construction of the Ash- <lb/>
reservoir, was killed <lb/>
and his automobile demolished when <lb/>
the Rip Van Winkle <lb/>
at Brown's station this <lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018252_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
1.11 m <lb/>
nit <lb/>
session assembled on <lb/>
of May. 1913, it being <lb/>
ed meeting from the res- <lb/>
wan <lb/>
NOTICE OF REGISTRATION AND <lb/>
ELECTION UPON THE <lb/>
TO ISSUE ROAD <lb/>
BONDS BY GREENVILLE TOWN- <lb/>
SHIP, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAB <lb/>
North Carolina. Pitt County. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the <lb/>
Board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
in <lb/>
the 20th <lb/>
an adjourned <lb/>
meeting held on the first Monday <lb/>
of May, 1913. ordered an election <lb/>
be held in Greenville township, Pitt; <lb/>
county. N. C, on Tuesday, the 29th day , <lb/>
cf July, 1913, at the regular polling <lb/>
place at the court house on the <lb/>
of of issuing Fifty <lb/>
thousand dollars worth of road bonds <lb/>
to bear per interest per <lb/>
and to run <lb/>
u period of forty years, the funds re- <lb/>
from the same to be used for <lb/>
the purpose of laying out, establishing, j <lb/>
repairing, grading, constructing and; <lb/>
Improving in any way the public roads <lb/>
in Greenville township as provided I <lb/>
act of the legislature of North Car-i <lb/>
session of 1913 in House Bill, <lb/>
No. and Senate Bill No. <lb/>
And notice is further hereby given <lb/>
an entirely new registration tor <lb/>
Mid election was ordered and called I <lb/>
and that Warren, Jr. was and; <lb/>
is appointed registrar for said election i <lb/>
and that the books for registration <lb/>
will be opened on Thursday, June <lb/>
J, and closed at sun set on Sat-1 <lb/>
July 1913. That on each, <lb/>
Saturday during said registration <lb/>
period the registration books will be; <lb/>
at the regular polling places it; <lb/>
the court house In Greenville. N. C <lb/>
at nil other times sail <lb/>
period will be open at the office of <lb/>
W I. Hall and Co. at Five Points. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. And all citizens. <lb/>
desiring to vote in said bond election; <lb/>
to b held on July 1913. will he <lb/>
required to register. <lb/>
This the day of May. 1913. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
Chairman Board of Com. of Pitt-Co. <lb/>
BELL. Clerk. <lb/>
Samples at <lb/>
Factory <lb/>
Prices. <lb/>
Hair received <lb/>
of <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
Spring <lb/>
Samples <lb/>
Nice, Goods Including <lb/>
Hosiery, Belts. <lb/>
Dresses, etc. A com- <lb/>
assortment to be sold <lb/>
Prices. <lb/>
Conic Quick Before the Best <lb/>
is gone. <lb/>
Quality Shop <lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENT <lb/>
INCREASED VALUES <lb/>
in <lb/>
ACCIDENT DISABILITY <lb/>
POLICIES <lb/>
Limits of for ordinary accidents <lb/>
and for travel accidents, will be <lb/>
given in all policies that were former <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/>
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. GET <lb/>
A MARYLAND POLICY. <lb/>
H. A. WHITE <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
1895 <lb/>
Evans St., Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker Dead <lb/>
Mr. Tucker died Tuesday <lb/>
afternoon In the hospital in Kinston. <lb/>
He was carried to the hospital sis <lb/>
weeks ago for an for <lb/>
but soon afterward <lb/>
fever developed and the ope- <lb/>
ration could not be performed. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker was years of <lb/>
a splendid young man, and was held <lb/>
in high esteem. He was a son of <lb/>
Mr. A. Tucker, and besides the <lb/>
father and mother is survived by one <lb/>
sister and five brothers. These are <lb/>
Mrs. J. I,. Brans, Messrs. W. A., D, <lb/>
A. Ralph. and Ola Tucker, the <lb/>
latter being a twin brother. <lb/>
The deceased was a member of both <lb/>
the Odd Fellows and Red Men <lb/>
here. <lb/>
The remains were brought here this <lb/>
morning on the Atlantic Coast Line. <lb/>
and taken to the home of his <lb/>
three miles from town. The <lb/>
Interment took place at o'clock this <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
How's This <lb/>
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- <lb/>
ward for any case of Catarrh that <lb/>
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh <lb/>
Cure. <lb/>
F. J. CO., Toledo. O. <lb/>
We. the have known F. J. <lb/>
for the last u years, and believe <lb/>
him honorable. In all I <lb/>
transactions and financially able to <lb/>
out any obligations by his <lb/>
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE, <lb/>
Triangle <lb/>
5-PLY Collars <lb/>
, CHOICE COT FLOWERS ROSES, <lb/>
i AND SWEET <lb/>
PEAS A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Our artistic arrangements <lb/>
In wedding outfits are equal <lb/>
l to the best. Nothing finer In <lb/>
rial offerings than our <lb/>
styles. <lb/>
Blooming pot plants, <lb/>
and ferns In great variety. <lb/>
Bedding plants In all varieties <lb/>
to beautify the yard. <lb/>
Write for list <lb/>
J. I. CO, . C <lb/>
D. J. Whichard. Jr., for Green- <lb/>
ville and vicinity.<lb/>
and Skin Troubles <lb/>
If are suffering with any old, <lb/>
running or fever sores, ulcers, boils, <lb/>
eczema or other skin troubles get a <lb/>
box of Salve and <lb/>
you will get relief promptly. Mrs. <lb/>
Bruce, Jones, of Birmingham, Ala., <lb/>
suffered from an ugly ulcer for nine <lb/>
I months and Salve <lb/>
cured her in two weeks. Will help <lb/>
you. Only Recommended by all <lb/>
I druggists. adv <lb/>
Your Food <lb/>
is only as pure as the Refrigerator you keep it in. To be <lb/>
H sure you are not subjecting your family to the worst type <lb/>
of Germ. Use a the most practical refrigerator <lb/>
built We have them in all sizes. Also a complete line of <lb/>
w porch chairs, rugs, art squares, etc. <lb/>
Our Undertaking Department is complete in every re- <lb/>
We carry a full line and guarantee <lb/>
service at moderate prices. Why pay more <lb/>
I furniture and Undertaking Co. <lb/>
g The Store That Pleases. <lb/>
Quality Plus <lb/>
Price Equals <lb/>
lesson yo <lb/>
Hill If yon <lb/>
our <lb/>
Furniture- <lb/>
Best qualities combined with sensible prices will mean <lb/>
perfect satisfaction here. A fine, seasonable display of reed <lb/>
wicker the offerings and compare prices. <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE <lb/>
i i i <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
THAT FIT <lb/>
For tali the fifth e season I solicit orders. As <lb/>
evidence el the satisfactory flues I make, my sales <lb/>
hare frown from to pounds material la Are years. <lb/>
Four Solid Cars <lb/>
already bought for this season's trade. Mill make them this <lb/>
year at the Liberty Warehouse. To meld delay let me have roar <lb/>
order at once. <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS <lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
Hall's Catarrh Cure I takes Internally, <lb/>
acting upon the blood and mu- <lb/>
of the Testimonials <lb/>
lent Tree, cents per bottle. Sold <lb/>
by all <lb/>
. constipation <lb/>
Toledo, O. , Bank organized <lb/>
in Philadelphia. <lb/>
Republican convention <lb/>
nominated William <lb/>
for governor. <lb/>
DISSOLUTION NOTICE <lb/>
All persons will take notice that the <lb/>
Shoe Company, a partnership <lb/>
heretofore composed of George <lb/>
ton and S. L. Stough, has, by mutual <lb/>
consent of said partners, dissolved. <lb/>
Mr. Stough has sold his entire In- <lb/>
in said company to Messrs <lb/>
George and Howard L. Hod- <lb/>
who will continue the business, <lb/>
without Interruption, as <lb/>
under the firm name and style of the <lb/>
Shoe Company. <lb/>
and Hodges have <lb/>
assumed all obligations of the old <lb/>
company; and all persons Indebted <lb/>
to the old company will settle with <lb/>
the new firm. <lb/>
May 29th, 1913. <lb/>
S. L. STOUGH. <lb/>
GEORGE <lb/>
HOWARD L. HODGES. <lb/>
At Ind., the United <lb/>
Powder and High Explosives Workers <lb/>
of America will meet on Tuesday of <lb/>
week for their <lb/>
which is expected to last two <lb/>
days. <lb/>
Bruce <lb/>
PUB- <lb/>
A AUDITOR <lb/>
fa. Goldsboro, C. <lb/>
Bank and Trust Examinations a <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
County, City and Borough Ac- <lb/>
counts systematized. <lb/>
Corporations and Mercantile <lb/>
Firms analytically examined. <lb/>
Partnership Accounts accurately <lb/>
determined. <lb/>
Beat and Power Plant Ac- <lb/>
counts perfected. <lb/>
Fire, Looses. Valuations and <lb/>
adjusted. <lb/>
Heal Estate and Lumber Audits. <lb/>
Trial Balance Sheet, and <lb/>
Loss Statement of Assets <lb/>
and Liabilities and Condensed Re- <lb/>
port Thereon Professionally <lb/>
pared and Guaranteed. <lb/>
of the United States <lb/>
Military Academy at West Point <lb/>
celebrated. <lb/>
Elegance in House Fur- <lb/>
Without Ex- <lb/>
Our Furniture stands the Test of Time. It la built, of the Best <lb/>
material True in wood an workmanship. enough to ha <lb/>
handed down to your as heirlooms. If your home Is not <lb/>
as and comfortable you like It, why not and <lb/>
its furnishings <lb/>
You will And Just the thing to give your dwelling a touch of <lb/>
luxury, without excessive <lb/>
FURNITURE CO. <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
ARE YOU INSURED <lb/>
If not let C. L. Wilkinson insure you in the Mutual <lb/>
Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark, N. J. <lb/>
INSURANCE THAT INSURES <lb/>
The benefits which the Mutual Benefit offers is <lb/>
surpassed. It is just one way but best all ways. <lb/>
Back of it is a 68-year reputation for fair dealing with all <lb/>
its policy-holders whether continuing, withdrawing or <lb/>
dying. C. L. WILKINSON, Special Agent, Greenville, If. C. <lb/>
Our Capital of <lb/>
And Surplus and Profits of <lb/>
Not to mention the double liability of stockholders of another <lb/>
Gives Absolute Security to those who Deposit with us <lb/>
This is a feature worth remembering. <lb/>
Accounts Solicited. None too large and none too small. <lb/>
THE NATIONAL BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
J. L. LITTLE, President W. E. PROCTOR, Vice-President <lb/>
F. G. JAMES, Vice-President F. J. FORBES, Cashier <lb/>
Card. <lb/>
W. F. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
in front room of the Edwards <lb/>
folding Just north of Court House <lb/>
Greenville, Carolina <lb/>
ALBION <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Office In Building. Third St <lb/>
Practice wherever hi service <lb/>
Greenville. Carolina <lb/>
P. C. Harding C. Pierce<lb/>
Lawyers <lb/>
Practicing la all tie Court <lb/>
Office In Woolen Building on Third <lb/>
street, fronting Court House <lb/>
M. W. K. D,. <lb/>
Practice limited to disease of the <lb/>
Ear. Nose Throat <lb/>
Washington. N. U. N. e <lb/>
Office with Dr. D. L. James, Green <lb/>
Till, day every Monday. a m to I pm <lb/>
JAKES L. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
In Edwards Building, fifth <lb/>
from street <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
S. J. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
n on the Corn <lb/>
House <lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
at<lb/>
F. M. <lb/>
Lawyer <lb/>
second floor In Woolen <lb/>
on Third St. opposite court house <lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina <lb/>
If. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
formerly occupied by J <lb/>
Where The Cotton Farmer L <lb/>
Mr. Charles J. Brand, of the Cotton <lb/>
Marketing division of the National <lb/>
Department of Agriculture, insists <lb/>
that we have entirely to many cotton <lb/>
gins. If there were fewer gins and It is expected that within a short <lb/>
and these kept going all the time time an international union of <lb/>
season, ginning would be done more tor Instructors and will be <lb/>
cheaply. formed. Local organizations are be- <lb/>
certainly have an undue pro- formed In many largo cities and <lb/>
portion of cotton buyers. A man from membership is Increasing. <lb/>
Memphis, Tenn., said to us the other A office building will be <lb/>
seems to me that about erected In the down town district of <lb/>
other man L know in Memphis Is St. Louis he Order of Railway tel- <lb/>
a cotton they are getting to take the place of their <lb/>
This was an exaggeration, cf present Inadequate quarters. The <lb/>
course and so Intended, but It sue- plans for the building have already <lb/>
a serious condition. In the end, been approved. <lb/>
It is the farmer, of course, who has Joseph C. of Chicago, who <lb/>
to support all these middlemen, and went to Roanoke, Va., to conduct a <lb/>
it would be well for Farmers Unions for the Amalgamated <lb/>
everywhere to take up the plant of Street and Electric Railroad <lb/>
of warehousing their cotton and then has started a dally <lb/>
of selling direct to tho mills or ex- paper and named it the <lb/>
porters in and ale lots. Reports from Cincinnati state that the <lb/>
Another incident mentioned by Mr. car men nave organized a union In <lb/>
Brand is significant. He recently and also all <lb/>
found staple cotton selling In lines entering Cincinnati. Including <lb/>
Ga., for two cents a pound, he latter city, the union now has <lb/>
or a bale less than It was bring- n embers in that locality. <lb/>
in S. C. where Mr. A law has been passed recently In <lb/>
takes pains to see to it that New Zealand which makes a fine Flanagan, <lb/>
farmers get fair values for for any person that works Greenville not in all <lb/>
staple lint. . than S hours a day. The law was history had an official in this <lb/>
Mr. Brand points out that first applied to women and girls work-1 <lb/>
farmers lose heavily by not Insisting lug hotels, but now it includes every- . <lb/>
on proper grading of their cotton body. Each city and town in H <lb/>
early in tho season. A few weeks island a day for itself that obliging than he. In these <lb/>
ago he asked one buyer how he gives to the working classes a Stood at the Front, his record <lb/>
found Hie grade of cotton. The buy- holiday. It may be Saturday or any with the department of <lb/>
reply was that he hadn't been other day in the week. the government, and the <lb/>
the cotton so far, but A new trade union has been form- of Ills service to the patrons <lb/>
Mr. Roy C. Flanagan Closes Nine <lb/>
Years Service <lb/>
AS <lb/>
Mr. David J. Whichard Appointed <lb/>
Man Of Lung <lb/>
Experience <lb/>
Monday a change of postmasters <lb/>
iii Greenville became effective, <lb/>
Mr. David Whichard taking <lb/>
charge as successor to Mr. <lb/>
Flanagan who resigned a little <lb/>
more than two months ago. <lb/>
Of the retiring postmaster, Mi, <lb/>
can he <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
Insurance <lb/>
Lire. F-Ire, Sick and <lb/>
on Fourth street, <lb/>
t.-r . . <lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
it all as that a lit- ed in London, Bag,, recently. It ts <lb/>
later, however, he would begin named the Trade <lb/>
rapidly. The explanation was ion and its aims are given <lb/>
that tho cotton had been above mere To assist wage earners In their en- <lb/>
middling in grade up to that time to obtain better wages and <lb/>
should have brought higher than conditions; to Insist as a right upon <lb/>
i middling prices; the later cotton would proper proportion of men's wages to <lb/>
j be more stained and on It the buyer be paid to the wife for the support of <lb/>
could often force prices below mid- the home; to Improve in every way <lb/>
Farmer. lie and condition of women. <lb/>
An exhaustive inquiry into the con- <lb/>
How Rich. of labor for women In country; <lb/>
After a great deal of worry and districts Is to be undertaken by n unity coming <lb/>
of the office, never leaving n <lb/>
slightest room for criticism. He <lb/>
did not stop at tho bounds cf <lb/>
duty, lint went far beyond to <lb/>
he obliging to every one. He has <lb/>
been postmaster some over nine <lb/>
years, being first appointed by <lb/>
President Roosevelt in March. <lb/>
and receiving two <lb/>
re-appointments. His <lb/>
would not have ex- <lb/>
the <lb/>
to engage <lb/>
If YOU do not feel <lb/>
like paying cash for a <lb/>
COME TO SEE US AND WE WILL AR- <lb/>
RANGE TERMS TO SUIT YOUR <lb/>
WE HAVE THE BEST LINE OF <lb/>
MADE AND BY CARRYING A COM <lb/>
STOCK AT ALL CAN <lb/>
GET WHAT YOU WANT AT A <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
LET US TALK IT OVER WITH YOU. <lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co. <lb/>
Coward Drug <lb/>
in <lb/>
Prescription <lb/>
Department <lb/>
ICE <lb/>
CREAM <lb/>
Superior to any <lb/>
Alt Soda fountain<lb/>
Full of <lb/>
Stationery,<lb/>
Pens. <lb/>
Kodak Supplies <lb/>
Numb <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
in <lb/>
study we have at last figured out how commission in connection With in and the management <lb/>
so many country editors get rich. Here German for the of a large real estate business, <lb/>
is the secret of their success. There r Working Women's Interests. The i led him to Bend ill his <lb/>
Is a child born in the neighborhood, work will naturally occupy a its <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
winded flowery article and tells <lb/>
i dozen different lies about beau- <lb/>
and accomplished The <lb/>
WELL. <lb/>
The North Carolina delegation in <lb/>
i minister gets and a piece of cake. House fared well in committee <lb/>
editor gets and a request to assignments. Three Chairmanship <lb/>
carry the groom's subscription ac- to tho delegation. Representative <lb/>
count another year. In the course of chairman of tho Commit- <lb/>
time she dies. The doctor gets from lee on claims. Goodwin will be the <lb/>
to and the minister gets from the committee Reform j <lb/>
to the editor publishes a no- m Service, and tho; He comes to the <lb/>
of death and an obituary two col- chairman of the on While the incoming with a long business ex- <lb/>
long, lodge resolution, a lot of m the Department of has no hope of surpassing Mr. and a knowledge of the <lb/>
poetry and a card of thanks and gets Other assignments Include Flanagan's record, he will people that will prove helpful in <lb/>
No wonder so many country merchant marine and fisher- take it n standard and do his conducting the affairs of the of- <lb/>
Norfolk Southern Railway <lb/>
Schedule In Effect April <lb/>
N. B. The following schedule ilium <lb/>
published information only and <lb/>
are not guaranteed. <lb/>
TRAINS LEAVE <lb/>
East Hound <lb/>
a. m. dally, <lb/>
Pullman Bleeping car for Norfolk <lb/>
a. m. daily, tor Plymouth, <lb/>
City and Norfolk. Broiler par- <lb/>
car service. Connect tor all <lb/>
point north and west <lb/>
p. m. dally, except Sunday, for <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
West Bound <lb/>
a. m. dally, for Wilson, . . <lb/>
and west. Pullman sleeping car of fires occurring in pressing clubs and expenditures in the <lb/>
service. Connects north south and that it would the part or wisdom Commerce; Small, rivers and OW- <lb/>
municipal authorities to restrict tors; Stedman, foreign affairs; Web. <lb/>
and these establishments to territory out- and mean, <lb/>
Bide tho lire districts. The use of and good roads. <lb/>
which Is often handled by Webb, Stedman and Small. <lb/>
careless workers, makes pressing some of tho biggest and most <lb/>
clubs unusually dangerous. Powerful committees could not under <lb/>
Young thinks that the clubs could <lb/>
located outside the fire districts upon any other committee <lb/>
that the tailoring establishments, Times. <lb/>
could ho operated in the business <lb/>
of tho communities. By such BABY <lb/>
an agreement much loss of property <lb/>
j might averted. Several North Car- <lb/>
cities have already passed re- <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
crease was to nearly 1.000 for the <lb/>
year ending with March. <lb/>
The handling of mails, of course, <lb/>
increased correspondingly <lb/>
the receipts and through this <lb/>
Growth in volume of business he <lb/>
kept the work of the office <lb/>
i with utmost accuracy and <lb/>
Sporting Goods <lb/>
OF BASEBALL GOODS, I <lb/>
BY FLASHLIGHTS. SCREEN <lb/>
ICE CREAM FREEZER, KING Wind- <lb/>
WALL PLASTER ATLAS <lb/>
CARR ATKINS <lb/>
editors get census, and expenditures of the <lb/>
Navy Department; alcoholic liquor <lb/>
Pressing Clubs Many Fires traffic and expenditures In the War <lb/>
Insurance Commissioner Young, Department, Gudger. public buildings <lb/>
commenting on a fire that original- and grounds, Indian affairs, and ex- <lb/>
led in a pressing club at Ayden, said in the Department of La- <lb/>
that ho was satisfied from the number . appropriations; rules <lb/>
to reach near to it as <lb/>
EVERY LADY IN THE <lb/>
county to write us for <lb/>
aid price on The Imperial Self-Heat- <lb/>
Gasoline Iron. Its a household <lb/>
treasure. Write now, to G. A. John- <lb/>
son and Bro., N. C. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
in <lb/>
a. m. dally, for Wilson <lb/>
Raleigh. Connect for all points. <lb/>
p. m. dally, for Wilson and <lb/>
Raleigh. Droller parlor car service. <lb/>
For further Information and <lb/>
In sleeping cars, apply to J. <lb/>
L. Hassell, Agent, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
W. W. <lb/>
General Passenger Agent, <lb/>
W. A. WITT, <lb/>
General Superintendent. <lb/>
NORFOLK. VA. <lb/>
FLOATING IN DITCH <lb/>
JUST ABOUND THE CORNER <lb/>
From The <lb/>
White House <lb/>
HOTEL RICHMOND <lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C. <lb/>
On direct car line to Union Sta- <lb/>
and all part of Washington. <lb/>
Close to all leading <lb/>
and business district <lb/>
rooms Newly <lb/>
Baths. <lb/>
American plan per day and <lb/>
up. <lb/>
Write for Illustrated booklet <lb/>
with map. <lb/>
M. LEWIS, Prop. <lb/>
ELIZABETH CITY. N. O, Juno f. <lb/>
The four year old son of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. F Lowry was drowned yes- <lb/>
In a big ditch near the home <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS lot his parents In <lb/>
The undersigned having duly Mrs. Lowry was attending to the <lb/>
Hied before the superior court clerk store for her husband who was away <lb/>
of Pitt county as executors of from home and had her little son In <lb/>
last Will and Testament of John Elks, the store with her. Ho slipped out <lb/>
deceased, notice Is hereby given to and soon missed him. She found <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to his body floating In the ditch, <lb/>
make Immediate payment to the The Is frantic with grief <lb/>
and all persons having over the tragic death of her child, <lb/>
claims against the estate notified Tho grandmother Is a <lb/>
to present the same to the undersign- In this city. She was Informed <lb/>
ed for payment on or before the 6th cf the accident this morning and her <lb/>
day of June, 1914, or this notice will grief was pitiful, <lb/>
plead In bar of recovery. <lb/>
This tho day of June, 1913. <lb/>
C. S. and J. J. ELKS, <lb/>
Executors of John Elks. <lb/>
C C ltd <lb/>
Marriage licenses <lb/>
Old Bay Line <lb/>
Steam Packet <lb/>
Dally, including Sunday, between <lb/>
NORFOLK AND BALTIMORE <lb/>
Mall steamers <lb/>
Equipped with Unit- <lb/>
ed Wireless Telegraphy and every <lb/>
modern convenience. Cuisine <lb/>
passed <lb/>
Portsmouth, Sundays, . pm <lb/>
A Portsmouth, week days <lb/>
An FENCES Lt Norfolk, dally . pm <lb/>
J. C. Lanier<lb/>
It fa <lb/>
SORTS <lb/>
Lt Old Point . pm <lb/>
Tickets sold to all point north. <lb/>
Lust week Register of Deeds <lb/>
Bell issued marriage <lb/>
to the following <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
David Williams and <lb/>
IS. <lb/>
B. and Lizzie <lb/>
Alice Allen. <lb/>
J. S. Nelson and Alice <lb/>
Whichard. <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
Lesley and Laura Jones. <lb/>
Isaac Staton and Reno Lang- <lb/>
Luther and <lb/>
Kittrell. <lb/>
Peter Langley and Mary Little. <lb/>
Isaac Williams and <lb/>
Brown. <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, Harrows, Distributors, Wag- <lb/>
ons, Cutters, etc., and we know you will become one of our satisfied customers. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, Phone No. <lb/>
a i is i<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018252_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb/>
and FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR<lb/>
Published by <lb/>
COMPANY. Inc. <lb/>
O. J. WHICHARD. Editor. <lb/>
WORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
out . .<lb/>
rate may b had upon <lb/>
application at th office In <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner <lb/>
ml Third <lb/>
All card of thank and resolution <lb/>
respect will be charged at <lb/>
per word. <lb/>
Communication advertising <lb/>
will be charted for at three <lb/>
cent per line, up to fifty linen. <lb/>
as second class matter <lb/>
august 1910. at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina, <lb/>
ct of March S. 1879 <lb/>
FRI DAY, JUNE 1913 <lb/>
MAKES BEST <lb/>
SHOWING <lb/>
Not long since Tho Reflector put <lb/>
out the challenge, for a town <lb/>
of 5.000 imputation, Greenville is the <lb/>
best building and loan town in the <lb/>
Hy way of explanation we <lb/>
said further, The Home Building and <lb/>
Loan Association has been in ex- <lb/>
seven years, has already ma- <lb/>
two series, one of them in <lb/>
weeks, has over shares In force, <lb/>
and there were 1,200 shares in <lb/>
fifteenth series just started. <lb/>
By way of a call on this challenge <lb/>
Mr. R. E. secretary of the <lb/>
Perpetual Building and <lb/>
Loan Association of Charlotte, sends <lb/>
us tho last statement of that <lb/>
That association is thirty <lb/>
year old and has Issued sixty series. <lb/>
Looking over the last twelve series <lb/>
we find that the smallest number <lb/>
of shares in either of them is 1,586 <lb/>
and the largest That is a fine <lb/>
showing, but according to our <lb/>
does not meet That <lb/>
is more than four times as old <lb/>
as Greenville's and Charlotte <lb/>
more than six times as large as <lb/>
Greenville, while the largest series <lb/>
of the Charlotte association is not <lb/>
guile three times as large as Green- <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
The commissioners of Craven <lb/>
have increased the road tax from <lb/>
fifteen to twenty cents. That road <lb/>
tax is five cents higher than will be <lb/>
required in Greenville to <lb/>
carry bonds. Hero a levy <lb/>
of fifteen cents will pay the interest <lb/>
on the bonds, create a sinking fund <lb/>
to pay off the bonds at maturity and <lb/>
leave enough to keep up the <lb/>
after they are built. Yet there are <lb/>
some people who say they had <lb/>
not have good roads if they have <lb/>
come with a bond Issue. Guess <lb/>
they had rather pay twenty cents <lb/>
tax like the Craven county people <lb/>
do, and do a little piece of road work <lb/>
when they can, than to pay <lb/>
cents for a bond issue that will bull <lb/>
roads all over the township and let <lb/>
them have the use of them. <lb/>
The large meeting held in the <lb/>
court house, Saturday, to organ- <lb/>
a Greenville Township Good <lb/>
Roads Association, shows that <lb/>
the people are interested in the <lb/>
coming election on the question <lb/>
of issuing bonds to build good <lb/>
roads in the township. While <lb/>
the attendance was gratefully <lb/>
it would have been much <lb/>
larger had tho meeting been held <lb/>
at a later hour in the day after <lb/>
farmers in town. As it was, <lb/>
the organization with <lb/>
fifty-five members was a fine <lb/>
start Others have since been <lb/>
calling on the secretary to have <lb/>
names enrolled. Every <lb/>
in the township, regardless of <lb/>
political affiliation, is eligible t. <lb/>
membership in the good roads a- <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
This is the last reminder we can <lb/>
give you that a meeting will be held <lb/>
in the court house at noon tomorrow <lb/>
to organize a Greenville Township <lb/>
Good Roads Association. Every one <lb/>
who signed the petition asking for <lb/>
the bond election, as well as all <lb/>
others who favor good roads, <lb/>
attend this meeting and Join in the <lb/>
work for carrying tho election In fa- <lb/>
of bonds. If we get good roads <lb/>
we must work for them. <lb/>
The Reflector has been taking note <lb/>
of the situation and If it is a judge <lb/>
outlook the people of the <lb/>
district arc not going to vote <lb/>
in next Tuesday's election to change <lb/>
the stock law to Its old bounds. They <lb/>
realize the folly of such a change <lb/>
and the cost, and trouble it would <lb/>
cause. Many who formerly opposed <lb/>
It. now realize that stock law is best <lb/>
for them. <lb/>
We went to hammer it under your <lb/>
hat again that on Saturday, at noon, <lb/>
a meeting will be held In tho court <lb/>
house to organize a Greenville Town- <lb/>
ship Good Roads Association to work, <lb/>
for the election on the question of <lb/>
issuing not exceeding bonds <lb/>
to build good roads in tho township. I <lb/>
It is the duty of every man in <lb/>
township who favors good roads to <lb/>
attend that meeting. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The biggest thing before North Car- <lb/>
just now is the freight rate <lb/>
problem. It is hard to understand <lb/>
why the railroads do not prefer to <lb/>
gain the good will of the public <lb/>
i than show a disposition to arouse <lb/>
antagonism and resentment They <lb/>
know they are charging unjust and <lb/>
discriminatory rates in North Caro- <lb/>
and should see the wisdom of <lb/>
o for a <lb/>
of this wrong. <lb/>
There are people of <lb/>
rents they have to pay for houses, i <lb/>
who could stop it very easily by let-1 <lb/>
ting the building and loan <lb/>
help them own a home. There <lb/>
are plenty of Instances <lb/>
amount paid for rent would keep up <lb/>
the building i loan payments, and j <lb/>
In a few years It would be paid for. I <lb/>
Every person In Pitt county who <lb/>
wants to help honor the heroes of the <lb/>
Confederacy in building a monument <lb/>
on the court house square, should <lb/>
get his contribution to the monument <lb/>
fund and hand it over to the commit- <lb/>
tee. Pitt county has long neglected <lb/>
this duty and the time is now here <lb/>
to amends therefor. The <lb/>
committees are at work and <lb/>
they want your help. <lb/>
Former Postmaster General Hitch- <lb/>
cock comes back at Postmaster Gen- <lb/>
for the statement made <lb/>
the latter that the postal depart- <lb/>
was not self-sustaining under <lb/>
the former administration, and says <lb/>
statement is as inaccurate as it <lb/>
Is A show down of fig- <lb/>
ought to disclose which one is <lb/>
correct. <lb/>
A very handsome magazine called <lb/>
edited by Miss Mae Lucile <lb/>
Smith, Is published at Henderson- <lb/>
vile. It is with <lb/>
pretty scenes In western North Caro- <lb/>
and its articles are very Inter- <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
Mr. W. Sherrill. editor of <lb/>
the Concord Tribune and <lb/>
of the North Carolina Press, <lb/>
Association, has been elected I <lb/>
trustee of Trinity College. <lb/>
Wherever you put Sherrill he is <lb/>
right. <lb/>
One of Bud Fisher's recent <lb/>
and pictures had considerable <lb/>
local flavor and caused much amuse- <lb/>
He did not know was <lb/>
so familiar with Greenville names. <lb/>
The State Board of <lb/>
in recently deciding to con- <lb/>
tine appropriations to state and <lb/>
county fairs, added the proviso <lb/>
that fairs to be entitled to the <lb/>
must eliminate all <lb/>
forms of gambling and indecent <lb/>
shows. This is right. We never <lb/>
could see why fairs should not <lb/>
be conducted without the so-call- <lb/>
ed side attractions that rob and <lb/>
fleece the people who attend. In <lb/>
the two years just past Pitt <lb/>
held two fairs, at neither of <lb/>
which no shows of any kind, nor <lb/>
any gambling schemes were <lb/>
lowed. And there were no sales <lb/>
concessions, and even no horse <lb/>
racing. Yet with the absence of <lb/>
all these tilings, which some think <lb/>
are necessary to make a fair, the <lb/>
Pitt fairs were a great <lb/>
success. What was accomplish- <lb/>
ed here can be done anywhere <lb/>
when the management goes at <lb/>
right, that is have a fair and <lb/>
nothing else but a fair. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The entire state mourns the death <lb/>
cf Dr. T. B. which occur- <lb/>
Wednesday at his homo In <lb/>
He was years of age. <lb/>
the dean of North Carolina Journalism <lb/>
and a most gifted writer. Because <lb/>
of advanced years he retired some time <lb/>
ago from active work, but at interval <lb/>
since the people have had the pleas- <lb/>
of reading his brilliant <lb/>
Business men of Greenville can <lb/>
well afford to leave their places for <lb/>
an hour tomorrow to attend the meet- <lb/>
in the court house to organize a <lb/>
Greenville Township Good Roads As- <lb/>
The roads will be as <lb/>
benefit to them as to anybody, and <lb/>
it is their duty to help get them. <lb/>
It s a far fetched Idea that tries <lb/>
to make any relation between the <lb/>
proposed bond Issue for good roads <lb/>
in Greenville township and the stock <lb/>
law question in other section of the <lb/>
county. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
At Oriental a whole cargo of liquor <lb/>
was captured by the Sheriff of Pam- <lb/>
and confiscated. That is where <lb/>
the search and seizure law played a <lb/>
good hand. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, June the <lb/>
beautiful country home of Mr. and <lb/>
Mr. Alfred near here, <lb/>
their daughter, yesterday <lb/>
married to Mr. David Williams of <lb/>
Tho parlor was tastily <lb/>
decorated in green and white, a pro- <lb/>
fusion of ferns, potted plant and <lb/>
Cowers being In evidence. <lb/>
Promptly at o'clock to the trains <lb/>
of wedding march, char- <lb/>
rendered by Ml Lucy Belle <lb/>
Langston, Miss Eva Langston and <lb/>
Miss Anna sister of the <lb/>
bride, entered the parlor where a <lb/>
large number of relatives and friends <lb/>
were gathered. Next came the groom <lb/>
with Mr. Q. H. Edwards of <lb/>
followed closely by the bride, upon <lb/>
the arm of her brother, Mr. <lb/>
of When <lb/>
reached the side of the groom who <lb/>
awaited her at the altar, they were <lb/>
made man and wife by Rev. C. K. <lb/>
Howard of KInston. <lb/>
Immediately after the ceremony the <lb/>
happy couple left In the groom's <lb/>
handsome automobile for Greenville, <lb/>
where they took the train for New <lb/>
York. Niagara and other points north <lb/>
and west. They are followed by the <lb/>
hearty congratulations and good <lb/>
wishes of a host of friends. <lb/>
Something else that is growing <lb/>
most as fast as crops. Is sentiment In <lb/>
favor of the bond issue to build good <lb/>
roads In Greenville township. <lb/>
Attorney General comes <lb/>
to the conclusion that neither the <lb/>
Standard Oil Company nor the Ame-- <lb/>
Tobacco Company have really <lb/>
dissolved. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The leaders in the tariff revision <lb/>
believe In looking out for the In- <lb/>
f the people who cat, and have, <lb/>
decided to put meats and on th <lb/>
free list. <lb/>
The endowment of Trinity College <lb/>
now aggregates the <lb/>
est endowment of any Southern col- <lb/>
Greenville is full of people <lb/>
here to attend the Training <lb/>
School commencement. And n <lb/>
cordial welcome is extended to <lb/>
each and every one. <lb/>
Former President Taft made a <lb/>
It back to tho White House to see <lb/>
how it looks with President Wilson <lb/>
at the of the <lb/>
And even June la giving us weather <lb/>
that makes fires comfortable. <lb/>
Today closes the commencement cf <lb/>
East Carolina Teachers Training <lb/>
School. After a week's Intermission <lb/>
the summer term will begin. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
The fellows who thought they <lb/>
would train Governor for the <lb/>
senatorial race have discovered their <lb/>
mistake. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
If Greenville had a large cotton <lb/>
factory, business men would not <lb/>
complain of duller Saturdays In the <lb/>
summer months. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
Now get to work In earnest to car- <lb/>
tho election for bonds for good <lb/>
roads in Greenville township. <lb/>
President Wilson has appointed <lb/>
Maj. E. J. Hale, of to <lb/>
be minister to Costa Rica. <lb/>
Good Committee <lb/>
L. A. Randolph, of the <lb/>
Greenville Township Good Roads As- <lb/>
named the following com- <lb/>
authorized by the meeting <lb/>
held In the court house <lb/>
Executive John F. Ev- <lb/>
ans, L. Joyner, A. A. Forbes, J, <lb/>
W. Allen. J. F. Pollard. John F. Craw- <lb/>
W. Harvey Allen, G. A. Evans, <lb/>
Adrian Savage, Adolph Fur- <lb/>
Allen Bowen, <lb/>
John J. H. Boyd, Sr Major <lb/>
Mills, Geo. W. Stokes, Robert Allen, <lb/>
Walter Cherry, L. C. Arthur, Char- <lb/>
He Tucker, Tucker, John <lb/>
R. W. Brown, W. E. Lewis, <lb/>
Arthur Mayo, L. A. Mayo, John ft. <lb/>
Taylor, Sam Hodges, J. J. Jones, <lb/>
Henry R. Johnson, F. E. Randolph, <lb/>
D. J. R. L. Little. Dr. J. <lb/>
E. Nobles, J. B. White. E. B. <lb/>
W. H. Dall, Dr. L. C. Skinner, J. W. <lb/>
Ferrell. J. J. Harrington, J. O. <lb/>
C. S. Carr, J. B. James. Dr. <lb/>
C. E. G. Flan- <lb/>
J. L. Little, F. C. Harding, <lb/>
F. J Forbes. S. J. Everett. <lb/>
Campaign H. A. White, <lb/>
J N. Hart, S. T. White, D. M. Clark. <lb/>
C. T. C. E. Fleming, W. <lb/>
Harvey Allen. <lb/>
A meeting of the campaign commit- <lb/>
tee Is called for night. <lb/>
11th. at o'clock In the county <lb/>
commissioners of the court <lb/>
house. As many of the executive <lb/>
committee as can attend are also ask <lb/>
ed to be at this meeting. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Co., <lb/>
for your light plow shoes In mens and <lb/>
boys. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber and Company <lb/>
will save you some money on your <lb/>
simmer straw hats. <lb/>
Mr. A. D. was here yes- <lb/>
attending the wedding. <lb/>
Miss Lena Cobb of Conetoe Is vis- <lb/>
Miss Anna this week. <lb/>
Miss Cox left this morning <lb/>
for Gold Rock, where she will spend <lb/>
a few days before going to Greens- <lb/>
where she will attend the bus- <lb/>
school at the Normal College. <lb/>
A. W. Ange and Co., has a full <lb/>
supply of large stone Jars and stone <lb/>
water tanks. <lb/>
Miss Mantle Whitehurst of Bethel <lb/>
U her uncle, Mr. M. G. Bryan. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. pf <lb/>
Kinston attended the marriage of Mr. <lb/>
sister, Miss to <lb/>
Mr. Williams, and returned home yes <lb/>
See A. W. Ange and Co., for a com- <lb/>
line of mill supplies. <lb/>
Mr. L. L. made a trip <lb/>
to yesterday to see the <lb/>
Bloomer girls cross bats with the Rob <lb/>
team. <lb/>
See Cox and House for cigars, cad- <lb/>
and cold drinks. <lb/>
Miss Maud Holiday of <lb/>
was here visiting friends yesterday. <lb/>
Dry goods, notions and shoe are <lb/>
going at cost at Cox and House's <lb/>
store. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE. June are <lb/>
I glad to hear that Mrs. Polly Nobles <lb/>
is Improving after having been very <lb/>
ill for sometime. We trust that Aunt <lb/>
Polly may soon be out with her <lb/>
again. <lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. T. B. Cox left Sat- <lb/>
morning for the St. Vincent <lb/>
Hospital at Norfolk, where they car- <lb/>
their daughter, Miss for <lb/>
an operation for appendicitis. Dr. <lb/>
i Cox returned yesterday, and says <lb/>
. that the operation was performed Sun- <lb/>
I day morning, and that Miss <lb/>
l getting along well. We hope to <lb/>
have her back with us again. <lb/>
I Tobacco, cotton, lime, thermometers <lb/>
and lanterns at A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Selling out at cost, dry goods and <lb/>
notions at Cox House. <lb/>
There will be a ball game here Sat- <lb/>
The team Is com- <lb/>
down to try our team. We feel <lb/>
confident that they will find that our <lb/>
boys do not sleep on their and <lb/>
certainly not on bases. The game <lb/>
will be railed at o'clock. Every <lb/>
body come out and enjoy a good game <lb/>
of ball. <lb/>
Mr. Jerome Smith has a case of <lb/>
fever. hope that It may prove to <lb/>
be a light case and that Mr. <lb/>
will soon be out again. <lb/>
See Harrington, Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your mowing machines and <lb/>
rakes, they will save you money on <lb/>
them. <lb/>
A new lot of felt and straw mat- <lb/>
tresses at A. W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Messrs. S. B. and H. W. Clark of <lb/>
Wilson are visiting at the home of <lb/>
Mr. R. O. Chapman. <lb/>
Miss Fannie Lee Spier Is visiting <lb/>
In Greenville. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber and Company <lb/>
can supply your want in cultivator, <lb/>
the very thing move the <lb/>
grass. <lb/>
Cold drink. Ice cream and cigars <lb/>
at Cox and House's. <lb/>
Brad, Pleads Guilty <lb/>
ATLANTA, June <lb/>
KIrby. who under the alias of <lb/>
Brother James posed as a <lb/>
priest and swindled Catholic residents <lb/>
of Atlanta and other southern <lb/>
cities out of small sums, gull- <lb/>
t- today In the United district <lb/>
court to charges of using the malls <lb/>
to defraud. KIrby was sentenced by <lb/>
Federal Judge William T. Newman <lb/>
to three In the federal prison <lb/>
and to pay a fine of f <lb/>
Good Road <lb/>
Column <lb/>
I EFFECT OF GOOD ROADS <lb/>
SOCIALLY AND FINANCIALLY <lb/>
We are entering upon an age of <lb/>
progress and development. The <lb/>
Is grasping new Ideas and adopt- <lb/>
new that look to the <lb/>
broadening of our national life phys- <lb/>
mentally and financially. To <lb/>
keep abreast of the times and go <lb/>
hand In hand with her sister states <lb/>
North Carolina must utilize her re- <lb/>
sources and every energy. Sure <lb/>
her lagging behind will not block <lb/>
the wheels of progress, but we must <lb/>
realize that to keep our enterprising <lb/>
young men In this state we must <lb/>
offer them inducements that can be <lb/>
obtained elsewhere. <lb/>
As it Is with the nation and the <lb/>
state, so it is with the state and the <lb/>
county. The grand old of Pitt <lb/>
cannot afford to Bit still and <lb/>
be contented while the other counties <lb/>
of the state are striving In every way <lb/>
to more perfectly develop their re- <lb/>
sources. We cannot expect the <lb/>
young men to remain here or others <lb/>
to be attracted to our midst unless <lb/>
we can offer them at least a part of <lb/>
what Other localities are giving. <lb/>
There is nothing that adds so <lb/>
much to the attractiveness of a com- <lb/>
as good roads. And good <lb/>
roads as much as anything else make <lb/>
ruling a profitable occupation. <lb/>
Social intercourse that Is so <lb/>
to the happiness of human be- <lb/>
especially the youth, is made <lb/>
by good roads. If young <lb/>
and young women are to be kept <lb/>
on the farm and away from the fas- <lb/>
cities, the farm and com- <lb/>
must be made attractive <lb/>
them. There Is no possible way of <lb/>
keeping the young boys from going <lb/>
to town to see their sweethearts <lb/>
so why not give him a <lb/>
good road that will shorten his trip <lb/>
and make It easy for him Other- <lb/>
wise he will begin to dread the trip <lb/>
and decide to locate In town and <lb/>
avoid the long and sandy drive. <lb/>
To the active energetic farmer who <lb/>
makes his time count, the monetary <lb/>
value of good roads <lb/>
First. A reduction In the cost of <lb/>
hauling, by saving time, carrying <lb/>
loads and reducing the wear and <lb/>
tear on wagons and strain on <lb/>
Second. An Increase In the value <lb/>
of lands within Its zone of Influence. <lb/>
Third. Increase in productive area <lb/>
the making of uncultivated land <lb/>
accessible. <lb/>
Fourth. The substitution of the <lb/>
more profitable crops for the less <lb/>
profitable crops. <lb/>
Fifth. The ability of the producer <lb/>
to market his at a time <lb/>
when prices are most favorable, In- <lb/>
stead of marketing the Just <lb/>
when the roads permit. <lb/>
The time Is ripe for action, good <lb/>
roads will benefit all classes and ail <lb/>
professionals, corporations and <lb/>
alike, so lets all Join the <lb/>
Good Road Association and boost <lb/>
a movement that never has failed to <lb/>
rive progress and success. <lb/>
D. if. CLARK. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
The stockholder for the Farmers <lb/>
Bank of Greenville are hereby called <lb/>
meet In Grand Jury room Pitt <lb/>
county court house on the 25th day of <lb/>
June, 1913. at p. m. sharp for tho <lb/>
purpose of electing officer and or- <lb/>
tho said proposed bank. All <lb/>
subscribers and those who wish to <lb/>
take stock are alike cordially invited. <lb/>
J. J. HARRINGTON. <lb/>
M. G. BRYAN, <lb/>
E. H. EVANS, <lb/>
QUINN, MILLER AND CO. <lb/>
B. S. <lb/>
RANDOLPH BROS. <lb/>
R. L. LITTLE, <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS, <lb/>
S. T. HOOKER. <lb/>
PAUL SOLOMON. <lb/>
J. W. BRYAN, <lb/>
H. T. <lb/>
W. B. NOBLES, <lb/>
S. S. SMITH. <lb/>
F. C. NYE, <lb/>
M. B. BRYAN. <lb/>
B. T. COX. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Jenkins-Cox <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A O. Cox <lb/>
Invite you to present at the <lb/>
marriage of their daughter <lb/>
Elizabeth <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Herbert Jenkins <lb/>
Thursday evening. June the twenty <lb/>
Thursday evening <lb/>
the twenty-sixth <lb/>
nineteen hundred and thirteen <lb/>
at nine o'clock <lb/>
Baptist church <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
At Homo <lb/>
after July 10th <lb/>
Aulander, N. C. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt County. <lb/>
In the Superior Court, Before the <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
J. F. and J. H. <lb/>
vs. Anna Moore, A. J. Moore, Jerry <lb/>
Moore, Hoy Moore, Herman Moore <lb/>
and Jerome Moore. <lb/>
The defendants above named, and <lb/>
especially the defendant Anna Moore <lb/>
and Moore, will take notice <lb/>
that an action entitled a above ha <lb/>
been commenced before the Clerk of <lb/>
the superior court of Pitt county to <lb/>
sell for partition a certain parcel of <lb/>
land In township. In Pitt <lb/>
county, adjoining the land of Aaron <lb/>
S. J. and <lb/>
others, containing SO acres more <lb/>
and said defendants and each <lb/>
of them will take further notice that <lb/>
they are required to appear before the <lb/>
clerk of said court on the 80th day <lb/>
of June, 1913, and answer or demur <lb/>
to the complaint and petition filed in <lb/>
said action, or the plaintiffs will <lb/>
ply to the court for the relief de- <lb/>
in said petition. <lb/>
This the 15th day of May, 1913. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
F. G. JAMES and SON, <lb/>
for plaintiff. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having duly qualified before tho <lb/>
superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
administratrix of the state of R. L. <lb/>
Warren, deceased, notice la hereby <lb/>
given to all persons Indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make Immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned; and all persons <lb/>
having claims against said estate are <lb/>
notified to present tho same to the <lb/>
undersigned for payment on or be- <lb/>
fore the 23rd day of May, 1914, or <lb/>
this notice will be plead In bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This 23rd day of May, 1918. <lb/>
MAUD E. WARREN, <lb/>
of R. L. Warren. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having qualified as administrator <lb/>
of Eddie T. Powell, late of <lb/>
Pitt county, N. C, this to notify <lb/>
all person having claim against the <lb/>
estate of Bald deceased to exhibit them <lb/>
to the undersigned within one year <lb/>
from the date of this notice, or this <lb/>
notice will be pleaded in bar of <lb/>
recovery. All persons Indebted to <lb/>
said estate will please make <lb/>
payment <lb/>
This the 16th day of May 1913. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN, <lb/>
ltd Administrator. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
Having qualified as administrator <lb/>
of Major T. Jefferson, deceased, late <lb/>
of Pitt county. N. C, I to <lb/>
all persons having claim against <lb/>
the estate of the said deceased to ex- <lb/>
them to the undersigned within <lb/>
twelve months from the date of this <lb/>
or notice will be pleaded <lb/>
In bar of their recovery. All persons <lb/>
Indebted to said estate will please <lb/>
make Immediate payment. <lb/>
This the 29th day of April, 1913. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN, Administrator. <lb/>
J. EVERETT, Attorney. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS <lb/>
The undersigned having duly <lb/>
before the superior court clerk <lb/>
of Pitt as executors of the <lb/>
last Will and Testament of John Elks, <lb/>
deceased, notice Is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to the estate to <lb/>
make Immediate payment to the <lb/>
and all persons having <lb/>
claims against the estate are notified <lb/>
to present the same to the undersign- <lb/>
ed for payment on or before the 5th <lb/>
day of June, 1914, or this notice will <lb/>
be plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This the 5th day of June, 1913. <lb/>
C. S. and J. J. ELKS, <lb/>
Executors of John Elks. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
executor of the estate of Luke Lang- <lb/>
deceased, notice I hereby given <lb/>
to all persons Indebted to the estate <lb/>
to make Immediate payment to the <lb/>
undersigned; and all persons having <lb/>
claims against said estate are notified <lb/>
to present the same to the undersign- <lb/>
ed for payment on or before the 11th <lb/>
day of June, 1914, or their notice will <lb/>
plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
11th day of June, 1913. <lb/>
W. L. CLARKE, <lb/>
Executor for Luke Langley. <lb/>
Id <lb/>
EDITOR AGAIN <lb/>
FULLED UP IN COURT <lb/>
WASHINGTON, N. C. June <lb/>
case of E. F. of Elizabeth <lb/>
City, against W. O. editor <lb/>
of the Independent of Elizabeth City, <lb/>
will be brought up before Recorder <lb/>
here tomorrow morning. <lb/>
recently sentenced to <lb/>
six month In the road for publish- <lb/>
an alleged slanderous statement <lb/>
about The latter has the <lb/>
right to have the editor tried In <lb/>
county In which the Independent <lb/>
circulates if he so desires, it I claim- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
tarn Mar tire <lb/>
The worst cues, no matter of how Handing, <lb/>
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. <lb/>
Porter's Healing Oil. It <lb/>
and at l-- time. <lb/>
Young Ladies Graduate At <lb/>
Bl REV. <lb/>
Manager Of The <lb/>
Orphanage. Greenville People <lb/>
Attend Of Alum <lb/>
Association <lb/>
HENRY ARNOLD <lb/>
GOLDSBORO, N. C, June <lb/>
bright, promising young girl com- <lb/>
pose the class at the first <lb/>
commencement exercises ever held in <lb/>
the new graded and high school at the <lb/>
Odd Fellows Home In this <lb/>
city, the first service which began <lb/>
on Sunday night with an Inspiring <lb/>
sermon by Rev. M. L. <lb/>
manager of the Thomasville Or- <lb/>
The Odd Orphan <lb/>
Home Is one of the oldest In North <lb/>
Carolina, but never until this year <lb/>
has there been a high school conduct- <lb/>
ed under Its own roof; and never <lb/>
last year was there even a school <lb/>
of any sort, except the weekly Sun- <lb/>
day school on Sunday afternoons. <lb/>
Until two years ago these children <lb/>
were all taught In the city schools <lb/>
of but at that time, on <lb/>
the grounds that they wore unable <lb/>
to admit the orphans free of <lb/>
any longer, the officers of the Golds- <lb/>
bore graded schools notified the sup- <lb/>
and trustees of the or- <lb/>
home that It would be <lb/>
for the children to attend the <lb/>
school longer unless they were paid <lb/>
for at the regular rate. The matter <lb/>
was Immediately taken up by the <lb/>
trustees and referred to the <lb/>
Lodge at its meeting, when it was <lb/>
decided to educate tho children in <lb/>
the Home. Not being in position, for <lb/>
want of time, to prepare for the high <lb/>
school by the opening of the fall <lb/>
team, the primary and grammar <lb/>
schools only were taught at the Home <lb/>
for the first year, those in the high <lb/>
school being continued for one year <lb/>
at the cost imposed by the school <lb/>
authorities. So It happens that the <lb/>
year Just closing marks the first <lb/>
the history of the high school at the <lb/>
Home. <lb/>
connection with the closing cf <lb/>
the high school year to be <lb/>
held the sixth annual reunion of the <lb/>
Alumni Association of I. O. O. F. Or- <lb/>
Home. This is an organization <lb/>
formed in 1905 by the former <lb/>
of the Institution who have <lb/>
the Home. It has been holding an <lb/>
meetings each year with but <lb/>
two interruptions since that time, an l <lb/>
all have been attended by large <lb/>
of children who once shared the <lb/>
benefits of the Institution. <lb/>
between fifteen and twenty are hero <lb/>
for the reunion this year and many <lb/>
more are expected before the services <lb/>
are The association has <lb/>
equipment of a modern <lb/>
library and reading room at the home <lb/>
and has accumulated a large number <lb/>
books and magazines. The officers <lb/>
are as President, Edward M. <lb/>
Davis. vice president. <lb/>
Mrs. D. W. Davis. Goldsboro; <lb/>
Henry A. Dennis, <lb/>
historian. W. F. Evans. Greenville. <lb/>
The meeting of the Alumni <lb/>
Association will be held tomorrow. <lb/>
The graduates exercises will come <lb/>
tomorrow night. <lb/>
Training School Closes <lb/>
Successful Year With <lb/>
Exercises of To-Day <lb/>
Commencement Address Delivered this Morn- <lb/>
by Hon. Henry Page of <lb/>
Aberdeen. <lb/>
It Is hoped that long after the young- May their portraits hanging here EXAMINATION FOB POST- <lb/>
et of the present members of our Lit- ; through all the passing <lb/>
Society shall have completed serve to teach ill this <lb/>
life that shall spiring lesson of their <lb/>
upon this face and thereby gain best serve all their fellow men who <lb/>
I a higher and a holler aspiration. serve those nearest them the best <lb/>
As a representative of the Edgar they And as the younger gen- <lb/>
; Allan Poe Literary Society I take look upon this older <lb/>
great pleasure In presenting to the face may they read in Its calmness fourth class postmaster <lb/>
AT <lb/>
The Unite. States Civil Service <lb/>
Commission announces that on Sat- <lb/>
June 1913, an examination <lb/>
will be at Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
a result of which It is expected to <lb/>
make certification to fill a <lb/>
plated vacancy In the position of <lb/>
A census school children of the <lb/>
graded school district Is now being <lb/>
taken and numerous reports and re- <lb/>
cords are being made for the future <lb/>
use of the school and for the state <lb/>
department of education. One of a <lb/>
number of Interesting facts shown by <lb/>
the records Is the number of grad- <lb/>
of the school, and what they <lb/>
are now doing. <lb/>
Fifty-nine persons have received the <lb/>
full high school diploma from the <lb/>
graded school. The fifteen who re- <lb/>
diplomas at the recent com- <lb/>
are so fresh from school <lb/>
that they have not decided upon their <lb/>
but It certain that moat <lb/>
of them will enter college next fall. <lb/>
Of the forty four who have graduate <lb/>
prior to this year, twenty are In col- <lb/>
and high Institutions; eleven, <lb/>
or one fourth of the total, are <lb/>
ed In teaching. One I In the news- <lb/>
paper work In Washington City; one <lb/>
Is a lawyer; two are engaged in bus- <lb/>
two are at home; six are mar- <lb/>
and the whereabouts of one Is <lb/>
unknown to u. <lb/>
The fact that over thirty-three per <lb/>
cent of the former graduates are en- <lb/>
gaged In teaching and other useful <lb/>
occupations and that nearly fifty per <lb/>
cent are In higher Institution <lb/>
paring for wider usefulness, speaks <lb/>
well for the people. The re- <lb/>
cord of the <lb/>
will bear favorable comparison with <lb/>
those of any town In the state. <lb/>
PRESENTATION OF DIPLOMAS <lb/>
Many Interesting Features Mark the Closing Days of the Fourth An- <lb/>
Commencement of the East Carolina Teachers <lb/>
Training School. <lb/>
school the portrait of our loyal sup and its peace, in Its gentleness and <lb/>
porter, our faithful advisor and Its strength in its benevolence and <lb/>
friend Ex-Gov. J. Jarvis, its sweet content perfected ages call <lb/>
Mr. Ch. of Board of Trustees, <lb/>
and old along with me <lb/>
In heaping honors on the heads of to be <lb/>
The last of life for the first <lb/>
the already great and honored we wag made- <lb/>
j lines forget that around us are <lb/>
spending their lives In working for <lb/>
at <lb/>
C, and other <lb/>
a they may occur at that <lb/>
office, unless it shall be decided In <lb/>
the interests of the service to fill the <lb/>
vacancy by reinstatement. The com- <lb/>
of the postmaster at this <lb/>
office was for the last fiscal <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Age limit, years and over on <lb/>
The portraits were painted by Mr. date of the examination, with the <lb/>
exception that in a state where <lb/>
n are declared by statute to be <lb/>
Order of Exercises <lb/>
Prayer <lb/>
J. H. Shore <lb/>
Ye Portals, Chorus <lb/>
Annual Address <lb/>
Hon. Henry A. Page <lb/>
. Chorus <lb/>
Presentation of Diplomas and Bibles <lb/>
Chorus from <lb/>
. Chorus <lb/>
Presentation of Portraits <lb/>
Poe and Literary Societies <lb/>
. Chorus <lb/>
Announcements <lb/>
. Chorus <lb/>
Benediction <lb/>
Rev. J. H. Shore <lb/>
Commencement Exercises <lb/>
At ten thirty this morning a largo <lb/>
assembled In the <lb/>
of the East Carolina Teachers Train- <lb/>
School. <lb/>
The exercises were opened by a <lb/>
by Rev. J. H. Shore. <lb/>
Ye by Gounod, <lb/>
was sung by the full chorus. <lb/>
After this Pres. R. H. Wright In- <lb/>
the speaker of the day, Hon. <lb/>
If. A. Page. Pres. Wright said It <lb/>
had been the policy of the school each <lb/>
year to get as a speaker some North <lb/>
Carolina man. a man who stands for <lb/>
something. In this money mad age <lb/>
It is well to realize that manhood <lb/>
and womanhood are the greatest as- <lb/>
sets of any state, county or town. <lb/>
He said he felt peculiarly fortunate <lb/>
In securing as a speaker a man who <lb/>
stands for the best in North Carolina <lb/>
manhood and In good citizenship. <lb/>
Mr. Page's subject was Bond- <lb/>
age of It was a great <lb/>
Mr. Page made a great speech on <lb/>
Bondage of He had <lb/>
a real message of power that Indicates <lb/>
a deep understanding of present con- <lb/>
a message from a man who <lb/>
dares to think for himself, who while <lb/>
he has the judgment to accept what <lb/>
Is good In the past, the courage <lb/>
to reject the bad, to cast aside out- <lb/>
grown systems, and to respect the <lb/>
and the future. <lb/>
A full report of the speech will <lb/>
appear In tomorrow's Reflector. <lb/>
The choruses were beautiful, the <lb/>
purity of tone and interpretation of <lb/>
the songs was marvelous. A chorus <lb/>
of about a hundred was on the stage. <lb/>
The whole audience joined In the <lb/>
singing of and <lb/>
Diplomas were presented <lb/>
Mary Emma Clark, Pitt county. <lb/>
Ruth Davit, Atlanta, <lb/>
Willie Greene Day, Raleigh. <lb/>
Mary Lucy Dupree, Greenville. <lb/>
Viola Elm City. <lb/>
Ellington, Greenville. <lb/>
Pearl Fleming, Greenville. <lb/>
Freeman, Washington. <lb/>
Annie May Hudson, <lb/>
Josephine Little, <lb/>
Mabel Lucas, Plymouth. <lb/>
Brownie Martin, Youngsville. <lb/>
Alice Weldon. <lb/>
Mary Moore, Pitt county. <lb/>
Ruth Moore, Burgaw. <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Ethel Perry, Kinston. <lb/>
Swansboro . <lb/>
Quinn, <lb/>
Willie Lee Smith, Oxford. <lb/>
Elizabeth Shell, Warrenton. <lb/>
Hattie Taylor, Rocky <lb/>
Josephine Tillery, Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Mary Ruth Tunstall, <lb/>
Harriet Whitehurst, <lb/>
Mary Newby White, <lb/>
Hattie Weeks, Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Mary Weeks, Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Lena White, Belhaven. <lb/>
certificates were given to those <lb/>
who had completed the one year <lb/>
course. <lb/>
Resolution Passed by the Literary <lb/>
Society, Hay 1911 <lb/>
As a of the deep debt <lb/>
of gratitude we owe to, and the sin- <lb/>
love and appreciation we have <lb/>
for Mr. W. H. In whose <lb/>
brain the East Carolina Teachers <lb/>
Training School first had It inception <lb/>
and whose efforts, <lb/>
zeal and rare professional spirit <lb/>
created tho desire in the minds and <lb/>
the hearts of others, and as a <lb/>
our debt of gratitude and <lb/>
sincere love and affection we have <lb/>
for GOT. J. Jarvis, whose mind <lb/>
once caught the significance and <lb/>
people and the children of the <lb/>
worth of such an Institution to the <lb/>
North he loves so <lb/>
whose rare gifts of organization and <lb/>
leadership made It possible to bring <lb/>
this school to this splendid reality, <lb/>
Be It Resolved, That the Lit <lb/>
Society and the Edgar Allan <lb/>
Poe Literary Society think and be- <lb/>
that the feeling of love and <lb/>
which the school has for <lb/>
Us founders, Mr. W. H. and <lb/>
Gov. J. Jarvis should find ex- <lb/>
In some fitting concrete form <lb/>
that would have a permanent place <lb/>
upon the walls of our school to serve <lb/>
as a constant reminder of the debt <lb/>
of gratitude we owe these an an-1 <lb/>
be a constant Inspiration to all to <lb/>
be of service to his fellow man, <lb/>
Be It Resolved. That no more fitting <lb/>
could we have than the <lb/>
of these men done In oil., <lb/>
painted by a good portrait artist, <lb/>
Be It Resolved, That the <lb/>
Literary Society In conjunction with <lb/>
the Edgar Allan Poe Literary Society <lb/>
put forth every effort to carry out <lb/>
provisions of these resolutions, <lb/>
Be it That the ways and <lb/>
means of carrying out tho provisions <lb/>
be left to a committee consisting of <lb/>
two members from the Liter- <lb/>
Society, two members from the <lb/>
Edgar Allan Literary Society, and <lb/>
two members from the faculty. <lb/>
Be It Resolved, That these <lb/>
be spread upon the permanent <lb/>
cord our state has made that we are <lb/>
sometimes accused of being egotistic <lb/>
in our praise of her. <lb/>
But with all our pride It seems to <lb/>
be nature to neglect true <lb/>
greatness at our door while we won- <lb/>
to places far remote In search <lb/>
of It. prophet Is not <lb/>
honor save In his own Is <lb/>
just as true today It was when <lb/>
uttered by the Divine Master almost <lb/>
two thousand years ago. Too often <lb/>
It Is the case that we roses <lb/>
In profusion over the graves of de- <lb/>
parted loved ones while the living <lb/>
travel life's highway In sadness with <lb/>
never a flower to cheer them on their <lb/>
way. We believe that we have as <lb/>
great men In our own city of Green- <lb/>
ville as exist In the state of North <lb/>
Carolina and It Is our delight to do <lb/>
them honor while we may. <lb/>
time ago the literary <lb/>
records of the and Edgar Al- <lb/>
Poe Literary <lb/>
WOODBURN, <lb/>
LILLIE BUNTING, <lb/>
RUTH MOORE, <lb/>
H. E. AUSTIN, <lb/>
Committee on resolutions from the <lb/>
Literary <lb/>
PATTIE <lb/>
EDNA CAMPBELL, <lb/>
BLANCHE LANCASTER, <lb/>
LEON R. MEADOWS, <lb/>
Committee on resolutions from the <lb/>
Edgar Allan Poe Literary Society. <lb/>
Presentation of Gov. Jarvis Portrait <lb/>
the good of their fellowmen. We be- Busbee, of Raleigh, an at- <lb/>
la show-in our appreciation of of whom North Carolina is Justly <lb/>
the services of our friend and of delight of <lb/>
them in the midst of their from the audience as the veil <lb/>
efforts, tell from the portraits. Mr. Busbee <lb/>
At last it was with such a in grasping <lb/>
as this that the E. A. P. and S L L Personality of each man and In <lb/>
societies decided to have made on <lb/>
as the canvas last those who come <lb/>
after will come under Influence of <lb/>
these two men and will understand <lb/>
traits of two of the men who have <lb/>
served this institution so well. <lb/>
As a representative of the S. L. L. <lb/>
Society I have the pleasure today of are in the <lb/>
presenting the portrait of the man they founded, <lb/>
who first conceived idea of such <lb/>
an institution. Tue Meeting <lb/>
be the art that can Immortalize The Alumnae Association had an ca <lb/>
The art that baffles tyrannic at yesterday <lb/>
i chain afternoon. A constitution was adopt- <lb/>
To quench ed and the for <lb/>
There are many men with minds year <lb/>
i which grasp big Ideas and are ready MUg Nell render, <lb/>
to execute them, but to a few president. Miss Edna <lb/>
who live for and study the needs cf Campbell <lb/>
their state Is given the foresight and; Second Sara <lb/>
power of conceiving plans and Ideas Waller. <lb/>
which will serve to better the masses j Sec-Treas. Miss Marguerite Davis, <lb/>
of the state they love so well. Committee is com- <lb/>
It has been said that the scholar the <lb/>
is the eye of the state and rightly so and three members <lb/>
far to the teacher who had come in the association. These three <lb/>
contact with the problem untrained Edna Campbell, Estelle Greene <lb/>
teachers In Eastern Carolina, in the and Margaret <lb/>
beginning of the 20th century come <lb/>
the vision of a need for an Institution <lb/>
to prepare and train teacher that <lb/>
might Instruct the youth of our state <lb/>
The class of 1913 was welcomed <lb/>
into the association. <lb/>
The following alumnae are attend- <lb/>
Class of 1911, <lb/>
So strongly was the need felt Margaret Blow, <lb/>
this man began sowing the seeds In Ruth Ila <lb/>
the minds of the people of Eastern Car j lock, and Mrs. Leon Fleming; Class <lb/>
educating them gradually Marguerite Davis, <lb/>
see and feel what be the Nannie Bowling, Willie <lb/>
of such an institution as to Harden, Ethel Hum- <lb/>
our state. Sara Waller, Estelle Greene, Ma- <lb/>
When the legislature convened Williams, Eula Proctor. Edna <lb/>
1907 to assistance came such, , Best Dall. <lb/>
men as Pitt able represents- The Dinner <lb/>
In the senate, Mr. Flem- <lb/>
of Greenville and states old <lb/>
friend to education Ex-Gov. J. <lb/>
Jarvis. <lb/>
With their assistance and his per- <lb/>
efforts and logical reasoning <lb/>
as to need for such an institution <lb/>
the E. T. T. S. was established <lb/>
by an act of the general assembly, <lb/>
ratified on the 8th day of March, <lb/>
1907. <lb/>
Mr. Ch, of Bord of Trustees. I now <lb/>
have the honor of presenting to you <lb/>
the portrait of Mr. W. H. <lb/>
of Greenville, N. C, a man whom as <lb/>
a citizen we long ago learned to re- <lb/>
as a leader we have come to <lb/>
honor and as a teacher we have grown <lb/>
to love. <lb/>
Mr. hit's Acceptance <lb/>
It Is fitting that the first two <lb/>
traits to adorn the walls of the East <lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training School <lb/>
by Mis Hattie Weeks <lb/>
Mr. President, Ladles and <lb/>
The state of North Carolina is Just- <lb/>
proud of her noble men and <lb/>
men, and well may she be, for no <lb/>
state in the Union can boast of a <lb/>
better citizenship. In war end In <lb/>
peace her soldiers and her statesmen <lb/>
have always ranked with best <lb/>
that our nation has produced. These <lb/>
things we as North Carolinians are <lb/>
not only willing but glad to admit. <lb/>
In fact, so proud are we the re- <lb/>
of this school decided to have <lb/>
oil paintings made of two of the found <lb/>
of our beloved Institution and as <lb/>
a representative of the Edgar Allan <lb/>
Poe Society It becomes my happy <lb/>
now to present one of those <lb/>
portraits to the school. Tho subject <lb/>
of this portrait Is a man whose <lb/>
are well known to u all and a <lb/>
man whom we have all learned to <lb/>
love. any eulogy that I could <lb/>
offer e useless. He Is a man <lb/>
who has been honored In every way <lb/>
possible by our state and a man who <lb/>
at one time represented our nation In <lb/>
a foreign country. And after all <lb/>
these had been bestowed up- <lb/>
on him, he did not think It beneath his <lb/>
dignity to settle In the town of Green- <lb/>
ville and here spend the closing years <lb/>
of his life the betterment of the <lb/>
masses of the state he loves so <lb/>
It duo largely to his Influence that <lb/>
the East Carolina Teachers Training <lb/>
School Is In existence today and that <lb/>
It Is located at Greenville; and as <lb/>
member of the Board of Trustees and <lb/>
chairman the executive committee <lb/>
he has done much toward bringing <lb/>
the school up to Its present condition. <lb/>
The dinning hall of E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
presented a beautiful scene last <lb/>
The decorations of sweet peas <lb/>
and ferns were In peculiar <lb/>
with bright, pretty faces of girls <lb/>
and the light evening dresses. <lb/>
Those present were the members <lb/>
of the three classes, 1911, and <lb/>
the faculty and officers, some <lb/>
of the Board of Trustees and a <lb/>
few out of town guests, special com- <lb/>
visitors. <lb/>
Miss Marguerite Davis, made a <lb/>
gracious, charming She <lb/>
gave a cordial greeting to the new <lb/>
members, the class of 1913, to which <lb/>
Miss Pearle Fleming, president <lb/>
of responded. Miss Dow- <lb/>
ell, responded to Alumnae <lb/>
It's Miss Sara Waller, in <lb/>
and gave a witty, spark- <lb/>
ling contrast between the when <lb/>
she was a and <lb/>
should be those of J. Jarvis Ml a and <lb/>
William H. the two chief aft. work of <lb/>
leaders of the forces that established Margaret , ,, maKe escape. He left tho <lb/>
this great and useful con-10, be and knowing what <lb/>
statesman and constructive done for he by to Strickland, followed <lb/>
teacher, representative of the people . the and attempted to arrest him. <lb/>
and representative of the profession, j Blow I turned on him am <lb/>
years, women years of age on the <lb/>
date of the examination will be ad- <lb/>
Applicants must reside within the <lb/>
territory supplied by the for <lb/>
which examination is announced. <lb/>
The examination Is open to all cit- <lb/>
of the United States who can <lb/>
comply with the requirements. <lb/>
Application forms and full <lb/>
concerning the requirement <lb/>
of the examination can be secured <lb/>
from the postmaster at Walstonburg, <lb/>
N C, or from D. C. Dudley, local sec- <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Applications should be properly <lb/>
executed and filed with <lb/>
n at Washington at least days <lb/>
before the date of the examination, <lb/>
otherwise It may be Impracticable to <lb/>
examine the applicant. <lb/>
SMITHFIELD, June Mas- <lb/>
alleged slayer of W. E. <lb/>
land and a notorious outlaw, is again <lb/>
safe behind jail bars at <lb/>
Sheriff W. F. Grimes and Chief <lb/>
H. Johnson received news this <lb/>
i before day as to <lb/>
whereabouts and set out Immediately <lb/>
to capture him. They drove to J. O. <lb/>
Lee's, about miles southeast of Four <lb/>
Oaks, Ingram's township and found <lb/>
asleep in a barn. Sheriff <lb/>
Grimes bounced upon him and had one <lb/>
arm the shackles before <lb/>
realized what had happened. <lb/>
had been ranging around <lb/>
the scene of the homicide since he <lb/>
killed Strickland on March He <lb/>
has been on the go most of the time <lb/>
and, knowing the swamps of Johnston. <lb/>
Sampson and Wayne, had been able t- <lb/>
elude the officers and friends of tho <lb/>
deceased. <lb/>
escaped from the Smith- <lb/>
field township chain gang March <lb/>
where he was serving a sentence <lb/>
posed by Judge F. H. Brooks, the <lb/>
recorder's court for retailing liquor, <lb/>
Charley Stanley was sent by the <lb/>
road authorities to capture and re- <lb/>
turn him to camp. Stanley went <lb/>
to Four Oaks and got W. E. <lb/>
land, a constable and deputy sheriff, <lb/>
who had arrested a <lb/>
of times, to go with him and help <lb/>
to the arrest. They located <lb/>
at the home of his father <lb/>
In Ingram's township. <lb/>
Stanley stood at the rear door and <lb/>
went in at the front door. <lb/>
appeared very friendly and <lb/>
Strickland a drink of whiskey <lb/>
which he declined and told <lb/>
gill to consider himself under arrest, <lb/>
whereupon drew a knife <lb/>
and to cut him to death <lb/>
best types of forces and the ideals <lb/>
on., whose union the Institution <lb/>
founded and shall be perpetuated. <lb/>
On behalf of the trustees I accept, <lb/>
with gratitude to tho donors, these <lb/>
portraits and pledge that they shall <lb/>
be preserved and cherished forever <lb/>
among the choicest treasures of this <lb/>
school, silent testimonials from living <lb/>
to all <lb/>
generations of the work and <lb/>
worth, of the wisdom and service of <lb/>
tho two chief leaders Its establish- <lb/>
and success, artistic <lb/>
of the love gratitude of the <lb/>
first beneficiaries of their <lb/>
j vice. <lb/>
Seen through the magnifying <lb/>
I of death and the mist of vanished <lb/>
years men's deed and service often <lb/>
seem greater than they are, but <lb/>
In the dry light of truth through <lb/>
the realistic mirror of the present, <lb/>
they rarely are magnified. When the <lb/>
living honor the living then the hon- <lb/>
or Is usually deserved, should he <lb/>
showed how the school <lb/>
was fulfilling a two-fold mission and <lb/>
really doing work <lb/>
this Is being proved by the number <lb/>
of marriages and announcements and <lb/>
i from the first class. When <lb/>
shall we three meet was re- <lb/>
to In rhyme by Miss Brownie <lb/>
Martin. <lb/>
The class of 1914, tho incoming <lb/>
seniors, served. Tho menu was as <lb/>
Soft Shell Crab <lb/>
Old Ham Escalloped Potatoes <lb/>
Beets <lb/>
Hot Bolls Ice Tea <lb/>
Tomatoes and Green Pepper Salad <lb/>
Pickles Wafers <lb/>
Strawberry Ice Cream Cake <lb/>
Tho folder were very attractive. <lb/>
Apt quotations were printed after each <lb/>
toast. <lb/>
The alumnae Association now <lb/>
I rapidly growing <lb/>
one of the strongest forces con- <lb/>
greater and to the recipient I <lb/>
must be sweeter seem. <lb/>
The and the <lb/>
have given their million to good <lb/>
causes and for deserve their need <lb/>
of praise, but there are gifts more <lb/>
and more priceless far In <lb/>
the sight of God and men than all <lb/>
the of and all the <lb/>
Each yea tho school authorities <lb/>
gladly welcome back home all who <lb/>
have gone out from Its wall. <lb/>
One of the most features <lb/>
of the evening was the delightful <lb/>
music, a family orchestra from New <lb/>
Bern. Mr. Walker Worth, leader and <lb/>
Mr. Gardner Worth, <lb/>
of Such were the gift of these , Worth. viol- <lb/>
men to at cause. Sliver and <lb/>
gold had they not to give, but what <lb/>
they gate better, enthusiasm, de- <lb/>
tireless toll, unflagging zeal, <lb/>
unrequited service and for these <lb/>
honor them this lay and generations <lb/>
yet unborn shall do them honor. <lb/>
and Mies Virginia Worth cellist, <lb/>
composed the orchestra. <lb/>
To Cure a Cold in One <lb/>
Take LAXATIVE Quinine MoM <lb/>
Headache and off Cold. <lb/>
refund money if it to cure. <lb/>
W. on each <lb/>
cut him nearly to death. <lb/>
has been at large until now. <lb/>
There has been a reward of one <lb/>
hundred dollars offered by the State <lb/>
and a like amount by Johnston <lb/>
for his capture, which has been <lb/>
augmented by brothers of the <lb/>
ed. A warrant has been Issued by <lb/>
Judge Brooks and will <lb/>
given a preliminary hearing In the <lb/>
recorder's court, Tuesday, Juno <lb/>
Tho firm of and Ward have been <lb/>
employed to prosecute the case. <lb/>
Pee Weakness and Le of <lb/>
The Old Standard general tome, <lb/>
TASTELESS chill TONIC, <lb/>
and builds up the A true <lb/>
and children. <lb/>
Sunday School Experts to Speak <lb/>
GRAND FORKS, N. D., June <lb/>
Several noted experts on Sunday <lb/>
School management are scheduled <lb/>
addresses before the annual <lb/>
convention of the North Dakota Sun- <lb/>
day School Association, which open- <lb/>
ed today for a session extending <lb/>
over three days. Every section <lb/>
the state I represented by <lb/>
gates of the various Sunday school. <lb/>
R. M. C. A. Conference <lb/>
EDINBURGH, June <lb/>
from many countries, Including Eng- <lb/>
land. Canada and the United States, <lb/>
have arrived In Edinburgh to attend <lb/>
the world conference of the Young <lb/>
Men's Christian Association. The con- <lb/>
will Its formal opening <lb/>
tomorrow the sessions will con- <lb/>
until the end of the week.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018252_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
. mi <lb/>
-r <lb/>
Ralston Shoes are unmistakably <lb/>
stylish. They appeal to men who <lb/>
pride themselves on being correctly <lb/>
as well as becomingly dressed. <lb/>
Our Spring models offer you a wide <lb/>
choice, and yet all of them are well <lb/>
within the limits of good of them <lb/>
have the comfort for which alone <lb/>
ire famous. Try <lb/>
J. R. J. U. MOVE <lb/>
For <lb/>
Commencement <lb/>
we are showing a beautiful line <lb/>
of White Lingerie Dresses and <lb/>
Shirt Waists at <lb/>
prices. WHITE A COLOR- <lb/>
ED PARASOLS, CORSETS, Hos. <lb/>
in large <lb/>
We made a cut in <lb/>
prices on all goods <lb/>
Especially Low Cat Shoes and <lb/>
Clothing. <lb/>
American Birds <lb/>
Beauty <lb/>
SO. . III <lb/>
WANT ADS <lb/>
Pr Lin Per Insertion <lb/>
ISIS, by The Associated <lb/>
LEARN ONE TWIG Newspaper School, Inc. <lb/>
A EVERY A. <lb/>
In former years a journey to Flor-; snowy herons are struggling <lb/>
EGGS ARE SCARCE. HAKE <lb/>
plentiful Buy Cackle-- of S. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
FOR SALE AT A 4- <lb/>
P. Marine Gas- <lb/>
Engine and Regular Outfit <lb/>
Write R. A. Tarboro. N. C. <lb/>
GOOD TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
Now Reedy for Delivery <lb/>
EXCURSION RATES <lb/>
to <lb/>
BEACH and NORFOLK <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD <lb/>
From Week End Sunday <lb/>
Farmville . 13.76 <lb/>
Greenville . 3.75 2.15 <lb/>
Washington . 1.75 2.25 <lb/>
Rates to Virginia Week End. <lb/>
cents higher, and Sunday cents <lb/>
higher than above Norfolk fares. <lb/>
Week End tickets sold Friday and <lb/>
Saturday. May 30th to September 7th. <lb/>
good to return until Tues- <lb/>
day following date of sale. <lb/>
Sunday tickets sold Saturday <lb/>
trains May 20th to September 7th. <lb/>
to return leaving Norfolk <lb/>
p. m. Sunday. <lb/>
Get complete Information from your <lb/>
ticket agent. <lb/>
W. W. G. P. A. <lb/>
Norfolk. Va <lb/>
meant, among other things, a sight <lb/>
of thousands of snowy herons. A trip <lb/>
down any of the rivers on one of the <lb/>
little stern-wheelers was sure to re- <lb/>
veal hundreds; but he Is fortunate in- <lb/>
deed who sees half a dozen of these <lb/>
Immaculate birds In a whole season , Societies has accomplished won- <lb/>
at the hands of the plume <lb/>
hunters. Often they are shot from <lb/>
nests that contain four <lb/>
five young who die a lingering death <lb/>
by starvation. <lb/>
The National Association of <lb/>
I have as a of flue- <lb/>
iron as there is in Pitt County <lb/>
and I never advertise more <lb/>
than I can shew. You will find <lb/>
me making flues at <lb/>
Gentry's Warehouse. <lb/>
L. H. P <lb/>
THE ORIGINAL r 1.1. MAKER<lb/>
MOVEMENT OF <lb/>
Time of Arrival and Departure of <lb/>
Passenger Trains <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST LINE <lb/>
Northbound Southbound<lb/>
p. m. p. m. <lb/>
NORFOLK-SOUTHERN <lb/>
Westbound <lb/>
a, m. a. m <lb/>
a. m. a. m. <lb/>
p. m. p. m. <lb/>
TODAY IX <lb/>
ASK FOR SHIRTS FOR <lb/>
Men. The very best values at W. <lb/>
A. I S St <lb/>
FOR ACRES VIRGIN <lb/>
forest, well timbered, miles north <lb/>
of Arthur. O. T. Tyson, R. P. D. <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
JOB FIELD PEAS CALL ON <lb/>
Bros., at House, N. C. <lb/>
MAN TEARS <lb/>
old with and buggy to work <lb/>
in Pitt county. Address Box <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
statue of Christopher <lb/>
bus was unveiled in Washing- <lb/>
ton. D. C. <lb/>
now. Along the upper reaches of <lb/>
St. John and Its tributaries they nest- <lb/>
ed In thousands, filling the air when <lb/>
distributed, like some enormous white <lb/>
cloud. In those days they did not <lb/>
themselves to tropical regions, <lb/>
but wandered as far north as Main. <lb/>
Long Island the gunners were <lb/>
veil acquainted with them and as <lb/>
late as 1910 a few were noted in <lb/>
South Carolina. <lb/>
These dainty birds of the South fall <lb/>
without the pale of protective <lb/>
Against the dark green of man <lb/>
groves or cypress their snow-white <lb/>
stand out like cameos. Deep In <lb/>
the Interior of the Everglades a hand- <lb/>
of the powerful <lb/>
Indians are making their last stand. <lb/>
In these same wilds the last of the <lb/>
in protecting the snowy heron <lb/>
and other birds. The aside of <lb/>
on government land by <lb/>
executive order where the feathered <lb/>
inhabitants can find sanctuary, has <lb/>
saved more than one species from <lb/>
annihilation. <lb/>
to lit Fourth Street, from f <lb/>
ll. i. Smith's build <lb/>
s. T. HICKS, Plunder. <lb/>
FOR ON THE <lb/>
Godwin Shop lot near Johnston <lb/>
feed J. E. Winslow. <lb/>
MOVED MOVED <lb/>
Into N. Stables <lb/>
Corner 2nd -i Evans Streets <lb/>
SAM <lb/>
Transfer Men <lb/>
Baggage and Express <lb/>
Promptness <lb/>
Phone No. Night or Day <lb/>
Meets all Trains <lb/>
you your borne you aw <lb/>
worried about rents and other <lb/>
ills; after you own your home you <lb/>
ear a happy and satisfied smile. We <lb/>
an help you toward owning your own <lb/>
me we will be glad to be of as- <lb/>
Call and let us talk the <lb/>
natter with you. Do It today. <lb/>
Shares In the 15th Series now on <lb/>
holding AND <lb/>
ASSOCIATION <lb/>
e gt, . . C <lb/>
June <lb/>
1781 Stephenson. the <lb/>
tor of the locomotive, horn. <lb/>
Died Aug. 1848. <lb/>
Francisco vigilance <lb/>
was formed. <lb/>
embassy arrived in <lb/>
Philadelphia as guests of the <lb/>
city. <lb/>
Most Children Hare Worms <lb/>
Many mothers think their children <lb/>
are suffering from Indigestion, head- <lb/>
ache, nervousness weakness, <lb/>
when they are victims of that <lb/>
most common of all children's ail- <lb/>
Peevish, Ill-tempered, <lb/>
fretful children, who toss and grand <lb/>
their teeth, with bad breath and col- <lb/>
pains have all the of <lb/>
having worms and should be <lb/>
Worm Killer a pleasant <lb/>
candy lozenge, which expels worms, <lb/>
regulates the bowels, tone up the <lb/>
system and makes children well and <lb/>
happy. Worm Killer la <lb/>
guaranteed. All druggists, or by mall. <lb/>
Price Indian Medicine <lb/>
Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis. <lb/>
Good News for <lb/>
Summer Weather <lb/>
THAT WARM WEATHER IS FOR GOOD, <lb/>
NATURALLY THINK OF TUB DISHES MOST COOLING. THIS <lb/>
ONE DISH OF ALL IS j, . I'll U I <lb/>
Ice Cream, <lb/>
SO NOT BUY ICE CREAM FROM THE CANDY <lb/>
PALACE, WHICH IS THE ONLY AND THE BEST CREAM IN <lb/>
TOWN WE GUARANTEE IT TO BE NOTHING BUT THE BEST <lb/>
AND PURE ICE CREAM. WE MAKE IT BY ELECTRIC MOTOR. <lb/>
WE KEEP FOUR AT ALL VANILLA, <lb/>
AND WE SELL MORE <lb/>
THAN ANYBODY. TAKE ORDERS ON SATURDAY AND <lb/>
DELIVER ON SUNDAY. WE SELL IT AT 11.40 PER GALLON. <lb/>
WK CORDIALLY INVITE EVERYBODY TO TRY OUR ICE <lb/>
CREAM, WHICH IS ALWAYS DELICIOUS AND <lb/>
PHONE Sis. <lb/>
The Candy Palace <lb/>
J. G. M AN <lb/>
S M <lb/>
Wholesale and retail grocer and <lb/>
dealer. Cash paid for hides, <lb/>
Fur Cotton Seed Oil barrels, Turkeys, <lb/>
Eggs. <lb/>
Oak bedsteads, mattresses, etc. <lb/>
Suits, Baby carriages, go-carts, par- <lb/>
suits, tables, lounges, safes. <lb/>
and Gall c snuff, High <lb/>
Life tobacco, Key West Cheroots. Hen- <lb/>
canned cherries, <lb/>
peaches, syrup, Jelly, meat; <lb/>
flour coffee, soap, lye, magic <lb/>
fond, man es. oil, cotton seed meal <lb/>
and bulls seed oranges, <lb/>
nuts, randies, dried apples, <lb/>
peaches prunes, currants, raisins, <lb/>
glass and china ware, wooden ware, <lb/>
cakes and crackers, macaroni, cheese, <lb/>
eat hatter new Royal Sewing ma- <lb/>
and numerous other <lb/>
Quality I cheap for cash. <lb/>
Come to me. Phone <lb/>
II <lb/>
Guaranteed Eczema Remedy <lb/>
The constant Itching, burning, red- <lb/>
rash and disagreeable effects of <lb/>
eczema salt rheum, Itch, piles <lb/>
and Irritating skin can be <lb/>
cured and the skin made clear <lb/>
and smooth with Dr. <lb/>
ma Ointment. Mr. J. C. Cleveland, cf <lb/>
Bath, had eczema <lb/>
years and had tried everything. <lb/>
All failed. When I found Dr. Hob- <lb/>
son's Ointment I found a <lb/>
This ointment Is the formula <lb/>
a physician and has been In use <lb/>
for an experiment That <lb/>
Is why we guarantee It All drug <lb/>
gists or by mail. Price <lb/>
Chemical Company., Philadelphia and <lb/>
St. Louis. <lb/>
Carnation Ball <lb/>
June h <lb/>
The important Social Function in North Carolina This Season <lb/>
OPENING BALL--------- <lb/>
Carnation Ball <lb/>
June 14th <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel, Saturday, June 14th <lb/>
The new management i. bending every effort to make this the most Brilliant and Elaborate Social occasion, under the most pleasing surroundings In the history of this famous resort. <lb/>
Every young lady on the will be presented by the management with a beautiful bouquet of lovely carnations. Special music by superb Orchestra. unique features. <lb/>
Mrs. II. J. of Hock; Mount, a singer of rare talent and wide reputation, possessed of charming and engaging personality, render appropriate selections. It will he of real Interest to her many <lb/>
friends and admirers the Stale and patrons of this popular Resort to know that she has been engaged by the new management for entire season, <lb/>
Mr. W. E. of Mount, prominent In social circles throughout North Carolina and Virginia, will lead the opening German on the finest ball-room floor in the South. All German clubs of North Carolina <lb/>
and Virginia are Invited to this great Social Function. <lb/>
SPECIAL SERVICE HAS BEEN ARRANGED FOR THIS OCCASION. LOW WEEK-END, HOUND TRIP AND SEASON TICKETS BY ALL RAILROADS. <lb/>
CUISINE AND SERVICE UNSURPASSED<lb/>
Hotel <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
T. L. BLAND R. A. CHERRY, props. <lb/>
L. T. BROWN, Manager Atlantic Hotel Morehead City, North Carolina <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
Morehead City <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 US- <lb/>
WANT YOUR BUSINESS <lb/>
E. G. FLANAGAN, E. B. BIGGS, <lb/>
C. S. CARE, Cashier. <lb/>
BISHOP DENNY DELIVERS THE <lb/>
BACCALAUREATE SERMON AT <lb/>
TRAINING SCHOOL SUNDAY <lb/>
. I f I on the <lb/>
Institution is to . yr with thirty and <lb/>
, kt -i ill clawed with thirty, not one lost <lb/>
Capacity Notwithstanding the Inclemency <lb/>
of the Weather. His <lb/>
lowering clouds, a <lb/>
congregation gathered at Bait Car- <lb/>
Teachers Training School Sun- <lb/>
day morning to hear the com <lb/>
sermon by Bishop Collins <lb/>
Denny. <lb/>
The sermon was one of gnat <lb/>
power, full of graphic scenes, rich <lb/>
imagery, profound truths and <lb/>
His theme was Paul, the <lb/>
of God; his am <lb/>
both to the Greek and barbarian, the <lb/>
wise and He announced that <lb/>
path where feet had stumbled. <lb/>
The sermon abounded in apt illus- <lb/>
and comparisons from <lb/>
literature and life, application <lb/>
to present conditions, truths in Members of the class of 1918 <lb/>
I would meet with success. He ex- <lb/>
hymns were sung by the entire pressed to them the flood will of <lb/>
dining the If the people <lb/>
of the slate could realize what <lb/>
the sending out of such <lb/>
of trained teachers meant <lb/>
would he no trouble in get- <lb/>
ling the money needed. We <lb/>
have to train mothers and <lb/>
fathers as well as girls and <lb/>
said that he felt assured <lb/>
congregation, <lb/>
II was his purpose to enforce, rather During the war Sunday eve- <lb/>
C. A. by Rev. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
The i <lb/>
Association for first time has Pretty and the World is <lb/>
part in the commencement, by the <lb/>
all with the institution <lb/>
and urged them to return of- <lb/>
Next on program was a bright, <lb/>
You're <lb/>
than to Interpret, the text. He said <lb/>
when a business man took an <lb/>
service i the direction <lb/>
of and it is <lb/>
he found out his assets and Ha- t, Sunday evening <lb/>
Paul did not mention an j,,,, should be <lb/>
asset, everything was liability. <lb/>
renewed the early life of Paul, stress- W E <lb/>
especially the two points hat who <lb/>
was a man equipped for ministry and ,, , , friend <lb/>
a believer, one who carried his be- <lb/>
lief Into action. Only a few men i <lb/>
the history of the world have been <lb/>
real thinkers, believers. Paul's <lb/>
was the best to be <lb/>
had. man does not honor God <lb/>
who goes to war with a bad <lb/>
In applying this to the day <lb/>
the bishop time for the <lb/>
Miss Alice Medlin then read <lb/>
an essay on Heritage of <lb/>
Southern <lb/>
Miss Ruth Moore presented the <lb/>
class prophecy in an original, <lb/>
way. Site used the number <lb/>
planned for the burying, <lb/>
on the night of June <lb/>
1818, of a casket containing the <lb/>
school since its inception, should of the class, to be opened <lb/>
invited to conduct this meeting years h <lb/>
Toreador Song from Blast <lb/>
For two pianos. <lb/>
Ethel Moore Clara Davis <lb/>
Glenn Lillian Harrell <lb/>
Stolen Wings. For <lb/>
Eliza <lb/>
In Rolling. For pi- <lb/>
Flossie Nobles <lb/>
Adore and Be Still. Gounod. <lb/>
Glee Club E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
Scherzo. Schubert. For piano. <lb/>
Snowdrops. Lehman. Duet. <lb/>
Bliss Branch, Mamie Tunstall <lb/>
Spanish Dance No. <lb/>
Duet for piano. <lb/>
Ethel Moore and Glenn Brooks <lb/>
My Heart At Thy Voice. Saint <lb/>
For soprano. <lb/>
Mary <lb/>
Poem For piano. <lb/>
For piano. <lb/>
Glenn Brooks <lb/>
Birds That Sang in May. <lb/>
Duet. <lb/>
Ethel Moore and Inez Pitt man <lb/>
Good Bye. For <lb/>
Mavis Evans. <lb/>
Sees. For piano. <lb/>
Ethel Moore <lb/>
Finale For two pianos. <lb/>
Margaret Boss and <lb/>
Lullaby. Brahms. <lb/>
Glee Club E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
SPECIAL <lb/>
TO THE SEASHORE <lb/>
Winterville Items. <lb/>
Then the she imagined in <lb/>
contrast. The audience greatly <lb/>
the quotations, em- <lb/>
bodying each girls striking char- <lb/>
Mr. Cox took as his theme the <lb/>
of The <lb/>
scripture lesson was John 1- <lb/>
the text, the 17th and prophecy at- <lb/>
go to brethren, and <lb/>
, them. unto my and Hattie <lb/>
dispensation of Ignorance has passed, q. , , Taylor sang n <lb/>
for The voice of God spoke Cox the ministration of <lb/>
woman to our Lord, particularly <lb/>
the ere.-.- and the <lb/>
tenderly unto Paul and called him to <lb/>
be a minister, an ambassador, and a <lb/>
witness. often lays his hand <lb/>
or. a man In the forces of the <lb/>
Bishop Denny defined the term <lb/>
as one who spends his resources <lb/>
for the benefit of others. He re- <lb/>
present the minus sign rather than <lb/>
the plus. <lb/>
For three years after his call Paul <lb/>
was In Arabia readjusting his <lb/>
logy. man has some <lb/>
Job Is a man who lost his theology, <lb/>
who could not get his theology and <lb/>
experience together and the whole <lb/>
book of Job Is a for adjust- <lb/>
Paul came back from Arabia <lb/>
with a theology that has served the <lb/>
world from then until now. <lb/>
The bishop sketched In vividly <lb/>
after scene In the life of Paul <lb/>
at he went from place to place <lb/>
filling his mission as an ambassador. <lb/>
Wherever he went It was that he might <lb/>
bring peace where warfare had reign- <lb/>
ed. the deck of the vessel stood a <lb/>
little In comparison with whom <lb/>
tho giants of all ages seem <lb/>
Caesar, Napoleon, Alexander, stand <lb/>
oat as conquerers by blood and war. <lb/>
Yet when Paul met an evil he acted. <lb/>
The place of honor to him was not a <lb/>
place of ease. Paul and Silas were <lb/>
sons of affliction. The figure of the <lb/>
flail, tho of the Romans, <lb/>
from which the word Is <lb/>
derived was for Illustration. Tho <lb/>
bishop paid tribute to the women who <lb/>
aided Paul. me the women of <lb/>
today and I'll have the world to- <lb/>
As a climax to Paul's career, the <lb/>
bishop made the In Rome glow <lb/>
with life, majesty and greatness. He <lb/>
pictured Paul, done with mission <lb/>
as ambassador to men, triumphant <lb/>
over self and the world ready for his <lb/>
reception In Heaven. <lb/>
At the close he returned again to <lb/>
the flail that windows the wheat from <lb/>
tho chaff. He Interpreted the term <lb/>
as you <lb/>
worked for and returns from. <lb/>
In his admonition to the class he <lb/>
ed the women to be <lb/>
wherever there i. burden to <lb/>
be lifted, a song to be sung or a <lb/>
The Hoard of Trustees of East <lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training <lb/>
School was in session this after- <lb/>
noon. The. following members <lb/>
are Mrs. J. Y. Gov.; <lb/>
T. J. Jarvis. Messrs. White. Ban-1 <lb/>
Herman. Ormond, and <lb/>
Only three are absent. Messrs. <lb/>
Clarence Parker and Leigh. <lb/>
via <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD <lb/>
and MOREHEAD <lb/>
Ready for Summer visitors <lb/>
Beginning Sunday, June 8th, spec- <lb/>
Sunday trains will be run from <lb/>
Washington via and New <lb/>
Bern to Morehead City and Beaufort <lb/>
every Sunday. <lb/>
Leave Farmville. <lb/>
Greenville . <lb/>
Arrive New Bern . <lb/>
Leave Washington. <lb/>
Chocowinity. <lb/>
New Bern . <lb/>
Arrive Morehead City . <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Returning <lb/>
Leave Beaufort . <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel . <lb/>
Morehead City . <lb/>
Arrive New Bern. <lb/>
Leave New Bern . <lb/>
Arrive Washington . <lb/>
Greenville . <lb/>
Farmville . <lb/>
Very cheap Sunday and Week End <lb/>
fares. Ask any ticket <lb/>
agent for particulars. <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel, under new manage- <lb/>
Best fishing on Atlantic <lb/>
W. W. <lb/>
General Passenger Agent. <lb/>
a. m <lb/>
. <lb/>
,. <lb/>
. a. in. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. p. m. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
,. <lb/>
. <lb/>
,, <lb/>
,.<lb/>
H. HaRRISS , <lb/>
Still With <lb/>
The Mutual Life Insurance Co., <lb/>
of <lb/>
I New York. <lb/>
WINTERVILLE, June <lb/>
rah Mitchell, who has been <lb/>
Miss Esther Johnson, returned to her <lb/>
home in Monday. <lb/>
Scythes, scythe blades and Singers <lb/>
at A. W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Coley, who has been <lb/>
visiting Mrs. B. T. Cox, returned to <lb/>
her home In Durham Thursday. <lb/>
See Cox and House for cold drinks, <lb/>
ice cream and cigars. <lb/>
Mr. Clinton Cox who has been vis- <lb/>
his sister, Mrs. C. T. Cox, went <lb/>
home Thursday evening. <lb/>
Binder twine In the good grades <lb/>
at Harrington, Barber and Co. <lb/>
Mrs. L. L. made a fly- <lb/>
trip to Greenville Friday even- <lb/>
Stone jars, churns, water and <lb/>
flower pots at A. W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Miss Fannie Lee Spier and brother, <lb/>
Ashley, went to Greenville Friday <lb/>
evening where Fannie Lee will at- <lb/>
tend tho commencement at E. C. C. <lb/>
T. S. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber and Com- <lb/>
for your mowing machines and <lb/>
reaping attachments. <lb/>
Miss Minnie Cox spent a few hours <lb/>
In Ayden <lb/>
offer our stock of dry goods, <lb/>
notions and shoes at cost. Cox and <lb/>
House. <lb/>
Miss returned home <lb/>
Friday night from the N. and I. Col- <lb/>
after spending two weeks with <lb/>
relatives on her way. <lb/>
DR. J. C. GREENE <lb/>
Physician and Surgeon <lb/>
Phone No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
from tho The class <lb/>
president. Miss Bettie Pearl Flem <lb/>
gave hack to Miss <lb/>
Ho brought for the class of 1912, a <lb/>
love for. intuitive faith in. and committed to them <lb/>
unfaltering devotion to Jesus. hidden from the Junior <lb/>
urged tn ho of if in <lb/>
Cod to men the world and Vie class <lb/>
of for safe keeping. <lb/>
Tho class <lb/>
was sung next. <lb/>
Last Will and <lb/>
by Miss Hattie Weeks <lb/>
caused much amusement. <lb/>
Miss Willie Greene Day, in <lb/>
her happily <lb/>
wove in many little local touches <lb/>
that added spices. The exercises <lb/>
dosed with the singing of <lb/>
ma <lb/>
Meeting and <lb/>
A business meeting of the Alum <lb/>
Association of E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
was held this afternoon. This <lb/>
evening at o'clock the annual <lb/>
to the children. <lb/>
lie lo them to keep <lb/>
the highest womanhood, and <lb/>
ed them not to he swept away by <lb/>
the modern tendencies that would <lb/>
make her lost the glory of <lb/>
manhood. The special music by <lb/>
the school was particularly good. <lb/>
The duet by Misses <lb/>
Branch, Love was <lb/>
beautifully sung. <lb/>
Class Day Exercises <lb/>
At ten o'clock this morning, <lb/>
after the school had filed into <lb/>
the auditorium, the thirty young <lb/>
ladies in the Senior class march- <lb/>
ed in through the side door to j banquet be given in <lb/>
the tune of and took the dining ball of the school, <lb/>
their places on the stage. <lb/>
Miss Mary Lucy Dupree gave <lb/>
a cordial welcome that express- <lb/>
ed the of of 1918. <lb/>
Miss Perry, as class his- <lb/>
was n happy choice <lb/>
she could speak with authority <lb/>
on all details concerning the class <lb/>
and the, school she was one <lb/>
of the first to when the <lb/>
doors of the school were first open <lb/>
-Mi i the of oil <lb/>
lamp-, tho many inconveniences <lb/>
of those first and drew a <lb/>
c between then and now. <lb/>
The the review <lb/>
cf four of trial and <lb/>
of class of <lb/>
Number three was an <lb/>
mental solo by the class musician, <lb/>
Miss Mamie Ruth Tunstall. <lb/>
In behalf of tho class Mis; <lb/>
Mary Clark presented to <lb/>
Pres. Wright, in trust for the <lb/>
school, a loan fund of to <lb/>
help three students. Certain <lb/>
went with the gift. <lb/>
Pres. Wright, in accepting the <lb/>
the deepest <lb/>
both because of the purpose <lb/>
Announcement <lb/>
Commencement exercises will <lb/>
begin at ten o'clock Tuesday <lb/>
morning. The address be <lb/>
delivered by Hon. Henry A. <lb/>
Page, of Aberdeen, one of North <lb/>
Carolina's foremost citizens. At <lb/>
close of the address the grad- <lb/>
class will he awarded their <lb/>
diplomas. There will be <lb/>
interesting feature after this. <lb/>
THE RECITAL ON <lb/>
SATURDAY EVENING <lb/>
The music recital at the Train- <lb/>
school on Saturday evening <lb/>
opened the commencement <lb/>
of E. C. T. T. S. A large <lb/>
audience showed genuine <lb/>
by their attention and <lb/>
The program reflected great <lb/>
credit upon the student. and <lb/>
teachers, Miss Lida Hill, teacher <lb/>
of piano and Miss teach- <lb/>
of voice. <lb/>
The playing was marked by clear- <lb/>
of touch, purity of torn and good <lb/>
The <lb/>
of the loan and clear and beautiful, <lb/>
touch of light needed to brighten a fine spirit it indicate He com-1 The program was as <lb/>
Rest Laxative For the A aged <lb/>
Old men and women feel the need <lb/>
of a laxative more than young folks, <lb/>
but it must be safe and harmless and <lb/>
one which will not cause pain. Dr. <lb/>
Kings Now Life Pills are especially <lb/>
for the aged, for they act <lb/>
and easily. Price Recommend- <lb/>
ed by all druggists. <lb/>
WHY Not Enjoy the <lb/>
Pleasure of Wear- <lb/>
Shoes That Fit the <lb/>
Feet <lb/>
That's the Kind You <lb/>
Find at Our Store at <lb/>
Prices to Fit the Purse <lb/>
SUMMER TIME is <lb/>
SANDAL TIME <lb/>
WE Have a Large As- <lb/>
of Bare- <lb/>
Foot Sandals and a <lb/>
goes with each Pair. <lb/>
SKIN SORES <lb/>
m m <lb/>
I V <lb/>
M Pm M k <lb/>
QUICKLY HEALED <lb/>
SHOE COMPANY <lb/>
an<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018252_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
WRIGHT. <lb/>
Lean Fond. <lb/>
The following Loan Funds have <lb/>
been left to the institution donated <lb/>
Donated by Class bf 1911. <lb/>
Donated by Class of 1912. 200.00 <lb/>
Donated by Summer School, <lb/>
1912 . 45.00 <lb/>
These funds have already boon in- <lb/>
in seven Student <lb/>
to attend school. <lb/>
The Class of 1913, young <lb/>
men who are Just their ii- <lb/>
have left a Loan Fund of <lb/>
to used is <lb/>
This to be known as tho <lb/>
Class of 1913 Loan <lb/>
The loan shall made to SOUS <lb/>
i . t of the Junior or Senior class. <lb/>
No loan is to be to a <lb/>
who not spent at least one <lb/>
year at the East Carolina Teachers <lb/>
Training School. <lb/>
Toe whom <lb/>
leans MO Shall make aver- <lb/>
age <lb/>
There shall Le cans, etch <lb/>
of which is to <lb/>
Those be voted by <lb/>
with the recommendation <lb/>
. tho student by the President the <lb/>
first regular mooting in October. <lb/>
If there are less than three <lb/>
these loans with the <lb/>
requirements, they Shall loft W <lb/>
the disposal of the President cl i <lb/>
school.<lb/>
faun-sea. Ledges sad Social <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
SheriffS. I. Dudley. <lb/>
Clerk Superior C. Moors <lb/>
Register of Deeds Ball. <lb/>
B. Wilson. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
B M. Lewis. W. E. Proctor. H. T <lb/>
Spier, J. Q. Taylor. <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
Mayor F. M. <lb/>
C. Tyson. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Chief of T. <lb/>
Aldermen E. B. <lb/>
v now en. J. S. Tunstall, <lb/>
Young Oxford Man Found <lb/>
Dead With Pistol Wound <lb/>
In Head <lb/>
F. Davenport, B. F. Tyson, Z. <lb/>
VanDyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Water and Light <lb/>
B. Spain. C. L. <lb/>
W. Tucker. <lb/>
L. Allan. <lb/>
Fire D. Overton. <lb/>
CHURCHES <lb/>
Baptist. C. M. Rock. <lb/>
C. C. Pierce, clerk; C. W. <lb/>
Wilson, of Sunday <lb/>
school; J. C. Tyson, secretary. <lb/>
J. J. Walker, pas- <lb/>
tor; E. A. Sr., superintendent <lb/>
Sunday school. <lb/>
Episcopal, St. Dallas <lb/>
Tucker, W. A. Bowen, nip- <lb/>
Sunday school. <lb/>
Presbyterian- P M <lb/>
Methodist. Jarvis <lb/>
H. Hoyle, A B. <lb/>
LODGES <lb/>
Greenville No. A. F. and A. M <lb/>
H. Harries. W. M.; L. H. Pen <lb/>
See. <lb/>
clerk; H. D. Bateman, <lb/>
dent Sunday school; L. H. Fender, <lb/>
Chapel <lb/>
loans shall be made for <lb/>
three years with interest at . <lb/>
. , . f <lb/>
cent beginning at tho close of w <lb/>
school year for which the loan was j Sharon No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
made. F. D Foxhall. W. M.; E. E. <lb/>
. Since r. high grade of scholar- .,. <lb/>
. , . . k. i Greenville Encampment No. I. <lb/>
Is required, the names of the Q Q pD w c p. L <lb/>
holders of these loans shall be Scribe. <lb/>
public at the time of their election River No. K. of <lb/>
and shall be printed in the catalog it Clark. C. A. B. Ellington <lb/>
the close of school year for k. of R S. <lb/>
the loan was made. Comment upon j Greenville Chapter No R. A. <lb/>
the spirit that prompted these <lb/>
The growing needs of this school Lodge No. I. O. O. F <lb/>
have made it necessary for the em-1 Meets every Tuesday night. F. J <lb/>
of an additional teacher. Forbes N. L. H. Pender. Sec. <lb/>
Miss Mabel M. Comfort now In Teach-1 Greenville Camp No. M. W <lb/>
OXFORD. Juno T. <lb/>
son of R. W. Lassiter, bank.-r <lb/>
and farmer, was found dead <lb/>
day morning about o'clock at his <lb/>
father's country home, death being <lb/>
the result of a pistol shot. <lb/>
While a bullet through the right <lb/>
temple must have caused Immediate <lb/>
death there Is know not the slight- <lb/>
est reason for any suicidal Intent and <lb/>
it Is thought by many people that the <lb/>
shot was fired by accident in a night- <lb/>
mare. The stricken family, alone, <lb/>
were with him and they know as lit- <lb/>
about it as strangers. There Is <lb/>
left no that Indicated any <lb/>
dissatisfaction with life. It is learned <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Lassiter was a splendid boy <lb/>
of twenty-four, a communicant of the <lb/>
Episcopal church, a man of strong <lb/>
mind and the youngest son of a <lb/>
of our boys and one girl. He lost <lb/>
his mother several weeks ago and the <lb/>
family has suffered many griefs. Last <lb/>
week he was at work with another <lb/>
brother and health and spirits were <lb/>
perfect. <lb/>
He retired Saturday night In <lb/>
perfect bodily and mental <lb/>
condition. It is not known how his <lb/>
father came to find him when he did. <lb/>
but it is understood that the pistol <lb/>
shot aroused the father. <lb/>
The funeral services were held this <lb/>
afternoon from tho Lassiter home on <lb/>
the edge of town and the burial took <lb/>
place In cemetery. Rev. f, <lb/>
H. T. of St. Stephen's <lb/>
church, officiated. <lb/>
METAL OF THE STANDARDS <lb/>
M ; <lb/>
Hart. H. P.; E. E. Griffin. <lb/>
Death of Mr. Cofield. <lb/>
News was received here last night <lb/>
of the death In of Mr. <lb/>
J. H. Cofield at the age of near <lb/>
He was a Confederate veteran and <lb/>
College. Columbia University, has a., meets every 1st and 3rd Wed- was a few days ago, <lb/>
been elected as teacher of , nights. Julius Brown, con- <lb/>
tics and History. i J. F. clerk. of the Memorial Day <lb/>
Enrollment last year . Tribe No. I-O. R. , Besides his widow, the <lb/>
Enrollment this year . m. Meets every Friday night J. J. leaves two <lb/>
represents j Jen kins. J. W. Brown. C. of and gUm daughters, among them <lb/>
Refused admission this year, <lb/>
. CLUBS <lb/>
Refused admission for this sum- B. James, president; <lb/>
this <lb/>
term . <lb/>
Refused admission prior to this <lb/>
year . <lb/>
Total number applying above our <lb/>
capacity to accommodate since <lb/>
school first opened four years <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
Summer Term. that <lb/>
term is Just as other <lb/>
Fall Term begins September 23rd. <lb/>
Already students are making <lb/>
for admission to our fall term. <lb/>
In addition to the thirty young <lb/>
men who have just received our <lb/>
the school gives this year <lb/>
forty-eight certificates as <lb/>
i One-Tear Course. <lb/>
Eliza Blount Branch. <lb/>
Carrie <lb/>
Brown <lb/>
Ward <lb/>
Kate Weeks. <lb/>
D. A. <lb/>
Georgia <lb/>
Eliza <lb/>
Eunice Parker <lb/>
Eula C. Savage <lb/>
Ella Selby <lb/>
Ada Smith <lb/>
Turner<lb/>
Eula Bass Maggie Johnson <lb/>
Nannie Catharine Batts Inez M. Only <lb/>
Bell Alice <lb/>
Addle May Bolton <lb/>
W. Outlaw, secretary. <lb/>
Round S. J. Everett <lb/>
president; Miss Nellie Denny, <lb/>
End of the M. H. <lb/>
president; Mrs. B. W. Mose- <lb/>
icy. secretary. <lb/>
Sans Skinner, <lb/>
president; Mrs. J. L. Carper, <lb/>
Carr. <lb/>
dent; Miss Ward lasers, secretary <lb/>
Daughters of T. <lb/>
J. Mrs J. L. <lb/>
ea, <lb/>
The Kings Daughter A. L <lb/>
Blow, Mrs t O. May <lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS <lb/>
Kings Daughters and Daughters of <lb/>
the <lb/>
being Mrs. W. R. Smith and Mrs. <lb/>
Annie of Greenville. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
All persons living In the stock <lb/>
law territory should comply with <lb/>
law requiring all stock to be kept <lb/>
up. Those who disregard this law <lb/>
will subject themselves to <lb/>
and their stock to being Impound- <lb/>
ed which all citizens should wish to <lb/>
avoid. <lb/>
By order of the Board of County <lb/>
Commissioners of Pitt county. <lb/>
BELL. <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
The Home Kitchen <lb/>
Paint your kitchen walls and wood <lb/>
work white above the wainscoting. It <lb/>
I keeps soiled hands away. Its cheer- <lb/>
Plies Cored la to brightness Is always Inviting. One <lb/>
Your will refund money if quart of Turpentine added to one- <lb/>
US of L. and M. semi-mixed <lb/>
II Bleeding or Protruding Pile in days. <lb/>
application and K real paint makes quarts of the <lb/>
. grade of pure paint, and It is en- <lb/>
Off Tear Rheumatism to paint a and two more <lb/>
Now la the time to get rid of your rooms. For outside painting the <lb/>
rheumatism. Try a twenty-five cent Tery highest grade of long life paint, <lb/>
bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment and i made by adding quarts of pure <lb/>
see how quickly your rheumatic pains j Linseed Oil to each one gallon of L. <lb/>
disappear. Sold by all druggists. Ma M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint. Sold <lb/>
One <lb/>
lies en Hand. <lb/>
An incredulous fellow, not from <lb/>
Missouri, either thought we <lb/>
Mamie E. Brown <lb/>
Cole <lb/>
Ada <lb/>
Amanda <lb/>
L. Edgerton <lb/>
Allene Edwards <lb/>
Mary Leila <lb/>
Blanche Gilbert <lb/>
Josephine Hewitt <lb/>
Joice Mabel Watson <lb/>
Hobbs Laura Weeks <lb/>
Nina <lb/>
Emily Johnson Womble <lb/>
Agnes Stewart <lb/>
If the newspaper accounts are <lb/>
this school this year is turning <lb/>
back to the State more <lb/>
and efficient teachers for the public <lb/>
schools than any other state <lb/>
and our rising senior class bids <lb/>
fair to be larger than any of its <lb/>
predecessors. <lb/>
Thai It Pays <lb/>
For the fiscal year ending April 30th <lb/>
were the advertising patronage of The Re- <lb/>
overdrawing the picture the other Hector was twenty-five per cent <lb/>
E. Phillips n talking about the immense bicycle than for the previous year and for <lb/>
Odell business of the John Flanagan Buggy; May. the first month of the present <lb/>
Simmons Company. If he wants to know some year. It was more than twenty-five <lb/>
Millie here they We have cent larger than in May of last <lb/>
Ida B. looked In at the plant to see what year. This is proof that those who <lb/>
Annie Stewart j they had, and by actual count found <lb/>
Pearl E. Taylor i bicycles in the show room, and there <lb/>
Mary Thompson were more in the storage room. <lb/>
Lanie Tyson s an ordinary thing for the <lb/>
Bloomer Vaughn j to get a carload of wheels at the <lb/>
Vera Mae Waters I time. No wonder they are selling <lb/>
use The Reflector advertising columns <lb/>
find that it pays them. <lb/>
Colic, Cholera and <lb/>
Remedy <lb/>
Every family without exception <lb/>
should keep this preparation at hand <lb/>
daring the hot weather of the sum- <lb/>
mer months. Chamberlain's Colic, <lb/>
Cholera and Remedy is <lb/>
times its cost when need- <lb/>
ed and Is certain to be needed <lb/>
before the la over. It <lb/>
no superior for the purposes <lb/>
Strayed <lb/>
From my farm six small <lb/>
them and putting nearly everybody or <lb/>
riding. <lb/>
Stops Scalp Itch <lb/>
and Every Form of Scalp <lb/>
Disease Cored Quick by <lb/>
It Is simply wonderful how <lb/>
goes after dandruff. You rub a little <lb/>
of it In with tips of the It <lb/>
gets right down Into the glands, <lb/>
them, stops the Itch, and makes <lb/>
the head feel fine. No, It isn't <lb/>
Is a fine, clear, vanishing liquid. <lb/>
You don't have to even wash your <lb/>
hands after using It for eczema, rash, <lb/>
and ail skin afflictions. A <lb/>
cent trial bottle at <lb/>
Is guaranteed to stop any skin <lb/>
Irritation. <lb/>
is prepared by F W. Rose <lb/>
Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and is <lb/>
has regularly sold by druggists at II a hot <lb/>
for tie. But to rove what It will do at <lb/>
which It Is Intended. Buy it now. expense, is now put up <lb/>
For sale by druggists. In cent trial bottles. <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
Marked swallow fork in right ear, <lb/>
black with few small white spots. <lb/>
Allen. Greenville Route <lb/>
AN OLD ADAGE <lb/>
light parse Is a heavy <lb/>
Sickness make a light purse. <lb/>
The U the seat of nine <lb/>
tenths of all disease. <lb/>
go to the root at the whole mat- <lb/>
thoroughly, quickly safely <lb/>
restore the action of <lb/>
to normal condition. <lb/>
Give tone to the system and <lb/>
solid flesh to the body. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Scientists After Long m <lb/>
to Have Evolved Almost Perfect <lb/>
Alloy for the <lb/>
There are, undoubtedly, no products <lb/>
f human skill on which a greater de- <lb/>
of care is expended than the <lb/>
of weight and measure in <lb/>
use the nations. Two <lb/>
things in particular must be <lb/>
and durability. Na- <lb/>
does not, it Is contended, furnish <lb/>
single metal or mineral which ex- <lb/>
answers the requirements for a <lb/>
standard of measure or weight that <lb/>
shall be as nearly as possible <lb/>
able. <lb/>
It is held that the best substance <lb/>
yet produced for this purpose is an <lb/>
alloy of per cent, of platinum with <lb/>
per cent, of This Is called <lb/>
and it Is the substance <lb/>
of which the metric standards <lb/>
pared by the international <lb/>
of weights and measures are com- <lb/>
posed. <lb/>
It Is hard, it Is less affected by heat <lb/>
than any pure metal. It Is practically <lb/>
or not subject to rust, <lb/>
and It can be finely engraved. In fact, <lb/>
the lines on the standard meters are <lb/>
hardly visible to the naked eye, yet <lb/>
they are even, sharp and ac- <lb/>
curate. <lb/>
It Is said that If our <lb/>
should ever be lost and relics of It <lb/>
should be discovered In some brighter <lb/>
age In the remote future there is <lb/>
which would bear higher <lb/>
to Its character than these <lb/>
standard measures of <lb/>
Harper's Weekly. <lb/>
Be Happy <lb/>
girl, or woman, who has never from <lb/>
any of the disease of Or, If the has been a <lb/>
sufferer, happy is she If the has learned of the wonderful <lb/>
benefits of the woman's tonic <lb/>
is a gentle, tonic remedy, for women's ailments. <lb/>
It It a natural harmless, purely vegetable. <lb/>
It has been in successful use for more than H <lb/>
hat cured thousands. It should do the same for you. <lb/>
f TAKE <lb/>
The <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Neely, of Denver, says, think <lb/>
there is no tonic on earth, as good as I used It <lb/>
with the very best results, i had backache and nearly <lb/>
everything a woman could suffer with, until I took <lb/>
Now, I feel better than I have for two years. I stall <lb/>
always recommend to other suffering <lb/>
can't praise It too highly. As a medicine for weak, tired, <lb/>
worn-out women, is safe and reliable. Try it, today. <lb/>
Ce. <lb/>
and M-page hook. <lb/>
MOST CORRUPT IN THE WORLD <lb/>
Russian Police, From Chief to Merest <lb/>
Messenger, Are Declared to <lb/>
Live on Bribes. <lb/>
Russian declares an <lb/>
Englishman who has spent much of <lb/>
his life In the of the <lb/>
the most corrupt In the world. There <lb/>
Is a definite tariff on thieves over <lb/>
there; pickpockets are practically <lb/>
The police go regularly to en- <lb/>
where crowds <lb/>
gate to receive their premium from <lb/>
the thieves. Practically every police <lb/>
official from the chief down to merest <lb/>
messenger Is bribed. They not only <lb/>
graft upon the thieves, but from fallen <lb/>
women as well. The government Is <lb/>
helpless to deal with the situation and <lb/>
It is allowed to go on unchecked. <lb/>
see, the government official <lb/>
know that if they attempt to inter- <lb/>
they would be killed. If the Czar <lb/>
tried to bring about any reform ho <lb/>
would be assassinated by the police <lb/>
and their agents. The officials know <lb/>
that It would bring down the entire <lb/>
governmental structure about their <lb/>
ears, so they let the grafting go along <lb/>
unmolested. It Is like that all over <lb/>
the empire, a veritable cancer. Bad <lb/>
as the police graft in America is, it is <lb/>
nothing In comparison to The <lb/>
empire Is honeycombed with It <lb/>
everything can be done In <lb/>
Russia with bribes and the same thing <lb/>
has been going on for centuries. Even <lb/>
in the middle ages the peasants lived <lb/>
under a system of graft similar to <lb/>
that of <lb/>
J. R, J. G, <lb/>
GENERAL STORE PAINTS OILS <lb/>
When You Paint <lb/>
Use PURE Paint and <lb/>
Use Pure LINSEED OIL to add <lb/>
to it at one-half the cost of Paint. <lb/>
PURE PAINT ts made with WHITE LEAD. ZINC and <lb/>
LINSEED OH. t bat's the way the L. M. SEMI-MIXED <lb/>
SEAL 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 ADDITIONAL quantity of OIL is put into the Paint <lb/>
by the CONSUMER, as by so doing he SAVES MONEY. <lb/>
gallons of LINSEED OIL with every <lb/>
gallons of L. M. PAINT <lb/>
and MIX the OIL with the PAINT. <lb/>
If the Paint thus made costs more than per gallon <lb/>
If the Paint as you use it is satisfactory <lb/>
man whatever you not and b back AIL you paid <lb/>
for the WHOLE of and th money you told to the Painter. <lb/>
Homeric Attributed to Many. <lb/>
If Messrs. Wesley, Baxter, <lb/>
Newton or any one of them <lb/>
but for the of God, goes <lb/>
. . . they must plead guilty to <lb/>
plagiarism If the of Na- <lb/>
be deemed <lb/>
It attributes the remark to <lb/>
John Bradford, who was born at <lb/>
chester, England, about 1510; was <lb/>
chaplain to Edward VI., and was in <lb/>
Mary's reign condemned to the flames <lb/>
and suffered at July <lb/>
The authority cited says that Brad- <lb/>
ford seeing a criminal driven by on <lb/>
his way to be executed <lb/>
bat for the grace of goes <lb/>
It further <lb/>
that Bradford's early career was seek <lb/>
that the remark was not <lb/>
a statement well sustained by <lb/>
other authority. <lb/>
sale Cut Steps In las <lb/>
How seals cut steps In the <lb/>
sides of Ice cakes In order to <lb/>
rise from the water for the purpose <lb/>
of breathing been recorded by <lb/>
members of Captain Scott's <lb/>
expedition. <lb/>
It was discovered that the seals, <lb/>
which formerly were supposed to leave <lb/>
the water by leaping, actually cut <lb/>
steps In the slippery surface with the <lb/>
great canine or eye teeth. soon <lb/>
as the teeth are placed In position, the <lb/>
head la moved rapidly from side to <lb/>
side until the ice has been cut away <lb/>
sufficiently to afford a footing for the <lb/>
front flippers of the animal. <lb/>
Each step has to be laboriously cat <lb/>
after this fashion until the body is <lb/>
enough out of the water to be thrust <lb/>
up the rest of the way by a kick of the <lb/>
bind flippers. <lb/>
It Did Not Matter. <lb/>
They were on their honeymoon, and <lb/>
were spending It amidst the <lb/>
of Nearly every <lb/>
day they attempted to climb to a fresh <lb/>
Flushed with triumph and with ex- <lb/>
heat, parched and scant of <lb/>
breath, they had at last gained the <lb/>
summit of a lofty peak. Then they <lb/>
paused. <lb/>
exclaimed the wife <lb/>
she had finished panting. have <lb/>
tramped all this to admire <lb/>
this beautiful view and we've forgot- <lb/>
ten the <lb/>
mind, replied the <lb/>
husband, taking a smell flask out of <lb/>
Bis pocket no one about. <lb/>
We drink Just -veil out of <lb/>
battler <lb/>
Letter from Former Greenville <lb/>
Man <lb/>
N, C, June 9th, 1913. <lb/>
Editor of The Reflector, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
Dear I feel that no true man <lb/>
ever loses Interest in the place of <lb/>
his birth and that he Is always alive <lb/>
to every forward step for good which <lb/>
old associates undertake, <lb/>
early life having been spent in your <lb/>
town naturally makes me very much <lb/>
interested in the important question <lb/>
now before Township, that <lb/>
of a bond issue for road building. <lb/>
I indeed sorry to learn that <lb/>
there was some opposition to move <lb/>
still that has been the <lb/>
of every community that has <lb/>
attempted to reach out on any line <lb/>
of progress. <lb/>
Several years ago when I took up <lb/>
my abode In the town of <lb/>
system of working the roads was <lb/>
exceedingly inadequate, the roads <lb/>
were very sandy and bad at all times. <lb/>
The progressive spirit Influenced the <lb/>
better element of thinkers and the <lb/>
of a bond was put be- <lb/>
fore the voters of the township and <lb/>
they voted an Issue of All <lb/>
the of the Ignorant and <lb/>
prejudiced were preached, but these <lb/>
were explained away and <lb/>
the road system was established with <lb/>
results which have stood the test. <lb/>
We have now all of the leading <lb/>
roads to our town in good shape- <lb/>
seems satisfied and there are no de- <lb/>
for a change to the old sys- <lb/>
If a man says that the road build- <lb/>
is expensive, two men answer and <lb/>
but they are worth twice <lb/>
what they My observation con <lb/>
me that your township cant <lb/>
afford not to build better roads. If <lb/>
it does not there will be regret in <lb/>
the future. <lb/>
rant It Secret <lb/>
splendid work of Chamber- <lb/>
Tablets Is becoming more <lb/>
widely known. such grand rem- <lb/>
for and liver troubles <lb/>
ever been known. For sale by <lb/>
all druggists. <lb/>
LOW <lb/>
Via Seaboard Air Line By. <lb/>
To Following Points From All Sta- <lb/>
In North Carolina <lb/>
ST. LOUIS. Ho. Southern Baptist <lb/>
Convention, May 14th to 21st, <lb/>
Tickets on tale May 9th to <lb/>
Final return limit May 27th. <lb/>
ATLANTA. Ga. Meeting General <lb/>
Assemblies Presbyterian churches. <lb/>
May 14th, June 1st Tickets on sale <lb/>
May 12-13-14-15-19-20. Final return <lb/>
limit June 10th. <lb/>
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. <lb/>
rate Veterans Reunion, May <lb/>
Tickets on May to 18th. <lb/>
Final limit returning 6th. <lb/>
FOR FULL INFORMATION as to <lb/>
rates, schedules, etc, apply to any lo- <lb/>
cal agent or address, <lb/>
H. D. P. A. <lb/>
IT. C <lb/>
Take Plenty of Time to Eat <lb/>
is a saying that eat- <lb/>
is slow If you have <lb/>
formed the habit of eating too rapidly <lb/>
you are most likely suffering from in- <lb/>
digestion or which will <lb/>
in serious illness <lb/>
less corrected. Digestion begins in <lb/>
mouth. Foods should be thorough <lb/>
and Then <lb/>
when you have a fullness of <lb/>
or feel dull and stupid after eat- <lb/>
take one of Chamberlain's Tablets. <lb/>
Many sever case of stomach have <lb/>
been cured by use of these tablets. <lb/>
They are easy to take and most agree- <lb/>
able In effect Sold by all druggists. <lb/>
Yours very truly, <lb/>
WILLIAM E. WARREN. <lb/>
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/>
you take GROVE'S TASTELESS chill <lb/>
TONIC, recognized for years through- <lb/>
out the South as the standard Malaria, <lb/>
Chill and Fever Remedy and General <lb/>
Strengthening Tonic. It is as strong as <lb/>
the strongest bitter tonic, but you do not <lb/>
taste the bitter because the ingredients <lb/>
do not dissolve in the mouth but do dis- <lb/>
solve in the acids of the <lb/>
Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean <lb/>
soc. <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. K. Surgeon. Prevent s Blood <lb/>
Poisoning. <lb/>
Thousands of families know it already, <lb/>
and a trial will convince you that DR. <lb/>
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC <lb/>
OIL is the most wonderful remedy ever <lb/>
discovered for Wounds, Burns, Old Sores, <lb/>
Ulcers, Carbuncles, Granulated Eye Lids, <lb/>
Sore Throat, Skin or Diseases and <lb/>
all wounds and external whether <lb/>
Con people are <lb/>
new uses for this famous old <lb/>
remedy. Guaranteed by your Druggist <lb/>
There <lb/>
Loot out <lb/>
Is LAXATIVE <lb/>
tea. Cums a Cold in One Day. <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
GREENVILLE IS TEE <lb/>
BE ART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED BY BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IX THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL A X D <lb/>
RY FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
JOB AND NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT.<lb/>
; .<lb/>
he Host the the Most i . . <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IX THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb/>
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb/>
WHO TO GET BET- <lb/>
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb/>
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
I FEW INCHES SPAt BAND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT TOD <lb/>
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
EXT I ON. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AX CAN <lb/>
BE HAD UPON <lb/>
VOLUME <lb/>
H. C, nil , a <lb/>
LADIES APPEAL <lb/>
REPAIRS AI <lb/>
Present Arguments Shewing Need <lb/>
For Improvements <lb/>
a ire <lb/>
Twenty Juries In Thirty Years <lb/>
Have That lie. <lb/>
pairs lie But <lb/>
lip Horn Dune <lb/>
Mrs. A. L. Blow as president of <lb/>
tho County Homo Society, is <lb/>
sending out circulars over the town <lb/>
and county In an effort l secure <lb/>
county in an to create <lb/>
sentiment In favor of repairing so far as clothing, fuel, bed <lb/>
of n more and respectable Poor <lb/>
MARCH TERM, <lb/>
find the building In fair con- <lb/>
except one. that needs repair- <lb/>
immediately for the comfort of <lb/>
occupants <lb/>
JANUARY TERM. <lb/>
find that tho Poor House Is <lb/>
not as comfortable as II should be, <lb/>
some of the flooring largo cracks, <lb/>
and they should be <lb/>
MARCH TERM, ISM <lb/>
we recommend lo <lb/>
County Commissioners of <lb/>
county that avail themselves of <lb/>
the law recently enacted by tho Gen- <lb/>
Assembly of North <lb/>
them to sell the present <lb/>
Poor House and rebuild as near the <lb/>
town of Greenville possible, so <lb/>
inmates may have the benefit of <lb/>
services and the visitation of <lb/>
the good ladies of <lb/>
SEPTEMBER TERM, <lb/>
find it in good condition ex- <lb/>
one house or two needing re- <lb/>
JANUARY TERM, <lb/>
find the inmates well cared <lb/>
MM It <lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL <lb/>
AT <lb/>
Woman is <lb/>
Killed By <lb/>
Lightning <lb/>
Militants <lb/>
Sentenced <lb/>
o Prison <lb/>
Had Formal Opening at Chapel <lb/>
Wednesday Morning. <lb/>
A woman, the wife of LONDON, June 17.- six of the most <lb/>
Head School Made formal Ad- <lb/>
To Teachers This <lb/>
Members Of <lb/>
Are Here <lb/>
Impressive exercises at chapel <lb/>
morning at the <lb/>
School marked the formal open- <lb/>
of tho summer term at the in- <lb/>
Up to the time of tho ex- <lb/>
Adams, who lived four miles In the prominent leaders of the militant <lb/>
country across Tar river, Was and one of <lb/>
by lightning yesterday afternoon were today <lb/>
to commit <lb/>
Those <lb/>
Kerr, <lb/>
the unfortunate affair this morn- Lake, -Miss Rachel Bar- <lb/>
though ii seems that the woman Mrs. Beatrice Saunders, Miss <lb/>
INTENTIONS <lb/>
kill <lb/>
log the thunder storm and Instantly <lb/>
I,.,,,. malicious damage to <lb/>
; killed. But little could learned <lb/>
Former Virginian Is S <lb/>
Widow <lb/>
lain <lb/>
was In tho Held <lb/>
storm came up. <lb/>
home, i at bi <lb/>
house, the g , k <lb/>
had done us work. Death was <lb/>
as, and the did <lb/>
live to Butter from the <lb/>
i l in I lie moth r <lb/>
working when <lb/>
She started to <lb/>
i reached <lb/>
the <lb/>
her <lb/>
the <lb/>
In- <lb/>
HO VOTIVE m <lb/>
two of tho buildings at tho <lb/>
home. Those who are familiar <lb/>
with the existing conditions at <lb/>
home say that these repairs are very <lb/>
much needed and that it is duty <lb/>
the county to look the mat- <lb/>
and have the necessary repairs <lb/>
made. <lb/>
The circular letter, followed by ex- <lb/>
of twenty grand juries of Pitt <lb/>
county are given below, <lb/>
for <lb/>
Greenville, May ., 1913. <lb/>
My Dear <lb/>
Herewith is handed you <lb/>
from reports of twenty Grand Juries <lb/>
for Pitt county, recommending with <lb/>
more or less strength, a comfortable <lb/>
provisions. We <lb/>
buildings in a v <lb/>
rep <lb/>
APRIL TERM, <lb/>
tho inmates and find <lb/>
in number and from Information <lb/>
could get, they seem to cared <lb/>
for as well as could be expected <lb/>
existing circumstances. The <lb/>
buildings uncomfortable to the <lb/>
These speak it-mates and a disgrace to the <lb/>
After viewing the situation, <lb/>
recommend that for comfort and con- <lb/>
it would be advisable to <lb/>
build-, and It should built at one <lb/>
a dormitory where tho better class <lb/>
cf Inmates could be eared for bettor <lb/>
use the best buildings use for <lb/>
this morning, exactly children, all of s . <lb/>
dents had registered for the summer together with , .; <lb/>
work and there arc many yet to be <lb/>
heard from. Young women from <lb/>
Annie Kenny and Laura <lb/>
while the man was <lb/>
chemist <lb/>
The jury banded in a Ga; Shot <lb/>
for mercy in the cases of Mi- <lb/>
i. and Barrett. <lb/>
i i sentence <lb/>
on . <lb/>
n months, Mrs. j <lb/>
Miss Kerr. -Mis. Katie <lb/>
twelve months; Mi i Barrett, <lb/>
e find some of sections or tho eastern part of r <lb/>
cry bad condition, and the still coming in Tor tho ill id <lb/>
airs j summer work, as President right <lb/>
and <lb/>
home for the county's poor, who Inmates they are best suited <lb/>
live at the Poor House. <lb/>
A Grand Jury Is an official body, <lb/>
a part of tho county's government, <lb/>
acting on authority given by law, and <lb/>
under oath. <lb/>
Their recommendations, as you <lb/>
know, should not be Ignored. To do <lb/>
so is dangerous to our peace and <lb/>
good order. <lb/>
Therefore, it is the duty of every <lb/>
good citizen of Pitt county to aid <lb/>
tho County Commissioners In carry- <lb/>
into effect tho persistent <lb/>
of the Grand Juries. The <lb/>
Commissioners desire to act for the <lb/>
citizens of the county, so, If you <lb/>
favor of carrying Into effect these <lb/>
recommendations sign n petition and <lb/>
ask your neighbors to sign It with <lb/>
you, to Commissioners, asking <lb/>
them to do so, and send it to tho <lb/>
chairman. <lb/>
If the Commissioners will sell the <lb/>
In the cook <lb/>
JANUARY TERM, 1911. <lb/>
we find the buildings <lb/>
pied by tho Home totally unfit for <lb/>
county farm and levy a tax of Ration. They are shingle covered, <lb/>
tea cents on tho hundred dollars and the shingles are. tho <lb/>
APRIL TERM, 1900 <lb/>
buildings are bad, repairs are <lb/>
recommended by the last Grand <lb/>
SEPTEMBER TERM, <lb/>
understand that a former <lb/>
Grand Jury has suggested the selling <lb/>
of our County Home for the purpose <lb/>
of purchasing In a more suitable <lb/>
place. We are of the same opinion, <lb/>
provided that a larger farm could he <lb/>
purchased In a suitable location at <lb/>
S reasonable price; a groat deal of <lb/>
and good judgment should be us- <lb/>
ed In making a <lb/>
NOVEMBER TERM, 1910. <lb/>
building needs repairing on <lb/>
this morning, the outlook is for <lb/>
tho very best summer school that <lb/>
Institution has ever had. <lb/>
school Is to be op- <lb/>
on exactly tho same basis as <lb/>
tho regular fall and spring terms. <lb/>
The book room will be In full opera- <lb/>
under the efficient of <lb/>
of tho teachers who has it In <lb/>
charge during the regular session, <lb/>
and tho infirmary is to be open to <lb/>
care for any who might become dis- <lb/>
In any way. The management <lb/>
Is doing everything possible to make <lb/>
things convenient and pleasant <lb/>
simmer students for, as they <lb/>
To Death <lb/>
Hi hate Who <lb/>
Immediately Suicided In <lb/>
Savannah, Ga. <lb/>
SAVANNAH, Ga., Juno That <lb/>
Whisnant, y <lb/>
nine ow who killed herself <lb/>
-Booths; Ml, I and Miss , t to death <lb/>
six months each; Mr. . <lb/>
, months. Guy in his private , <lb/>
All were committed to <lb/>
the third division, emails hard home to kill the physician la <lb/>
labor. Each defendant was ordered to indicated In nob Mrs. Whisnant ad- <lb/>
one-seventh of the costs of dressed to her mother which <lb/>
and was bound over to found at her home today. <lb/>
I keep the peace for a year after the <lb/>
v. s <lb/>
WARRENTON, Juno <lb/>
of Imprisonment, <lb/>
big-1 With the exception of Ms. Saunders <lb/>
In this Mrs. Whisnant stated <lb/>
that was about <lb/>
. to happen and she besought her <lb/>
nest lire in tho history the women loudly proclaimed their mother's forgiveness for her intended <lb/>
tonight n few minutes after Intention of going on a <lb/>
seven o'clock, when lightning struck <lb/>
large tobacco <lb/>
house of J. J. and R. <lb/>
-Mess, burning It, together with thous- <lb/>
lands of pounds of tobacco. <lb/>
The largo tobacco warehouse of tho <lb/>
Company ad- <lb/>
joining, was also burned, together <lb/>
they want tho students to get four ,, <lb/>
much out of their stay as they can. <lb/>
Professor C. W. Wilson, who will <lb/>
and who will have personal charge <lb/>
of the affairs of the institution during <lb/>
the next two months, conducted the <lb/>
chapel exercises this morning. <lb/>
ho had read a Psalm and the vast <lb/>
concourse of students and visitors <lb/>
had repeated together the Lord's pray <lb/>
a song was sung, and <lb/>
Wilson made the announcements for <lb/>
Victory on Freight Rate <lb/>
a carload <lb/>
Of and wagons. <lb/>
The losses will be about as <lb/>
be the director of summer school, house tobacco c, June 17- <lb/>
Warehouse follows close on the heels <lb/>
minor losses total High Point in winning a freight <lb/>
The is about victory announced by the in- <lb/>
Tho fire at time Commerce Commission today, <lb/>
some of tho nicest residences In tho i The complainant in the action is the <lb/>
town, but by hard work on the Company, <lb/>
of the volunteer fire department, they which has recently established a <lb/>
saved after being badly <lb/>
ed. A deal of household <lb/>
. . , . WM by being re- <lb/>
moved from the homes. <lb/>
This lightning also struck <lb/>
meeting of tho various classes and <lb/>
stating that every department would <lb/>
got under way today. <lb/>
Several stanzas of the state anthem. <lb/>
tho home of G, W, so- <lb/>
was delightfully <lb/>
by tho students and President <lb/>
branch factory in Wadesboro, The <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Is the railroad In- <lb/>
and the of the com- <lb/>
mission is a complete victory for <lb/>
the company. <lb/>
The complaint set forth that before <lb/>
February 1912, freight rates in <lb/>
lots from Wadesboro to South <lb/>
Wright was called upon for an <lb/>
lions damage was done to the house, Carolina points were on the <lb/>
dress. <lb/>
worth of property for one year, it <lb/>
will be about enough to purchase a <lb/>
small tract of land and build a suit- <lb/>
able home. Think of each year <lb/>
you give charitably amount of <lb/>
money; give It year for a county <lb/>
home. <lb/>
Feeling the necessity for a better <lb/>
homo and to co-operate with others <lb/>
having a feeling, call you <lb/>
to help. <lb/>
P. Remember that twenty Grand<lb/>
mended this, in substance. <lb/>
Excerpts From Reports Of Gran-I <lb/>
Juries Relating to fond it Ion of <lb/>
County Poor <lb/>
APRIL TERM. 1881. <lb/>
find tho County Homo well <lb/>
kept and Inmates well cared for. but <lb/>
recommend that necessary repairs <lb/>
made on the <lb/>
SEPTEMBER TERM, <lb/>
find the buildings In fair con- <lb/>
except one, that needs to <lb/>
repaired Immediately for the , <lb/>
of the therein. We <lb/>
recommend that the Commissioners <lb/>
dispose, of tho present Poor House <lb/>
property Invest In some nearer <lb/>
Greenville to make for the <lb/>
are badly run down and <lb/>
in need of repairs. To make them <lb/>
comfortable for tho coming winter <lb/>
about worth of repairs Is <lb/>
needed. especially recommend <lb/>
that larger and better buildings <lb/>
provided, that In our opinion, a <lb/>
brick building should con- <lb/>
for tho Home, that the pres- <lb/>
buildings so badly run down <lb/>
that now Is tho and <lb/>
to construct new buildings <lb/>
for tho Homo. are needed, and <lb/>
tho construction of them <lb/>
upon which we believe <lb/>
tho County should act without fur- <lb/>
JANUARY TERM. 1912 <lb/>
especially recommend that the <lb/>
County Commissioners have new build <lb/>
erected at tho County Home, as <lb/>
find the present buildings very <lb/>
old and in a dilapidated <lb/>
APRIL TERM. 1912 <lb/>
but for a while the Davis woman was basis as rates from town in South <lb/>
in a critical condition. She Is now to another. Al soon as the <lb/>
President right s address was the and is ,. j , , <lb/>
feature of the exercises. It was n I ,. . <lb/>
sort of Introduction to the students, bus bad long since been L nearby potato In <lb/>
was meant to give them sonic lusted here. In this connection ho South Carolina without changing the <lb/>
I to from and <lb/>
d the road <lb/>
to followed during the two party hero this summer; It was claim,., <lb/>
of work. Ho told the teachers <lb/>
that It was indeed a pleasure to him <lb/>
to see so many of them present, and <lb/>
that he was confident that the com- <lb/>
term would be the most success- <lb/>
In tho history of the school. He <lb/>
said that tho school had already out- <lb/>
grown Its bounds, and that It would <lb/>
have to stop growing until tho state <lb/>
would furnish It a new suit of school <lb/>
clothes. Since April of this year <lb/>
tho authorities of the school have <lb/>
been turning away applicants for ad- <lb/>
he understands that <lb/>
come hero for work, and not for re- <lb/>
creation and amusement. Four years <lb/>
ago. said President Wright, when he <lb/>
took charge of the ho ask- <lb/>
ed tho superintendent. Mr <lb/>
Y. Joyner. what lie wanted here. Mr. <lb/>
Joyner replied that tho of <lb/>
the school was train teachers for <lb/>
tho schools of North Carolina, and <lb/>
since that time he has held rigidly <lb/>
to that purpose. And. as a result, <lb/>
this Training School is tho only In- <lb/>
here have that there <lb/>
mission Into the school on account of n the state whose solo bus <lb/>
is the of teachers for <lb/>
the pubic schools. <lb/>
Superintendent Edwin D. <lb/>
of the Graded Schools, who <lb/>
lack of room. In all 9.19 have been <lb/>
turned away for this cause since <lb/>
tho school was first opened four <lb/>
years ago. President Wright express- <lb/>
ed the appreciation of tho <lb/>
ho school of what has been <lb/>
done by tho people of the town in <lb/>
II have charge of tho department <lb/>
was from <lb/>
Wadesboro before the plan was built <lb/>
to justify a new rate on an Interstate <lb/>
basis. <lb/>
Now, however, expense of <lb/>
new tariffs has been thrown a- <lb/>
way. as the commission has ordered <lb/>
that tho rate from now on not <lb/>
exceed the rates In before Feb- <lb/>
1912. Preparation Is ordered <lb/>
soon as the fertilizer company can <lb/>
show how much It has paid above the <lb/>
old rate. <lb/>
The rulings of the commission show <lb/>
that at least North shippers <lb/>
are being heeded when ask for <lb/>
reductions on lines. <lb/>
inmates made no com- opening their homes for the <lb/>
and were getting along I of many student who could <lb/>
Turn nut . <lb/>
feels and believes that a great Tho speaker the school <lb/>
should take place at the County I Stands for hard work In the summer <lb/>
school well as at other times, <lb/>
warning his teachers that the <lb/>
Residence <lb/>
June <lb/>
readied the city, and began class-1 a severe I i which vis- <lb/>
or today. Professor D. C. Brooks, I Red this section ibis afternoon, tho <lb/>
of Trinity College, who win of John Pool. In West Stated <lb/>
.-- n. <lb/>
has been delayed in bis arrival, but jelly destroyed. Most of the furniture <lb/>
he l to reach town tonight. saved. Mr. Pools at <lb/>
will begin his classes tomorrow morn- work and Mrs. had gone to the <lb/>
home of a neighbor, Just prior to <lb/>
Tho identity of the woman who ac- <lb/>
companied Whisnant to Dr. <lb/>
office has been discovered <lb/>
by the police, but it is said she con- <lb/>
tho authorities she had no idea <lb/>
of the intentions of Mrs. Whisnant <lb/>
When she went to the physicians of- <lb/>
with her. <lb/>
funeral of Dr. will <lb/>
at Whaley. Va. Tho body <lb/>
left hero this afternoon. The body <lb/>
of Mrs. Whisnant was taken this <lb/>
morning to Sylvania. Ga., where <lb/>
formerly lived. <lb/>
Dr. u <lb/>
SUFFOLK, Va., June Guy <lb/>
O. who was shot and in- <lb/>
killed in Savannah <lb/>
by Mrs. Eugene II. Whisnant, who <lb/>
later committed suicide, was a <lb/>
of county, being <lb/>
born and reared near Springs <lb/>
church, about eight miles south of <lb/>
Suffolk. <lb/>
According to i advices re- <lb/>
here last i hi Mr. <lb/>
was shot by the woman who was sup- <lb/>
posed to be n Insane, while writ- <lb/>
a for her. He was <lb/>
the son of Mrs. and <lb/>
L. Parke who died <lb/>
two years ago. He was brother <lb/>
of Fairies of <lb/>
county, and a Ural cousin r. h. <lb/>
superintendent of the <lb/>
Railway and Power Company <lb/>
of this city. <lb/>
D. who was about <lb/>
years old. left Suffolk In <lb/>
which time he has been very success- <lb/>
making a specially In treating <lb/>
skin and cancer n i s, <lb/>
The deceased, who was unmarried, <lb/>
was In the of visiting his pa- <lb/>
rents near Suffolk every year. <lb/>
Tho remains left Savannah today <lb/>
en route to Whaley, Va. about three <lb/>
miles from tho scene of his birth. <lb/>
Tho services will con- <lb/>
ducted tomorrow afternoon from Lib- <lb/>
Springs Christian church, <lb/>
most directly In front of tho former <lb/>
home of the d, <lb/>
storm. Other houses were saved <lb/>
hard work. <lb/>
The local i and syS <lb/>
terns suffered id from tho<lb/>
1866 Beginning of tho six <lb/>
war Austria and <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>