<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00018295_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
Lanterns <lb/>
Strong and Durable <lb/>
and Hard <lb/>
Use under All <lb/>
Condition. <lb/>
Give steady, bright light. <lb/>
Easy to light. Easy to <lb/>
clean and re wick. Don't <lb/>
smoke. Don't blow out <lb/>
in the wind. Don't leak. <lb/>
At dealers everywhere <lb/>
STANDARD OIL COMPANY <lb/>
D. C. <lb/>
Richmond, Va. <lb/>
Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
BALTIMORE <lb/>
Charlotte. N. C <lb/>
Charleston. W. Va. <lb/>
Charleston. S. C. <lb/>
It Always Helps <lb/>
says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky in <lb/>
writing of her experience with the woman's <lb/>
tonic. She says I bean 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. soon <lb/>
gained pounds, and now, do all my housework, <lb/>
as well as run a big water mill. <lb/>
I 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/>
Of <lb/>
Make Your Own Paint <lb/>
. YOU WILL SAVE GAL. <lb/>
THIS IS HOW <lb/>
Buy gals. SEMI-MIXED REAL PAINT. <lb/>
at per gal. <lb/>
And gals. Linseed Oil to mix with it <lb/>
You then make gals, of pure paint for <lb/>
It's only per gal. <lb/>
Anybody can mix the OIL with the PAINT. <lb/>
Whereas, if you buy gals, of ready-for-use paint in <lb/>
CANS, you pay a gal. or <lb/>
The L. V M. SEMI-MIXED REAL PAINT Is WHITE LEAD. <lb/>
ZINC and LINSEED OIL. the paint materials I <lb/>
Use a gal. out any PAINT yon buy. and II not the best <lb/>
paint made, return the paint and get ALL your back. <lb/>
JR. J. G. MOTE, N. C. <lb/>
CO., SNOW X. C. <lb/>
GASKILL CO, S. C. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
My son. Luther Barrett, age <lb/>
has left home and refuses to <lb/>
return. All are forbidden <lb/>
to hire him unless his wages are <lb/>
paid to me. <lb/>
ROSA BARRETT<lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
We hereby give notice that will <lb/>
apply to the Board of County Com- <lb/>
missioners at the regular April 1914 <lb/>
meeting to have opened as a public <lb/>
load, the road now running from th. <lb/>
Langley place on the road <lb/>
across our lands to the creek road <lb/>
which road has been used by the pub- <lb/>
for thirty years and longer. <lb/>
This March 1914. <lb/>
D. E. HOUSE. <lb/>
R. D HARRINGTON-. <lb/>
Taken up on m. about Decent <lb/>
her 1st one black sow weighing about <lb/>
pound, marked swallow fork left <lb/>
crop and silt right, black face <lb/>
white and tall Owner can <lb/>
same by paying expenses attached. <lb/>
W. E. LEWIS, Gr, N. C. <lb/>
-J Route I <lb/>
Eyes Last <lb/>
How often have <lb/>
forced to say <lb/>
these very words. You <lb/>
evidently have never <lb/>
tried <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
which gently regulate <lb/>
your system and stir <lb/>
your liver to action. <lb/>
Sugar coated or plain <lb/>
your druggist. <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
Pitt County, <lb/>
In Superior Court <lb/>
Before D. Moore, Clerk. <lb/>
William and <lb/>
U. T. T. Gardner <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Henry <lb/>
By virtue of a decree made by D. C. <lb/>
Moore, clerk of the superior court of <lb/>
Pitt county, in the above entitled cause <lb/>
the 18th, day of March. 1914 the <lb/>
commissioner will on <lb/>
day the 13th day of April, 1914. at <lb/>
O'clock noon, expose to public sale. <lb/>
before the court house In Greenville <lb/>
to the highest bidder for cash, the fol- <lb/>
I described tract or parcel of <lb/>
land, to Wit <lb/>
Situated in Swift Creek township <lb/>
Pitt county, Carolina adjoining <lb/>
the lands of the Allen heirs, <lb/>
the heirs of N. R. Corey, the Stoke <lb/>
lands and others and containing <lb/>
more or less and being a portion <lb/>
c f the land left by last will and <lb/>
of J. F. Hellen to the Heller <lb/>
heirs. <lb/>
This sale will be made for the <lb/>
pose of making partition among the <lb/>
tenants in common. <lb/>
This the 13th day of March, 1914. <lb/>
F. C HARDING, Commissioner <lb/>
Harding pierce. <lb/>
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having qualified as <lb/>
tor of Anne deceased <lb/>
late of county, this is to <lb/>
all persons having claims <lb/>
against the estate of the said de- <lb/>
ceased to exhibit them to the <lb/>
within twelve month <lb/>
from this date, or this notice will <lb/>
he pleaded in bar of their <lb/>
All persons indebted to said <lb/>
estate will please make immediate <lb/>
payment. <lb/>
This the 6th. day of March 1914 <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
Administrator. <lb/>
JAMES A <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
MONEY SAVED <lb/>
by The J. I. Case Tobacco Transplanter. <lb/>
Great saving in time and labor, increase in yield per acre. Set <lb/>
plants when wait for rain. Each plant watered at the <lb/>
roots, covered with dry earth-no p. Every <lb/>
for every purpose, desired. Come and see these machines before <lb/>
buy, built right, works right, wears right, and prices right, <lb/>
is best made.<lb/>
Grimesland, N. C. Feb. 1914. <lb/>
Messrs. Hart Hadley, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
In regard to the J. I. Case Tobacco <lb/>
Transplanter will say; that I am <lb/>
pleased with it. I couldn't ask for <lb/>
one to work any better and It was just <lb/>
as you represented It to be. It worked <lb/>
perfection and I am satisfied it save <lb/>
me several hundred dollars. <lb/>
I set my entire crop of seven acres <lb/>
with it and It was dry weather when <lb/>
I set it. I used six barrels of water <lb/>
first setting. I set some parts <lb/>
per acre and got a perfect stand the <lb/>
rows all through my patch by hand <lb/>
just to try it and I found that that <lb/>
which I set with be Transplanter grew <lb/>
better the season through. I set <lb/>
some for several of my neighbors and <lb/>
they say that theirs grew better than <lb/>
that they set by hand, and they are <lb/>
begging me to set theirs for them the <lb/>
coming season. I also have friends <lb/>
at a distance of fifteen miles from me <lb/>
who want me to set their crop for <lb/>
them. <lb/>
I can't say much for your ma- <lb/>
chine and wouldn't be without our. <lb/>
for Five Hundred Dollars and as to <lb/>
your services. I couldn't ask for bet- <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
JESSE. II. SMITH. <lb/>
HART HADLEY, <lb/>
Sale of Heal I -fate. <lb/>
By virtue of i. power of sale contain <lb/>
In a certain <lb/>
and delivered by L. <lb/>
and wife, Annie to Greene <lb/>
Manning, dated 30th day of September <lb/>
and duly recorded in the Regis- <lb/>
office in Pitt county, in book d t, <lb/>
page the undersigned will on <lb/>
Monday the 20th day of April, 1914 <lb/>
exposed to public sale before the court <lb/>
house door in Greenville to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash the following <lb/>
ed tract or parcel of land, to <lb/>
in township. <lb/>
I'm county. North Carolina, beginning <lb/>
the mouth of Peter's Run where it <lb/>
enters into Creek and run <lb/>
thence a straight line to the <lb/>
mouth of Marl branch thence up the <lb/>
various courses of said branch to a <lb/>
take; J. W, corner, thence <lb/>
with said line north <lb/>
west 4-5 poles to a stake, a walnut <lb/>
tree stump, thence south 2-3 west <lb/>
poles to a stake on the great Con <lb/>
creek near a small <lb/>
down the courses of said <lb/>
creek to the beginning, containing <lb/>
acres more or This Is <lb/>
made to satisfy the terms of said <lb/>
gage deed. This the 17th day of <lb/>
March, 1914. <lb/>
GREEN MANNING, Mortgagee <lb/>
By I,. Ange. Assignee. <lb/>
HARDING t PIERCE, <lb/>
3-20-ltd <lb/>
HARDWARE <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Grain Privileges <lb/>
Receipts. <lb/>
The receipts of the Greenville <lb/>
the quarter ending March <lb/>
31st. were 14.392.36 an Increase of <lb/>
over the ex <lb/>
of The tin-, i. of the office <lb/>
both In receipts the quantity of <lb/>
mall handled, Is in- r. dug all the <lb/>
time, and shows that Greenville Is <lb/>
growing In business and population. <lb/>
Notice of Administration. <lb/>
The undersigned qualified <lb/>
as administrator of W. H. <lb/>
deceased, late of Pitt county. North <lb/>
Carolina this is to notify all per- <lb/>
sons having claims against the estate <lb/>
said deceased to exhibit them <lb/>
he undersigned on or before the 6th <lb/>
day of April, 1915, or this notice will <lb/>
be plead in bar of their recovery. All <lb/>
persons indebted to said estate win <lb/>
please make immediate payment. <lb/>
HUGH S. <lb/>
Administrator <lb/>
HARDING PIERCE, Attorneys. <lb/>
4-6 ltd <lb/>
Dog Show In Minneapolis. <lb/>
MINNEAPOLIS, April <lb/>
and most notable exhibition <lb/>
of dogs ever held in the north <lb/>
west opened in this city today under <lb/>
the auspices of the Minneapolis Ken- <lb/>
Club. An offer of in cash <lb/>
prizes has attracted the blue ribbon <lb/>
winners from the recent shows In <lb/>
the east and In Canada. All of the <lb/>
popular breeds are well represented. <lb/>
Judging was commenced soon after <lb/>
the opening today and will be <lb/>
until the show closes Saturday <lb/>
t MM <lb/>
MONEY IN WHEAT. <lb/>
Puts and calls are the safest and <lb/>
surest method of trading in wheat <lb/>
or oats. Because your loss is <lb/>
absolutely limited to the amount <lb/>
bought. No further risk. <lb/>
Positively the most profitable way <lb/>
o trading. <lb/>
Open an account. You can buy <lb/>
puts or calls on <lb/>
grain for or you can buy both <lb/>
for or as many more as you wish. <lb/>
An advance or decline of cent gives <lb/>
you the chance to take profit. <lb/>
A movement of cents profit. <lb/>
Write for full particulars and bank <lb/>
references, <lb/>
R. W. NEUMANN <lb/>
Columbus, Ohio. <lb/>
Address all mall to Lock Box 1420. <lb/>
of Application for Pardon. <lb/>
Notice Is hereby given that on the <lb/>
day of April 1914 or as soon thereafter <lb/>
as in convenient to the Governor, ax. <lb/>
application will be presented to the <lb/>
Governor for the of Willis <lb/>
Pitt who was convicted at the August <lb/>
term 1913 of the superior court of Pitt <lb/>
county of the larceny of some <lb/>
gathered corn In the field and <lb/>
ed to six months on the roads of Pitt <lb/>
county. This the day of March <lb/>
1914. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN, <lb/>
S. J. EVERETT, <lb/>
for Will Pitt <lb/>
Executors Notice and Advertisement <lb/>
For Claims. <lb/>
State of North Carolina, Pitt <lb/>
The undersigned having been <lb/>
pointed and duly qualified as <lb/>
tor of the estate of F. A. Patrick, de- <lb/>
ceased, all persons having claims <lb/>
against said estate are notified <lb/>
to exhibit the same before me on <lb/>
or before the 30th day of March <lb/>
1915, or this notice will be pleaded In <lb/>
bar of their recovery. All persons In- <lb/>
to said estate will please make <lb/>
immediate payment. This the day <lb/>
of March 1914. <lb/>
W. J. KITTRELL, <lb/>
Executor last will and <lb/>
of F. A. Patrick, deceased. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
THE FARM <lb/>
Basis of all <lb/>
LIME <lb/>
all good firming. Write far <lb/>
bulimia by the but authority the United <lb/>
Stain Lima on the and get price <lb/>
of lie lime. Don't buy Mad, <lb/>
A will give you <lb/>
POWHATAN LIME CO. <lb/>
VIRGINIA <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
. ,., fir mutt I<lb/>
BUILD I <lb/>
i f-1- i. how. u. <lb/>
you Write loAmy. <lb/>
D. SWIFT CO, <lb/>
Sale of Timber. <lb/>
Under and by virtue of the power <lb/>
authority contained in a certain <lb/>
Davis and wife, Davis, to R. <lb/>
A. Stamper, of date 11th day of July <lb/>
1913, and duly recorded in the Pitt <lb/>
l County Registry in book I. page <lb/>
default having in the <lb/>
payment of bond thereby <lb/>
the undersigned, will on Thursday th <lb/>
9th day of April, 1914, at o'clock <lb/>
M In front of the court door <lb/>
of Pitt county, Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
for sale at public auction to the high- <lb/>
est bidder, for cash, the following de- <lb/>
scribed <lb/>
All the right, title and interest Of <lb/>
the said F. O. Davis and wife. Addle <lb/>
M. In and to all the green pine <lb/>
timber trees that will measure <lb/>
Inches in diameter at <lb/>
the stump when cut, that are now <lb/>
standing-, growing and being upon that <lb/>
tract of land situated In Falkland town <lb/>
ship, Pitt county, adjoining the lands <lb/>
of Ben Moore, the heirs, John <lb/>
Gay and Bob Rodgers, and practically <lb/>
as follows, <lb/>
at a stake on the Green- <lb/>
ville and Wilson road, thence N. 1-3 <lb/>
W. 4-5 R. to a stake In Ben <lb/>
line agreed <lb/>
thence N. 3-8 E. 1-5 R. to a <lb/>
stake in Jacob's branch, Jno. Gay's <lb/>
corner, thence down the various <lb/>
courses of Jacob's branch to the <lb/>
Greenville, Wilson public <lb/>
the point of beginning, containing <lb/>
acres, more or less, saving and ex- <lb/>
the pine timber on <lb/>
about five acres of the above <lb/>
ed tract of land located on the public <lb/>
road on the southeastern portion of <lb/>
the body of land, cut off separated <lb/>
from the main body of the tract by an <lb/>
old tram road running through the <lb/>
woods, evidences of which can now be <lb/>
plainly seen, and saving and except- <lb/>
further five long leaf pine timber <lb/>
trees and one short straw pine <lb/>
tree which are to be, or have been, <lb/>
designated as excepted from this con- <lb/>
with the full n <lb/>
and privilege from the date of this <lb/>
Instrument up to the 8th day of <lb/>
June, 1915, in person or through their <lb/>
agents or servants to enter upon said <lb/>
land and pass and over the <lb/>
same at will, on foot or with teams <lb/>
and conveyances, In which to cut and <lb/>
remove said timber trees, together <lb/>
so, with the right and privilege for <lb/>
during the time above mentioned <lb/>
cutting and removing from the fore- <lb/>
going laud use in handling and <lb/>
trail th logs on such <lb/>
poles as are needed for car stand- <lb/>
and skid poles, provided these <lb/>
shall be cut from such places on th . <lb/>
land as shall be designated by the <lb/>
R. A. Stamper, or his <lb/>
R. A. STAMPER, Mortgagee. <lb/>
This the 6th day of March, 1914. <lb/>
to Creditors. <lb/>
Whereas by a decree of the Superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county, made by his honor <lb/>
I F. A. Daniels, Judge Presiding <lb/>
term. 1914, Pitt county super- <lb/>
court in that certain special ac- <lb/>
entitled J. Tripp vs. I. J. <lb/>
J. S. Ross was appointed <lb/>
receiver of the firm of Tripp, Hart <lb/>
Company and was authorized by said <lb/>
decree of the court to take possession <lb/>
collections of all kinds, notes, <lb/>
gages and claims of whatsoever kind <lb/>
duo to the of Tripp, Hart Com <lb/>
and collect the same as <lb/>
as practicable. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given to all per- <lb/>
sons Indebted to the firm of Tripp. <lb/>
Hart Company to make immediate <lb/>
settlement with J. S. Ross, receiver, <lb/>
and all persons having claims against <lb/>
the firm of Tripp, Hart Company, <lb/>
are hereby requested to file their <lb/>
claims with said receiver. This the <lb/>
26th day or March, 1914. <lb/>
J. S. ROSS. <lb/>
3-31 It. Receiver of Tripp. Hart Cc <lb/>
Having duly qualified as <lb/>
tor on the estate of <lb/>
ton deceased, notice Is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons claims against said <lb/>
estate to present them to me properly <lb/>
authenticated on or before the <lb/>
day of March 1915 or this notice will <lb/>
be plead In bar of their recovery. AH <lb/>
persons Indebted to said estate will <lb/>
make immediate payment to me. This <lb/>
day of March 1914. <lb/>
R. A. WORTHINGTON <lb/>
on the estate of Worth- <lb/>
deceased. 1-31 Id <lb/>
We are Informed arrangement- <lb/>
are about completed to commence the <lb/>
Monument Campaign Fund. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as executor of the estate of E. A. <lb/>
deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make Immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned; and all persons <lb/>
having claims against said estate are <lb/>
notified to present the same to the <lb/>
for payment on or before <lb/>
March 1915 or this b <lb/>
plead In the bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This 1st day of April <lb/>
J. L. CARPER. <lb/>
Executor of the estate of E. A. <lb/>
Sr., deceased. <lb/>
Leaks are often detected where they <lb/>
are least expected. Sometimes in Pitt <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Om application a <lb/>
repeat ad <lb/>
yield to <lb/>
moM. <lb/>
for fret ,, <lb/>
OINTMENT<lb/>
GREENVILLE IS THE <lb/>
BE A RT OF E ASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
AND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
BY THE BEST <lb/>
FA I NO CO TRY. <lb/>
I TRIES OF ALL <lb/>
RINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
HA EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL AND <lb/>
Till BUT A RT FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
OB AND NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT.<lb/>
Agriculture It the I the Healthful, the Baal <lb/>
WE HAVE A <lb/>
OF TWELVE HUN- <lb/>
AMONG THE BEST <lb/>
PEOPLE IN THE EASTERN <lb/>
PART OF SOUTH 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/>
PEW INCHES SPACE D <lb/>
TELL THEM WHAT YOU <lb/>
TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
A D I SIX <lb/>
ARE LOW AND <lb/>
BE HAD UPON<lb/>
APRIL IT. 1911. <lb/>
Local Buggy Factory <lb/>
Enjoying Rapid Growth <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Company <lb/>
Passing Its 48th Successful Year <lb/>
HE PAST AND IKE <lb/>
Every Veer They Large In <lb/>
crease in Business and <lb/>
are Made to Meet <lb/>
Demands for their Products. <lb/>
When the late Mr. John Flanagan <lb/>
moved to Greenville years and <lb/>
established a buggy factory and re <lb/>
pair shop here, wise and good man <lb/>
that was he perhaps never dreamed <lb/>
that he was laying the foundation for <lb/>
the Immense plant that today bears <lb/>
his honored name and keeps his j <lb/>
my fresh with those who knew him. <lb/>
He began business in B Sinai way in <lb/>
small frame building, he put the <lb/>
stamp honesty on every piece of <lb/>
work he turned out and thus paved <lb/>
the way to a prosperous business ca <lb/>
He detested sham in any form <lb/>
never let a shoddy job go out of <lb/>
his shop. When he took a man's <lb/>
he gave in return for it a dollars <lb/>
value in material and workmanship. <lb/>
Patrons were not slow to learn this, <lb/>
whenever the name John <lb/>
Kan was seen on that vehicle <lb/>
was recognized as one of merit. <lb/>
Year by year the business grew, <lb/>
from time to time more <lb/>
to be added to meet the demands <lb/>
upon the plant which had won a rep- <lb/>
even into neighboring states. <lb/>
The plant grew until it covered a <lb/>
large part of the lot on street <lb/>
Hotel Macon. <lb/>
After many years of successful <lb/>
its founder passed away and <lb/>
son, Mr. E. G. Flanagan, succeeded <lb/>
him at the head of the enterprise. Ha <lb/>
organized a company for carrying on <lb/>
the business on a still larger scale, <lb/>
and it grew to such a degree that they <lb/>
found It impossible to meet the de- <lb/>
for their products without fur- <lb/>
enlargement. This being true the <lb/>
company began negotiations for the <lb/>
purchase of adjoining property, bin <lb/>
not being able to secure it, the lot on <lb/>
the corner of Fourth and <lb/>
street was purchased and a large three <lb/>
story brick building was placed <lb/>
on in 1907, X feet. At th <lb/>
completion of the building new and ad <lb/>
machinery was installed <lb/>
to enable them to increase the <lb/>
number of vehicles per day to meet <lb/>
the enormous demand that had grown <lb/>
by that time. <lb/>
This of course called fur the employ. <lb/>
men Of more workmen, and as the <lb/>
business continued to grow at the <lb/>
rapid rate it was then experiencing, <lb/>
additional mechanics were added. <lb/>
This growth soon materialized in more <lb/>
being needed, so with the open <lb/>
of the fall of 1913 plans were <lb/>
drawn up and the contract let for an- <lb/>
other building adjoining, and <lb/>
as large as the old one. The new ad. <lb/>
was completed about the Oral <lb/>
Of tins year and Immediately occupied <lb/>
with enlarged and new <lb/>
for the manufacture of buggies and <lb/>
carriages and the other departments of <lb/>
their business. <lb/>
Today the Flanagan buggies arc <lb/>
known and used not only in ever; <lb/>
nook and corner in Pitt county, but <lb/>
in a majority of the counties in <lb/>
Carolina, and in nearly every slate <lb/>
below the Mason and Dixon line. <lb/>
With the increased popularity of <lb/>
the John Flanagan Buggy Company <lb/>
their vehicles, Greenville gets <lb/>
share of the advertisement, <lb/>
the company is known <lb/>
Greenville is known as their home. <lb/>
Among the many improvements <lb/>
made at the completion of the new ad <lb/>
was a water sprinkler system <lb/>
cost of about which gives them <lb/>
much lower insurance rate. The <lb/>
system is arranged on the ceiling of <lb/>
the different departments, and should <lb/>
fire occur in any part of the building <lb/>
when it reaches to a certain heat it <lb/>
causes the caps that are stationed on <lb/>
the pipes a few feet apart to blow oil <lb/>
allowing a large stream of water, <lb/>
Octant to extinguish any blaze <lb/>
may occur. An electric elevator is also <lb/>
used in carrying stock to the different <lb/>
doors. <lb/>
Another acquisition made since the <lb/>
completion of the new part of the <lb/>
factory was the installation an inn <lb/>
on Page . <lb/>
City Delivery of Mails For <lb/>
Greenville Effective June <lb/>
i delivery mails is now tor Greenville according to <lb/>
a message received this by Mayor J. James from Hon. <lb/>
John Small in Washington, stating that the depart, <lb/>
had t of free delivery, effective June this <lb/>
year. The telegram reads as <lb/>
Washington, U. C, April 16th, <lb/>
Mayor J. It. James, y-r <lb/>
Greenville. N. C , <lb/>
Department has established . <lb/>
villa, effective June Tl. Meantime examinations carriers will . <lb/>
held SMALL. <lb/>
Present Proportions of <lb/>
The Monument Fund <lb/>
Eleven Battleships and <lb/>
Men Are Sent to <lb/>
The Mexican Coast <lb/>
Uncle Sam Says Federals Must <lb/>
Salute Stars And Stripes <lb/>
DEMANDS SOME SATISFACTION <lb/>
Will Force a Public From tin <lb/>
Government as Apology <lb/>
for the Arrest of American <lb/>
at <lb/>
April <lb/>
Wilson today ordered virtually <lb/>
the entire Atlantic fleet to Hex, <lb/>
ran waters to force a public salute <lb/>
to the Stars and Stripes from <lb/>
government as an apology <lb/>
for the arrest of American blue- <lb/>
jackets at last Thursday. <lb/>
WASHINGTON. D. C, April <lb/>
No ultimatum has been Issued, that <lb/>
is, no specified time has been set with- <lb/>
in which the Huerta must <lb/>
comply, but the naval demonstration <lb/>
has been ordered as a concrete <lb/>
of the fixed determination <lb/>
the United States to back up Rear <lb/>
Admiral Mayo's demand for a salute <lb/>
The of the John Harry Company. <lb/>
I p to tonight Gen. Huerta had not <lb/>
made satisfactory response to that <lb/>
demand. <lb/>
All Depends on Huerta. <lb/>
developments depend on <lb/>
Huerta was the way a high <lb/>
administration close to the <lb/>
President summarized the situation. <lb/>
The decision to send the fleet was <lb/>
reached after the and Sec- <lb/>
Bryan had conferred for an <lb/>
hour with John Lind, personal <lb/>
of the President in Mexico <lb/>
and after a two hour cabinet meet- <lb/>
during which dispatches from <lb/>
Charge revealed that <lb/>
the Huerta government disputed the <lb/>
right of American bluejackets to be <lb/>
ashore at and contended <lb/>
that its recent public statement of <lb/>
apology was ample. <lb/>
Immediately after the <lb/>
meeting adjourned Secretary Daniels <lb/>
issued his order to the Atlantic fleet, <lb/>
and wireless messages flashed up <lb/>
and down the Atlantic coast to put <lb/>
the fleet under steam for <lb/>
It will be the largest fighting fore <lb/>
the American government has as <lb/>
for possible action the <lb/>
Spanish American war. <lb/>
I battleships with Carrying <lb/>
; in all about 15.000 men will com- <lb/>
the force Every <lb/>
where at the White House the State <lb/>
Department and the Navy Depart <lb/>
meat, the hope was expressed that <lb/>
the dispatch of the fleet would not <lb/>
lead to serious consequences, <lb/>
there was a prediction <lb/>
among officials that <lb/>
Gen, Huerta would the <lb/>
i an demand and close the incident <lb/>
were careful to point out <lb/>
that negotiations with the <lb/>
government bad not ended, and that <lb/>
the way was still open o Gen Huerta <lb/>
to make amends <lb/>
Gets <lb/>
Hear Admiral force at <lb/>
not including vessels held in <lb/>
but not actually ordered <lb/>
the scene, will comprise eleven great <lb/>
battleships, with many cruisers and <lb/>
auxiliaries in about <lb/>
men. A statement issued b <lb/>
Navy Department tonight aid. <lb/>
Great <lb/>
complements of the seven <lb/>
of the Atlantic fleet which <lb/>
will proceed to will total <lb/>
about men. There will be <lb/>
marines at as a <lb/>
landing force, fully equipped <lb/>
service. There will be eleven battle <lb/>
ships in waters, with total <lb/>
complement of nearly ten <lb/>
men. <lb/>
The division squads of the monument <lb/>
soliciting funds were on the go again <lb/>
this morning, and met for lunch in Car <lb/>
Club rooms this afternoon and <lb/>
to make their reports. The amount <lb/>
reported grew from yesterday t., <lb/>
Mr. L. it. Carroll, who is engineer- <lb/>
the monument campaign, <lb/>
two large thermometers in front <lb/>
the Proctor Hotel to show how <lb/>
divisions stand. Division No. led in <lb/>
total amount yesterday, but <lb/>
of division made Hit largest <lb/>
Today No. J was <lb/>
ahead. <lb/>
The campaign is lively and it Wit <lb/>
not take much longer to raise the fund <lb/>
needed the monument. <lb/>
telegrams have been received from <lb/>
other places sent by persons making <lb/>
subscriptions lo the fund. <lb/>
Chairman F. C, Harding, who baa <lb/>
given the majority of his time to prep <lb/>
for the campaign says that <lb/>
is highly pleased and with the <lb/>
amounts that have already been <lb/>
plus the number lo be turned <lb/>
in at lunch hour feel that <lb/>
i; will be a matter of putting on the <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
The interest has increased greatly <lb/>
yesterday morning, when the cam <lb/>
properly began. The following <lb/>
shows the standing up to <lb/>
L. C. Arthur <lb/>
N. D. <lb/>
Mrs. Lin a <lb/>
Bell <lb/>
W. L. Best <lb/>
W. A Bowen <lb/>
W. B, Brown <lb/>
Wiley Brown <lb/>
R. L. Carr <lb/>
J. L. Carper <lb/>
II, Clark <lb/>
C. A. Clark <lb/>
Miss Blanche <lb/>
Mrs. Ada Cherry <lb/>
S. I. Dudley <lb/>
Albion Dunn <lb/>
D. C. Dudley <lb/>
A. Dupree <lb/>
T. II. Dupree <lb/>
A. Ellington <lb/>
S. J. Everett <lb/>
V. G. <lb/>
C. H. Forbes <lb/>
F. J. Forbes <lb/>
B. B, Gates <lb/>
I. <lb/>
J. I. Grimes <lb/>
Hart and Hadley <lb/>
W . L. Hall <lb/>
J. N. Hart <lb/>
G. B. Harris <lb/>
E. House <lb/>
T. M. Hooker <lb/>
Miss L. A. <lb/>
N. W. Jackson <lb/>
Dr. D, L James <lb/>
I. James <lb/>
O. it. King <lb/>
J. C. <lb/>
Dr. C. OH. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs <lb/>
W H. <lb/>
D. C Moore <lb/>
L. I Moore <lb/>
Mrs M. II. <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
I II . <lb/>
Laugh <lb/>
B. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
H Ricks <lb/>
A.<lb/>
Smith <lb/>
R. Sugg <lb/>
i. <lb/>
Tail and <lb/>
I. <lb/>
Warren, Jr <lb/>
J. <lb/>
M Jones <lb/>
C. B <lb/>
Charles Harris <lb/>
JO <lb/>
SO <lb/>
r, <lb/>
r, <lb/>
u; <lb/>
Oil<lb/>
ID <lb/>
Oil<lb/>
CO<lb/>
no <lb/>
in<lb/>
r, <lb/>
S It<lb/>
If. . i <lb/>
Greenville Wholesale <lb/>
Paul <lb/>
t;. B. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
c. E <lb/>
a. c. <lb/>
B. on <lb/>
c. i; <lb/>
E. <lb/>
s. j. <lb/>
L. u <lb/>
J. F. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
C. U . <lb/>
i. B. <lb/>
Pitt Lumber j <lb/>
B. v U <lb/>
s DO <lb/>
Miss Martha till <lb/>
Mrs. c. p. <lb/>
Ned <lb/>
B. M <lb/>
II <lb/>
Mrs. c. s <lb/>
C. S. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
c. e <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Jas. <lb/>
j. R and J. G. On<lb/>
W. W. Oil <lb/>
. W. <lb/>
Frank <lb/>
W. E. <lb/>
It. L <lb/>
H . C. on <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
M. L. <lb/>
H A. <lb/>
C. S. <lb/>
National <lb/>
F. D. <lb/>
James <lb/>
C. M. <lb/>
A. <lb/>
P. <lb/>
c. C. <lb/>
W. T. <lb/>
AH ; <lb/>
Charles <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. r <lb/>
A II <lb/>
H y r. <lb/>
E A no <lb/>
D C. i <lb/>
II <lb/>
Carr and <lb/>
J. K <lb/>
A Blow. Jr <lb/>
w. E <lb/>
and <lb/>
E. L. <lb/>
T D <lb/>
it. D, <lb/>
The <lb/>
Todays <lb/>
w i. <lb/>
Mr and Mrs. D B <lb/>
John II <lb/>
Lee s <lb/>
R, <lb/>
in-. <lb/>
I April an <lb/>
Mrs. C. Cobb and daughter i <lb/>
folk an -pending a few days at <lb/>
dale. <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. C. and <lb/>
of spent Tuesday <lb/>
in our town. <lb/>
Mr. Milton Eason of Lizzie and An h <lb/>
Flanagan of Cross <lb/>
Tuesday night at Mr. Mills Smith.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018295_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE CAROLINA HOME <lb/>
and FARM and EASTERN <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Published by <lb/>
lac <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor. <lb/>
CAROLINA. <lb/>
ant . .<lb/>
rates b. bad upon <lb/>
application at the office <lb/>
corner <lb/>
tad streets <lb/>
All cards of and resolutions <lb/>
M reaped will be at <lb/>
per word. <lb/>
Communication <lb/>
will b charged at three <lb/>
per Hue. up to lines. <lb/>
second matter <lb/>
August 1910. the post at <lb/>
Not th Carolina, <lb/>
act of March i, 1879. <lb/>
FRIDAY. APRIL IT, 1914. <lb/>
man to say NO. <lb/>
Look for r <lb/>
swears never surrenders, <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
Some men an- others <lb/>
make o noise <lb/>
Now is the in lake a <lb/>
course in swimming. <lb/>
Gentle spring is as i- <lb/>
a Donna. <lb/>
spring fever is a new name for <lb/>
Houses for rent in Greenville are <lb/>
an Items. <lb/>
There a sad heart There are lots of good men <lb/>
because the weather was so bad arc not desirable neighbors by all <lb/>
Beater suit or inn means. <lb/>
urn <lb/>
II Is stated <lb/>
ministers of a to the <lb/>
order <lb/>
Easter Hats, Easter Weather and <lb/>
week has most of tin- <lb/>
, I rifle. <lb/>
What's the with <lb/>
Civic leagues <lb/>
Out saloons in Illinois <lb/>
wire voted dry by women las; <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Delinquent Tax List <lb/>
For 1913 <lb/>
Thirty aviators were killed in <lb/>
months time. a fair <lb/>
record for the <lb/>
-o <lb/>
is tin- cream <lb/>
ill sours. <lb/>
ii Interest <lb/>
way Mexico towns are being r <lb/>
ported lo have fallen, all i <lb/>
down If keeps up. <lb/>
Kinston has passed an ordinance <lb/>
h will debar carnivals from <lb/>
Incorporate limits of the city. <lb/>
am strenuously wires the <lb/>
i ; Wonder does he think la <lb/>
Interesting news to us <lb/>
Candidates for sheriff are coming <lb/>
a plenty, but as to the other county <lb/>
offices little is being said. <lb/>
have this day levied on the fol- <lb/>
lowing described. Real Estate to <lb/>
satisfy the laxes due lo me state <lb/>
North Carolina and the county of <lb/>
Pitt, for the year 1913 and the <lb/>
Real so levied on will be sold <lb/>
The four not be court house door in the town <lb/>
hut who should worry about a gun- . on Monday tin <lb/>
4th day of May. 1914 at o'clock in <lb/>
unless said taxes and legal charge-, <lb/>
uses arising from the failure <lb/>
Well, the boys t have the i to pay the same within the time re <lb/>
to turn out with that straw lid Tester- by law, are paid by that date <lb/>
day. b. , DUDLEY, Sheriff. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP <lb/>
TOWNSHIP <lb/>
If there is any one we would <lb/>
like to see in Carolina It is a <lb/>
state wide good roads movement. <lb/>
Why not put up the little hammer <lb/>
you have been knocking your <lb/>
town with and get a fly swatter <lb/>
Now Mount and Tarboro <lb/>
are locking horns in the barge Iran.- <lb/>
portal inn movement it would be <lb/>
Greenville's Interest to join the rank- <lb/>
l. Mills Kitchin, son of Congress <lb/>
man Kitchin, is now owner and editor <lb/>
the Scotland Commonwealth <lb/>
Brother Kitchin has the ability and w <lb/>
wish him success as one among us <lb/>
Thai Confederate monument <lb/>
looks good at a <lb/>
Wu ii the average man drops into <lb/>
drops clear through. <lb/>
If in. y had some other name <lb/>
hap- it would be just as hard <lb/>
Tin weather forecast promises <lb/>
there will be no damage done <lb/>
W lid <lb/>
The week stand shows must <lb/>
think Greenville has a money tree, <lb/>
her people are an easy mark. At <lb/>
any they almost run on <lb/>
Other gel here and whether good <lb/>
bad Indifferent they get a good <lb/>
crowd <lb/>
They say liquor go, but <lb/>
concerns us most Is where how <lb/>
fa. <lb/>
will <lb/>
We couldn't so <lb/>
v should u-e worry about the <lb/>
t. <lb/>
It no difference how <lb/>
looking a fellow may he, a girl <lb/>
can i In ii inn admiring him if n <lb/>
only with her. <lb/>
If you wish in be successful iii an, <lb/>
movement you may spend <lb/>
every possible home, then you <lb/>
will realize a come back. Once tried <lb/>
will be <lb/>
The tour New York Gunmen inn- <lb/>
pay the penally Monday the <lb/>
of Rosenthal unless there is i <lb/>
considerable change before then. They <lb/>
. tor a low trial of 111- <lb/>
grounds new evidence they claim <lb/>
have discovered by a <lb/>
Rabbi. <lb/>
Never there a clamor for <lb/>
tin- man who knows his trade <lb/>
r with pen hammer, whether <lb/>
a brush spade lies equipped, th <lb/>
world him, rails upon him <lb/>
for his skill, on day gladly ban <lb/>
him rolls from it- till, <lb/>
till <lb/>
i Mrs Clyde acres <lb/>
i I. <lb/>
Wiley lot . . <lb/>
in January 1911 when Cole M , M <lb/>
entered upon his duties as Governor i;. Cherry lot <lb/>
of South Carolina there were thirteen Guard. <lb/>
hundred prisoners in the State's Pen Acres Home. <lb/>
During his administration W Forbes acres <lb/>
he has made several wholesale par <lb/>
dons, and there remains now . <lb/>
within prison walls. Last week j <lb/>
he turned loose a list of fourteen a- <lb/>
which were eight murderers <lb/>
doubt it is Ins purpose lo keep <lb/>
word when he told a committee of tho <lb/>
session of the General Assembly <lb/>
he would empty the prison <lb/>
August of ibis year. It is a <lb/>
a people have lo submit to slid. <lb/>
from the Governor of their Stale, and <lb/>
if ii be necessary for them to <lb/>
under such laws then it would be <lb/>
nothing more than right to tare from <lb/>
tin statutes of that state every leaf pro <lb/>
o crime, place them under <lb/>
and key in the penitentiary and apply <lb/>
10.50 <lb/>
16.03 <lb/>
13.95 <lb/>
19.20 <lb/>
. <lb/>
K. James acres <lb/>
H. Pender I lot <lb/>
W Perkins acres <lb/>
. <lb/>
lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
lot Lucas <lb/>
lot Res <lb/>
lot Adams . . <lb/>
A Kicks lot Res <lb/>
5th Street <lb/>
David G. Sermons acres <lb/>
Sermons <lb/>
W. Tripp acres Patrick <lb/>
W H. Willoughby acres<lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
H Clark acres Clark 11.92 <lb/>
B. A J. E. I Mil acres 12.31 <lb/>
Mrs. Heine Edwards acres 7.02 <lb/>
W. H. Faulkner acres Green 10.95 <lb/>
K. M, Farrow <lb/>
J. A. Gardner and A. M. <lb/>
acres 16.30 <lb/>
J. B. Garris acres creek <lb/>
C Q. Moore acres <lb/>
and Bennett acres <lb/>
C. J. and wife <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
Town lots <lb/>
Mrs. Bettie acres <lb/>
A. D. Johnson 1-10 acres <lb/>
J. J. Jackson acres <lb/>
M Laughinghouse and Co., <lb/>
Town lot <lb/>
B. F. Manning, Jr. Town lot <lb/>
J. C. Raspberry Town lots <lb/>
and Keel acres <lb/>
Mrs. H. Smith acres <lb/>
Mrs. Tripp acres <lb/>
H. F. acres <lb/>
I Allen lot Pitt St. <lb/>
John Jr. lot Patrick <lb/>
Allen s acres Home <lb/>
a torch, then lei the supporters Clark lot St. <lb/>
Cole suffer the consequences. Isaac Carr l lot Pitt St. <lb/>
Joe Daniel I lot First St. <lb/>
W. R, Edwards lot Clark St. <lb/>
Mexico has certainly got lo pop a Frank lot II Lane <lb/>
i or volley rude Sam Edward Fleming l lot <lb/>
has ordered the <lb/>
Atlantic Heel and <lb/>
to <lb/>
movement of ill <lb/>
the Marine <lb/>
Hume Land I'm Sale. <lb/>
whereas the Hoard of Commission- <lb/>
of Pill county have decided dis- <lb/>
pose of the old county home property <lb/>
and to establish a county home <lb/>
Greenville, the Hoard on March SO. <lb/>
appointed a committee rat Si. <lb/>
II K. Foreman lot PHI St. <lb/>
Foreman lot 13th St. <lb/>
John F. Greene lot Mill <lb/>
Ada lot Perkins <lb/>
lane lot Pitt St. <lb/>
Martha Harris lot II <lb/>
Andre Hopkins acre <lb/>
Nathan liter lot Green St. <lb/>
Charlie Jackson lot B Lane <lb/>
Sam Joyner lot First St. <lb/>
Ida Jones lot First St. <lb/>
I Robert King and wife lot <lb/>
Clark St. <lb/>
lot St. <lb/>
which you do not know about <lb/>
your friends are the very things <lb/>
makes you like them so much. If <lb/>
only knew a little more about then <lb/>
you have less friends <lb/>
Do not ask any of the monument <lb/>
workers to call again when they <lb/>
preach you for a contribution, <lb/>
lake your subscription at once. The <lb/>
needed be pledged in two <lb/>
days more. <lb/>
The Is on lo raise the fund <lb/>
for erection of <lb/>
monument on house square IS <lb/>
ready to mike your contribution a- <lb/>
as called upon, and let it bi <lb/>
liberal as the cause deserves, <lb/>
When women themselves, refuse to <lb/>
for each other, how on earth do <lb/>
they expect some one else to Vole for <lb/>
them <lb/>
What Hon. said about <lb/>
Panama lolls question in <lb/>
speech published by the <lb/>
News was certainly enough <lb/>
With many of the trees just begin- <lb/>
to it hardly looks like <lb/>
foliage can attain lull growth by the <lb/>
10th of May. the leaves are <lb/>
usually said to he grown. <lb/>
purpose of the same. And M<lb/>
I H Lane <lb/>
Lizzie Kern. <lb/>
Champ Clark has almost kicked him <lb/>
sell of the Democratic since <lb/>
b- has been keeping company with W. <lb/>
K Batter watch yourself <lb/>
I or you will soon be a lonesome <lb/>
statesman. <lb/>
Freezing temperature and Raster <lb/>
bats seen, to conflict i hit. <lb/>
should have wailed until Mr <lb/>
got rid of that cold<lb/>
A great many people went <lb/>
Wednesday to SM what <lb/>
happened. <lb/>
If we ever have lo take <lb/>
things in Mexico better give <lb/>
the contract <lb/>
The campaign committee in charge <lb/>
Of raising the purl of the nun <lb/>
for Ho lion of a Confederate <lb/>
on court house square, <lb/>
this we,, mailed to thous <lb/>
ands of of the county <lb/>
Next Week. 14th lo the <lb/>
a canvass will be made to receive tub <lb/>
lo the fund, and is Impel <lb/>
Hal promptly and <lb/>
If should bring about b <lb/>
weather we fear many of the fair . <lb/>
will he unable to control <lb/>
per. <lb/>
You are constantly bearing a <lb/>
the high anal of living. Do you <lb/>
hear even one taint whisper <lb/>
the high cost of loafing <lb/>
Many a married man thinks he <lb/>
harms in oilier women when he <lb/>
he I know her as BI <lb/>
knows his wife. <lb/>
of B. M. Lewis, J. Taylor and <lb/>
Julius divide present <lb/>
county home land and buildings for <lb/>
whereas said committee has divided <lb/>
of laud in four lots, dividing <lb/>
the land lying on the east side of the <lb/>
Greenville and New Bern road in <lb/>
lots the land lying on the <lb/>
tide of the Greenville and New <lb/>
road into two lots. Lot No l is the <lb/>
northern portion lying on the east <lb/>
side Greenville New Bern <lb/>
road and contains acres more on <lb/>
which about acres is cleared j <lb/>
land and said w ill retain live build- <lb/>
No. is Hie southern <lb/>
of the land on east side of <lb/>
Greenville and New road ml <lb/>
contains 53.50 acres more or less El <lb/>
which bout acres in cleared land <lb/>
said lot is lo have three buildings, <lb/>
buildings Nos. and Lot No. <lb/>
consists of the southern <lb/>
the land on the west side of the Green <lb/>
ville and New Bern road and <lb/>
acres more or less and on said lot Mary <lb/>
there are now three buildings and <lb/>
building No. is also assigned to said <lb/>
lot. there is about acres of cleared <lb/>
land on said lot. consists of <lb/>
the northern portion the land on th- <lb/>
weal side of the Greenville and Nev <lb/>
Hem road and contains acre <lb/>
more or less of which about acres is <lb/>
cleared land There is a good build- <lb/>
on same and building No. I is <lb/>
lo said A complete man <lb/>
Of said division is in the office of tin <lb/>
Register of Deeds for inspection And <lb/>
on report of the to tho <lb/>
6.12 <lb/>
3.12 <lb/>
6.41 <lb/>
6.03 <lb/>
Ml<lb/>
7.04 <lb/>
4.45 <lb/>
10.75 <lb/>
5.98 <lb/>
6.98 <lb/>
6.98 <lb/>
15.43 <lb/>
9.20 <lb/>
4.41 <lb/>
7.06 <lb/>
9.57 <lb/>
4.89 <lb/>
acres <lb/>
A L. Patrick town lot <lb/>
J. W. Perkins acres <lb/>
C. H. Stokes acres <lb/>
C acres Savage <lb/>
H A. Wall 1-2 acres <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
N. V. Cannon acres Cannon <lb/>
Clarice Durham 3-4 acres <lb/>
Richard Little acres <lb/>
Susan acres <lb/>
Jordan Venters acres <lb/>
Wash Wilson acres <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Mrs. A. V. Carr lot <lb/>
It. A. Q. W. Harden <lb/>
Ashley Dudley lots <lb/>
M. Dupree est lot <lb/>
A. H. Joyner lot <lb/>
Dr C. C. Joyner lots <lb/>
Cornelius Joyner acres <lb/>
Mrs acres <lb/>
I. M. Morrow lot <lb/>
Mrs. Alice lot <lb/>
T. Windham est lot <lb/>
Q. W Windham lot <lb/>
D D. Windham let <lb/>
19.31 <lb/>
32.16 <lb/>
13.22 <lb/>
3.98 <lb/>
4.41 <lb/>
4.11 <lb/>
Henry Allen Town <lb/>
Jacob Town lot <lb/>
Stephen town lot <lb/>
D. Town <lb/>
J. W. Cox Town <lb/>
Mamie Chapman Town lot <lb/>
Jordan Harden S acres <lb/>
Gussie Harden acres <lb/>
Perry Daniels acres <lb/>
Aaron Evans I Town lots <lb/>
1.541 <lb/>
7.38 <lb/>
TAX LIST. <lb/>
from page <lb/>
W. H. Wilkinson lot <lb/>
Wells and Mill Plant <lb/>
Wells and Ivy lot <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
I lot Clark Si. <lb/>
lot Clark Si. <lb/>
E, King lot C II <lb/>
William Lilly lot Green St. <lb/>
Edmund Little acres <lb/>
J. Lang lot First St. <lb/>
H. R. Little lot Higgs <lb/>
I lot Perry <lb/>
I lot Perry <lb/>
lot <lb/>
Sam Mooring acres Shivers <lb/>
Andrew Moore lot Pitt St. 7.10 <lb/>
Frank lot 13th St. <lb/>
Charlie Patrick lot Patrick St 2.67 <lb/>
Alfred Evans town lot <lb/>
R. M. Johnson Town lots <lb/>
Noah Jones town lot <lb/>
Sampson Town <lb/>
Irvin Knox 1-4 acre <lb/>
F. Town lots <lb/>
Charles Richardson Town lot <lb/>
Henry Smith acres <lb/>
Norris Tucker Town lot <lb/>
Jerry acres <lb/>
Town lot <lb/>
Amos Williams Town lot <lb/>
mi <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Jess Adams acres <lb/>
if. A. acres <lb/>
W. L. P. Corey acres <lb/>
acres <lb/>
J. It. Haddock acres <lb/>
W. L. Hudson acres <lb/>
W. F. Harding acres <lb/>
Adam Mills acres <lb/>
C. Nobles acres <lb/>
Gus Sutton acres <lb/>
J James Turnage acres <lb/>
H. F. acres <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
7.05 <lb/>
10.68 <lb/>
3.12 <lb/>
15.59 <lb/>
4.73. <lb/>
7.38 <lb/>
2.40<lb/>
37.53, <lb/>
20.52, <lb/>
16.44 <lb/>
20.05 <lb/>
17.81 <lb/>
Isaac Hell acres <lb/>
J. O. Smith acres <lb/>
Hill Smith acres <lb/>
acres <lb/>
Tom Atkinson lot <lb/>
Robert Atkinson <lb/>
Battle lot <lb/>
W. J. Blount lot <lb/>
Olympus L. Blount lot <lb/>
Richard Blount lot <lb/>
Willie Chestnut I <lb/>
Levy Exum lot <lb/>
Richard <lb/>
Daniel Gay lot <lb/>
Austin <lb/>
Matilda Hues hit <lb/>
John Johnson <lb/>
Will Joyner. Sr. lot <lb/>
W. Alfred Joyner lot <lb/>
Joyner lot <lb/>
John II. Joyner <lb/>
Edgar Joyner lot <lb/>
Oscar Joyner <lb/>
A. L. Joyner <lb/>
Lovelace Joyner acres M. II. acres <lb/>
2.40 <lb/>
16.14 <lb/>
14.89 <lb/>
17.49 <lb/>
4.11 <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Jesse Clark 3-4 acres <lb/>
Frank Johnson acre <lb/>
D. O. Moore acres <lb/>
Billy Warren acres <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
5.34 i Frank Battle acre <lb/>
15.51 Jim acres <lb/>
Ben Dunn acres <lb/>
14,50 Wast acres <lb/>
6.82 <lb/>
in u hi <lb/>
12.57, WHITE <lb/>
William Redmond lot Reade St. <lb/>
Thad Rodgers lot Fleming <lb/>
Smith acre.; <lb/>
Patrick acres <lb/>
Miles Short I lot Green St. <lb/>
Noah Teel Ravine <lb/>
Wooten lot Perkins <lb/>
B Lone. <lb/>
Amanda Wilkes IS acres <lb/>
TOWNSHIP <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Carr Heirs acres <lb/>
Eason and Stamper acres <lb/>
W. T. Flora acres Pill <lb/>
J. R. Gay acres <lb/>
W R. Henderson acres <lb/>
5.30 <lb/>
2.67 <lb/>
3.81 <lb/>
2.67 <lb/>
8.10 <lb/>
3.54 <lb/>
3.51 <lb/>
5.73 <lb/>
Oscar Joyner acres M <lb/>
John I lot <lb/>
Mary Moore lot <lb/>
John <lb/>
John H. May <lb/>
lot <lb/>
Louis Philips <lb/>
Jim Pollard I <lb/>
William I <lb/>
Nathan Sunders, Sr. lots <lb/>
Henry Jr. <lb/>
Julia Vines lot <lb/>
Abner Ward lot <lb/>
H Wallace lot <lb/>
Sam Williams <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
17.611 J. T. Bason acres <lb/>
2.4.1 II. II. Smith acres <lb/>
4.71 H. T. J. <lb/>
2.41 acres 2.95 <lb/>
5.3 <lb/>
2.40 <lb/>
10.04 <lb/>
9.91 <lb/>
7.47 <lb/>
5.69 <lb/>
2.8. <lb/>
8.35 <lb/>
8.83 <lb/>
7.7.1 <lb/>
2.16 <lb/>
2.45 <lb/>
2.9 <lb/>
4.41 <lb/>
8.39 <lb/>
1.91 <lb/>
4.12 <lb/>
7.67 <lb/>
5.09 <lb/>
6.59 <lb/>
44.66 <lb/>
9.21 <lb/>
12.63 <lb/>
7.02 <lb/>
8.76 <lb/>
8.68 <lb/>
7.02 <lb/>
4.59 <lb/>
1.90 <lb/>
2.80 <lb/>
1.9.1 <lb/>
11.43 <lb/>
3.31 <lb/>
10.23 <lb/>
5.79 <lb/>
18.12 <lb/>
8.16 <lb/>
8.83 <lb/>
6.15 <lb/>
1-3 <lb/>
7.08 <lb/>
12.33 <lb/>
2.97 <lb/>
3.57 <lb/>
16.82 <lb/>
9.14 <lb/>
OS <lb/>
8.93 <lb/>
4.11 <lb/>
4.-3 <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
Emily Nobles acres <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
acres <lb/>
J. D. acres <lb/>
G W. Lane acres <lb/>
board on Tuesday. April 7.-14 u. L. Lang acre <lb/>
approved the report of the committee D. P. acres PHI <lb/>
ordered the committee to sell the Bruce acres Pin <lb/>
land on Ha I. 1914. ,. .,. , arr,. <lb/>
Therefore by virtue of th. orders d S. Owen acres Own <lb/>
the Hoard of Commissioners of pi Owen acre <lb/>
referred b. F. Own i acre <lb/>
tied will on Monday the 4th day ., M , , a, r,. <lb/>
Mac 1914, at o'clock M . before R Own acre <lb/>
court house door ii, Greenville, n c . ,, ,, I acres V <lb/>
expo the above described land a; k t, Thigpen acres <lb/>
public auction to in- highest H. acres M <lb/>
In as above set and as a Crave <lb/>
whole, provided any bidder bids Mrs. , ,, ,,, <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
for tin said land as one whole <lb/>
than the total sum bid for the <lb/>
tracts separately. Terms of sale COLORED <lb/>
per cent cash, per cant acre <lb/>
per cent November and per Corbett 3-4 acres Swain <lb/>
cent January I. 1915 Possession to Willie Fields acre <lb/>
he given January 1915 This th <lb/>
9th of April 1914. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
J. G. TAYLOR. <lb/>
BROWN.<lb/>
7.02 <lb/>
6.15 <lb/>
7.85 <lb/>
7.52 <lb/>
2.4 <lb/>
4.88 <lb/>
18.75 <lb/>
11.47 <lb/>
8.44 <lb/>
2.07 <lb/>
7.19 <lb/>
3.54 <lb/>
4.41 <lb/>
Mrs Mason acres 9.46 <lb/>
I Williams acres <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
James R. Inlay acres <lb/>
C. Holliday acres <lb/>
K A. Hill acres <lb/>
Moses Little acres <lb/>
J. Bert Little 1-2 acres <lb/>
Robert Mitchell acre <lb/>
John J. Redding acres <lb/>
Thad acres <lb/>
Robert K. Wilson acres <lb/>
The men who travel say tiny <lb/>
other town in Eastern North Carolina <lb/>
where there is as much building go <lb/>
on as in Greenville. <lb/>
Alter holding office for <lb/>
years Miss Tyler received <lb/>
a the postal authorities <lb/>
; slating that she would have turn <lb/>
Court land office over to her site- <lb/>
15.92 II. A. Williams. Miss Tyler's <lb/>
protest was late as commission <lb/>
had been given to Mr Williams <lb/>
due course. <lb/>
II . <lb/>
Moses acre <lb/>
Mamie Mayo acre <lb/>
Sarah May <lb/>
Nathan Saunders acres <lb/>
I Abram Swindell acre <lb/>
Savage acres F <lb/>
0.86 <lb/>
8.49 <lb/>
2.09 <lb/>
10.74 <lb/>
2.02 <lb/>
2.02 <lb/>
2.49 <lb/>
4.41 <lb/>
4.71 <lb/>
BETHEL TOWNSHIP <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
W Bullock acres <lb/>
Bullock <lb/>
Ginning Co., Gin and <lb/>
out <lb/>
John Ellison acres Johnson <lb/>
Lena Gardner Rollins <lb/>
Mai l lames I acre <lb/>
J. Perkins acres <lb/>
W . <lb/>
I II Stall Smith <lb/>
Henry acres <lb/>
J. II. Williams acres <lb/>
J, A. Williamson acres <lb/>
It. Best acre Smith <lb/>
John I acre <lb/>
Minerva acre <lb/>
Smith acres <lb/>
Teel acres <lb/>
linker Wilkins acres Grimes <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Misses Lizzie and Florence <lb/>
Town lot <lb/>
Mrs. Lula town lot <lb/>
Mrs Lula town lot <lb/>
O. C. Cox Town lot <lb/>
Coward town lot <lb/>
O. R. Town lot <lb/>
J. H. Hall acres<lb/>
LAND SALK <lb/>
2.25 By of the power of <lb/>
6.81 contained in a deed of trust made by <lb/>
J. to H. If, White, <lb/>
on December 18th, 1912, which <lb/>
12.12 deed of trust was properly recorded <lb/>
in the office of the Register of <lb/>
f Pin in Book page <lb/>
and also under a mortgage executed <lb/>
by the said J. L. to I. <lb/>
Fleming dated December 13th, 1912, <lb/>
and recorded in Book A-ll page <lb/>
both of said mortgages being given <lb/>
lo secure purchase money due for <lb/>
46.801 the land hereinafter described, the <lb/>
18.001 undersigned trustee and mortgagee <lb/>
5.11. will sell for cash at public auction <lb/>
the court house door in Green- <lb/>
W on Saturday May 9th. 1914. the <lb/>
, following described tract or parcel of <lb/>
land In the county of PHI and <lb/>
4.60 in Township and known <lb/>
Ml as a purl of the Grimes farm. <lb/>
2.53 Beginning the Jones corner an I <lb/>
running South West feel lo <lb/>
brunch; thence with run of <lb/>
right branch lo the A. C I. R. <lb/>
right of way. with said <lb/>
s right of way West 1563 feel; thence <lb/>
to line; <lb/>
6.49 <lb/>
16.22 <lb/>
1.41 <lb/>
1.11 <lb/>
2.10 <lb/>
2.97 <lb/>
9.02 <lb/>
with said line feet to the <lb/>
beginning containing 1-10 acre <lb/>
more or less. For more accurate de <lb/>
reference is hereby made lo <lb/>
deed from IS Fleming to J. D. <lb/>
Dec. 1912. <lb/>
This April 9th, 1914. <lb/>
H. M. Trustee. <lb/>
I. FLEMING. <lb/>
F JAMES Sob. <lb/>
Attorneys.<lb/>
WE ARE POSITIVELY <lb/>
SELLING, A WHOLE, THE BEST LIFE <lb/>
CONTRACTS, BEING PARTICULARLY FREE <lb/>
FROM AND RESTRICTIONS, AND <lb/>
WITH MARKED AND BENEFITS TO <lb/>
Before buying elsewhere, see us, <lb/>
IT WILL PAY YOU <lb/>
MOSELEY BROS. <lb/>
AGENTS.<lb/>
Social and xi <lb/>
PERSONAL <lb/>
MONDAY, APRIL 1914. <lb/>
Messrs W. T. and Taylor <lb/>
of Aurora were In town <lb/>
his morning. <lb/>
Miss Ethel who has been <lb/>
visiting Mrs. E. L. Clark, Mrs. W. H <lb/>
Ward and Mrs. George left <lb/>
Saturday to spend Easter week with <lb/>
Miss Mae Blount, of Washington. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. Harriss and Lee <lb/>
Fuller King and Mrs. W. J. Turnage <lb/>
went to Farmville this morning. <lb/>
Mr. A. L. Blow left this morning <lb/>
for Raleigh. <lb/>
Mr. Luther Holden of Washington, <lb/>
who has been traveling for H. M. <lb/>
Jenkins wholesale grocery house of <lb/>
that city has accepted a like position <lb/>
with Hooker and Anthony. <lb/>
Mr. Geo. Howard, of Washington. <lb/>
Is In town today. <lb/>
Mr. E. one of our well known <lb/>
Policemen who has been sick for some <lb/>
time left this morning for Richmond <lb/>
where he will be taken to the <lb/>
Mr. was by <lb/>
Dr. J. C. Greene. <lb/>
Mr. Hayward of Ayden, is in <lb/>
I own today on business. <lb/>
Mr. Mercer Tyson left this morning <lb/>
for Tarboro. <lb/>
Mr. L. I. Moore of is in <lb/>
town today. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Bryan came in this morn <lb/>
from Kinston. <lb/>
Mr. S. T Hooker left this morning <lb/>
for Richmond, Va., <lb/>
Mr. Leon L. Hives, spent Easter <lb/>
in with friends. <lb/>
Mr. spent the Easter <lb/>
holiday with his father in <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Mr and Mrs. William Lancaster and <lb/>
Miss Kora Lancaster are the guests <lb/>
of Mr and Mrs. E. L. Clark. <lb/>
Mrs. John C. Butner and <lb/>
daughter, of Boston, Mass., cum In <lb/>
Saturday afternoon to visit her mother <lb/>
Mrs. A. L. Blow. <lb/>
Miss Eula Cromartie, of Raleigh <lb/>
spent Easter here with her people. <lb/>
Mr Oscar Green of Kinston, spent <lb/>
Easter here. <lb/>
Misses Mable Stokes and Alene <lb/>
who have been teaching <lb/>
school at Falkland, spent Easter her <lb/>
with Mrs. W. E. Tucker. <lb/>
Mr. J. A. Jones, of Rocky Mount <lb/>
spent Easter here with his family at <lb/>
home of Mr. J. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Ruth Tunstall return- <lb/>
ed to her school at Bayboro this morn <lb/>
after spending Easter here with <lb/>
her parents, Mr and Mrs. J. <lb/>
stall. <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
Register of Deeds Dell has <lb/>
issued licenses to the following <lb/>
since last report. <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
Jim Franklin and <lb/>
Stokes. <lb/>
Frank Brady and Amanda Gregory. <lb/>
O. H. and Bessie Cannon <lb/>
Guy E. Evans and Mary Myrtle <lb/>
Evans. <lb/>
C. S. Harrell and Fannie <lb/>
by. <lb/>
COLORED <lb/>
William Williams and Delia Fore- <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Henderson Davis and Alice Whit- <lb/>
field. <lb/>
Prof. Is <lb/>
Superintendent Until <lb/>
Place Can Be Supplied <lb/>
The County Board of Education ls <lb/>
looking carefully into the selection <lb/>
of a successor to the late <lb/>
dent W. H. In order that <lb/>
the splendid progress of the county's <lb/>
educational system under his <lb/>
may be carried on. For that <lb/>
reason the board will nut act hastily <lb/>
but will take time in making a <lb/>
so as to obtain the best man <lb/>
for the position. The board <lb/>
once hoped that Prof. C. W. Wilson, <lb/>
of the Training School faculty, might <lb/>
be for it, but his duties at the <lb/>
school are such that he felt he <lb/>
not give the county <lb/>
the time it would require. As there <lb/>
are some important matters, however <lb/>
before the board that cannot be attend <lb/>
ed to without the assistance of a sup- <lb/>
he has consented to serve <lb/>
as acting superintendent until the <lb/>
board can make a permanent selection <lb/>
POSTMASTER AT BETHEL <lb/>
On Saturday Miss Estelle Jones, <lb/>
daughter of Mr. S. M. Jones, received <lb/>
the appointment as postmaster at <lb/>
Bethel. She reached a high mark in <lb/>
the examination held some time since <lb/>
for the office, and her application had <lb/>
the endorsement of most of the <lb/>
of the community who arc <lb/>
fled at her appointment. <lb/>
The selection of a postmaster at <lb/>
Ayden has been submitted to a <lb/>
which will be held next <lb/>
day. There are several candidates <lb/>
and the primary promises to be a live- <lb/>
one. <lb/>
Musicale the Training <lb/>
School by Artists <lb/>
April 28th <lb/>
A musicale program of in <lb/>
and will be presented <lb/>
by the Edgar Allen Poe <lb/>
Society of the Teachers Training <lb/>
School on Tuesday evening April <lb/>
28th. In order to procure artists of <lb/>
the highest type, the society has in- <lb/>
curred heavy expenses, and asks the <lb/>
people of Greenville to give to this <lb/>
generous patronage. <lb/>
The artists engaged for the <lb/>
Mrs. Sara Storm <lb/>
Miss Ethel Lee <lb/>
list, and Mr. violinist. <lb/>
Mrs. of Baltimore, de- <lb/>
lighted the audience last year by her <lb/>
singing, and needs no further <lb/>
All who heard her then will <lb/>
wish to hear her again. <lb/>
Miss Ethel Lee, cellist who will be <lb/>
remembered from last concert. <lb/>
has been studying In New York this <lb/>
winter, and will bring us a delightful <lb/>
repertoire of new and beautiful <lb/>
Mr. of Baltimore, the <lb/>
violinist has never been with us be- <lb/>
foe. He represents the finest type of <lb/>
musician, combining wonderful <lb/>
with superb technique. <lb/>
Besides giving selections of great <lb/>
brilliance and power, he will render <lb/>
many familiar favorites. <lb/>
In Memory of Major Bull. <lb/>
AUGUSTA, Ga April <lb/>
Is to pay a notable tribute to one of <lb/>
her beloved sons tomorrow, when an <lb/>
elaborate bridge erected In honor of <lb/>
the memory of Major Archibald W. <lb/>
Butt will be dedicated with Impressive <lb/>
exercises. The date was selected as <lb/>
the second anniversary of the <lb/>
disaster, In which Major Butt lost <lb/>
life. Former President William H. <lb/>
Taft, an intimate personal friend of <lb/>
the deceased, will deliver the <lb/>
pal address at the dedication. <lb/>
For Weakness and Loss of to <lb/>
The Old Standard general <lb/>
chill TONIC, <lb/>
Malaria and u the A true tonic <lb/>
A and <lb/>
If You Want This Pony<lb/>
Shop, Kicks Grocery, <lb/>
Company, Palace and The He fleeter Company. <lb/>
W. S. <lb/>
Office at Carr <lb/>
H Store. <lb/>
House Painting, Interior Decorator <lb/>
Paper Hanging, <lb/>
Inventor Declares He Is a Victim <lb/>
NEW HAVEN, Conn. April <lb/>
John Hogan, of West Haven, an In- <lb/>
widely known as an authority <lb/>
on marine and automobile engines, <lb/>
was arraigned in court today to an- <lb/>
to a charge of attempted <lb/>
It Is alleged that recently while <lb/>
Miss Margaret Williams of this city <lb/>
was taking tea at the Hogan home, <lb/>
the Inventor put poison In Miss <lb/>
lea and that of his wife. Ho <lb/>
declares that the accusation la <lb/>
false and that he is a victim of cir- <lb/>
The wife of the inventor <lb/>
also denies the allegations. <lb/>
BANKRUPT SALE OF <lb/>
SHOES <lb/>
The entire stock of the <lb/>
Shoe Co., will be <lb/>
sold AT COST to satisfy <lb/>
the creditors. <lb/>
worth of Spring and Sum- <lb/>
mer goods had just been received. <lb/>
BUY YOUR Summer SHOES NOW <lb/>
W. L. HALL, Assignee <lb/>
WANT ADS <lb/>
Pr Linn Pr <lb/>
of Mrs. Flake <lb/>
Mrs. Flake away at <lb/>
today home of her <lb/>
Mrs. Lillie Smith in South Green- <lb/>
ville, after an Illness of eleven weeks. <lb/>
Mrs. Flake was years old and is <lb/>
survived by several children. The <lb/>
funeral services will be held at tho <lb/>
home by Rev. J. M. Daniel tomorrow <lb/>
The Interment will be at the <lb/>
family burying ground at Mr. W. H. <lb/>
Aliens, near Greenville. <lb/>
New Civil for Dallas. <lb/>
DALLAS. Texas April <lb/>
for Dallas County's new Jail <lb/>
and criminal court building was laid <lb/>
today with interesting exercises. The <lb/>
new building will cost and <lb/>
will be one of the most Imposing and <lb/>
best equipped structures of Its kind <lb/>
in the south. <lb/>
Married I'M- Morning <lb/>
At o'clock this morning at the <lb/>
home of Mr. J. H. Mr. <lb/>
Frank James, of Virginia and Mill <lb/>
Lizzie Jones, of Arthur, N. C, were <lb/>
married, Rev. J. J. <lb/>
of the Christian church officiating. <lb/>
Dr. F. Flits, Osteopath, begs to an- <lb/>
announce that he will in Greenville <lb/>
for the practice of Osteopathy Tues- <lb/>
day, Thursday, and Saturday mornings <lb/>
from to Office at Mrs. Ada <lb/>
Cherry's residence, corner Fifth and <lb/>
Washington streets. Phone 250-J. <lb/>
on <lb/>
For all occasions, Roses, <lb/>
Violets and Values th. lead <lb/>
era. Our art la wedding arrange- <lb/>
are of th. latest <lb/>
finer In floral offerings to had <lb/>
pot plants, Hy <lb/>
palms, Norfolk pine. <lb/>
aid many ether nice pot plant. <lb/>
bushes, shrub <lb/>
hedge plants and shads tress <lb/>
telegraph and orders <lb/>
promptly executed by <lb/>
J. I. Co., <lb/>
Store Greenhouse M <lb/>
N. <lb/>
D. J. Jr., <lb/>
Agent for sad Vicinity <lb/>
Cash must accompany orders <lb/>
for want ads, except from those <lb/>
having regular advertising ac- <lb/>
counts. The rate Is I per <lb/>
Has, six word to the line. Tel- <lb/>
Ne. <lb/>
. <lb/>
FOB AND BLOOM, <lb/>
plants. Miss Bettie Warren, SOS W <lb/>
3rd street, <lb/>
EARLY TOMATO <lb/>
now ready a dozen. <lb/>
D. D. <lb/>
Cash with order please. <lb/>
W. S. <lb/>
of Human Hair Goods, <lb/>
Curls, Transformations etc. Natural <lb/>
Hair Braids for sale. Prices reason- <lb/>
able. Residence Mrs. Ada Cherry's.<lb/>
JUST A CAB LOAD OF <lb/>
Terra pipe, and Inch. <lb/>
T Phone CO. <lb/>
EGOS, II A DOZEN <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
ASK FOB WHITE <lb/>
SWAN flour, Is the <lb/>
3-24 <lb/>
IT II MS BOOM FOB RENT. <lb/>
Mis. W. L. Hall. <lb/>
LOST- A BUNCH OF KEYS, <lb/>
will return same to Greenville Motor <lb/>
Co. and get reward. <lb/>
ltd. <lb/>
PIT SOW, WE <lb/>
have all colors. MM, HASKETT <lb/>
I none <lb/>
The <lb/>
Mrs. J. F. Stokes Is In the for <lb/>
prise in News and con- <lb/>
test. If you th. honor to corns <lb/>
to Pitt county help her to win. She <lb/>
or her agent will you about It. <lb/>
Your efforts la her behalf will b <lb/>
appreciated. <lb/>
We Have <lb/>
Full line of Ford Cars, also <lb/>
to one and all ate cash or notes <lb/>
past and Solicit a continuance <lb/>
of lame. <lb/>
Ford Supply Co. <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
T. I. Moore <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
Fire, Health and Accident <lb/>
Opposite Proctor Hotel <lb/>
ft <lb/>
A B Checks <lb/>
GOOD IN ALL PARTS <lb/>
OF THE WORLD. . . <lb/>
ISSUED BY <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Banking Trust <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
assess<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018295_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
. <lb/>
-w<lb/>
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY <lb/>
Harrows, Drag Harrows, Pulverizing Harrows, Corn Planters, Planters, <lb/>
Fertilizer Distributors, IVan ire Sp readers, Oliver Chilled Plows, Tiger and Red Star <lb/>
Tobacco Transplanter, American Wire Fence, Galvanized Roofing. Prices the <lb/>
lowest. to see us for anything you reed. We carry Stock. <lb/>
remember our MOTTO is QUALITY <lb/>
J. R. and J. G. MO YE <lb/>
MADE HIS MEANING CLEAR <lb/>
Neat Explanation of Witness Turned <lb/>
Laugh on Famous English <lb/>
At a trial between two London mu- <lb/>
sic publishers before the court of <lb/>
kings bench in ISIS, the matter In <lb/>
dispute a violation of the copy- <lb/>
right in the song of Old English <lb/>
Thomas Cooke. a com- <lb/>
poser of note In his day. was <lb/>
subpoenaed as an expert witness. <lb/>
On cross-examination Sir James <lb/>
Scarlet; questions him us <lb/>
sir. you say that th two <lb/>
same, but different. <lb/>
What do yon mean by <lb/>
Ton promptly <lb/>
Bald that tho notes In the two <lb/>
copies were alike, but with different <lb/>
accents, the one being in common <lb/>
time, the other in six-eighths time, <lb/>
and consequently the position of the <lb/>
sect notes was <lb/>
pray, sir. don't beat about <lb/>
the bush, bu explain to the jury, who <lb/>
are supposed to know nothing about <lb/>
music, the meaning of what you call <lb/>
said Cooke. tn <lb/>
music is the stress laid upon a par- <lb/>
note In the same manner as <lb/>
you would lay stress upon a word, for <lb/>
the purpose of being understood. <lb/>
Thus if were to Bay. are an <lb/>
it rests on but If I were to <lb/>
say, are an it rests on you, <lb/>
Sir <lb/>
Shouts of laughter followed this ex- <lb/>
Silence at length having <lb/>
been obtained, the judge, with much <lb/>
gravity, <lb/>
you satisfied, Sir <lb/>
Sir James, who had become scarlet <lb/>
In more than name, In a great huff re- <lb/>
witness may stand <lb/>
NEED NOT FEAR FOR CANAL <lb/>
TRY a Ton of Our <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal Feed <lb/>
cheaper than c. s. meal. <lb/>
HALL MOORE <lb/>
s i in i i iii n <lb/>
Coward Drug Co. <lb/>
Only the <lb/>
Drug, <lb/>
Used In <lb/>
tat <lb/>
W MM <lb/>
ICE <lb/>
CREAM <lb/>
to a <lb/>
All <lb/>
Full Dim <lb/>
Stationary, <lb/>
Fountain <lb/>
Pa. <lb/>
Kodak Supplies <lb/>
Coward-Woolen Drug Co. <lb/>
VI, CARDS. <lb/>
D. . <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Laud and Drainage Cases a Specials <lb/>
In formerly y <lb/>
and Blow. <lb/>
HUNGRY CROWS KILLED CAT <lb/>
DUNS <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
In Building, Third St <lb/>
Practices his services <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
W. CARTER, II. D. <lb/>
Practice limited to diseases of the <lb/>
Ear Nose end Threat <lb/>
Washington, N. C. N. C <lb/>
with Dr. D. L. James, Green <lb/>
day every Monday, <lb/>
Fruits, Candies and Vegetables <lb/>
Call on <lb/>
The California Fruit Store <lb/>
Next door to the Hotel, art Ft re to No aid We <lb/>
give your order special Quick service <lb/>
delivery to all parts City. <lb/>
Special Prices on Bananas cents a dozen <lb/>
The California Fruit Store <lb/>
CO<lb/>
The John Flanagan Co. <lb/>
in <lb/>
Harness, Bicycles Etc., <lb/>
Undertakers and <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
I Lino Is The Quality <lb/>
Get Your Spring Ad Ready <lb/>
S. J. <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
In Edwards Building, on the <lb/>
House Square <lb/>
H A <lb/>
Lawyers <lb/>
Practicing in all Courts <lb/>
In on <lb/>
street, fronting Court House <lb/>
Pussy Had No Chance Against the <lb/>
Numbers and Ferocity of Her <lb/>
Attackers. <lb/>
a small particolored <lb/>
cat. which had been presented <lb/>
recently by a friend returning from <lb/>
the Orient to Ralph Marlon, owner of <lb/>
a farm in the Christian Hook section <lb/>
of Oceanside. L. I., wandered a short <lb/>
from the farmhouse and was <lb/>
stalking sparrows when a flock of <lb/>
hungry crows descended on It. <lb/>
The leader of the crows swooped <lb/>
like a hawk on the cat, attacking with <lb/>
claws, wings and beak. <lb/>
to run away, but crows swarmed <lb/>
In from all directions. From his <lb/>
, house Marion saw the huge black <lb/>
, birds flapping their wings a few feet <lb/>
above the ground and then darting <lb/>
I awkwardly downward. When he <lb/>
them the flock took flight, <lb/>
cawing angrily and leaving on the <lb/>
ground the remains of a Japanese cat. <lb/>
Hunger, Increased by the present <lb/>
cold spell, is believed to have been <lb/>
the motive of the crows, which nor <lb/>
are content with worms, Insects <lb/>
and grains. <lb/>
Fortifications to Guard the <lb/>
Through Panama Will Be <lb/>
Made Impregnable. <lb/>
Having Invested nearly <lb/>
In the canal, the United States la in- <lb/>
tent upon safeguarding that <lb/>
outlay against the possibility of <lb/>
damage through foreign war. <lb/>
cation of the canal has been under- <lb/>
taken purely as an Insurance matter. <lb/>
It Is sought to make It impossible In <lb/>
Una of for any enemy to take <lb/>
possession of the waterway or to dam- <lb/>
age it to such extent that the ships <lb/>
of the States could not use It <lb/>
at will. <lb/>
Guns of and 10-Inch caliber will <lb/>
placid at forts guarding both tho <lb/>
Pacific and Atlantic entrances, com- <lb/>
a radius of miles. The <lb/>
forts at the Pacific entrance are con- <lb/>
on three islands In <lb/>
Pay, at the very beginning of the <lb/>
canal, flamenco, and <lb/>
There huge masses of volcanic <lb/>
rock, behind which, from the <lb/>
fire of ship, no matter how pow- <lb/>
the forts stand. Tho great <lb/>
locks are seven miles in- <lb/>
land from the forts, and no gun at the <lb/>
present time Is powerful enough to <lb/>
send a shell the miles Intervening <lb/>
between the outside of the zone of <lb/>
fire from the forts, and locks <lb/>
which control the canal. Even with <lb/>
tho marvels of modern gunnery, it <lb/>
would be as difficult to place a shell, <lb/>
even If It could be thrown that far. <lb/>
as for a rifleman to hit a lead pencil <lb/>
at a distance of 2.000 <lb/>
Mechanics. <lb/>
NOT APPRECIATED AT FIRST <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
still With <lb/>
The LIT Co <lb/>
of J. T. <lb/>
DR. T. II. <lb/>
Specialist In Fitting Abases. <lb/>
At Saturday after the second <lb/>
Sunday of each month at J. R. Smith <lb/>
and Bros. Store. <lb/>
Home Kinston, N. C. <lb/>
MR. PAUL It <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
Office over Frank Wilson's Store <lb/>
Telephone <lb/>
Greenville. N. <lb/>
L I. Moor.- W H.<lb/>
Attorneys at Urn <lb/>
North <lb/>
Man of Spirit. <lb/>
Few persona ever stop to consider, <lb/>
Bays the Journal of the American Med- <lb/>
Association, that when they <lb/>
speak of man of they are <lb/>
really, however unwittingly, employ- <lb/>
the language of the of <lb/>
Galen, a noted Roman physician, <lb/>
born A. D. That the term la <lb/>
used Is testimony that the old doc- <lb/>
of spirits is not obsolete. Galen <lb/>
perhaps had a conception of nerve <lb/>
trunks as conductors of something <lb/>
he called it and from the <lb/>
brain and spinal cord. The natural <lb/>
spirits were that property which gave <lb/>
to blood the capacity of nourishing <lb/>
the tissues of the body. The vital <lb/>
spirits were acquired in the heart; <lb/>
and when last the blood with Its <lb/>
vital spirits went to the brain and <lb/>
experienced a sort of refinement for <lb/>
the last time, the animal spirits were <lb/>
separated from It and carried to the <lb/>
body by the nerve trunks. The animal <lb/>
spirits of Oaten have the <lb/>
nerve Impulses of today. These are <lb/>
not electricity, but they produce It, <lb/>
and can be manifested by It.<lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
DR. t. <lb/>
has moved his from Old Rat <lb/>
Bow Stables to Dr. Zeno Brown's <lb/>
Stables on Fourth Street <lb/>
Day or Night. <lb/>
I ii i d w <lb/>
Life <lb/>
of New Tank <lb/>
Assets <lb/>
A. A cast <lb/>
Brans St. Greenville, N. a <lb/>
Rebuked. <lb/>
The all extensively <lb/>
traveled persons great <lb/>
sticklers for titles. One must not only <lb/>
say Heir Doc- <lb/>
tor Baron Meier, Professor Schmidt; <lb/>
one must also say Frau <lb/>
Frau Doctor Meier, <lb/>
Frau Professor Schmidt. Also there <lb/>
are fine distinctions In titles. If <lb/>
title la higher than another by <lb/>
much as a hair's breadth, the way- <lb/>
faring lean must not call the rightful <lb/>
owner of the higher title by the lower <lb/>
title. Never. <lb/>
A public school teacher who <lb/>
already enjoyed tho title of master <lb/>
WM promoted lo head master. Next <lb/>
day young unaware as <lb/>
yet of honor that had come to his <lb/>
Instructor overnight, greeted him with <lb/>
his usual cheery morning, mas- <lb/>
said the new head mas- <lb/>
with dignity, you'd rather <lb/>
Just call me New York Eve- <lb/>
Post. <lb/>
Fitzgerald's Translation of <lb/>
Once Sold at the <lb/>
Price of Two Cents. <lb/>
How Edward Fitzgerald's <lb/>
was rescued from neglect <lb/>
and obscurity, a contemporary <lb/>
tells. Mr. the elder, <lb/>
published the book, and finding that it <lb/>
did not sell, he relegated It to the <lb/>
penny box In his shop. Its subsequent <lb/>
success was due to a fortunate <lb/>
dent. Two of Dante Gabriel <lb/>
friends came across the poem, and <lb/>
thought It reading <lb/>
read It, and recommended It to <lb/>
read Swinburne wrote, <lb/>
and I Invested sixpence <lb/>
or possibly would <lb/>
not wish to exaggerate our <lb/>
copies at that not <lb/>
price. <lb/>
day. thought might get <lb/>
some more for presents among friends, <lb/>
but the man at the stall asked two- <lb/>
pence expostulated with him <lb/>
In terms of such humorously Indignant <lb/>
remonstrance as none but he could <lb/>
ever command. We took a few, and <lb/>
left him. In a week or two, If I am not <lb/>
much mistaken, the remaining copies <lb/>
were sold at a guinea. I have since <lb/>
seen copies offered at still ab- <lb/>
surd prices. I kept, my pennyworth <lb/>
the tidiest of the have It <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
Believed Him Honest, But <lb/>
Mayor Hunt of Cincinnati said the <lb/>
other day of a notorious political <lb/>
who call this fellow honest <lb/>
have to stretch the truth a little. They <lb/>
have to stretch It like the old colored <lb/>
farmer of Paint Rock. <lb/>
old farmer said to a young <lb/>
bean, Calhoun. Ah <lb/>
yore gal Lillian, but <lb/>
wouldn't come round <lb/>
house no <lb/>
de wot <lb/>
Calhoun, Ah missed a bucket, <lb/>
and de time de bridle gone, <lb/>
and now as Ah has use de saddle, <lb/>
wouldn't come <lb/>
no <lb/>
don't say honest, <lb/>
Ah is; but <lb/>
things happens while in de neigh- <lb/>
so. an <lb/>
man, wot ain't de best <lb/>
health, please come round dis <lb/>
house no <lb/>
H. F. <lb/>
Insurance <lb/>
Life, Fire, Sick and at <lb/>
Office on Fourth <lb/>
Wilson's <lb/>
T. H. <lb/>
Specialist Fitting Glasses. <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Store. Ayden <lb/>
the second Monday of each month. <lb/>
Home . Washington N. C. <lb/>
Early Inured to Cold. <lb/>
Perhaps I he most extraordinary of <lb/>
ill methods of warding off Is that <lb/>
adopted by some of the tribes of the <lb/>
northwest It Is s matter of <lb/>
The when young <lb/>
first whipped order lo make their <lb/>
flesh tingle, and then sent to bathe in <lb/>
the half frozen rivers. <lb/>
On elite; their teens they are <lb/>
to lie out of doors at night with- <lb/>
out clothing The is that <lb/>
those who survive are able to i <lb/>
naked In any weather without the <lb/>
lightest discomfort. <lb/>
Persian Temple Coming to America. <lb/>
L. Kevorkian, a noted Persian ex <lb/>
who controls a concession for <lb/>
excavating burled Persian south <lb/>
of Is going to New York with <lb/>
or pieces or Persian pottery, <lb/>
said to be from to years <lb/>
old. <lb/>
He will also take a remarkable <lb/>
praying temple, which Is said to be <lb/>
2.000 years old. It will be <lb/>
in three sections. <lb/>
All tho pieces are wonderfully en- <lb/>
There are two small pieces <lb/>
and one small pot eight Inches high, <lb/>
which are valued at 180.000, Another <lb/>
piece is an urn which Is said to be <lb/>
worth <lb/>
Mr. Kevorkian says the collection Is <lb/>
the result of excavations In the past <lb/>
two years and that he Intends to ex- <lb/>
It In New York, Philadelphia and <lb/>
Chicago. <lb/>
Rigid Law Enforcement <lb/>
In the States performing <lb/>
run risks. Some years ago a <lb/>
chimpanzee visited South Bend, Ind. <lb/>
Among other tricks he smoked a <lb/>
cigarette. As soon as he lit up a <lb/>
policeman stepped forward and asked <lb/>
for the animal's name. In order that a <lb/>
summons might be issued against him <lb/>
for Infringing a law of the Indiana <lb/>
legislature prohibiting cigarette <lb/>
in court the following day It wan <lb/>
pleaded that tho chimpanzee could <lb/>
hardly expected to know the extent <lb/>
of his but the magistrate ruled <lb/>
that Ignorance was no excuse for law- <lb/>
breaking, and fined the defendant the <lb/>
sum of l, which was paid by <lb/>
trainer. <lb/>
LUSCIOUS CRAB APPLE <lb/>
QUEEN OF ALL THE VARIETIES <lb/>
OF PRESERVES. <lb/>
Maine Editor Pays Deserved Tribute <lb/>
to Fruit, Inspired by Boyhood <lb/>
of Its Superlative Tooth- <lb/>
tome Qualities. <lb/>
It demands a hungry boy who has <lb/>
taken hearty exercise In the open air <lb/>
lo steal native Maine crab apples for <lb/>
the sake of eating them, asserts the <lb/>
News. Even tho red haw- <lb/>
plums after the fall and <lb/>
sweeten up the are fur more <lb/>
preferable than the wild crabs. Re- <lb/>
heavy frosts add sweeting to <lb/>
balls of sour fire, which makes <lb/>
thorn palatable to wild partridges, red <lb/>
and gray squirrels, and rare <lb/>
and beautiful grosbeaks. It is the <lb/>
housewives of Maine who most <lb/>
the wild crab <lb/>
for the making of tarts and <lb/>
beautifully pink Jellies, which stand <lb/>
sunny autumn windows and ripen <lb/>
for days at a time. The very essence <lb/>
of the Northern bills Is concealed In <lb/>
those topping tumblers of glass. <lb/>
No Maine housewife thinks of eat- <lb/>
a Thanksgiving turkey or a <lb/>
Christmas goose without crab apple <lb/>
Jelly to go along. Today It Is more <lb/>
highly esteemed than cranberry <lb/>
or summer Jellies made from <lb/>
barb, grapes or currants, or the col- <lb/>
parings of drying apples. Those <lb/>
small Individual cups of baked dough, <lb/>
when filled with Jelly and <lb/>
under the family name of tarts, may <lb/>
serve to whet one's appetite until he <lb/>
can reach more substantial foods. <lb/>
What has become of those dear old <lb/>
glass or Jars of preserves in <lb/>
brown sugar or molasses crab <lb/>
which were slammed In delectable <lb/>
sweetening with their stems Intact, <lb/>
so that boys with uncultivated tastes, <lb/>
who ate them greedily, Irreverently <lb/>
called them <lb/>
With unbroken skins and plump <lb/>
bodies fairly reeking in sweets, they <lb/>
filled Jar after Jar along the cellar <lb/>
shelves, and were taken to school and <lb/>
eaten with biscuit and butter for <lb/>
school dinners, and even taken to the <lb/>
sick or ailing as appetizers. There is <lb/>
not a family physician In Maine who <lb/>
Is not Intimately familiar with these <lb/>
crab apple The old <lb/>
when they were really boys, termed <lb/>
them which meant the fa- <lb/>
foods for finishing a meal. As <lb/>
malted beers and ales have taken the <lb/>
place of hard and new elder upon the <lb/>
family table, possibly apples, raisins <lb/>
and evaporated fruits may have In <lb/>
some degree crowded out crab apple <lb/>
preserves. <lb/>
Though they are going from our <lb/>
cellar shelves and dining tables, fond <lb/>
memories of them linger lovingly, nor <lb/>
can the passing of almanacs and cal- <lb/>
totally erase them. <lb/>
Ups and Downs of Oyster. <lb/>
The total number of persons en- <lb/>
gaged In the oyster industry of the en- <lb/>
tire United States is 67.257, with year- <lb/>
wages amounting to and <lb/>
the capital Invested, excluding the <lb/>
value of tho private beds, <lb/>
The yield of oysters for 1912 <lb/>
was bushels, an average <lb/>
of a third of a bushel for every man. <lb/>
woman and child In the country. <lb/>
Every restaurant, however humble or <lb/>
wherever situated, as well as every <lb/>
great hotel, la expected during the <lb/>
season to have oysters on the bill of <lb/>
fare. In olden times the epicures of <lb/>
Athens and other close to the <lb/>
ocean had an abundance of shellfish <lb/>
such as we use, and enjoyed them <lb/>
very much. But to the Jews this kind <lb/>
of food was forbidden by their law. <lb/>
which, allowing certain kinds of <lb/>
rejected much Bea food, including the <lb/>
oyster, which was probably but little <lb/>
known to the ancients. <lb/>
ever hath not fins and scales ye may <lb/>
not eat; It Is unclean unto<lb/>
Looking Forward. <lb/>
Marconi's successful experiment, In <lb/>
tho course of which he lighted an In- <lb/>
lamp six miles distant <lb/>
from his power plant without the aid <lb/>
of wires, Is prophetic of the wonders <lb/>
to be wrought the future. <lb/>
waves will heat an well as <lb/>
Illuminate the dwellings of our <lb/>
who will preserve In museums <lb/>
rare specimens of the dirty furnaces <lb/>
with which their ancestors once <lb/>
wrestled. <lb/>
No more ashes <lb/>
No more clinkers <lb/>
Our children or our grandchildren <lb/>
will fly across the Atlantic at pleasure <lb/>
In with fuel; <lb/>
in airships driven by electricity which <lb/>
has been shot from shore to motors. <lb/>
Talking around the world then by <lb/>
means of will be as <lb/>
easy and cheap as conversation with <lb/>
Chicago Is now over what we proudly <lb/>
call the long Globe. <lb/>
Irish Superstition. <lb/>
The mystery surrounding the find- <lb/>
of a human skull In the garden <lb/>
of a merchant's residence <lb/>
has been unraveled by Sergeant <lb/>
of the local constabulary. <lb/>
A few years ago, the <lb/>
states, a man was gathering bramble- <lb/>
berries near where still <lb/>
remain the ancient and crumbling <lb/>
walls of a religious monastery, when <lb/>
ho came upon tho skull, to which were <lb/>
attached a few teeth <lb/>
Believing In the superstition that <lb/>
there was a cure for toothache tn a <lb/>
tooth extracted from the skull of a <lb/>
person, he carried It home, where <lb/>
It remained until his son, through fear <lb/>
or from other cause, burled It. <lb/>
Local Buggy factory <lb/>
rum Page <lb/>
telephone system that is i <lb/>
from the business offices through <lb/>
each and every department of the <lb/>
plant. This proves not only <lb/>
int but a great time saver, as it per <lb/>
mils the force to converse with <lb/>
the foreman of any department <lb/>
matters pertaining to said de. <lb/>
It requires nearly the <lb/>
entire time of one of the office em- <lb/>
to receive from and deliver <lb/>
messages to those in charge. When <lb/>
questioned regarding the new phone <lb/>
system, an official advised The Re- <lb/>
representative that the com- <lb/>
had had this improvement <lb/>
mind for several months, but after con <lb/>
ion decided to wait until the new <lb/>
addition was completed, because if It <lb/>
had been installed before it would <lb/>
practically have necessitated tearing <lb/>
down and rebuilding the entire system <lb/>
The Installation was made by the <lb/>
Home Telephone Co. employees <lb/>
the supervision of Manager II. M. <lb/>
Phillips. <lb/>
While making the trip through <lb/>
building our attention was attracted <lb/>
pieces of machinery in opera <lb/>
that enables them, lo do better <lb/>
work and With dispatch. Many of the <lb/>
machines are not used even in larger <lb/>
manufacturing concerns, and this is <lb/>
one among many points in favor <lb/>
the local establishment that gives It <lb/>
rank among the foremost buggy mail. <lb/>
u factories. <lb/>
We are glad to have had the <lb/>
of going through the plant <lb/>
sincerely appreciate the courtesy <lb/>
shown us by the officers and <lb/>
who led us over that tremendous build <lb/>
leg Into each department, explaining <lb/>
the working and out put of the factory. <lb/>
We venture to say that but a small <lb/>
per cent of not only Pitt county's pop- <lb/>
but of Greenville, the home <lb/>
of the John Flanagan Company, <lb/>
has the slightest Idea what a large es <lb/>
they have in their midst, <lb/>
and should have an opportunity to go <lb/>
through the building they should avail <lb/>
of it. because it will prove <lb/>
of interest as well as pleasure. And it <lb/>
will cause them to boost their tow i <lb/>
and county In the future more I <lb/>
they have in the past. <lb/>
The plant has employees with a <lb/>
pay roll of about per week, and <lb/>
a capacity of twenty-five buggies <lb/>
a day. <lb/>
Mia. <lb/>
NOTICE OF REGISTRATION <lb/>
ELECTION UPON <lb/>
TO VOTE SPECIAL TAX <lb/>
SCHOOL DISTRICT NUMBER . <lb/>
SWIFT CREEK TOWNSHIP. PITT <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given the <lb/>
Board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
in regular meeting assembled, on <lb/>
the 6th day of April 1914. ordered an <lb/>
election to be held in Swift <lb/>
township. Pitt county. North <lb/>
on Tuesday June at <lb/>
store, on the question or proposition <lb/>
of voting for or against the levying n <lb/>
Special School Tax, of thirty cents <lb/>
the hundred dollars valuation of prop <lb/>
and ninety cents on the poll. <lb/>
Boundary lines of said District No. <lb/>
S, Swift Creek township, are as fol- <lb/>
at District <lb/>
line, on Creek <lb/>
runs an direction <lb/>
to Pitt and Craven County line <lb/>
thence with Pitt and Craven county <lb/>
line to a point including the <lb/>
lands. K. E. Powell lands, W. J. Ki- <lb/>
and J. B. Kilpatrick. thence <lb/>
in a northern direction to Swift <lb/>
Creek, including the W. H, Patrick <lb/>
land, then up said creek to i Guru <lb/>
Swamp, thence up Gum <lb/>
Swamp, to the Pugh lands, including <lb/>
tho Pugh lands lo the west <lb/>
with the road to District line, <lb/>
or District Number Swift Creek, or <lb/>
better known us the Hanrahan Dis- <lb/>
line, thence with <lb/>
said district and district line, <lb/>
to the <lb/>
And notice is further hereby given <lb/>
that entirely new registration for <lb/>
said was ordered and called, <lb/>
and that J. P. Jr. was and <lb/>
is appointed registrar for slid <lb/>
and W. F. Harding. E. a. John <lb/>
son. Poll holders or Judges of election <lb/>
and that the books for registration <lb/>
will be open on Saturday May 16th, <lb/>
1914. and closed at sunset on <lb/>
day, June ti. 1914, that on each Sat- <lb/>
during the said <lb/>
period, the registration books will <lb/>
open at the said store, and <lb/>
at all other times during the said <lb/>
period, will be open at the <lb/>
the said registrar, and all <lb/>
desiring to vote in sail Special School <lb/>
Tax Election, to be held on Tuesday. <lb/>
June 1914 will be required to res- <lb/>
This the 14th day of April 1914. <lb/>
B. M LEWIS, Chairman <lb/>
of Hoard of County Com. Pitt County. <lb/>
BELL. Clerk. <lb/>
Money to Loan on Improved <lb/>
Farm Lands at 1-2 per cent <lb/>
Long Terms <lb/>
C. L. WILKINSON <lb/>
nm <lb/>
Solid <lb/>
Comfort <lb/>
I he home that is furnished <lb/>
by us Is a really <lb/>
hone-like place J <lb/>
because the furniture you <lb/>
choose here i- intended ex- <lb/>
for that purpose. <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
The Missouri State <lb/>
Lite Insurance Co. <lb/>
Not the oldest <lb/>
Nor <lb/>
The biggest <lb/>
JUST THE BEST <lb/>
show you <lb/>
J. F. Stokes, <lb/>
Special Agent <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Thai will suit place intend for it -last but <lb/>
nut least your purse. See the offerings. <lb/>
Vandyke<lb/>
S. T. HICKS <lb/>
Plumbing Heating Contractor <lb/>
Moved to New Store on Fourth Street <lb/>
Allen's Stables <lb/>
Estimates Cheerfully Given on all Work Large or Small <lb/>
Repair Work a Specialty <lb/>
Out of town work will receive our <lb/>
prompt attention <lb/>
Residence Phone 383-L. . Office Phone <lb/>
Heath of Han. <lb/>
Mr. IS. Tucker a well known <lb/>
young man who lives near Simpson, <lb/>
sen of Mr. John Tucker, died Saturday <lb/>
afternoon. Mr. Tucker was twenty- <lb/>
to years of age and liked well by <lb/>
very body. He bad been lingering for <lb/>
several clays but his trouble was not <lb/>
thought to be serious, in fact, worked <lb/>
up until Friday in the store of I, <lb/>
Wooten Co., at Simpson. Friday <lb/>
coining to town to attend lo <lb/>
some business, Saturday morning ho <lb/>
was taken seriously ill. Dr. L. C. <lb/>
Skinner. being called. The exact <lb/>
cause, of his death is not known. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker loaves a father, mother <lb/>
and several brothers. <lb/>
FOB MAY <lb/>
OF PUT SUPERIOR <lb/>
List of jurors as drawn for Hie Civil <lb/>
term of Superior Court. County, <lb/>
beginning -May Hit for one week. <lb/>
J. Crawford. Heaver Dam town- <lb/>
ship; Nathan town- <lb/>
ship; Bethel township; <lb/>
John Carolina <lb/>
Malone Tucker, W, Harris. T. <lb/>
Williams. township; H. J. <lb/>
township; G. L. Fields. <lb/>
IS. L. Move. E. F. Gaynor. R. O. <lb/>
long. L. A. P. Turnage, <lb/>
township; J. T. Moseley. <lb/>
Jefferson. J. W. Moore. I. K <lb/>
Hell. Falkland township; W. S. Move. <lb/>
A. Savage. T. W. A. II. <lb/>
Tall. Greenville township; E. A. Car- <lb/>
tier, township; L, H <lb/>
Wilson. Swift Creek township. <lb/>
Karl ha Flake <lb/>
Today at p. in. the funeral of <lb/>
Mrs. Martha Flake one of I he oldest <lb/>
members of the Methodist Church of <lb/>
this town was conducted from the <lb/>
house of her daughter. Mrs. <lb/>
Smith. Had she lived until today she <lb/>
would have been seventy-live years <lb/>
old. She was born near <lb/>
and most of her life in or near <lb/>
place. She was twice <lb/>
but both husbands proceeded her to the <lb/>
great beyond. She leaves behind four <lb/>
children to cherish her honored <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Cory. Sam Flake, Mrs <lb/>
Smith and Mrs. Luther Joyner. <lb/>
Early in her life she united with <lb/>
the Bethlehem Methodist church, and <lb/>
was both an earnest and devoted fol- <lb/>
lower of Christ. She took an in <lb/>
in Sunday school and church as <lb/>
long as her health permitted and i-i <lb/>
her humble way was a useful servant <lb/>
to her master and her church. She <lb/>
had been in declining health for some <lb/>
time but her faith was steadfast until <lb/>
the end. On Monday, April 13th she <lb/>
passed away to meet her master. Hon- <lb/>
or to her and peace be to her <lb/>
ashes. <lb/>
A FRIEND.<lb/>
Little by little your savings grow <lb/>
and more money is added to your ac- <lb/>
count when you have opened an ac- <lb/>
count with us. <lb/>
The Home <lb/>
Building and Loan <lb/>
Association <lb/>
Many a woman saves a little each <lb/>
week, but is at a loss where to put it <lb/>
Why not deposit it with us where it <lb/>
will draw interest and will <lb/>
in quantity -very day <lb/>
SEVENTEENTH SERIES <lb/>
GETS THE <lb/>
MONEY <lb/>
AND <lb/>
i you lo i t ilk <lb/>
u Hit money while <lb/>
got It h h fact. Isn't It <lb/>
Why your own <lb/>
let we ran help <lb/>
you own <lb/>
Opens May <lb/>
Shares Now On <lb/>
Sale <lb/>
Why continue paying rent when <lb/>
an fur- you with the money with <lb/>
which to build and you repay us <lb/>
the same as paying rent Did you over <lb/>
stop to think a nice home you <lb/>
could with the money you have <lb/>
paid out in RENT.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018295_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
Strong <lb/>
Serviceable, Safe. <lb/>
THE most reliable lantern for <lb/>
farm use is the R It is <lb/>
made of the best materials, so that <lb/>
it is strong and without <lb/>
being heavy and awkward. <lb/>
It gives a clear, strong light. Is easy <lb/>
to light and re wick. It won't blow <lb/>
out, won't leak, and wont smoke. <lb/>
It is an expert-made tern. Made <lb/>
in various styles and size s. There is a <lb/>
for every requirement. <lb/>
At Dealers Everywhere <lb/>
STANDARD OIL COMPANY <lb/>
Washington. D. C. <lb/>
Richmond. Va. <lb/>
Norfolk. Va. <lb/>
BALTIMORE <lb/>
ton, W. Va. <lb/>
Charleston. S. C <lb/>
STOMACH TROUBLE <lb/>
FOR FIVE YEARS <lb/>
Majority of Friends Thought Mr. <lb/>
Hughes Would Die, But <lb/>
One Helped Him to <lb/>
Recovery. <lb/>
Ky. In interesting ad- <lb/>
rices from this place, A. J. Hughes <lb/>
writes as was down with <lb/>
stomach trouble for five years, and <lb/>
would have sick headache so bad, at <lb/>
limes, that thought surely I would die. <lb/>
I tried different treatments, but they <lb/>
did not seem to do me any good. <lb/>
got so bad, could not eat or sleep, <lb/>
and ail my friends, except one, thought I <lb/>
would die. He advised me to try <lb/>
and quit <lb/>
taking oilier- medicines. I decided to <lb/>
take his adv ice, although did not have <lb/>
any <lb/>
I have low been taking <lb/>
tor three and it has cured me <lb/>
haven't hid those awful sick headaches <lb/>
since using it. <lb/>
I am id thankful for what Black- <lb/>
la done <lb/>
has been <lb/>
found a y valuable medicine for de- <lb/>
stomach and liver. It <lb/>
is composted of pure, vegetable herbs, <lb/>
contains id dangerous ingredients, and <lb/>
acts et surely. It can be freely <lb/>
used by ;. rig and old, and should be <lb/>
kept in family chest <lb/>
Get a today. <lb/>
Only jg <lb/>
TO CREDITORS. <lb/>
Having qualified as <lb/>
tor of ford, deceased <lb/>
late of Pitt county, this is to <lb/>
all persons having claims <lb/>
against the estate of the said de <lb/>
ceased to exhibit to the <lb/>
within twelve months <lb/>
from this data, or this notice will <lb/>
be pleaded in bar of their <lb/>
All persons indebted to said <lb/>
estate will please make immediate <lb/>
payment. <lb/>
This the 6th. day of March <lb/>
w. Crawford. <lb/>
Administrator. <lb/>
I hi <lb/>
BES <lb/>
Sale Real Estate. <lb/>
virtue s power of cont <lb/>
ed and delivered by W L. <lb/>
wife, Annie to <lb/>
Manning, dated 30th day of September <lb/>
and duly recorded in the Regis- <lb/>
office Pitt county, in book d <lb/>
page will on <lb/>
Monday the 20th day of April. 1914 <lb/>
to public sale before the court <lb/>
house door iii Greenville the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash the lot <lb/>
ed tract or panel of land, to wit; <lb/>
in township. <lb/>
Pitt county. North Carolina <lb/>
Ho- of Peter's Run whore it <lb/>
enters Into Crock and ran <lb/>
thence a straight line the <lb/>
month of Marl branch thence up <lb/>
various courses of said branch to a <lb/>
W. corner, then. <lb/>
with said s line north <lb/>
west 4-8 poles to a stake, walnut <lb/>
tree stump, thence south 2-S weal <lb/>
poles to a Make on the great Con <lb/>
creek near a small <lb/>
down the various courses of said <lb/>
creek to the beginning, containing <lb/>
acres more or This sale if <lb/>
made to satisfy the terms of said <lb/>
gage This the day of <lb/>
March, 1914. <lb/>
GREEN MANNING, Mortgagee <lb/>
By I. Ange. Assignee. <lb/>
HARDING A PIERCE, <lb/>
3-20-ltd<lb/>
Notice <lb/>
The undersigned qualified <lb/>
as administrator of w. II. <lb/>
deceased, late of Pill county, North <lb/>
Carolina this is to notify all per- <lb/>
ons having claims against the <lb/>
said deceased to exhibit them t <lb/>
the undersigned on or before the 6th <lb/>
day of April. 1916, or this notice <lb/>
be plead ill liar of their recovery. Al. <lb/>
persons Indebted to said estate <lb/>
please make Immediate payment. <lb/>
HIGH <lb/>
Administrator <lb/>
HARDING PIERCE, Attorneys. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
MONEY SAVED <lb/>
by The J. I. Case Tobacco Transplanter. <lb/>
Great saving time and labor, increase in yield per Set your <lb/>
plants when wait for rain. Each plant watered at the <lb/>
roots, covered with dry earth-no Every necessary <lb/>
for every purpose, desired. Come and see machines e you <lb/>
buy, built right, works right, wears right, and prices right, <lb/>
is best made <lb/>
N. C, Feb. in. 1914. <lb/>
Messrs. Hart ft Hadley, <lb/>
Greenville. N. C., <lb/>
In regard to the J. I. Case <lb/>
Transplanter will say; that I am <lb/>
pleased with it. I couldn't ask for <lb/>
one to work any better and it was just <lb/>
as you represented it to be. It worked <lb/>
to perfection and I am satisfied it <lb/>
me several hundred dollars. <lb/>
I set my entire crop of seven acres <lb/>
With it and it was dry weather when <lb/>
I set it. I used six barrels of water <lb/>
setting. I set some parts of <lb/>
per acre and got a perfect stand the <lb/>
rows all through my patch by hand <lb/>
Just to try it and I found that that <lb/>
which I set with he Transplanter grew <lb/>
better the season through. I also set <lb/>
some for several of my neighbors an <lb/>
they say that theirs grew than <lb/>
that they set by hand, and they are <lb/>
begging me to set theirs for them the <lb/>
coming season. I also have friends <lb/>
a distance of n miles from <lb/>
who want me to set their crop for <lb/>
them. <lb/>
can't say much for your ma- <lb/>
chine wouldn't without one <lb/>
for Five Hundred Dollars and as to <lb/>
your services. couldn't ask for bet- <lb/>
Yours truly. <lb/>
JESSE. SMITH. <lb/>
HART HADLEY, <lb/>
HARDWARE <lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Grain Privileges <lb/>
Make Your Paint <lb/>
YOU WILL SAVE PER GAL. <lb/>
THIS IS HOW <lb/>
Buy gals. I. A M. SEMI-MIXED It PAINT. <lb/>
at r gal. <lb/>
And gals. Linseed Oil to mix it <lb/>
You then make gals, of pure <lb/>
It's only gal. <lb/>
Anybody can mix the OIL with t. PAINT. <lb/>
Whereas, if you buy gals. paint in <lb/>
CANS, you pay in a gal. or <lb/>
The or REAL PAINT is WHITE LE <lb/>
ZINC and LINSEED OIL. <lb/>
Use a gal. out any yon buy-, i the best <lb/>
paint made, return the paint and get ALL- your back. <lb/>
J. J MOVE. , C <lb/>
KN CO SHOW <lb/>
CO- g. c <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
Having qualified as executors of <lb/>
Harriet L. Ross deceased, lute of Pitt <lb/>
County North Carolina, this is to <lb/>
notify all persons having claims <lb/>
against the estate of the said deceased, <lb/>
exhibit them to the undersigned <lb/>
within twelve months from this date, <lb/>
or this notice will be pleaded in bar <lb/>
of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to said estate <lb/>
will please make immediate payment <lb/>
This April 18th, <lb/>
Joshua Rosa <lb/>
O. A. Ross <lb/>
Executors. <lb/>
IN WHEAT. <lb/>
Puts and calls are safest and <lb/>
surest method of trading in wheal <lb/>
in or Because your loss is <lb/>
absolutely limited to the amount <lb/>
bought. No further risk. <lb/>
Positively the most profitable way <lb/>
Of trading. <lb/>
Open an account. You can <lb/>
puts or calls on 10.000 bushels <lb/>
for or you can buy both <lb/>
for or as many more as you wish <lb/>
An advance or decline of cent gives <lb/>
you the chance to take profit. <lb/>
A movement of cents profit. <lb/>
Write for full particulars and bank <lb/>
references. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
Columbus, Ohio. <lb/>
Address all mail to Lock Box 1420. <lb/>
G and Son, <lb/>
Attorneys. <lb/>
Id Star. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
My son. Luther Barrett, age <lb/>
left homo and refuses to <lb/>
return. All are forbidden <lb/>
to hire him unless his wages are <lb/>
paid to me. <lb/>
ROSA BARRETT<lb/>
Having qualified as administrator of <lb/>
Edwards, deceased late of Pitt <lb/>
N. C this is to notify all persons <lb/>
having claims against the estate. <lb/>
She. said deceased to exhibit them to <lb/>
the undersigned within twelve months <lb/>
from this date, or this notice will be <lb/>
leaded in bar of their recovery. All <lb/>
parsons Indebted to said estate <lb/>
lease make immediate payment. <lb/>
This April 1914. <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
Administrator <lb/>
F. O. SON Ally <lb/>
YOKE OXEN <lb/>
weight about HOC pounds, ages six or <lb/>
broke. <lb/>
O. T. <lb/>
Greenville N. C. <lb/>
S law w Route <lb/>
THE DAY'S WORK <lb/>
Does it seem that <lb/>
you could not get your <lb/>
work Do you constantly <lb/>
fed like lilting down Per- <lb/>
yawn continually. <lb/>
Then <lb/>
Tim's Pills <lb/>
Became your Ever is sluggish <lb/>
and be to ac- <lb/>
it druggist's, <lb/>
sugar coasted or plain. <lb/>
For of our <lb/>
patroon hr drives to town, our <lb/>
bun- -i. II will be open <lb/>
every Saturday from a. to S. <lb/>
p. m.<lb/>
On Monday the 4th day of May 1914 <lb/>
will sell public auction before tho <lb/>
court house door in Greenville the fol <lb/>
lowing real estate said is made . <lb/>
satisfy the taxes due town of <lb/>
Winterville for the year 1913 on the <lb/>
same. This the 6th day of April 1914 <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Tax Collector. <lb/>
Mrs I lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
Wiley Downs lot <lb/>
P. locust lots <lb/>
T. C. Nelson lot <lb/>
Williams lot <lb/>
1.60 <lb/>
Ma <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I up stairs of Baker <lb/>
opposite W. S. Flem <lb/>
store for purpose of <lb/>
inK and furniture <lb/>
faction <lb/>
Phone L. C.<lb/>
Notice <lb/>
Having qualified as executors of H. <lb/>
Cannon, deceased, late of <lb/>
North Carolina, this Is to notify ill <lb/>
persons having claims against the es- <lb/>
of said deceased to present thorn <lb/>
to the within twelve <lb/>
months of this date or this notice will <lb/>
be pleaded n bar of their recovery. <lb/>
All indebted to said estate will <lb/>
please make immediate payment. This <lb/>
the 9th day of April <lb/>
B. CANNON <lb/>
J. B. CANNON. <lb/>
F G. SON, ltd <lb/>
THE FARM <lb/>
Basil of all <lb/>
LIME <lb/>
it the In of ail good Write far <lb/>
by the beat m the <lb/>
Stairs on on the Farm, and get price <lb/>
of tat lime. earth. <lb/>
etc. A will you <lb/>
POWHATAN LIME CO. <lb/>
STRASBURG VIRGINIA <lb/>
Application for <lb/>
Notice is hereby given that on the <lb/>
day of April 1914 or as soon thereafter <lb/>
as in convenient to Governor, <lb/>
application will be presented to <lb/>
Governor for the pardon of Willis <lb/>
Pitt who was convicted at the August <lb/>
term 1913 of the superior court of Pitt <lb/>
county of the larceny of some <lb/>
gathered corn In the field and <lb/>
ed to six months on the roads of Pitt <lb/>
county. This day of <lb/>
1914. <lb/>
JULIUS <lb/>
S. J. <lb/>
Will Pitt, <lb/>
Notice and Advertisement <lb/>
For Union. <lb/>
Stale North Carolina, <lb/>
The undersigned having been <lb/>
pointed and duly qualified as <lb/>
tor of the estate of A. Patrick, de <lb/>
ceased, all persons having claims <lb/>
against said estate are <lb/>
to exhibit same before me on <lb/>
or before 30th day of March <lb/>
1915, or this notice will be pleaded in <lb/>
bar of recovery. All persons in- <lb/>
to said estate will please make <lb/>
immediate payment This day <lb/>
of March 1914. <lb/>
W. J. KITTRELL, <lb/>
Executor of the last will and <lb/>
of P. A. Patrick, deceased <lb/>
Grifton. N. C <lb/>
I North Carolina. <lb/>
put County <lb/>
In the Superior Court <lb/>
Publications of Summons, <lb/>
G. K. <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Com- <lb/>
New York Central and <lb/>
son River Railroad Company, Old <lb/>
Dominion Steam Ship Company an I <lb/>
Clyde Line Steamship Company. <lb/>
The defendants, New York Central <lb/>
and Hudson River Rail Road Company <lb/>
and tile Old Dominion Steamship <lb/>
Company will take notice that an <lb/>
action entitled above, has been <lb/>
Commenced in the Superior Court o <lb/>
Pitt County, for the collection of <lb/>
damages arising by the delay In <lb/>
tho shipment of one certain angina <lb/>
shipped to O. E. Harriss, Greenville, <lb/>
North Carolina, by Motor Co., <lb/>
of New York, on or about <lb/>
March 3rd., 1913. by way of the New <lb/>
York Central and Hudson River <lb/>
road company, the Old Steam <lb/>
ship Company and the Clyde Line <lb/>
Steamship Company; and the said de- <lb/>
will further notice that <lb/>
they are required to appear at <lb/>
next term of the Superior Court of <lb/>
Pitt County to be held on the 11th, <lb/>
day after tho 1st Monday in March, <lb/>
it being the day of May, 1914, at <lb/>
the Court House of said County, in <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina and ans- <lb/>
or demur to the complaint of the <lb/>
plaintiff in said action, or the plain- <lb/>
tiff will apply to the Court for the <lb/>
relief demanded in said complaint. <lb/>
This 11th day of April. 1914. <lb/>
C. MOORE, <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court Pitt Co. <lb/>
A. T. D. C. <lb/>
HARDING PIERCE, Attorneys. <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
to Creditors. <lb/>
whereas a decree of the <lb/>
court of Pitt county, made by his <lb/>
P. A. Daniels, Judge Presiding <lb/>
March term. 1914, Pitt county super- <lb/>
court in that certain special ac- <lb/>
i entitled J H. vs. I. J. <lb/>
J. -S. was appointed <lb/>
receiver of of Tripp, Hart 4- <lb/>
Company and was authorized by said <lb/>
decree of the court to take possession <lb/>
collections or all kinds, notes <lb/>
gages and claims of whatsoever <lb/>
due to the Tripp. Hart Com <lb/>
and rolled the same as <lb/>
as practicable. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given to all per- <lb/>
sons tho firm of Tripp. <lb/>
Hart Company to make immediate <lb/>
settlement J. S. Ross, receiver, <lb/>
and all persons having against <lb/>
the Arm of Tripp, Hart Company <lb/>
are hereby requested to tile <lb/>
claims with Bald receiver. This the <lb/>
26th day of March, 1914. <lb/>
J. S. ROSS, <lb/>
It. Receiver of Tripp. Hart Cc <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Having duly qualified as <lb/>
tor on the estate of Worthing <lb/>
ton deceased. is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons having claims against said <lb/>
estate to present them to me properly <lb/>
authenticated on or before the V <lb/>
day March 1916 or this notice will <lb/>
be plead in bar of their recovery. All <lb/>
persons indebted to said estate will <lb/>
make immediate payment to me. This <lb/>
day of March 1914. <lb/>
R. A. WORTHINGTON <lb/>
on the of <lb/>
deceased. 3-31 Id <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
I i <lb/>
I,, or <lb/>
SEARCH <lb/>
mi . i. m <lb/>
PATENTS BUILD PORT. <lb/>
-N t <lb/>
y in t <lb/>
Writ <lb/>
D. SWIFT It CO. <lb/>
k. <lb/>
Seventh St., Washington, D. C. I <lb/>
Meal T. Forbes for Sheriff. <lb/>
Although many good candidates are <lb/>
out for this office we would like to <lb/>
name one for this place, that man <lb/>
T, He is no stranger <lb/>
to the people of this county having <lb/>
been born and raised among us. <lb/>
farmer by profession, ho has made <lb/>
good in every line of work ho has <lb/>
undertaken. He Is sober and reliable <lb/>
and worthy in way to fill this <lb/>
office If elected he make Hi <lb/>
ideal officer and the county would <lb/>
make no mistake In electing him Io <lb/>
this office. <lb/>
A DEMOCRATIC VOTER <lb/>
Pitt county. April <lb/>
ltd It w. <lb/>
to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county <lb/>
as executor of the estate of E. A. <lb/>
Sr deceased, notice is <lb/>
given to all persons Indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned; and all persons <lb/>
having claims against said estate are <lb/>
notified to present the same to tho <lb/>
for payment or before <lb/>
March 1915 or this notice will b <lb/>
plead in the bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This 1st day of April 1914. <lb/>
J. L. CARPER, <lb/>
Executor of the estate of B. A. <lb/>
Sr. deceased. <lb/>
Leaks are often detected where they <lb/>
are least expected. Sometimes in Pill <lb/>
county. <lb/>
Bale of <lb/>
Owing to the recent death of Prof <lb/>
W. II. necessitating tin- <lb/>
breaking up of his family, the mar <lb/>
of bis daughter, Miss In <lb/>
Mr. John It. Carroll, which had been <lb/>
announced for Juno 3rd, will take <lb/>
place on the afternoon of April 28th. <lb/>
In Memorial Baptist church. <lb/>
We are Informed that arrangement- <lb/>
are about completed to commence tie <lb/>
Monument Campaign Fund. <lb/>
Is Skin <lb/>
Clear a a <lb/>
i. h. with <lb/>
P. H MM t-I H <lb/>
I Ml i <lb/>
W ran <lb/>
Ha A <lb/>
a . <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
. <lb/>
, I<lb/>
IS THE <lb/>
HEART OF EASTERN <lb/>
CAROLINA. IT HAS <lb/>
A POPULATION OF FOUR <lb/>
THOUSAND, ONE HUNDRED <lb/>
iND ONE. AND IS <lb/>
ROUNDED BY THE BEST <lb/>
FARMING COUNTRY. <lb/>
INDUSTRIES OF ALL <lb/>
KINDS ARE INVITED TO <lb/>
LOCATE HERE FOR WE <lb/>
HAVE EVERYTHING TO <lb/>
OFFER IN THE WAY OF <lb/>
LABOR, CAPITAL A N D <lb/>
TRIBUTARY FACILITIES. <lb/>
WE HAVE AN UP-TO-DATE <lb/>
A N D NEWSPAPER <lb/>
PLANT. <lb/>
Agriculture I. Bast the Healthful, the a.,,, <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 TO GET BET- <lb/>
ACQUAINTED <lb/>
THESE GOOD PEOPLE IN <lb/>
BUSINESS WAY TO TAKE <lb/>
FEW INCHES SPACE AND <lb/>
TELL EM WHAT YOU <lb/>
HAVE TO BRING TO THEIR <lb/>
ATTENTION. <lb/>
OUR ADVERTISING <lb/>
ARE LOW AND CA V <lb/>
BAD UPON<lb/>
C, FRIDAY ft, PHI <lb/>
m ii. <lb/>
Give Instructions For Us S <lb/>
Withdraw <lb/>
From Mexico City <lb/>
Marines Drives Fed- We Vote They <lb/>
Gamblers Heavily Fined <lb/>
By Judge Daniels Today <lb/>
Criminal Court Moves On at Rapid Pace. <lb/>
Pollard Case is First on Docket I <lb/>
Morning <lb/>
at Distance About <lb/>
Are Dying In <lb/>
Miles Out of Vera the Cry of Senator Reed Hearing <lb/>
. Of the Killing of American Marines at <lb/>
. S. Hag NOW Floats VeraCruz <lb/>
Over Custom House. <lb/>
to <lb/>
WASHINGTON, April, 82.8.-00 P. issued <lb/>
to the United Stales this afternoon to withdraw charge <lb/>
from Mexico City. He also instructed the Mexican <lb/>
charge to leave Washington at once and return to Mexico. It is be- <lb/>
from this that Huerta is preparing to declare war. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C. April P. depart- <lb/>
received information from Admiral Fletcher shortly after noon <lb/>
today that he had complete control of Vera Cruz after a battle lasting <lb/>
up to early noon. of lives or damage done was not given, but <lb/>
he stated that the had retreated from Vera Cruz to a distance <lb/>
of about fifteen or twenty miles of the city. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C, April Wilson an <lb/>
today that United States would not fire another shot <lb/>
against the Mexicans unless some overt act of Huerta compelled them <lb/>
to. The President also stated that he expected fighting of yesterday <lb/>
and today would bring the Federal leader to his senses. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, C., April A. M. Congress to- <lb/>
day placed the Mexican hostilities in absolute charge of the President. <lb/>
Resolutions declaring war is expected soon to follow. <lb/>
EL PASO, Texas. April A. received here <lb/>
today from Northern Mexico, being near here is to the effect that <lb/>
twelve hundred Mexicans had recruited and reported that they <lb/>
wen ready to go in service against the United States. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, April is rumored among the <lb/>
officials at the Capital that it is the belief that Charles <lb/>
has been assassinated as nothing hits been heard from him since <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
VERA April A. combined fleets <lb/>
Admirals Fletcher and Badger started the bombardment of Vera <lb/>
Cruz about eight o'clock this morning and is continuing at this time. <lb/>
VERA CRUZ, April P. received <lb/>
here from the officials in Washington to turn over the bodies of the <lb/>
dead marines to their families. <lb/>
What a Voter to Say. <lb/>
Mr. don't know how it <lb/>
In In your town, bat up we <lb/>
had several to announce <lb/>
for office that are going to lose <lb/>
Of <lb/>
I am glad that cur are look- <lb/>
on any one can and will no. <lb/>
pay debts with contempt I <lb/>
if you want to respected <lb/>
these days you had better act the <lb/>
honest part.<lb/>
Storied Fight <lb/>
tonight denied tho <lb/>
report that the tents were set <lb/>
on fire by the militia. Ho also re. <lb/>
Iterated that wan <lb/>
WASHINGTON. C, April . <lb/>
on the of the ad- <lb/>
ministration Mexican resolution he- <lb/>
fore morning, the Senate at <lb/>
was in the midst of a grave and <lb/>
passioned debate. Ultimate passage or <lb/>
the resolution as reported by the for <lb/>
Relations Committee general <lb/>
conceded. The House had <lb/>
ed until o'clock in the morning <lb/>
await the Senate's action. <lb/>
Silence Is Solemn. <lb/>
reports of the engagement <lb/>
at Vera Cruz bad filtered to the <lb/>
when the Senate resumed its <lb/>
at o'clock. four Amen <lb/>
dead in Vera Cruz, the twenty <lb/>
wounded, and the two hundred <lb/>
reported killed in the taking of <lb/>
city became the text of the talk, <lb/>
mentioned hushed voices, and greet <lb/>
ed with a solemn silence throughout <lb/>
Senate Chamber, to <lb/>
Cabinet in <lb/>
A full quorum of th House of Rep- <lb/>
crowded the rear of th, <lb/>
Senate hall. Secretary of State Bryan <lb/>
himself often referred to debate, <lb/>
Secretary of War Garrison, Secretary <lb/>
the Navy Daniels. Postmaster Gen <lb/>
Secretary of the Treas <lb/>
and Secretary to the <lb/>
President sat about <lb/>
They listened eagerly and held <lb/>
whispered conferences as the discus- <lb/>
progressed. The diplomatic gal- <lb/>
was rilled with members of the <lb/>
corps, with Ambassador <lb/>
of Great their <lb/>
head. <lb/>
The Republican side of the <lb/>
led by Senator Root, demanded that <lb/>
the proposed In the res- <lb/>
for a movement In force <lb/>
against Mexico be founded not on th; <lb/>
Incident but on the long <lb/>
series of outrages against American <lb/>
citizens and their property, Including <lb/>
the outrages where <lb/>
control. <lb/>
Senator Reed and James vigorously <lb/>
defended the committee resolution de <lb/>
during the Insult to the flag at Tam- <lb/>
Justified all that resolution <lb/>
provided for. <lb/>
Atmosphere In Tease <lb/>
As the night wore on, and Senator <lb/>
after Senator demanded an <lb/>
to be heard, the atmosphere in the <lb/>
Chamber grew more and more tense. <lb/>
Senator Fall made a lengthy plea for <lb/>
a campaign that would cover the <lb/>
th and breath of Mexico. <lb/>
At a recent meeting of the Sans <lb/>
Hook Club, it was voted, in case <lb/>
the proposed plan for Pitt County <lb/>
Hospital materialized, to furnish a <lb/>
room for the use of charity <lb/>
Twenty-Six Men, Women and <lb/>
Children Are Killed In <lb/>
Battle With Coal Miners <lb/>
Col., April known <lb/>
death list of men, women and <lb/>
children a maximum possibly of <lb/>
fifty dead, a result of tho battle <lb/>
at Monday, between State <lb/>
troops and striking local miners <lb/>
ed Colorado tonight to a <lb/>
tension. <lb/>
of armed men from Fremont <lb/>
county and from near Denver going <lb/>
to reinforce six hundred or more <lb/>
strikers now at Ludlow presaged re- <lb/>
of armed violence at any <lb/>
moment. <lb/>
The fund la raised, now let the work <lb/>
start on the monument. <lb/>
band of Greek strikers <lb/>
Louis <lb/>
The soldiers were out i <lb/>
their camp by bullets, according to <lb/>
the officer. Later, said, the <lb/>
attacked Lieut. de. <lb/>
A spinster got married at the age <lb/>
of in Boston the day. which <lb/>
proves that the watchful waiting pol- <lb/>
icy sometimes gets results <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
The discharge of four train crews <lb/>
of the Colorado and Southern Rail, <lb/>
road for refusing to take trains <lb/>
soldiers and ammunition from Trial. <lb/>
dad to Ludlow caused talk of a strike <lb/>
by and trainmen. <lb/>
Call Extra Session <lb/>
officials waited the <lb/>
authority of Governor <lb/>
now to call a special <lb/>
session of the Legislature to <lb/>
funds for the State militia and <lb/>
for dealing with the situation. <lb/>
Late tonight it was the urgent de- <lb/>
sire of officials that <lb/>
the extra session be called, for in It <lb/>
they professed to see the beginning <lb/>
and end to the labor dispute. <lb/>
Trinidad Horror <lb/>
TRINIDAD, Colo, April With <lb/>
seven identified dead In Trinidad <lb/>
morgue and missing and reported <lb/>
dead, the toll of yesterday's battle be- <lb/>
tween state troops and strikers at and <lb/>
near Ludlow probably will reach <lb/>
Among those reported missing arc <lb/>
The ease called at this morn- <lb/>
session of criminal court was a <lb/>
recall of the trial of tour <lb/>
on Monday were arraigned <lb/>
and lined each. Judge Daniels <lb/>
stated at Hi. re opening that the <lb/>
was recalled on account of a com <lb/>
I ion he received yesterday <lb/>
. one the number had i <lb/>
conducting a gambling house for some <lb/>
time Several new witnesses were <lb/>
this morning, several as to <lb/>
the character of the defendant and <lb/>
three for the state, n resulted in s <lb/>
fine of two of the nun <lb/>
while the oilier members of the <lb/>
Of lawbreakers paid and <lb/>
each In addition lo Ibis the <lb/>
court threatened a road sentence <lb/>
the one accused of conducting the <lb/>
Tuesday Afternoon <lb/>
Clifton Newton arraigned on the <lb/>
charge of larceny, pleaded guilty <lb/>
was sentenced to four years hard labor <lb/>
in the state penitentiary. <lb/>
John Grimes. Hen Bell and John BU <lb/>
ton for gambling. continued <lb/>
as to Grimes and Bell's bond renewed. <lb/>
Station pleaded guilty and Judgment <lb/>
was suspended upon payment of cost. <lb/>
The Judgment rendered yesterday <lb/>
In the ca of Carl Byrd for <lb/>
was stricken out and another given <lb/>
for the defendant to be I <lb/>
in the county Jail for a term of twelve <lb/>
months with lease to hire to Mr. J <lb/>
R. upon payment coal <lb/>
Richard Johnson paid a fine of <lb/>
on the charge of assault with <lb/>
deadly weapon. <lb/>
Pate, gambling Kearney <lb/>
ed guilty and fined and coat <lb/>
and continued as Io Parker and <lb/>
Pate. <lb/>
diaries Daniels charged with resist <lb/>
. i r pl guilty and is sent <lb/>
I to the county roads for a term of <lb/>
months. <lb/>
Underwood sent to prison <lb/>
for twelve months for assault <lb/>
weapon He is to be hired out <lb/>
Mr. m. Lawhorn upon pa; <lb/>
men costs. <lb/>
Wilbur Sugg, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, pleads guilty, Judgment <lb/>
defendant be Imprisoned for a term <lb/>
twelve months with leave to be hired <lb/>
to Mr. it. a. Nichols upon <lb/>
and <lb/>
Monroe carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, pleads guilty and judgment <lb/>
i suspended upon payment of costs, <lb/>
I. Marshall to Address Editor. <lb/>
FORT April Tb <lb/>
annual meeting of the Florida Press <lb/>
Association began here today and will <lb/>
continue until Friday. Vice President <lb/>
Thomas K. Marshall has accepted an <lb/>
invitation to address the members of <lb/>
the association tomorrow. <lb/>
Torpedo Boat Launched. <lb/>
BATH, Me. April torpedo <lb/>
boat destroyer was launch- <lb/>
ed at the yards of her builders here <lb/>
today. The christening ceremony was <lb/>
performed by Miss Margaret Le <lb/>
ton of New York, granddaughter of <lb/>
the late Rear Admiral David <lb/>
for when the vessel was named <lb/>
Parcel Post Packages <lb/>
Received at And Sent From <lb/>
Local in Days <lb/>
Though not quite month, <lb/>
ago. the post business of the <lb/>
government has developed enormous, <lb/>
and larger all the time. It <lb/>
is a great convenience both to the bus <lb/>
men and the general mass of <lb/>
people, in rural as well as in urban <lb/>
districts, more and more they are <lb/>
taking advantage of its benefit. <lb/>
To ascertain the extent to which the <lb/>
parcels post is being used, the <lb/>
master general last month issued <lb/>
order to postmasters throughout th. <lb/>
country to keep a record of packages <lb/>
handled during the first fifteen days <lb/>
of April We have seen the figures <lb/>
for the local and It remark <lb/>
able that so large an amount of <lb/>
parcels post is handled In Greenville. <lb/>
In the fifteen days parcels came <lb/>
to this office. Of these 1606 were de. <lb/>
from the windows and boxes <lb/>
of the office on the six rural de <lb/>
where, regardless of district, at i <lb/>
cent per ounce, Heavier packages in <lb/>
the local zone are f cents for <lb/>
pound and one tor h addition <lb/>
two in the and second <lb/>
zones, a radios Of miles, cents <lb/>
or the first pound and c. in for each <lb/>
additional pound; in the third <lb/>
BOO miles, ii cents the pound <lb/>
and I cents for eat additional pound, <lb/>
in the fourth wine. miles, cents <lb/>
for pound and cents for <lb/>
each additional pound; in th. fifth <lb/>
zone, miles. S cents for the <lb/>
pound an I for additional <lb/>
pound; In the sixth zone, 1.400 miles, <lb/>
cents for firs and rent <lb/>
each i in tho <lb/>
miles, It cents for <lb/>
the first pound and cents for each <lb/>
additional pound; in the eight <lb/>
eluding all United States possessions <lb/>
I- cents a pound. <lb/>
to have been suffocated by the <lb/>
fire that destroyed the strikers <lb/>
Tho list of known Injured consists of <lb/>
three soldiers brought to to- <lb/>
day. Trinidad tonight was horror- <lb/>
stricken by reports of number of <lb/>
women, children and <lb/>
who lost their then tn the fight and <lb/>
In the fire that followed. <lb/>
were trapped without a <lb/>
chance of said John <lb/>
non, president of district fifteen. <lb/>
ed Mine Workers of America. <lb/>
mm m i <lb/>
win <lb/>
cry. In came days par- <lb/>
wars mailed here to go else <lb/>
where Of these were for the local <lb/>
zone, for the first zone, for th I <lb/>
second zone, tor the third zone <lb/>
for the fourth zone, for tho fifth <lb/>
zone I for the sixth zone and one for <lb/>
eight zone. <lb/>
Many people, when they try the par- <lb/>
post the first time, express <lb/>
at the low rates. For in. <lb/>
stance, packages not exceeding four <lb/>
ounces In weight can be sent any. <lb/>
are insured up Io In <lb/>
value for an additional of <lb/>
or to for cents. Packages can <lb/>
be sent C. O. by adding a fee of <lb/>
cents to tho postage, fee also <lb/>
covering Insurance. <lb/>
Packages weighing as mu. h .- I <lb/>
are accepted for the Aim amt <lb/>
second zones, while the is <lb/>
to pounds all other zones. <lb/>
The privilege has also been extended <lb/>
to . numerous articles that at <lb/>
first were restricted from these low <lb/>
rates.<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>