[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]
The Carolina Home and Para and The Eastern Reflector. 
of PITT 
Desires to In Correspondence 
with Relatives. 
The following letter, recently re- 
by Sheriff S. I. Dudley, was 
handed to The Reflector for 
cation that any relatives of the gent- 
writing it may be read the letter 
correspond with him if they de- 
Tex., Feb. 1911. 
To the Sheriff of Pitt County, N. 
Will you please inform me if there 
Is living in your county at this time 
any persons by the name of 
ton. If there are, I suppose they are 
relatives of mine and I would be glad 
to correspond with them. My father 
and mother were born and raised in 
Pitt, county. My grandfather 
ton's given name was John, and my 
grandmother was named Hannah. 
My father's name was Lacy Braxton. 
One of his brothers was named 
another was 
named John, and I think another was 
Charles. He had one sister who mar- 
a man by the name of Luke Lo- 
hon or There may have 
been more brothers and sisters, but 
these are all that I can call to mind 
now. 
My father's first wife and my moth- 
was Elizabeth Parker. There were 
three children born to that union; 
the first one named Marion died in 
infancy, the second, Elbert, lived to 
be about years old and died in 
Tennessee, the third and last one was 
myself, Elias, and I am years old. 
My mother died in Pitt county in 1846 
and my father married a second time 
in 1848 or His last wife was 
named Tripp, daughter of 
Tripp, of Pitt county. They 
moved to Tennessee in 1849 and 
ed six children, all cf whom are 
there, except one who is living 
in Texas. 
My father has b en dead near 
years. My grandfather Parker, I 
think, lived and died in Pitt county. 
My mother had two brothers and two 
sisters that I can remember, the 
brothers being Frank and James Park 
the sisters Sylva, who married 
Simon Hamilton and Rachael, who 
married a man by the name of Jesse 
Braxton. They moved to Tennessee 
in an early day. 
If you can place this letter in the 
hands of any of my relatives you will 
confer a very great favor upon me, 
and I will be glad if they will write 
to me immediately. 
Yours truly, 
ELIAS BRAXTON. 
Braxton is a very name 
in this county, and many people by 
that name are still living, we suppose 
relatives of the writer of the above 
letter will be easily 
REGISTERED. 
The Origin of Fertilizers. 
Mr. Royster believed that success awaited the 
Manufacturer of Fertilizers who would place quality 
above other considerations. This was Mr. 
idea Twenty-seven years ago and this is his idea 
to-day; the result has been that it requires Eight 
Factories to supply the demand for Royster Fertilizer 
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY, 
FACTORIES AND SALES OFFICES. 
NORFOLK, VA. TARBORO. N. C. COLUMBIA. C. 
MACON. COLUMBUS, MONTGOMERY, ALA. BALTIMORE, MD. 
A BUS FARMER. 
One Who Does Work Six Days In the 
Week. 
ANNIVERSARY OF THE MAINE. 
Patriotic Americans The 
Wreckage With Colors. 
By Wire to The Reflector. 
Havana, Cuba, Feb. is the 
thirteenth anniversary of the blow- 
up of the battleship Maine and 
the occasion was commemorated to- 
day by a party of patriotic Americans 
who draped the exposed portion cf 
the wreck in American colors. The 
work ff raising the wreck was 
abandoned while the deco- 
-rapped flags over the wreck- 
Never speak evil of one. Be Just 
before you are generous. 
Avoid temptation through fear 
you might not withstand 
Ayden, N. C, Feb. 1911. 
To the 
Thank you for your good opinion, 
but I expect you have misjudged me. 
I don't think I could write anything 
that would interest any one, and if 
there is one thing that I do poorer 
than anything else it is writing. 
can do the spelling K. In fact, I 
have no time to write, as I work 
every day, except Sunday, as 
as the clock ticks. I boast that 
I can do more work of a light nature 
than any white man in my, or your, 
county. Pretty broad claim, but. I 
can do it, taking age, etc., into ac- 
count. 
When night comes I want to read 
as bad as I want to eat, that is, I 
get as hungry to read as I do for 
something to eat, so by the time I 
look over your paper, the Standard 
Laconic, the News and Observer, The 
Kinston Free Press, the Progressive 
Farmer and the Literary Digest, I 
have gotten sleepy and hunt the bed. 
Am up next morning by o'clock, 
feeding stock and very often milk my 
cow by lantern, especially if I am 
going to the tobacco market. 
I reckon I struck the right calling 
when I decided to follow farm- 
for a living, for I don't mind 
the sun up to degrees, nor the 
rain no more than a turtle minds the . 
mud. 
i the my county 
when Mr. Grimes was trying to or- 
the farmers into the Tobacco 
Association, also the 
in the Cotton Growers 
and raised money and sent to head- 
quarters. I am not ashamed of my 
occupation and don't mind anybody 
seeing me in my working clothes, 
would not know me, Mr. Editor, 
if you could see a picture of me taken 
sometime just a I have been helping 
to clean out and put down the 
co Hues at the beginning of the cur- 
season. 
Now, I will promise to write a 
short article now and then, but can 
not write often, as I am always 
busy. 
My cabbage are already up now, 
and I am working on a garden to- 
day and hope to plant it tomorrow. 
Have a fine patch of rape which I 
sowed broadcast last October. It 
is now ready for grazing. 
I just write this letter to show 
you I am a farmer. 
W. A. 
FOR BUSY SHOPPERS 
Love making is one kind of a cold 
weather picnic. 
Business Re- 
Bargain Column. 
CLOVER SEED, KINDS 
and garden 
or in packages. F. V. Johnston. 
BUSHELS OF SEED OATS, 
Burt or days, apple, rust-proof, 
turf, black and white 
F. V. Johnston. 
DON'T STALK CUTTERS AND 
Disc harrows before seeing J. R. 
J. G. 
FENCING FOR SALE BY J. 
R. J. G. 
SALE OF REAL ESTATE. 
North Carolina, 
Pitt County. s 
By virtue of a power of sale con- 
in a certain mortgage deed ex- 
and delivered by W. H. Smith 
and wife Ada Smith to F. C. Harding, 
dated 27th day of January, 1908, and 
duly recorded in the Register's office 
Of Pitt County, in book Z-8, page 
the undersigned will on Monday, the 
10th day if March, 1911, at o'clock, 
noon, it being the first day of the 
March Term of Pitt County Superior 
Court, expose to public sale before 
the Court house door in Greenville, 
to the highest bidder for cash, the 
following described tract or parcel 
if land, to 
Lying and being in Pitt County, 
North Carolina, in Township, 
the lands of the Beaufort 
County Lumber Company, the lands 
of J. B. Smith, the lands of W. L. 
Smith and Blount Adams, containing 
acres more or less and being the 
identical or parcel of land whereon 
H. Smith and wife resided on the 
27th day of January, 1908. This sale 
is made to satisfy the said 
mo; deed. 
Tins the 11th day of February, 1911. 
L. A. WHITE, Assignee. 
P. C. HARDING, Attorney. 
t-d 
NEW STYLES IN HAIR PUFFS AND 
switches just received. J. R. 
J. G. 
PURINA SCRATCH FEED MAKES 
hens lay. FOr sale by J. R. J. 
G. 
RED BLISS SEED POTATOES 
home grown. J. R. J. G.
BUY THE NEW VEGETABLE PI. 
matting, beautiful patterns, and 
coloring perfect through the entire 
length. J. R. J. G. 
JUST GRAPE 
Fruit and oranges, at S. ll Schultz. 
SAM FLAKE 
Harness Repair Shop 
and dealer in odd parts of leather and 
findings. 
TO EXPRESS OFFICE N C. 
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. 
Volume 
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1911. 
y. . 
coin sol 
NORTH 
REAPING SUCCESS LEGAL 
PROFESSION 
WAS A FORMER REFLECTOR BOY 
A Letter From a Former Pitt 
That Takes Us Back to Early 
Folks Glad at His 
Success In the North. 
Occasionally there comes some 
pleasant reminder of I'm happy 
past from a friend of the days of 
youth that is truly refreshing. The 
editor is in receipt of such a letter 
from a of other days, Mr. C. 
P. Wilson, of Morristown, N. J., and 
while it is written in a personal way, 
he is so well remembered here that 
we know many of our readers will 
be interested in some extracts from 
it. His letter takes us back to those 
days in our early business career, 
now a quarter century gone, when 
Claude Wilson was one of the Re- 
boys, and he, Ed. Harris 
poet on the and the editor 
spent many happy hours around the 
and in the woods on the river 
together. In the latter Claude 
drifted away from us, a little later 
cast his lot In the North where he 
has risen to great prominence In the 
legal profession, and hie success 
makes us proud of this former son 
of Pitt county and one of 
But no. Claude, are not get- 
ting yet, even though some of 
the things you write about were a 
long time ago. True there are fur- 
rows gathering in the brow, it 
takes stronger glasses for us to see 
how to read, some gray hairs would 
appear if the did not keep them 
bid, there arc grown children 
around the family fireside, thins 
that would ordinarily make a man 
think he was getting old. the 
heart is yet young, and those 
days of the past seem but as 
days. 
This reminiscent mood is about to 
us off from the letter, in 
part is as 
l want to congratulate you upon 
i he neat appearance of your paper 
and its if may be per- 
to coin a word which seems 
to fit. 
I am prompted to write you by 
some items in your issue of the 15th. 
The name of T. F. Christman. who 
writes from Cal., seems 
perfectly familiar, although it is now 
twenty years since I have been in 
Greenville except to pass through on 
the train. I remember Blow 
perfectly, and can in my 
mind's eye as I write. He worked 
for father in the register of deeds 
office away back in 1884, while I 
was serving my apprenticeship with 
you. And to read about Miss Bruce 
party, Hadley you Bay 
and Will Moore's death in
These things certainly bring the old 
town back to me. Of course it has 
grown entirely beyond any familiar- 
I had of it. Water supply, sew- 
and electric lights What city- 
airs And bond issue How was it 
ever done You must have had some 
cheerful funerals. 
Keep up the good roads movement 
Money cannot be spent for a better 
public improvement. Morris county, 
N. J. having a population of about 
and about the area of Pitt, 
bonded for some eight years 
ago, against substantial opposition- 
and protest, to build stone roads. No 
one now regrets the work. The 
county now pays about year- 
to keep these roads in repairs. It 
is well worth it, however. 
You and I are growing old, aren't 
Hut we are still trying to do 
right and live decently I know. 
have succeeded up here and our firm 
is the leader of our bar. I have 
and won some big cases 
court of last resort, and have 
in learning a little bit of 
law and am still learning. Last year 
I was Bent to Texas and the year be- 
fore to California twice on business, 
and an going to argue a case in 
the Nevada Supreme court In April 
or May. Just think of it A Pitt 
county farmer boy being sent across 
the continent on a business 
involving something over 
Well, it made me smile. I'll con- 
fess, but I won out closed the 
matter. 
LAW 
PROCEEDINGS OF THE N. 
GENERAL ASSEMBLY 
ANOTHER NEW COUNTY ASKED FOR 
Senate Passes The Cobb 
School Bill and The State 
Bill Again Has Con- 
of the House. 
One of the petitions presented to 
the senate was from bachelors of 
Hendersonville protesting against the 
Ewart bill imposing a tax on dogs, 
bachelors and justices of the peace. 
One of the bills ratified was to 
low the town of Farmville to issue 
bonds for improvements. 
These were among the new bills 
of Extend the 
time in which practitioners of op- 
may register. 
Pharr of Empower 
commissioners to reduce taxes of 
company, Charlotte. 
In the house were more petitions 
against the sale of near-beer, and 
also petitions favoring issuing bonds 
to erect an administration building. 
The committee on salaries and fees 
nude a favorable report on the sen- 
ate bill increasing the salary of the 
governor to 
These were among the new bills in- 
To amend the revenue 
law of 1909. 
To prohibit wearing mil- 
uniform for private purposes. 
To amend the military 
law. 
To promote the higher ed- 
of the blind. 
For relief of pupils at 
Blind School. 
To amend the law of 1907 
regulating hours of labor in facto- 
To protect innocent 
deaf, dumb and blind women. 
Williams of To define 
the crime of . 
To 
companies. 
To make husband and 
wife jointly liable for support of 
Williams of To 
Training School for 
Western North Carolina. 
In the senate were many 
petitions asking passage of the law 
prohibiting the sale of near-beer. 
The divorce bill that had 
passed the was given an 
favorable report by the senate com- 
to which it was referred. 
These were among the new bills 
Hobgood of For main- 
of State Normal College and 
to build additional dormitories. 
Sikes of Provide for erect- 
fire-proof building to house the 
State library and State records. 
Cotton of Authorize Bethel 
school district to funds. 
The house finance re- 
ported favorably on the bill 
holding an In 
township on the of lining 
bonds for roads 
The committee on pensions report- 
ed favorably on the bill to erect a 
monument to the women of the 
and Representative J. S. 
Carr made a speech support- 
it. 
The committee on public f vice 
corporations reported 
the bill reducing on tho-o 
roads that nu 
The Piedmont, county bill cm a up 
as a special order, and after lengthy 
discussion was defeated. 
These were among the new 
To provide 
clerical for the governor. 
To amend the charter of 
Pethel. 
To loan of 
money on shares by partners. 
To provide tr-t- 
hooks for children public 
N who are unable to pay 
same. 
To amend the Revival re- 
to costs of criminal cases 
justices of the peace courts. 
on page 
ii mil awn nil
,. 
POOR PRINT 
Li, Pi
BATTLE HEWS. 
View of Revolution 
From 
This whole proceeding of 
lurid tales of bloody battles 
and constant federal slaughter in 
Mexico has been a continuing Outrage 
on the Mexican government, which 
for many years has been one of the 
most orderly, economical, and pro- 
or the Western hemisphere. 
The government has been singularly 
free from graft; the modest federal 
revenues have been devoted to works 
of great public utility, and there has 
a effort both to 
diversify and enlarge native 
tries and to Introduce new ones from 
broad. 
It Is a bold to proclaim 
that there is any serious percentage, 
the people, outside of the old-time 
bandits and professional revolution- 
whom President put out of 
business years ago, who are 
with the administration. The 
whole present petty disturbance Is 
purely the result of the obsession of 
young a resident of the 
city, who became fired with the 
that he was a bigger man than j 
but who mustered only a hand- 
of votes, and hence resorted 
the defunct remedy of stirring up two 
Classes of disturbers of the peace 
the one the survivors of the free- 
booting bands, and the other the 
literates, who accept what comes to 
them by word of mouth as a new- 
gospel of adventure. 
You will note that throughout the 
WOO miles of Mexico's extension there 
Carolina Home end Farm ad The Reflector. 
DO YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT 
YOU SHOULD FOR THE 
Money paid by check to you a permanent re- 
cash handed out does not 
m Bank is a starter towards 
ready for use, or to be added to. 
economy, always
is provided with every safeguard for the protection of its
We will be glad to have your business. 
CARR, Cashier 
o. 
ABOUT FE UTILIZERS. 
j Fertilizer Formulas mid 
Fertilizing; 
Letter after letter Is now coming 
to me asking for fertilizer formulas 
cotton, for com, for peanuts, and 
ill sorts of crops, idea with most 
being they must have a formula. 
for every crop planted. I can 
the needs of every man's land 
from a general description and no in- 
i to a cure-all for 
y sort of land and every crop. What 
is peace and good order except S needed more fertilizer for- 
the United . j la a good rotation of crops and 
feeding of legume for- 
e and the making of more manure, 
the United States border, where ma- 
fugitives from justice, and 
American trouble breeders are alike 
Interested and combined in the 
Of conducting a fake revolution by 
lurid press dispatches, per cent 
subjective, built on a pinch of fact 
and report. 
This to called revolution is but ; 
recrudescence of an old-time evil 
of outlaws taking refuge In the 
mountains and issuing thence In 
to prey upon the industrious. The . 
Is this difference, that the leader 
funds of own and presumably those 
of men who hope to be rewarded by- 
fat concessions, and while the hand 
of men the comprises 
about all the well-known bandits and 
murderers not previously captured. 
strict were issued against the 
stealing of even a box of matches, 
the men being notified that there 
money to be distributed to pay for 
what was needed; so the 
has not yet reached the stage of free 
campaign. We were In the 
midst of the lighting 
poor lighters, and they treated us lit 
honest men, who, for at leas 
were not obliged to live off the 
try. Since then the alleged . 
has been receding rapidly I 
until there is nothing left of it e 
the Texas dispatches of fright 
blood letting on the south ride g 
the Rio 
and his dupes are not en 
either to the sympathy of u,. 
American or to the use of 
the territory of the 
States a base for flea-biting 
the administration. The whole 
foolish ought to come to 
an end c. 
it; letter to New 
limes. 
tided by the more liberal use of 
potash, while in 
the who farms right 
need to buy anything in 
way of fertilizers except plain 
acid. This is the 
g factor in any fertilizer formula 
i when a mo for a for- 
for corn I am apt to tell him 
hat tho best I know Is a crimson 
dover crop on which the farm ma- 
has been spread in winter a 
as made. That will make cheap- 
com than any formula 
i can give. This is especially true 
I the manure about pounds 
acid or floats mixed 
every ton. And the man who has 
i crimson sod to turn for his cotton 
seldom need anything but a lib- 
dose of acid phosphate or Thom- 
phosphate, which, in such a case, 
have a good influence in 
ming the acids for tho clover. Our 
farmers are clean 
as one writer has bald. 
a god rotation and grow 
and crimson clover 
acid potash 
or r limes as heavily as you 
been using a complete low-grade 
our cotton, and yon will 
letter results and cheaper. Then 
phosphoric acid is 
d tho same thing, whether it 
from rock or bone or Thomas 
.
mm
W L. DOUGLAS, the great shoe 
and former Governor of 
first saved and banked he cot 
for making and mending shoes. This was his 
start in business. Today he is worth many 
millions. y 
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank 
We pay interest on Time 
Certificates at per cent. 
Bank of Greenville 
GREENVILLE, N. C. 
MOORING INTRODUCES A 
mat 
i m 
to Pearls 
Mil J- Hall Edwards 
Ob. DILL of Birmingham, one of the British 
.------- medical early devoted them. 
or Done or Thomas , selves to the use of the X . 
or floats. Tho only thing T Greenville Township Rend Bend surgery, delivered a lecture in ion 
re . the 
o available In acid By Wire to The 
In any other form, but if Raleigh, N. a, Feb. 
The story told with a whisper la 
a loud one. 
do not find riches 
part they played in surgery. Speak- 
of other uses of the X-rays ex- 
; to turn or ma- G. M. Mooring, of Pitt, today m medicine he said he only knew 
t one and that was for the discovery 
of pearls. Instead of destroying tho 
oyster to ascertain it contains 
pearls, he declared that the rays 
might be used to show Whether the 
contained a pearl, and, if 
were the oyster might 
to rue em so to 
continue to grow.-Courier Reports. 
can profitably use introduced In the house a , 
; or the mental hill to the Greenville S- 
;. ; grow ship bond election. 
then , bill proposes to out 
; grade, the provision a new 
7- m less money in the I of voters for the i to 
K than If you farmed and be hold J , 
F. m 
The Carolina Home and Farm and The
Pin COUNTY LEADS 
THE WHOLE 
IN DIPLOMAS FOR CORN GROW- 
LAST YEAR 
NINE AWARDED IN PITT COUNTY 
Other County 
That R c c e i v I up 
These Diplomas Also Get Cash 
plans for This 
Year. 
Just as The Reflector has said time 
and time again, Pitt county is a 
county. We have a wonderful county, 
and there are some wonderful boys 
In the county. A number of these boys 
entered corn contest last 
year, and the Judging has come 
for the winners in the contest to re- 
their rewards. 
The meeting was not largely at- 
tended as It should have been, but a 
number of the boys, and farmers 
from various sections of the county 
were present. Mr. J. F. Evans, head 
of the demonstration work in the 
county, called the meting to order, 
and asked Mr. I. head of 
the boys corn clubs in the State, to 
preside. 
Mr. stated that the govern- 
or of the State had caused to be 
ed diplomas to every boy in the State 
who made as much as bushels of 
corn on an acre of land last year. 
In the entire State of these 
are awarded, and of these 
come to Pitt county, no other county 
in the State having surpassed that 
number. These diplomas are hand- 
engraved and signed by 
Governor Secretary of the 
State Grimes, State Superintendent 
Joyner, Commissioner of Agriculture 
Graham, County Superintendent Rag 
dale and Special Agent 
Mr. had the Pitt county 
diplomas with him, called on Mr. 
L. Joyner to present them to the 
boys whose names and corn yields 
are as E. Henry Corey, 124.1 
bushels; Ben Lewis Jr., 09.7; Herbert 
Owens, 97.1; Dennis 92.1; 
G. T. Tyson, Jr., Moses T. 
88.7; Oscar Crisp, 85.9; Mark Smith, 
Clinton Cox, 75.5. 
Some of these boys made interesting 
talks as to how they the corn 
These same boys received a cash 
award. Mr. C. R. Townsend 
contributed and Messrs. J. R. 
and J. G. to be given those 
making the best crops. The committee 
who had the distribution of tint 
money thought it best that each win- 
of a State diploma should have 
a part of the fund, and awarded it to 
the boys named above in the follow- 
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 
5th and each, 7th, 8th 
and 9th each. 
There was much then o 
plans for this year's contest. A list 
of prizes offered by business men of 
Greenville was read, it is proposed 
lo give one hoy from each township 
in the county a trip to Washington 
city next fall. In addition to this trip 
there will be a large list of prizes. 
There is a county committee to 
range the details of the contest and 
to get the co operation of township 
committees. 
Later The Reflector will give 
of th 
with the list of prizes 
offered and full details of the contest. 
There should be a large number of 
boys in the county to enter the con- 
test. 
E. 
Mar- 
There were like a 
men at i e meeting of the 
Men's Prayer ; e in the Pres- 
church Sn. day afternoon. 
The attendance interest at these 
meetings is little short of marvelous. 
The men get both pleasure and 
out of them, hence are glad to 
attend. 
The subject discussed Sunday 
was 
One of the leaders was absent, but 
the other two, Messrs. S. F. 
and Z. T. Broughton, opened with In- 
talks, some others follow- 
them. 
Attention being called to the 
from famine In China, 
offerings were made amounting 
to to be sent to the relief com- 
for the sufferers. 
he meeting next Sunday after- 
noon will be held in the Christian 
church. Subject, Care of 
Luke Leaders, Messrs. 
II. I. B. B. Sugg and R. M. 
Hearne. 
The men and boys of the 
who are not attending these 
meetings are certainly missing much. 
ANNIVERSARY. 
Sermon Preached by Rev. J. H. Shore
Sunday, the 19th, the 
of the order cf the Knights of 
Pythias, the order being instituted 
February 1864, Throughout the 
country, and especially North Car- 
the anniversary was observed 
the lodges attending church and 
earing a special sermon appropriate 
the occasion. 
Tar Lodge, No. of Green- 
ville attended Jarvis Memorial 
dist church Sunday night, and heard 
a splendid sermon by the pastor, Rev. 
J. II. Shore. The pastor spoke 
briefly of the anniversary and growth 
of the order, and 
lated them on the great good they 
had accomplished for humanity. His 
text was Prov. Friend 
at All From this text 
delivered a sermon on 
that was a real gem and made 
deep impression on all who heard 
L. There was also excellent music 
it this service. 
The order strong In 
and its influence for 
good its felt throughout tho 
A Jumper and a Stepper. 
There are two brothers here who 
the and short of 
do being very low in statue and the 
exceedingly tall. We saw 
cm come out the door together to 
go visit a neighbor. A 8-feet picket 
fence separated the two yards, and 
o save walking around the short 
a little running start 
jumped over it. ex- 
the long one. don't have 
o jump, I can step over And 
over he stepped, without even taking 
hands out of his pockets. 
The
To belittle oneself does not 
of
Our seed cotton r and 
corn planter, plants our seed 
at a bundling-- plants 
a peck or more to the acre, 
one to six inches apart 
one seed at a time. 
Saves half the work and time 
of chopping. Position force 
feed means absolute J r 
of drop without 
seed. 
Style Leaders
i to to 
that wore In the notice at 
the time might have killed Deputy 
Sheriff The live men are 
Dave Young. Wade Williams, Mat- 
thews Mebane, lid. Nelson, and Jim 
The military guard has not 
Wilson county court to convene at ordered yet to go to on as 
once for the trial of Lewis West and special guard, it is very probable 
his accomplices in the killing of that it will be, there are yet 
Deputy Sheriff and the fears of trouble. The governor 
wounding of Chief of Police determined, If to 
QUICK FOR WEST. 
Governor Will Probably Or. 
Special Term. 
Governor has re- 
quested to call a special term of 
lynching Li North Carolina 
bis and 
times order out full 
it. might be said with certainty the 
National Guards III ho e 
Glover. 
West and his three associates are 
now being held in the penitentiary 
for safe-keeping. 
The court will in all probability 
be called to convene within the next 
two weeks and the will be 
conveyed to from Wilson for 
trial on special trains and under full 
military guard, and will ah-o be 
guarded during the process of the three years M. -1 c 
-d smooth crop In i g i
when West i. 
Raleigh Times. 
in 
. , 
Stray 
taken 
Taken 
one 
trial. crop in t en 
It Is understood that are to in left ear. Owner can got Fame 
be taken to arrest a number of identifying and paying . 
whose names West has given 
members of the desperado gang. R. F. D. No. N. C, 
Aral of five ltd 
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern 
The Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. 
chiefly I C e 
i i i i ire. I v covet their 
bonds, and were 
etc. Ii as 
Iniquity, what would 
the Lord's v be on so of the 
baa much 
my 
A KING SOLD HIMSELF 
I Kings 
and 
idolatry. 
CO Ahab . said, 
sold ll to work evil in the 
Bight f imp The effects of 
the gradually but its 
salutary lesson remain i with the King 
and with the people t a considerable ex- 
God had recognition. 
Baal's co n i i rot broken. 
n n I concern 
her .; He return 
ed and founded Schools of the 
Prophets In Israel, being the mas- 
amongst them. 
Our present l non shows the meanness 
of d the awful power of 
a wicked woman. Ahab h d two line pal- 
aces; one of them, at was an 
palace, but even its possession 
did not make King happy. He desired 
to attach to It a fine vineyard owned by 
pent 
both word of his 
sires, offering to 
chase with money or I 
to for It an- H 
other vineyard. -n 
both, Asserting his 
rights, declined to sell 
for any price. 
As a result the Ki i 
was disappointed, 
heart-sick. 
He had allow- 
ed to 
grow In his heart 
lie wanted that vine- 
yard, lie was King, O 
so it was very 
of to 
refuse to take a good, liberal price for It. 
declared as his objection Hint the 
Lord's regulations forbade that lie should 
his family Inheritance. Apparently 
It was a hopeless ease and Ahab, 
and sour, lay abed, refusing food 
In Action 
Then entered the Queen, 
the cause of his sorrow. Hearing It 
she answered I Will give It to you Forth- 
with wrote letters to the chief men of 
the city, signing the letters with her 
band's real. With brutal frankness the 
letters told the select men of the city 
what was desired of them. 
They were to make a mockery of re- 
by keeping a fast. 
They were to hypocritically to 
their neighbor by giving him the 
most prominent place of honor at the fast. 
They were to provide two worthless 
scampi by who. at 
the appropriate time in fast would 
take their places near and then, 
with feigned religious fervor, protest 
against him and denounce him as n bins 
of Cod and King, 
each other v testimony 
they had heard the blasphemy with their 
own 
The penalty of blasphemy was rec- 
to be that of stem use and the de- 
to be carried out and 
thus to gotten of. 
If we are Inclined to feel or speak 
strongly of v course of Jezebel, 
as we should, let us not forgot that some- 
what similar practices prevail hi our day. 
True, no one today could be stoned to 
death the suggestion of a Queen In 
civilized lands. Nevertheless, people have 
been heard to express the wish that they 
had lived in former times, so us to 
had an opportunity for stoning those 
whom they disliked. But take a case in 
Suppose a man conducting n 
business. Suppose covetous neigh- 
set up a competing business, as they 
would lave a full right to do. But sup- 
pose, tin n. that one or the other, coveting 
the whole trade, were to attempt sharp 
in pilling commodities 
below cost, Interfering with the others 
credit the bank, or tin; the 
would not this I In r-c- 
of i . kind which 
King Ahab And would It 
not be reprehensible I i God's Bight And 
dare any who the Lord, so 
neglect I . I n Rule of hi 
Word 
Another A storekeeper 
a good was offered ii certain 
commodity at a less price than lie hid 
been paying r a contract. 
He accepted The who had h-en 
oiling him this commodity In the past 
was angry, i m of trade, lie set 
up a and sold goods 
at a loss, as he I to do, ho 
wealthy, until failed 
for lack of business. Then the m w store 
ed ll ad 
Its work as a business It had 
killed indeed, coy and 
Jezebel methods, l 
conditions. much more 
the in of suppose and
Ahab la 
p. 
toms of our day 
greater degree of Ii and knowledge 
than Ahab d 
Woman 
As per ins ructions, word was at 
sent, which came to the hands of Jezebel. 
saying 
Was dead, as 
wishes The 
Que n then said to 
I sullen lord. Arise, 
t possession of the 
vineyard of 
he la dead. 
The King seems to 
had no qualms 
of conscience, but to 
have been in some 
its as bad as 
t Queen, but with 
less courage At all 
i . he proceeded 
to take possession of 
I e as 
though he n t there Is 
a God of i-. to whom he must 
mat el y .;. 
Divine direction. 
wont forth , m the King and. by the 
Lord's command, said. thou killed 
and also taken possession In the place 
whore tho do e the blood of Na- 
I both shall dogs lick thy And this 
was fulfilled to the letter very 
Shortly after. Note, however. King's 
attitude and how inclined he was, as be- 
fore, to ignore the Lord and to think 
merely of the 
Ahab accosted saying, 
thou foam me. O mine He re- 
the e . have found thee be- 
cause thou . sold to work evil 
In h f he 
i one of the most crying 
evils of our d ll Is causing more 
heart a d t of every kind, per- 
haps, than any sin 
polices hearts that ask. 
In disc -it pride. 
Why Is such n weary task. 
And all l d 
And hour In f- on st huts admire 
How Love i In heir aid 
Love that ll ; . . i seems to tire 
n rich ; e . ion 
overcoat, sweater and 
lipped Where the break of 
of the engines had caught. Had 
clothing not given way I would 
been doubled up and 
.; my death. As it wag i was 
along the track for nearly n foot 
is a place on my 
i and my left feels 
bum. I I 
A up and get around all right. 
how be came to have 
presence of mind to stretch 
out between the rails, Mr. 
is going to be hard for you to 
but it id true. About fifteen 
; go when I was a boy and living 
i Portsmouth I came very near 
the TORPID LIVER, 
strengthen the 
regulate the bowels, and are 
as an 
ANTI-BILIOUS 
In m, districts their virtues 
are widely recognized, as they 
peculiar properties in freeing 
the system from that poison. 
sugar coated. 
fake No Substitute. 
mind, neither one of engines had 
the usual cow catcher were 
used for shifting work. Flynn is 
slight, not g more 
TWO TRAINS PASS MAX.
down the middle of the 
by two shifting 
of the Norfolk and Western 
running double-beaded SO 
an hour, passed over by the 
two et and yet living to 
ell Co tale with only two small flesh 
round and a nervous shock to re- 
mind of his was ex- 
of Stephen E. Flynn, a 
employed at the plan- 
of E. A. Watkins and Bro., 
; Ai i e avenue and tie Nor 
and railroad, where the 
ed yesterday after- 
; i O'clock, 
. hour and a half later while 
r in g bed In the ward at 
Vincent's Flynn, who 
his wife b id two children lives 
No. avenue, 
told reporter of 
i. the He 
had knocked off work and 
my clothes, started to 
a car for my home In Bramble- 
were four or five loaded 
can on t. e siding leading to 
mill d I passed behind 
en e on the track. 
I between rails, 
ten feet from me. I saw two big 
c i coming double- 
leaded, thirty miles an hour from 
Point. I could move 
e in d of cow catcher of the 
a mo the knees. 
i i-11 i it to throw myself 
ween e rails. Then 
lO. I I . . 
Rome 
In with me were 
first ; heard when I re- 
i ti. i could not 
i my a- mi l gt but Could 
me. 
g the same accident. I owe my es- than pounds. Had he been 
e today to an example set by my set, the parts of 
Log then. We, the dog, a pointer and engine would have crushed him. 
, walking across the old Court Norfolk 
trestle of the Seaboard Air Line 
i Portsmouth when an engine came 
along. I swung down, holding to the at Ayden. 
of trestle by my hands and Hart Company, of Ayden. 
the dog flattened himself between the county, is chartered lo do a 
rails, letting the engine pass over general mercantile -business, both 
Just as the struck me this wholesale and retail; to buy and sell 
I thought of the dog with the good.-, wares, fertilizers and 
that am here very much alive disc of every description. The 
being a mangled mass cf capital stock is but 
begin business when 
Alter being picked up, Flynn was has subscribed. Stockholders 
in the ambulance, which was H- Trip,, H. A. Hart, I. 
from St. Vincent's and taken Times. 
to the hospital. His hat and urn- 
were found beside him between i The early blooming fruit trees are 
the rails, doth undamaged. His catching it. 
told of the accident by a ; 
friend. 
The physicians at the hospital said 
there were no Internal injuries and 
in two or three days Flynn would 
out and walking around none the BUSHELS OF SEED OATS, 
worse for his close cull. or days, apple, rust-proof, 
Tic probably owes his life to two turf, black and white 
causes besides Ids presence of F. V. Johnston. IS 
BUSHELS BURT OR 90-DAY 
oats, at F. v. Johnston's
OF THE CONDITION OF 
THE BANK OF AYDEN 
AT N. O. 
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business, January 1911. 
RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. 
Loans and Capital stock paid 
. 15,625.00 
Overdrafts. 
Hanking house, furniture 
and fixture . 
Due from hanks and 
Cash items . 
Gold coin . 
Silver coin, including all 
minor coin currency. 
ii Dank notes and 
other S. Notes. 
610.69 
82.785.05 
6.00 
15.00 
1.7 
5.814.00 
Surplus fund. 
Undivided profits, 
current expenses 
taxes paid . 
Deposits subject to check. 
Savings deposits . 
Cashier's checks 
Certified check.--. 
less 
and 
out stand- 
2,427.97 
73.550.00 
26,801.89 
86.85 
38.00 
hear what was going on around 
Total 
143,029.21 
Total 
148,029.21 
Slate of North Carolina, of Wit, 
I, J. Smith cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly that 
the above statement is true to the of my knowledge and belief. 
J. R. smith. Cashier. 
Subscribed and sworn to before 14th day of January, 1911. 
STANCILL HODGES, 
J. R. SMITH, Notary Public, 
it. C. CANNON, commission expires 
1911.; 
Directors. 
I NOTICE I 
wish to your t our new line of f which 
we no have. Wt rat care In this 
think we can your wants in Shoes, No- 
I aces and Embroideries in fact anything that i- in a 
Store. 
Come s show 
Tripp, Co., Ayden, N. C. 
THE LARGEST IN THE CITY 
Has just received a big of arc 
Store Crockery and invite ail to inspect It. A full line of Candies always 
and Chocolates and Etc., all a. pound. The biggest assort- 
Fresh Candies times each week. and Store 
anything you need 
MIL 
Deductions o 
mull s 
Action of writers of detective, 
stories eclipsed by the still 
solved mystery of the death 
Charles and Grace 
who found dead in the parlor 
of the home in Cumberland 
on December The couple were 
to be married that day. The bride- 
groom was worth and had no 
dents or reasons for that 
been discovered. bride-to- 
be is believed to have had no trouble 
any kind. two were 
found sitting upon a sofa dead it was 
thought they had taken poison by 
and for some unexplained 
reason. The latest theory is that coal 
gas escaping from a stove In an ill- 
ventilated room killed them, but in- 
death from coal gas with- 
out a sign of suffering or struggle 
seems an improbable solution. 
Upholders of the poisoning theory 
are sustained by the discovery of 
cyanide of potassium when an 
was held. Those who held the 
coal-gas theory are strengthened in 
their belief by the fact that a cat 
confined in the room died of coal-gas 
poisoning, and physicians examining 
the blood of the dead bodies found 
conditions indicating the possibility 
of death from carbon monoxide. 
If the two persons were killed by 
coal gas the case was, of course, one 
of accidental killing but it happened 
that both bodies had traces of 
of potassium. On the other 
hand, even If the poison was 
by one with intent to murder 
and taken subsequently with suicidal 
intent, the carbon monoxide in the 
air might have poisoned their blood 
simultaneously with the action of the 
cyanide of potassium, or might have 
been taking effect slowly before the 
work of the murderer and suicide be- 
A third possibility is that a 
third person may have murdered the 
couple, and might benefit, in the event 
of being suspected, by the confession 
resulting from the discovery that car- 
monoxide might been the 
cause of death. 
There were no witnesses the 
tragedy SO far OS investigation has 
proved the surrounding it. and 
one set arc as positive 
about poisoning theory as the 
other if a suspect should be 
arrested and tried for the murder, 
the probability ct a conviction would 
Lo email with the coal-gas theory to 
be relied upon by defense. The 
cart b about ts a 
and about as dramatic as anything 
into existence by a 
That gas should kill a man 
and a woman so quickly that the at- 
of the bodies betrayed no signs 
of their having anticipated death or 
than that the motive for the 
murder and suicide, or the suicide 
pact, could not have been discovered 
by time ii there had been cir-j 
rendering the couple deb- 
enough to take poison. 
theory murder obtrudes itself. But, 
notwithstanding the quick action of 
cyanide of potassium, how could a 
murderer have administered the 
poison unseen by anyone and 
suspected by the victims, and effect- 
ed escape without having been 
observed by other persons in the , 
house when going in to the parlor to j 
perpetrate the crime or when 
the room after having succeeded 
Louisville Courier Journal. 
IN WASHINGTON, D, C, 
EVERYBODY KN 
WILLIAM t
Married in the parlors of Hotel 
Potter Wednesday afternoon at 
by Rev. G. B. Perry, Mr. Otto Turn- 
age and Miss Lillian Ruth Whitfield. 
The beautiful and impressive ring j 
ceremony was used. 
Mrs. Turnage is a daughter of 
Mr. X. H. Whitfield who came here 
from Farmville last year to engage 
in the handling of leaf tobacco. She 
is a most charming young woman 
and is admired by a wide circle of 
friends all over eastern North Caro- 
where she is a favorite in social 
circles. 
Mr. Turnage is it son of Mr. Theo- 
Turnage. a leading merchant 
of Farmville one of Pitt county's 
largest planters. He is cashier of 
the Citizen.; Bank of Farmville, and 
is recognized as a young man of 
groat promise in the business life of 
Farmville and Pitt county. 
Immediately after the ceremony 
they left for Farmville where they 
mm
p.
i-m
I find 
very valuable for 
rebuilding of a 
worn and tired 
system. 
impulsive, courteous, 
in good fellowship, a lover home magnanimous to ens- 
true to is a reputation that any man may well j. 
m better description than CoL 
they left for Farmville . is given U 
Hill Standard La- known gt Z one has over optioned that 
knew him. 
Read what ho concerning 
write to say that I used find It a very I 
valuable remedy coughs or and ft I 
system, dissipates and old tired feel 
Camp, 1740 I St., N. W., Washington, D, C. 
v ., could .-I night, I 
Hint I- 
conic. 
The bride is well known in Green- 
ville, Where she lived a number of 
years, and has a host of friends here, 
all whom extend best wishes. 
Memory of Mr. Boyd. 
Friday February 10th. 
as the day at its brightest God 
in a-mighty wisdom saw tit to 
take from cur midst one of Green- 
noble t men and citizens. Mr. 
Boyd. Mr. Boyd was a 
bright man of about thirty 
yearn of and was loved by all 
vim knew Each morning Be 
would go to his work, returning 
evening bright and cheerful. He 
never ed of his task, no. 
matter how ha; C or long it was. He ; 
was always willing to do what was 
put him never stopped 
it van finis j 
Mr. about 
thought to be 
Friday when he was taken 
and died. 
I And what shalT do with all the 
days he are 
That be counted ore we 
hi- face 
. fife 
MR. 
reel It my duty 
to you a few words in 
your tried differ- 
at but I ave Hut Po- 
is the on earth, and a 
perfect ten builder. 
and it f a 
heartily it to who 
arc weak and run down. It 
new and 
I cannot too highly of 
to and will n to r it 
tor 
lime. 
I v.-s very v.-. 
i-
that lowers 
Between 
time of grace 
we In 
with longing 
floe 
Into past with 
Cheat ourselves to .-- 
day 
love or him t our i 
us God's great gin 
of memory
m to
Of cat 
Shall we, 
looked within 
Live and life's purposes tub- 
lime 
we mud do ac o did work 
ever upward, when cur time 
e i alls us home 
;,. . ill be n to g , I a he was 
lay el i life in this world 
with him I i h forever more 
POOR PRINT 
rt 
he Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. 
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern 
THE PEOPLE 
IS THE INLAND WATERWAY TO 
BE FREE INN. C 
RAILROADS CHARGE 
This is h Obstruct Water 
i. interest of the 
Imposes an 
lax tents per ton 
Norfolk, Va Feb. 1911. 
i He 
ii waterways are to 
railroads should 
to make traffic 
lines 
similar those be- 
tween are no 
elements hostility be- 
railways and water 
but we must modify ex- 
and we shall 
. 
. . . 
justice, 
. hi . ed and m- 
will pros 
Lie of Hon. H. 
Convention of 
Atlantic Waterways As- 
November 18th, 
On January 17th, last, eleven days 
tile inland Waterway, near 
Beaufort, was opened to traffic, the 
at and Wash- 
u charge 
4.01 a pounds cargo 
wharves 
that 
or was to be shipped 
With the 
the wharf 
existed. Mew 
are two 
towns given this par- 
is no 
at Plymouth, 
City, Ca,
man twenty years it has 
m policy of the rail- 
to extended facilities 
tor exchange commodities with 
at its water terminals; 
wharves, ware- 
nestles been built 
to encourage that val- 
revenue, and the 
promptly, rapid 
importance. 
i Geography of Eastern North 
more boats than 
and gasoline motor gives 
them tar carrying capacity. 
to the railroad wharves 
truck, farm products 
and carried back 
the supplies for 
tie borne 
sudden and radical 
c of 
the accustomed visitor 
Unless it pay cents per ton 
of cargo former welcome 
take a boat's lading at Elisa- 
beth City without charge, while at 
New or Washington a charge 
will made and collected for the 
in addition to the 
rates the property 
herein passing over the 
C ; .-. . or or. the 
.-v. -V by 
whether it has been trans- 
ported over the railroad or not 
Why impose an additional tax on 
the wealth of Eastern North Caro- 
invested in boats, lo the ex- 
tent of cents per ton of cargo to 
be delivered to or obtained at railroad 
wharves at New Bern and Washing- 
ton 
Why create an unnecessary port 
change at New Bern and Washington 
Why virtually increase the inland 
rates to and from New Bern and 
Washington 
Now mark a coincidence. The 
Lake Drummond Transportation Co. 
was by Virginia to in- 
crease the traffic in Lake Drummond 
Canal, and by giving coherence to i 
service of scattering vessels as i 
well as by extending the influence 
of water rates to inland towns, to 
determine how far steamboat service 
could be on the Sounds 
To those ends the company has, 
for some months, been carrying gen- 
cargoes to New Bern and Wash- 
and, to some extent, to Kin- 
and Greenville also. For the lat- 
towns the freight was handled 
from vessels at railroad wharves in- 
to cars placed for the purpose, the 
local rates to destination being 
paid to the railroad company. 
company's rates from Norfolk 
to New Bern and Washington are 
about per cent, less than rail 
rates, but higher than the charges of 
independent vessels. The tariff is 
based on necessarily uniform service, 
but having corporate management 
and responsibility. 
The charge above 
ed, during its imposition, will require 
the inland freight to be drayed from 
the vessel's wharf to the local rail- 
road station. Indeed at this writ- 
a letter from our New Bern agent 
says that his application for cars to 
be placed for vessel freight was re- 
fused under instructions from Nor- 
folk, not to place cars for vessel 
lines from Norfolk, hut to require 
the freight to be drayed to 
warehouses; in verification of which 
the Traffic Manager of the railroad 
company, when applied to, said that 
his company would not permit the 
Lake Drummond Company's boats to 
berthed at its wharves at New 
Bern and Washington to land freight 
to be forwarded to inland towns, and 
it would be received only at the com- 
regular receiving station 
If, therefore, the railroad com- 
intend to obstruct the inland 
movement, and if the Lake Drum- 
Company could be diverted 
from its mission, or be discouraged, 
the methods above described seem 
to be thoroughly adapted to the 
pose. 
The free waterway is near at hand. 
Something like ten millions of 
are to be expended between Nor- 
folk and Beaufort. Shall the re- 
stop at the shores of 
the Sounds 
The issue is made, and would seem 
to invite the action of your 
of Commerce. 
THE LAKE DRUMMOND TRANS- 
COMPANY. 
Delegates and Membership of At- 
Deeper Waterways 
1909 1910 
THE OLDEST MAS IS S. C. 
Fred Venters, Sr., This 
Distinction. 
We are printing herewith a 
of the two old men recently 
mentioned in The Reflector as being 
here before the board of county com- 
missioners seeking aid. They are 
Fred Venters, aged and his son. 
Fred, aged Both of them are 
remarkably well preserved for their 
years. The old man was admitted 
CLEOPATRA FIRST HOBBLER. 
FRED VENTERS JR., AND SR. 
to the county home. Both of these 
old men prior to the Civil war were 
slaves of the late Mr. George W. 
Venters. 
Recently there died in Charlotte 
Mr. Henry aged 
years, said to have been the oldest 
man in North Carolina. Since his 
death we take it that Pitt county can 
now claim having the oldest man 
the State, the elder of the two 
mentioned above being 
But of Course Did Most of Her 
Journeying a Barge. 
Scientific research has disclosed 
that Cleopatra was the first woman to 
wear a hobble skirt. Hieroglyphics 
on the newly excavated building 
blocks in Egypt show the famous 
queen in a gown drawn so tightly 
about her ankles that one wonders 
how she walked at all. 
Come to think of it, Cleopatra 
didn't do much walking. She 
most of her journeying in a 
a. with rugs strewn carelessly 
and lolling 
in poses that made the royal 
craft look like a Turkish bath 
inside out. 
cannot blame the attendants. 
perhaps, for taking advantage of 
opportunity to loll, for Antony's 
sweetheart was a fault-finding house- 
keeper and generally kept Charmion 
and her other attendants on the 
jump. 
The library that Cleopatra com- 
suicide because Octavia sport- 
ed a hobble skirt tighter than hers 
is open to debate. Anyway, 
created the role of the hob 
Press. 
Child Died of Hydrophobia. 
The six-year-old daughter of Mr. 
Andy Fletcher died at Pilot 
Tuesday morning of last week 
from the effect of a dog bite. The 
Mt. Airy News says that about six 
weeks ago a little pug dog, a pet of 
the child's had fits and snapped and 
bit everything in sight. Before the 
family realized the situation the dog 
had the little girl. Then they 
killed the dog. Time passed on and 
last Saturday the child was taken 
with cramps and gradually grew 
worse. Monday morning it began 
to have spasms and a doctor was 
called. He found It suffering with 
all symptoms of hydrophobia and 
nothing that he could do would bring 
relief. The child could not swallow 
and yet it was thirsty and cried for 
water. Every time it saw water it 
would go into spasms. Its suffer- 
were 
Landmark, 
N. C. 
New 
Washington. 
Greenville. 
CO 
IS 
CO 
The thing that ever happened 
is not a as some of tho things 
never happened. 
Life Saved at Death's Door. 
never felt so near my 
writes W. R. Patterson, of Welling- 
ton, Texas, when a frightful cough 
and lung trouble pulled me down to 
pounds, in spite of doctor's treat- 
for two years. My father, moth- 
and two sisters died of 
and that I am alive today is 
due to Dr. King's New Discovery, 
which completely cured me. Now I 
weigh pounds and have been well 
and strong for Quick, safe, 
sure, its the best remedy on earth 
for coughs, colds, asthma, 
croup and all throat and lung 
and Trial bottle 
free. by all druggists. 
A Business Man's Ten Rules. 
Rule Give me more than I ex- 
and I'll pay you more than you 
expect. I can afford to increase your 
pay if you increase my profits. 
Rule Watch your work, not the 
clock. A long day's work makes a 
long day short, and a short day's 
work makes my face long. 
Rule Don't He. It wastes m 
time and yours. I'm sure to catch 
you in the end and that's the wrong 
end. 
Rule You owe so much to your- 
self that you can't afford to owe any- 
body else. Keep out of debt or keep 
out of my shop. 
Rule Dishonesty is never an ac- 
Good men, like good women, 
see temptation when they meet 
it. 
Rule Mind your own business 
and in time you'll have business 
your own to mind. 
Rule Don't do anything here 
which hurts your self-respect. The 
who is willing to steal for 
me is also capable of stealing from 
mo. 
Rule It's none of my business 
what you do at night. But if 
affects what you do the next 
day and you do half as much as I 
demand, you'll last half as long as 
you hope. 
Rule Don't tell mo what I'd 
to hear, but what I ought to hear. 
I don't want a valet to my vanity, 
but I need one for ray dollars. 
Rule Don't kick if I 
you are worth while correcting, you 
are worth while keeping. I don't 
waste time cutting specks out of rot- 
ten Journal. 
Wife Cot Tip Top Advice, 
wife wanted me to take our 
boy to the doctor to cure an ugly 
writes D. Frankel, of 
Okla., said put 
Salvo on She did so, and it cured 
the boil in a short time. Quickest 
healer of burns, scalds, cuts corns, 
bruises, sprains, swellings. Best 
Pile cure on earth. Try it. Only 
cents at all druggists. 
There lots of smart people who 
haven't tense enough to keep it to
THE VALUE OF GOOD ROADS. 
Prices tor Perishable 
Can he Obtained. 
Crops 
VACANCY AT ANNAPOLIS. 
The necessity of good roads is be- 
coming more and more known to the 
people of all sections. Recently in an 
address, Col. M. Richards said very
It is a plain common sense 
that in order to obtain good 
prices In the northern markets for 
perishable crops on the farm such 
products must be disposed of with- 
out delay. 
In every year there are bad 
conditions at irregular periods, and 
in winter these conditions are often 
continuous. The old fashioned road 
leading from this far, to the nearest 
railway shipping point is during such 
season, or for many days at a time, 
almost, if not wholly, impassable. 
With ripened crops ready for the 
market, chickens maturing, eggs be- 
coming stale, fruits and vegetables 
beginning to show signs of decay, 
the prices of wheat, oats, grain or 
hay, or the prices of all these 
the farmer sits in his door way 
dividing hie attention between the 
western skies shore and the stretch 
of muddy road, here and there sub- 
merged, forlornly praying that it may 
be dried up soon. Finally as it doesn't 
dry, he loads up or pounds 
of products on a two-horse wagon 
Examinations to be Held in April or 
June. 
Washington, D. C. Feb. 1911. 
Editor 
A vacancy from the first 
district has just occurred at 
the United States naval 
by reason of the resignation of a 
midshipman from this district. The 
navy department desires that 
nations be made at the earliest date 
for a principal and for first and sec- 
and third alternates. The men- 
and physical examinations for 
entrance will occur either oil the 
third Tuesday in April, or the third 
Tuesday in June, at the option of the 
nominees. I shall glad to hear 
from any young men who are 
to stand the mental and physical 
examinations. All candidates must 
be between the ages of sixteen and 
twenty years at time of their 
examination. shall be glad to for- 
ward to any applicant a pamphlet 
giving the regulations admission 
; the naval who may 
c making application 
for nomination. Prompt attention is 
Very respectfully. 
JOHN H. SMALL. 
Professional Cards 
W. F. 
opposite K L Co 
next t 
Co it ; i building. 
. . N. 
N. W. OUTLAW 
IT LAW 
race formerly occupied by. J I 
Fleming 
V C. D 
CLARK 
Civil Engineers and Surveyors 
. . i. 
S. J. EVERETT 
in Building.
Veterans to Meet in Wilmington. 
At a largely attended meeting last 
and tries the road. Somewhere on 
. . ,. um.-. it of Cape Fear Camp, 
the trip he mires or his wagon breaks 
down, and be sees worse mishaps 
ahead. He backs out and drives 
home with damaged outfit and worse 
damaged temper. If lie is a 
fellow, he may try this same 
performance the next clay and the 
next, with the results; while 
his products are spoiling or perhaps 
finally of no value at all; and instead 
of receiving profits on the yield of 
the farm for that season he faces a 
dead loss. 
All these because the only route 
leading from his farm to a railway 
station is a mere travesty of a public 
highway, broken by zigzag gullies, 
lined with ruts axle deep, a 
of bumps and hollows, slopes, 
huge boulders that rise like immense 
warts in the middle of the road, and 
during the whole of the rainy season, 
perhaps, a miry pond of water to vary 
the situation. 
A Card of Thanks. 
To My 
I wish to thank every one who had 
my interest at heart in the recent 
subscription contest, conducted by 
The Reflector Company, and worked 
for my benefit. The fact that I won 
one of the prizes offered is highly 
pleasing to me and I can assure my 
friends that all help extended me 
was gratefully appreciated. 
NELLIE 
I Moore. 
W. H. Long 
Ar LAW 
Greenville . . 
m all court. u. 
next 
Dr. L; 
v Carolina 
United Confederate Veterans, with 
the commander. Gen. James I. Metts, 
presiding, and Adjutant L. Leon at 
his post, mention was made of the 
fact that the State organization has 
been invited to hold Its re-union and 
convention in this city this year, and 
members were reminded that they 
will be expected later to enter hear- 
into the arrangements for the 
entertainment of the visitors. The 
last re-union and convention was 
held in Norfolk, Va at which time 
Gen. James I. Melts, of this city, ex- 
tended an invitation to hold tho next 
meeting in Wilmington. The 
was accepted and the veterans 
in all parts of the State are look- 
forward with much pleasure to 
the meeting to be held in this city. 
The indications are that tho attend- 
will he between and 
probably nearer the latter figure. The 
veterans will be greeted with the true 
Southern hospitality and it can be 
safely said that nothing will be left 
undone that would tend to make their 
enjoyable. All Wilmington 
will join in with the veterans of 
the local camp in their entertain- 
of the visitors. The meeting 
will be held some time in 
Morning Star. 
Send Both Addresses. 
frequently receive letter 
or 
cards from subscribers to The Re- 
asking their address be 
changed to a certain post office, but 
failing to give the address to which 
the paper going. It will 
much confusion and time if sub- 
In making request 
would ROTH old and new 
addresses and say gel 
the daily or weekly edition of the 
paper. 
DR. E. L 
. .
Lawyer. 
ROUTE OF 
NIGHT EXPRESS 
hid,; in effect 18th 
X. following schedule fig- 
published as information ONLY 
are not guaranteed. 
TRAINS LEAVE 
a. m. daily. Night Express 
Sleeping Car for Norfolk. 
a. m. daily, for Norfolk and 
car service between 
New and No; folk, connects for 
all points north and west. 
p. m. daily except Sunday, for 
Washington. 
a. m. daily for Wilson and Bel- 
north, south 
west. 
a. m. daily i Sunday for 
Wilson Raleigh, connects for 
all points. 
p. m., daily, for Wilson and
I l. Vent 
v C. 
Special Low Rates 
To 
ALA., 
NEW ORLEANS LA. 
via 
Card of Thanks 
Ayden, N. C, Fob 
Editor 
I wish to thank my many friends 
for all kindness shown me during 
The Reflector contest; also The Re- 
Company for the grand prize 
awarded me. 
Respectfully, 
Faye E. Corey 
One of the things a man cant 
is why his enemies have so 
many friends. 
i A dog up 
it is i wt 
Falls Victim to Thieves. 
S. W. Bends, Of Coal City, Ala., has 
a Justifiable grievance. Two thieves 
his health tor years. They 
were a liver and kidney trouble. Then 
Dr. King's New Life Pills throttled 
them. He's well now. for 
constipation, malaria, headache, 
cents at all druggists. 
I i v 
An friend, to 
m a 
JULIUS Bit OWN 
n LAW
H. If, CARTER, 
Practice limited to diseases of the 
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 
Washington, N. Greenville, N. C. 
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. 
James. a. m. to p. m., 
every Monday. 
ALBION DUNN 
LAW 
in building, on 
Street 
wherever services en 
desired 
. . . N. 
A. L 
S. J. Nobles 
MODERN BA SH P 
furnished, everything n 
and attract e, the very 
best barbers. Second to none 
Opp. J. R. J. G. 
Choice Cut Flowers 
and Violets 
Wedding Ml s 
at 
Telegraph lid Telephone or- 
promptly by 
s. 
Account 
CELEBRATION, 
1911. 
Account of the above 
the Seaboard Air Line Railway will 
sell exceedingly low round-trip 
to the above named points, 
from all points on its line. 
rickets he on Sale Feb. 21st to 
Limited to Return 
Upon payment of to Special 
Agent, located in St. Charles Hotel 
New Orleans, tickets can 
be extended until March 26th. 
Those holding round-trip tickets 
to New Orleans account of Mardi 
will be sold round trip reduced 
rates from New Orleans to any point 
in Texas or Louisiana. 
For rates from your station, 
to your local agent, or address tho 
undersigned. 
II. S. LEA 
Division Passenger Agent, 
RALEIGH, N. C. 
j. l co, 
j f Phone No 
RALEIGH, 
H C. 
J C. LANIER 
DEALER 
Monuments 
Tomb 
Iron 
C. 
follow v. ho knows he knows is 
for
POOR PRINT
-W
Carolina Hone and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. 
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. 
I RM and
III i . i I I 
J Editor. 
; K. NORTH CAROLINA 
-.-. 
may be had upon 
e business Is 
; ii g, corner 
. ; . 
ea 
I I 
would adopt such a motto, 
vesting themselves of the spirit of 
selfishness and devote their efforts 
indeed to the public good. There 
is more than a sermon in that motto, 
and it might well adorn the walls 
Of every public building and every 
school room in the land. No nobler 
sentiment could be inspired In a 
youth than to devote his life to the 
public good, and at the end no greater 
could be inscribed than that 
his life had been thus spent. 
FARMERS FAVOR A TAX 
DOGS. 
i advertising 
ill . for at three 
cents per up to fifty lines. 
Enter l as second class matter 
August 1910. at the post at 
North Carolina, under 
act March -i, 
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1911, 
. SUBSCRIBERS. 
person who takes a news- 
t. to pay it promptly 
a During the 
fail statements were sent to all mail 
subscribers of Reflector who 
owed as much OS a dollar. Many 
wets in responding with re- 
ate many who 
paid, their at- 
has called to it several 
times paper. Perhaps 
it mo. e to negligence than 
e, we hope this 
. be sufficient to bring 
duty. We are now 
a of the mail lists, 
out statements 
do not pay before their 
They save 
find expense of 
if they will pay 
are some whose 
names it will be necessary to drop 
If payment is not made by ins first 
u o i not be 
names, but under 
it may have to be 
accounts of whose 
names ate then will be 
i to. collection. If this 
the case of any 
tins, he will have 
to 
Ar a meeting of the Farmers Union 
of Pitt county, held Greenville on 
February a resolution was 
adopted favoring a tax on all dogs 
in the county. The resolution pro- 
for a tax of one on males 
and two dollars on females, the 
money derived from the tax to be 
turned into the public school fund 
of Pitt county. 
The resolution was adopted by the 
unanimous vote of delegates, rep- 
resenting a membership of more than 
eight hundred farmers of Pitt 
I Some members of the present leg- 
have said that farmers are 
opposed to a tax on dogs, but the 
farmers of Pitt county, in the 
referred to, show conclusively 
where they stand on the question. 
The robbers who held up a South- 
railway train Georgia, 
day morning, and robbed a safe in 
the Southern Express car, made a 
much -larger haul than the offices 
first allowed to be made known. One 
package of money stolen contained 
and other packages were 
so taken, while it was first reported 
that the total amount stolen was lit- 
more than Tho express 
company does not 
the estimation of the public by 
false reports matters of this 
kind. 
It takes an effort to get business 
in these days, and neither an 
nor a town can draw much mere- 
on past prestige. Greenville needs 
some united activity along this line. 
We have a good town all light, but 
that fact alone is not going to make 
business for the business men unless 
there is an effort to bring it. 
After a fight extending over years, 
congress has passed the Appalachian 
forest reserve bill, which carries an 
appropriation of a year for 
the conservation of forests. North 
Carolina is one of the states that will 
profit directly by this bill, as 
of the lands to be purchased by the 
government are in our mountain 
ranges. 
Greenville township should organ- 
a good roads association to con- 
duct the campaign for the election 
to be held on the question of issuing 
bonds to build roads in the 
township. We do not know when 
election will be held, but a meet 
Dig should be called early to 
for work to get the good roads. 
It sounds like a return of old times 
and getting back to the days of Jesse 
James, when such a train hold up 
occurs as that in Georgia Saturday. 
And with all the law and officers and 
means of communication, the robbers 
seem to get away about as easy as 
pioneer railroad days. 
above the desk of tho 
t the in tho 
o, I. of commerce of 
t.-. t. is
iii- PUBLIC GOOD 
In the sudden death of Mr. S. Witt- 
of Charlotte, which occurred 
Tuesday evening, that city and the 
State loses one of its most useful 
men. He was recognized as the lead- 
spirit in building and loan 
and took more interest in 
that work than any man in North 
Carolina. He was president of the 
State league of building and loan 
associations also first 
dent of the national league. 
Senator of Idaho, a Rep- 
was bold to say 
tho senate Thursday that prejudice 
against the is just as intense 
the north as the south, 
that the north plays the in 
its to the contrary. 
he spoke the truth. 
have the privilege of enjoying some 
of them in our own life time. Hence 
we are in of building 
roads now without waiting a 
years to begin. 
There two weeks more of 
the allotted term of the present leg- 
The members should now 
cut out the little local bills and de- 
mote the remainder of the time to 
matters that need attention for the 
still searching steamers 
to Ethel Clare 
a; we have no idea. She 
One who should be allowed to stay 
ad long as she wants to, and 
the the better. 
Taxes pay bonds. 
Bonds build public utilities. 
Public utilities make communities. 
Good people and good things come 
only to good communities. 
We must have the best to invite 
the best. 
---------o 
That North Carolina has a seaport 
that fourth in the South in 
Handling commerce, is something to 
proud of. Only three other cities 
Galveston, New Orleans and 
more sea-going 
than Wilmington. 
----o---- 
ADVANTAGE OF 
ROADS. 
FOB 
The corn contest Pitt 
county this year is going to be some- 
thing worth while. And next fall 
there will be an agricultural exhibit 
day of the county will be proud 
Let the have an eye to 
some of their best products for 
the exhibit. 
The has been given a tip 
on something that sounds mighty 
good. It is that a movement in 
way to give a modern 
opera in tho near future. 
; finite particulars were not told us, 
n noble our who WM ,,. 
The man who has public good to tell all he as. 
heart is fee true and that there is something in 
that lives up to movement. hope it will 
ii ideal 
If the legislature dose nothing 
about that administration building 
and a fire should destroy many of the 
state's valuable records, there would 
go up a howl from Murphy to 
against every member of the 
The Reflector is proud of tho Pitt 
boy corn raisers that they 
placed their county at tho head of 
the list receiving State diplomas. 
to fee every township 
in tho county tend a boy on the pro- 
posed trip to Washington City next 
fall. 
While we have no objections to 
people In the next century having
Going home to supper all tired out 
at end of a week's hard work to 
a of crisp chitterlings by 
your plate were sent by a friend, 
is a reminder that there are Joy 
spots left life yet. 
This is a progressive age, to 
near a opposing good roads 
public improvements, sounds like be 
ought to have lived back the age 
of plows ox carts. 
One trouble the way of some. 
us adopting the Tanner fast to get 
around the high cost of living, is the 
want of sufficient surplus flesh to 
sustain a last. 
Every North Carolina newspaper 
that nave mentioning it 
at all, has declared in favor of the 
passage Ton ens bill as intro- 
by 
Some people are so prejudiced oil 
side a question that 
overlook principal 
and for argument maKe 
against those the other side. 
It would not do for a telephone 
manager in part of tho country 
to follow the example of the Quo out 
in California who advertised for ugly 
girls. There would be no 
cants. 
Winston- Salem is also going after 
of 
POOR 
movement that counts. We want to 
see Greenville on the move and keep 
moving. 
One main advantage about issuing 
in to build good roads 
in Greenville township, is that the 
very same cents on each 
property valuation the people are 
now paying for road taxes, will pay 
the I on the bond issue, set 
aside a sinking fund to pay 
off the bonds at maturity and leave 
a little over a year for main- 
of the roads. That would be 
remit even if the tax 
of t c r i 
the present figure. o. 
with good roads valuations would en- 
and more people would come 
In, that the surplus for 
would grow larger each year. 
To issue the bonds the money could 
be obtained to build good roads at 
once without increasing the tax, while 
to going on as at present 
having only the cents tax to spend, 
nothing permanent is done to the 
roads and that much money is 
---------o 
Wednesday, 22nd, is the day set 
apart for observation as Bill Nye day 
by the public schools of North Car- 
We hope the schools of Pitt 
will duly observe the day, and 
that a good size collection will be 
taken for the Bill Nye memorial build 
at the Stonewall Jackson Train- 
school. 
There is nothing like persistence. 
Representative Koonce kept after it 
until he got his insurance 
bill passed through the house. 
If there is nothing in their methods 
that need investigation, we do not 
see why the insurance companies 
fight the bill.
Those Southern train robbers get- 
ting away so easy with their booty, 
may embolden others to try the 
game. It is likely, however, that 
for some time to come the railroads 
will be on their guard. 
------o 
If American railroads lead in the 
actual economy of operation, as is 
recently shown by English authority 
then there is no reason why American 
roads should have higher freight 
rates than English roads. 
---------o 
Hot on the is the 
way some of the head lines read of 
the attempt to find the Georgia train 
robbers. We guess it was the posses 
who were hot, and not the trail, as 
so far they have not come even near 
a scent of the robbers. 
o--------- 
Tennessee goes on the theory that 
holding a Federal license 
evidence of guilt of 
Acting on this fifty-two per- 
sons found with such licenses were 
recently lined each. 
o----- 
Marking time is all right for get- 
ting ready, but forward Is the 
If men are to follow the decree of 
fashion, they will ere long be walk- 
around In the variety 
of pants. 
Tho time is almost here when you 
will regret that your neighbor has 
any chickens. The newly planted 
garden affords an Ideal place for 
scratching. 
---------o 
had better luck than Pied- 
and some of the other 
a ts. The bill to establish the new 
of Hoke passed by a big ma- 
j- 
-o 
t Durham Sun, 
seems to know how to read a hand. 
says two children of King George 
with the measles is royal 
o--------- 
Have the editors any right to be 
Sun. 
Not more so than they have to be 
A man who Is not honest in his 
. dealings is not a proper 
man to have a hand In administering 
public business. 
---------o 
Eggs having dropped to cents 
in Chicago leads to the belief that 
the cold storage fellows must be 
catching it on their cornered stock. 
o--------- 
A news item says 
or Buggy Company caught fire 
Thursday We hope none 
of them wore injured. 
The day is coming when you can 
hardly find a man who will not be 
ashamed to admit that he was once 
opposed to good roads. 
It breaks more eggs to drop the 
price than if they remain high. That 
is the people can get more of them 
to break. 
Slate building has passed 
. senate, but the amount was cut 
down to half a million dollars. 
If you want to know bow many 
these farm-life schools, as she has In 
other educational 
News and Observer. 
Manure- and Fertilizers. 
Stable manure is excellent for the 
garden, of course, but 
with stable manure only will soon 
get an excess of nitrogen the soil 
and you will find that your potatoes 
run to tops and make small potatoes 
and that your tomatoes grow too 
lankly make too many imperfect 
Now, do not advise stop- 
ping stable manure on the 
out i do advise making it 
plant food. It is de- 
especially i acid, 
c d Reflector, it la every Will greatly 
at least 
of acid to 
ton the manure, if liquid 
portion of the manure has been care- 
fully saved, there will not much 
deficiency in potash, but sandy 
soils it is better to add some 
ate of potash, say pounds to 
ton of manure. Now while I do not 
think that for ordinary farm crops 
it pays to compost and lino the ma- 
it does pay for the I 
would pile the manure now scat- 
the acid phosphate potash 
through it, placing it in a broad, fiat 
neap. As soon as signs of heating 
show, tin n it and It the 
fiat heap. Then make layers of 
black mold from the woods six inches 
thick, and cover with a layer of the 
mixed manure of same thickness 
carry the heap up, in way keep- 
it broad and fiat. If 
shows, chop all down and mix 
completely it in the flat 
heap. In this way you will soon 
have a heap of fine and well 
posed compost that will be more 
readily to the plants 
manure. For my I get 
the manure from New York 
City. This has a great deal of hay 
and straw mixed it, it is 
to get hue before apply- 
it to F. Massey, in 
Farmer. 
, a ca. hold of a copy. 
Some aviators were arrested 
Tampa, Fla., for giving an exhibition 
on Sunday. 
Just a look at the roads now should 
be enough to make people want bet- 
ones. 
---------o 
The citizen who does not feel proud 
of Pitt ought to pack his grip 
move. 
If you can't talk for 
play a game of shut mouth.
The legislature congress will 
both be back home in a few weeks. 
Hobson is not yet weaned from his 
war talk. 
-------o 
It will pay an individual and pay 
a community to advertise. Folks 
will not know what you are and what 
you have unless you tell them. 
Every dog has bis day. in 
North Carolina the dogs have every 
day. But the sheep, poor things, get 
no day at all. 
Wholesale graft has been 
in the public school board of 
What else could you ex- 
in 
If they keep on doing something 
to the House Raleigh, 
they may make a good hotel of it 
after awhile. 
---------o 
Some people arc so set in their 
ways that it is hard to acknowledge 
are wrong even after they see 
it. 
It Is much easier to cast a slur at 
a man's character than it is to re- 
pair the wrong done him by the slur. 
If other articles of food come down 
in keeping with the drop in eggs, 
living will not be so high. 
Farm-Life Schools. 
One of the most important and far- 
leaching educational measures before 
general assembly is the 
bill, which is the 
special order in the senate today at 
o'clock. The measure has en- 
endorsement and support of 
the teachers the 
of State, 
unanimous fa- 
able from the senate 
education and on 
It to pass. More 
man eighty-two per cent of 
of North Carolina are country 
More than ninety-five per 
cent, will never receive any 
preparation tor citizenship or for use- 
in country 
We stand it to be the chief 
purpose of these farm-lite schools to 
prepare boys for agricultural 
suits and life, to prepare 
for home-making and house- 
Keeping, to conduct agricultural and 
demonstration and extension 
work the faculty for the 
and their wives of the entire 
county; to provide short courses of 
for adult farmers and their 
wives, and for public school teachers, 
and, In a word, to be made a power- 
mi agricultural dynamo that would 
i touch helpfully every phase of 
life and education in the 
A school of this sort In a 
ought to greatly improve agricultural 
i and rural conditions in this 
These schools are not 
They are most successful 
operation in Wisconsin and other 
States of the middle west. 
Let North Carolina set the pace for 
vie South in the of 
i n to succeed. 
Advertising is salesmanship, but to 
expect it immediate 
la Tue best sales- 
man to try times 
to patiently tor months, to 
i from a or firm 
custom is sought. He first 
inures his goods and firm known, he 
wants of his prospective 
customer, wins confidence and 
finally receives an or- 
possibly a small one at first, 
and is very careful to give full 
faction in every way; then business 
comes easier, but the salesman does 
quit calling on the new customer 
alter the first order, nor does hi 
neglect the oldest customers, for 
that matter. Business is won by con- 
attention and following up, 
u send a salesman or an advertise- 
out once, then stop, is 
nearly like abandoning a stream 
if fish is not landed with first cast 
of the fly or baited hook. 
brings attention, consideration, 
good will, Inquiries, and it is up to 
seller to make good and keep 
advertising. Every time an advertise- 
stopped, the advertiser stands 
a chance to lose on the investment 
already made In 
Printer Journalist. 
Most of the hot air people band 
you is. merely cold air warmed 
over. 
s I
rm 
I I Mill
Tin- Horn and Farm The Batten Reflector. 
JURORS FOR H 
Drawn ;. The Board of Com 
M twin, beginning 
SOUTH WIS HONOR 
of and Mrs, . L. of 
Awarded Scholarship 
On last Friday, February Mr. 
,; ,; P. Cobb, Barn- Ma Bobbins Long of Statesville was 
D. T. House, W. S. . o scholarship to advance 
Buck. Harvey Mills, 
on, Tucker, W. 
H J. A. Briley, H. 
g; D. C. Beach, w. B. Ran- 
W. H. Whichard, J. P. Daven- 
port. W. u. Crawford, J. L. 
For the March term beginning 
March U. Stocks. J. A. Smith, 
H. W. J. R. Cannon. Wm, 
Peel, S. M, Crisp. Matthew Boykin, E. 
W. E. Barrett, Oscar 
Tucker, W. G. Atkinson, L. M. 
age, R. L. Smith, J. r. Ashley 
La id, award 
id co erred as a tribute to it and 
i achieved in his 
in portraiture, without 
and without application on bis part 
fur the award, is conferred so 
that ho is at liberty to seek his own 
or teachers-abroad and spend 
two years in pursuit of his stud 
It carries with it allowance 
It is the first distinction of 
tho kind awarded Southern artist 
May last Mr. Lour finished the 
Whichard, O. A. Johnson, L. H. the Art Students L of 
. i. Stokes. York and has since then been 
I th April term beginning 
M. Smith. C. D. Smith, 
T. S. L. Ward, A. B. II. A. 
pursuing his work in his studio in 
Statesville, preparatory to going to 
Europe to his course. He 
Gray, Abram Dixon, L. S. Edwards, accepted the scholar i and win 
J. U. Fred months, after completing 
Cox, o. Johnston. J. s. in which he is now 
Hart, J. A. Lang, S. May, S. K. enter one the famous 
J in. . F. Frank Lilly, I abroad. 
A. S. SI . B. Carroll. Z. V. Lot- Mr. i is the only living son 
tin. W. c. H. A. Pierce, E. and Mrs. Benjamin . Long, 
David B. He was formerly a 
Turnage, J, R. j. a, Andrews, of Homers and at Davidson 
F. A. Patrick, Frank Wilson. College. Ho early gave evidence of 
C mo tn has more tips 
v now, while you are 
making you Might to he then 
when the come you will have 
something to fail back 
Where is the you have been 
earning all tin e years You spent it 
and somebody put it in the hank. 
don't you ; your own money in 
the hank for If- why let the other 
fellow save n ha you i 
BE 
AND 
START A BANK ACCOUNT 
with 
Wm. Tyson, G. T. Evans. 
W. J. Q. 
C. I-. 
For the term beginning May 1st 
Smith, . H. Cobb. Lewis High 
L. L. Word. I. R. 
I Edwards, Cannon, Reuben 
r J, W. E. 
C. A. P. T. 
Anthony, J. J. Jenkins, B. E. 
A. Evans, W. 
A. Caraway. 
hidden 
Natalie ;,,. Timely That 
Can 
ford t Ignore, 
DANGER SIGNAL NO. comes 
They 
will warn -ii when tho kidneys are Aid u. i . 
An Old Idea 
artistic talent which soon so 
that he i , . 
to make it his life work. Since 
that lime has devoted his 
exclusively to it, with what splendid 
results the signal honor Just won 
serves to indicate Not he 
natural talent and is 
already finely he is pas- 
his art and 
all his attention to Its mastery, 
with an inter. t. and an ii 
which arc unflagging. His hundreds 
of personal friends and those of 
family feel a keen pride in his 
achievements and a confident belief 
the future holds even b 
in store for 
Observer. 
THE NATIONAL DANK 
of N. C. 
F. G. JAMES, Pros. F. J. FORBES, Cashier 
-Ti 
-I 
How About Your Home 
Is it comfortably furnished If not would find it in 
foresting to visit our store and look over our stock of 
FURNITURE and FURNISHINGS. 
Everything- needed from Parlor to Kitchen at prices 
I that will make you sit up and take notice.
clear, 
kidneys out 
Bad 
foamy, or a thick I A Elector brings 
full of paragraph from the 
of 
A dark 
am 
thin, 
d, 
ti id ;. regular of 
SIGNAL NO. com 
J. H. BOYD, JR. 
i.
pains, a 
acute, toll you I 
,,; the . of dropsy, 
disease. Kid- i 
Pills help sick Here's 
. ii;.; j 
g Green- 
X. C, i am certain that 
Kl Pills are a remedy of 
; d I ii i not hesitate to re- 
them. I 
he, i in my kid- 
of kidney 
trouble, I cot a supply 
of Kidney from the John 
L. Drug Co. It did net take. 
them long to bring mo 
by all dealers. Price DO 
Cl, 
ind African descent, was 
looked the Mitchell, 
do yon think of woman 
rage 
The old meditated a mo- 
and then l tell 
you, it terrible, it's bad enough for 
a man to suffer, but it's worse for 
t to 
for the United 
the 
no other. 
Far Ton 
pay any man 
to 
it actually cost
decline 
For the week ending the Chat- 
Tradesman the fol- 
lowing new Industries established in 
North 
Improvement 
company. 
I cotton gin. 
Morgan realty com- 
D. 
he no company. 
St. hardware com- 
Lank. 
furniture 
Carolina School
Spring and Simmer Courses for Teachers 
1911 Spring Term, March 14th to May weeks. Sum- 
mer Term, June to July eight weeks. 
aim of the m to 
FOll 
Text Those used In the public schools of the Slate 
e'er further information, address, 
II. Pres 
X. c.
Company 
SELL INSURANCE 
Mn 
Monday Tho t 
u woods and run n 
FOR THE 
Central Life Insurance Co.
The Carolina Home and Farm Eastern Reflector. 
Bat a to Cure Catarrh. 
How many readers of tho Reflector 
now that in Inland Australia where 
mightiest of eucalyptus 
row in abundance, that there is no 
catarrh or disease of 
respiratory tract. 
The refreshing balsam thrown out 
W these trees fills the air and is 
into the lungs by the 
and all germ life is destroyed. 
if you have catarrh you cannot go 
j Inland Australia except at great 
but you can breath right in 
own home the same pleasant, 
healing, germ killing air 
on if were living 
. die eucalyptus of 
Just breathe it is made 
om eucalyptus and 
combined with and 
antiseptics employed in the 
system. 
Pour a few drops of in the 
and breathe It. As it passes 
the catarrh infected membrane 
kills the germs and heals the raw, 
surface. 
is guaranteed to cure ca- 
coughs, colds, croup and sore 
or money back. Complete 
including Inhaler Extra 
of cost but cents, 
old by Coward Wooten and drug- 
everywhere. 2,17,27-3,10 
COST OF ROADS IN 
FRANKLIN COUNTY 
Marriage Licenses. 
During the past week Register of 
Moore has issued licenses to 
following 
John H. and Pattie Norris. 
J. O. Cannon and Clemmie Smith. 
Jesse Stancill and Clark. 
Barnes and Margaret Parker. 
W. M. Peyton and Rosa Lee Gil- 
S. W. Harper and Helen King. 
Sam Coward and Sparta Edwards. 
Tortured for Tears,. 
By a cure-defying stomach 
that baffled doctors, and resisted 
remedies he tried, John M. Mod- 
of Mich., seem- 
d doomed. Ho had to sell his farm 
give up work. His neighbors 
aid, can't live much 
Whatever I ate distressed he 
I tried Electric Bitters, 
worked such wonders for me 
hat I can now eat things I could 
take for years. Its surely a 
rand remedy for stomach 
as good for the liver and kid- 
Every bottle guaranteed. Only 
at all druggists. 
Who The Tariff Helps. 
A Chicago man bought a barrel of 
the other day, paying there- 
or When he opened the bar- 
el the first thing he saw was a note, 
was paid for 
apples; how much did you 
And there you are. And yet 
he G. O. P. says the poor farmer is 
n danger of being ruined by 
Last fall the price 
t beef on the hoof fell twenty per 
At the same time the retail 
to small consumer went up 
ten per cent. Cut down the tar- 
ff bars and see what happens. It is 
lot the producer who is going to get 
but the middle man. That's 
he is 
You have, to want more than you 
to get what you want. 
No man has failed until he was 
to admit it himself. 
Built There Per 
Bo as Well or Better. 
To give a little idea of tho result 
of the road building in 
township, Franklin county, Mr. A. H. 
of sent Mr. U. A. 
White some photographs of the new 
that show just what they are 
mom 
in t-e road; 
j. Mr. I 
executive committee baa 
mil t work 
is be worked, name 
is 
the toad 
road is to Tue route is settled 
entirely by 
of people along old roads 
being given duo 
engineer is the man our commit- 
tee follows and upholds to tho letter. 
Relative to the actual work in build- 
roads, our superintendent is 
the man who stays on the job and 
does the 
Again Mr. Vann are ex- 
proud of the work done up 
for we believe that nobody has 
better roads, and as a matter of 
nobody is building them 
for less money. Our per mile, in- 
everything for finished road, 
is about 
These roads can be built in Pitt 
county fully as cheap, if not cheaper 
than in Franklin county, as this sect- 
ion is more level and therefore less 
grading and re-locating will be re- 
quired. 
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad 
SCHEDULES 
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green- 
ville, and Kinston. Effective November 1st, 1910. 
Ar. 
Ar. 
Ar. 
am. 
i ; 
Drives Distress From Upset Stomach 
in Five Minutes. 
tablets not only 
cure indigestion but build up the en- 
tire system and make weak and 
frail strong and vigorous. They are 
guaranteed to do so by Coward 
Wooten. 
They cause the glow of health to 
appear in the cheeks and make 
eyes bright and sparkling. chase 
out bad blood and cause pimples and 
sallow skin to disappear. 
stomach tablets arc such 
wonderful stomach and 
that they are sold under 
an agreement to return your money 
if they do not cure indigestion or any 
other trouble arising from an upset 
stomach, such as biliousness, sick 
headache, dizziness, loss of appetite, 
fermentation, nervousness, sleepless- 
nightmare, etc. 
And only cents a large box at 
Coward Wooten's, and druggists 
everywhere. 
trouble had bothered me 
a long time, and though I doctored 
and used several remedies, there was 
no cure given me until I used MI- 
I used to feel weak, bloodless and 
depressed, but built up my 
health and made mo 
J. Newton, Mich. 
2,14,23-3,7 
Business Change. 
Mr. M. H. has sold his 
grocery business to Mr. W. A. Teel, 
and the latter has moved his own 
stock to-the building occupied by the 
former, combining the two. 
Even food for thought appears to 
be adulterated. 
Ar. 
Ar. 
Norfolk 
Hobgood 
Washington 
Plymouth 
Greenville 
Kinston 
For further information, address nearest ticket 
agent or W. WARD, Ticket Agent Green- 
ville, N. C. 
W. J. P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, Gr. P. A. 
WILMINGTON, N. C. 
. . 
See That Your Ticket Reads 
via 
CHESAPEAKE LINE 
To Baltimore 
ELEGANTLY APPOINTED STEAMERS 
PERFECT DINING SERVICE ALL OUTSIDE STATEROOMS 
Steamers leave Norfolk daily 6.15 p. m. from 
of Jackson st., arrive Baltimore at 7.00 a. m. Direct connection 
with rail lines tor all further particulars call 
or write 
F. R. LiN, T. P. A., st, Norfolk, Va
J. S. MOORING 
General Merchandise 
Buyer of Count J Produce 
FIVE N C. 
Hoofing and Sheet Metal Work. 
Slate 
in 
Tm Repair Work, and i r i u i u o 
S see j J L R I Ii O f 
N. C.
C, T. MUM FORD'S 
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY 
BOWEN 
Greenville C. 
Advertise with us
mm
I Carolina Borne and Pans and The Eastern H Hector, 
Tl-e Ha and Farm end The
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT 
IN CHARGE OF PAUL N.
B Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Fa 
Eastern Reflector for vicinity 
Advertising Rates en Application 
V. 
Fob. Mr. Roy Cox is in Raleigh visit- 
School celebrated friends. 
day Friday by Mr. Haul Taylor, of Kinston, an 
following old student of Winterville H 
school, spent Friday night in town 
by Clara with friends. 
Harper. Fifty barbecue and stock pigs for 
Charles by G. Cox Manufacturing Com- 
Chapman. 
S by a Mr. A. Sharp wont to Green- 
Lizzie Saturday morning 
b . of D. v a g Cox Co 
I by Miss Lillie res to purchase twenty 
-Normal and Industrial Col- wood can 
. Davenport, runs. 
Carolina, by Miss buy your raw hat. before 
Dr. II, by 
. Royal i is, 
. North 
C. H, b- 
r Carroll 
For 
ii Evelyn Button, who has 
, aunt, Mrs. Susan Jack 
Forest returned 
v. 
Lizzie Fannie Earl. 
d Doughty, left for 
. Oak City, 
i read and 
our rabbet roofing from liar 
Barber Company 
, Barber Company arc 
rolling tao harrow, the 
is, any to weed with. 
LI. and Mi. 
were in 
evening 
Mr. E Proctor, of 
M. vi Norfolk. 
who have been visiting Mrs. B. F. 
left tor their homes Friday 
Mr. Jesse of 
. in town yesterday evening on 
business. 
Julia loft tor her 
home I- Friday evening to 
Bread Saturday and Sunday, 
If need your horse 
. Co. Manufacturing Com- 
has employed a specialist for 
and lie will you 
r their factory. Try his work, 
J;. w. of 
will la the Baptist church 
Tuesday evening, February St, 
seven o'clock. will also 
Of 
School, Wednesday morning in 
Winterville 
of 
land, is Visiting her aunt, Miss
Satterthwaite went to 
tor home near to 
Saturday mid Sunday. 
A; G. Cox is having his 
re-painted. 
Roy d. E. 
. J, 
on 
a. has just 
; in a n o line of 
your to the beautiful 
in window, 
and Berry Nichols 
in town Friday visiting 
v. .-. Co- The; 
. complete line, ; w invite 
i a look, 
and I. . i 
Ms. Nancy Carrie Smith 
most at a 
, reception Tuesday evening 
honor of Pi . 
Forbes, of Greenville. 
The were received at the 
by hostess and of 
or. 
.-ore Invited into the 
plays were very much 
A . of the . 
ac 
cat in two pieces, Too writ- 
them wag o 
matched 
hearts were Invited into the 
room where they at enjoyed a 
feast. Tl o dining room 
beautifully decorated in green 
ad white. 
On leaving the room 
into the ball 
was apple 
bit the apple without 
it with their hands. Mr, 
Everett the prize a 
After the was awarded each 
they had never a 
evening and 
to their respective 
Winterville, N. C, Feb. 
Taylor, who hi ct 
X Roads, spent Saturday 
and Sunday with Mies Dora 
Cox. 
Mr. J. B, Is 
Dick-taking a 
cine. 
Company arc 
fall now 
for- cash. Some good bargains 
you. 
Dock and 
went to 
night. 
cur line of pants, they go 
ii g cheap while they 
r . 
We ore t- 
hon t 
ii A at , 
. 
M. A; 
appointment in the 
t, H-i 
preached on to 
rap 
at A, A 
. ; ens ton, 
th in 
for some 
. .-. 
. r. ;. c i 
Mi; Li i Ti 
of Hie arc Miss b 
J . on. 
wen mi i. 
to. i y . i ii the; all 
a few to , i 
of the store. 
M s Addle Copeland ., i i 
night and Sunday VI-
Mr. j. bullock, of 
in town Sunday. 
boys of Winterville in 
good , they In got to bi 
eggs in the bank with Si. i's 
mi water. 
Helen Sm and Cox 
to yesterday 
Mr. C. T Cox have Rune, bus 
e a a g ii toward i 
Mr. J. S. of w, , I
i U. IV, of 
s announced, . 
Baptist on Tuesday 
lug i ck i i Sunday School 
K I id stress the
. L was acquired b; 
. book on. the there- 
by getting the ; e 
of second, by 
address was 
o a training 
numbering about He 
will address the students of Winter- 
lie High School Wednesday morn- 
A Heine Wedding Tuesday 
the Urn Makers 
i I 
To road 
of g in 
Mr. T. M. which was to 
place the Memorial 
Tuesday afternoon 
at q of the illness of Mr. 
Hooker, a brother of the 
was the home 
the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
ii. A. Tyson on Dickinson avenue. 
ii Tuesday at nine o'clock, 
present to witness the 
ceremony only the families of the 
bride and those who had 
i asked to take part in the 
i was 
I through the 
ceremony was perform 
lite and green. 
were North Caroling 
. , the 
Cart of To appropriate 
to pay off debt of 
Carr of To provide h 
stones at graves of Confederate sol- 
Idlers at Raleigh. 
tore 
cU 
. C, Fe . 21.- 
i who Is going to 
Ayden Sunday he 
i.; . on Wall street, 
Outlaw, arid Aldridge 
Saturday night the 
Sadie Causey and Lillian 
tn of Miss Etta 
V Saturday Sunday. 
was a light largo crowd at 
Riverside Sunday 
morning, everybody is invited to 
Telephone Directory. 
arc nor compiling our now 
directory, and have a 
amount of advertising space for 
sale, 
all patties 
plating having a telephone Installed, 
to give, their orders at once, to insure 
their names being properly listed. 
To secure advertising space or tel- 
. the manager. 
HOME TELEPHONE TEL. CO.-
Taken thirty 
our well equipped Machine Shops 
and learn the Automobile business 
and accept good 
CHARLOTTE SCHOOL, 
me entrance 
bridal 
V was 
sweetest 
en ii.-i the notes of 
march pealed forth 
skillful of Miss 
on, the bridal party 
e following Dr. J. C. 
Wilson, who performed the 
Then the two maids of 
Misses Pattie Wooten and 
Leonard Tyson, wearing white 
chiffon dresses and carrying 
can beauty roses. Then the groom 
entered on arm of brother, 
Mr, Will Hooker, and then came the 
always lovely but never more 
than on her wedding day, 
gowned in an exquisite lace rose over 
in, elaborately trimmed with seed 
and the used on her 
grandmother's also wearing 
e slippers her grandmother ff 
a ago. Her veil was .-.-- 
with a wreath of of the valley 
eke carried a shower bouquet 
of bride roses and of the val- 
W. L. Hall, the dame of 
or, entered with the bride. She 
o o white and car- 
American beauty roses. 
A very informal reception was 
for d time at which 
were served by 
Ward Which- 
Mai tic Move King, King 
and Chi Tyson. 
Many handsome presents attest the 
popularity of the contracting parties, 
among these being a of silver, 
cut glass, and brass. 
D;
i;. i 
a.; 
or i 
. II. C. Hyatt will in Green- 
t Hotel s, March 2nd 
and the 
i boating of the 
. I SEED, KINDS 
ii 
a V. Johnston. 
e is 
From the Bad 
The Greenville Reflector tells 
other articles of food come 
down in keeping with the drop in 
living will not be so The 
trouble that when egg. drop they 
break their shell and make a muss 
of it. There is no for good 
fresh eggs that drop; but there la 
one to get away when an egg of a 
bad character drops in a community. 
Durham Sun. 
Arthur. 
the 
i tum 
to Mrs. 
Ayden, destroyed by fire. The 
. . occupied by a Mr. Turn- 
who lost all of his furniture 
without insurance. There was 
. on the with 
on the question of i. bond 
for roads, passed Its final 
i ail ; 
l number of new bills were 
all i 
nature. The exceptions w 
To amend the of 
. . -r and define 
funds the 
. ; led
. elating 
death. 
 To air the 1-1 I 
1907-1 . 
To amend the food law of 
ii 
To for ; 
th relief 
i To i all ex-C in- 
iV U rate and their 
. . 
The senate took all toe 
. ,. day's session In throughout the 
bill to appoint a To prohibit the 
State building commission and
an-J home at per 
The senate 
flood of mo th. 
petitions against the sale of near-beer 
and against liquor in clubs. g to 
Senator bill to provide the schools. 
land title system was report- 
me committee on 
the that it go 
I om judiciary. This 
on fees 
a substitute in- 
Pour a few and 
I aDd were among tie new 
the 
kills th. Provide 
f of school i 
In towns having 
or over; 
of Guilford by 
in prostitution of women and 
bawdy houses. 
by Relative to re- 
from weight In price cf 
for bagging and 
Armstrong En-j 
of wood alee-1 
Martin of Establish 
. g a bond issue 
building. 
, T tore were several speeches both 
for ;., . the bill, and 
To amend t ;, 
. proposed 
of bonds to 
-s wanted to cut the 
in any ball Iii 
grounds on the Sabbath. 
To provide for the I 
Carolina 
To repeal of 
1809, regarding is. 
Tn impose 
corporations doing In this 
State. 
of the new bills Introduced to To require officers and 
T e bill to . SI farm-life of corporations doing a 
also came up as a special to be 
i . brought rut much discus-1 
protect fish 
commission 
of the state; 
Among the new bills introduced 
the 
To fix the salary the 
court justices. 
To appropriate 
addition to present 
of To secure 
Che more accurate listing of incomes 
Bin excess of 
To amend the 
lien law of 
To assist farmers by co- 
operative field experiments. 
Dough To establish a 
reference library 
To prevent carrying of vis-; 
of Belling same, except to 
m of a 
., . to appoint state tax 1- 
of Authorize 
of close of in- 
persons state hospital for the 
Insane; also provide for 
v -v of Sunday as a day 
; by railroad 
; hi preventing spread of hog 
cholera In North Carolina. 
of Brunswick re- 
peanut growers In 
Carolina. 
of Relative to 
text-book commission; also 
d parts of public school law. 
of Regulate 
ii g insurance 
were among the new 
bills 
inn 
To Incorporate the Free 
Baptist Seminary of 
den. 
i To amend the law of 1909 
making appropriations to state 
To encourage the early 
of 
Carr of To amend the 
relating to practice of dentistry 
To amend the charter 
of Orphanage. 
Increase the 
of old soldiers to
had much work do,
of the 
To authorize counties to Suet 
bonds for road construction. 
The bill, 
the appointment of a bu 
commission and g 
bond to . 
state administration g 
Raleigh was report. 
the joint committee on , 
lions and made a order I j 
text Wednesday at o'clock. 
Many bins had previous 
passed were ratified, and others ad- 
on their reading. 
Among the new bills were ; 
v.-o of general Importance. The; 
of 
ate Industrial and Manual 
graining School Colored 
Sikes of Increase state 
as for schools cents on the 
of property; also relative to 
lead bodies for medical schools. 
Committees made unfavorable re 
to allow 
o issue road construction bonds; 
the union label on 
and-to prohibit the 
ind sale of pistols and 
by officers. 
bills to allow the people to 
The senate 
only ;. new bills were 
none of in being of mi ch 
lance. me of th re. 
-good of Prohibit ; 
In North Carolina j 
and ah ex- 
ten i lime for is for 
th caused by negligence or wrong- 
of another. 
of Appropriate 
for Deaf and Dumb Institute; 
. -How Deaf and Dumb Institute 
, , Improvements, 
of In 
j clerk in state auditor's 
I or R quire to 
r. in public 
The house had a busy day with 
committee reports and the 
of bills. Some of new bills 
Dill rd of 
the governor to take necessary action 
I to settle disputed boundary line 
North Carolina dud Tennessee. 
T of Hertford To change 
of Baptist Female 
Ir. to College. 
To prevent sale of 
and cartridges to minors. 
, of To a state 
co mission and a state board of 
Ion of taxes. 
To end the divorce 
la . 
of To increase 
of employees of state 
I ital ii 
u. To protect the public 
against drunkenness and profanity. 
To make prohibition 
effective
The farm life school bill came up 
again by special order the aerate 
. ; ti ; discussion 
,. ; second reading. The bill 
pro- for --i appropriation or 
by state for the establish- 
or . these schools in any 
county ill provide a 
,; was i in the 
j ;. ;. the road elect- 
;. township, Pitt county 
; and ordered
up as 
ii . 
t; . 
of taxes 
on bank u 
the corporation has become 
solvent, to the r or seller for 
the proceeds of produce and 
property handled by said 
ration as agent 
The senate had a long session on 
practically local The only 
new bills that had interest 
of a locality was one to in- 
corporate the Educational 
and Co-operative Union of North Car- 
The bill to permit Greenville town- 
ship to vote on the question of is- 
suing bonds to build good roads, 
having passed its readings, 
ratified. 
The Cotten bill, to the 
Torrens land-title system his 
request, made order for 
Wednesday noon. 
bill 
. order and was 
. among new bills 
favorable report was made 
bills to establish a school or 
j for the feeble-minded, and 
provide the examination of 
at school, both of these I ills 
to the comm on 
Eons. 
These were some of the bills in- 
Carr of To pay off the 
of the Home and 
r I s sup or. 
Williams To amain 
he charter of the Grand Lodge. . 
distribution personal . p-
Provide for enlargement 
of Eastern Carolina 
Correct fee simple deeds 
f P. 
stale 
ors for the counties and define 
duties. 
To create the North Caro-l 
.-.  tenant's. 
any county to 
. . to the 
school fund. 
; of word 
for the purpose of procuring 
nth ; also in 
in and ear- 
i. 
There were a large number of com- 
e reports, come favorable and 
tome unfavorable, and a number of 
tit ma matters 
,. re , There was also a 
1.0 new Mils, those of general 
i . ii g 
This Item by way of 
in the Raleigh News and 
The senate, though 
three hours, was busy almost entire- 
with local measure.;. Most of ,; 
were what Reading Clerk Squires re- 
to as bills, or 
All opossums, mil 
rabbits, from Sleepy Hollow to Hang- 
Dog, were, put under the ; 
law. The calendar was cleared 
great majority of small mat- 
and is predicted i-. 
week l-e one of 
much general interest.
The put in several h u R 
of hard work, but U was m 
One till l 
its final reading was to put- 
ting stripes on 
for 
Another new bill v . in- 
i he selected 
the new county II established b 
Jarvis, the territory to be 
within the bounds being .;, 
Wilson, 
counties. 
No bills of i 
Introduced.
Th s Cobb ii g 
life y its 
gs in tao ate 
in any mate; particular 
bill provides for such 
count 
year, a like sum to be 
by the State, but not in v 
ha . ton to be In 
year. 
administration also 
passed final reading and was Bent to 
the house. Only eight senators were 
against it. 
Senator Introduced a bill 
bond Issue of 
to make permanent Improvements 
To amend the j the University, Norm- 
to to evidence. and Industrial College, and 
To amend the on page 
POOR PRINT
in 
The Carolina and and The Eastern Reflector. 
To Carolina and Pans and The Eastern 
OF ROADS 
i this 
Some people talk of sand-clay roads 
as if they were yet only in an ex- 
Stag and their 
known. The government has been 
making tests of constructing roads of 
Hand and clay, and Farmers Bulletin 
No. prepared by Mr. W. L. Spoon, 
road export and issued by the 
States department of agriculture, 
the estimated cost of the con- 
of this character of roads 
and their use. From that bulletin 
we take those 
According to the experience of this 
the cost of sand-clay 
in the South has been found to 
range from to per mile, 
most cases running from to 
A sand-clay road constructed 
under the direction of the office at 
Gainesville, Fla., in length- 
feet wide, and having a 9-inch sand- 
clay surface, cost per mile, 
or cents per square yard. 
sand-clay road built under the 
of the office at Tallahassee, 
Fla., feet wide and surfaced with 
about Inches of sand-clay mixture, 
cost per mile, or about cents 
per square yard. In case changes of 
grade have to be made with 
cuts and fills, the cost would 
be proportionally greater than the 
figures given above. There can be 
no question, however, that under all 
circumstances this form of 
is cheaper than macadam. 
The possibilities of the sand-clay 
road may not be fully realized by the 
public for a long time to come, still 
tho progress being made in this form 
of road building in nearly every part 
of the country is encouraging. Such 
benefits as have come to Richland 
county. S. C, Pike county, Ala., Dal- 
las county, Ala., Cumberland county, 
N. and many other sections 
throughout the Atlantic and Gulf 
States from the use of sand-clay 
roads should be a 
for a general study of the sub- 
those parts of the country 
where these materials exist in 
quantities. 
Sand and clay had always been 
abundant in Pike county, Ala., still 
a combination of the two for road 
purposes was not thought of until 
four years ago. At the present time 
there are nearly miles of sand- 
clay road in this county, which for 
all practical purposes, are as useful 
us macadam roads, and which have 
about of the amount 
standard macadam of the same or 
less width would have cost in this 
section. With this system the re- 
section of the county may be 
reached, which would not be the case 
had fewer and more expensive roads 
Been attempted. At the present rate 
of Improvement every important pub- 
road in this county will soon be 
a serviceable highway, over which a 
wagon loaded with six bales of cot- 
ton may be drawn easily and quick- 
whereas, before tho improvement 
began, only small loads were 
It la Important that success like 
this be given wide publicity 
bee. It carries with it method as 
encouragement. The first 
g done in this locality was to 
f which of the clays accessible 
would make a good road. After this 
important matter had been decided, 
bonds were issued to raise money to 
equipment. This comprised eight 
to 
each, wagons, plows, scrapers, and 
hand tools. 
The extent to which this form of 
road construction can used In pub- 
road improvement throughout the 
country can hardly be overestimated. 
In making small repairs to roads, if, 
instead of filling with brush, 
a few loads of sand or gravel from 
sand bars and gravel beds found along 
the streams in hilly portions of the 
country were hauled to the road, 
permanent improvement would re- 
It has been found that this kind 
of road Is admirably suited to the 
northwestern part of tho country as 
well as to the southern, and it is 
believed that, it will be found worthy 
of more general study than it has 
ever received heretofore. Its study 
should be of Interest to the public 
schools in the rural districts of the 
country. If school boys were en- 
to make a sand-clay walk 
to the school house, the 
task of keeping a clean school build- 
would be sufficiently lessened to 
make up for tho time to interest 
NO. 
the boys. Besides this actual 
a lasting benefit would be 
given to that community from this 
simple study of a valuable process. 
For a large part of the country, the 
sand-clay road is the only road 
or within the reach of tho rural 
districts. It requires less money to 
build than any other typo of road 
except the earth road and loss money 
to repair. It is simpler in its con- 
than any other except the 
earth road, and lasts longer with the 
same amount of repair. 
ANSWERING QUESTIONS. 
Missouri n. R. Agents Must Answer 
Questions. 
There is a bill before 
legislature which makes it a mis- 
demeanor for a railroad agent to 
refuse to answer a civil question; 
meaning probably an uncivil answer 
to a civil question. It would so 
hard to such a law that it 
would be better not to have it at 
all. But the bill doubtless has its 
origin In a situation. There 
are many, many uncivil answers to 
questions asked by the traveling pub- 
Many of them are no doubt so 
simple and unnecessary as to arouse 
the Impatience of the agent and so 
he sputters out a swift and 
factory answer. One cannot alto- 
blame him, for we would all 
do about as ho does if we were in 
his place. 
But this, of course, is no excuse. 
The Bible somewhere commends those 
who are easily and 
so the spirit of gentility and kindness 
should ever be on its guard against 
those who attack, it with Ignorant 
and thoughtless questions. And 
then It Is really a great pleasure, 
even in moments of provocation to 
be serene, kindly and submissive. And 
it should also be remembered that 
many people travel so little that 
when they do stray from home they 
are so suspicious of their own 
edge and ability that they reach out 
for support in every direction. They 
are entitled to consideration. They 
should be tenderly cared 
Journal. 
first Class 
Farm Implements 
You save Labor, Time and 
Money when you buy 
that wear well and work 
well. The kind that we tell. 
We issue one of the best and 
most complete of Farm 
Catalogs. It gives prices, 
descriptions and much interest- 
information. Mailed free upon 
request. 
are headquarters for 
V. Crimp and other Roofing, Wire 
Fencing. Barb Wire, Poultry 
Netting, etc. 
Write for Descriptive Catalog and 
prices on any supplies or Farm 
you require. 
The Implement Co. 
1302 East Main St., 
RICHMOND, . . VIRGINIA. 
SAVING BOYS.
S M 
Wholesale and retail Grocer am 
j furniture dealer. Cash paid 
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Barrels 
Turkeys, Oak Bedsteads, Mat- 
creases, etc. Suits, Baby Carriages 
Go-Car ts. Parlor Suits, Tables 
Lounges Safes, P. and Gail 
ft Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key 
Henry George Ci- 
gars, Canned Cherries, Peaches, 
Syrup, Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar 
Soap. Lye, Magic Food. Mat- 
Oil Cotton Meal and Hulls, 
Seeds Oranges, Apples, 
Gaudies. Dried Apples, Peaches 
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass
and Crackers, Cheese 
Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma- 
numerous other 
and for cash. 
to toe, me. 
Number 
S M 
Engraved Wedding Invitation. 
The Reflector Company carries a 
full Hue of samples of engraved wed- 
ding invitations and announcement. 
ad visiting cards and can fill orders 
promptly. Samples ho seen at 
Public Schools to Make Contribution 
to Bill Nye Memorial. 
At a time when the questions of 
juvenile reformatories and juvenile 
police courts are being discussed 
all sections of the State, the appeal 
of the Jackson Training 
School, through the Nye memorial 
committee, should carry some force 
to the hearts of thinking men and 
women. It is not a matter of 
knowledge that the Stonewall 
Jackson Training school is doing one 
f the noblest works that human 
hands can salvation of the 
young and growing boy. It stands 
as a bulwark between him and the 
devil; it saves him from the 
which is born of association 
with adult criminals. The Stonewall 
Jackson Training school is giving to 
the State a clean and upright citizen 
every time it turns out a finished 
And somehow we believe that 
when the Almighty shall come to 
reckon up tho good deeds of men 
He will carefully consider the man 
or woman who has stretched out his 
or her hand to save a boy from 
shame and misery. 
And we too that every fa- 
whose hoy is still living will feel 
his pulses beat quicker, and will 
swell the contribution of his 
on Nye which 
curs next Wednesday. As has been 
repeatedly stated, the children of 
the public schools throughout the 
State will on that day contribute one 
penny or more to the Bill Nye 
fund, a fund which is being 
raised to build a memorial building 
rt the Stonewall Jackson Training 
for boys. Apart from the 
honor accorded the memory of North 
Carolina's adopted son, who 
help this fund are providing an ad- 
building for the training 
school at Concord. 
From all reports the school 
arc enthusiastic in the cause 
and we entertain the hope that the 
will take a largo part in the 
glorious work. Asheville Citizen. 
C. L. 
Why not take a trip to FLORIDA 
or CUBA They have been brought 
within easy reach of the splendid 
through train service of the 
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD 
Write for booklets, rates or any 
other information, which will be 
cheerfully furnished. 
T. C. WHITE, 
General Passenger Agent, 
WILMINGTON. N. C. 
Stray Taken Up. 
I have taken up one stray yearling, 
red color, about one year old, up- 
marked. Owner can get same by 
ownership and paying 
charges. 
C. E. FLEMING, 
R. F. D. N. C.
Central Barbershop 
HERBERT EDMONDS 
Proprietor 
Located in business of town. 
Four chair- in operation ard etch 
one presided by a bar- 
I her. L die waived t their home. 
No one's ever drove him 
to bankruptcy; it is his friends that 
do that. 
WOOD'S SELECTED 
Seed Potatoes 
We are headquarters for 
the best 
Maine-grown, Second 
Crop Northern- 
grown Seed Potatoes; 
stocks selected and grown 
specially for seed purposes, 
and superior both in quality 
and productiveness. 
Wood's New d e 
Seed Catalog 
and information as to the 
best and most profitable kinds 
to plant, both for early and 
main crop. 
Write for prices and Descriptive 
Catalog, mailed free on request. 
T. W WOOD SONS 
Richmond, Va. 
Legal Notices 
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND. 
State of North Carolina, 
Pitt county. 
We. Robert Brown and S. S. Smith. 
enter and claim a certain piece or 
parcel of land situated Greenville 
township, Pitt county, beginning at 
H. L. Coward's. Willoughby's 
and Lang's coiner, running south 
with the line to James 
May's corner, with May's line 
to B. B. land, thence with 
line to H. L. Cowards line. 
thence with Coward's line to the 
ginning, containing twenty-live acres, 
more or less. 
This day of February. 1911. 
ROBERT BROWN, 
S. S. SMITH. 
Any and all persons claiming title 
to or interest in the above described 
must file with me their protest 
in writing within the next days or 
they will be barred by law. 
This 16th day of February. 1911. 
If. MOORE, 
Entry Taker. 
ltd 
NOTICE SALE. 
By virtue of a rower of sale con- 
In a certain mortgage deed 
executed to as mortgagee, and 
hearing date January IT. by S 
E. Gainer and wife, Delia Gainer. 
and duly recorded In public reg- 
of Pitt county, in K-C, at 
page to secure the o 
a certain bond therein mentioned 
the stipulations In said 
gage deed not having boon complied 
with, and at the request of I. H. and 
J. Little, assignees of 
Manning, assignee of said mortgage 
i shall, on Tuesday afternoon, at 
o'clock. March 1911, at the court 
house door in Greenville. North 
Carolina, offer at public sale, to the 
highest bidder, for cash, the follow- 
described property, 
Being one house and lot in the 
town of Bethel. N. C. and 
on the corner of West James and 
Pleasant in said town, and be 
ginning on the corner of said street 
thence with Pleasant street yard, 
thence parallel with James street, a 
southerly course yards, thence r 
line parallel with the line 
yards to James street, thence with 
James to the beginning, and 
containing 1-2 acre, more or less. 
This Feb. 
D. COREY. 
I. H. and W. J. LITTLE, 
Punning Smith, -Sty 
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. 
Halving duly qualified before t 
Superior court clerk of Pitt count 
as administrator of the of Per- 
Hathaway,, deceased, notice J 
hereby given to all persons 
to the estate to make Immediate 
to tho undersigned; and c 
persons having claims against 
said estate are notified that th; 
must present the same to the 
signed for t on or before 
17th day of January, 1912, th 
will be plead In bar of 
This 17th day of January, 1911. 
P. C. HARDING, Attorney, 
ABNER 
of 
NOTICE OF 
J M. having Bold bis entire 
in the firm of J. M. Rev- 
heretofore in 
t.--, of N. C. to John 
the firm of J. M. f 
la hereby m- 
h-1 from and 
i-, e i of dissolution the v 
t.-. b. Ml the 
the 
l of J. M f- Co 
owing 
make payment to 
E. Williams and all 
the firm 
-if J M. ore- 
to said John E.
the 27th of 1911. 
w. 
m In Arm o J. M 
continue P 
n the of John E. 
place, and shall be glad 
t the patrons of the former 
Arm me with a continuance of 
their patronage. 
This the 27th of January 1911. 
E WILLIAMS 
H sob entire interest 
in the J. M. Com- 
E. Williams he will 
business In the name 
E. Williams at the same 
d I take cm- 
him to the and 
27th day of T-u-v 
J. M. 
SALE REAL 
By virtue of a power of sale con- 
in a i mortgage deed. 
delivered by M. M. 
Alonso Cherry, M. S. Harvey. 
i J. R. Boyd, William 
S F. Fleming ard Willis Clark. 
of a. M. E. Zion church, of 
lie, N. C. to P. C. Harding. 
, i of 1910. and 
i the office of register 
r i i county, In Book I -9, 
the undersigned, will, on 
the day of March, 1911, 
I , , r noon, expose to 
ale, before the court door In 
,,. , to the highest bidder, 
,, , . the following described 
acts r parcels of land, 
. n the town of Greenville, 
, Carolina, on tho side of 
and west side of 
. lot on said street, known as the 
lot, and on the side of
, rs the Jonah Latham 
; the lot upon which the 
; . building of the A. M. E. Zion 
in the town of Greenville is 
situated, containing 1-4 of an acre, 
more or less. Also one other id in 
aid town of Greenville, and being 
h . i or i- lot which the A. M. 
i- built, and ad- 
; ill- the lot of Boston Boyd on the 
and Reed street on the west and 
1-4 of an acre, more or 
; lb made to satisfy the 
. of said mortgage deed. 
This February 8th. 1911; 
J. T. ALLEN, 
n; Assignee of Mortgage. 
STATE OF NORTH 
CERTIFICATE OP DISSOLUTION 
To All to Whom These en M u 
Come- 
Whereas, It appears to 
faction, by duly authenticated record 
of the proceedings for the 
dissolution thereof the us 
consent of ail the stockholders, de- 
posited In my office, that The 
Lumber Company, a corpora- 
of this State principal 
office Is situated 
in the city of Greenville, o 
Pitt, of North Carolina J. 
Cobb being the agent I i 
in thereof, upon whom pro- 
may be 
with the requirements of Chapter 
of 1905, entitled 
preliminary to the Issuing 
this Certificate of 
Now. Therefore, I J. Bryan Grimes, 
secretary of State of the State of 
North Carolina, do hereby certify 
that the said corporation did, on the 
12th day of December, 1910, file in 
office a duly attested 
consent in writing to the dissolution 
of said corporation, e I by all 
the stockholders thereof, which 
consent and record of tho ; 
aforesaid are now on file In my 
said office as provided by law. 
In Testimony Whereof, I have here- 
to set my hand and affixed my 
seal, at Raleigh, this the 
day of December, A. D. 
J. BRYAN GRIMES, 
Secretary Of Stale. 
n Sale of of 
N is given to the pub- 
c generally, that beginning on 
v.-. the first day of February 
S. Atkins, trustee, will 
; t port and at greatly reduced 
. all of Hie entire stock of 
re and a and goods for- 
-r U- by C. E. Bradley, in 
Greenville; N. C This sale will lie- 
gin Wednesday, February 1st. and 
for days. 
This stock contains a full line of 
and plated silverware, chins 
ind cut glass; a. full line of musical 
goods; a large number of solid gold 
rings and a large assortment of 
Jewelry, both solid and filled 
ordinarily carried la a Jew-
This will be a cash sale but 
greatly reduced, and the 
generally are to 
take adv if the 
bargains 
W. S. ATKINS, Trustee 
MORTGAGEE'S SALE. 
By virtue of authority of a 
deed, to nm by Thomas 
. and V. on 
day of December, and 
recorded in the register's office 
Ly, in i D-9, page 
, the i of a c 
g i date therewith, 
the in said mortgage 
I been complied with, shall 
expose public auction, for cash. 
; Saturday, the 19th day or March, 
at the court house door in 
Greenville, Pitt county, the following 
In Beaver Dam township, lying on 
tittle creek, beginning 
it Adams bridge across said creek, 
running thence with said 
creek to the line between 
e place and the Flanagan place 
the lines of the May 
ace ard Flanagan place to the 
d Snow Hill road; 
r road to Adams 
. ; ;.; containing 
more or less, and being 
May i lace which lies on the 
of tho Greenville and Snow 
. 16th, 1911. 
A. E. TUCKER 
j j. Everett, Mortgagee.
NOTICE. 
virtue of the power of sale 
; in a certain mortgage deed 
and delivered by Edward 
i wife. Adams, 
King, on the 4th of March, 
r.-o recorded In the Re- 
a Deed i office of Pitt county 
.- ;., 
i, Ar- 
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. 
Jennie having this 
day qualified as administratrix of the 
estate of J. R. deceased, 
do hereby notify all persona indebted 
said estate to make immediate 
with me, and notice is here- 
given to persons holding u 
against estate, to hie their said 
claims with the undersigned 
mouths from date hereof, or 
notice will be plead bar Of re- 
This the day of January 
Administratrix of the instate . 
J. R. Deceased 
V. C. HARDING, 
Stray Taken 
have taken one 
light brown with white on 
and forehead, unmarked, j 
my about m a is. 
can same 
dud paying 
II. H. CRAFT, 
R. F. No. Winterville, c
.-I 
,. o the higher 
. the 
. i ., i . . n- 
.- , i State of 
.;,;. ,.;, ,;. as i.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS, 
fetters of admit noon th 
estate of I. S. Owens, deceased, 
this day been issued to the 
by the of 
court of Pitt county, notice Is De-en 
given to all persons holding 
said estate to present t m 
to us for payment on or before th 
13th of February, or t 
notice Will be plead In bar of 
recovery. persona 
said estate are requested to make 
mediate payment to us. 
This the 11th day of 
1911. 
W. D. OWENS, 
J. R. GARDNER, 
Administratrix of the estate 
Blow, 
in 
i lie lands of Alonso Move. 
if. horn, Me aw. 
and containing 
. pin ,. let's, and f- 
tn -M by 
n . to mortgage 
Th's I d iv of 
R. W. KING. 
-.- Blow, 
of I. 
ltd 
SI ray Tali en 
i have taken up a black female 
weight about pounds, in 
condition, marked two slits In 
each ear. Owner can get same by 
lug and paying 
A. 
X. C. 
OF REAL ESTATE. 
. a, 
County. 
By virtue of a power of sale con- 
in a certain mortgage deed ex- 
and by W. H. Smith 
id Smith to F. C. Harding, 
day of January, 1908, and 
in the Register's office 
P County, in book Z-8, page 
. u will on Monday, the 
i If M; toil, at o'clock. 
icon the day of the 
. . in of Pitt county Superior 
. to public sale before 
e Court door In Greenville, 
to the for oath, the 
; d tract or parcel 
land, 
In Pit County, 
v th . I 
the lands of -th. 
i v Company, the lands 
i . . am th, I lands of W. L. 
Smith an Blount Adams, containing 
acres more or less and being the 
or ; reel of land whereon 
.-. ,. i and wife on 
th January, This sale 
;.; made to the terms Bald 
a deed. 
I i ; the of February, 1911. 
. A. WHITE, 
p. C. HARDING, Attorney. 
It 
iii-iV. 
Subscribe lo Th Reflector. 
Lawyers the Only Ones Who ; H 
t The Torrens 
So far as can 
but i to tie 
system of land i 
that objection is the legal 
of North Carolina not . 
; . . but i fall If yon 
haven't i ye r r bi 
and especially State it 
about this matter and let them 
how you feel It, .- n 
busy right after supper might . 
attend to matter without deb 
If you have already written, 
you write few more Hues to I 
them know you prefer t i be i 
with results alter the fl- 
rather than to have so m n 
promises before 
lion The legislature will not be 
In session much longer I what l- 
done must be done 
Labor is that a C- S 
that vault 
else I play.
POOR PRINT
INTERESTING NOTES 
FROM THE UNIVERSITY 
Team Ready to Begin Work 
For The Season. 
Chapel Hill, M. C, Feb. 
Chan. H. Chancey has arrived in 
Chapel Hill and taken charge of the 
tram. His squad is short 
t pitchers. Capt Hackney is the 
only old varsity man who will ho 
out for the team. Coach 
facet a situation, in which bis only 
chance for a winning team is to de- 
a heavy hitting team. He be- 
that the best defense is a good 
offense and his Intention is to put 
out a team whose marked character 
is aggressiveness. 
The sermon for 
Hug delivered Sunday Rev. 
R. L. Patterson of the Lutheran 
church, of Charlotte. Dr. Patterson 
is one of the ablest preachers In North 
Carolina and his sermon was in 
respect of his ability. 
The Mitchell Scientific Society 
met in the chemistry building last 
Tuesday night. Papers were present- 
ed by Dr. and Dr. 
The annual mission study rally 
the auspices of the Y. M. C. A., 
was held in Gerrard hall 
night. The principal address was 
made Mr. W. A. mission- 
on furlough from the 
and traveling secretary of tho inter- 
national committee of the Y. M. C. A. 
Mr. has recently visited the 
field where the University's 
Mr. E. E. Barnett, former 
secretary of the Chapel Hill Y. M. 
C. A. is at work. He presented in a 
striking and a courage-inspiring man- 
the call of the field to the 
courageous college man of the pres- 
generation. 
Two courses in Bible study will 
be given during the spring; the one 
on foreign missions by 
Williams, Dr. Minis, and other 
of the faculty and preachers 
of the village, and the Challenge of 
the City by Dr. A. H. Patterson. At 
the meeting Monday night men 
were enrolled and it is expected that 
tho systematic canvass which is be- 
made by the association will re- 
in interesting over men in 
this work. Last spring the classes 
included men. 
Carolina Home and Farm and the Eastern Reflector.
That there is more to a Fertilizer than 
Analysis is proven conclusively the results 
obtained every year from Royster Fertilizer. 
They are made from experience obtained by 
actual field experiments of what the plant 
requires, and not from ready reference 
formulating. 
Every ingredient in Royster Goods is 
selected for its plant food value, and has its 
work to do at the proper time, therefore the 
plant fertilized with ROYSTER goods is fed 
regular from sprouting time until harvest. 
x Ask your dealer for Royster goods and 
I see that the trade-mark is on every bag. 
When you see this you know that 
you are getting the genuine and original 
I ROYSTER Fish Fertilizer. 
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY, 
FACTORIES AND SALES 
NORFOLK. VA. TARBORO. U. C C C. 
BALTIMORE MO. CA S C 
COLUMBUS. MONTGOMERY. ALA 
IN THE COTTON BELT. 
THE BAD BOY AS AN 
About of Arrests In Cities 
are Boys Under Years. 
The State is today taking care of 
tens of thousands of its young men 
after they have become criminals 
when they might have been saved 
from lives of crime by sane, sensible 
and sympathetic interest by the state 
From one-fifth to one- 
fourth of all arrests in cities have 
generally been among under 
years of age and in proportion to 
ages of our population, decades, 
this means that more boys are being 
arrested in cities than any other class 
of citizens, and these boys are mostly 
the criminals of tomorrow, unless 
wisely corrected and protected today. 
The of detecting and convicting 
for a period of years, 
city of Denver, through tho 
courts, was The 
f the people of Denver in 
actual dollars and cents in three 
years under the Juvenile court system 
was more a quarter of a million 
National 
A Larger Acreage of Cotton, Corn and 
Wheat Expected. 
After a dry December and 
there have been fine rains in the 
cotton belt and the New Orleans 
report indicate that a great 
crop of cotton will be planted. That 
paper says that with the approach of 
the time for active operations in the 
fields the absence of sufficient 
became a serious drawback. Far- 
could not properly prepare their 
lands, and it was evident that seed- 
would be useless without 
moisture. During the past week or 
ten there have been quite cop- 
rains and in the drought 
section of Texas there have been 
downpours, which greatly 
changed the aspect of affairs. As a 
result farmers have been encouraged 
to redouble their preparations for the 
season's crops and with anything like 
reasonable weather from now on an 
increased area will undoubtedly be 
planted in cotton, corn, wheat and 
other staples. The recent rains have 
also greatly improved the for 
early vegetables the truck far- 
are consequently happy. 
The high prices which have 
for during the past 
years have undoubtedly 
aged farmers to plant more extensive- 
of that crop than ever before. A 
good cotton crop is needed and Is 
to sell at paying prices even if 
the 15-cent price of the present sea- 
son be not reached. The lesson of 
proper crop diversification has been 
thoroughly learned in the South 
that is little danger that farm- 
will neglect oilier crops to devote 
their whole energy to cotton. Still 
with the steady increase in 
and with the temptation held out 
by the lucrative price, tho desire to 
plant more cotton 
will be The advance 
all indicate that throughout 
the cotton belt large planting is be- 
arranged for. Mules and 
implements and supplies are be- 
for on a more liberal 
scale than for several years past. All 
that was needed to make increased 
acreage certain was the advent of 
sufficient rain. Now that the rain has 
come we may expect to hear of active 
work in the field from every part of 
the Chronicle. 
What the Law Makers are Doing 
Two Successful Farmers. 
In a issue of an exchange 
the other day the following two ex- 
of successes by progressive 
farmers was noticed. They are 
here for tho information and in- 
of our readers. 
Last year Mr. D. E. of 
Princeton, N. C, planted a piece of 
corn after oats, which made a very 
yield. From one and 
acres he gathered eight two-horse 
loads. This was fifteen stands or five 
barrels, making twenty five bushels 
each load. Two hundred bushels 
for one and three-quarter acres is 
certainly a large yield. This laud 
Since planted in clover. 
Mr. John Stephenson, of Pleasant 
drove, N. C., and his son, Mr. It. I. 
who farm together raised 
good crops again last year. On their 
farm they had an acre of corn which 
followed cotton an made a very fine 
yield. They broke the land with a 
two-horse plow and made the rows 
four feet apart, with the corn 
inches in the rows. They used 
three sacks of 8-3-3 guano and one 
hundred of nitrate of soda 
and one hundred pounds of top dress- 
They made 1-2 bushels of 
corn, bundles of fodder, and 
bushels of on the 
from page 
Raleigh A. and M. As divided, it will 
give the University and the 
others each. 
The warmest debate of the day 
curred on the bill amending the char- 
of Elizabeth City, and reducing 
the number of wards from seven to 
four. 
There were a number of bills, and 
any former bills passed second and 
third readings. 
While the house occupied most of 
day In further consideration of 
the revenue bill, which had to be 
gone into carefully, there was time 
for the introduction of numerous new 
j bills, most of them local. 
Representative Mooring introduced 
a supplemental bill to the Greenville 
township road bill, and 
introduced one to change 
the boundary line of Farmville grad- 
ed school district. 
N. C, Feb. 
Walter Gay, of came in 
Friday to visit her parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. F. M. Smith. 
Mr. Ivey Smith and daughter, Miss 
Trilby, went to Roanoke Rapids Fri- 
day and returned Monday. 
Mrs. Ned. Laughinghouse is spend- 
some time with her father at 
Miss Winnie Evans visited Miss 
at Saturday and 
Sunday, 
Rev. S. W. filled his 
appointment Sunday and at night. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. and 
Mr. R. E. Willoughby attended the 
sale of the late J. R. 
Tuesday. 
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful the Most Noble Employment of Washington. 
Volume 
GREENVILLE, X. G, FRIDAY, MARCH 1911. 
in her 
HOPES HIS HOME COUNTY 
WILL GET GOOD ROADS 
IX 
See How Anybody Can Object 
To The Place. 
A gentleman who was raised on a 
farm in Pitt county, but is now a 
prominent business man in another 
State, writes a letter commending 
The Reflector for its improvement 
and progress, and 
am always interested in anything 
I hope you are going 
to get the good roads you arc work- 
on, too. I don't see how anybody 
can object to the plan you have, for 
it seems to me that the man who 
would get the least benefit from it 
would be paid many times over for 
his part of the cost. There are so 
many people in the world who are 
not willing to benefit themselves a 
deal, or even a little bit, be- 
cause somebody else gets a share of 
It; and they are therefore willing 
to drag along to avoid doing some- 
thing that some other fellow may be 
by a 
CHARRED BODY FOUND. 
Robbery and Murder Preceded The 
Burning 
By Wire to The Reflector. 
Rochester, N. Y., March The 
charred body of Hyatt was 
found in the ruins of his home today. 
He was a recluse and said to have 
much money in the house. Police be- 
he was robbed and murdered 
and the house burned. 
Grow Everything Big. 
The Greenville Reflector says that 
Pitt is a great county, and so it is. 
There were more diplomas awarded 
to the boys of that county In the corn 
contests last year than in any other 
county in the State. This speaks 
well for the boys and also for the 
soil over here. They 
grow everything big in Pitt and 
Greenville is becoming an important 
center of this 
Enterprise. 
The ocean is crossed in a 
number of bridal parties. 
FALLS IN THE FIRE 
AND SERIOUSLY BURNED 
MR. OF WASHINGTON. 
The Accident May Reach Fatal 
Result. 
A telephone message from Which- 
ard brings information of a serious 
accident occurring near there Tues- 
day night. Mr. B. F. Peterson, of 
Washington, who had been traveling 
through the country selling eye glass- 
es, stopped at the home of Mr. M. A. 
to spend the night. Mrs. 
was in the kitchen 
supper and Mr. went 
out to feed his stock, leaving Mr. 
Peterson in the house alone for a 
Mr. Peterson, who is about 
years old, was taken with epilepsy 
or a fit and fell over in the fire, bad- 
burning his head, face and one 
shoulder and hand. His injury is 
believed to be serious and may 
prove fatal. He has been taken back 
to his home in Washington. 
ROBIN PLEADS GUILTY 
CHARGE 
PLEA OF INSANITY ABANDONED. 
A STRANGE COINCIDENCE. 
Twice Summoned Home by 
Telegrams. 
For several years Mr. and Mrs. J. S. 
of Newark, N. J., have been 
coming South for the winter, and each 
season have been spending part of 
the time in Greenville where they 
have many friends. About four years 
ago on their annual visit here to 
Mr. and Mrs. Ola Forbes, they were 
called back home by a telegram an- 
the death of a brother of 
Mr. They have been here 
sometime during each winter since, 
and a few days ago came again to 
visit Mrs. Forbes. Today Mr. 
received a telegram advising him of 
the of his brother's widow. 
This is the second time death mes- 
sages have called him home from 
Greenville. 
Honor Roll. 
The honor roll of Grimesland 
high is as 
Thomas Proctor, Ethel Car- 
Mary Proctor, Mabel Gal- 
Willie Holt Faucett, 
Thelma Bryan, Blanche Proctor, 
Ethel Knott Proctor. 
Will be Passed March 
Other Indictments Pending. 
By Wire to The Reflector. 
New York, March 
the defense of insanity and throwing 
himself on the mercy of the court, 
Joseph G. Robin today pleaded guilty 
to the indictment charging him with 
the larceny of from the Wash- 
Savings Bank, of which he 
was formerly president. This action 
was taken after a conference of law- 
which decided that no adequate 
defense could be presented. Justice 
announced that Robin will 
be sentenced on March 27th. There 
are still seven additional indictments 
against Robin. 
GREENVILLE WILL HAVE 
BASEBALL THIS 
NEW FRENCH CABINET. 
Three New Members Were Appointed 
Today. 
By Cable to The Reflector. 
Paris, March members of 
the new French cabinet were an- 
today. They are M. 
minister of finance, M. 
minister of marine and M. 
minister of war. The first two have 
been in the cabinet before, while 
is president of the army 
commission of the chamber of 
ties. 
BANK ROBBERS ESCAPE. 
Cornered in A Hay Loft But Got 
Away. 
By Wire to The Reflector. 
Chicago, March supposed 
bank robbers, after exchanging shots 
with a posse of citizens and farmers 
at Walnut, fled from a hay loft 
in which they had been discovered 
and escaped. They are suspected of 
robbing the Walnut bank of 
Senator Retains His Seat. 
By Wire to The Reflector. 
Washington, March 
retains his seat by vote of 
to The vote was taken at 
this afternoon. 
ENTHUSIASTIC HELD. 
Committee to Confer Witt Other 
Towns us to Forming League. 
Greenville's interest in baseball 
the coining season was shown by the 
large attendance of enthusiasts at a 
meeting in the city hall Tuesday 
night, something like being pres- 
Mr. J. D. James was asked to 
preside over the meeting, and Mr. 
G. J. Woodward acted as secretary. 
In calling the meeting to order and 
stating its Object, Mr. James said he 
had received several letters from 
Kinston, Grifton and Ayden asking 
that Greenville join with those towns 
in establishing a league to be com- 
posed of strictly home players, each 
town to have two games each week, 
beginning about the middle of June 
and continuing until September. 
It was decided to appoint a com- 
consisting of Dr. E. A. 
and Mr. J. B. James, to meet the 
representatives of the other towns at 
an early day and get their 
for forming the league, and re- 
port the result of their conference 
back to another mass meeting to be 
held as soon thereafter as possible. 
The meeting of these representatives 
will be held next week. 
It was stated with authority 
at this meeting Tuesday night that 
parties have all their plans ready to 
build baseball park here if the 
league is organized, and that they 
will have the park in readiness In 
ample time for the opening of the 
ball season. 
So it looks like Greenville can en- 
joy much good ball playing the com- 
summer. As soon as the con- 
of representatives of the 
four towns is held and the result re- 
ported, further detail, be given. 
Ice Cream Party. 
There will be an lee cream party 
preceded by a short play, held in tho 
school building of Grimesland, Fri- 
day night. March 3rd, for the benefit 
of the school. Admission and 
cents. The public is cordially in- 
T- 
POOR PRINT