VOL. XI. NO. 4Q
-WOMAN'S MISS
IONARY UNION
Prominent Workers of Six
Associations Will Meet
here Next Week---Dr.
»
Alercer Delivers Address
Tuesday Night---An In-;
teresting Program.
The Woman's Missionary So
ciety of the Willirmstou Baptist
Church will entertain the delegates
from the Associations of Chowan,
West Chowan, Flat River, Roanoke
and Tar River. The opening sess j
ion will begin Tuesday the 27th
and last through the 29th. All the j
sessions will be held 111 the Baptist i
Church.
Miss Fannie He k, President of j
the Southern Baptist Convention I
as well as of the North Caiolina I
Convention, will be present together j
with others of the Central Com I
mittee, Mesdames Hight C. Moore,
Killian and Miss Elzabeth Biiggs,
of Raleigh
These meetings will be very in
teresting to all interested in Miss
ions, and it is desired that not only |
the ladies of the Baptist Church I
attend, but the ladies of the town.
The day sessions will be for the.
women only, but on Tuesday eve
ding at S o'clock, Dr. Mercer, of;
Rocky Mount, will deliver an ad
dress to which all are invited, both
ladies and genthmen
If any Baptist Church within
these Associations has not yet sent
in the names of delegates, it is re-
qiigalei that thev do so at once to.
Mrs. John I) Biggs, Chairman of!
the Hospitality Committee, that
homes may be provided.
A cordinl invitation is extended'
to all ladies to atteud these meet-!
ings— September 27-29
The following program will be;
observed:
I
Tuesday, 3:30 p m.
Devotional Exercises, Mrs. G. J.
Dawell.
Address of Welcome by Mrs. J
D Biggs, of tbe Baptist Church,
Miss E. S Gordon, of the Episco
pal Church, Mrs. A. R. Dunning,
of the Disciple Church and Miss
Annie E. Mizd!, of the Methodist
Church. ™ T
Response, Miss Boyette.
Organization, Enrollment of Del
egates, Election of Officers, Ap
pointment of Committees.
Discussion of State Missions,
Mrs. A. V. Joyner.
Discussion of Foreign Missions,
Mrs. J. D. Biggs, Jr.
The Boys Bands, Mrs. Sallie
Harbison.
Report of Oxford Meeting, Mrs...
I. A. Pittman.
Adjournment.
Tuesday Night, 8 o'clock ~~
Missionary Address, Dr. Mercer.
Wednesday, 9:30 a. m.
Conference on Mission Methods.
Music.
Devotional Exercises, Mi9s Bessie
Parker.
Purpose and Hope of the Con
ference, Mrs. Justus Everett.
The Bible in the Societies, Ideal
Programs, Mrs. Killian.
Society Mechanism.
Wednesday Afternoon
Prayer in the Life of a Society,
Miss Briggs.
Relation of the Societies to the
Church, Society Expansion, Miss
Heck.
Mission Study, Mrs. Killian.
Some Ideals, Miss Briggs...
Wednesday Night
Address, Miss Hefk.
Thursday Morning
Devotional Exercises, Personal
Service, Personal Responsibility,
Mrs. Killian.
N. Carolina and the General
Union, Miss Briggs.
THE ENTERPRISE
Murderer Captured
Norman Lewis, the negro who
shot Chief of Police Stalliugs, of
Spring Hope, was captured at
Henderson while waitiug to board
| a train for Virginia. But his vie
-1 tini is dead, having expired Wed
uesday morning in a hospital at
Richmond, where he had been
taken in the hope that experienced
surgeons could save him. Lewis
places all the blame 011 his wife,
affirming that she fired the fatal
j shots. She has been placed in jeil.
j Officers fearing violence had Lewis
I taken to Raleigh for safe keeping.
| The lamen'ed victim of the negro
lis a brother of Mr. Joseph Stal
ling* of the firm of York a Stal
lings, proprietors of the Dixie
Warehouse in Williauiston. The
! message of his brother's death
' reached him too late to board the
morning train and he left ou the
! Sht o-fly Wednesday afternoon for
Spring Hope Friends and ac
quaintances here sympathize with
j him in the loss of bis brother.
Your blood is your life. Ii" it's
I impure, it acts as a receiving agent
| for diseases. Protect your health,
Iby keeping your blood pure and
j rich. Hollister's Rocky Mountain
Tea, the most effective blood tonic
j for thirty years Nothing so bene
ficial. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets.
Saunders it Fowden. -
Unveilling Ceremonies
The Woodmen of the World will
unveil the monument of Sovereign
|J. D. Johnson, Sunday Septe 111 ber
[2sth at 3 o'clock at the Cemetery.
These ceremonies will be public
I and everybody is cordially invited
j to attend.
For Bald Heads
, 1
A Treatment That Costs
Nothing if it Fails
We want vou to try three large
bottles of Rexall "93" Hair Tonic
on our personal guarantee that the
trial does not cost you a penny if it
does not give ypu absolute satisfac
tion. That's proof of our faith in
this remedy, and it should indis
putably demonstrate that we know
what we are talking about when
we say that Rexall "93" Hair
Tonic will grow hair 011 bald heads
except where baldness has been of
such long duration that the roots
of the hair are entirely dead, the
follicles closed and grown over, and
the scalp is glazed.
Remember, we are basing our
statements upon what has already
been accomplished by the use of
Rexall "93" Hair Tonic, and we
have the right to assume that what
it has done for thousands of others
it will do for you. In any event
you cannot lose anything bv giving
it a trial on our liberal guarantee.
Two sizes, 50c and $ 1 .00. Remem
ber, you can obtain Rexall Rem&-
dies in this community only at
our store —The Rexall Store. The
S. R. Biggs Drug Co.
Mission Giving, Our School,
Mrs. Killian.
"Developing our Resources.
Thursday Afternoon
Mission in the Sunday School,
Miss Briggs.
Resume of Conference.
Our Reasonable Expectation.
Adjournment.
m m m
A Mia if Iron Merits
Indomitable will and tremendous
energy are never found where
Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bow
els are out of order. If you want
these qualities and the success they
bring, use Dr. King's New Life
Pills, the matchless regulators for
keen brain and strong body. 25c
at Saunders & Fowden. ...
WILLIAMSTON, N. C.. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1910
Death oi a Young: Woman
► Died at the home of her parents
near Williaulston on the morning
( of Septemlx'r 19th, 1910, Annie
1 Rogers, aged twenty-one years.
Truiy it may be said that "in the
midst of life we are in death" when
[tone thinks of the sudden summons
1! which came to this young woman
1 j —strong and \*lporous, busy about
ij those things which her willing
, j haud-> found to do, full of hope for
I j the future, but stricken suddenly
j 011 Saturday morning last witji a
? j congestive chill followed bv nien
. ingitis. Physicians were called
) I who jjave eVefy possible help but
■'death released the soul fr in its
j earthly teneuieut two days later,
fl A young life gone, a help meet in
; the family and a loving daughter
II and sister whose place cannot be
f j filled.
; Tuesday morning, the- funeral
n services were conducted by Rev.
• G. J. Dowell, atjd the interment
1 was in the Biggs cemetery at Bear
Grass. Many frieuds and relatives
sympathize with the bereaved ptr
' etits and brothers and sisters.
' ! Vour complexion as well as your
' I temper is rendered miserable by a
1 j disordered liVer. By taking Cham
: [berlain's Stomach and I.iver Tab
lets you cau improve both. Sold
• by f-Saouders Scj,Fowden and all
| dealers.
Court Next Week
! Judge R. B. Peebles, whose ill
ness prevented the convening of
Court this Week, instructs Sheriff
! Crawford that he will be here on
' Monday to open Court. TheCritn
j inal Docket will be disposed of first
j Everybody having cases will take
I notice of this and be present on
: Monday or the days on which their
cases were set 011 the calendar.
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
• | Diarrhoea Remedy is today the best
M known medicine in use for the re
• I lief and cure of bowel complaints,
t It cures griping, diarrhoea, dysen
tery, and should be taken at the
1 first unnatural looseness of the bow
els. It is equally valuable for chil
r dren and adults: It always cures
1 Sold by Saunders & Fowden and
all dealers,
i N»
The Situation
1
Money has been tight. Trade
has been only moderately fair
The past two months have not been
keenly active. No reason can be
assigned for the dullness of this
■ period but it seemed to have been
general in all sections of the South,
i The outlook for the fall season is
much brighter than it has been for
several years. Cotton will hardly
sell below fifteen cents. The far
mers have diversified their crops
and improved the lands to such an
extent that the value the acre has
been greatly euchanced. Merc
hants have not bought heavily for
the newseason. Extreme conser
vatism has been a characteristic of
the Southern merchant since 1907.
The cotton mills will resume on
full time prior to October. Many
are now running on lull time. The
crop outlook is very good. Collec
tions have been only fair. Some
merchants have been inclined to
worry over the situation but an in
vestigation shows that the past sea
son was even a better one for
retailers than 1909. To those who
are Inclined to worry this homily,
written somewhere is dedicated:
"A poor old man is Wombat Smith;
He used bis brains to worry with.
His wealthy brother, be it s^id,
Employed his brains to get ahead.
That man, we learn, success attains
Who aims to utilize his brains."
-4kL . •
Home Coming ot Carolinians
There is just now a great deal of
interest in North Carolina in the
Middle-West, where there are not
only thousands ot former North
Carolinians, who have never for
gotten their mother statevbut great
numbers of other people jwho are
ior the first time learning some
thing about this state and its pos
sibi'itics In nearly every coin
. munity in Noith Carolina there are
people who have relatives in Jlu-
West whi would like to visit this
state. They uovv have an excel
lent opportunity to inform these
ex North Carolinians that they can
, avail themselves of very low rates
from Ohio, Illinois and Indianua.
i 011 the jib and the 28th of Octobi r,
■ to come to Raleigh, to attend the
■ Home Coming Jubilee and Reunion
during the Semicentennial State
| Fair, October 17 to 22, ihe tickets
being good for twenty five days,
; so there is opportunity also to vistt
- any patt of the state. The tickets
i are known as Honieseekers tickets,
and to show their cheapness it may ,
be stated that the fare from Cin
cinnati to Raleigh and return is
. only $1630; children under 12,
years of age being given half fare.
It would be well for people in this
secnon to write their ami
I friends in the West about this op
I port unity, and urge them to brii g
some new people to look at this
fair state of North Carolina, the
Land of Opportunity.
Nature's greatest gift to' the
human family is Ilollister's Rocky
, Mountain Tta. With it your
r lam lv is fully protected, Best
' babv medicine in the world. 35c
1 Tea or Tablets. Saunders & Fow
. den. '
Resolutions
Whereas tuberculosis is known
to he communicable, curable, and
preventable; and
Whereas, at present, the loss to
, society in deaths and in money
justifies a concerted effoiton the
part of the public:
Resolved, That-the attendance at |
the North Carolina Association for
the Prevention of Tuberculosis calls
to the attention of all religious
bodies and business organizations,
I manufacturers and employers, the
great need of the popular enlighten
nicnt-of the citizens of the State
and for institutions for the cure of
unfortunate sufferers, and recom
mends that the representatives from
, the various counties of North Caro
lina he instructed to pay special at
tention to the enactment of such
legislation as will aid to provide for
an adequate appropriation to pro
vide for the establishment and
maintenance of such institutions,
and that every legitimate organiza
tion of the State lends its coopera
tion to wage a campaign for the
result commensurate with our
needs.
Be it further resolved, That a
copy of these resolutions be for
warded to the religious bodies,
trade and business organizations,
and leading papers of the State,
and that every board ot trade and
chaml>er of commerce be requested
to adopt resolutions expressing the
desire of their various communities,
and publicly requests the represent
atives of their respective communi
ties, when elected, to vote for an
adequate appropriation to aid in
preventing and curing tubercular
patients throughout the State,
when the next General Assembly
convenes in Raleigh in 1911.
Not a minute should be lost when
a child shows symptoms of croup.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy giv
en as as soon as the child becomes
hoarse, or even after the croupy
cough appears, will prevent the at
tack. Sold by Saunders & Saun
ders and all dealers.
Mass Meeting
Tuesday night, quite a number
of the prominent citizens of the 1
town assembled at the City Hall j
1 for the purpose discussing the;
proposition to light the town byi
elfctricity. Town Clerk C. H.
Godwin called the meeting to order!
and John L. llnsst.ll was made'
chairman and S R. Biggs secre-1
tary. The object of the meetiugj
was stated and the questious wet el
discussed by those fet* tfud against;
lights.
It was finally decided to make'
a contract for .the lights and avoid
the necessity of issuing bonds for.
which the people voted in June.
The Virginia-Carolina Peanut Co., j
which purposes with proper en
couragement, to build an immense .
-factory here was the favoiite bid-!
der for the contract. This was de-1
cidul to be given them for $2,400!
pi*r annum with a contract and j
franchise for twenty years The
proposition to thus dispose of thtij
in (tier rue ved only five negative!
votes. 11. W. Stubbs was instruc
ted to arrange for the levy vxlrch
will be about fifteen cents on the
■ hundred dollars, but tliis» will not 1
be done unless necessary.
What you doiu' neighbor? 11 el p-1
in' Bill. What's Bill doiu'? Help i
in'-Mainly. What's Mandydoin?)
illtlpin' Motlief. What's mother j
doin'? Taking Ilollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea. Sensible family, j
Saunders & Fowden.
Another Bear Gone
T" Hast week ii«-ar J aim s\ i!Te7"V smc •
bear or bears had been killing the
Uogvof Uenipsey Mizell who farms
assisted bv his two sisters, Misses j
IJz.zia and Mosella Mizell. Mr. j
Mizell with the two women started
out to catch Mr. Bruin in his noli- !
. 1
liess. His Majesty was located in J
a thicket and the young women
; went in with the dogs to run him
out. They were successful and as
the beast appeared in the open he
was killed by Mr. Mizell The
.Misses Mizell are not easily fright
ened, having lived so long iii the
section where bears seem to be
abundant. Yet it was a brave
thing to do and there are many men
who would have faltered.
Don't waste your money buying
plasters when you can get a bottle
of Chamberlain's Liniment for 25
ceirts. A piece of flannel dampen
ed with this liniment is superior to
any piaster for lame back, pains in
the side and chest, and much
cheaper. Sold by Saunders cS:
Fowden and all dealers.
Requested to Attend Services
Our Conference time drawing
near, and the pastor desires a full
attendance of the membership at
all the services until Conference'
This is a matter of highest impor
tance. Services next Sunday at
11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
All are cordially invited to at-;
teud. Respectfully,
C. L READ.
The Robersonville High School
began its fall term on September
sth. under most promising condi- (
tions. Thus far one hundred and
five pupils have been enrolled. The
patrons and public iu general be
speak a" most profitable year's
wonk. There ifave been some
changes'in the faculty. Mr. J. D.
liason, of Wilson, Principal, is ably
assisted by Misses Anna Phelps, of
Victoria, Va.. Susan and Margaret
Chandler, ot Mebane, Mrs. Briley,
of Robersonville and Miss Lula D.
Sauls, of Norfolk, who has charge
of the department of music. The
building and grounds have been i
greatly improved, especially the in- 1
terior which has been thoroughly
renovated. I
o
■nj
St.oo a Year id Advance
ROBERSONVILLE
NEWS ITEMS
■ # j
Local Happenings and
People who are Coming
and Going, Here, There
and Yonder as Gathered
by our Regular Corres
pondent.
Lester Edmondsoti was in town
Monday.
A. R. Dunning was in town
.Wednesday.
Mrs. S. L. Ross is on the sick
list this week.
V. R. Gray, of Hassell, was in
town Tuesday.
Harvey 1,. Roberson is in Nor
folk this week.
J. A. Coffiekl is recovering from
; his recent illness.
Mrs. Hi 11 ie Litl'e and daughter
were in town Friday.
I
Miss Alma Fleming, of Hassells,
was in town Friday.
Dr. R. H. Hargrove returned
from Tarhoro Sundayi
Mrs. W. 1). Gardner spent Wed-
I nesday night out of town.
j Mrs. Robert Nelson and son re
| turned from Bethel Sunday.
Miss Minta Bonner, of Aurora,
| is visiting Mrs. I). 15. l'arker.
Prof. J. D. Kason spent Satur
day and Sunday in Williatnston.
Miss Sadie Bonner, of Bonner-
I ton, is visiting Miss Clyde Tripp.
I Mrs. J. A. Coftield, has been
"visiting I er mother near Gold Point
Miss Mary Whitfield 'spent sev
jeral days in Gold Point last \Veek.
Miss Elisabeth Gordon, of Wil- >
! liamston, was here Mpnday night.
R v. Mr. Howard, of Kinstoti,
filled liis regular appointment Sun
day.
Mrs. Ed Purvis and son, of Has
sell, spent several days here last
week.
Master Vance Roberso'i is at
home again after a visit to the
country.
Mrs. W. K Roberson and daugh
ter spent several days at Ay den
last week.
Misses Annie Mooring and Nina
Robertson spent Wednesday night
in tin country.
Misses Nora Moore, Ella Wool
ard, and Bessie Roebuck, of Pitt
County, were in town Friday.
Mrs Nannie Tyler is on the sick
list this week. Tier many friends
hope to see her out again soon.
G A. Crofton and family spent
several days in Gold Point last
week at the home of B. 11. Rober
son.
Rev. Mr. Gordon conducted ser
vices here Monday night assisted
by Rev. Mr. I'ugh, of Memphis,
Tenn.
Miss Fancy Hoard, of Arkansas,
who has beetuvisiting relatives here
left Tuesday for Tarboro enroute
home.
The school was very much
pleased to have Rev. Mr. Gordon /
conduct devotional services Tues
day morning.
Quite a number of people hire
attended the yearly meetings at
Hickory Grove and Conoho Satur«
day and Sunday.
Miss Lizzie Roberson, who has
been ill with typhoid fever for
some time, seems to be improving
but her brother, Willie, is on the
sick list.
While waiting for the train last
Thursday, D. B. Parker was
stricken with paralysis. His con
dition is very serious, but his many
friends and Joyed ones hope to see
him out again.