,;v. A- V ,7: v." -..... .. .. Times One liioawlke ANDREW J. CONNER, PUBLISHER. , , "CAROLINA, CAROLINA. HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS ATTEND HER." SUBSCRIPTION PER ANNUM $1.00 Volume XX. ' RICH SQUARE, NOETIIAMPTON COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 191 1. Number 29 A high-grade business school where young meo and women are prepared tor Independence and Prosperity. Thousands of our former students arc holding leading office positions "You see them wherever you go." , Special rates to those who secure scholarships now for the New Year's term which begins January 2-3. Cata logue. Address J. M. Ressler, Pres. Norfolk. Va. T. W.ktawn. J.A.WomIL MASON & WORRELL. i TTORNEYB & COUNSELLORS AT LAW, JACKSON, N. C. Practice is all Courts. Business promptly and faithfully attended to. Office 2nd floor bank building. RAYMOND G. PARKER, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Jackson, N. C practices in all courts. All business given prompt and faithful attention, Office 3nd Floor Bank Building. 6 PMbla. F. & Hairia PEEBLES & HARRIS. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. JACKSON. N. C. rTuctice in all Courts. Business promptlv and faithfully attended to. EDGAR THOS. SNIPES, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Real Estate bought and sold, Loans negotiated. Ahofikie, N. C. Practices wherever services are desired 'Phone No. 16. DR. C. G. POWELL DENTIST, POTECASI, N. C. Umn be found at his office at all times xeept when notice is given in due paper W. H. S. BURG WYN JR. Attorney and Counsellor at Law. """"-" Jackson, N. C Practices where service desired S. T. 6TANCGIL Attorney and Counselor a Law law Building Norfolk. Virginia Practicing in all Courts in North Caro lina and Virginia bm. B. WonoBNa. Stahlbt Wauioura. WINBORNE & WINBORNE, Attorneys at Law, MURFREESBORO. N. C Phones Noe. 17 and 21. GAY cVMIDYETTE Attorneys So Counsellors at Taw JACKSON. H. a Practice in all Courts. All business promptly and faithfully attended to. Office 2nd floor. New Bank bnilding. DR. J. M. JACOBS DENTIST, ROXOBEL, N. C. Extracting from children at same price as adults. Dr. W. J. Ward, DENTIST WELDONt N.C- Dr. E, Ehringhaus, Dentist. Now located at Jackson. N.d, where he is prepared to do first class dental work. Office in 2nd. story Bank build- " ing. . . " . Fire Insurance Notice. I will be glad to furnish rates, ," - etc. on all classes of fire in- " ' - suance in North Carolina and -, write your insurance for you. Take the safe course and run no risk by insuring your prop erty in the Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Company, of Richmond, Va. or the Dix i ie Fire Insurance Co., of ': Greensboro, N. C. : : : R.E.BROWHTAjt. Qabysbtjbq, N. C. , SEABOiBD LOCAll loads Improved-Sunday school Ex- cursloD To Erect Modem Mob , School Bulldlog-Other lews. N Mrs. Inez Ferguson and chil dren have been esteemed guests, the past week, in the home -of her parents. Mr. and MrB. M. D. L. Harris, of the Hams' Shop vicinity. Among the many callers in our town Saturday, we note Messrs. R.F.Barnes of Gumoerry. and H. P. Pall, the widely known and popular notion salesman of Balti more, Md. We note in your Jackson letter of last week's issue, that the correspondent is boasting of the largest High School Auditorium in the county for the new build mg they are planning to erect Unless we have been incorrectly informed, Mr. Stanford told ou building committee that our mod ern auditorium would seat 500 people comfortably. Mrs. Herbert Wade and chil dren of Rich Square, were wel come visitors here la3t week in the hospitable home of Mr. Suiter Rogers. Misses Jessie Barrett and Grace Stephenson left Monday after noon for a visit in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Long. Rev. E. N. Harrison of Garys burg filled his monthly appoint ment with the M. E. church here Sunday evening. The weather was somewhat threatening and intensely hot. yet a good sized audience were rewarded, as usual by a good sermon. He made many pleasant calls in town Mon day, before leaving for his home. We cannot report all our peo ple well this week as the follow ing nave sunerea irom cnnis since our last writing, viz: Mrs, Alice Darden, Miss Julia Jones Messrs. A. J. Jordan and Bailey Maddrey, and Masters Joe Rog- era and Elliott Harris. Mr. R- H. Stanford of Rich Square arrived Monday to ar range for work to commence at once upon our modern mgn School building. The road machine was in our town and vicinity last week, Much needed repairs were made to our highways and we hear on ly words of commendation for the improvement wrought dur ing their brief stay. Rev. L. A. Parker was present at the regular monthly services of his Mt. Carmel Baptist church the past Saturday and Sunday. He draws and interests large crowds wherever he has an ap pointment We learn that Sea board was well represented the past Sabbath. Light showers have fallen here every day since Saturday, not near enough to relieve the dry condition, Crops, to the utter surprise of all, are standing the drought remarkably well. We earn that a storm, Saturday af ternoon, cyclonic in its behavior, passed over a portion of the Sha ron vicinity uprooting trees, un roofing houses, demolishing fen ces and damaging crops. No lives are reported losfc t Da S. B. Boone of Jackson paid a flying visit to his relatives in the home of Mr. Suiter' Rog ers the past Sunday morning. i Agent Cumming, who has been in the employment of the S. A L. railroad here for the past 15 years, will leave with his family for Portsmouth, Va., on July-lst, where he ' has a more lucrative position. We understand he will be succeeded by one Mr. Jones of Virginia. Mr. Green F., Gay ? and bride: will return from their bridal tour Tuesday. A reception will be tendered them at the home of the groom. We take this means of welcoming his cultured, wife to our community. We believe she will do us good. We hope their future lives may be always as happy as now. The first June peaches we have seen were received eaaly Mon day morning. We are indebted to Miss Dene Edwards of the Pruden Springs vicinity for the nice treat. The Annual Sunday School ex cursion from Weldon to Ports mouth. Va., will leave here Fri day A. M. at 6:05 o'clock. These excursions are always largely patronized and we feel sure this will be no exception to the rule. Remember no stops, for' passen gers, will be made, after leaving Margarettsville. Mrs. J. D. Yates, whose life was despaired of some 2 months ago, has recovered sufficiently to leave last Saturday for a visit to her daughter, Mrs. Mary Wcodleif of Kittrells.Her friends hope she may return much ben efitted by this trip. . The W. M. Society of Seaboard Baptist church met in regular monthly session at the home of Mrs. Lucie Grubbs last Monday afternoon. The most far-reaching action of this meeting was the organization of a Mission Study Class. After the anjourn ment Mrs. Grubbs served, in her own inimical style, peach ice cream and cake, which all your readers know is good at all times, but best when the thermometer is hovering near the 100 mark. Your scribe not only attended the Gay-Bowers nuptials' last week, but also visited Panacea Springs, and the Fosburg Lum ber Camp where a delightful night was spent in the home of Mr. Phillip Stephenson. The crops in that section are consid ably above the average. The country abounds in places of in terest, such as the Rocky Moun tains, gold mine and the wel known uarrett winery. Un our return, we dined with our friends Mr. and Mrs. John W. Gay, for merly of Seaboard. Thev have a beautiful and commodious home in Littleton which they are still improving by adding convenien ces and comforts. The many friends of Mr. W.A. Grant of Butterworth, Va., who resided here for many years, will be surprised to know-that he has taken unto himself a better half and he and bride are now with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Grant of Jackson, We hope for each of them happy; useful, and prosperous lives. , wwv m' we near or several picnics in this vicinity on the glorious fourth. The Willing Workers of Seaboaad Baptist church will give a lawn party on the evening of the 4th of July in the lawn oppo site the home of Mrs. Lucie M. Grubbs. The public are cordially invited. Music and refreshments of varied kinds will be on hand in abundance. The glorious fourth comes only once a year so come and bring, everybody else and et's celebrate it in good "Down Home" fashion. , ' Old Zick. Sore Thlogl Hubby (with ; newspaper) Well, well! Another bank gone to' smash, and none of the direc tors knew anything about what was going 'on, K- ,f :l i&c. t:2. Mrs. Votington Of course not! t wouldn't be so if the directors were all women. -Boston Trans cript ' . v - BOW TO SUPPRESS HBfJSEFLIES. Cheap and Effective fay Hie Premises Clear of Nuisance. tc Keep THIS That the housefly nuisance in any community can be largely suppressed by united effort on the part of those who are inter ested can not be denied by any one who understands the situa tion. The fly is not only disagreeable but is a menace to health. Ty phoid fever and cholera infan tum, and probably other intesti nal diseases are often carried to victims by flies. Steps should be taken in every community to commence a vigor ous fight against this pest and it seems advisable to Jet every one become well informed about the breeding places of flies, and the methods of preventing them Poisoning and trapping the flies is also of great importance. Lif t, HISTORY AND BREEDING .''LACES OF HOUSEFLIES. Flies originate largely from the hors;, cow and mule stables. Cow manure will breed flies in great numbers, in spite of many re ports to tne contrary, in and around such places the flies lay their eggs. Fully ninety-five per cent of all the flies develop in the stable manure. Garbage piles. heaps of decaying vegetable mat ter, and any accumulation of filth may breed flies. The eggs hatch in less than twenty-four hoars into small. white, wriggling maggots. The maggot stage of the flies lasts only five days in warm weather. Full grown maggots are about one-third inch long. with body , pointed at. the head end. The full grown maggot changes to a reddish-brown pupa stage, about one-fifth inch long, which lives about five days, and then transforms to the adult winged flv. A generation of houseflies, from egg to adult stage, may develop in ten or eleven days. This shows that if the stable manure is hauled out once a week, flies will not have time to mature. Fully fifteen generations of houseflies mature during the sum mer. Each female fly will lay about one hundred and twenty eggs, and this fact serves to account for the great numbers of flies wnere tne breeding places are not done away with in a com munity. Flies do not usually travel over a few hundred yards from their breeding places, so that it is en tirely, practicable, by united ef fort on the part of those who are interested, to do away with most of the houseflies in any commun ity. POISONING FLIES WITH FORMALIN There are several more or less successful fly poisons, such as Seibert's Poison Fly Paper, but the writer has had best success with Formalin. This costs only fifty cents a pint, and is used by placing one tablespoonful in a half pint cup of one-half each of milk and water. This should be exposed in plates, and it is well to put a piece of bread in the middle of the mixture to furnish more surface on which the flies can light and feed. V This formalin solution seems to attract the flies and kills them quickly. The writer recently poisoned over forty thousand (about 4 quarts of flies) in less than twenty-four hours in a calf barn where the flies were very numerous. In this manner thou sands of flies are killed before they have deposited eggs. When attempting to poison flies around dwelling houses it is best to expose the formalin pois on mixture outside as well aB in side the houses. Use it on the front and back porches where the flies are waiting to enter when ever the doors are opened. We can never succeed in per manently lessening the flv nui Bance by simply paisoning or trapping the flies, but when we attempt to prevent the breeding places, the work of poisoning the adult flies wlil be of great assis tance. ' Every citizen who is interested in the health and welfare of his family should determine where the flies are breeding and should not be suspicious of his neigh bor's premises until he has made a careful search for the breeding places of flies on his own place. R. 1. Smith, Entomologist. Agricultural Experiment Sta tion, Raleigh, N. C. A Tramp's Testimony. Exchange. A tramp asked for a drink in a saloon. The request was grant ed, and when in the act of drink ing the proffered beverage, one of' the young men present ex claimed: "Stop! Make us a speech. It is poor liquor that doesn't, loosen a man's tongue." Ihe tramp swallowed down the drink, and as the liquor coursed through bis blood, straightened himself and stood before them with a grace and dignity that all his rags and dirt could not ob scure. "Gentlemen," he said, "1 look tonight at you and myself, and it seems to me that 1 look upon the picture of my blighted man hood. This bloated lace was once as handsome as yours! this shamb ling figure once walked as proud ly as yours, for I was a man in the world of men. I, too once had a home and friends and position. I had a wife as beautiful as an artist's dream. But I dropped the price less pearl of her honor and re spect into a cup of wine, and. like Cleopatra, saw it, dissolve, then quaffed it down in the brim ming draugnc, i nau cnuaren sweet and pure as the flowers of spring, and saw them fade and die under the blighting curse of a drunken father, I had a home where love lit its flame upon the altar and mininstered before it, but I put out the holy fire, and darkness and desolation reigned in its stead. I had aspirations that soared high as the morning star, but I broke and bruised those beautiful forms and strang led them, that I might hear their cries no more. Today i am a husband without a wife, a father without a child, a tramp without a home, and a man in whom eve ry good impulse is dead. All have been swallowed up in the maelstrom 6f drink. " The tramp ceased speaking. The glass fell from his nervous fingers, and shattered into a thousand frag ments on the floor. The doors were pushed open and shut again, and when the group look ed ap the tramp was gone. And this, gentle reader, is a true tale, the tramp at one time having been a ' prominent attor ney. -v ;.- -: Do not be boastful over the man who appears to be beneath you today. He may be above you tomorrow. Changes come often in life. k bEAUTIFUL imiAGE. Miss Pame L Bowers if Utileloa Becomes the Bride oi Nr. 6. f. Gay ot Seaboard. A beautiful marriage occurred Wednesday morning at 11:30 o'clock, June 21. 1911, at the hospitable home of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Bowers, near Littleton, when their charming daughter, Pattie Leah, became the bride of Mr. Green F. Gay of Seaboard. A large crowd of relatives and friends were present and the oc casion was most delightful in, many respects. The marriage was very unique and beautiful in its simplicity and originality.The ceremony was performed in the elegant parlor of the home.which was tastefully decorated with pot plants and cut flowers. Miss Nina Vinson presided at the piano and skilfully rendered Lohen grin's wedding march. As the procession was forming m the hall, Miss Agnes Wills beautiful ly sang "How many times do I love thee dear." First came the iittle flower girl, Miss Maud Bow ers, niece of the bride, bearing a lovely basket of roses which she gracefully scattered in the line of the procession. Then followed little Miss Mary Bowers, attired in dainty white, carrying the wedding ring on a cushion ; next came Mr. and MrB. Ben S. Gay. Mr. Ezra Bowers and daughter. Miss Mary, then Miss Daisy and Annie, Margaret Bowers and Laura Gav. Then came the bride and groom. The officiating min ister was the bride's brother. Hev Paul Bowers of Roanoke, Va., and the ring ceremony was osetf. Immediately after the ceremony an informal reception was held and congratulations showered upon the happy couple. After the reception Mr. and Mrs. Gay drove to Littleton and boarded No. 38 for a trip to Philadelphia, Washington and Baltimore. They will be at home to their friends, near 'Seaboard, after July 1st The bride wore a handsome going away gown of blue, with hat and gloves to match. The array of gifts was one of the largest and handsomest ever seen in that section. It comprised gifts of silver, gold, cut glass, china, linen, checks, and num berless other things and is a proof of the popularity of the parties. The bride is the cultur ed daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Bowers and is widely known throughout this and other States and is loved wherever known. She is famous for her many lov able traits. The groom is one of Northampton '8 progressive and prosperous farmers and is fortu nate in winning such a charming beide. Among the guests from a dis tance were: Hon. Ben S. Gay, wife and daughter, Miss May Belle, Jackson; Mr. Paul Holo man, Rich Square; Mrs. J. T. Maddrev, Messrs. Sam, Alvinand sister Miss Laura Gay, Seaboard; Mrs. Marietta Owen Parker, Franklin, Va.; Mrs. Frank Rich ardson, Manning, S. C, and Rey Paul Bowers, wife and children, Roanoke, Va. : ' r in spring and summer, it's ihe natural time to store up health and vitality for the year. Scott's Emulsion is Nature's best and quick est heln. ah IW illll