PRINCETON NEWS. Princeton, N. C? Sept 27.?Thtre was a large number of the W. O. W. order and a great number of friends went to Smithfield last Sun day to attend the unveiling of the jconunient dedicated to the memory of the deceased brother, Jesse H. Wellons. Mr. George Hood, of Golds I)oro, delivered the address. There was of the order in line of march 102. The brother was a favorite here among the fraternity. In fact he was liked by every one and did not have an enemy and never turned A deaf ear to the needy and was al ways ready to help those in dis tress. His place has been hard to fill in a great many respects. Our people speak well the praises of the good citizens of Smithfield for their many acts of kindnesses shown them. Miss Maude Gulley, of Clayton is visiting Miss Louise Massey. Mr. P. H. Massey and family, of Wilson's Mills, visited Mrs. T. P. Farley the past week. Messrs. C. E. Kornegay and Fletch er Futrell, of Pine Level, were in town Sunday. Mr. J. A. Winters who held the post here as section foreman, has accepted a like position in Raleigh with the Southern. On.' ot the most enjoyable occasions of the season was held Friday night at the beautiful home of Miss Louise Massey. She had planned an even ing of pleasure for her many friends and spared no pains in making pro per arrangements for the event. The evening was a most enjoyable one. The spacious veranda and parlor Jep.t peculiar charms for the enjoy ment of the guests. The hostess, Miss Louise Massey, presided with genial hospitality for which the home Is favorably known. The evening passed playing games of various kind on the porch and refreshments consisting of Ice cream and cako was served with a lavish hand. Those present were Misses Maude Gulley, Rosie Hastings Sallie and Guile Gran tham, Leona Holt, Juanita Penny and Clara Finlayson; Messrs Clifton and Nerus Holt. Bill Crowell, Jack Edwards, Jimmie Joyner, Robert Wil I lis and Ed. A. Holt. PITTMAN'S CROSS ROADS NOTES. ) t - ??*?, . . | Mr. Baldy Pittman, Jr., spent a few days in Durham the first of this week. ( Mr. Charlie Langdon, of Benson, spent a few days recently with Mrs. W. H. Avery's people. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Woodard spent {Sunday with Mr. T. D. Creech. j .Mr. Jasper Wadkins spent Satur day night with Mr. Jesse Sellars. | Miss Florence Smith spent last Thursday night with Misses Martha I and Mary Creech of Selma. Miss Mary Creech, of Selma, spent Saturday night with Mrs. Joe Brown 3 family. I Mr. Fill Faulkner spent Saturday night and Sunday in our section. Mrs. Joe Brown and son, Leon, spent a few days near Princeton this week. Rev. J. R. Wallace filled his regu lar appointment at the church Sun day and had very good attendance. On Sunday September 25th Mr. Jesse Sellars and Miss Odie Broad w?U were united in the holy bonds of matrimony by Rev. W. M. Ferrell at his home. It being a kind of a slip up on the people there were only two present?Mr. Jasper Wat kins with Miss Minnie Sellars. Miss Broadwell is the daughter of Mr. K. Broadwell of near Thanksgiving church, who is a prosperous farmer of that section. Mr. Sellars is the aon of Mr. George Sellars, one of our most prosperous farmers. Our wishes for them is a long, peaceable, happy and prosperous life. REPORTER. Sept. 26. 1910. NOTES FROM NEW ZEALAND. The people of this section are very busy picking cotton and ga thering hay. We are glad to see our new school building so near completion at Hood's prove. Gor.d many people of this section attended the assolcation at Foi'r Daks Saturday and Sunday. The people of this section were <lad to have among them last Sun day Mr. Elijah Lassiter of Golds boro. Mr. Zeb Eldridge, of Los Angeles. California, Is spending a few days *ith relatives in this section. Miss Etta Johnson visited Miss 3arah Lee Sunday evening. Mr. Eschol Lee, of the Dunn force, visited at Mr. M. P. Johnson's Sat urday night. Mr. and Mrs. Hassell Blackman. of the Reasley section, spent Sunday evening at Mr. N. P. Johnson's. Mr. J. H. Barefoot, of Beasley, visited at Mrs. Mamie Adams' Sun day. The Herald Is a welcome visitor fo our boxes. REPOR+ER. HARE'S STORE NEWS. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Talton are spending some few days In Raleigh on business. Mis. Nancy Oneal spent Sunday in Selma visiting at Mr. J. E. Par ker's. I We are sorry to note that Mrs. Joseph Talton has been confined to her room some few days but hope she will soon be up again. We have lots of sickuess in our community, chills and fever. Our farmers are very busy nowa days picking and ginning cotton al- | though the crop is very short, but the high price will balance the crop. Mr. W. J. Lewis is more than i pleased this week?It's a boy. j Politics, high price cotton, and , green peas is the talk nowadays. REPORTER. Your complexion as well as your temper is rendered miserable by a disordered liver. By taking Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets , you can improve both. Sold by Hood Bros. I I MILL CREEK ITEMS. I Mr. Fred G. Rose, of Wilmington, spent last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Rose, and left Monday for Durham where he will enter Trinity College. I Several of the people of this sec tion attended the Primitive Baptist Association at Four Oaks and all say it was the biggest they ever at tended. i Rev. John J. Langston, of Kimber lin Heights College, of Tenn., who has spent the past summer in the evangelistic work in Georgia, spent a few days of last week with his father, Mr. Ira W. Langston. On Sunday night he preached at this church a very strong sermon, us ing this as a subject: "God shall Send Them a Strong Delusion." Many of this young minister's friends were present and were delighted to know that he had developed into such a powerful pulpit orator. The ten-days singing school taught at this place by Prof. E. Mcintosh Cullom and his sister, Miss Blanche, | closed on Friday, the 23rd inst. The programme was begun at 10:30 a. i m. with the house "brimful" of spectators; who had come from the various places where Prof. Cullom had previously taught a school the past summer; by singing the old familiar hymn, "What a Friend We Have in Jesus," after which a pray er was offered. At 11:30 Prof. J. H. Langston was called upon who responded with a very eloquent speech in which, he spoke of the improvement the choir had made under the tutorship of , Prof. Cullom and the occasion as a decided rally for the Sunday school; after which an Intermission of an hour and a half was?given, in which | time a very sumptuous dinner was served on a long table prepared for j the purpose. Th? afternoon pro- j gramme consisted of songs, duets and quartettes by the choir and short speeches by Messrs. W. H. Marler and J. T. Langston. This closed the second school of music taught by these proficient teachers, and another school was subscribed f< B for next year. Beasley No. 2. The Death Angel's Visit. On Saturday, Sept. 3, 1910, the 1 death angel visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Parnell and took from them their darling baby Edward. He was born Feb. 13th, 1908. He did not stay with us but a short while but it was a happy stay. Little Edward was not sick but a short while and death was not ex pected. 'Tis hard to say good-by to those that are so dear. W. H. M. Kenly, N. C. A Gentle Hint. He?"I think your family name is such a fine one." She?"Do you? I get dreadfully tir ed of It."?Lonilon Opinion. Morehead and Local Issues. Mr. Morehead. the mau who thinks he thinks he is chairman ot the re publican state executive committee and Mr. Grissom, who is Mr. More head's secretary have recently let themselves be interviewed on the subject of the Maine election. Most republicans exhibit symptoms of the Jim-jams when the Maine election is mentioned and at once begin to shy. Mr. Morehead and his private secre tary, however, each tackle the ques tion in their own several ways and both of them make a mess of .lt. We don't know whether It was Jim-Jams In their case or what, but any way Mr. Grissom could see nothing but "licker" in It. Mr. Grissom says "licker" was the cause of it all and leaves the inference that North Carolina republicans ere all right on the liquor question. From which It may be noted that Mr. Grissom be lieves that the local self-government plank In the republican platform is. an announecment in favor of more "licker." That is a matter, howev er, in which republicans themselves disagree. And even the same re publican will disagree with himself. It depends on where lie i3 talking as to how he interprets ilie platform. W'e don't know whether Mr. More head holds the same views about the local self-government plank as his secretary or not, but we do know that they do not in regard to the Maine election. Mr. Morehead says the tariff did it. And when Mr. More head said that he spoke an eternal truth. In all those brilliant speech es which he didn't make in Congress during those two years he has been cementing his friendship with Ma rion Butler, he never said a truer thing than that. And Mr. ~ More head might have added that this same tariff is going to "do"' the re publicans all over this country this fall. The republicans have well-nigh "done" the country. But the people have at last gotten tired of republi canism and the beginning of better things is in sight. Mr. Morehead, however, did bring in the word "local." They can't get away from that little word. But the people remember the kind of local government the republicans gave us ten years ago and they want nothing of a local nature from them or from them locally. But the tariff. Mr. Morehead says, 's a locla issue, and that's why Maine went Democratic. Local conditions there, he says, are such that the people no longer want a high tariff. Same here, too, Mr. Morehead, and all over the country as well. This local condition is so wide-spread that it has become a general condition. But to return to Maine, and for once Mr. Morehead is not local. He goes all the way to Maine to find a "local" example. When General Hancock, in his letter of acceptance suggested that the tariff was a local question it was treated by republicans as the great est joke of the campaign. Mr. More head was then too young and too good a democrat to appreciate this joke; for we find him to-day gravely announcing the same dotcrine. If the republicans were right in their contentions then, that they gave the coun*ry a tariff policy national and not local in Its application. It is sin gular that the south, which Mr. More head contends is languishing for more protection, did not prosper by it. If it Is a really local question, as Mr. Morehead contends, It is singu lar that New England, the chief bene ficiary, has got too much of a good thing. While admitting that his party in Maine had become so bad that the people could not endure It longer, and broke away from the tra ditions of a generation, he failed to point out any similar condition in North Carolina to justify the peop'e in rising up against the dominant party here. Indeed, he is unfortu nate in his attempt at a comparison between Maine and North Carolina. If the Democrats ever were bad in Maine, certainly sufficient time has elapsed for It to be forgotten?not so in North Carolina; for men younger than Mr. Morehead can remember, nay, cannot forget, the kind of gov nment given to this state by his party. And what Is still more to the point, the same mighty hand guided ' his party ki North Carolina then that steered Mr. Morehead safely into the : chairmanship, and which every man knows continues, and will continue. ' to gu'de Mr. ''orehead and his party | In every step they take. But in regard to our campaign In I North Carolina; that is the one thing t that looks good to us, and we re gret that Mr. Morehead did not fa | vor us with his views about some i other local luterest. Doubtless he has been carried up Into a high mouc* tain. Our people are satisfied with one issue given us by Mr. Morehead; the issue of "Butler Come Back." The folks are as eager for the cause as If a real fox race was on sure enough. There will be no trouble this year about the people turning out to hear our speakers?the trou ble is our speakers and our democrat ic literature are in such demand that Mr. Eller is unable to supply the demand. Our party has been wanting a little exercise ever since 1900 and on this decennial year they are having a good time with the same old crowd they licked then. But whatever the question in Maine Mr. Morehead Bhould remem bern ay he will not be allowed to forget that there is a local question in North Carolina and that is Butler Ism. The people of this state have not yet tailcn so low that they will take Marlon Butier back Into their confidence. It is a local i??v? and a local issue that means the bigger? democratic majority since Butler was driven from the state by an outraged public sentiment ten years ago.? Raleigh Times. A Man of Iron Nerve. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are never found where Stom ach, Liver. Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, use Dr. King's New I.ife Pills, the matchless regulators, for keen brain and strong body. 25e. at Hood Bros. What Is the Matter With Our High Schools? Instead of our high schools serv ing uniformly to make our boys and girls better citizens, more cultured men and women, more efficient work ers and happier human beings, the results have often been quite (he op posite, says Benjamin C. Gruenberg, in "Success Magazine." We find countless high school graduates who turn their talents against their city or State; who think they know it all and make no intellectual progress whatever; who shun work and ser vice and despise the workers of the world; who break their hearts in the successful pursuit of things not worth while, or in vain efforts after a life to which they are in no way adapted. To be sure, there are undesirable citizens, lazy and dishonest and un happy men and women among those who have had but very little educa tion. But the point is that the high schools have failed in too many cases to do what was expected of them. , ( | The Lash of a Fiend would have been about as welcome to A. Cooper of Oswego, N. Y., as a merciless lung-racking cough that defied all remedies for years. "It was most troublesome at night," he writes, "nothing helped me till I used Dr. King's New Discovery which cured me completely. I never cougTi at night now." Millions know its matchless merit for stubborn colds obstinate coughs, sore lungs, lagrlppe, asthma, hemorrhage, croup, whooping cough, or hayfever. It relieves quick ly and never fails to satisfy. A trial convinces. 50c. $1.00. Trial bottle tree. It's positively guaranteed by Hood Bros. The principal industries of Holland are agriculture and cattle breeding. WORLD'S FAMOUS DYSPEPSIA PRESCRIPTION. It Drives Away Stomach Distress in A Few Minutes, Stops Heartburn And Belching. If you have anything the matter with your stomach you ought to know right now that MI-O-NA stom ach tablets are guaranteed by Hood Bros to cure Indigestion or any sick ness caused by Indigestion, such as the following, or money back: Sick headache, biliousness, dizzi ness, nervousness, sour stomach, fer mentation of food, belching of gas, heavy feeling at pit of stomach, vo miting of pregnancy. If your meals don't digest but lie like a lump of lead In your stomach; if you have foul breath and loss of ap petite, a few Mt-O-NA tablets will put your stomach in fine shape. In short order. If you or any of your family suf fer from stomach trouble of any kind, get a 50 cent box of MI-O-NA stom ach tablets at once. Hood Bros, and druggists everywhere sell MI-O-NA on money back plan. "I was cured of dyspepsia that had assumed the nervous form, by the use of MI-O-NA and I praise MI-O NA highly. My trouble got me weak, and nervous so that I could not sleep; the bowels were constipated, and I had sharp, shooting pains through the kidney regions, and hard dull, backaches. MI-O-NA is worth its weight in gold."?Walter rebo, St. Clair, Mich. Waynesvllle Courier: Hon. W. T. ? Crawford In speaking about farming ?Mr. Crawford has recently develop i ed a great Interest In farming?re 1 marked that on his farm on Richland Creek, wheat was raised that threshed out from 218 bundles 141 bushels. That seems to be a fine yield and mighty good wheat. Has [any farmer In Haywood beat this? NOTICE. | The undersigned having qualified as Administrator on the estate of Mrs. E. E. Rhodes deceased, hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to me duly verified on or be fore the 30th day of September, 1911, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery; and all persons In debted to said estate will make Im mediate payment. This 24th day of September. 1910. T. H. ATKINSON, Admr. Princeton, N. C., R. F. D. No. 2. NOTICE. The undersigned having qualified as Executor on the estate of J. Ashley Starling deceased, hereby no tifies all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to me duly verified on or be foro the 30th day of September, 1911, or this notice will be pleaded In ^iir of their recovery; and all per sons inueoiiu to ?ald estate will mako Immediate payment. This 26th day of September, 1910. WILLIE FLOYD STARLING, Exr. Don't Break Down. Severe strains on the vital organs, like' strains on machinery, cause break-downs. You can't over-tax stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves without serious danger to yourself. If you are weak or run down, or under strain of any kind, take Electric Bitters the matchless, tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de Sande, of Kirkland, 111., writes: "That I did not break down, while enduring a most severe strain, for three months, Is due wholly to Electric Bitters." Use them and enjoy health and strength. Satisfaction positively guaranteed. 50c. at Hood Bros. NOTICE. The undersigned having qualified as administrator on the estate of R. A. Barber deceased, hereby notifies all ' persons having claims against said estate to present the same to me du ly verified on or before the 9 day of September, 1911, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery; and all persons indebted to said estate will make immediate pay ment. This 7 day of Sept., 1910. A. C. JOHNSON. Ex. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD NEW SHORT ROUTE THROUGH EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA via. RALEIGH-NORFOLK. (Schedule In effect August 15th.) NORTH AND EAST BOUND: No. 8. Daily. Leave Goldsboro 7:15 A. M., for New Bern, Beaufort, Washington and Norfolk. No. 10. Daily. Leave Goldsboro 3:20 P. M., for New Bern, Morehead City and Beaufort. RALEIGH DISTRICT. No. 12. Daily, except Sunday, leave Wilson 8:20 A. M., for Green ville, Washington and Norfolk. No. 18. Daily, except Sunday. Leave Wilson 5:00 P. M., for Green ville and Washington. No. 6. Daily, "Night Express," Pullman Sleeping Cars, leave Wilson 11:15 P. M., arrive Norfolk, 7:00 A. M. For particulars apply to J. L. Roy al, U. T. A., or F. W. Tatem, Gener al Agent, Goldsboro, N. C. H. C. HUDGINS, General Passenger Agent. ? W. W. CROXTON, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. E. T. WATSON KENLY, N. C. Who has served as bookkeep er the past three years for Bailey and KIrby has commenc ed business for himself. He will deal in Real Estate and sell Insurance and work as a Merchandise Broker ? Do You Feel This Way? li&fcyr Do yon ieel all tired out ? Do you sometime* think you just can't work away at your profes aion or trade any longer ? Do you have a poor ape tite, and lay awake at nights unable to sleep ? Are your nerves all gone, and your stomach too? Has am bition to forge ahead in the world left you ? If so, you might as well put a stop to your misery. You can do it if you will. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will make you a different individual. It will set your lazy liver to work. It will set things right in your stomach, and your appetite will come back. It will purify your blood. If there is any tendency in your family toward consumption, it will keep that dread destroyer away. Even after con* sumption has almost gained a foothold in the form of ? lingering cough, bronchitis, or bleeding at the lungs, it will bring about ? cure in 98 per cent, of all cases. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. R. V. Pierce, I of Buffalo, N. V., whose mdvite it given fret to all who wish to write him. Hit great success has come from his wide experience and varied practice. I Don't he wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substi- I tutes for Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to be "just nt good." Dr. i Pierce's medicines are or known composition. Their every ingredient printed 1 on tbeir wrappers. Made from roots without alcohol. Contain no habit- ] forming drugs. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. i I KILLtheCOUGHI ; AwoCUPETwquwCS I "drying's hew Discovery *WD ALL THROAT AND LUHC TROUBLES n GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY ? ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as ex-vcutor and a-lwlnlstrator (with will annexed) of the estate of Rev. E. B. Blake, de ceased, this is to notify all person* having claims against the said es tate to present them to me on or before August 26th. 1911, or this notice will be pleaded In bar against them. Also all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate settlement with me at Clayton, N. C. This 22nd day of August, 1910. H. R. GOODSON, Executor and Administrator. Clayton, N. C. NOTICE The undersigned having qualified at administrator on the estate of Jesse W. Hinton deceased, hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to me duly verified on or before the 17 day of September 1911 or this no tice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery: and all persons indebted tc said estate will make immediate payment. This 13 day of September, 1910. J. H. HINTON, Admr. Bailey, N. C. NOTICE. By virtue of the authority contain ed in a certain mortgage deed exe cuted to me on the lstdayof Decem ber, 1903, by J. H. Baker and Allie Baker, his wife, and duly registered in the Register's office of Johnston county In Book S No. 8, page 34, I shall sell at public auction for cash at the Court House door in the town of Smlthfleld, N. C., on the 14th day of October, 1910, at 12 o'clock M., the following real proper ty to-wit: A certain piece or tract of land lying and being in Johnston county, North Carolina, in Oneals township, and described and defined as follows, to-wlt: Their undivided interest in a tract of land adjoining the lands of Gaston Woodard, J. B. Smith and John Johnson, containing -38 acres more or less and fully de scribed in said mortgage. This 14th day of September, 1910. G. G. EDGERTON & SON, , Mortgagees. ? i SUMMONS nv PUBLICATION. North Carolina, Johnston County. In the Superior Court, September Term, 1910. THOMAS MORGAN V8 IDA MORGAN. The defendant above named will take notice that the action entitled as above has been commenced ia the Superior Court of Johnston coun ty by the plaintiff for the purpose of obtaining a divorce from the defend ant, and the defendant will further take notice that she is required to appear at the next term of the Su perior court of Johnston county td be held on the 12th day of Decem ber, 1910, at the courthouse in said county In Smithfield, N. C., and ans wer or demur to the complaint in said action or the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief de manded in said complaint. This September 8th, 1910. W. S. STEVENS, C. S. C. JAMES A. WELLONS, Att'y for plaintiff. USE PRINTED STATIONERY. BUSINESS MEN EVERYWHERE USE PRINTED STATIONERY. THEY WOULD NOT THINK OF WRITING THEIR LETTERS ON PLAIN STA TIONERY. THEY KNOW THAT IF THEY DID THEY WOULD BE CON SIDERED UNBUSINESS LIKE. OTH ERS THAN MERCHANTS, LAW YERS, DOCTORS AND BUSINESS MEN GENERALLY ARE BEGINNINC TO SEE T:IE IMPORTANCE OF US ING NEATLY PRINTED STATION ERY IN ALL THEIR CORRESPON DENCE. WE ARE PREPARED TO PRINT ALL KINDS OF STATION ERY FOR FARMERS, JUSTICES OF THE PEACE, COUNTRY MER CHANTS. MILL MEN, PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS, OR ANY OTH ER CLASS WHO MAY WANT PRIN TED NOTE HEADS, LETTER HEADS 3NVELOPES AND CARDS IN SMALL QUANTITIES. OUR PRICES ARE 110HT. OUR WORK IS THE BEST. 3UR PAPER AND ENVELOPES ARE ALWAYS SATISFACTORY. AND WE 3AN FILL YOUR ORDER ON THE SHORTEST NOTICE. COME TO SEE JS AND LET US FIX YOU UP A ?OT OF PRINTED STATIONERY VND YOU WILL BE MORE THAN 'LEASED. BEATY & LASSITER, Publishers of THE SMITHFIELD HERALD, Smithfield, N. C. THE SMITHFIELD HERALD AND the Thrlce-a-week New York World, both one jre?r for $1.75.

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