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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
Mr. Hoyle Favors <lb/>
To the I shall not attempt <lb/>
to answer Mr. last letter for <lb/>
there Is nothing in It worthy of a <lb/>
reply. His insinuation that Mr. <lb/>
represent anybody except <lb/>
the poor unfortunates, is too <lb/>
for anybody to believe, and is <lb/>
to all intelligent people only the <lb/>
of <lb/>
To the Why should the poor <lb/>
louse be removed to Greenville <lb/>
of all. because of present <lb/>
It was my pleasure, <lb/>
or rather displeasure, to visit the home <lb/>
on Friday and lost my way going <lb/>
I I ITEMS <lb/>
July M. <lb/>
B. Bryan left this morning for <lb/>
folk in interest of the new bank to <lb/>
established at Greenville. <lb/>
Mr. A. W. Ange and family are <lb/>
visiting his parents at Jamesville this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
While they last, for cash, we will <lb/>
sell dress straw hats at cost Come <lb/>
and see them. Harrington, Barber <lb/>
and Company. <lb/>
Mr. W. W. Forest of Ayden was <lb/>
here visiting his son B. D. Forest <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
S. D. Thorne returned Sunday from <lb/>
Rocky Mount where he has been <lb/>
visiting relatives. <lb/>
Thermometers, lanterns and to- <lb/>
more than a mile off. This proves at a. W. Ange and Com- <lb/>
bow hard it is for visitors to reach <lb/>
the county home. Little kindnesses See and House for shoes and <lb/>
which many would be glad to show nave the best grade of <lb/>
they cannot because of the distance. goods for least money. <lb/>
In the next place there are certain Mr j D CoX returned Monday <lb/>
equipments which are absolutely I after spending few days at Fair- <lb/>
necessary for the safety and comfort <lb/>
of the inmates which can be obtained i wide awake <lb/>
and maintained a much less returned Sunday from a short <lb/>
near town. A building of brick <lb/>
concrete as near fire proof as Miss Maggie Whitehurst of Bethel <lb/>
should be erected. To haul all is Mr. M. G. <lb/>
material seven or eight miles an <lb/>
would be a needless expense. Steam A load of and a <lb/>
should be provided, which can load top dressing at <lb/>
only be maintained at a regular and Company, <lb/>
temperature by using coal. The as as possibly <lb/>
could not afford to haul coal, good beef cows and barbecue <lb/>
even miles and the keeper of the <lb/>
home tells me that the wood is fast <lb/>
out We should <lb/>
also provide electric lights and water <lb/>
works for the home. This can be <lb/>
done much cheaper from a town <lb/>
the plant Is already established than <lb/>
from a private plant. <lb/>
Any one who will think honestly <lb/>
for a few minutes can see the <lb/>
for these improvements . More <lb/>
than half of the Inmates of the home <lb/>
are sick and helpless. They can- <lb/>
not make fires, water or attend <lb/>
to lamps. With open fires and oil <lb/>
lamps many of item are In grave <lb/>
danger of being burned up. Just <lb/>
one view of the sanitary conditions <lb/>
conditions are too bad to be <lb/>
rut in print will convince the hard- <lb/>
est heart that waterworks is an <lb/>
necessity. If these things <lb/>
were not Imperative necessities I am <lb/>
persuaded that they ought to be sup- <lb/>
plied for those who are less <lb/>
ate than we. <lb/>
More than this we are born social <lb/>
beings. Whether we are rich <lb/>
we love company. We are never <lb/>
quite ourselves without it. Let the <lb/>
dry winds of poverty sweep over <lb/>
your own soul; let your deeds and <lb/>
even your life be lessened in the <lb/>
public estimation not because they <lb/>
are less worthy but because you are <lb/>
less wealthy; feel for yourself th <lb/>
awful sting, receive to the very <lb/>
heart that wound which no future <lb/>
can wipe out or obliterate, and the <lb/>
companionship of a faithful dog, tho <lb/>
wag of his tall at your presence <lb/>
bring a little joy and consolation. <lb/>
There are a sister and two brothers <lb/>
In the home. They were all <lb/>
ed when they were five years old <lb/>
carried to the county home when the <lb/>
sister was seven. She Is now fifty- <lb/>
four, having spent nearly half a <lb/>
century in the public alms house. <lb/>
She cannot read a word. She must <lb/>
sit and hold her poor drawn hands <lb/>
all day with no companion except <lb/>
that of a colored attendant. I am <lb/>
told she has never seen a <lb/>
a brick building or an electric <lb/>
light. How she must yearn for just <lb/>
one peep of this great wide world <lb/>
We cannot afford even at the cost <lb/>
of extravagance to neglect such life <lb/>
sufferers as these. We had better <lb/>
waste a great deal of the county's <lb/>
money than let a single one of God's <lb/>
little ones go unnoticed. If I sin let <lb/>
me sin on the side of mercy. Let <lb/>
those who feel that they are the self- <lb/>
appointed guardians of the funds of <lb/>
Pitt county find some other means <lb/>
or economizing than with our poor. <lb/>
Better let your road wash in gullies, <lb/>
and your streets grow up in weeds, <lb/>
than let a single one dependent upon <lb/>
you suffer. Space will not let me <lb/>
quote it, but I ask all to read with me <lb/>
St. Matthew 25th chapter, verses 31-1 <lb/>
which Is Christ's account of <lb/>
last day. Can any man read this, <lb/>
knowing at most that his days are few j <lb/>
and then shut up his bowels of com- <lb/>
passion from those who are hungry <lb/>
and for the sake of saving a few <lb/>
of the people's so-called earned <lb/>
dollars when two or three dollars each <lb/>
would be ample funds. <lb/>
Now Just a word as to <lb/>
which actually exist at the home. <lb/>
R. W. market. <lb/>
Misses Nannie Braxton and Ruth <lb/>
Wingate left Monday for Fair Haven, <lb/>
Mass. where they expect to make <lb/>
their home. The best wishes of <lb/>
their many friends go with them. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Cox were visit- <lb/>
Mrs. Cox's parents near Cox Mill <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Messrs. S. E. and H. W. Clark of <lb/>
Wilson were visiting at Mr. R. <lb/>
Chapman's this week. We are In- <lb/>
deed glad to have these men visit <lb/>
our town, but we fear they will do <lb/>
us as Mr. Herbert Jenkins did. <lb/>
If you need hay see us before <lb/>
you buy. A W. Ange and Co. <lb/>
Go to Cox and House's store for <lb/>
drinks of all kinds and cigars <lb/>
of best grade. <lb/>
Misses and Jeanette Cox <lb/>
made a business trip to Greenville <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
If it is beef, fish, meat and bar- <lb/>
or anything that Is to be found <lb/>
in a grocery store. R W. Dall's is <lb/>
the place to go. for the best goods <lb/>
the right prices. <lb/>
We have some loafers on our <lb/>
streets that we think it would be <lb/>
better for themselves and for our <lb/>
citizens if they had employment, if <lb/>
is no place more than the county <lb/>
roads. <lb/>
Mr. Bill Allen little <lb/>
who was sent to the hos- <lb/>
for the appendicitis last week <lb/>
died Sunday without the operation <lb/>
being performed. The patient did not <lb/>
i each the hospital in time for an op- <lb/>
to be of any value. <lb/>
After lingering for nearly a week <lb/>
after having the second stroke of <lb/>
Mr. Harrington, who <lb/>
lives near here, passed away last <lb/>
Saturday afternoon. Mr. Harrington <lb/>
was a faithful member of the Free <lb/>
Will Baptist church at Reedy Branch. <lb/>
He was true to his Creator, <lb/>
trade him a good neighbor and a val- <lb/>
citizen. Mr. Harrington was <lb/>
of the ripe old age of years. He <lb/>
leaves three children, fourteen grand- <lb/>
children and two <lb/>
to mourn his death. His <lb/>
are Mr. J. F. Harrington, Mrs <lb/>
Vincent and Mrs. Mary <lb/>
all of The <lb/>
family have our deepest sympathy In <lb/>
their bereavement. <lb/>
A HAPPY <lb/>
HOME <lb/>
Is one where health abounds, <lb/>
With Impure blood can- <lb/>
not be good health. <lb/>
With a disordered LIVER there <lb/>
cannot be good blood. <lb/>
revivify the torpid LIVER <lb/>
If natural action. <lb/>
A healthy LIVER means pare <lb/>
Mood. <lb/>
blood means health. <lb/>
Health means happiness. <lb/>
Take no Substitute. All Druggists. <lb/>
Black Eagle, the plug of <lb/>
I Sun Cured tobacco, I have It. D. W. <lb/>
did not observe a single rocking chair, <lb/>
only little low split bottomed ones <lb/>
which the occupants must I <lb/>
alt in a stooping position. stomaches too weak to digest such <lb/>
re no window that I saw. food. These are a few of the awful <lb/>
Some of the inmates are so helpless sights which greet the vision of a <lb/>
that in feeding themselves with their visitor to the county home of this <lb/>
poor drawn hands they necessarily great rich county of Pitt of which her <lb/>
drop particles of food on their cloth- citizens boast. No people can long <lb/>
and a of files annoy them continue prosperous who neglect <lb/>
all day. No use to say they are filthy, i their poor. May God forbid <lb/>
They- cannot help themselves. Many these <lb/>
DROPS <lb/>
THE BEST <lb/>
REMEDY <lb/>
For all forms of <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
and <lb/>
THE PAIN <lb/>
Quick Relief <lb/>
It stops the aches and pains, re- <lb/>
swollen and <lb/>
acts almost like Destroy b <lb/>
the excess uric acid and Is quick, <lb/>
safe and sure In Its result. No <lb/>
other remedy like it. Sample <lb/>
free on request. <lb/>
BOLD BY DRUGGISTS <lb/>
One Dollar per bottle, or sent <lb/>
j paid upon receipt of price If not <lb/>
obtainable In your locality. <lb/>
. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. , <lb/>
Strati <lb/>
SKIN SORES <lb/>
mm rt. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
5.1 <lb/>
QUICKLY HEALED <lb/>
Items From Galloway's frost Roads <lb/>
Galloway's Cross Roads, July <lb/>
Mr. Guy Buck returned home from <lb/>
where he has been for an <lb/>
operation for the appendicitis. We are <lb/>
glad to see him back, hope him a quick <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
Mr. B. F. Buck, formerly known <lb/>
as the is expecting to <lb/>
have a horse in the race at New <lb/>
Bern July 4th. <lb/>
Mr. S. L. and Mr. Ross Ed- <lb/>
wards spent Sunday evening at Mr. <lb/>
W. L. Woolen. Report a very pleas- <lb/>
ant evening. <lb/>
We were glad to see Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
J. C. Galloway at Salem Sabbath <lb/>
school Sunday morning. <lb/>
Mr. Lee Roy Buck and S. L. <lb/>
ton were at New Bern Thursday. <lb/>
Mr. H. H. Porter, one of our R. F. <lb/>
D. carriers is expecting to purchase <lb/>
an auto soon. <lb/>
Our farmers are very busy In their <lb/>
They have very nice crops <lb/>
around here. <lb/>
Mr. C. E. Lincoln <lb/>
requests the honor of your <lb/>
at the marriage of his daughter <lb/>
Nellie May <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Leroy James Teachey <lb/>
Thursday afternoon <lb/>
July the seventeenth <lb/>
nineteen hundred and thirteen <lb/>
at three thirty o'clock <lb/>
Three hundred and five Belle <lb/>
street <lb/>
Greensboro, North Carolina <lb/>
At Home <lb/>
alter July eighteenth <lb/>
Rose Hill, N. C, <lb/>
We have Just a fresh sup- <lb/>
ply of the celebrated Black Eagle Sun <lb/>
Cured Tobacco. J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Piles Cured in to Days <lb/>
Your druggist will refund money if <lb/>
OINTMENT fail, lo cure any cue of Itching, <lb/>
Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in to days. <lb/>
The application gives Ease and Rest. <lb/>
Resolutions of Condolence <lb/>
Whereas the Lord in his wisdom <lb/>
has seen fit to take from our Bro. <lb/>
mother; be it re- <lb/>
solved. <lb/>
1st. That Tribe No. <lb/>
extend to Bro. Buck our deepest <lb/>
In his bereavement, the sorest <lb/>
of all trials and him to one <lb/>
who all things well. To God <lb/>
he can look for help and succor when <lb/>
human aid has failed. <lb/>
2nd. That a copy of these <lb/>
be sent to The Reflector for <lb/>
publication, a copy be sent to Bro. <lb/>
Buck and a copy be spread on our <lb/>
records. <lb/>
CLARENCE VINCENT, <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
J. M. BARBER. <lb/>
Committee <lb/>
of the hearths are adorned with <lb/>
and some of the chimneys have no <lb/>
backs. fat meat and corn mighty, <lb/>
bread was the diet for the poor weak <lb/>
Let every true come <lb/>
to the help of the Lord against the <lb/>
B. M. HOYLE. <lb/>
The next time you want tobacco <lb/>
come to my store and get Black <lb/>
Eagle Sun Cured. It's a good one. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
-i . <lb/>
For Weakness and test of Appetite <lb/>
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, <lb/>
TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out <lb/>
Malaria and builds up the system. A true <lb/>
Bud sure For adults and children. <lb/>
MARION ELEANOR DODD <lb/>
By RICHARD STRONG. <lb/>
Many indeed are the sins of the <lb/>
telephone rightly so. And <lb/>
general indeed is the recognition of <lb/>
these sins by the public. But perhaps <lb/>
telephone girls are aggravated beyond <lb/>
the lot of other mortals, and their <lb/>
good acts are not always recognized <lb/>
as are those which the peace <lb/>
of mind of the telephone public. <lb/>
For Instance, if Marion Eleanor <lb/>
an operator at ten per week, <lb/>
bad not been full of charity and lore <lb/>
for human kind, at least one case of <lb/>
true love would have miscarried and <lb/>
at least two hearts would have gone <lb/>
over the falls. <lb/>
It became the duty of Marion <lb/>
nor one day to connect Charles Dudley <lb/>
and Fannie on <lb/>
her wires. From the first Intonation <lb/>
of Fannie voice as she an- <lb/>
Charles Dudley's Inquiry as <lb/>
to her health the operator realized <lb/>
that something was wrong. The brief <lb/>
conversation which it was her sad <lb/>
privilege to hear confirmed her first <lb/>
realization. Charles Dudley was all <lb/>
apology and Fannie <lb/>
was all coldness and reserve. <lb/>
thought Marlon <lb/>
nor to herself. <lb/>
Now the relations of Charles Dudley <lb/>
and Fannie <lb/>
were town than town <lb/>
gossip, for they were of the very es- <lb/>
of the town life. The twain had <lb/>
mutually fallen In love, literally at first <lb/>
sight their courtship thus far had <lb/>
been a dream. He ardent and <lb/>
she tender and receptive. Both <lb/>
proud the other. <lb/>
This was their first quarrel, so <lb/>
Judged the telephone girl, and Judged <lb/>
correctly. It gave her a distinct shock <lb/>
when In answer to Charles Dudley's <lb/>
greeting Fannie replied In icy <lb/>
Mr, <lb/>
There was evident apprehension In <lb/>
the voice of Charles Dudley as he re- <lb/>
Joined. <lb/>
beg your pardon for disturbing <lb/>
yon, <lb/>
If you came <lb/>
an Interruption. <lb/>
exactly, I mean Miss <lb/>
called you up because I <lb/>
to make amends for anything I may <lb/>
have done or said last night which <lb/>
may have seemed offensive. II was <lb/>
a trifle piqued at your attitude toward <lb/>
that matter really, I <lb/>
did not mean to be rude or anything, <lb/>
you <lb/>
Her answer came In the same chill <lb/>
tones. <lb/>
Is nothing whatever to ex- <lb/>
plain or apologize for, I assure you, <lb/>
Mr. I think the less said <lb/>
about our little difference of opinion <lb/>
the better for all concerned. I beg <lb/>
you to excuse me, as I am very <lb/>
Then both receivers dropped with <lb/>
two very decided chugs. <lb/>
This episode haunted the telephone <lb/>
girl for the days and weeks which fol- <lb/>
lowed, but she spoke no word of it to <lb/>
any human being. <lb/>
The days went by and the town <lb/>
began- to take notice of the estrange <lb/>
menu <lb/>
Makers of <lb/>
can Humor <lb/>
Mill Ml S WARD <lb/>
Farrar <lb/>
1911, by The Associated <lb/>
LEARN Newspaper School, Inc. <lb/>
A EVERY DAY A <lb/>
About fifty years ago a slender,, and died in Southampton, Eng- <lb/>
modest appearing man edged his way, land, on March 1867. By trade he <lb/>
hesitatingly out upon a London lee- J was a Journeyman printer and <lb/>
platform before a large from one end of the land to the <lb/>
phlegmatic Britishers and with every, other following his trade. The true <lb/>
evidence of falling courage and em- <lb/>
proceeded to poke <lb/>
at the Tower London and every <lb/>
cherished tradition. This was <lb/>
Ward. His winning person- <lb/>
humorist must of necessity have a <lb/>
wide knowledge human nature, <lb/>
and these early American humorists <lb/>
were given great opportunity to meet <lb/>
and study odd types of humanity In <lb/>
and the contrast between his the many corners of our new nation <lb/>
shyness and the <lb/>
of his statements won him in- <lb/>
success in England. They <lb/>
d for his and they <lb/>
the quality of his humor, which <lb/>
in its boisterousness and absurd ex- <lb/>
was distinctively <lb/>
can. <lb/>
Artemus Ward was the first <lb/>
can contributor to London <lb/>
he wrote that periodical many let- <lb/>
which were read with delight <lb/>
throughout England. In fact, his <lb/>
success abroad was much greater <lb/>
than any he bad achieved at home, <lb/>
and there was tragedy in his death, <lb/>
which came very soon after he be- <lb/>
gen his work in England and Just <lb/>
as he was reaping some reward for <lb/>
many years of struggle. For Browne <lb/>
was like most of our other humor- <lb/>
in that he was a rolling stone. <lb/>
Artemus like Josh Billings <lb/>
and many other contemporaries, de- <lb/>
an extravagant system of <lb/>
spelling. As we of this generation <lb/>
attempt to read his works at any <lb/>
in the days before the Civil War. <lb/>
Artemus Ward, like Josh Billings <lb/>
himself as a showman. Next to his <lb/>
famous lecture on his to the <lb/>
Mormons, his descriptions of his <lb/>
show won the greatest popular <lb/>
success. show at present con- <lb/>
of three moral Bares and a <lb/>
Kangaroo little <lb/>
make you yourself t- <lb/>
to see the little cuss Jump up <lb/>
and he writes to a country <lb/>
editor, and in the same letter he <lb/>
am to skewer your <lb/>
I repeat In regard to <lb/>
them that I shall git em <lb/>
struck up to your office. <lb/>
My sentiments agree with <lb/>
yours exactly. I know they do, <lb/>
I never saw a man <lb/>
didn't. A. Wart, <lb/>
P. S. You scratch my and He <lb/>
scratch your <lb/>
Every day a different human <lb/>
est will he <lb/>
tor. Yon can get a beautiful intaglio <lb/>
reproduction of the above picture, wits <lb/>
length, we find less to amuse us-five others, equally attractive, x <lb/>
than In the writings of Josh 1-2 Inches In site, with this week's <lb/>
for Instance. He lacked the <lb/>
rent of philosophy that Josh Billings <lb/>
possessed. Yet his fame In his own <lb/>
day was greater than that of Bil- <lb/>
lings. <lb/>
Charles Farrar Browne was born <lb/>
in Maine, on April <lb/>
SEE J. R AND J. G. MOTE FOR TO- <lb/>
trucks and side dressing fer- <lb/>
distributors. Id <lb/>
Try <lb/>
Has Cored Worst Cases And Yon Can <lb/>
Prove It For Only Cents <lb/>
Yes, try That's all you <lb/>
need to do to get rid of the worst <lb/>
case of eczema. You take no chance, <lb/>
It is no experiment. Is <lb/>
guaranteed to stop itching, <lb/>
rash, raw, bleeding eczema, make a <lb/>
It began to be whispered that I pimpled face smooth and clean. <lb/>
Charles Dudley and Fannie <lb/>
were seen together no more. Nobody <lb/>
but Marlon Eleanor understood the <lb/>
matter at all and she was mum as the <lb/>
traditional church mouse. <lb/>
Then her great opportunity. <lb/>
Charles Dudley and a friend were on <lb/>
the wire one day and in answer <lb/>
some question as to his down-hearted- <lb/>
Charles Dudley told of bis es- <lb/>
from Fannie and <lb/>
broke into the most Impassioned pro <lb/>
of love and despair and self- <lb/>
accusation. <lb/>
Now it so happened at the very mo <lb/>
when this flood of Charles Dud- <lb/>
heart's blood broke loose, Marlon <lb/>
Eleanor had Fannie on the <lb/>
wire waiting for c number. Now the <lb/>
telephone girl, being a woman herself, <lb/>
bad a very clear Idea a <lb/>
point of view and she already had <lb/>
mo is a wonder and the minute <lb/>
plied it sinks In, vanishes, leaves no <lb/>
evidence, doesn't stick, no grease, <lb/>
Just a pure, clean, wonderful liquid <lb/>
and It cures. This Is guaranteed. <lb/>
Is put up by the E. W. Rose <lb/>
Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., and sold <lb/>
by all druggists at l for the large bot <lb/>
tie and at cents for the liberal size <lb/>
trial bottle. Try one cent bottle <lb/>
and be convinced. <lb/>
Pharmacy. <lb/>
NOTICE OF REGISTRATION AND <lb/>
ELECTION UPON THE <lb/>
TO ISSUE 850,000.00 ROAD <lb/>
BONDS BY GREENVILLE TOWN- <lb/>
SHIP, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAR <lb/>
In a well <lb/>
known authority covers the subject <lb/>
the pictures and stories of the <lb/>
week. Readers of The Reflector and <lb/>
will know Art, <lb/>
History, Science and Travel, <lb/>
and own exquisite On sale <lb/>
at the Reflector office and Ellington's <lb/>
Book Store. Price. Ten cents. Write <lb/>
today to The Reflector for booklet ex- <lb/>
The Associated <lb/>
School plan. <lb/>
Let us sell you a plug, a pound or <lb/>
a box Black Eagle Sun Cured to- <lb/>
and make you happy. J. R. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
IS <lb/>
To Cure a Cold In One Day <lb/>
LAXATIVE Quinine. It stops the <lb/>
and Headache and works oft the Cold, <lb/>
money if it fails to cure <lb/>
W. on ea box. <lb/>
July flags <lb/>
were displayed In the capital today <lb/>
in observance of the tenth birthday <lb/>
anniversary of the Crown Prince <lb/>
who If he lives will some day <lb/>
become the kink; of Norway. The <lb/>
northern climate appears to have <lb/>
agreed with the prince, who has de- <lb/>
Into a lively, robust young- <lb/>
during his eight residence <lb/>
In Norway. Many persons profess <lb/>
to see In the features of the youthful <lb/>
prince a decided likeness to his ma- <lb/>
grandfather, the late King VII <lb/>
of England. <lb/>
figured It out Fannie would j North Carolina, Pitt County, <lb/>
have been glad of a reconciliation II Notice is hereby given that the <lb/>
It could come about in a manner Boar . of <lb/>
in adjourned session assembled on <lb/>
the 20th day of May, 1913, It being <lb/>
an adjourned meeting from the reg- <lb/>
she would do the pardoning and the <lb/>
man would be properly humbled. <lb/>
Instantly she recognized her <lb/>
and with Napoleonic, <lb/>
she grasped It. She cut Fannie meeting held on the Monday <lb/>
into the conversation between May, 1913, ordered an election to <lb/>
Dudley and bis friend. held In Greenville township, Pitt <lb/>
When was over she cut out the county, N. C, on Tuesday, the 29th day <lb/>
friend and said sharply to Fannie <lb/>
your <lb/>
There was a preliminary skirmish <lb/>
cf July, 1913, at the regular polling <lb/>
place at the court house on the <lb/>
of of Issuing Fifty <lb/>
questions and answers before Fannie thousand dollars worth of road bonds <lb/>
finally discovered that she to bear per cent interest per <lb/>
connected with Charles Dudley and and to run for <lb/>
the friend was out. Then Fannie <lb/>
a great goose to talk <lb/>
sort of thing into a telephone for hall <lb/>
the town to hear. If you have any- <lb/>
thing to say to me would It not be <lb/>
wise to come over and tell It to me <lb/>
You know how dreadfully Inquisitive <lb/>
and gossipy these horrid telephone <lb/>
operators are anyway, and they <lb/>
that snippy little girl <lb/>
misses an opportunity to make trouble <lb/>
If she can get people by the <lb/>
Both receivers dropped again with <lb/>
two thuds and while Charles <lb/>
hastened to the side of Fannie <lb/>
that the and cooing might <lb/>
begin. Marlon Eleanor sighed and <lb/>
Into the ear a waiting <lb/>
, wouldn't that Jar <lb/>
by Dally Story Pub. <lb/>
tin <lb/>
time glass <lb/>
a period of forty years, the funds re- <lb/>
from the same to be used for <lb/>
the purpose of laying out, establishing, <lb/>
repairing, grading, constructing and <lb/>
improving in any way the public roads <lb/>
in Greenville township as provided <lb/>
act the legislature of North Car- <lb/>
session of 1913 In House <lb/>
No. 1886 and Senate No. 1799. <lb/>
And notice Is further hereby given <lb/>
that an entirely new registration for <lb/>
said election was ordered and called <lb/>
and that Warren, Jr. was and <lb/>
Is appointed registrar for said election <lb/>
and that the books for registration <lb/>
will be opened on Thursday, June <lb/>
1913, and closed at sun set on Sat- <lb/>
July 1913. That on <lb/>
Saturday during said <lb/>
Surprising of Stomach Trouble <lb/>
When you have trouble with your <lb/>
stomach or chronic constipation, don't <lb/>
Imagine that your case Is beyond help <lb/>
Just because your doctor falls to give <lb/>
you relief. Mrs. G. <lb/>
N. J writes over a month <lb/>
past I have been troubled with my <lb/>
stomach. Everything I ate upset It <lb/>
terribly. One of Chamberlain's ad- <lb/>
came to me. After <lb/>
reading a few of the letters from <lb/>
who had been cured by Chamber- <lb/>
Tablets I decided to try them. <lb/>
I have taken nearly three-fourths of <lb/>
a package of them and can now eat <lb/>
almost everything that I For <lb/>
sale by all druggists. <lb/>
In September George <lb/>
open Ills fourth season In <lb/>
After a engagement <lb/>
he will begin a tour of the East and <lb/>
middle west. <lb/>
Good Judges of tobacco say Black <lb/>
Eagle Sun Cured Is the best. Let me <lb/>
supply you. D. W. <lb/>
Ill lent, On <lb/>
The worst cases, no matter of how long <lb/>
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. <lb/>
Porter's Am septic Healing Oil. It <lb/>
and He .- at , <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. And all citizens <lb/>
desiring to vote In said bond election <lb/>
to be held on July 1913, will be <lb/>
registration I required to register. <lb/>
period th registration books will be <lb/>
.-open- M <lb/>
the court house In Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
and at all other times during said <lb/>
period will be open at the of <lb/>
W. I. Hall and Co. at Five Points, <lb/>
This the 23rd day May. 1918. <lb/>
Chairman Board of of Pitt Cd. <lb/>
BELL, Clerk. <lb/>
ask <lb/>
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb/>
HEART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
HA EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb/>
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
JOB AND NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT. <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE <lb/>
THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN 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/>
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/>
GREEK I. C Mil DAY IV 1911 <lb/>
SI <lb/>
The Unjust Free Road <lb/>
Duty in Pitt County <lb/>
Road lax Has Cost in <lb/>
Eight Years <lb/>
GREENVILLE AW <lb/>
County In Slate Has <lb/>
Abolished Free Labor System. <lb/>
Extracts From Mr, <lb/>
Bill <lb/>
the Greenville Township Good <lb/>
Roads <lb/>
on the One Hundred Dollars of prop- <lb/>
el and Seventy-Five cents on the <lb/>
poll. Mr. Evans, the self-styled <lb/>
friend, Is the author of the <lb/>
bill, and It is with ibis that he Is <lb/>
lighting the bond Issue, re- <lb/>
quire only a Fifteen Cent tax and <lb/>
no road duty. the bond bane <lb/>
I the town people pay of the <lb/>
Why not let them build your <lb/>
I roads for you <lb/>
j Extracts from the hill are given as <lb/>
fellows for your observation, see sec- <lb/>
are living today In age of <lb/>
progress and development. The old <lb/>
usages and customs under which our <lb/>
of the Eighteenth <lb/>
lived have long since been dis- <lb/>
carded for modern appliances and <lb/>
methods. It would seem ridiculous <lb/>
and absurd for this generation to <lb/>
think of living as our fore-fathers <lb/>
ed and putting up with the <lb/>
with which they had to con- <lb/>
tend. <lb/>
Yet, some of our good con- j <lb/>
tend today that what was good enough <lb/>
for their fathers is good enough for <lb/>
them. What would our great and <lb/>
prosperous country have done had <lb/>
the telephone and telegraph never <lb/>
been invented, or In what <lb/>
would we be placed should our <lb/>
mode of travel be limited to the old <lb/>
fashioned stage coach of an hundred <lb/>
years ago Had we no printing press, <lb/>
no electric lights, no Improved farm- <lb/>
machinery, no great rural mall <lb/>
routes to take the news and happen- <lb/>
to the farmers, no advancement <lb/>
It medical science, where would we <lb/>
be as a nation compared with other <lb/>
nations of this time <lb/>
Think over things, Mr. <lb/>
and think what it would mean to <lb/>
you bad we never enjoyed these <lb/>
The Friend <lb/>
from a Senate Bill No. <lb/>
1230 introduced by Senator Evans <lb/>
from Pitt, and entitled net to <lb/>
create a system of working the pub- <lb/>
lie roads of Pitt county and to <lb/>
ate a county road commission and <lb/>
road committee for the several town- <lb/>
ships within the <lb/>
Sec. That each overseer elected <lb/>
by the said township committee, be- <lb/>
fore entering upon the duties of his <lb/>
shall take an oath to faithfully <lb/>
and impartially discharge the <lb/>
his office and shall execute a <lb/>
of such amount as the township <lb/>
committee prescribe, the <lb/>
of which shall be that he ac- <lb/>
count for all the moneys placed In <lb/>
his hands; and the said overseer shall <lb/>
at each quarterly meeting of the <lb/>
committee, and <lb/>
directed by them, make a report of <lb/>
the condition of the roads and the <lb/>
work done on the same. Ho shall <lb/>
report the number of days work- <lb/>
ed by the persons upon each of the <lb/>
AVers. road districts and the <lb/>
of persons worked, and the name <lb/>
of each person who has paid cash in <lb/>
lieu of services and the amount paid <lb/>
each; the amount and manner of <lb/>
all during the said <lb/>
quarter and the number of days ho <lb/>
worked In fulfilling the duties <lb/>
or changed the century- of his office. <lb/>
old methods. And then try to think <lb/>
of some Improvements that have been <lb/>
made In the system of working tho <lb/>
roads In Pitt county since the land- <lb/>
of Noah's ark. <lb/>
It Is true we have the convicts <lb/>
and a fifteen cent road tax, but this <lb/>
has cost us In the last <lb/>
eight am for Greenville township <lb/>
alone and what can we show in the <lb/>
form of good roads For this no <lb/>
one in particular Is to blame, It Is <lb/>
the old worn out system that <lb/>
Is a failure In nine out of every ten <lb/>
cases. Other counties have Issued <lb/>
bonds and leaped forward In pros- <lb/>
and growth, WHY NOT PITT <lb/>
Yes, we also have the free labor <lb/>
system, which nearly every county <lb/>
In the state has abolished. An In- <lb/>
unjust and <lb/>
method of forcing every man who <lb/>
happens to be over eighteen and <lb/>
forty-five years of age, and who <lb/>
lives out of the Incorporated limits <lb/>
of a town, to work days free on <lb/>
the public roads whether or not hi <lb/>
owns a foot of land or drives on the <lb/>
roads once a year. This Is a part <lb/>
of our road system that Is over one <lb/>
hundred years old and which was <lb/>
enacted Into law during tho <lb/>
century, when labor was cheap <lb/>
and plentiful and the roads required <lb/>
Sec. That all able-bodied male <lb/>
persons able to perform the labor re- <lb/>
quired, between the ages of eighteen <lb/>
and forty-five years, shall <lb/>
be liable annually to do and perform <lb/>
five days labor on the public roads <lb/>
of the district to which he be <lb/>
assigned by the of the <lb/>
township In which ho Pro- <lb/>
that the said person shall <lb/>
to the penalties for <lb/>
to perform road duty as la now pro- <lb/>
by law. <lb/>
Sec. That If any person <lb/>
to be released of road duty, to <lb/>
which ha Is assigned, shall pay to <lb/>
the overseer of the township the sum <lb/>
of three dollars and fifty In a <lb/>
lump sum, ho shall be relieved of <lb/>
road duty for the term of one year. <lb/>
The overseer shall give a receipt for <lb/>
the same, and the person so paying <lb/>
shall keep the same as evidence of <lb/>
his Provided, further, that <lb/>
If from heavy rains, floods, wash- <lb/>
outs, or other extraordinary causes, <lb/>
the township committee shall be of <lb/>
the opinion that tho of the <lb/>
roads of their township demand It <lb/>
they may the number of <lb/>
days labor prescribed for each per- <lb/>
son subject to road duty to one ad- <lb/>
Provided, further, that ten <lb/>
hours shall constitute the day's <lb/>
very little attention, but such an as required in this act; and <lb/>
system was never intended <lb/>
meet the needs and demands of t <lb/>
prosperous people in the Twentieth <lb/>
century. <lb/>
You have been urged by tho an- <lb/>
men to return to this old <lb/>
just which Is out of <lb/>
with progress and a retarder of de- <lb/>
a bill was <lb/>
Provided, further, that each person <lb/>
liable for road duty shall receive <lb/>
notice to perform such labor as <lb/>
now required by law. <lb/>
Sec. That persons subject to <lb/>
road duty, as defined this act, who <lb/>
shall be summoned as herein <lb/>
ed to perform any labor upon the pub- <lb/>
Four Games of Baseball in <lb/>
Greenville in Next <lb/>
Few Days <lb/>
Four games of baseball with some <lb/>
of the fastest teams In this section <lb/>
to pis ed in this town between this <lb/>
time and next Tuesday. The manage- <lb/>
. the local team seems to be a- <lb/>
ware of the fact that Greenville fans <lb/>
are baseball they are do- <lb/>
their best to bring here teams that <lb/>
v. ill put up the best games that can be <lb/>
had. <lb/>
Fremont will come here tomorrow <lb/>
and Friday for two games, and Farm- <lb/>
ville is booked for Au- <lb/>
is to come on Tuesday. It is <lb/>
said that tho aggregation <lb/>
now has seven out of nine men on the <lb/>
team as hired players, and that they <lb/>
will come here with the Intention of <lb/>
turning the tables on the local team. <lb/>
Fremont will bring here tomorrow <lb/>
one of the leading pitchers of the Col- <lb/>
diamond for last spring, and this <lb/>
pitcher Is on less than Aycock, who <lb/>
was one of the mainstays of the Caro- <lb/>
team during the 1913 season. He <lb/>
Is known well among college baseball <lb/>
men, and In coming to Greenville ho <lb/>
will face some of his own teammates. <lb/>
Aulander has not been seen here this <lb/>
season, and the fans have not had an <lb/>
opportunity to see the team in action. <lb/>
The game tomorrow will be called at <lb/>
o'clock, and a good game is to be <lb/>
expected. One of the best pitchers <lb/>
on the local aggregation will <lb/>
Aycock, and the game promises to be a <lb/>
one. <lb/>
County Matter Fix Licenses <lb/>
Before <lb/>
on Monday <lb/>
For Business Concerns <lb/>
Ayden Items. <lb/>
AYDEN, July killed <lb/>
of Dennis boys near <lb/>
church some days ago. <lb/>
Mr. J. F. and family spent <lb/>
last week at Morehead. <lb/>
Mr. C. V. Cannon and family are <lb/>
spending the week at Virginia Beach. <lb/>
Miss Velma Harrington of <lb/>
and Miss of Atlanta. <lb/>
Ga., are visiting here this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Mr. R. C. Cannon and family <lb/>
last weak at <lb/>
The Odd Fellows <lb/>
give concert In tho auditorium <lb/>
here Wednesday night. <lb/>
Rev. I,. will preach at th <lb/>
church Friday <lb/>
Lime, cement and all kinds of roof- <lb/>
at J. R. Smith and <lb/>
Mr. Broadway, one of old cit- <lb/>
died here last week and was <lb/>
hurled <lb/>
An error was made in yesterday's <lb/>
paper in regard to the statement as to <lb/>
the county home matter being <lb/>
ht before the county <lb/>
at their meeting Monday. It appear <lb/>
that hi mention of the matter <lb/>
v. as made to though it was free- <lb/>
discussed by those members pres- <lb/>
and an effort was made to arrive <lb/>
at some practical plan for the <lb/>
of the work of Improvement <lb/>
and change. <lb/>
Nothing was done, for g was <lb/>
expected to be done. It was only <lb/>
hoped to bring the matter before the <lb/>
commissioners, so that they could b-i <lb/>
prepared to act later, on when more <lb/>
Is said about it. <lb/>
Another meeting of the board lo <lb/>
discuss matters not touched upon last <lb/>
Monday is to be held next Monday <lb/>
In the court house, and at that time <lb/>
the question of the county home will <lb/>
also be brought up. i <lb/>
List Licenses to lie Changed <lb/>
Local Organizations <lb/>
BOARDING HOUSES EXEMPT <lb/>
Negro's Leg <lb/>
Cut off by <lb/>
Log Train <lb/>
John Mitchell, colored, a <lb/>
tho log road belonging to the Coop- <lb/>
and Lumber Company In the <lb/>
southern part of the city, suffered a <lb/>
very painful injury last night when ho <lb/>
had tho to have his leg cut <lb/>
off while at his work. <lb/>
The small train was pulling Into the <lb/>
yards and was crossing a switch. In <lb/>
some way It seems that the engine <lb/>
Mitchell thought that It was going to <lb/>
reeled to one side Just a fraction, and <lb/>
turn over, and jumped in an attempt <lb/>
t save his life. The engine did not <lb/>
turn over as he expected, and tho <lb/>
fell so that one of his legs fell a- <lb/>
the rail, and was run over by the <lb/>
engine. <lb/>
Hassell, and <lb/>
Skinner, were called and gave the <lb/>
Immediate attention. It was <lb/>
found that the leg would have to <lb/>
taken Off, and It was amputated short- <lb/>
after. <lb/>
And a bill was passed, lie roads under the of this <lb/>
by -hr. an <lb/>
more upon you this burden-1 shall appear at <lb/>
some tax and placing In addition a named by the overseer at an hour <lb/>
property tax of Twenty-Five not earlier than seven a. m. with <lb/>
such tools and Implements a the <lb/>
overseer may have directed, and the <lb/>
overseer may arrange for the use of <lb/>
teams, or other <lb/>
tools and machinery to be employed <lb/>
and used under his direction upon <lb/>
such terms and prices as may be <lb/>
approved by the township road com- <lb/>
Sec. That for the pro- <lb/>
In this act, tho residence of <lb/>
any person who has a family shall <lb/>
be where his family resides, and the <lb/>
residence of any person shall be <lb/>
where he sleeps In any road district <lb/>
In Pitt county. <lb/>
Sec. That violating <lb/>
any of tho provisions of this act shall <lb/>
guilty of misdemeanor and shall <lb/>
fined not more than fifty dollars <lb/>
nor Imprisoned more than thirty days. <lb/>
Sec. SI. That this act shall not <lb/>
apply to any township having Issued, <lb/>
or that may hereafter Issue, bonds <lb/>
for the of the roads with- <lb/>
in Its boundaries. <lb/>
Section. Is tin amendment. <lb/>
u- lair <lb/>
member of the house of <lb/>
Americans Conclude Tour <lb/>
BERLIN, July Expressing <lb/>
themselves as well satisfied with the <lb/>
results of their months tour of Indus- <lb/>
trial Germany and more than <lb/>
with the warm cordiality with <lb/>
which they have been received every- <lb/>
where, the members of the American <lb/>
Society of Mechanical Engineers who <lb/>
arrived at Hamburg on June con- <lb/>
their lour today at Munich. <lb/>
While the official Itinerary of the trip <lb/>
is ended many of the American visit- <lb/>
ors will remain on the continent for <lb/>
some time longer. Others are <lb/>
to sill New York at th end of <lb/>
the week. <lb/>
ltd., July The <lb/>
memory of General Edward <lb/>
who commanded tho English and <lb/>
tn war against tho <lb/>
French and Indians was honored here <lb/>
today by the unveiling of a monument <lb/>
elected by the Daughters of the Amer- <lb/>
Revolution. The; monument <lb/>
stands In front of the court-house and <lb/>
marks the of Gen. en- <lb/>
here, In 1765, on his way to <lb/>
Fort Several congress- <lb/>
men and delegates representatives of <lb/>
army <lb/>
Slates took part In the exercises that <lb/>
attended the unveiling of tho <lb/>
Licenses On Hoarding Houses <lb/>
Al fa include Those <lb/>
Accommodating Train- <lb/>
School Girls <lb/>
Licenses and assessments to be <lb/>
id upon the firms of the town <lb/>
have appointed by the board of <lb/>
and are printed below. <lb/>
Borne few changes have been made in <lb/>
sonic of the licenses, but In the main <lb/>
they are practically the same as under <lb/>
tho administration of the old board. <lb/>
The list is indeed a long one, but <lb/>
firms will have an opportunity of <lb/>
reading up on the items contained <lb/>
the report may acquaint them- <lb/>
selves with that charges that are to <lb/>
made. <lb/>
On opera or hall used as <lb/>
opera house 130.00 per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On public 110.00 per <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On real estate and rent collecting <lb/>
agency per year or part of <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
On butchers per year or part <lb/>
of a year. Fresh meat dealers sub- <lb/>
to same tax. <lb/>
On wood and coal <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On undertakers per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On junk dealers per year or. <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On livery stables per year <lb/>
or part of a year. <lb/>
On hotels charging per day <lb/>
or more, pear year. <lb/>
On hotels per day <lb/>
or more, per year. <lb/>
On hotels charging per day <lb/>
or more, per year. <lb/>
Private boarding houses taking <lb/>
more than two boarders per <lb/>
year or part of a year. Provided this <lb/>
does not apply to persona taking <lb/>
school teachers or pupils attending <lb/>
the Training School. <lb/>
On skating rinks per month <lb/>
or part of a month. <lb/>
On dealers in pistols, knuckles, <lb/>
knives, daggers, etc., <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On restaurants per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On exhibitors of wax works or <lb/>
for profit per <lb/>
On merry-go-rounds or place for <lb/>
any or play used for profit <lb/>
per day. <lb/>
On drays for horse <lb/>
used for year or part of a year. <lb/>
On of medicine or other <lb/>
of merchandise soiling either <lb/>
on foot, from a stand or vehicle or <lb/>
In a house temporarily rented or <lb/>
ed for that purpose per day. <lb/>
On dealers In fire works or lire <lb/>
crackers, not Including cannon crack- <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers in cannon crackers <lb/>
per or part a year. <lb/>
On dealers In hand cloth- <lb/>
per day. <lb/>
On each broker or dealer In <lb/>
contracts per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On on tho streets of <lb/>
and cold fruit and <lb/>
per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On each slot machine with fixed <lb/>
returns per year or part of a <lb/>
On Gypsies, palmists, fortune tell- <lb/>
per ti- tr part <lb/>
a day. <lb/>
On feather per <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On bill board par <lb/>
rear or part of a year. <lb/>
On every person or Inn n <lb/>
cigarettes in town shall pa; a <lb/>
tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On all persons or corporations sell- <lb/>
illuminating oil, lubricating oil, <lb/>
benzine, or <lb/>
there s located in town <lb/>
station or warehouse for distribution <lb/>
of such oil in quantities of gal- <lb/>
or more in any one tank or <lb/>
shall pay a license tax of <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On all persons Issuing trading <lb/>
stamps an defined in of <lb/>
the revenue act of Carolina <lb/>
of 1909. shall pay a license tax of <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On moving picture shows in other <lb/>
than licensed hall shall pay a tax of <lb/>
per month or part of a month, <lb/>
or per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On every person or corporation <lb/>
peddling clocks. or ranges n <lb/>
town per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On every Individual or firm, or <lb/>
he or their agents In <lb/>
business of buying and selling <lb/>
or bicycle and motorcycle pup- <lb/>
piles and fixtures shall pay n <lb/>
tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On pawn brokers per year <lb/>
or part of a year. <lb/>
On gift enterprises or any person <lb/>
or offering any <lb/>
for sale and proposing to present tho <lb/>
purchaser with a gift as an e- <lb/>
to purchase, or on every <lb/>
rant dealer in prize photographs or <lb/>
of hind, shall pay a license <lb/>
tax of per year or part of a <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On switch back railway, <lb/>
gallery or place for of <lb/>
or play with or without a <lb/>
tiny a license tax of <lb/>
or art of a year. <lb/>
On every dealer In stocks, <lb/>
or other certificates shall pay a II- <lb/>
tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On each firm or corporation man- <lb/>
or bottling soda water, <lb/>
coca-cola, ginger ale and like <lb/>
preparations shall pay a license tax <lb/>
of per year or part of a year <lb/>
On every person whether an agent <lb/>
for another or as who en- <lb/>
in the business of taking or- <lb/>
for enlarging photographs or <lb/>
who enlarges photographs, shall pay <lb/>
a license tax of per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On merchants per year or <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On barber shops per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On express companies <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On telegraph companies <lb/>
year or part of a year. <lb/>
On Jewelers year or <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On drug per yon- i <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On warehouses for the sale <lb/>
per year or par i <lb/>
year. <lb/>
On dealers In musical <lb/>
per year or part of a ye <lb/>
On manufacturers that sell <lb/>
finished goods other than their <lb/>
make year or part of a <lb/>
On machinists that carry <lb/>
sale such as pipes <lb/>
of kind per I <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On dealers classed as <lb/>
in agricultural <lb/>
I are <lb/>
per year or part of a year <lb/>
on page<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018256_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
mm <lb/>
Mr. J. A. Lang Does Not Want <lb/>
Country Home Any Nearer <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Winterville Items. <lb/>
July F. <lb/>
Nye left yesterday for Lenoir <lb/>
where today he will make an ad- <lb/>
at a Sunday school picnic at <lb/>
Sandy Next week he is to <lb/>
a series of educational address- <lb/>
. Morehead City, <lb/>
To the The <lb/>
U going on through the columns of <lb/>
your paper regarding the <lb/>
poor and afflicted that are charges <lb/>
of our county, trust may result in <lb/>
some improvement In the care and, <lb/>
management of them, but I think we I <lb/>
re- High School. It is a neat and ac- <lb/>
curate representation of the work the <lb/>
Mr. S. C. Carroll who has been <lb/>
with rheumatism, is <lb/>
He is now able to be out again. <lb/>
We have just seen a copy of the <lb/>
new of the Winterville <lb/>
who go mo print with our view <lb/>
girding the matter should be charitable <lb/>
in our criticisms of the management <lb/>
and also towards our citizens who <lb/>
have seen tit to express their opinions <lb/>
regarding the same While there <lb/>
no tax payer in the county who is <lb/>
more willing anxious to have <lb/>
poor properly cared for than <lb/>
as I wish for them to be made as <lb/>
comfortable as possible, consistent <lb/>
economy. <lb/>
don't regard it m wise or <lb/>
business proposition to of <lb/>
the home to this or any other <lb/>
town for two <lb/>
drat, the matter or as the <lb/>
we would have to pay for <lb/>
the lame quantity of land adjacent <lb/>
to town and we can tell the farm <lb/>
on which it is situated for, will build <lb/>
modern and I <lb/>
both and and <lb/>
equip them with lights, water <lb/>
beat. Second, It would be almost <lb/>
impossible tor the superintendent to <lb/>
control them, were they living In or <lb/>
near the town as they would <lb/>
to spend moat of their time in the <lb/>
day on the rivets, would <lb/>
be given by the public such things <lb/>
as would not be beneficial for them. <lb/>
Cold drink confectioneries and liquor <lb/>
eventually would make them <lb/>
discontented with their <lb/>
You know old afflicted <lb/>
are nervous and childish and <lb/>
to manage with the best of <lb/>
surroundings, so I would say to <lb/>
those who feel inclined to <lb/>
the superintendent of the poor house <lb/>
fiat he has no snap, but a position <lb/>
no man would have did he not need it <lb/>
An-1 I would also suggest to the <lb/>
two gentlemen, who jumped at <lb/>
that they misconstrued the meaning <lb/>
of his letter and I fear Impugned <lb/>
motives, as know very well <lb/>
know him to be a Christian gen <lb/>
and a man who is Willing <lb/>
to line the cared for in U com- <lb/>
manlier as myself or the i <lb/>
who assailed him. I would farther <lb/>
more suggest to his assailants <lb/>
being so much interested in the <lb/>
poor Inmates that they might <lb/>
a little to the spiritual needs <lb/>
Of the poor and unfortunate leave <lb/>
tho care of the physical wants to <lb/>
the honorable board of commission- <lb/>
the superintendent and the <lb/>
A. LANG, <lb/>
July 1913. <lb/>
school is doing. The superintendent <lb/>
will take pleasure in forwarding cop- <lb/>
i h to any who desire them. <lb/>
We heard some one remarking yes- <lb/>
that hot weather did not seem <lb/>
I to have much effect on the people of <lb/>
Winterville. They attend church as <lb/>
faithfully when the weather Is warm <lb/>
when it is pleasant, which speaks <lb/>
well for the town. <lb/>
The trustees of the Winterville <lb/>
High School In a recent meeting or- <lb/>
the addition of an annex to <lb/>
the academy building in order to re- <lb/>
the congested condition of the <lb/>
school and make room for Others ii I <lb/>
were seeking admittance to it. La-t <lb/>
summer ten and a dining hall <lb/>
large crouch to seat were added <lb/>
to the Dormitory. The growth <lb/>
very gratifying to Its <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
Mr. T. Cox and wife are spend- <lb/>
few days at Beach <lb/>
and Pines. <lb/>
Mr Bryan and Jamie Smith <lb/>
went to yesterday. <lb/>
Another installment on the <lb/>
of tho splendid electric light <lb/>
plant recently purchased by the town <lb/>
has just arrived. The building is. <lb/>
ready and the engine and dynamo <lb/>
now en route. In a few weeks we <lb/>
snail have a plant that Is up to date <lb/>
in every respect and large enough to <lb/>
furnish sufficient current for a town <lb/>
several limes the size of Winterville. <lb/>
The old plant which was entirely too <lb/>
small to meet the needs will then be <lb/>
entirely Who said Win- <lb/>
is not awake <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. W Ange and <lb/>
have returned from <lb/>
after a visit of several days to the <lb/>
parents of Mr. Ange. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Edwards of Atlanta <lb/>
Ga. arrived today and made <lb/>
their home at tho hotel. Mr. Ed- <lb/>
wards Is a contractor and expert oil <lb/>
mill man and will have charge f <lb/>
the rebuilding of the oil mill which <lb/>
was burned last winter. We are glad <lb/>
to welcome them to our town. <lb/>
Misses Dora Cox and Lucy <lb/>
arc friends in <lb/>
Several of the citizens went to Nor- <lb/>
folk Thursday to spend the Glorious <lb/>
Fourth. <lb/>
To Cure a Cold In One Day <lb/>
Quinine. It stops <lb/>
and works off the Cold. <lb/>
refund if it fail to cure. <lb/>
A. GROVE'S signature on box. <lb/>
BETTER BE SAFE <lb/>
THAN SORRY. <lb/>
Remember your own property, however <lb/>
safe-guarded may be damaged or de- <lb/>
by FIRE, originating from <lb/>
your neighbors carelessness. <lb/>
When insuring, Get the <lb/>
best, IT COST NO <lb/>
MORE. <lb/>
H. A. WHITE <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
j f <lb/>
j and tools always guaranteed. Stag and g <lb/>
i paints. Detroit Vapor Oil and Gasoline Stove and B <lb/>
S Ranges. King Windsor Asbestos hard Wall Plaster <lb/>
Atlas Cement O-Cedar polish Oil and Mop, <lb/>
j CARR ATKINS Hardware- <lb/>
OFFICIALS <lb/>
Churches Lodges and Social <lb/>
I'll Ml <lb/>
Young Men Of Give Delightful <lb/>
Outing To Visiting Ladies <lb/>
July young men of <lb/>
tho town gave a sail in <lb/>
honor till young of the town, <lb/>
Tho merry party driving from Ayden <lb/>
to met at tho river at <lb/>
o'clock where they boarded the <lb/>
launch h took them about fifteen <lb/>
rules down the where a beau- <lb/>
dinner was spread on 11.- banks. <lb/>
ti following were the couples <lb/>
Miss Lucy Turnage with Mr. <lb/>
II hi <lb/>
Mill Lee Nichols Mr. Lloyd <lb/>
Turnage <lb/>
Mils Jennie Turnage with Mr. <lb/>
Anna Lawrence with Mr. Ste- <lb/>
Nobles. <lb/>
Mill Annie Edward With Mr. <lb/>
v i i <lb/>
Mill May Smith with Mi. Paul <lb/>
Miss Hattie Kittrell with Mr. Al- <lb/>
Cannon and Master Jack <lb/>
Mrs. Agnes mount, of <lb/>
Ayden. and Mrs. Vita Brooks, <lb/>
of Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
Professional <lb/>
ALBION <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Office in Third <lb/>
Practice, hie <lb/>
desired <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
F. C. Chas. C. Pierce <lb/>
PIERCE <lb/>
Lawyers <lb/>
Practicing In all the Courts <lb/>
In Building on Third <lb/>
street, fronting Court Home <lb/>
For Cuts ii in and Bruises <lb/>
In every homo should be a <lb/>
box of <lb/>
to apply in every of burns, outs, <lb/>
or scalds, J. H. Politico, Del- <lb/>
Tex. R. No. <lb/>
Salvo my little <lb/>
girl's cut foot. No one believed it <lb/>
i be The world's ho <lb/>
Only by <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
L Vt. . II,. <lb/>
limited to diseases the <lb/>
our, and <lb/>
.- in, N. N. C <lb/>
Office with Dr. n L. Green- <lb/>
day every Monday, t a m to I pin <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
n the <lb/>
House <lb/>
Greenville, North <lb/>
Conn <lb/>
L. I. Moor <lb/>
W. B. Loot <lb/>
MOORE A LOSS <lb/>
Attorneys at Law <lb/>
P. <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Lawyer <lb/>
second floor In Woolen <lb/>
on Third St., opposite court house <lb/>
North <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
SheriffS. Dudley. <lb/>
Clerk Superior C. Moore. <lb/>
Register of Bell. <lb/>
B. Wilson. <lb/>
C Laughinghouse. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
L. Mel <lb/>
B. M. Lewis, W. E. Proctor. M. T. <lb/>
Spier, J. G. Taylor. <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
M. Wooten. <lb/>
C. Tyson. <lb/>
L. Carr. <lb/>
Chief of T. <lb/>
Aldermen K. B. <lb/>
A Bowen. J. S. Tunstall, <lb/>
F. Davenport, B. F. Tyson, Z. <lb/>
VanDyke, H. C. Edwards. <lb/>
Water and Light <lb/>
U Spain. C. OH. Laughinghouse, <lb/>
W. Tucker. <lb/>
L. Allen. <lb/>
Fire D. Overton. <lb/>
CHURCHES <lb/>
Baptist, C. M. <lb/>
pastor; C. C. Pierce, clerk; C. W. <lb/>
Wilson, superintendent of Sunday <lb/>
school; J. Tyson, secretary. <lb/>
J. J. Walker, pas- <lb/>
tor; E. A. Move. Sr superintendent <lb/>
Sunday school. <lb/>
Episcopal, St. <lb/>
Tucker, W. A. sup- <lb/>
Sunday school. <lb/>
Presbyterian- P U clerk <lb/>
M. Hoyle. pastor; A <lb/>
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. O. F. <lb/>
Me. is every Tuesday night, F. J. <lb/>
Forbes N. L. H. Pender. Sec. <lb/>
LODGES <lb/>
No. A. F. and A. M <lb/>
II. BantU W. M.; L. H. <lb/>
See. <lb/>
clerk; H. D. <lb/>
dent Sunday school; L. H. Pender, <lb/>
secretary. <lb/>
Chapel <lb/>
Rev. W. O. pastor. <lb/>
Sharon No. A. F. and A. M. <lb/>
F. D. Foxhall. W. M.; E. E. <lb/>
Sec. <lb/>
Greenville Encampment No. I. <lb/>
W. C. P.; L. <lb/>
H. Pender, Scribe. <lb/>
River No. S, K. of <lb/>
M. Clark. C. A. B. Ellington. <lb/>
K. of R. and S. <lb/>
Greenville Chapter No BO. R. A. M. <lb/>
-J. N. Hart. H. E. E. <lb/>
DR. J. C. <lb/>
Physician and Surgeon <lb/>
Office on Dickinson Avenue <lb/>
PHONE 335-L<lb/>
Yon-ll look fr and <lb/>
fore you could find better <lb/>
values. <lb/>
Exclusive <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Aristocratic, original styles, <lb/>
copies of the old-time <lb/>
master wood-workers, <lb/>
with the newer styles of period short, a <lb/>
that will j our tastes and pocket-book here. <lb/>
NOTE <lb/>
TAFT VANDYKE <lb/>
WEEK <lb/>
EXCURSION RATES <lb/>
to <lb/>
and <lb/>
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD <lb/>
Week <lb/>
w J Bern . <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
to Beaufort <lb/>
than to Morehead City. <lb/>
Rates from stations Id <lb/>
same proportion. <lb/>
Week End tickets sold Friday, Sat- <lb/>
and Sunday morning trains, <lb/>
good to return until midnight Tues- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Sunday tickets sold each Sunday <lb/>
until September limited to date <lb/>
of sale only. <lb/>
For complete Information call any <lb/>
ticket or <lb/>
W. W. O. P. A. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
S. K. T. P. A. <lb/>
Raleigh. N. ft <lb/>
CHOICE CUT FLOWERS HOSES. <lb/>
CARNATIONS ASTERS ALL <lb/>
COLORS A SPECIALTY <lb/>
Tennis Tourney <lb/>
LOUISVILLE. Ky. July The <lb/>
annual lawn for <lb/>
of Ohio and Ken- <lb/>
and <lb/>
continue through tho week. All In- <lb/>
points to a most successful <lb/>
tournament More than well <lb/>
known players are entered, exclusive <lb/>
from those of the Louisville Tenn's <lb/>
Club, on whose courts are under <lb/>
whose auspices the meet Is being held. <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
rifle formerly occupied by <lb/>
Fleming <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
Life, Firs, Sic and Accident <lb/>
Office on street, rear<lb/>
sun <lb/>
Attorney at Caw <lb/>
In Edwards fifth door <lb/>
from <lb/>
Attorney st Law <lb/>
North I <lb/>
Greenville Camp No. M. W. <lb/>
f A., meets every 1st and 3rd Wed- <lb/>
nights. Julius Brown, con- <lb/>
J. F. Stokes, clerk. <lb/>
Tribe No. I. O. R <lb/>
M. Meets every Friday night. J. <lb/>
Sachem; J. W. Brown, C. of <lb/>
CLUBS <lb/>
B. James, president; <lb/>
W. Outlaw, secretary. <lb/>
Round J. Everett, <lb/>
president; Miss Nellie Denny, <lb/>
the M. -H <lb/>
president; Mn. B. W. <lb/>
secretary. <lb/>
Sans Skinner, <lb/>
president; Mrs. J. L. Carper, <lb/>
Lillian Carr. pres <lb/>
i dent; Mill Ward secretary <lb/>
Daughter of T. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. <lb/>
Our artistic arrangements <lb/>
In wedding outfits are equal <lb/>
to best Nothing Oner In <lb/>
offerings than our <lb/>
styles. <lb/>
plants palms and ferns <lb/>
for house <lb/>
Write for list <lb/>
J. L. A CO, Raleigh, N. C <lb/>
D. J. Jr., for Green- <lb/>
ville and vicinity. <lb/>
A NEW PARLOR CAB LINE <lb/>
HAS BEEN <lb/>
via <lb/>
SEABOARD AIR LING RAILWAY <lb/>
Between <lb/>
Charlotte and Raleigh on the New <lb/>
Seaboard Train <lb/>
Raleigh a. m.; Arrive Char <lb/>
p. m.; Charlotte <lb/>
a. m.; Ar. Raleigh p. m. <lb/>
This train runs solid between <lb/>
and Rutherfordton. Parlor <lb/>
en, secretary. <lb/>
The Kings A. L. <lb/>
Blow, president; Mrs J. O. <lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS <lb/>
Kings Daughters and Daughter of <lb/>
the <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
THAT FIT <lb/>
Far tali the I solicit year orders, i <lb/>
evidence the satisfactory line make, my <lb/>
bare grows from m material In the <lb/>
Four Solid Cars <lb/>
already height for this season's trade. Will make them this <lb/>
year at the Liberty Warehouse, To avoid delay let me have <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
Elegance in House Fur- <lb/>
Without Ex- <lb/>
Our Furniture stands the Teat of Time, It la built of the Beat <lb/>
material. True In wood an workmanship. Good enough to he <lb/>
banded down to your heirlooms. It your home Is not <lb/>
as cozy and comfortable you like It. why not and <lb/>
Its furnishings <lb/>
will find the thing to give your dwelling a touch of <lb/>
luxury, without excessive <lb/>
CO <lb/>
N. <lb/>
East Carolina Teachers Training School <lb/>
A school to train teachers for the public <lb/>
of North Carolina, Every energy is directed <lb/>
to this on purpose. Tuition free to all who agree to <lb/>
teach For and other inform <lb/>
ROBT. H. WRIGHT, President, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. G <lb/>
Coward Drug Co. <lb/>
But <lb/>
Drugs <lb/>
in <lb/>
Department <lb/>
ICE <lb/>
CREAM <lb/>
h any <lb/>
All Fountain <lb/>
Drink <lb/>
Toilet Article,, <lb/>
Full Urn <lb/>
Stationery, <lb/>
Fountain <lb/>
Pm, <lb/>
Kodak Supplies <lb/>
Numb-50 <lb/>
Drug Co. <lb/>
In The Heart Of The <lb/>
White for schedules, etc., <lb/>
H. D. P. A. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
JAMES Jr., T. P. A. <lb/>
Charlotte. N. C. <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
STATE AND <lb/>
COLLEGE <lb/>
You can register for the bond issue <lb/>
at any time between now and July <lb/>
but the sooner the better for you <lb/>
and all concerned. <lb/>
Maintained by the State for the <lb/>
en of North Carolina. Five regular <lb/>
Courses r.;.,. lo . Special <lb/>
Courses for teachers. Free tuition <lb/>
to those who agree to become teach- <lb/>
In the state. Fall session begins <lb/>
September 17th, 1913. For <lb/>
and other Information, address <lb/>
I. Pres. C,<lb/>
LEGAL <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
LAND SALE <lb/>
By virtue of a mortgage executed and R. L.<lb/>
of June, 1912. which mortgage on of June, 1913, the under- <lb/>
duly recorded in the office of the Keg- signed was appointed receiver of tho <lb/>
liter of Deeds of Pitt county In book Roberson, Taylor <lb/>
D-10, page the undersigned will <lb/>
W. A. Taylor, J. C. Taylor and <lb/>
B. Dawson, Trustee, vs. W J. Rob- STOLEN KISS <lb/>
By ROB <lb/>
The sloping vineyards along On- <lb/>
I were lightly veiled in tho <lb/>
sell for cash before the court house ad J- C. of Indian summer. In the air was that <lb/>
door In on Saturday, July w- J- Roberson and R. L. Barn- warmth that Into <lb/>
12th, 1913, tho described hill individually by Hon. H. W. the veins and lulls the brain to dreams <lb/>
real <lb/>
parcel or lot and In that <lb/>
bee, Judge, In a proceeding In Pitt and reminiscence. The giant <lb/>
part of the town of N C court entitled as above; faintly. . dis- <lb/>
W an order was duly made, sound that <lb/>
four lot. tn Block In tho plot of -Id cause by Judge. <lb/>
mid town. Not, and a quiring all creditors of the firm of the heavy odor of <lb/>
full and accurate description of which Roberson. Taylor and and the duster, <lb/>
can be had by referring to deed from . . . rich clusters <lb/>
O. M. Mooring, mortgagee, to J. S. of w- J. C. everywhere. <lb/>
Mooring, both of said deeds are here- Taylor, W. J, Roberson and R, L. It is only by some such psychology <lb/>
by referred t- for an accurate Individually, to file with the cal analysis, whether scientific or not, <lb/>
undersigned receiver statements of an explanation can be found for <lb/>
on J g <lb/>
and Bethe, road at a pine day of September, <lb/>
stump at the edge of tho lot and run- Ills, or else stand debarred from <lb/>
with the road yards to the participating in the distribution of <lb/>
right of way of the A. C. L. railroad, <lb/>
with said right of way norther- <lb/>
the assets of said firm and the in- <lb/>
to the Alpine road, thence with the members thereof. <lb/>
Alpine yards opposite a big <lb/>
post oak. thence a straight line <lb/>
tho post oak a fore and aft tree <lb/>
to the containing 1-2 acres <lb/>
more or less. tho tract of land <lb/>
in a from Ashley <lb/>
wife to Taylor. Jones <lb/>
and Fleming, reference, to which deed <lb/>
U made for an accurate description. <lb/>
Also all of the mill property <lb/>
building, machinery, steam mill. <lb/>
This 30th day of June, 1913. <lb/>
N. B. DAWSON, Receiver. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
the great laughing <lb/>
to Imprint her pretty, upturned, <lb/>
lips, a kiss, thinking nil the <lb/>
while It. was <lb/>
And such a kiss A group of gay <lb/>
young girls turned at the sound, only <lb/>
j to see tho demure blushing <lb/>
to be but nulling In <lb/>
of the fact that It was <lb/>
who had slipped up behind her <lb/>
tipped bat chin hack, as <lb/>
sometimes did. when he was not too <lb/>
serious. <lb/>
that-Is the way when <lb/>
And she turned back <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt county. <lb/>
In the superior court. <lb/>
H. Brown, F. B. <lb/>
and Deed., vs. F. C. Hard- Is not <lb/>
Hole of property now on of J. J. Perkins, Deed. J. to wait for Antoine. <lb/>
parcel of land and used in M. Bernard, Bernard, Jul- When he came up was hang. <lb/>
and et I him. casting nil manner of <lb/>
All of said property Is sold to sat- <lb/>
said mortgage. I an <lb/>
This June 11th. 1913. notice that summons in tho above en- <lb/>
Tho defendants, Holman Bernard <lb/>
Bernard will take , <lb/>
taste, Antoine. <lb/>
tie chin is as soft as <lb/>
J P Y re breast of He burst <lb/>
F. O. SON. Was against tho into a loud guffaw. Is <lb/>
ltd defendants on tho 13th day of May. had given the dark-eyed girl <lb/>
1913, out of tho Superior Court of Pit this nickname because she was tall as <lb/>
County, which was return- a maypole, and It had stuck because <lb/>
able before his honor at tho May fatty will tell <lb/>
NOTICE OF SALE OF STOCK <lb/>
MERCHANDISE <lb/>
put r., you; she saw kiss <lb/>
W. A. Taylor. J. C. Taylor and M. and I think It Is outrageous <lb/>
B. Dawson. -es. vs. W. the court <lb/>
and P. I. day of Ma- 1913- for was not prepared for this, <lb/>
Pursuant to order made by of establishing a Hen , he had no idea anyone had seen <lb/>
H W. Whedbee, Judge, in tho above land Dy defendant In him, and had called La into <lb/>
entitled cause on the 26th day of Juno <lb/>
1913, the undersigned Receiver will <lb/>
on Monday, the 21st day of July, 1913, <lb/>
at the hour of at Bethel,; that <lb/>
N. C. and In the store building after the Monday <lb/>
occupied by tho firm of Roberson, I the W of <lb/>
Taylor and offer at and or demur to <lb/>
sale to tho highest bidder for cash the <lb/>
entire stock of goods, wares, <lb/>
together with all fixtures and <lb/>
furnishings, now to be found in said <lb/>
building, formerly occupied by <lb/>
Roberson, Taylor and <lb/>
Notice is also given hereby that <lb/>
accordance with the of tho <lb/>
above mentioned order of Judge <lb/>
Whedbee entered on tho 26th day of <lb/>
the town of tho defendants It only to tease Antoine, So he quick- <lb/>
will also take notice that they are re- ran off to another group. But <lb/>
quired to appear at the next term of was silent and his companion <lb/>
had no chance to poison his mind <lb/>
against her rival. <lb/>
entered the vine-covered <lb/>
cottage and kissed her mother with <lb/>
the happiest of faces. <lb/>
my little I see you <lb/>
made up your quarrel of last <lb/>
night with <lb/>
he slipped up behind <lb/>
me as I was Walking <lb/>
ma, it was so good of him. I know <lb/>
I was the wrong last night and I <lb/>
shall tell him so when he comes to- <lb/>
Hut Antoine did not come. The <lb/>
next day noticed a differ- <lb/>
Dr. Vann <lb/>
Preached <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
Some of the finest and most Inter- <lb/>
services held at tho Baptist <lb/>
church by any preacher since <lb/>
M. Rock, tho pastor, left the city <lb/>
for his vacation, were conducted there <lb/>
Sunday at Hit and <lb/>
ex--ling hours by Dr. R. T. Vann, <lb/>
of Meredith College, <lb/>
Largo congregations gathered <lb/>
for tho services at both hours and <lb/>
the host attention was given to the <lb/>
noted preachers. <lb/>
Dr. sermons were both in- <lb/>
and helpful to those who <lb/>
heard and his reputation of say- <lb/>
what will do one good was by no <lb/>
means lessened yesterday. His <lb/>
n ons showed thoughtful and careful <lb/>
study and wire enjoyed <lb/>
c by these who heard them. <lb/>
There hut very few member. <lb/>
of the church in this t. <lb/>
who widely known, <lb/>
more universally loved than is in-. <lb/>
Vann. He has traveled over every <lb/>
action of North Carolina and has <lb/>
preached to many of the <lb/>
of bis faith, in the deliberation. <lb/>
of the Baptist Convention, <lb/>
Vann Is always an appreciated <lb/>
and one whose advice Is wise and <lb/>
highly valued. The Baptist people of <lb/>
Greenville ware glad to have him In <lb/>
tho city yesterday and will always <lb/>
extend to him a very cordial <lb/>
come whenever he conies here. <lb/>
Mr. Hoyle <lb/>
Commends <lb/>
The Mayor <lb/>
Commendation of action of <lb/>
Mayor James deciding pool <lb/>
rooms was heard at the Methodist <lb/>
church yesterday morning by Rev. K <lb/>
M. Hoyle during the course of h's <lb/>
Minion. Mr. Hoyle preached on the <lb/>
powers of in authority, and It <lb/>
was in connection with his praise for <lb/>
tho administration of the national <lb/>
government that he also took the <lb/>
time to commend tho city's <lb/>
In acting conscientiously and with <lb/>
tho fear of God when this matter <lb/>
was put up to him. <lb/>
Scarcely anything other than com- <lb/>
of the mayor's action has <lb/>
been heard among tho Christian <lb/>
people of the community, and it Is <lb/>
hi that the people in general <lb/>
are planted with the decision <lb/>
made in the matter. <lb/>
At III service E. <lb/>
will assist Mr, Hoyle <lb/>
the summer months, conducted <lb/>
the exercises preached lo a <lb/>
congregation. Those who heard the <lb/>
sermon were pleased with the mes- <lb/>
sage that was brought by the young <lb/>
Ho starts off his work <lb/>
here under tho most favorable cir- <lb/>
and the people of <lb/>
church will rally to his as- <lb/>
his slay In Greenville. <lb/>
Small Fire <lb/>
In Home of <lb/>
Mr. Johnson <lb/>
complaint or the relief demanded will <lb/>
be granted. <lb/>
This the 27th day of June 1913. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court, <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
SALE <lb/>
By of of a <lb/>
gage executed to me by R. V. Jefferson tho way tho girls treated her. <lb/>
June. 1913. the said Receiver Is now and M T Jefferson on tho 28th Day after day of the balmy Indian <lb/>
having prepared a Inventory of duly recorded summer passed away and <lb/>
of said stock of goods, wares and mer- hi Register's office in Pitt County no in doubt of tho world's in- <lb/>
and will be Q-8 to secure tho her work with a sad <lb/>
made according to said inventory f .,, ,,, ,,., heart. What she done Toot <lb/>
much on the dollar All . She knew nothing of the <lb/>
e are f S as yet. could under- <lb/>
are In said not having stand. <lb/>
sock and inventory will be open , ,,,, expose at w <lb/>
all times for their inspection. for on Saturday, the Bitting on the stone wall, her eyes <lb/>
will be made subject to the .,, of 1913 at n . <lb/>
confirmation of the court. Greenville, Pitt County, at the <lb/>
This day of June. MM. <lb/>
N. B. DAWSON Being a town lot in tho town of <lb/>
Receiver, beginning an iron stake <lb/>
d-w , w Moseley's N. <lb/>
corner, and running Westward with <lb/>
Canadian Forestry <lb/>
Man., July The <lb/>
fifteenth annual convention of the <lb/>
Canadian Forestry Association, which <lb/>
assembled In this city today for a <lb/>
three session is the most <lb/>
gathering of Its kind <lb/>
held in the Dominion. Delegates re- <lb/>
presenting all tho provinces are here <lb/>
to attend the proceedings. The <lb/>
of the convention city and tho <lb/>
fact that topics of Interest <lb/>
provinces occupy the fore- <lb/>
most place on the <lb/>
combined to bring about an unusually <lb/>
largo attendance from the Central and <lb/>
western sections of tho <lb/>
A largo project for <lb/>
of Ontario and the <lb/>
provinces Is to be and <lb/>
upon tho convention. The <lb/>
of fores- <lb/>
try, and numerous other questions, <lb/>
those pertaining to the pro- <lb/>
of timber from lire, will <lb/>
also be dealt with by the <lb/>
TO <lb/>
across the valley and her thoughts <lb/>
far-off Gascony. when came <lb/>
upon her. <lb/>
he said banter <lb/>
Is last of her illustrious <lb/>
race It makes her to mourn <lb/>
Come, let me kiss away that sad <lb/>
hate you I hate you I hate <lb/>
said Moseley's Northern lino feet she burst forth. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly a thence <lb/>
before the court clerk ward with Simon Eastern <lb/>
of Pitt county executor, of the boundary foot inches to a corner, <lb/>
last Will and John with Southern <lb/>
deceased, notice Is to g to a corner <lb/>
all persons Indebted to -state to tho western <lb/>
make Immediate payment to tho boundary Southward foot Inches <lb/>
and all persons having the beginning, <lb/>
claims against the estate are notified i Tills Juno 26th 1913 <lb/>
to present the same to tho undersign- <lb/>
ed for payment on or before tho 5th <lb/>
day of Juno, 1914, or this notice will <lb/>
be plead In bar of recovery. <lb/>
This the day of June, 1913. <lb/>
C. S. and J. J. <lb/>
Executors of John <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
Mortgagee <lb/>
S. J. <lb/>
Atty, <lb/>
ltd. <lb/>
Dear little <lb/>
This is serious. Tell <lb/>
only shook her head <lb/>
winked the tears back. For a long <lb/>
time the good hearted fellow who hail <lb/>
worked all the mischief <lb/>
In silence, then, unwilling to leave <lb/>
without a word <lb/>
will save a to <lb/>
The girl shook her head. <lb/>
Do not be so <lb/>
not sobbed poor <lb/>
going Not to the <lb/>
party that the boss gives us. Why. <lb/>
there will be dances, games, and <lb/>
Not going to the <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
executor of tho estate of Luke Lang- <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the J <lb/>
Superior Court Clerk of Pitt County , if you do not hold the water in your <lb/>
mouth you can never get <lb/>
But the girl wouldn't smile and poor <lb/>
went away sad of heart. <lb/>
she shall he laid, and with the <lb/>
aid of mother ho Anally <lb/>
persuaded her to go at the last min- <lb/>
Of course her appearance, and with <lb/>
set tho busy tongues wag. <lb/>
as administrator of he estate of M. <lb/>
C. Tyson deceased, notice Is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons Indebted to tho es- <lb/>
to immediate payment to th- <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby given I undersigned; and persona <lb/>
to all persons Indebted to the against are <lb/>
t make Immediate payment to the fled to present the to the under- <lb/>
undersigned; and all persons having signed for payment on or before the <lb/>
claims against said estate arc notified 24th day of Juno 1914. as this notice; rival <lb/>
to present the same to the undersign- will be plead bar of recovery merry plan that all the girls <lb/>
for payment on or before the 11th This Juno 26th, 1913. I ed. They would send poor timid Pan. <lb/>
J. MARSHALL COX I Into tho great empty barn <lb/>
of M. C. Tyson, deed. where had up tho <lb/>
t like a ghost swaying back <lb/>
and forth the darkness, and when <lb/>
j she screamed they would all a <lb/>
NOTICE TO l lino us i laugh. <lb/>
Notice Is hereby given that the crowd gathered about tho low <lb/>
has this day qualified as T door, as the girl slowly mounted <lb/>
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE administrator of tho estate of T. the ladder. Ai removed the band- <lb/>
.,,., . , ,. , Williams, deceased, and nil persons age and saw the grinning <lb/>
Having qualified administrator of Indebted to laid estate hereby tho great ghost she could not sup <lb/>
J R. Haddock, of Pitt county, to make settle-, press a little gasp <lb/>
North Carolina, this is to notify all ft undersigned J exclaimed a voice <lb/>
Persons Calm, against . th. <lb/>
estate of the said deceased to nod. that they are required to file threw herself Into <lb/>
It them to me wit months said claims with the undersigned ad- arms. <lb/>
After they had sat bliss- <lb/>
fully together for tome Fan- <lb/>
day of June. 1914, or their notice <lb/>
plead In bar of recovery. <lb/>
This 11th day of June. 1913. <lb/>
W. L. CLARKE, <lb/>
Executor for Luke Langley. <lb/>
Id <lb/>
what <lb/>
Why registering for tho bond <lb/>
election. <lb/>
Southern Railway <lb/>
Schedule In Effect April <lb/>
N. B. The following schedule <lb/>
published as Information and <lb/>
are not guaranteed. <lb/>
LEAVE <lb/>
East Bound <lb/>
a. m. dally, <lb/>
Pullman sleeping car for Norfolk. <lb/>
a. m. dally, for Plymouth, <lb/>
City and Norfolk. Broiler par- <lb/>
car service Connects for all <lb/>
points 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 <lb/>
service. Connects north south and <lb/>
west. <lb/>
a. m. dally, for Wilson and <lb/>
Raleigh. Connects for all points. <lb/>
p. m. dally, for Wilson and <lb/>
Raleigh. Broiler parlor car <lb/>
For further Information and <lb/>
sleeping cars, apply to <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/>
was discovered In the home <lb/>
Mr. It. L. Johnson on tho corn-1 <lb/>
of Washington and Second slice <lb/>
o'clock The <lb/>
alarm was quickly given, and tho <lb/>
response of tho fire company a <lb/>
very short time prevented the <lb/>
from being completely consumed. <lb/>
i. in large quantities issued from <lb/>
the building, coming mostly from <lb/>
the eaves of the roof, giving <lb/>
Hie appearance of a much bigger fire <lb/>
than was the actual case. <lb/>
Just what the damage will be Can- <lb/>
be said, though tho house was <lb/>
left in a very bad condition, The <lb/>
water did more damage than did the <lb/>
Bra. and destruction wrought by <lb/>
the Bremen In tearing off tho tin <lb/>
amount to quite Item, <lb/>
The tin roof, probably <lb/>
building, or greater pall <lb/>
of it. became had ii for this. <lb/>
blaze could have gone through <lb/>
the shingle roof, and could have <lb/>
Its free course. <lb/>
Tho furniture was only <lb/>
by being Carried from the n <lb/>
such a hurry, and by the rough <lb/>
Many of the window glasses <lb/>
were broken through by tho Bremen <lb/>
and Other. In an effort to r, Min- <lb/>
point from which to fight the <lb/>
lire from the inside. <lb/>
For Trial <lb/>
Mo., July <lb/>
The case of Mrs. Ida May <lb/>
who charged with having killed <lb/>
her husband and seven-year-old <lb/>
with an ax, was called in court <lb/>
today for trial. Tho double killing <lb/>
cured in tho home on the <lb/>
night of June Mrs. is said <lb/>
by the police to have confessed to the <lb/>
but this confession <lb/>
she subsequently repudiated. It Is <lb/>
believed an effort will be made to <lb/>
prove the woman Insane . <lb/>
Marriage Licenses <lb/>
Last week Register of Deeds Hell <lb/>
issued marriage licenses to the fol- <lb/>
lowing <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
Arthur Melton and Mamie Fields. <lb/>
Joe Wiggins and Nora Sheppard. <lb/>
Corey and Ada <lb/>
Willie Williams and <lb/>
Green and Sallie Burney. <lb/>
lint, Dinar <lb/>
The c,. no how Blinding, <lb/>
re by the old reliable Dr. <lb/>
Porter. It relieves <lb/>
Pain and 0-- I . <lb/>
in <lb/>
in HARDWARE <lb/>
and FARM <lb/>
MACHINERY <lb/>
That's the point <lb/>
in Its <lb/>
the quality of our goods <lb/>
and Machines that has won for us thousands of satisfied customers.<lb/>
from this or his notice will be within twelve months <lb/>
bar of <lb/>
All person. Indebted to said state claims. <lb/>
from the dale hereof, or this notice <lb/>
will be plead In bar of recovery of I said, I was In the <lb/>
will please Immediate <lb/>
This tho 16th day Juno, 1913. <lb/>
wrong when we quarreled; I forgive <lb/>
you for laying <lb/>
It easier to forgive than to ask <lb/>
This the 3rd day of July, 191.1. <lb/>
DR. MORRILL, <lb/>
W. SMITH, Administrator of tho estate of T. L. I and much more <lb/>
F. O. JAMES and SON. <lb/>
t ltd B ltd w Attorney. Dally Story Pub. <lb/>
You can buy an inferior grade of seed, sow it and reap half a crop. <lb/>
You can save a dollar or two on the purchase price of some Binders, Mow- <lb/>
Rakes or Cultivators but you are running just as big a risk as when you <lb/>
buy inferior seed. Why not buy the BEST at first <lb/>
Nothing but in <lb/>
We carry nothing but the in in Farm Machinery and <lb/>
as well as Hardware, and we know our goods will give you absolute <lb/>
satisfaction. We carry a stock of repairs for the machines we sell and our de- <lb/>
sire is to give you the best service possible. Let us show you our Mowers, <lb/>
Rakes, Binders, Cultivators, Planters, Weeders, Harrows, Distributors, Wag- <lb/>
ons, Cutters, etc., and we know you will become one of our satisfied customers.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018256_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
i u <lb/>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb/>
and FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
I'M REFLECTOR lie. <lb/>
D. J WHICHARD. Editor. <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
year, . . <lb/>
Hz <lb/>
rate may be had upon <lb/>
at business office in <lb/>
The Reflector Building, corner <lb/>
and streets. <lb/>
All cards of thanks and <lb/>
will charted for at <lb/>
ant per word. <lb/>
Communication advertising <lb/>
will be charted at three <lb/>
per line, up to fifty lines. <lb/>
K. r i as second class matter <lb/>
August 1910, at the post office at <lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina, undo; <lb/>
act March 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY. JULY 1913 <lb/>
HIVE II FOB <lb/>
We have come to conclusion <lb/>
Greenville . an i the Will <lb/>
Baptist Seminary tor the asking. <lb/>
points ii advantage of the <lb/>
town were brought out at the <lb/>
THE RIGHT OF A <lb/>
In the first regular meeting of the <lb/>
new of aldermen at which any <lb/>
matters of business were attended to, <lb/>
It was put up to the mayor to de- <lb/>
one of the toughest questions any <lb/>
mayor has had to deal with lately. <lb/>
A motion was made last night to re- <lb/>
the action of the old board tn <lb/>
prohibiting the operation of pool rooms <lb/>
in the city. The eight aldermen <lb/>
ed four for and four against, <lb/>
the mayor to de- <lb/>
the question. And he decide <lb/>
that we should not return to the days <lb/>
of rowdyism and at- <lb/>
upon pool rooms. <lb/>
Shooting pool In itself we believe <lb/>
to be en innocent pastime and one <lb/>
that requires Just as much skill and <lb/>
training as golf or checkers. But <lb/>
do not know of any game that car- <lb/>
ii so much gambling, betting <lb/>
and misconduct as does this <lb/>
Borne may think that they can <lb/>
an orderly Joint, but we believe that <lb/>
wherever you have a room you <lb/>
will hare to a certain ex- <lb/>
tent And there are but very few <lb/>
of them where, or near where, yon <lb/>
beer or blind tiger liquor <lb/>
it might be that the Proctor Hotel <lb/>
could operate what Is called a <lb/>
last night which, It to <lb/>
us. lo s sure the <lb/>
this town II the proper efforts are room a u <lb/>
made, and in tic light direction. <lb/>
Greenville is the center of a <lb/>
gambling connected with it. If these <lb/>
arc places worthy of the attendant-5 <lb/>
which bas in it more WU our ls on <lb/>
than any other county indoors of some of them are painted <lb/>
eastern North Carolina, and if under <lb/>
school is to be moved, as it is. then Of age If pool is a game <lb/>
it seems to us that the trustees of amusement, then we should make <lb/>
the institution will look with favor and a place where boys of <lb/>
upon this town as a place for its age not have to be ex- <lb/>
permanent location. If the people would be <lb/>
Greenville will only make the rooms cannot <lb/>
Baptist people feel that the seminary respectable, let's not have any at all. <lb/>
is wanted here, they will give it to <lb/>
us. Of course, we must put up <lb/>
sort of a bid for the school, and we <lb/>
must make the very best one that <lb/>
we can. The fact that rumors have <lb/>
reached the city should not lessen <lb/>
our efforts to make the most <lb/>
offer that the town can <lb/>
The mass meeting last night only <lb/>
served to quicken the efforts that had <lb/>
been started. It only added new <lb/>
to a movement which ought to <lb/>
give us another first class institution <lb/>
of learning. And. if the people <lb/>
the town will prove to the Free Will <lb/>
Baptists that the school is wanted <lb/>
here, we believe that these good <lb/>
will do the rest. <lb/>
Do you know that this seminary <lb/>
ls in its infancy, and that the <lb/>
committee is now preparing , <lb/>
branch out into a wider scope, an <lb/>
make it a FIRST RATE COLLEGE <lb/>
Do you know that this is the <lb/>
Free Will Baptist College in this Con- <lb/>
which embraces North and <lb/>
Booth Carolina and Georgia and <lb/>
the Institution draws its student body <lb/>
from these three great states <lb/>
Do you know that the Free Will <lb/>
Baptist people of the county Will <lb/>
contribute upward of to the <lb/>
project if Greenville business men <lb/>
will go after it <lb/>
These questions may ail be an- <lb/>
in affirmative. They are <lb/>
facts which were developed at <lb/>
meeting last night, and which <lb/>
will make it worth while for this <lb/>
town to pull for the school. Mr. Cit- <lb/>
get busy. <lb/>
Mr. Edgar Turlington, a <lb/>
boy. has just completed three <lb/>
work in two at the famous Oxford <lb/>
College in England. He stood at the <lb/>
head of his classes and that along <lb/>
with tho foremost students of the <lb/>
world. In the competitive <lb/>
for the Rhodes scholarship <lb/>
years ago. he won out, and has <lb/>
made a success In England. He will <lb/>
come home this month to spend three <lb/>
after which time he will re- <lb/>
to England to take postgraduate <lb/>
I work. North Carolinians stand at <lb/>
the head of the line wherever you put <lb/>
them, and this young man is to be <lb/>
congratulated on the credit which he <lb/>
has reflected upon his native town <lb/>
and his native state. <lb/>
o-------- <lb/>
AND BICYCLES <lb/>
There Is in North Carolina a law <lb/>
against running automobiles above a <lb/>
certain speed limit. There Is In most <lb/>
of the cities and towns of North Car- <lb/>
a law regulating the speed of <lb/>
these benzine go-carts and prohibit- <lb/>
citizens from riding bicycles on <lb/>
sidewalks. These laws apply to <lb/>
Greenville, and are supposed to o <lb/>
enforced. Are they Let history an- <lb/>
Yesterday morning there were <lb/>
before the mayor several small boys <lb/>
charged with riding bicycles on the. <lb/>
sidewalk, and some charged with ex- <lb/>
the speed limit. <lb/>
Now, if we arc correctly <lb/>
the speed limit for automobiles in <lb/>
Greenville ls eight miles an hour, and <lb/>
everybody here ought to know that <lb/>
are machines in tho city which <lb/>
exceed this -ate. And, It seems that<lb/>
height of their ambition when riding <lb/>
bicycles on the sidewalk. Gentlemen, <lb/>
screw lid down tight, and <lb/>
have the law, obeyed or done away <lb/>
with. <lb/>
MR. J. P. <lb/>
In the death of Mr. J. P. <lb/>
Pitt county loses one of its best cit- <lb/>
and a man who was always <lb/>
ready and willing to place himself at <lb/>
i the service of his county and his <lb/>
state. He was one of the committee <lb/>
who had supervision of the <lb/>
of the handsome county court <lb/>
house which is tho of Pitt <lb/>
county. In business he was a <lb/>
tanner, and the county i- <lb/>
better off for his having lived in Ii. <lb/>
Mr. was man who was <lb/>
loved by those who knew him, for It <lb/>
Is said that to know him was I i <lb/>
love him. He was a Christian gen- <lb/>
and an active member of the <lb/>
Christian church. Those with whom <lb/>
he came In touch could not <lb/>
help but feel the great magnetism <lb/>
about his personality. He Is gone <lb/>
hut his deeds shall live on forever, <lb/>
and shall be a kindly light to those <lb/>
who follow after him. He was a mat <lb/>
of whom It can be said that the world <lb/>
is all the better for his living In It. <lb/>
We do believe that the Constitution <lb/>
Commission will gain anything bl <lb/>
these constant delays which have come <lb/>
to be habitual with them. They will <lb/>
meet at one place, stay there several <lb/>
days, and about the time they <lb/>
down to real hard work, they adjourn <lb/>
lo meet again in some other town, <lb/>
three or four later. It teems <lb/>
to us that the excuse that they give <lb/>
for adjourning is no at all. <lb/>
They say that they stop to consider <lb/>
whether or not It would be advisable <lb/>
to recommend this or that provision <lb/>
but completed measure Is <lb/>
finally to the people the <lb/>
f- or want <lb/>
the reviled constitution. <lb/>
and was given a rousing re- <lb/>
upon. Its arrival in the <lb/>
City. new line opens up one of <lb/>
the richest farming sections of the <lb/>
state, and the venture means that a- <lb/>
part of the state is to be given <lb/>
advantages of rail communication <lb/>
with the outside world. When the <lb/>
freight rates are properly adjusted <lb/>
the central section of the plate will <lb/>
grow by leaps and bounds. <lb/>
In what he declared to be the last <lb/>
public address he shall make Colonel <lb/>
Henry Watterson took for bis subject <lb/>
peril menacing the future of the <lb/>
But how do we know It <lb/>
will menace the future of the <lb/>
Last year he was romping over <lb/>
the country saying that Wood row <lb/>
would be a menace to the <lb/>
try, but most of us are agreed he <lb/>
is one of the greatest blessings we <lb/>
have received from the Almighty In <lb/>
in lime. <lb/>
A lad who was the in- <lb/>
in four disastrous fires In <lb/>
which his fathers property was lost, <lb/>
has Just been declared mentally <lb/>
balanced, and not responsible for his <lb/>
acts, and is to be sent to Texas for <lb/>
treatment instead of being confined <lb/>
in a hospital. Poor chap; by the time <lb/>
those Texas greasers get through <lb/>
him, he will be ready to burn up th <lb/>
whole town of Statesville. <lb/>
The sometimes plays <lb/>
with the material that is handed <lb/>
in. and that is what happened to <lb/>
last Saturday. Several times it ha-5 <lb/>
made us say things which we never <lb/>
dreamed, and things which had no <lb/>
sense to them, but have allowed <lb/>
them to go by. This time, however, <lb/>
we feel compelled to make a <lb/>
though embarrassing it may be. <lb/>
Here is the copy as it left the ed- <lb/>
office, of the squib that was <lb/>
used in the wrong sense last Sat- <lb/>
We note with pleasure that the <lb/>
place filled by the lamented <lb/>
Editor Bob Phillips in the North Car- <lb/>
Conference has just <lb/>
been filled by Professor Overton ls a <lb/>
singer of wide reputation, and, while <lb/>
he is not a Methodist, he is a good <lb/>
old brother, and will <lb/>
Hob place as good as <lb/>
one as could be had. <lb/>
Meredith College, of Raleigh, has <lb/>
just received a bequest of <lb/>
which will come into the possession <lb/>
of the college at of the do- <lb/>
husband. This famous school <lb/>
is one of the very finest colleges for <lb/>
women that can be found in the state. <lb/>
and It is deserving of any bequests <lb/>
that it may receive. <lb/>
THE COUNTY HOME <lb/>
During the past few weeks during <lb/>
the discussion through the columns <lb/>
of this paper of the county home <lb/>
matter, we have tried to keep hands <lb/>
off, and allow others to have their <lb/>
say. Unfortunately, we have never <lb/>
had an opportunity to visit the <lb/>
home, and consequently can dis- <lb/>
cuss the situation only from what we <lb/>
have heard. <lb/>
We have allowed some things to <lb/>
pear in the communications on the <lb/>
matter the like which we shall not <lb/>
let pass again, for we fear that some <lb/>
things that have been said were Just <lb/>
a little too strongly put. Let It be <lb/>
understood, however, that we are not <lb/>
backing out, nor are we apologizing <lb/>
for anything that has been publish- <lb/>
ed, but we have only and simply <lb/>
reached the conclusion that the in- <lb/>
in personalities by <lb/>
will do no good. Such pro- <lb/>
will only serve to muddy the <lb/>
waters and to delay and cause <lb/>
ill feeling. This must stop. We <lb/>
come and shall be very glad to re- <lb/>
intelligent communications that <lb/>
are to the point, but there is no ad- j <lb/>
vantage to be had in indulging In <lb/>
personalities and In around <lb/>
your elbow to get to your <lb/>
In the county home matter. <lb/>
Judging by what we have heard <lb/>
said about the county home, as we <lb/>
only can judge, something should be <lb/>
done to improve the intolerable con- <lb/>
at the home. The inmates <lb/>
say that they like what they have, <lb/>
and the surroundings, only because <lb/>
they have no hopes of any changes <lb/>
for the and because they have <lb/>
never known anything better than <lb/>
they have. Just because they, In their <lb/>
ignorance, do not appreciate the con- <lb/>
In which they live, and th; <lb/>
danger from disease due to what we <lb/>
suppose is unsanitary conditions, does <lb/>
not excuse the from <lb/>
decent quarters for them. <lb/>
Whether the county home should <lb/>
be moved nearer Greenville we shall <lb/>
leave for others to say. There are <lb/>
good both for and against <lb/>
the change, but we have not yet <lb/>
found any one who says that <lb/>
should not be made, and <lb/>
made at once. The most ignorant <lb/>
person knows that a building con- <lb/>
fifty years ago to serve tho <lb/>
purpose of a great county half a <lb/>
ago cannot serve the same <lb/>
In its advanced stages of <lb/>
today. What man wants to live <lb/>
in a little two by four shanty that <lb/>
was constructed more than half a <lb/>
century ago <lb/>
traffic. of her sons in congress <lb/>
introduced a bill that the <lb/>
shipping of liquor Into dry territory. <lb/>
and sentiment can be so In <lb/>
other arts of the country as to bring <lb/>
about results over the nation <lb/>
as have been brought about right <lb/>
here in North Carolina. <lb/>
ESKIMOS LAUGH AT DYSPEPSIA <lb/>
That tight engage in by a half do- <lb/>
den veterans at <lb/>
day was the one feature <lb/>
the entire of the Blues and the <lb/>
Gray. It is the only event of the great <lb/>
reunion that pave the slightest Inti- <lb/>
that there Is yet any feeling <lb/>
between the Union soldier and the <lb/>
wearers of the Gray. <lb/>
People In the Far North Consume Any- <lb/>
thing, and Never Suffer the Fangs <lb/>
of Indigestion. <lb/>
We hear ranch of American <lb/>
but there is one native of <lb/>
America that la certainly not troubled <lb/>
bi this respect The Eskimo defies <lb/>
all the of hygiene and thrive. He <lb/>
eats until he la satisfied, bet ls said <lb/>
A gentleman was in town the satisfied while a shred of <lb/>
. . , . , his feast remains unconsumed. His <lb/>
day who formerly lived In Pitt limited by the supply, and <lb/>
county, but who now resides near by that only. <lb/>
over In Martin. The Eskimo cannot make any <lb/>
. . . . , about the manner of cooking bis <lb/>
asked how he was getting along, he food , he doe, J <lb/>
said he was doing fine, and that be ft Nor, so far as the blubber or fat <lb/>
could not be hired to come back here. of the arctic animal la concerned, la <lb/>
. ., . . , , . . the Eskimo concerned about his man- <lb/>
He said that Pitt county s roads .,. <lb/>
or eating It Indeed, he may be <lb/>
not with those In Martin not to eat it at all. He cuts It <lb/>
and that he could haul twice as stripe an inch and an <lb/>
. Inch thick, and then lowers the strips <lb/>
much produce to market there one J <lb/>
here. In the face of such facts as rope Into a well. <lb/>
these, how can any one afford to vote Despite all this, the Eskimo does <lb/>
again the bond issue for good roads <lb/>
make a good meal off the flesh and <lb/>
akin the walrus, provision so bard <lb/>
Judge Cook in his charge to the and gritty that In cutting up the <lb/>
grand Jury in a Raleigh court yes- mUSt <lb/>
ordered the twelve men to j The teeth of a child <lb/>
bring up every man who had j will, It ls said by those In a position <lb/>
Cigarette to minors. This Is an-i to know- meet of <lb/>
; as the teeth of an American child <lb/>
other law that should enforced j meet n the flesh of an apple, <lb/>
for If there is an evil habit that Is although the hide of the walrus Is <lb/>
prevalent to a large degree among the an <lb/>
and bears considerable <lb/>
of this state it Is that of the of AD elephant <lb/>
cigarettes. You seldom ever see The Eskimo child will bite it and <lb/>
a non-cigarette user when you do not u and know hat <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
In tho same man see a gentleman. <lb/>
When tho women come Into posses- <lb/>
of the ballot, they should re- <lb/>
member that they place themselves on <lb/>
a par with men In politics and they <lb/>
may prepare themselves lo put <lb/>
the things that have been heaped up <lb/>
on the politicians of the age. She <lb/>
GUM CHEWING AN OLD HABIT <lb/>
Red Indians Are Thus to Have <lb/>
Quenched Their Thirst In <lb/>
Century. <lb/>
chewing In the United States <lb/>
appears to be a general habit, It <lb/>
would take quite a few gum <lb/>
to use up what is manufactured. More <lb/>
will, by her own efforts, pull herself than million sticks of gum ls the <lb/>
from the high pinnacle where she has annual output of American <lb/>
All this stuff ls made of chicle. <lb/>
been placed by the gentlemen of the <lb/>
race. <lb/>
which comes from a gum tree In the <lb/>
tropics, the Importation of chicle Into <lb/>
the United States figuring up two mil- <lb/>
lion dollars a year. The chicle <lb/>
bas become a big industry in the <lb/>
republics to the south. gum tree <lb/>
ls tapped very much the same the <lb/>
We must have that Baptist College. <lb/>
They say it Is to be made a <lb/>
national college for three states, and <lb/>
those who it ought to be in position rubber tree. <lb/>
to know what they are talking about. g found the Indians <lb/>
of this hemisphere chewing gum to <lb/>
Greenville usually gets what she goes their thirst away back In the <lb/>
after and we believe that the good fifteenth century, and they reported <lb/>
Baptists will see this proposition in <lb/>
that It relieved exhaustion; but it <lb/>
The Mount Olive Tribune, under <lb/>
date of June issued what it called <lb/>
a progress edition. It was a fine <lb/>
edition, and something that the <lb/>
of Mt. Olive, to say nothing of the <lb/>
editor, may well feel proud. Editor <lb/>
Mints deserves congratulations upon <lb/>
his attainment. <lb/>
--------o <lb/>
Tomorrow is the Sabbath day. <lb/>
member the sabbath day to keep it <lb/>
holy; six days shall thou labor and <lb/>
do all thy work, but the seventh day <lb/>
Is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God. <lb/>
In It thou shalt do no Cat <lb/>
any Improvement be made In Green- <lb/>
ville <lb/>
The first train was run over the new <lb/>
branch of the Norfolk Southern be- <lb/>
tween Raleigh and Mt. on Wed- <lb/>
To President Wilson life must be <lb/>
one collector of Internal revenue <lb/>
another. No sooner Colonel <lb/>
Watts got his than Colonel Bill <lb/>
of Goldsboro. Jump into the <lb/>
limelight for the of the <lb/>
eastern district. <lb/>
those Wash- <lb/>
police going to know when <lb/>
a man is drunk The man himself <lb/>
is the best authority when he will <lb/>
be honest In the matter and tell the <lb/>
truth.<lb/>
THE SALOON <lb/>
The Christian people of the United <lb/>
States have decreed that the <lb/>
moat go, and that It must be ban- <lb/>
from our borders. It is, as <lb/>
we believe, a matter of only a few <lb/>
years until America shall <lb/>
from this great evil, and from <lb/>
the greatest curses ever visited <lb/>
upon a nation, For many years past. <lb/>
the campaign against the rum <lb/>
has been progressing by leaps and <lb/>
bounds, and each succeeding year has <lb/>
added millions of people lo the <lb/>
territory. At the present time more <lb/>
than half the people in the United <lb/>
States are living in prohibition <lb/>
and a large per cent over and <lb/>
above this number are living where <lb/>
the people local option. <lb/>
national society of Christian <lb/>
Endeavor which meets In Los Angeles <lb/>
this week will, It Is reported, <lb/>
y launch a campaign to have placed <lb/>
in the constitution an amendment <lb/>
prohibiting the sale and manufacture <lb/>
of intoxicating liquors in America. <lb/>
This Is merely a sentiment coming to <lb/>
a head which has long been form- <lb/>
and it will form a nucleus around <lb/>
which will begin one of the mightiest <lb/>
campaigns that ever shook a <lb/>
If the Christian people will <lb/>
take up arms against this evil and <lb/>
go at It in earnest, believing that <lb/>
they will accomplish their ends, tho <lb/>
victory will come. <lb/>
Oh, of course, there will be those <lb/>
long-faced fellows who will be ready <lb/>
to yell out that It can never be done, <lb/>
but fifty years ago hundred of <lb/>
in North Carolina wt-re willing <lb/>
to predict that North Carolina <lb/>
never have statewide prohibition. But <lb/>
we have It, and statistics show that <lb/>
this state Is among the leading ones <lb/>
In nation in keeping down this <lb/>
1876 before gum chewing became a <lb/>
the same light as the of Green- among the nations, so at least <lb/>
do. the gum makers say, being guided in <lb/>
j their opinions by the statistical rec- <lb/>
Still, the oldest inhabitants say <lb/>
A news item carried in one of the, q,,, bid gum. Resin or some- <lb/>
South Carolina papers states that all thing else must have been be <lb/>
of the Wrightsville hotels are Ml <lb/>
out a substitute that was better liked. <lb/>
Another gentleman living In Concord y t <lb/>
wrote there for reservations and was commodity has Increased to such an <lb/>
informed that every room was taken. that Importing firms hare been <lb/>
. . obliged to search the markets and ex- <lb/>
That was a clever scheme of the hotel the of <lb/>
proprietors to get a little free i to obtain a supply sufficient to meet <lb/>
and that right up next to good. Misting requirements. <lb/>
live reading matter. <lb/>
Chance for the Reformer. <lb/>
, . , The Chicago Evening Poet opens up <lb/>
how many people during by wondering <lb/>
this hot weather ever think of how soon the time will come when the <lb/>
to an old-fashioned palm leaf toastmaster at a banquet will feel at <lb/>
liberty to squelch the speaker who has <lb/>
fan and fanning themselves to sleep limit. Here ls a <lb/>
these hot Many a night chance for those earnest souls who <lb/>
the long ago an old grandmother their leisure and other people's <lb/>
time by organizing societies for the <lb/>
would lie awake and fan her grand- prevention of things. believe we <lb/>
son to sleep on the hot summer nights, echo the soulful sentiments of nearly <lb/>
But she is gone now, and peace to experienced in lay- <lb/>
down the dictum that a proper <lb/>
her banquet should be one-fourth oratory <lb/>
and three-fourths gustatory. When the <lb/>
Mr. Citizen, don't withhold your proportions are usually <lb/>
support from tho movement to get ls Joy in neither phase <lb/>
of the things, and life becomes a howl- <lb/>
Baptist Seminary Just because and a dreary waste. <lb/>
yon think it may a bond Every banquet speaker should be <lb/>
The town already has its hands full platform <lb/>
which would either collapse and drop <lb/>
of bonds, and none will be t,, a or gently wheel <lb/>
for this. Jump right in and do all him out of the dining room at the end <lb/>
of minutes. A banquet ought to be <lb/>
something more than an endurance <lb/>
contest <lb/>
you can to bring it to Greenville. <lb/>
The new city administration prom- <lb/>
some time ago that the vagrants <lb/>
would be put to work and it is now <lb/>
up to them. If they were all made <lb/>
to go to work, the scarcity of farm <lb/>
labor would certainly be lessened to <lb/>
an extent. <lb/>
Old Houses. <lb/>
A house at acquired for a <lb/>
museum is said to be the old- <lb/>
est dwelling Germany, having been <lb/>
built for the archbishop <lb/>
According to Borne <lb/>
ties Fighting Cocks Inn, St At- <lb/>
hens, which claims to be the oldest <lb/>
I habited house In England, beats even <lb/>
traveling record, having been built as a <lb/>
to the monastery founded <lb/>
at St by King Off a about <lb/>
A bunch westerners <lb/>
from coast to coast have had their <lb/>
photograph made with Governor it has, however, not served as an Inn <lb/>
and the governor's picture will be Ion other buildings, such <lb/>
as the Saracen's Head, Newark, the <lb/>
Old Green Man, the Seven <lb/>
Stars, Grove, Manchester, and <lb/>
the Bell Chronicle. <lb/>
one of the fascinating of <lb/>
being governor of North Carolina. <lb/>
The London Daily Mall says that <lb/>
the militant suffragette movement In <lb/>
England has about played out, but <lb/>
there will still be rumblings as long <lb/>
as Aunt Pankhurst Is any <lb/>
f hereabout . . <lb/>
A fellow In a runaway airship n <lb/>
New York the other day said that <lb/>
he was not exactly scared. He <lb/>
have been almost scared. <lb/>
Literature In Brazil. <lb/>
That Brazil as a <lb/>
gives encouragement to literary effort <lb/>
today that not given a few years <lb/>
ago is shown In the series of book <lb/>
notices that are In Le Brest <lb/>
a French Journal of Rio <lb/>
Janeiro, Among- new <lb/>
la a of <lb/>
of Martin of which the <lb/>
paper says style is agreeable and <lb/>
the reading of the work, which la <lb/>
la vary 1- <lb/>
American Sea <lb/>
Painters <lb/>
No. S. FREDERICK i. WAUGH <lb/>
Roaring <lb/>
LEARN ONE <lb/>
A EVERY A <lb/>
1918, by The Associated <lb/>
Newspaper School. Inc. <lb/>
Frederick J. Waugh comes of a well <lb/>
known artistic family. farther <lb/>
was a portrait painter, his mother a <lb/>
painter of miniatures, and <lb/>
Ida Waugh, also an artist. He was <lb/>
a study of small arms, and has a not- <lb/>
able collection of those of various <lb/>
epoch's and styles. Indeed, be ls an <lb/>
authority on the subject. <lb/>
Although Waugh's recognition has <lb/>
born at New the largely through his marine <lb/>
scene of some of the earliest <lb/>
stations of art. He was <lb/>
educated in the school of the <lb/>
Academy of Fine in Phil- <lb/>
and at Academic <lb/>
Paris. After leaving the French <lb/>
Waugh settled down in Eng- <lb/>
land, where he became an Illustrator <lb/>
for the London Graphic and other <lb/>
English serving a long <lb/>
at picture making. Dur- <lb/>
he is a competent painter of t <lb/>
figure and landscape, as well a de- <lb/>
artist of no small ability. <lb/>
The Philadelphia Art Club has one of <lb/>
bis Important landscapes per- <lb/>
collection. Two years his <lb/>
patting of Holy <lb/>
of the successes of the National <lb/>
exhibition; in 1910 his <lb/>
called obtained the <lb/>
Thomas B. Clarke prize. It represents <lb/>
all his illustrative work lie found a ship at sea, her docks crowded with <lb/>
time to make oil of land- fighters in quaint costumes, a <lb/>
scape scenes, and his <lb/>
attention to marine themes. <lb/>
ho has made his great successes. Fin- <lb/>
ally he gave all his time to painting <lb/>
aid, returning to America, at <lb/>
Montclair, New Jersey. <lb/>
and cutting with swords, or firing <lb/>
ii s. faithful In and costumes, <lb/>
full of the liveliest action, <lb/>
composed, and well carried out. <lb/>
Every day a human <lb/>
est story will la The <lb/>
Almost immediately Waugh took a skill and inventiveness, he <lb/>
prominent place as a painter of time In his odd moments to <lb/>
., various things with to <lb/>
ocean, spending considerable of the <lb/>
.,. hi no little to the playing <lb/>
summer on the coast of Maine. His , <lb/>
of musical Instruments, making some <lb/>
Additional Communications <lb/>
on Moving County <lb/>
Home <lb/>
screens <lb/>
screen <lb/>
I was <lb/>
I beg <lb/>
pictures have found their way to many <lb/>
museums at home and abroad. At <lb/>
the Metropolitan Museum of Art ho ls <lb/>
represented with Roaring Fort- <lb/>
an canvas of mid-ocean <lb/>
while the National Gallery. Wash- <lb/>
and the Brooklyn Museum of <lb/>
Arts and Sciences he has work of <lb/>
most equal significance. In England <lb/>
he ls represented in the galleries at <lb/>
Liverpool and Bristol, and also In tho <lb/>
Museum of Natal, South Africa. <lb/>
Painting the ocean in great activity, <lb/>
a sense of enormous power and <lb/>
obtains a <lb/>
to say tragic, quality which <lb/>
few men With much <lb/>
them himself. He has also made <lb/>
tor. You can get a beautiful intaglio <lb/>
reproduction of the above picture, with <lb/>
five others, equally attractive, <lb/>
1-2 Inches else, with this week's <lb/>
In a well <lb/>
known authority covers the subject <lb/>
cf the pictures and stories of the <lb/>
week. Readers of The Reflector and <lb/>
will know Art, <lb/>
History. Science and Travel, <lb/>
and own exquisite pictures. On sale <lb/>
at the Reflector office and Ellington's <lb/>
Book Store. Price, Ten cents. Write <lb/>
today to The Reflector for booklet ex- <lb/>
The Associated <lb/>
plan. <lb/>
To the I did not intend to <lb/>
have anything more to say on the <lb/>
county home matter but since Mr. <lb/>
Garris thinks I reflect upon him, and <lb/>
since he refers to what the two <lb/>
brethren of said, I <lb/>
feel I must have this final word. <lb/>
I did not intend the slightest re- <lb/>
upon Mr. Garris end the man- <lb/>
in which he attends to the poor. <lb/>
I believe him to be a conscientious <lb/>
good man who does the best he can <lb/>
with the present equipment I am <lb/>
indeed glad he has put the <lb/>
the windows and hung <lb/>
doors since I was there. If <lb/>
mistaken about the screens <lb/>
pardon, <lb/>
I understand that Mr. is <lb/>
about the poorest paid officer in the <lb/>
County an possibly has the most <lb/>
of any. Anything less <lb/>
per month for keeling <lb/>
home ls too Lie. <lb/>
Now, just a word In regard to th I <lb/>
men from I thought <lb/>
what they said was too ridiculous for <lb/>
anybody to notice, hut since Mr. Gar- <lb/>
did notice It, I feel Justified In <lb/>
replying. These gentlemen th <lb/>
pronoun In referring to the <lb/>
rules of the Methodist church. I <lb/>
presume by this that they are <lb/>
Now, Bro. Methodist, do you <lb/>
know the law of your church Do <lb/>
you read the Discipline If not let <lb/>
me advise you to buy on It will <lb/>
cost you cents, postpaid from <lb/>
Smith and Lamar, agents. Richmond, <lb/>
Va., Nashville, Tenn. or Dallas, Tex. <lb/>
Then turn to page of the 1310 <lb/>
edition read beginning with ilia <lb/>
second paragraph. This a row <lb/>
every preacher takes when he is or-<lb/>
Is his office to <lb/>
search for the sick, poor and <lb/>
tent that they may be visited and re- <lb/>
Will you do this gladly and <lb/>
Answer will so do <lb/>
by the help of In taking up <lb/>
this county home matter I am just <lb/>
fulfilling a vow I took nearly ten <lb/>
years ago. <lb/>
As to the tax proposition I have <lb/>
paid tax for twelve years to support <lb/>
the poor and when I leave hero I will <lb/>
doing likewise somewhere else. <lb/>
Furthermore another Methodist preach <lb/>
will fall heir to this privilege here <lb/>
So their point as to that is not well <lb/>
taken and really laughable. <lb/>
E. M. <lb/>
Greenville. July 1913. <lb/>
Aldermen Fix License <lb/>
TO <lb/>
from page <lb/>
LITTLE <lb/>
CHEEK <lb/>
and to Improve the old erect new <lb/>
buildings, among them a chapel, and <lb/>
to wall in the buildings and yard to <lb/>
keep out the aforesaid midnight <lb/>
which done. Better <lb/>
institution was forthcoming and the <lb/>
helpless was cared for. Con- <lb/>
were so improved that we <lb/>
rested our case there two and a half <lb/>
decades. <lb/>
Well so bad as this was it was <lb/>
In step with the times. We had no <lb/>
railroads. Greenville about two thou- <lb/>
sand population, Pitt county about <lb/>
thirty thousand. Two telegraph <lb/>
No telephones; no R. F. D. <lb/>
Kings Daughters; no electric <lb/>
lights; no paved streets; no Training <lb/>
School; no tan shoes; no snow white <lb/>
no type writing machines; no <lb/>
automobiles; no tobacco growing; <lb/>
hobble skirts; cotton B to cents. <lb/>
Real estate low; labor going begging. <lb/>
Now as I am nearly to the sixty mile <lb/>
post and as we have above named <lb/>
necessities and luxuries, I appeal to <lb/>
the patriotic manhood of the great- <lb/>
grandsons of the noble of <lb/>
and to the sons and grand- <lb/>
sons of the wearers of the Gray. <lb/>
You, my people, whom I was born <lb/>
and reared and lived among, do you <lb/>
not know that time has improved and <lb/>
its now time to better alleviate the <lb/>
suffering of the aged and infirm and <lb/>
that our grand old county Is behind <lb/>
In her charitable to that <lb/>
arc dependent up her Please vis- <lb/>
it this forsaken home of the poor <lb/>
We have a fine temple to try our <lb/>
criminals and store them when they <lb/>
are guilty. Now, can't you see that <lb/>
poor house accommodations a <lb/>
long ways behind the times. <lb/>
is measured by our intelligence <lb/>
and the care of the poor and afflicted. <lb/>
The people of only have lo <lb/>
convince the officials are only <lb/>
the of the that they <lb/>
in earnest and that their cause <lb/>
is a worthy one. They know that they <lb/>
to obey the great American man- <lb/>
hood. Just as sure as I live I'll see <lb/>
these things come to pass. Its a <lb/>
worthy cause and it shall come to <lb/>
pass. Sell no bonds but go down In <lb/>
your <lb/>
G. T. TYSON. <lb/>
Greenville. July 1913. <lb/>
WINTER Till F. ITEMS Mr. Clark stated this morning that <lb/>
WINTERVILLE July The t the opinion of the bond ad- <lb/>
class from the Odd Fellow's that a who. <lb/>
Orphanage at Goldsboro will be <lb/>
Thursday night, and will give a con- <lb/>
cert the Auditorium. all go <lb/>
out and give a good crowd. <lb/>
Mr. Joseph Braxton has purchased <lb/>
a new Ford car. <lb/>
See A. W. Ange and Co., for lanterns <lb/>
and tobacco twine. <lb/>
Miss Dorothy Johnson returned <lb/>
heme yesterday after spending some- <lb/>
time visiting her sister Mrs. H. B. <lb/>
of near <lb/>
Go to Cox and House for shoes and <lb/>
slippers. <lb/>
Mr. Jessie Cannon and Miss Mac <lb/>
Smith of Ayden were among the gay- <lb/>
visitors In our town yesterday. <lb/>
Wanted This week in <lb/>
1.000 beef cattle and barbecue <lb/>
pigs. These are required to meet Hie <lb/>
future demand. <lb/>
Everything In the market line can <lb/>
be found at R. W. market. <lb/>
Mr. A. W. Ange is at Jamesville this <lb/>
week with father whom we learn <lb/>
ii very ill. <lb/>
Hyman Moore and Joseph Clark V <lb/>
Greenville were pleasant visitors here <lb/>
for some of our young people Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Pollard of Farm- <lb/>
Is visiting Miss Cox. <lb/>
Mr. Kindred of Stella Is <lb/>
visiting his brother Mr. P. H <lb/>
A. W, Ange and Co. have a supp <lb/>
lime and cement on band. <lb/>
Misses Mamie and Kate Chapman <lb/>
lift Monday for Wilson, where they <lb/>
will spend a few days visiting friends. <lb/>
Miss of Fallon is visit- <lb/>
relatives here this week. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Cox returned <lb/>
Sunday from their summer vacation at <lb/>
Wrightsville Beach, South Port and <lb/>
Southern Pines. They visited Mr. <lb/>
Cox's mother. Mrs. E. E. Cox at the <lb/>
latter place. <lb/>
Swift hams cost per lb. at <lb/>
for the same quality can <lb/>
be purchased in at <lb/>
oilier things In proportion as stated <lb/>
by Supt. of County Home, why not <lb/>
preach economy and move the <lb/>
homo to if It is to be <lb/>
moved at all. where It can ho kept up <lb/>
for the least expense. I believe tin <lb/>
majority of voters of Pitt county <lb/>
agree to statement. <lb/>
have registered for the election <lb/>
favor of good roads and that if <lb/>
the total registered vote can be <lb/>
brought to the polls on the day of <lb/>
the election tit issue will car- <lb/>
by a tie <lb/>
The Importance of all voter reg- <lb/>
before July has been em- <lb/>
by those In charge of the <lb/>
roads headquarters, and efforts <lb/>
made to get the voters to <lb/>
for taking part in the <lb/>
Business n-m of tho town are em- <lb/>
In declaration of the <lb/>
gr- at hat can be had by <lb/>
son of the roads that may be <lb/>
built If election carries. <lb/>
Illustrations of where men have left <lb/>
Pit, county because of the bad <lb/>
of the roads and because of the <lb/>
extreme difficulty in gelling farm pro- <lb/>
ducts to market can be produced and <lb/>
these will only serve to prove the <lb/>
value of Improved roads for the <lb/>
l- and for Greenville town <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
i is believed that unless something <lb/>
is done to attract the business of the <lb/>
county to this town, other <lb/>
centers of this section of the <lb/>
state will get what Greenville ought <lb/>
to have. The business men of the town <lb/>
realize and it Is for reasons <lb/>
they are waging such in active <lb/>
campaign for the cause of <lb/>
the roads leading Into town. <lb/>
Martin county has just called an <lb/>
election to be held under the same <lb/>
Statewide law that Greenville town- <lb/>
ship is using, and a section of Gates <lb/>
going to vote under the same law <lb/>
on July These counties are very <lb/>
to Pitt and it is believed that <lb/>
If they a bond election in fa- <lb/>
of good roads and get far ahead <lb/>
of Ibis town Greenville- will lose <lb/>
much of tho business that Is now <lb/>
coming this way. <lb/>
On ice cream and cold drinks j <lb/>
less sold by merchants in building <lb/>
they use daily for their merchandise <lb/>
business per year or part if <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
On dealers in or agent for <lb/>
per year or part of <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
On embalmers per year or <lb/>
part of a year. <lb/>
On banks and banking institutions <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On shops used for cleaning and <lb/>
pressing clothe per year or <lb/>
part of a year. Tailors subject <lb/>
to the same tax but when both are <lb/>
run together only one license ls re- <lb/>
quired. <lb/>
On automobile transfer's per <lb/>
year or part of a year for each ma- <lb/>
chine used. <lb/>
On each vehicle used as a transfer <lb/>
per year or part of a year. <lb/>
On plumbers per year or part <lb/>
of a year. <lb/>
On places of amusement charting <lb/>
not more cents admission <lb/>
and performing any given place <lb/>
much as one week at a time shall <lb/>
pay for the first day and one <lb/>
dollar per day for each succeeding <lb/>
day. <lb/>
On persons owning stallions or <lb/>
Jacks per year or part of a <lb/>
year for each stallion or Jack kept <lb/>
In town. <lb/>
On soda per year <lb/>
or part of a year. <lb/>
hf . <lb/>
stand engagements of <lb/>
more than six distinct attractions <lb/>
per week. If more than six <lb/>
distinct attractions conducted for <lb/>
profit per week. <lb/>
Small Gels Promise Drainage En <lb/>
From Washington To <lb/>
Pitt <lb/>
WASHINGTON. C. July <lb/>
Small secured today from <lb/>
the bureau of engineers in the De- <lb/>
of Agriculture the promise <lb/>
to send to Pitt county within the next <lb/>
month an engineer to survey Little <lb/>
Creek to see whether or <lb/>
not the territory contiguous to It can <lb/>
b drained at a reasonable cost. <lb/>
About acres In Pitt county along <lb/>
the hanks of the creek arc affected, <lb/>
and If drainage is found to be <lb/>
cable, a drainage district will <lb/>
Iv formed. The land is as rich as <lb/>
any In North Carolina, Pitt being not- <lb/>
ed for fine farming E. <lb/>
In News and Observer. <lb/>
A Lawn Party <lb/>
July tho even- <lb/>
of Thursday, July 1913, Tho <lb/>
Embroidery Club entertain- <lb/>
ed on the lawn of Miss Bell Miller, <lb/>
which was beautifully decorated In <lb/>
red and white and Illuminated by <lb/>
Japanese lanterns. <lb/>
Those In the social <lb/>
Mr. O. A. Swan with Miss <lb/>
Nellie president; Mr. L, G. <lb/>
of Vandemere, with Miss <lb/>
Annie Flowers; Mr, F. G. Dawson <lb/>
Ethel Ives; Mr. R. J. Flow- <lb/>
with Miss Bell Miller. Mr. H. B. <lb/>
Ives with Miss Mr. <lb/>
C. V. Swan with Miss Virginia Ives; <lb/>
Mr. W. B. with Miss Man- <lb/>
Armstrong; Dr. of Richmond, <lb/>
with Miss Rice; Mr. O. <lb/>
Me. with Miss Ives; Mr. <lb/>
Z. V. Potter with Miss Emma Roll- <lb/>
son; Mr. Seth Willis, of Arapahoe. <lb/>
. Flower. L. <lb/>
To tho In the <lb/>
of tho removal of the county home <lb/>
my memory runs back to the early <lb/>
sixties. When a boy my parents used <lb/>
to take me with them to visit <lb/>
aunt near Hancock's church. We <lb/>
came fifth street turned to the right <lb/>
at Nelson's old store city mar- <lb/>
Greenville and Now Bern road, <lb/>
tho places that I remember was <lb/>
Green's old mill near L. C. Arthur's <lb/>
residence. Cousin Sallie Bell's three <lb/>
miles out Marten point- <lb/>
ed out by father as the place where old <lb/>
Fannie, a and her son had <lb/>
murdered tho farm manager Griffin, <lb/>
Fannie and her son were bunged. <lb/>
This farm Is now known as the Math <lb/>
Sermon's farm. <lb/>
Next was the Pitt county poor <lb/>
use and called by no other name <lb/>
been called tho homo tor the <lb/>
aged and affirm, later as county home. <lb/>
There was as remember a few <lb/>
small farm houses. It seemed to <lb/>
have tho right name. next passed <lb/>
by it 1884. saw no change except <lb/>
a few more of the same small houses <lb/>
hod been added. <lb/>
In days the Justice of the <lb/>
peace and county commissioners <lb/>
the county tax rate for the en- <lb/>
suing year on the first Monday in <lb/>
June. This writer had the honor of <lb/>
being a Justice of the from <lb/>
1881 to 1887, therefore had <lb/>
to get familiar with the in- <lb/>
of Pitt county. <lb/>
Prior to about 1885 tho <lb/>
of the poor shall <lb/>
take the liberty to call it poor house <lb/>
until conditions are improved <lb/>
away from the farm. Purnell Pat- <lb/>
rick, a good and honest man, cared <lb/>
for this poor place for many years <lb/>
prior to his death in 1882. Food was <lb/>
taken out to tho Inmates once a week <lb/>
and divided among them. The sup- <lb/>
going out at other times <lb/>
in case of violent sickness or death <lb/>
About tho above date there arose <lb/>
and there about the morals of <lb/>
the place. Some women were In- <lb/>
mates only found to be <lb/>
that had led a life of <lb/>
The worst men of the community <lb/>
gathered there to find congenial com- <lb/>
prowled and spreed around till <lb/>
a late hour at night very baring to <lb/>
the sick and aged. <lb/>
To the Colonel Harry Skin- <lb/>
and Governor and I agree <lb/>
some more and mod- <lb/>
buildings should be erected for <lb/>
those unfortunate ones who are <lb/>
mates of our county home. I would <lb/>
have the convicts build a good road <lb/>
to the present site , then I would <lb/>
spend three thousand dollars for a <lb/>
modern dwelling for <lb/>
to live for a good keeper <lb/>
is for the proper care <lb/>
of those unfortunates. Then I would <lb/>
spend thirty-five hundred dollars for <lb/>
Infirmary, for a proper sanitary <lb/>
building for this purpose I consider <lb/>
necessary if we are to care for the <lb/>
sick at all. Then I would employ <lb/>
the convicts for at least one month <lb/>
in clearing additional land upon <lb/>
which to raise provender for the <lb/>
I would have a nice peach <lb/>
and apple orchard, a strawberry <lb/>
patch and come raspberries, cherries <lb/>
and plums. I would have at <lb/>
two good milch cows and a <lb/>
tor, so that tho matron might make <lb/>
some butter and those who like it <lb/>
might have good sweet milk to drink. <lb/>
I would spend five hundred dollars <lb/>
for water works, so that tho <lb/>
might be sanitary and the in- <lb/>
mates might have an abundance of <lb/>
water lo and in which to <lb/>
bathe. I would try to make this a <lb/>
model farm and I would have some <lb/>
kind of services there every <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
The saddest thing connected with <lb/>
tho county home is the unchristian <lb/>
treatment by us of those <lb/>
who have been for . tho <lb/>
twenty years at least. No one ever <lb/>
tried to teach them anything. They <lb/>
cannot read, they cannot work, they <lb/>
cannot even walk about. They have <lb/>
no religion or morals, because they <lb/>
have never been taught and we are <lb/>
Oh, how I do pity these <lb/>
miserable people and I know it <lb/>
might have been otherwise. <lb/>
These poor creatures should even <lb/>
now be furnished with picture <lb/>
and some one should try to In- <lb/>
them In something. I want <lb/>
the people's money Judicially spent. <lb/>
Farmville, July 1913. <lb/>
A Good Investment <lb/>
W. D. I well known mer- <lb/>
chant of WIs. bought n <lb/>
stock of Chamberlain's medicine <lb/>
as to be able to supply them to his <lb/>
customers. After receiving them he <lb/>
WM himself taken sick and says that <lb/>
one small bottle of Chamberlain's <lb/>
Colic, Cholera and <lb/>
worth more to him than the <lb/>
cost of his entire stock of these med- <lb/>
For sale by all druggists. <lb/>
of Committee <lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C. July The <lb/>
members of the House Committee on <lb/>
Naval Affairs sailed on the yacht May- <lb/>
flower today for an Inspection of tho <lb/>
navy yards and stations at Norfolk, <lb/>
Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Ports- <lb/>
mouth, Newport, New London and <lb/>
other points. The trip will occupy <lb/>
two weeks and will extend far north <lb/>
as Bay, Maine. <lb/>
who have tried Black Eagle <lb/>
say it Is tho best sun cured tobacco <lb/>
ever used. sell It. J. It. <lb/>
and J. C <lb/>
tores, Older Remedies Cure <lb/>
worst cases, no of Low lone standing, <lb/>
an- cured by wonderful, old reliable Dr. <lb/>
II. Oil. ll .<lb/>
If you want to vole for bonds or <lb/>
against them, you can't do it unless <lb/>
you register. <lb/>
to Take Prominent Part <lb/>
PARIS, July The Sixth Inter- <lb/>
national Congress of Free and Pro- <lb/>
Christians and Other <lb/>
Liberals, which ls to have its for- <lb/>
opening here one week from to- <lb/>
day, ls expected lo be the Import- <lb/>
ant meeting ever held for the purpose <lb/>
of bringing Into closer relationship the <lb/>
different denominations of the Christ- <lb/>
Church. The United States and <lb/>
Canada will be represented by many <lb/>
delegate. Among the of <lb/>
wide prominence who will address the <lb/>
conference Sir Henry James, Prof. <lb/>
Rudolph of the University of <lb/>
In Other Counties Mia <lb/>
Stole. Bate For <lb/>
Is Just Three Weeks <lb/>
Today <lb/>
As tho dale approaches for the <lb/>
bond for good roads the cam- <lb/>
on both sides grows warmer <lb/>
warmer. Both sides claim that <lb/>
they will carry the election, and that <lb/>
their Bide will out in the final <lb/>
culmination the fight which is stag- <lb/>
ed to be pulled off on July Just <lb/>
three weeks from today. <lb/>
The of the good roads <lb/>
bond election are getting their ducks <lb/>
in a row and are preparing to make <lb/>
a whirlwind campaign during the <lb/>
last few weeks. Headquarters have <lb/>
been opened In tho law office of At- <lb/>
N. W. Outlaw Just opposite <lb/>
court house and Mr. D. M. Clark has <lb/>
been placed charge. A <lb/>
has been employed, as the of- <lb/>
work necessitated by tho <lb/>
ca has grown to <lb/>
portions. Circulars and pa- <lb/>
Hiving information about the <lb/>
good campaign in this township <lb/>
are being rent broadcast to the cit- <lb/>
of this section of the county. <lb/>
Voters from this on will have <lb/>
an opportunity to Inform themselves <lb/>
on any of the points of the law <lb/>
which the election was called <lb/>
and all who lave in their minds any <lb/>
as to way they should <lb/>
County Homo Matter Was <lb/>
dot Brought Before <lb/>
Commissioners <lb/>
Only routine matters for the most <lb/>
part occupied the time of the board <lb/>
of county commissioners in their reg- <lb/>
monthly meeting held In the <lb/>
court house yesterday. The board <lb/>
was in session nearly all the en- <lb/>
tire day after o'clock In the morn- <lb/>
but only matters of minor <lb/>
were acted upon. <lb/>
After all that has been said, writ- <lb/>
ten, and done, no one appeared be- <lb/>
fore the meeting in regard to moving <lb/>
the county home from its present lo- <lb/>
cation. It will be remembered that <lb/>
several weeks or a month ago the <lb/>
Ladies County Home Society sent out <lb/>
all over the county circular letters <lb/>
asking that the people start a move- <lb/>
In the interest of moving the <lb/>
home nearer city, and at that <lb/>
time it was presumed that some one <lb/>
would appear before the commission- <lb/>
at the meeting yesterday and <lb/>
ask that something be done in the <lb/>
matter. However, nothing was <lb/>
or attempted. Not one word was <lb/>
Bald lo the commissioners during the <lb/>
sessions In regard lo the movement, <lb/>
no action was <lb/>
en one or <lb/>
What to the public was perhaps <lb/>
the Important thing to come <lb/>
before the board was Hie drawing of <lb/>
, Jurors for the next term of civil <lb/>
and criminal court to be held <lb/>
Pitt county. The civil term will be- <lb/>
August In. and the criminal term <lb/>
week later on August IS. Jurors <lb/>
drawn tor both terms given be- <lb/>
low. <lb/>
Civil term beginning August <lb/>
J. A. Nichols. Jesse Maurice. <lb/>
J. H. Keel, L. S. Edwards, <lb/>
Cannon, J. A. T. F. John- <lb/>
son, J. E. Green. Jason T. <lb/>
A. Turnage. J. T. Bynum. J. A. Lung, <lb/>
A. Taft, W. A. B. D. C. <lb/>
Beach. A. C. J. P. Flem- <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
Criminal term beginning August <lb/>
25th. A. B. Tyson, Jas. H. <lb/>
Cobb. W. A Nichols, S. M. Harris, L. <lb/>
J. J. B. Bowers, J. B. <lb/>
S. If. Jones. M. C. Manning. <lb/>
F. L Andrews, R. L. Barnhill, D. S. <lb/>
Rollins, L. I. Phelps, I. S. <lb/>
R. C. H. J. E. <lb/>
Cash. Robert Darden. Jr. W. B. <lb/>
U A. Fulford, Thomas Bea- <lb/>
Louis B, C. Edwards. <lb/>
J. W. Gardner. Jr. H. B. B. <lb/>
B. Sugg, J- H- Major Mills. <lb/>
J. L. Little. W. J. Turnage, V E. <lb/>
R. S. May. W. J. <lb/>
U. S. Williams, W. F. Fleming. P. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
. jot who back for <lb/>
Leon of Edward. After to the above named board Rabbi Stephen of a lack of information, am invited <lb/>
contests delicious Ice cream was levy a higher tax that a New York. Dr. David Starr Jordan the headquarters and talk <lb/>
served by Mrs. C. V. Armstrong and be paid higher wages and Rev. A. Eliot to those who are In charge of the <lb/>
Mrs. A. J. Flowers. to reside on the premises of Boston. campaign. <lb/>
of Stomach Trouble <lb/>
Sedentary habits, lack of out <lb/>
exercise, Insufficient mastication <lb/>
food, constipation, a torpid liver, <lb/>
and anxiety, <lb/>
food and drink not suited to you <lb/>
ago and <lb/>
habits and take Chamberlain's Tab- <lb/>
lets and you will soon be well again. <lb/>
For sale by all <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018256_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Dressers J <lb/>
hi There <lb/>
PROTECTION <lb/>
Business entrusted to this AGENCY gives <lb/>
REAL PROTECTION. <lb/>
Close attention to all details of the INSURANCE <lb/>
business <lb/>
From placing your risk in the STRONGEST <lb/>
COMPANIES. <lb/>
From satisfactory your LOSSES. <lb/>
MOSELEY BROS, <lb/>
-r- . <lb/>
Makers of <lb/>
can Humor <lb/>
So. MARK TWAIN <lb/>
LEARN ONE THING <lb/>
A EVERY a. <lb/>
1913. by The Associated <lb/>
Newspaper School. Inc. <lb/>
. B <lb/>
Tons <lb/>
Flue Iron <lb/>
Now on Hand at Gorman Gentry's <lb/>
Warehouse <lb/>
SOUNDS LIKE A <lb/>
KIT IT WILL NOT HALF <lb/>
THE DEMAND FOR THIS <lb/>
SEASON. <lb/>
KNOWING HOW TO MAKE <lb/>
THE GREAT CAKE <lb/>
WE THEIR <lb/>
IS WHAT HAS HIDE <lb/>
ELITES THE MOST POPULAR IN <lb/>
THE COUNTY. COME UP TO <lb/>
MAN'S AND SEE FOR <lb/>
YOURSELF AND GIVE ME YOUR <lb/>
ORDER. <lb/>
If all of us realized our boyhood <lb/>
dreams, the world would be overcrowd- <lb/>
ed with pirates, treasure hunters, and <lb/>
keepers of candy shops. One who <lb/>
realized his boyhood ambition was <lb/>
our greatest American Mark <lb/>
Twain. His boyhood days was spent <lb/>
la a little Mississippi River town be- <lb/>
fore the river commerce was <lb/>
its glory, and the Mississippi pilot <lb/>
was a who ranked very be- <lb/>
low the angels in the eyes of small <lb/>
boys. To a pilot was the dream <lb/>
of small Sam Clemens. After work- <lb/>
a local printing office, and then <lb/>
as an expert compositor In St. Louis, <lb/>
New York, and other came <lb/>
back in 1861 to realize that early <lb/>
and to be a pilot. The Civil <lb/>
War stopped his piloting, end after a <lb/>
brief service on the <lb/>
1-c went to with his brother, <lb/>
who had been appointed territorial sec- <lb/>
There he began the <lb/>
work that led to his later ca- <lb/>
as a writer. <lb/>
Mark Twain, as knew was <lb/>
a pen name taken from the <lb/>
logy of But <lb/>
everyone docs not know that Clemens <lb/>
was the second writer to make use of <lb/>
It. It was first user by Isa- <lb/>
Sellers of the New Orleans Pica- <lb/>
Just as Mark Twain Sally ranks <lb/>
to any other American hum- <lb/>
writer, does he seem to have <lb/>
exceeded them all In the variety of <lb/>
his experiences and the extent of his <lb/>
wanderings Into the odd corners of <lb/>
our country. When in Nevada he <lb/>
became a reporter and staff writer. U <lb/>
was there that ho first learned his <lb/>
power of expression. <lb/>
triumphant lecture <lb/>
them entire. <lb/>
tour, and paid <lb/>
week. <lb/>
For a time he . <lb/>
It is hard for us of the present day <lb/>
critics, living still in the memory of <lb/>
Mark Twain's delightful personality, <lb/>
with hie mirth provoking after-dinner <lb/>
speeches till ringing in our ears, to <lb/>
say just how he will be as a <lb/>
humorist or as a serious he <lb/>
has written so much of both <lb/>
good. <lb/>
Every day a human <lb/>
est story will lbs <lb/>
tor. Yon can get a beautiful intaglio <lb/>
reproduction of the above picture, with <lb/>
five others, equally attractive, s <lb/>
1-2 Inches In size, with this week <lb/>
In a well <lb/>
known authority covers the subject <lb/>
ct the pictures and stories the <lb/>
Readers of The Reflector and <lb/>
Hid lour Children of Worms <lb/>
You can change fretful, ill-temper- <lb/>
ed children into healthy, happy young- <lb/>
by riding them of worms. Toss- <lb/>
rolling, grinding of teeth, crying <lb/>
cut while asleep, accompanied <lb/>
Intense thirst, pains in the stomach <lb/>
and bowels, feverishness and bad <lb/>
breath, are that indicate <lb/>
worms. Kickapoo Worm Killer, a <lb/>
pleasant candy lozenge expels the <lb/>
worms, regulates the bowels, restores <lb/>
your children to health and <lb/>
Mrs. J. A of <lb/>
have used Kickapoo Worm <lb/>
Killer for years, and entirely rid my <lb/>
children of worms. I would not be <lb/>
without Guaranteed. All drug- <lb/>
gists or by mail. Price <lb/>
Indian Medicine Co., Philadelphia <lb/>
St. Louis. <lb/>
OF TRAINS <lb/>
Arrival aid Departure of the <lb/>
Passenger Trains <lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST LINE <lb/>
Northbound Southbound<lb/>
f. m. p. m. <lb/>
Outbound <lb/>
a. m. Ill a. m. <lb/>
a. m. a. m. <lb/>
. m. p. ax <lb/>
J. W. Little <lb/>
Merchandise Broker <lb/>
GRENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
IX OFFICE WITH W. L. AND <lb/>
W. WARREN AT FIVE POINTS. <lb/>
I desire o express my appreciation <lb/>
of your patronage of the past. I sin- <lb/>
trust dealings in every- <lb/>
way have been satisfactory to you. I <lb/>
hope to have your further orders. Call <lb/>
and see me, or phone and let me quote <lb/>
you prices. I represent some of the <lb/>
very best concerns. <lb/>
Office Residence 257-L. <lb/>
J. W. Little <lb/>
MERCHANDISE BROKER. <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND <lb/>
MECHANIC ARTS <lb/>
The State's Industrial College <lb/>
Equips men for successful lives In <lb/>
Agriculture, Horticulture. Stock <lb/>
lag, Dairying, Poultry Work, <lb/>
nary In Civil, Electrical, <lb/>
and Mechanical Engineering; In Chem- <lb/>
and Dyeing; In Cotton <lb/>
Four year courses. Two, and <lb/>
One courses. teachers; <lb/>
buildings; modern equip, <lb/>
meats. County superintendents hold <lb/>
entrance examinations at all county- <lb/>
seats July Write for complete Cat- <lb/>
to <lb/>
E. R. OWEN, Registrar, <lb/>
West Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
Bruce <lb/>
CORPORATION EXPERT, PUB- <lb/>
ACCOUNTANT AUDITOR <lb/>
Norfolk, Ya. Goldsboro, N. 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 <lb/>
determined. <lb/>
Light, Heat and Power Plant Ac- <lb/>
counts perfected. <lb/>
Fire, Losses. Valuations and <lb/>
adjusted. <lb/>
Real Estate and Lumber Audits. <lb/>
Trial Balance Profit and <lb/>
Loss Accounts, Statement of Assets <lb/>
and Liabilities and Condensed Re- <lb/>
port Thereon Professionally <lb/>
Bard and Guaranteed. <lb/>
H P <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
. The will know Art, <lb/>
mining, going to California and, <lb/>
other districts. In San Md own , <lb/>
Francisco he tried his hand at L, Reflector and <lb/>
again, and took a trip to i Rook Ten cents. <lb/>
Sandwich which he wrote up; The Reflector for bookIe, <lb/>
fur a local paper. From 181.9 to IS. ,. -t. ., <lb/>
. , , Planting The Associated Newspaper <lb/>
i he was editor of a prominent Buffalo plan <lb/>
dally. <lb/>
An experience had <lb/>
great effect upon sin's per- <lb/>
character, <lb/>
great who . that time <lb/>
M had known his simply as a humorous <lb/>
j writer of considerable ability, was tho <lb/>
failure of his business. In 1884 he be- <lb/>
crime others of a publish- <lb/>
house. The business failed tea <lb/>
years later with large liabilities. <lb/>
I Mark Twain accepted responsibility <lb/>
for these debts, toured the world In r. <lb/>
If you want to vote for bonds or <lb/>
friends against them, you can't do It unless <lb/>
yon register. <lb/>
I I S <lb/>
H. BENTLEY <lb/>
With <lb/>
The Mutual Life Co., <lb/>
of <lb/>
New York. <lb/>
The summer <lb/>
time when the <lb/>
air Makes <lb/>
old young <lb/>
for a while So <lb/>
they can enjoy <lb/>
PERRI <lb/>
TEA, <lb/>
COFFEE, <lb/>
LISK FLOUR. <lb/>
And numerous <lb/>
other goodies. <lb/>
Call you <lb/>
you will have the <lb/>
personal <lb/>
of <lb/>
S M <lb/>
Ready Made <lb/>
DRESSES <lb/>
And <lb/>
KIMONOS <lb/>
In the very newest <lb/>
styles of the sea- <lb/>
son as well as the <lb/>
very newest ma- <lb/>
These Dresses are <lb/>
made of Crepe <lb/>
cloth, in <lb/>
white and colors i <lb/>
beautiful striped I <lb/>
and figured lawns <lb/>
Also a beautiful line <lb/>
of Silk and Crepe <lb/>
Kimonos. <lb/>
The prices are <lb/>
low on these<lb/>
Get before j <lb/>
they are picked j <lb/>
over. j <lb/>
Quality Shop<lb/>
GET READY TO SELL YOUR TOBACCO AT <lb/>
Johnston <lb/>
BIG BRICK WAREHOUSE <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
We will be ready to take care of you and protect your interests <lb/>
WILL SELL IT <lb/>
. Johnston Foxhall <lb/>
The <lb/>
Greenville Banking Trust Co. <lb/>
Represents the Highest Standard of Safety in Banking <lb/>
IN 1910 The State Treasurer of North Carolina selected this Bank as a Depository for state funds. <lb/>
IN 1911 The United States Government designated this bank as a legal depository for Postal Savings Funds. <lb/>
IN 1912 The Good People of Pitt County selected this bank as a safe bank in which to keep their money, to the extent that its <lb/>
business exceeded not only any other bank in this section but the Greenville Banking and Trust Co., took its stand among <lb/>
the largest and strongest banks in the eastern section of the state. <lb/>
Resources Over Half a Million <lb/>
E. G. Flanagan, Pres. <lb/>
E. B. Higgs, Vice-Pres. <lb/>
C. S. Carr, Cashier. <lb/>
M. Rock Writes of His <lb/>
Voyage Across the <lb/>
Atlantic <lb/>
Meeting of <lb/>
Bond Issue <lb/>
Opponents <lb/>
Below published a letter from <lb/>
Rev. C. M. Rock, pastor of the <lb/>
church of this city. Mr. Rock <lb/>
is away from the city on a vacation <lb/>
of several months during which time <lb/>
he Is traveling abroad. This letter <lb/>
was written on the high seas, and tho <lb/>
writer describes of the thrilling <lb/>
experiences that were his during his <lb/>
voyage across the Atlantic Ocean. <lb/>
Those who have never been where they <lb/>
see nothing but water <lb/>
nothing of the peculiar feelings tint <lb/>
come to one who Is sailing the high <lb/>
seas, and to them and others Mr. <lb/>
Rock's letter will be interesting read- <lb/>
To the I could easily tell <lb/>
what I did not see. But may I <lb/>
to tell a little of the and <lb/>
what I saw <lb/>
We left Philadelphia at noon on <lb/>
June. 11th, on with <lb/>
eight hundred passengers; sailed <lb/>
down the Delaware river to the sea. <lb/>
For three days, better weather and <lb/>
seat could hardly be expected. Then <lb/>
with rising of wind the waves <lb/>
p little high. However, all went well <lb/>
until Saturday night, June 14th. The <lb/>
sun went down in a bank of cloud <lb/>
and the clouds r down in <lb/>
Then where, above or <lb/>
low. or both, came a howling <lb/>
raging storm. skies <lb/>
rising mighty ship <lb/>
with seeming ease and <lb/>
from wave to wave; as a doll from <lb/>
hand to hand. I stood on the <lb/>
deck until two o'clock In tho <lb/>
morning, watching the mad <lb/>
doing battle with our craft. Wave <lb/>
after wave broke across tho lower <lb/>
decks and the spray would often <lb/>
reach the place on which I stood. <lb/>
Thinking had seen enough for <lb/>
one night we went below and turn- <lb/>
ed In. But did not take the pro- <lb/>
caution to close tho port hole just <lb/>
over my berth. It being feet from <lb/>
the water we did not dream that the <lb/>
v ates could or would dare come in. <lb/>
but another guess was coming just <lb/>
as sleep had taken of me, <lb/>
a roaring and crashing and With <lb/>
it ere I was aware a great wave roll- <lb/>
ed right through that hole and got <lb/>
on the head first and on piece <lb/>
or body and bed. I had to It <lb/>
Tho fellow in tie bed below <lb/>
room got the drippings <lb/>
were much and cold. <lb/>
Well, you know how we spent the <lb/>
night. Sleep was sweet that day. A <lb/>
good sea bath Is nice in tho dead <lb/>
hours of the night; Just try one. It <lb/>
will be enough to I closed that <lb/>
port hole and kept It so until the <lb/>
sea went down. have had some <lb/>
sick and one died and was burled at <lb/>
sea at o'clock at night. I was <lb/>
permitted to see it and stood <lb/>
to the body as ho was lowered In <lb/>
tho water. The body floated away <lb/>
for a few feet and then sank in per- <lb/>
haps two miles of water to rise no <lb/>
more until the great day. It was a <lb/>
sad sight; so far from home, not a <lb/>
loved one near, a few <lb/>
to say sad words and then <lb/>
lower him In the watery grave, it <lb/>
made a deep and lasting Impression <lb/>
my mind. <lb/>
will sec our first land <lb/>
row since left and to <lb/>
me it will be n glad <lb/>
I am feeling an old now <lb/>
some one must dash water against <lb/>
my room so I can Bleep when I reach <lb/>
shore. . <lb/>
Monday, June 23rd we will <lb/>
A second rally and mass meeting <lb/>
of the opponents of the proposed is- <lb/>
sue of bonds for good roads <lb/>
ll Greenville township was held in <lb/>
the court house on Saturday after- <lb/>
noon. The meeting had been well <lb/>
advertised beforehand, and men from <lb/>
all sections of the township were <lb/>
present. <lb/>
Mr. Manning, the president of the <lb/>
organization, presided over the meet- <lb/>
and called the speakers to the <lb/>
floor. Several men from various <lb/>
parts of the township spoke on the <lb/>
bond Issue, and men from all <lb/>
were called upon to tell what the <lb/>
condition at affairs is near their <lb/>
homes. Most of them reported that <lb/>
they know but very few votes living <lb/>
near them who expected to vote to-- <lb/>
good roads. It was stated by some <lb/>
of them that most of the farmers <lb/>
in their immediate neighborhood had <lb/>
registered the election. <lb/>
Mr. W. P. Evans was called upon <lb/>
for a speech on the bond Issue, and <lb/>
he spoke for more than an hour. Mr. <lb/>
Evans was very enthusiastic in his <lb/>
denunciation of the proposed Issue <lb/>
and told his audience that It It car- <lb/>
their taxes would he Increased <lb/>
more than they had been before. Ho <lb/>
took up the circular that has been <lb/>
distributed over the town by the ad- <lb/>
of good roads, and wanted lo <lb/>
know why It was that Mr. Joseph <lb/>
Hyde Pratt did not sign his name <lb/>
to what ho had written about the <lb/>
bond Issue, and why it was that In- <lb/>
formation on the subject had to he <lb/>
such a distance as New <lb/>
Tor City. <lb/>
After tho meeting circulars were <lb/>
distributed containing bill under <lb/>
which the bond issue was called, and <lb/>
other Interesting matter. <lb/>
Teachers Their Convention <lb/>
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, July <lb/>
The annual convention <lb/>
the National Educational Association <lb/>
formally convened today. The Hist <lb/>
or tho general sessions was held this <lb/>
In the Mormon Tabernacle, <lb/>
and of the various depart <lb/>
men is were held in throughout <lb/>
the city. It Is estimated that <lb/>
visitors are here for the convention. <lb/>
The great Mormon Tabernacle, with a <lb/>
seating capacity of was scarce- <lb/>
able to all of those who <lb/>
sought admittance for the opening <lb/>
proceedings. Addresses welcome <lb/>
were made by Governor Spry of Utah, <lb/>
Mayor Park of Salt City, and <lb/>
representatives of the schools and <lb/>
educational departments of the Slate <lb/>
end city. <lb/>
DON'T LEAVE I <lb/>
To Seek Afar. The Evidence <lb/>
Is At Your Door <lb/>
No need to leave Greenville to hunt <lb/>
up proof, you have it at <lb/>
home. The straightforward state- <lb/>
of a Greenville like that <lb/>
given below, bears Interest for <lb/>
man, woman or child in <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
T. R, Moore, deputy sheriff, <lb/>
Evans street, Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
was troubled by lameness In my <lb/>
book and my kidneys did not do <lb/>
work ea they should. I get Dean's <lb/>
Kidney Pills from the John L. Wooten <lb/>
Drug Co. and I not used them <lb/>
long before I got relief. I can say <lb/>
ll this remedy acts just rep- <lb/>
sale by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
New agents for the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Remember the and <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
DAD DE- <lb/>
CREASING <lb/>
Funeral of Mr. J. P. <lb/>
Was Held Sunday <lb/>
at <lb/>
In an article in the special July <lb/>
of Southern <lb/>
Good Roads N. en- <lb/>
titled and Shadows In <lb/>
by Mr. A. L. Fletcher, <lb/>
pears the <lb/>
Ashe county. Instead of gaining In <lb/>
population in the last decade, lost <lb/>
lost Grayson <lb/>
county shows a gain but all of the <lb/>
gain Is in three or four small towns <lb/>
which have up with the com- <lb/>
of railroads and were not In ex- <lb/>
v. lieu the census 1900 was <lb/>
taken. Every country township shows <lb/>
a decrease In population. <lb/>
Bad roads, alone, is responsible. I <lb/>
met a boyhood friend and <lb/>
B physician, who, me, was <lb/>
a visit lo home folks. He said <lb/>
that he back home to <lb/>
after he finished college and put in <lb/>
four years at tho hardest work <lb/>
his life, driving through mud, over <lb/>
stony roads up well-night impassable I <lb/>
grades, killing his horses and many j <lb/>
times endangering his life. Ho woke <lb/>
to the fact that ho was killing him- <lb/>
self doing his wife and babies an <lb/>
by remaining and ho <lb/>
moved to a county of macadam roads <lb/>
peace and contentment reign <lb/>
and the people are prosperous and <lb/>
progressive. He Is doing well, living <lb/>
and working In comfort. <lb/>
He went on to name a dozen other <lb/>
right young men who had left tho <lb/>
mountains because of bad roads, <lb/>
lawyers, farmers, dentists <lb/>
Funeral services over the remains <lb/>
cf the late Mr. J. P. were <lb/>
held at the home of the deceased <lb/>
near Sunday afternoon <lb/>
o'clock. A very large crowd of <lb/>
friends and relatives of the family <lb/>
were present for the funeral, and the <lb/>
floral tributes were many and very <lb/>
beautiful. The burial took place in <lb/>
the old burying ground just <lb/>
the road from the home. <lb/>
Tho funeral services were conduct- <lb/>
ed by Rev. C. W. Howard, of the <lb/>
Christian church, and were <lb/>
very impressive. The pall bearers <lb/>
Messrs. W. E. Proctor. J. P. <lb/>
James, U W. Tucker, O. W. <lb/>
ton, J. J. May, C. T. A <lb/>
large number of people from Green- <lb/>
ville went down to yesterday <lb/>
for the funeral exercise, and to pay <lb/>
this last tribute of respect to a man <lb/>
who has been a powerful factor In <lb/>
the of Pitt county. He Is <lb/>
veil known In this city he <lb/>
has visited many hundreds of times <lb/>
during former years. <lb/>
Mr. was sixty-one <lb/>
of age and leaves a wife and five <lb/>
children. In the family there were <lb/>
eight children, and of these, since Mr. <lb/>
death, there Is left only <lb/>
one and this Is a sister who Is more <lb/>
than eighty years old. <lb/>
The King Of All Laxatives <lb/>
For constipation, <lb/>
and use Dr. King s <lb/>
New Life Pills. Paul of <lb/>
Buffalo, N. Y. says they arc <lb/>
all laxatives. They are a bless- <lb/>
to all my family and I <lb/>
keep a box at Get r. box and <lb/>
get veil. Price Recommended <lb/>
. by all druggists. <lb/>
HY 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/>
Sign your name on the register <lb/>
yon can vote for good roads on July <lb/>
in J IS Street, front of <lb/>
R. U Smith's <lb/>
formerly occupied by Chinese <lb/>
Laundry. Phone M. <lb/>
S T. HICKS. The <lb/>
at where this be mail- <lb/>
ed. will reach June <lb/>
24th. Doubtless when you read this <lb/>
I will again be on the sea bound for <lb/>
It has been very cold on trip <lb/>
and we wished that we had waited <lb/>
Greetings to my church end the <lb/>
town. <lb/>
C. If. ROCK. <lb/>
High Sen. near English Channel June <lb/>
1913. <lb/>
teachers and business men. <lb/>
Everyone of them is making good. <lb/>
The people of the mountains do not <lb/>
fret and chafe under the weary load <lb/>
Imposed by bad roads, as do the <lb/>
of the lowlands, and this very <lb/>
fact discourages the friends of the <lb/>
good roads cause. They accept their <lb/>
lot with a sort of fatalism and <lb/>
trudge through the mud <lb/>
resignedly. Occasionally, a <lb/>
Impatient youngster, who <lb/>
has been away to and got a <lb/>
taste of the benefits that come from <lb/>
good roads, or who has caught a vis- <lb/>
ion of something better, breaks away, <lb/>
as this young physician did, from <lb/>
the ways of his fathers and pleads <lb/>
for better things, but the great ma- <lb/>
of the young men or these <lb/>
mountain counties are following ll <lb/>
the ways their fathers bearing <lb/>
id tier <lb/>
and it o. occurred to <lb/>
them that such a thing as a <lb/>
Is possible. <lb/>
What the future mountain <lb/>
section is to be none can tell. All <lb/>
Unsightly Face Spots <lb/>
Arc cured by Dr. Eczema <lb/>
Ointment which heals all skin <lb/>
No matter how long you have <lb/>
been troubled by burning. <lb/>
or scaly skin humors, just put a <lb/>
little of that soothing antiseptic, Dr. <lb/>
Eczema Ointment, on tho <lb/>
sores and the suffering stops Instant <lb/>
Healing begins that every min- <lb/>
Doctors use <lb/>
and recommend It. Mr. of <lb/>
Littleton, Pa., eczema on <lb/>
forehead; Dr. Eczema <lb/>
cured it In two <lb/>
to relieve or money refunded. <lb/>
All druggists, or by mall. Price <lb/>
Chemical Co., Philadelphia <lb/>
and St. Louis. <lb/>
Have a Large As- <lb/>
of Bare- <lb/>
Foot Sandals and a <lb/>
goes with each Pair. <lb/>
SHOE COMPANY <lb/>
Grayson county there Is pro- <lb/>
Wise, Lee, Washing- <lb/>
ton, and are <lb/>
building macadams roads and perhaps <lb/>
Grayson Will get in line. So far as <lb/>
I have been able to observe however, <lb/>
there was not tho slightest <lb/>
of in road Improvement, <lb/>
Ashe and Alleghany counties have not <lb/>
even good examples In counties <lb/>
rounding encourage them and it <lb/>
ii- going lo be even slower there. In <lb/>
the southwestern part of North Car- <lb/>
things are bumming. Bond la- <lb/>
cues voted almost daily <lb/>
great tilings are done. <lb/>
this will reach Ashe and Alle- <lb/>
but it may a long lime. <lb/>
hide built to sell at a tempting price <lb/>
is the poorest investment YOU can <lb/>
make. It is an expensive economy. <lb/>
Even the horse becomes ashamed <lb/>
of such a vehicle. We do not sell <lb/>
that kind. <lb/>
Ours are the depend- <lb/>
able sort with a strong <lb/>
guarantee behind <lb/>
them. <lb/>
And, too, we are here to make good If anything should <lb/>
go wrong. <lb/>
We sell all sorts of vehicles. Have pleased some mighty <lb/>
particular people who discovered we are satisfied with <lb/>
small profits. <lb/>
Send for our descriptive booklet or come to see us and <lb/>
. let yon what we. have. <lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018256_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
A Party <lb/>
July young <lb/>
people of were Invited <lb/>
meet Miss Jeanette Cos and guest <lb/>
Miss Mamie Pollard, of Farm- <lb/>
ville. In the <lb/>
July <lb/>
At the the ho <lb/>
greeted group of merry guests In <lb/>
the town park pacing <lb/>
of and enjoyment. <lb/>
Large Japanese lanterns portrayed <lb/>
pillowed settees, chairs, hammock, <lb/>
and twinge among patriotic <lb/>
of crepe paper and miniature j <lb/>
flags. <lb/>
Each gentleman soon found his <lb/>
partner for the evening by means of <lb/>
bisected names of Then a <lb/>
interesting romance, with blanks <lb/>
left to be filled In with the names <lb/>
of some member of the <lb/>
was completed and handed in <lb/>
Mr. Hardy Johnson and Miss Kale <lb/>
Chapman were the successful con- <lb/>
winning a beautiful gold ink <lb/>
which was then presented to <lb/>
the guest of honor. Mr. Ashley Spier <lb/>
and Miss Rosa Causey won the <lb/>
an Instantaneous match. <lb/>
After this each guest was asked <lb/>
to draw around a large <lb/>
pie and pull for a plum. <lb/>
crash sounds that burst forth <lb/>
the BU <lb/>
I,, , minutes with mirth. <lb/>
Then delightful refreshments of <lb/>
banana split were served, after which <lb/>
the deported declaring Miss <lb/>
a most charming <lb/>
Invitations to the marriage of Miss <lb/>
Whichard. of this city, <lb/>
and Mr. Grover Cleveland Andrews, <lb/>
of Weldon, have been received In this <lb/>
a, will take <lb/>
on the morning of July and will <lb/>
be one of the chief social events of <lb/>
the month. Friends of tho young <lb/>
couple will be Interested in the an- <lb/>
which appears <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Whichard <lb/>
request tho honor of your <lb/>
at the marriage of their daughter<lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Grover Cleveland Andrews <lb/>
on the morning of Wednesday <lb/>
the twenty-third of July <lb/>
nineteen hundred and thirteen <lb/>
at quarter after seven o'clock <lb/>
At Home <lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina <lb/>
At Home <lb/>
after the tenth of August <lb/>
Weldon. North Carolina <lb/>
LOCAL <lb/>
MAKES STATEMENT <lb/>
Dodson's Liver Tone Is the Best <lb/>
Remedy Constipation and Shirk- <lb/>
Liver he has Ever Sold <lb/>
A FACT <lb/>
ABOUT THE <lb/>
What Is known as the <lb/>
is seldom by actual exist- <lb/>
external conditions, In the <lb/>
great majority by a dis- <lb/>
ordered LIVER. <lb/>
THIS- IS A FACT <lb/>
Which ha <lb/>
by a course of <lb/>
Camp <lb/>
fifth annual Holiness camp <lb/>
meeting will open at <lb/>
camp ground near on <lb/>
next Wednesday. July The meet- <lb/>
will continue for ten days. Ev- <lb/>
cordially Invited to attend <lb/>
A. H. BUTLER. <lb/>
President Camp Meet In e <lb/>
Tor Weakness and Less of <lb/>
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, <lb/>
A . <lb/>
Every person who has tried Dad- <lb/>
ion's Liver Tone and knows how sure- <lb/>
and gently it the liver to <lb/>
working and relieves biliousness will <lb/>
bear out the drug store In <lb/>
statement about Dodson's Live.- <lb/>
lone. <lb/>
It is purely vegetable liquid, that <lb/>
entirely takes the place of <lb/>
harmless and pleasant to the taste, <lb/>
that has proven itself the most <lb/>
factory remedy for a slow-working <lb/>
liver that most of our customers have <lb/>
ever tried. A large bottle Mils for <lb/>
fifty cents and we do not hesitate to <lb/>
give the money back to any person <lb/>
who tries a bottle on the strength of <lb/>
this statement and is not satisfied <lb/>
In these days of doubtful <lb/>
es and dangerous drugs, a statement <lb/>
like the above la a pleasant assurance <lb/>
that Dodson's Liver Tone Is a reliable <lb/>
remedy for both children and grown- <lb/>
ups In buying a bottle for <lb/>
ate or future use It is well to make <lb/>
sure you are getting the genuine <lb/>
son's Liver Tone and not some <lb/>
Imitation that has copied our <lb/>
claims, but do not stand back of their <lb/>
guarantee. You may be certain of get- <lb/>
ting the genuine if you go to <lb/>
for it. <lb/>
PUBLICATION OF SUMMONS <lb/>
North Carolina, Pitt County. <lb/>
In the Superior court, August term, <lb/>
1913. <lb/>
Delia Nobles vs Richard Nobles. <lb/>
Tho defendant. Richard Nobles. In <lb/>
the above entitled cause, will take <lb/>
notice that an action entitled as above, <lb/>
has been Instituted In the superior <lb/>
court of county by Delia No- <lb/>
as plaintiff vs Richard Nobles <lb/>
as defendant, for the purpose of dis- <lb/>
solving the bonds of matrimony ex- <lb/>
between the plaintiff and the <lb/>
defendant and the said Richard No- <lb/>
will further take notice that he <lb/>
la required to appear before the Judge <lb/>
of the Superior court at a court to <lb/>
be held for the county of Pitt, at the <lb/>
court house In Greenville, Pitt <lb/>
on the 2nd Monday before the <lb/>
1st Monday of September, It being the <lb/>
day of August. 1913, and answer <lb/>
the complaint in this cause which has <lb/>
this been deposited and filed In <lb/>
the office of the clerk of the superior <lb/>
court of said county, within the first <lb/>
three days of said term; and let the <lb/>
said defendant take notice that if he <lb/>
fall to answer the complaint within <lb/>
the time required by law, the plain- <lb/>
tiff will apply to the court for the <lb/>
relief demanded in the complaint. <lb/>
This the day of July. 1913. <lb/>
D. C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court, Pitt County <lb/>
ltd Sew <lb/>
flu-y emit the LIVER <lb/>
bring hope a the <lb/>
mind. They health and Me <lb/>
to the t <lb/>
NO SUBSTITUTE <lb/>
Sign your name on the register so <lb/>
you can vote for good roads on July <lb/>
We have Just a fresh ran- <lb/>
ply of the celebrated Black Eagle Sun <lb/>
Cured Tobacco. J. R. J. G.<lb/>
g, Fiery, <lb/>
Raw Eczema <lb/>
Relieved la a Few Seconds <lb/>
Yea, an Itching, burning, raw, <lb/>
skin relieved the moment <lb/>
touches it. is a clean, sooth- <lb/>
healing wash, composed of Thy- <lb/>
Witch Hazel. <lb/>
Acid and other medicinal heal- <lb/>
properties. relieves and <lb/>
cures every form of skin and scalp <lb/>
eruption and If you are not entirely <lb/>
satisfied with results from the very <lb/>
first cent bottle, druggists will re- <lb/>
fund your money. Large size bottle <lb/>
fl. Endorsed and sold In <lb/>
by i Pharmacy. <lb/>
Is prepared by E. W. Rose <lb/>
Medicine Co., St. Louis. Mo., and <lb/>
their guarantee is as good as gold. <lb/>
Surprising Cure Stomach Trouble <lb/>
When you have trouble with your <lb/>
stomach or chronic constipation, don't <lb/>
imagine that our case is beyond <lb/>
just because your doctor falls to give <lb/>
you relief. Mrs. G. Plain- <lb/>
Held, N. J-. writes over a month <lb/>
past I have been troubled with my <lb/>
stomach. Everything I ate <lb/>
terribly. One of Chamberlain's ad- <lb/>
books came to me. After <lb/>
reading a few of the letters from <lb/>
who had been cured by Chamber- <lb/>
Tablets I decided to try them. <lb/>
I have taken nearly three-fourths of <lb/>
a package of them and can now eat <lb/>
almost everything that I For <lb/>
sale by all druggists. <lb/>
Good judges of tobacco say Black <lb/>
Eagle Sun Cured Is the best. Let me <lb/>
supply you. D. W. <lb/>
A LEADING BOARDING SCHOOL <lb/>
for <lb/>
ISM. <lb/>
and<lb/>
Sack par-<lb/>
la W. 0.1 far<lb/>
ate., <lb/>
W. T. PH. D. <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
The next time you want tobacco <lb/>
come to my store and get Black <lb/>
Eagle Sun Cured. It's a good one. <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
The Best Medicine in the World <lb/>
little girl had dysentery very <lb/>
bad. I thought she would die. <lb/>
Colic, Cholera and <lb/>
cured her. and I can truthful- <lb/>
say that I think It Is the best med- <lb/>
In tho Mrs. <lb/>
Clare, Mich. For sale by <lb/>
all druggists. <lb/>
NOTICE Of SALE <lb/>
Slate of North Carolina, county of <lb/>
III the Superior Court, before D. C. <lb/>
Moore. Clerk. <lb/>
N. B. Dawson. of F. J. <lb/>
son. Deed., vs E. L. Dawson, Henry <lb/>
Harper and wife Dora Harper, N. <lb/>
II. Dawson. Jr. and wife Ada <lb/>
son, heirs at law. <lb/>
By virtue of an order made in <lb/>
above entitled cause by Hon. D. C. <lb/>
Moore, clerk of Hie superior court of <lb/>
Pitt county, dated July 3rd. the <lb/>
undersigned commissioner will on <lb/>
Monday, the 4th day of August. 1913. <lb/>
at offer for sale at public <lb/>
before the court house door In <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. to the highest bid- <lb/>
for cash, the following <lb/>
ed property In the county of <lb/>
undivided one-fourth interest, <lb/>
after the life estate of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
F. B. Staton and N. B. Dawson, In <lb/>
and to all real and personal prop- <lb/>
conveyed to N. B. Dawson for <lb/>
life and thereafter to F. J. Dawson. <lb/>
Dora Dawson. Ernest L. Dawson and <lb/>
Dawson In equal Dawson, by <lb/>
B. Staton and wife Augusta J. Sta- <lb/>
ton, by deed dated the first day of <lb/>
i March, 1901, and duly recorded in <lb/>
book D-7. page Pitt county reg- <lb/>
to which reference is hereby <lb/>
made for a more particular <lb/>
of the property therein convey- <lb/>
ed the tract therein containing <lb/>
acres, more or less, and fully <lb/>
In said <lb/>
This July 1913. <lb/>
DONNELL GILLIAM. <lb/>
ltd Commissioner. <lb/>
DROPS <lb/>
THE <lb/>
REMEDY <lb/>
For all forms of <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
Lumbago, Sciatica, Neural- <lb/>
Kidney Troubles, and <lb/>
Asthma <lb/>
STOP THE PAIN <lb/>
Gives Quick <lb/>
It Helps <lb/>
says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., in. <lb/>
writing of her experience with the woman s <lb/>
tonic. She says began to use <lb/>
my back and head would hurt so bad, I <lb/>
thought the pain would kill me. was hardly able <lb/>
to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles <lb/>
of I began to feel like a new woman. I soon <lb/>
gained pounds, and now, do all my housework, <lb/>
as well as run a big water mill. <lb/>
wish every suffering woman would give <lb/>
The Woman's Tonic <lb/>
a triaL I still use when I feel a little bad, <lb/>
and it always does me <lb/>
Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, <lb/>
tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman- <lb/>
trouble. Signs that you need the woman s <lb/>
tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying <lb/>
for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing <lb/>
women for more than fifty years. <lb/>
Get a Bottle Today <lb/>
QUININE AND IRON-THE MOST <lb/>
EFFECTUAL GENERAL <lb/>
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic Combines both <lb/>
in Tasteless form. The Quinine drives <lb/>
out and the Iron builds up <lb/>
the System. For <lb/>
It stops aches and pains. <lb/>
swollen Joints <lb/>
like Destroys <lb/>
the excess acid and <lb/>
safe and sure In Its HO <lb/>
other remedy like it. Sample <lb/>
free on <lb/>
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS <lb/>
One Dollar per bottle, or sent <lb/>
paid upon of price If not <lb/>
obtainable In your <lb/>
SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. <lb/>
Lake <lb/>
Map <lb/>
You know what vim are taking when <lb/>
yon take TASTELESS chill <lb/>
TONIC, f-r I years <lb/>
out the South as the Malaria <lb/>
Chill Fever Remedy <lb/>
Strengthening Tonic. II is us <lb/>
the strongest bitter tonic, but you <lb/>
taste the hitter because the <lb/>
do not dissolve In the mouth but do <lb/>
solve readily in the Is of <lb/>
Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean <lb/>
it. <lb/>
RELIEVES PAIN AND HEALS <lb/>
AT THE SAME TIME <lb/>
The Wonderful, Old Reliable Dr. Porter's <lb/>
Healing Oil. An Antiseptic <lb/>
Surgical Dressing discovered by an <lb/>
Old R. R. Surgeon. Prevents Blood <lb/>
Poisoning. <lb/>
Thousands of families know it already, <lb/>
and a trial will convince you that DR. <lb/>
ANTISEPTIC HEALING <lb/>
Oil, is the most wonderful remedy ever <lb/>
discovered for Wounds, Burns, Sores, <lb/>
Ulcers, Carbuncles, Granulated Eye Lids. <lb/>
Sore Throat, Skin or Scalp Diseases and <lb/>
all wounds and external diseases whether <lb/>
slight or Con people are <lb/>
finding new uses for this famous old <lb/>
remedy. Guaranteed by your Druggist <lb/>
We mean it. <lb/>
There is <lb/>
Look for signature of K. GROVE on <lb/>
That is LAXATIVE QUININE <lb/>
box. Cures a Cold in One Day. <lb/>
Black Eagle, the best plug of <lb/>
Sim Cured tobacco, I have It D. W. <lb/>
To Cure a Cold in One Day <lb/>
to LAXATIVE Quinine. <lb/>
and Headache and off the Cold, <lb/>
refund if it fails to cure. <lb/>
W. ire on each boa. <lb/>
n. t. <lb/>
Life. and <lb/>
on Fourth strait rear<lb/>
NOTICE OF SALE OF ESTATE <lb/>
By virtue of a power of con- <lb/>
in a certain mortgage deed ex- <lb/>
by W. W. Perkins to E. A. <lb/>
Jr., on the 2nd day of January, 1909, <lb/>
and recorded in the registers office <lb/>
in Pitt county in book D-9, page <lb/>
the undersigned will, on MONDAY, <lb/>
the day of August, 1913. at <lb/>
noon, expose to public sale, <lb/>
before the court house door in Green- <lb/>
ville, to the highest bidder for cash <lb/>
the following described parcel of <lb/>
land, <lb/>
in the town of <lb/>
on the west side of the A. C. L. rail- <lb/>
road, beginning at the Intersection <lb/>
of and Railroad streets and <lb/>
runs north 31-20 west feet to a <lb/>
stake, the corner of lots Nos. and <lb/>
on street, thence a <lb/>
direction about feet to a point <lb/>
In the line of the Standard Oil Com- <lb/>
feet from Railroad street, <lb/>
thence south west with Railroad <lb/>
street feet and Inch to the be- <lb/>
ginning, being lots Nos. and part <lb/>
of lot No. In the plot made for <lb/>
and in April. <lb/>
This sale is made for the purpose <lb/>
GENTLE LAX <lb/>
SKIN SORES <lb/>
KM, MB. <lb/>
WHIST <lb/>
WORM. aW b <lb/>
SALVE <lb/>
ear Ban at <lb/>
QUICKLY HEALED <lb/>
a. . <lb/>
One of the few colleges for women In the South that confers an A. <lb/>
B. degree representing four years of genuine college work according <lb/>
to the standard of the Association of Colleges of the Southern States. <lb/>
Diplomas awarded to who complete the course In the Schools of <lb/>
Art and Music. Library facilities excellent. Systematic training in <lb/>
physical education under director and assistants. Courts for tennis <lb/>
and basket-ball. Board and room In Main Building, heat, <lb/>
light, literary tuition, fees for physician and nurse, and all minor fees <lb/>
220.00; In the East Building and Cottages, from to less <lb/>
Students not offering the necessary units for entrance may prepare In <lb/>
Meredith Academy, which la rated In Class A of the accredited schools <lb/>
of the State University. For catalog, Quarterly or fuller In- <lb/>
formation, address R. T. President, N. C. <lb/>
Let us sell you a plug, a pound or <lb/>
a box of Black Eagle Sun Cured to- <lb/>
and make you happy. J. R. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
J. E. MARSH <lb/>
Veterinarian <lb/>
Located at R. L. Smith's Sales Stables <lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
of complying with the terms of said <lb/>
mortgage deed. <lb/>
This the 1st day of July. 1913. <lb/>
VIRGINIA H. PERKINS, <lb/>
Assignee of Mortgage, <lb/>
HARDING and PIECE, Attorneys. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
WARRENTON HIGH SCHOOL <lb/>
First Class College School For And <lb/>
Strong and experienced This school furnished the <lb/>
leader of the freshman class last year at Davidson College and <lb/>
at the University. Boarders under I he Immediate supervision of <lb/>
the Principal. GRAHAM. <lb/>
NOTICE TO <lb/>
Having this day been appointed by <lb/>
the clerk of the superior court of Pitt <lb/>
county as administrator of the es- <lb/>
of Richard Carr, deceased, and <lb/>
duly qualified as such, notice <lb/>
is hereby given to all persons hold- <lb/>
claims against said estate to <lb/>
sent them to me for payment, duly <lb/>
authenticated, on or before the 8th <lb/>
day of July, 1914, or this notice will <lb/>
be plead In bar of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to said estate <lb/>
are urged to make Immediate pay- <lb/>
to me and thus save costs and <lb/>
expense. <lb/>
This the 7th day of July, 1913. <lb/>
J. L. HOBGOOD, <lb/>
Administrator of Richard Carr. <lb/>
JARVIS and BLOW, Attorneys. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
Piles Cured in to Days <lb/>
Your will refund money if <lb/>
OINTMENT to cure any of Itching, <lb/>
Blind. Protruding <lb/>
The application and <lb/>
THE STAR <lb/>
IS THE BEST LIGHTED WAREHOUSE EVER BUILT <lb/>
For The Sale of Leaf Tobacco <lb/>
Keep Your Eye on the STAR this Year and see if it does not <lb/>
sell it HIGHER <lb/>
O. L. JOYNER <lb/>
B. B; SUGG<lb/>
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb/>
HEART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
RINDS 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/>
A-w <lb/>
Is the Host the Most Healthful, the Employment Mn. George <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF NORTH CARO- <lb/>
LINA AND INVITE THOSE <lb/>
WHO WISH TO GET BET- <lb/>
ACQUAINTED WITH <lb/>
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HA TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
RATES ARE LOW AND CAN <lb/>
BE HAD UPON <lb/>
VOLUME <lb/>
s. c, FRIDAY IF Mil<lb/>
den Retains The Free <lb/>
Will Baptist Seminary<lb/>
Executive Committee Made Decision Goldsboro Party <lb/>
yesterday Afternoon Over Roads of Several <lb/>
BIDS OF TOWNS <lb/>
A SPECIALIST <lb/>
Our That School Re- <lb/>
mains At If It Could Nut <lb/>
Come Here. Hurl i Mount <lb/>
Was Eliminated <lb/>
After a long fight and a hard <lb/>
between the various towns bidding <lb/>
for the trustees of tho <lb/>
Free Will Baptist Seminary <lb/>
day at Ayden decided that the school <lb/>
should remain at its present location. <lb/>
To most who were in close <lb/>
touch with the situation and with <lb/>
what the people of Ayden were do- <lb/>
In, the decision came as no surprise. <lb/>
As a matter of fact, the greater part; <lb/>
of the people of Greenville were very <lb/>
much In favor of Ayden keeping <lb/>
school If It could not come here, and <lb/>
since it did not move, the decision of; <lb/>
the judges was very satisfactory to <lb/>
those citizens who worked so hard for <lb/>
getting the location of the school for <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
A delegation of ten of the leading <lb/>
business men of Greenville journeyed <lb/>
to Ayden yesterday morning in <lb/>
for the purpose of being <lb/>
present for the meeting and present- <lb/>
the claim of this town. This com- <lb/>
was composed of Messrs. B. <lb/>
W. Moseley, chairman; Professor It. <lb/>
h. Wright, F. C. Harding, C. T. Mun- <lb/>
ford, E. B. Higgs, C. Laughing- <lb/>
house, Mayor J. B. James, R. L. Lit- <lb/>
D. J. Whichard, and B. K. <lb/>
Ayden s Bid <lb/>
All of the trustee's were either <lb/>
present In person or by proxy. It <lb/>
was decided that each delegation <lb/>
should have thirty minutes in <lb/>
to present its bids. Ayden came In <lb/>
first on the program. A bunch of <lb/>
the school girls, carrying a ban- <lb/>
with the inscription a <lb/>
Little Town Big With <lb/>
entered the hall, and gave the school <lb/>
yell. The delegates drew for the or- <lb/>
in which they should come, and <lb/>
It fell to Ayden first. J. R. Turnage <lb/>
and R. W. Smith presented the offer <lb/>
of this town, which was <lb/>
cash. This was given on condition <lb/>
that the school will spend twice <lb/>
amount In improvements and new <lb/>
buildings. <lb/>
Hid <lb/>
drew second place, and <lb/>
Attorney F. C. Harding and Mayor J <lb/>
B. James presented nor claim. Tho <lb/>
offer made by Greenville was <lb/>
In cash, a choice of two free sites, <lb/>
ind free electric lights and water for <lb/>
ten years. In addition to this, two <lb/>
other sites were offered that could <lb/>
be bought by tho school, and in case <lb/>
one of was selected tho town <lb/>
was to add additional to tho <lb/>
cash offer. Besides all these. Green- <lb/>
real estate men agreed to <lb/>
off the hands of the school the plot <lb/>
of ground now owned by them In <lb/>
Ayden and to pay them for It. <lb/>
Offer <lb/>
Next In order came whose <lb/>
claim was presented by Mayor <lb/>
Sutton, Paul and Editor <lb/>
T. Edwards of the Free Press. <lb/>
offered In cash with a <lb/>
tree site, and free electric lights for <lb/>
three years. The Free Will <lb/>
church to give an additional <lb/>
If the school was locate <lb/>
.,, .- -.-. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Just as the delegation was <lb/>
closing, a delegation of four from <lb/>
Mount arrived on the scene <lb/>
News and <lb/>
Fifteen Goldsboro and Wayne <lb/>
citizens, among them the road <lb/>
trustees, who will direct the <lb/>
of that that their township <lb/>
voted for roads recently, came here <lb/>
last night from where good <lb/>
roads are not common. <lb/>
From Wayne the party set out Mon- <lb/>
day morning, went through Hoke <lb/>
and from there to Moore <lb/>
county where Henry A. Page pi <lb/>
over the Moor, county <lb/>
the sand-clay roads of his county. <lb/>
Aberdeen statesman did missionary <lb/>
work while he had such a prominent <lb/>
citizenry with him, talked the sand- <lb/>
clay salvage and Its long-time <lb/>
ties. He made converts. Mr. <lb/>
always does. <lb/>
The party went well over tho roads <lb/>
of that county, said to be tho <lb/>
the best. Mr. Page believes In <lb/>
them. They outwear the macadam, <lb/>
he is quoted as saying, and he has <lb/>
given both a try-out. The party also <lb/>
met Leonard Tufts, a northerner <lb/>
es good roads. <lb/>
They came In last night, stopped <lb/>
at the Yarborough and this <lb/>
will take their machines out again <lb/>
There four automobiles In th- <lb/>
party. They will Invade Franklin <lb/>
Nash, doing Wake on the <lb/>
expect to return to Goldsboro tonight. <lb/>
The Wayne men are on this <lb/>
lour hoping to find the <lb/>
material in which to invest their <lb/>
The road trustees are <lb/>
among the most substantial <lb/>
nun In Eastern North Carolina. Those <lb/>
who direct tho spending of the <lb/>
are, J. M. Grantham, John Bardin, <lb/>
C. A. Norwood, G. C. Royall and <lb/>
Charles Dewey. <lb/>
issue Is of recent date <lb/>
Tb township went <lb/>
into tho extension of roads. With the <lb/>
money the trustees expect to remake <lb/>
Goldsboro. <lb/>
Everywhere on the road between <lb/>
Wayne and Moore, were evidences of <lb/>
great thrift. Mfr. Royall said lo <lb/>
night that he has never <lb/>
Improvement in n section than <lb/>
county. roads have done <lb/>
he said, and ho believes <lb/>
do it anywhere. <lb/>
The party stopping here last <lb/>
was composed of these <lb/>
Judge W. R. Allen, Nathan O Berry. <lb/>
F. K. Borden, E. B. Borden, Jr., Ed- <lb/>
win J. W. Grantham, John <lb/>
Bardin. G. A. Norwood, B. H. <lb/>
J. H. Norwood. O. C. Royall. <lb/>
Charles Dewey. R. G. Thompson, J. <lb/>
a. Dewey, E. B. Dewey. <lb/>
Government Expert Will Investigate <lb/>
Health Conditions <lb/>
Mr. Haskett Move <lb/>
for Setter Laws <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Issuing of Bonds Is a <lb/>
System of Financiering <lb/>
TC- <lb/>
They brought with them no concrete <lb/>
bid for the permanent location of the <lb/>
school, but merely wanted to see what <lb/>
the school wanted. No bid was <lb/>
here, and the trustees would not <lb/>
low them to bring In a bid after hear- <lb/>
the others that had already been <lb/>
closed and consequently Mount <lb/>
was eliminated from the race. <lb/>
The meeting at which the decision <lb/>
of the trustees was made was held In <lb/>
the afternoon. At that time the <lb/>
offered by all of the towns bid- <lb/>
ding were considered, and the s <lb/>
made the to the best of their <lb/>
ability. people,, of. Greenville <lb/>
failing of the <lb/>
of tho school, are glad that, sine <lb/>
they could not get t, the location re- <lb/>
mains at Ayden. <lb/>
John. II. Small Has <lb/>
Secured Services Of Expert To <lb/>
Investigate <lb/>
And Malaria <lb/>
An expert to study the malaria and <lb/>
mosquito problem in the eastern part <lb/>
of will visit this town in <lb/>
a few days, according to a statement <lb/>
given out by Congressman John H. <lb/>
Small during a recent visit to Wash- <lb/>
An account of the visit of tho <lb/>
specialist, and something of the work <lb/>
that ho will do Is given below as <lb/>
en from the Washington Daily <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Congressman John H. Small, <lb/>
has been here for the past few days <lb/>
gave out information this morning, <lb/>
which will ho of vital Importance to <lb/>
tho residents of Eastern North Caro- <lb/>
Mr. Small has arranged with <lb/>
the Public Bureau of Health to send <lb/>
an expert here to study the malaria, <lb/>
and mosquito problems in this dis- <lb/>
Dr. Carter, who is recognized a-s <lb/>
one of the most noted In <lb/>
States on sanitation and pub- <lb/>
health, will Washington <lb/>
some time In August. Dr. Carter hid <lb/>
charge of the sanitation in Panama <lb/>
and his work in ridding the lean <lb/>
Zone of mosquitoes was of Immense <lb/>
Importance value. <lb/>
While he is here, he will <lb/>
ate with the county health <lb/>
and the city health officers. <lb/>
He will not only study malarial con- <lb/>
and their but will do <lb/>
liver at least one lecture <lb/>
to the citizens, showing how mos- <lb/>
propagate malarial <lb/>
Tho only condition that Dr. Car- <lb/>
imposes on the different towns <lb/>
he will visit Is that the cities, through <lb/>
their mayors and boards of aldermen <lb/>
request him to visit their <lb/>
towns. Dr. Carter will only go tr <lb/>
where his services <lb/>
asked fer. <lb/>
The malaria problem Is a most <lb/>
question for every town In East- <lb/>
North Carolina, not only on <lb/>
f, hut from <lb/>
economic standpoint. is no <lb/>
doubt but that Dr. Carter's services <lb/>
will be In demand. <lb/>
Tho doctor will also visit Eliza- <lb/>
beth City, Edenton, Ply- <lb/>
mouth and Greenville. <lb/>
Congressman Small returned t- <lb/>
Washington D this afternoon. <lb/>
In <lb/>
BRUNSWICK, Ga. July <lb/>
for an organized movement to urge <lb/>
the admittance of Confederate <lb/>
to Federal homes and <lb/>
tho payment of pensions from tho <lb/>
Federal instead of the state <lb/>
to the dwindling number of those <lb/>
who fought for tho <lb/>
were discussed here today tho an- <lb/>
reunion of the Georgia division <lb/>
of the United Confederate Veterans. <lb/>
Tho opening session this morning Was <lb/>
devoted to the exchange of greet- <lb/>
This the veterans <lb/>
listened to address by Governor <lb/>
reunion will conclude <lb/>
tomorrow. <lb/>
To the The article in yes- <lb/>
paper by Dr. Zeno Brown <lb/>
was very timely and should be care- <lb/>
fully considered, and should be re- <lb/>
yea. It should be put <lb/>
circular form and distributed over <lb/>
this county. <lb/>
Three years ago the writer of this <lb/>
was running a I all dairy. He had <lb/>
the state veterinarian Dr. <lb/>
to test his cows. The doctor express- <lb/>
ed surprise that a town of this size- <lb/>
should have no dairy laws. Later tho <lb/>
cows were tested by Dr. Wood. He <lb/>
said there was only one other person <lb/>
in the county that had his cattle test- <lb/>
ed, G. T. Tyson. <lb/>
The good roads are attracting our <lb/>
attention, but let us put our thoughts <lb/>
on more important, more <lb/>
the health of our children. <lb/>
I request again that you <lb/>
tho doctor's letter. <lb/>
Yours for health, <lb/>
D. HASKETT. <lb/>
Greenville, July 1913. <lb/>
State and National do <lb/>
It Very <lb/>
FOR HEEDED IMPROVEMENTS <lb/>
Announcement is made that a leave <lb/>
of absence for year has been <lb/>
granted to Professor L. R. Meadows, <lb/>
head of the department English at <lb/>
the Training Mr. Meadows Is <lb/>
to leave the city at an early date for, of dollars <lb/>
a prolonged trip of vacation after does it whenever a permanent <lb/>
Other Rich Hy <lb/>
Roads And n- <lb/>
Township Could Io <lb/>
The <lb/>
The Greenville Good <lb/>
Roads <lb/>
To some people the simple word <lb/>
bond is a great bug-bear shout- <lb/>
ed into their tars by the demagogue, <lb/>
but we cannot help believing that <lb/>
most of the people of Pitt county are <lb/>
too intelligent to mislead by any <lb/>
such opponents of progress when they <lb/>
once understand the true fact in the <lb/>
case. <lb/>
Issuing bonds is nothing but a sys- <lb/>
of financiering that is <lb/>
when any great undertaking is <lb/>
to be successfully accomplished. The <lb/>
United States Government has issued <lb/>
bonds from its very birth as a nation <lb/>
and is still at it today. The state of <lb/>
North Carolina has Issued millions <lb/>
of bonds and continually <lb/>
would probably be some excuse for <lb/>
advising the people to go slow, bat <lb/>
in view of the fact that Mecklenburg, <lb/>
Guilford, Wake and over <lb/>
filly of the counties of the state <lb/>
grown rich by Issuing bonds <lb/>
holding roads, and that at least <lb/>
other counties, including Wake for <lb/>
a million dollars, are to vote on <lb/>
issues this year, we think we should <lb/>
profit by the experience of others <lb/>
fall in line for progress and develop- <lb/>
VOTE FOR BONDS, GOOD ROADS. <lb/>
AND PROSPERITY ON JULY 29th. <lb/>
OF LIBERALS <lb/>
which he will proceed to some higher is to be made. Greenville <lb/>
Institution of learning where he will township has of <lb/>
take advanced work. <lb/>
During the absence of Mr. Mead- <lb/>
the chair of English will be tilled <lb/>
by Professor Harold Whitehurst. Mr. <lb/>
Is a young man well fit- <lb/>
for the position to he has <lb/>
been called. He is a graduate of th-; <lb/>
University of North Carolina, speaks <lb/>
languages, and has taken con- <lb/>
work In Columbia <lb/>
He taught In Beaufort. <lb/>
New In other school <lb/>
this state. Ml will take <lb/>
charge of department upon the <lb/>
opening of the regular fall term. <lb/>
GAMBLING AT GAMES <lb/>
Some effective steps should be <lb/>
en to put an end to the wholesale <lb/>
gambling that goes on at the base- <lb/>
I ball park on afternoons that <lb/>
are played there. Personally <lb/>
I we were not present at the game yes- <lb/>
afternoon, but our attention <lb/>
I has been called to the fact that <lb/>
men. visitors for the most part <lb/>
are told, were busily engaged in <lb/>
j passing money and arranging bets <lb/>
n. the game during the course of Its <lb/>
progress. <lb/>
People who go out to see a good <lb/>
property and desires to borrow <lb/>
to build permanent hard roads <lb/>
for the benefit and enjoyment of Its <lb/>
citizens; why should any one and es- <lb/>
the farmers kick when <lb/>
of this property is within the <lb/>
Incorporation limits of the town of <lb/>
Greenville where none of the <lb/>
is to he spent. <lb/>
By Issuing bonds we are merely <lb/>
borrowing money to build a greatly <lb/>
reeded improvement, to pass- <lb/>
able roads, and any farmer who wish- <lb/>
es to buy a of land resorts to <lb/>
the same method, only he borrowing <lb/>
almost to the full value of his land, <lb/>
while the township borrows only one <lb/>
dollar on every sixty-live thousand <lb/>
one hundred and sixty-six <lb/>
worth of property. It Is practically <lb/>
the same proposition as a man buy- <lb/>
a farm worth for which he <lb/>
Prominent Minister and Distinguish- <lb/>
ed Liberal Religious Work- <lb/>
Gather <lb/>
PARIS, July <lb/>
Congress of Free Christianity and <lb/>
Religious Progress, attended by <lb/>
prominent ministers and distinguish- <lb/>
ed liberal religious workers from all <lb/>
over the world, opened sixth <lb/>
session in Paris today, and <lb/>
for a week hold a series of meet- <lb/>
in the Louvre, the <lb/>
Foyer de and other places of <lb/>
assembly. The meeting is the first <lb/>
that the congress has held In France. <lb/>
Its previous sessions having been In <lb/>
London, Amsterdam, Geneva, Boston, <lb/>
Cambridge and Berlin. <lb/>
Numbered among the speakers who <lb/>
are to take part in the present meet- <lb/>
men of distinction India, <lb/>
Japan, Germany, England, Denmark, <lb/>
Canada, the United States and other <lb/>
countries, while such well known <lb/>
men as Sir Henry James, Dr. David <lb/>
Starr Jordan, Pastor Charles Wag- <lb/>
Professor Rudolf Henri <lb/>
and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise <lb/>
will also contribute to the program. <lb/>
AYDEN ITEMS <lb/>
AYDEN, N. C, July R. <lb/>
Smith is at today to as- <lb/>
In rebuilding the oil mill. <lb/>
Miss Lil Chapman, of <lb/>
spent last week With Miss May <lb/>
Cannon. <lb/>
Mrs. H. S. e who died in <lb/>
Wilson was buried lure last Thurs- <lb/>
v have to pay rent pert day. <lb/>
year, and instead of going on renting <lb/>
the land and paying out tho <lb/>
for rent each year he uses this <lb/>
in pay off a part of the principal and <lb/>
the interest year year until he has <lb/>
Mrs. Joe Pi remedy which Is <lb/>
so well advertised as I blOOd med- <lb/>
is sold in by J. R. Smith <lb/>
and Bro. <lb/>
Rev. W. I. <lb/>
his land paid for. The fifteen Cants filled the pulpit at the Baptist church <lb/>
that you have for tho post eight years Sunday. <lb/>
clean exhibition of the sport, been paying as a rent for the roads <lb/>
shocked to notice such things go on <lb/>
In the grandstand. The practice Is <lb/>
n nuisance, and all honest people <lb/>
demand that a stop be put to It. W <lb/>
arc told that the wagers were made <lb/>
and the passed openly In the <lb/>
grand stand at the game yesterday <lb/>
between and Greenville, <lb/>
If this lie true, the arm of the law <lb/>
should ho brought to bear upon it <lb/>
and It should be seen to that those <lb/>
persons are punished who insist up- <lb/>
on carrying on such practices. <lb/>
Of Wood, of the Hod <lb/>
Is DOt to He <lb/>
Is showing up well tho bat on <lb/>
the bases well as doing excellent <lb/>
pitching. <lb/>
To Amend Stale <lb/>
RALEIGH, N. O., July <lb/>
commission appointed to draft a set <lb/>
of proposed amendments to the con- <lb/>
of North Carolina met here <lb/>
today to consider the measures pro- <lb/>
posed. Among tho most Important <lb/>
receiving attention are <lb/>
j those providing for the Initiative and <lb/>
I referendum, a compulsory school <lb/>
that you now have Is simply convert- <lb/>
ed Into a fund that pays tho yearly <lb/>
interest an equal amount of tho <lb/>
each year and maintains <lb/>
the roads. Under this system there <lb/>
is no burden placed on any <lb/>
year, and tho same amount is <lb/>
paid tho last year as is the first. <lb/>
There is absolutely no truth in the <lb/>
statement that you leave a debt <lb/>
your children to pay for each year <lb/>
pays its part and no one year pays <lb/>
more than another. <lb/>
Some of those who are opposing <lb/>
bonds been heard to say they <lb/>
would gladly go down in their pockets <lb/>
and contribute to a good roads fund, <lb/>
yet even if they were sincere or If <lb/>
a special tax sufficiently large to <lb/>
build tho roads was levied we do not <lb/>
think It hardly fair to tax those who <lb/>
arc here or two years for an <lb/>
that others who come in <lb/>
later will enjoy no cost to them- <lb/>
selves. The- t row <lb/>
term of six months, a new system <lb/>
taxation, prohibiting the build the roads and then <lb/>
of special act, and <lb/>
allowing Bible reading in the public <lb/>
schools. <lb/>
for them each ear as them. <lb/>
If this were the first bond issue <lb/>
for roads In North <lb/>
Mrs. J. Smith of Vanceboro, Is <lb/>
relatives in Ayden. <lb/>
Car lime Just received J. H. <lb/>
Smith and Bro. <lb/>
Mr. C. E. Smith who was hurt so <lb/>
badly and sent to hospital <lb/>
is homo for a few days. <lb/>
Mrs. Hodges Is visiting her <lb/>
parents at Burke Station, Va. <lb/>
Mrs. D. B. Heath Is very sick. <lb/>
Today will decide whether the <lb/>
Will Baptist school will remain In <lb/>
Ayden move to another town. <lb/>
Our farmers wishing for rain. <lb/>
Mrs. Grover and <lb/>
laughter spend- <lb/>
a few days with her parents near <lb/>
Arthur. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Buck Is at <lb/>
hospital tor his health. <lb/>
Mrs. Emma Is <lb/>
to her home with a sprained ankle. <lb/>
Ayden Is on a boom; new stores <lb/>
and residences going up In <lb/>
parts of our town. <lb/>
Mr. J. C. Jones is visiting his <lb/>
tor <lb/>
Mr. K. W. Cobb returned Tuesday <lb/>
Carolina night from Morehead City. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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