Hertford County Herald __ i * . ? , wSH THE LAR0EST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA. VOL. 6 ^ , AH08KIE, N. C., APRIL 30. 1915. - i I no 15 I : Tate Machtaery 4 Supply Co., i liui.un, N. C. MACHINERY SPECIALISTS Everything in Machinery and Supplies Dr. C. G Powell, DENTIST - / OFFICE OVER S.J. DILDAY'S STORE AHOSKIE. N. C. Winborne da Wlnborna Benj. B. Winborn# Stanley Winborne Attorneys-at-Law MURFKEESBORO, N. C. Phonea Ne. 17 and 21. j ? ? ? Edgar Thomaa Snlpea Attorney-at-Law Loans Negotiated Real Eatate Bought and Sold) OSoe: 2nd Floor J. W. Godwin. Jr, Bldg AHOSKIE. N. C. R. R. ALLEN Dealer In 8ASII. DOORS. BLINDS. WINDOW GLASS. HARDWARE. PAINTS AND BUILDING MATERIALS GENERALLY Wholesale and Retail Ne. 1127 Washington Square SUFFOLK. VA. 8 ASH. DOORS. HARDWARE. PAINTS, LIME. CEMENT. SEWER PIPE. CART MATERIAL MILL 8UPPLIES, STOVES. RANGES AND ETC. CLOSE PRICES. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED AND OBLIGE. E- L FOLK CO. Ne DI7-BI0 Washington Square SUFFOLK. VA. W W. ROGERS Attorney-st-Law Prompt Attention Glean to All AHOSKIE. N. C. C. Wallace Jones Attorney and Coancelor-At-Law WINTON. N. C. Practice in all eourta. Logns negotiat ed. Sosejal attention to collections. Located in Bank of WinWr D. L THOMAS GENERAL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Plana and Specifications furnished upon application Cement and Tile Work Brick Work a Specialty AHOSKIE. N. C.; ' Roiwtll C- Bridgar Attorney-at-Law WINTOR. N. C. J. R. EVANS; a-** Practical Tin Roofer and Sheet Metal Worker Prices Right. MURFREESBORO. N. C. FRANK G. TAYLOE Notary Public Ahoskie, North Carolina. J. L. PARKER County Suveyor?Road Engineer ' and Draftsman. ? wotajit rv mi.TO. Office with W. W. Rogers, Ahoskie, N. C. 1 Walter R. Johnson AttornrtatLaw Ahoskie, North Caboliha Practices wherever services desired Ini If. i M n?#r laker laildiig Health Promotes Happlaess Without heaHb, genuine joy is impossible; without good digestion and regular bowel movement you cannot have health. Why neglect keepipg bowels open and risk being sick and ailing! You don't have to. Take one small Dr. King's New Life Pill at night, in the morining you will have a full, free bowel movement and feel much better. Helps your appetite >uu digestion. Try one to-night. Ady. ? Helps for Home-Makers. Edited by the Extension Depart ment of The State Normal and Indnatrial College. CAKE OF HOUSE. Fleers. The spring cleaning, and the fatigue that comes from taking up the carpata and matting, dusting tbem and puting them back! Is there anything that means more confusion and disorder in the hornet What to do to make the old floors sightly prevents many housekeepers from doing away with carpets and using rags in stead. Painted Floor. With a Hard Finish. If an old floor is good, heavy and not too uneven by warping it may be made presentable. First: Take up all the tacks, and have the floor cleaned; then when it is tboruly dry, paint it with two coats of oil paint, allow ing it to dry between coats. Then apply a coat of a good brand of "bard floor finish,V This is a' special form adapted to use on floors; it dues not show heal marks can be wiped with a damp cloth, and lasts longer than ordinary floor varnish or wax. Palsied Floors With. Wax Finish. Instead of the varnish, a little beeswax may be added to the paint. This will give the finish of a polished floor, and may be wiped off with a damp cloth. Stain With Wax Finish. A fter the floor has been tboroly 1 cleaned and dried a coat of stain may be applied. After this baa dried, if tbe floor ia old and of 1 soft wood, one or two coats of shellac may be put on. Then a coat of good floor wax may be put on next. After this has been on for a an hour or two tbe floor may 6e polished with a woolen cloth fastened on a broom, or with a weighted brush, rubbing witb the grained of tbe wood rather than across it. Stain H itb Wax Finish. A good hard floor finish. Valapar for instance, of the wax, tbe floor baviog been cleaned and stained as previously slated. In either of these mothoda of finishing, the spots may be wiped up with a cloth slightly damp, allbo any great amount of water left on the floor will damage the finish. The floor should be swept and then rubbed over with a , woolen cloth moistened with a little oil., This cloth may be fast- , ened on a broom. (ii < Wood Wort. ( Unless wood work has a grain worth showing, it should be paint ed rather than stained. Id the colonial houses and in most bousos that have been, built for a number of years, tbe wood work is painted white, or ivory tint. One does not tire of this, and if the paint is enameled rather than left dull it is not hard to keep clean. Stain is a transparent finish in tended for use on woods that are beautiful grained by nature. Woods with grain are usually rn three steps: filling, and staining, and surface finishing. Filler and stain may often be mixed and aj> plied in one coat. Firms that manufacture wood finishes of vari our kinds'show that cypress and ordinary\y5fiow pine may be made very beautiful by using on them the same grayish, greenish, and brownish stains that are ordinary applied to oak and chesnut. After wood is filled and stained, tbe sur face may be finished with either varnish or wax. The latter is pre ferable if it is to be applied by members of tbe family, since it does not require skilled labor. Don't Yon Say the Same? " If Ahdskie would be attractive to viaitora and a -healthful place for our bomepeople, do food ahould be exposed to flies in its grocery stores, food-shops and market; its hotels, cafes and restauranteabould not be swarming with jBies and its streets and vacant lots should never be seen littered with tresfe and unsightly objects. Denies Charges. An article appeared in the col umns of the Herald last week signed L. T. Edwards, accusing the men who got tbe petition up of bringing serious charges against Mr. T. J. Teaster. I being one of tbe men who got the petition up and one of the Urge number who signed it, I will state to the public that tbe statement is absolutely untrue. Wo. have brought no t-haiges against any of the present Board of Hubervisors that will injure tbeir good name. A copy of tbe petition will be found in this issue of the Herald and tbe public can see for them selves that there is no charges against Mr. Teaster. As for it being signed witbont explanation, I can't see it that way and I'm sure that every fair mind ed man will agree with me after reading the petition. Mr. Edwards also claims he and others have been fooled in signing the petition. Mr. Edwads is a very intelligent man, and a man of bis caliber should read before he writes*. If he read the petition before he signed it be could not have been fooled as tbe petition is sufficient explanation. It is also claimed that the petition was gotten up through malice. That is also untrue. There was no malice used, it was strictly a busi ness proposition. As for throwing Mr. Teaster out of office, we did not look at tbe matter in that way. My undersUnding is that tbeir term of office expires June 1st. 1915, and will have to be re ap pointed on the above date, and I can't see where we will be throw ing any one out of office. Expira tion of time will save us that trouble. Mr. L. T. Edwards signed tbe petition with bis eyes wide open, and since that time for same ration unknown to the writer Mr. Ed wards has changed his mind and is trying to cast reflections on the people who signed it. Mr. Edwards also claims that the work has been satisfactory, that may be true, but I was not aware of tbe fact. W. K. Howard. Copy of the Petition. Stete of North Carolina, Hert ford County, St. Johns Township. To the Honorable Board of Com missioners of Hertford County; QFEBTIN08> Whereat we the un dersigned petitioners and voter* of { St. Johns Township Hertford County, N. C., have reasons to be lieve we should get results from the money spent for public roads in St. Johns Township. 2nd. We believe we will get greater improvements for the same money now spent, if you will ' nominate and appoint for use man we truely believe to be fully com petent for a Township Supervisor, also one we believe will give the desired time to the work necessary to apply the funds of the Town ship to the greatest possible ad vantage for better and more per manent roads. 3rd. We pray your Honorable Board to appoint for us J. C. Benthall, as our road Supervisor. ,W. R. Howard. Getting Better. (Charlotte Observer.) Bradstreet says there "is busi ness in the south; lots of it, and it gets better every day." The cotton mills used more raw material in March by 6,000 bales than in any' previous month in two years. Of course there is business in the south?more by t.long shot right now thari knoivn in the history of th't section of a oountry of which the south it far and away the best part. As usual the country has a bum per crop of baseball wonders who have just emerged from the dense undergrowth. Cuba will permit no more price fights. It is supposed that they horrify the patrons of bull fight ing- .fs Dr. Aleiudtf to Speak to Aalander, N. C. Aulander, N. G. April St.?Dr. Alexander, president of the North Carolina Far me/a' Union, haa ac cepted an invitation of theCbaUu qua Committee to deliver jan ad dress here Friday evening, April 80th. The speaking will be In the Woodmen ball apd the bour will be 3:80 Moat of us have beard Dr. Alex ander and heboid, we want to bear him again. He takes you captive and binds you hand and foot, makes you remember things you have forgotten, puts life into senti ments you thought Were' dead and changes the ideal* of a life time in an bonr and you are proud of your new conviction*. - The speaker comes to us under the auspices of his Union, how ever, hie address will be generally, educational. No admission will be charged for member/ of the Union and tbey are cort&ally invited to be present. A general admission to the public of ilk will be charged in order to .defray necessary ex penses. Miss Kute Jenkins, Miss Mar gsret Faucett and Mr. C. W. Mitchell Jr.of th#Chowan College Glee Club will fgmish music. The sweetness, melody and symphony which this talent renders is ex ceptional and all of our music lovers await their coming with many apnreeiatiuna. , Newspaper Charity. "Space and copies of his piper go to make up-the newipeper man's entire stetjb it) trade," says the Fourth Est* to is an editorial entitled, "ObfejU of Charity." "XUwe offrr for sale t* the oobKc. and no one baa ever yet given any aert of aatiafactor.v reason why be should ever be asked ay anyone to donate them.* "One thing newspaper people will never be able to undiretand is why any person will walk into a newspaper office and make himself or herself an object of charity and insist upon what thev would dis dain to ask for in any other shop or plaee of business in the town. The principle is the same in the newspaper office aa in the dry goods store, the grocery, the drug store, and what a great many peo ple need is to come to recognize it as the same and get off the news paper charity list. "Advertising space in the newa paper is for sale, not to give away. It has a certain intrinsic value in itself that makes it worth money. Copies of the newspaper are for sale, not to give awa?. If they are worth having, they are worth the exceedingly small.price asked for tbem. "The public, or at least a large portion of it, has some verry er roneous ideas about these matters, and it is but just to the newspaper folks that these ideas be corrected in accordance with the same busi ness principles that prevail in all other buaineas establishment*. "In the vast majority of cases, this geneaoua charity on the part of newspapers is blissfully taken for granted, and the paper's liber ality abused. That which is pure ly a favor is accepted as a matter of course, and what should be re quests are couched as demands. "When the courtesy baa been performed tiure ie rarely appre ciation, and more often dissatis faction?generally silence. "The result in many other towns . and cities has been thai a ban has been put upon all fret) publicity, no matter what its object?even , upon the church notice. In thorn cities such favors aa the oreea be stows are properly appreciated and valued. Chin sop Yellow Parlol (Yadkin Valley Pilot.) As the pacific coast relaxes ap prehensive interest is the "yellow peril" Chin* takes it op. \ Vance Starts Early. HoldinJ Free Anti-Typhoid Dispell - enriee throughout the County. Vaooe county ie going nfter typhoid fever. Their new health officer. Dr. D. C. Abeher, got on tlie job there a few months tgo. According to an unofficial report, be ie starting anti-typhoid vacci nation dispensaries all about over the country. At Kiitrell, nearly one person out of every four is already availing himself of the free treatment. Elsewhere over the county the people are lining up < for the treatmenl before tlie .fly 1 and typhoid season gets here in > full blast. ' One enthusiastic Vance county man, in writing of the splendid 1 results tbey are getting from their 1 whole time health officer, says, , "He is a hustler, and he realizes 1 that be can get all the cooperation ? from the people of this county be I wants." | To the People o! Hertford Conntj, < At preMDt the growing disposi- ! tion on the part of the medical 1 world ia to prevent disease, and ! enlighten the mass eg ai to the ! transmission of diaeaae; with this ! enlightenment should come coufi- < dence and cooperation.- * It is the desire of the Board of j Health of Hertford county that J I impress upon you the great j value of the proper sanitation ef the privy. The unsanitary privy ? is one of the greatest menaces to health in Hertford county, giving ua the source of such diseases as typhoid, book-worm, tuberculosis diarrheas and other bowel diseases. Of late vital statistics havs ihown us that the death rate is higher in rural districts (country sad. small tuwna) than in the large wties.' This condi tion is due to the larger cities having sewerage ind to the enactment and enforce ment of proper sanitary regula tions. There is no reason why . we should not have rural -health conditions approximating the \ ideal. In the country this is a matter with the individual and I urge you not to neglect this mat ter of vital importance. In the towns I would suggest the enact ment and enforcement of proper unitary ordinances. I hope the school committees will look into the health conditions it tiie school houses. The privy is tdtv times more i dangerous to health and more dis igreeable in summer than in winter, ? ?o now is the time to remedy this svil. Heat dries the excrete and the wind blows the germs, also ^ insects are more numerous in hot ? weather and these are carriers of ? disease. There are some privys ? in our towns situated right on ? drains leading to the streets, and t the first heavy rain that comes ? washes the filth right in the gut ters on our streets. Sometimes in ( the summer you can detect the ( odor of these houses 76 yards. ^ The essentials of a sanitary privy , are: That it should have a proper j receptable to receive the excrata ( as it is discharged, a receptacle ( which will protect the contents ( from contact with insects and . proper disposition of the excreta. ^ I think the most practicable would . be viz: galvafiized tub or tubs as j receptacles, occupying a vault, which should be made fly proof with a hinge door at back for re moval and empting of tubs. As . soon as tubs are full same should be removed and contents buried in the ground, the tubs sprinkled with lime, returned to the vault and door fastened. I hope the people will give this matter proper consideration. Plans of construction fbir privys (sani tary) can be obtained from the N. C. State Board of Health or any physician in the county can get same for you. W. B. Pollabd, Supt. Health Hertford county. Pllaa Cured In 6 to 14 Day* TMf dmntat will ntal momrr If VAXO Tlw im?p?Uo*Uon (Itc* mm tad Ac*. Me. | FIRE INSURANCE 11 J NOTARY PUBLIC | WALTER L. CURTIS I AHOSKIE N. r, : | I DON'T SPEND ALL YOUR EARNINGS J W Put some aside for possible sickness, or misfrtune. ? We welcome small accounts as well as large ones. ml The man who has a little money saved is the one who is Z X in a position to open the door when Opportunity Knocks. X SJ Don't run the risk of loss by fire or thieves, deposit yonr 'V w- surplus earnings with us. m 8 THE BATSTK OF WINTONi wiNToT>f< n- c* j?j MONTAUK ICE CREAM TOUCHES THE SPOT Fills the demand fora dainty dessert, as no other dessertcan. It's the choice of mother, father, sister and brother?and the bearders, if there be any. It's one subject npon which the whole family agree. That's because Montauk Ice Cream is so pure, rich and delicious. Trv it: THE MONTAUK COMPANY, INC., Maker* of "Purify" lee Cream sad lees. 275 Granby Street ? NORFOLK. VA. MMMAMMMIMMMMSMaMMSMSMMWaMMIMSMMM I MOST PEOPLE*"! id this community cary account* at this bank. Some are cback- jj in?r, others are savings, while still others are both. We invite YOU to become a member of our happy family. Checking account* are the most convenient me tbod of paying D bill*, and they discourage extravagant habit*. Saving account* draw 4 per cent interest, M M Merchants and Farmers Bank u ^n^on' j| LET ME HAVEYOUP BUSINESS 1 I have opened up an up-to-date Pressing Parlor in tba rear of my stand and solicit the work of the public. Syecial Attention to Ladies' and Childrens' Garments. I Let Me Have Your Order For That Spring Suit or Trouaara. Q Z. V. BELLAMY, Ahoskle, N. C. fl r^/- i- n fTEioirnisiE) k is often no harder to find than a dollar Z K when you want one in a hurry. w IS Annex a check book by opening an ac- w (count at this bank, and protect yourself from such annoyances is the future. & We carry many accounts at this bani^. N X , | Possibly we have yours, too. X |S If not. we invite you to open an ac- W ft count today, ft We will serve you faithfully. | THE PEOPLES BANK ? & MURFREESBORO, N. C. ? V VWo WWW Feldman's Bargain Store J Is Open For Business. ^ We will again serve you with genuine bargain*. I Our bargains are awaiting you. Everything in new ? Spring Goods. FELDMAN'S BARGAIN STORE j Nowaom.'o Block AHQ3K1C. M. C- | ? J f ' ? '