Eastern reflector, 1 November 1901


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Have You Forgot
What
THAT I AM STILL CARRYING
DATE LINK OF
Pry Goods, Press Goods, Shoes
Hats, Shirts, Pants, Hardware
AND A NUMBED OP OTHER THING
WHICH I AM UNABLE TO
Come to sec me for your next Barrel of Flour or Pork.
Yours to
While.
AFTER TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN PAID IX THE
II HE III
OF NEWARK, X. J., YOUR POLICY HAS
i. Loan Value,
Gash Value,
Paid up Insurance.
Extended Insurance that works automatically,
Is
Will be re-instated if arrears be paid within on month while you
are living, or years after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence
of and payment of arrears with interest.
second No Incontestable.
Dividends are payable the beginning of the second and cf each
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year he paid.
They may be To reduce or
To Increase the Insurance, or
To make policy payable as an during the lifetime
of insured.
J. L. SUGG,
Greenville, N. C.
ASTHMA CURE FREE.
Brines Instant Cure in all Cases
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE RECEIPT POSTAL.
There is nothing like It brings
instant relief, even in the wont cases. It cures when
all else tails.
The Rev. I-. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, III., says.
bottle received in good
I cannot tell you how thankful I feel for the
good derived from it. was a slave, chained with
putrid sore at asthma for ten years. I do
of ever cured. I aw your advertise-
the cure of this dreadful and tormenting
disc thought you had
yourselves, bill to give it a trial. To my
the trial acted like a charm. Bend me
a foil
We want to send to every a treatment of
similar to the one that cured Mr. Wells. We'll send It by mail post-
paid, absolutely Free of Charge, to any sufferer who will write for it,
even on a postal. Never mind, though you are despairing, however
bad your case. will relieve and cure. The worse your
case, the more glad we are to semi it. Do not delay, rite at once, ad-
dressing Dr. Taft Bros Medicine Co., Baal 130th St., X. Y.
Sold by all Druggists.
None genuine unless
Red Cross is on label
Don't lake a Substitute
TO PRODUCE THE EQUAL OP
for Chills, Fevers,
Night and Grippe, and
all forms of Malaria.
WAIT TO
SPEND CENTS AND CURED I
CURES TONIC
TRY IT. NO NO PAY. PER
TO TAKE.
GRIFTON ITEMS.
N.
Mr. and Mrs. Ola Forbes return-
ed to Greenville Monday.
E. W. Pace and J. E.
returned to Greenville Tuesday.
J. J. Rhodes, of New Bern,
rived to bis family
here.
J. L. Keen, Jr., Dr. W. W.
Dawson, J. K. Harvey Jacob
attended a meeting of
the Odd Fellows at A j den Monday
Misses Julia and
spent the in
Monday.
W. and V. A.
of Kinston, were here
Tuesday.
Geo. W. B. Hadley stopped over
here with us a short while
day when on his way to
We were clad to have do so
hope you will repeat
George.
W. Gaskins and E. T. Cox
went to Monday night.
Walter and
came down Tuesday even-
to witness the
sou marriage.
W. G. is moving his
repair shop to
We regret giving up
Mr. at he was one
most enterprising
The colored Disciple convention
started here yesterday and the like
of elders and delegates we have
never seen.
Dr. W. W. Dawson C. J.
Tucker went on a business trip to
yesterday.
Mrs. J. R. Rose is visiting her
parents at Goldsboro.
Yesterday Boning, the 33rd, at
seven o'clock, there was a mar-
at the residence of Mr. S. W.
Dawson over in bis
Miss Bailie, to Mr. Rufus
Walston, of A large
number of friends and relatives
witnessed the ceremony. They
left on the early train accompanied
as as by Miss Julia lie-
and Miss Katie
sister of the bride. We
late Mr. Walston on winning so
charming a bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson gave one
their at the M. B.
church, Tuesday night. Owing to
their being blind they gave in-
show. After the concert
there was a nice purse made
up for them.
For
Prof. W. H. Lynch of Mountain
Grove Academy at Mountain
Mo., is credited with read-
more paid for newspapers
any other man in the United States
says the City Times. He
subscribes for newspapers six of
them The professor was
in Kansas City yesterday, in
discussing the papers,
use the newspapers in my
classes. They arc the best
in the world for teaching cur
rent history and geography. The
real drama of life in its varied
forms of commercial, political and
social relations must be seen and
learned through mirror of the
the newspaper. Every
Friday in the academy is
devoted to the reading of
It may be mentioned as a fact
of interest to consumers of iron in
the United States that the
Iron and Steel Company has
made several shipments of pig
iron from Cape to Boston
and New York, paying the heavy
duties and competing with
our local producers. It is not be-
cause the Company can
make iron at less than it can
be made in this country that it
successfully invades our market,
but because the prices in the home
market, under cover of protective
duties, arc
Philadelphia Record.
Welcome as Sunshine
long storm is a reeling of relict when
pitiless cold has been
sway by Lung Balsam. Only
who have been cured of and
this remedy can
Dawson, of what feeling is. There is no opium in
the Balsam; it food fleet is radical and
Ii sting Take a bottle home today.
Pills
will save the from many
and enable aim to eat
whatever he wishes. They
SICK HEADACHE,
the food to lute and non r-
the body, give appetite,
DEVELOP FLESH
and solid muscle,
coated. M
Take No Substitute.
Elegantly sugar
TONIC LAXATIVE
It yon have tour stomach, indigestion, biliousness, constipation, bad
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, backache, loss
of appetite, insomnia, lack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy skin,
or any symptoms disorders which tell the story of bad bowels and an
Impaired digestive system, Will Cure You.
It will clean out the bowels, stimulate the liver and kidneys, strengthen
the mucous membranes of the stomach, purify your blood and put you
your again. appetite will return, your bowels move
your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your will clear and
and yon will feel the old time energy and buoyancy.
Mother the. to give one
and similar . said Meal
It keeps their r i- tonic.
nature, aids duration, seated n
causes sleet, sad ton i well. I rarity ;
U and II.
For Sale by
la not only mot
. loin
-Pi. to Till CO . Ill N
I i t i
Ii
Till . N V . rd m, ,,,,
lost
According to an article publish-
ed recently in a French chemical
journal, the output of ill,
Sicily has increased from
tout in 181.0 to tons
The world's production in
these two years was
tons. Sicily furnishing
about per cent. The amount of
in the ore varies from a
very rare richness of per cent.
to or In the
nary ore. The older method of
obtaining from its ore was
by letting lite t. it in heaps or in
kilns, the itself serving as
fuel. This method has, however,
been discarded both on account of
the waste and because of the
which the fumes
of the burning nave rise.
the with
with a
of
is in many cases used, but the only
method in which no f.,
regenerated lathe extinction with
steam under pressure. The ex-
i is rapidly In-
will long con-
to supply the part
world's production.
B. K. Sherman, of
Iowa, says for his State that It has
a percentage of to
In the public schools n
any other in It
I There are in round
tiers 28.000 school in Hi e
and school children.
Number Law Breaker.
While nobody can doubt the
prevalence of crime it looks
prising that there arc tunny as two
hundred and fifty habit
nil lawbreakers in the country.
In 1850, it is said there was but
criminal to every
This proportion by 1870
had changed to one in
to one in at present
is on band a representative
of the fraternity in every
of people. To attend to these
evil-doers, police and
other capturing, trying and guard
are
more than hundred thousand
men employed that it is
mated all the of the
land were to suddenly reform, in
addition to what they steal
damage would a saving
to the ration, through the various
channels in which the change
would work, of over
You Know What
When take Chill
Tonic the formula is plainly print-
rd u every Untie showing that It is simply
in a form.
Cure. No Pay.
Mayer Collector
toms the District of
North Carolina, with headquarters
tn this yesterday received
word that Charles I . Clark, Jr.,
had been appointed Deputy Col-
and this place,
to succeed the lately
Wm. K. Clarke.
Mr. Clarke is well known in this
Community as a gentleman of fine
ability, high social standing and
thoroughly equipped for the
office to which helms
been
politics he is known as a
Gold been a
strong advocate of the principles
of
politically his
appointment is regarded as a very
strong
Mr. Clark was recommended by
Mr. M. Collector of Cub
loins here, who
every way with the standing
character of the new appointee.
Maw Journal.
The Shoe and Leather National
Bank end National Hank of
of Boston, Mass., each
with capital, will con-
In December under the
name of the Lit w.
J. II. Reagan, only
of the Cabinet, is
critically ill Tex.
Ala., July 1887.
Dr C. J. Dear Sir;
to you demands that I should give my
experience with excellent medicine,
Our girl. Just thirteen
months old, had much trouble teething.
Every remedy exhausted in the shape
of from family physicians.
Her bowels continued to pass on pure blood
burning fever continued for days at a
time. Her life was almost of.
mother determined to try and in
a day or two there was a great
life had bowels were
and, to little now
doing well. Yours, etc. D. W.
Ed. ft Prop. News.
level beaded Carthage
business man cheerfully threw
away the other says The
Kansas City Journal. bad
just received a check pay-
of an account from a man
whose bank standing was not
he Al class. He it,
however, but was refused payment,
with the information the man
bad but on deposit. The
payee promptly took out of his
pocket and deposited it to the
man's credit. he drew
the on the check without
and went on his way re-
He had only lost in-
stead
Bobbin's Chill Pills cure chills and all
malarial troubles. That is what thin- were
made for. Cure after other renames fail
No cure, no pay. Price bottle
Druggists.
The Marshall Enterprise says
that Mr. E. N. Fry made bush
els of corn on average
of over bushels to the acre.
Good farming, others should
emulate a worthy example. The
Enterprise is precisely right when
it urges a better system of
farming must be inaugurated.
most cultivate less laud and raise
more grain Every farmer should
resolve to cultivate no more poor
land, but only improved laud. Do
that and there is money it.
Make home
ton Messenger.
For Sale.
Mr Farm Near N C.
shout about W in
Twenty this is line
or truck land. buildings, to-
water, For further
BOX Berkley,
IN
J. V. PERRY k CO.
Norfolk, Va.
Cotton Fin handlers of
Bagging, Tits and Bags.
shipments
solicited.
E. E. Griffin,
Practical Watch Maker and Jeweler.
Opposite I. O., N. C.
Hit- the
tin- clocks.
wall
In v iii for
ti , t .
in Re-
, in
E. E. GRIFFIN.
Photographer,
N. C.
The leader in good work and low prices
Nice for per
Half Cabinets per listen
All other lines very Crayon Portraits
made from any small picture cheap. Nice
Frames band all the time. Come and
my work. No trouble to show
samples and answer questions. The very
best work to all. Office hours
to a. to A p. in. Tours to
NOTICE TO
Letters of administration upon the
of James Tingle having day
been to me by the Clerk
court of Pitt notice is
hereby given to all persons holding claims
on told estate to present them to me for
on or before 24th day of
r, 1902, or this notice will be in bar
of their recovery. All persons indebted to
said estate are requested to
settlement of indebtedness.
This day of October
WILLIS,
Administrator of James Tingle.
JARVIS Attorneys.
TO CREDITORS.
Having duly qualified before the
court Clerk of Pitt county as
the last will testament of J. P.
notice is hereby given
to all persons Indebted to
payment to the undersigned,
and all persona having claims against said
estate are notified to present same with-
in twelve months from date or this notice
will be plead in bar of recovery.
This 7th day of October, 1901.
J. L. O. MANNING,
Executor of J. P.
OLD DOMINION LINE
SIR VICE
Steamer leave Washing
ton daily at A. M. for Green-
ville, leave Greenville daily at
M. for Washington.
Steamer leaves
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday
and Fridays at A. M.
leave Tarboro for Greenville
Tuesdays, and Saturdays
at A. M. carries freight only.
Connecting at Washington with
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore,
New York and
ton, and for all points for the West
with railroads at Norfolk.
Shippers should order freight by
the Old Dominion S. Co. from
New York; Clyde Line from
Bay Line from Baltimore
and Line from
Boston.
SON,
Washington, N. C
J. J.
Greenville, N.
North Carolina, Pitt county, Greenville
Oscar Hooker
D. N. Co. and
Southern Express Co.
defendant, D. N. Co., will
take notice that a summons in above
entitled action was against said de-
on 18th day of September, 1901,
by C- D. Rountree, a of Peace
of county, North Carolina, for sum
of due said plaintiff by contract
which summons is returnable before said
Justice at his office at Greenville in said
county on the 7th day of November, 1901.
The said defendant will also take notice
that a warrant attachment was issued
by said Justice on the 18th day of
1901, certain property of the
said now in the of the
Southern Express Co., at N. C.
which warrant is returnable before
said Justice at the time and place above
named for the return of the summons,
when and where the said defendant is re-
quired to appear and answer or demur to
the complaint, or the relief demanded will
be granted. C. D.
This Sept
LAND
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
court, made by His Honor W
Judge presiding at May term, 1901, of Pitt
Hie case of C. Rountree and
wife against Blount and others,
tee of Hickory Hill church, the
Commissioner will sell cash before the
court door in Greenville on
day of November, 1901, the follow-
described piece, parcel or lot of land
situate in the Town of Greenville,
known as Hickory Hill
lot, and as a part of lot No. Be-
ginning at the copier of lots and on
Greene Street and running with the line of
lots and West IV. t. North a
straight line parallel with Greene street
feet, thence a direct line parallel with
line street, thence with
Greene street to the beginning, containing
2-8 square yards.
This Oct. 1st, 1901 r.
Commissioner.
to
Public.
ATTENTION AGENTS
Mr. John C. Drewry, Agent for
North Carolina and Virginia, of that Well-
Known and Popular Company,
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT
Life Insurance Co., of
Desires to to its large number of
policy holders, and to public
generally, of North
will now Resume Business In this
state and from this date will issue its
splendid desirable policies, to all de-
siring very best insurance in the best
life insurance company in the world.
If the local agent in your town not
yet completed arrangements, address
JOHN C. DREWRY,
State Agent, Raleigh, N.
Assets
Paid policy
Live, reliable energetic agents wanted at
once to won for
THE GREENVILLE
cur
RHEUMATISM
STAY CURES.
A vegetable remedy
cures recent and long
The greatest blood
purifier known,
endorsement of leading
after thorough trial. Cures per
cent, of cases treated.
per bottle.
Sold a.
CO.
Manufacturers of
Doors, Sash and Blinds,
Interior and Exterior
for Fine Modern and Cheap Build-
We solicit pat mange and
to ant infliction In
price, and wink.
send to
rift. Co.
GREENVILLE, N. O.
M.
Wholesale retail and
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for
Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Bar-
Turkeys, Egg, etc. Bed-
steads, Mattresses, Oak Salts, Ba
by Carriages, Go-Carts, Parlor
suits, Tables, Lounges, Safes, P.
and Gail Ax
Tobacco, Key West Cheroots,
American Beauty Cigarettes, Can-
Cherries, Peaches, Apples,
Pine Jelly, Milk,
Flour Coffee, Meat, Soap,
Ly, Magic Food, Matches, Oil,
Cotton Seed Meal and Halls, Gar-
den Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches,
Prunes, Currents, Raisins, Glass
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden
Ware, Cakes and Crackers,
mm. Cheese, Beat Batter, Stand-
ard Hewing Mao hi net, and nu
other goods. Quality and
Quantity. Cheap for cash. Com
to see me.
Phone
o. w.
GREENVILLE N.
Cotton Bagging and Pies always
on ban t
Fresh goods kept constantly on
hand. produce and
sold. A trial will convince yon.
D. W.
WHICHARD BRO.,
DEALERS IN
Whichard, N. C.
The Stock complete in every de
and prices as low as the
lowest. Highest market prices
paid for produce.
Bra.
-DEALER IN-
A GENERAL LINE OF
ER.
Also a nice Line of Hardware.
COME TO SEE ME.
J. B. COREY.
Norfolk, Va.
Cotton Buyers and Brokers in
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and
Private Wires to New York,
Chicago and New Orleans.
The Commoner
WEEKLY.
WILLIAM J. BRYAN,
Editor Publisher,
Lincoln,
in Advance.
One Year Six Months
Three Sing. Copy
No traveling canvassers are em-
ployed. Subscriptions taken at
The Reflector The Semi-
Weekly and
will be sent together
one year for or The Daily
and
one year for 13.60 payable in ad-
PATENT
far
PATENTS
C. A CO.
FOR
The Eastern Reflector
D. J. EDITOR
TRUTH TO
PER H,
VOL. XX.-
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I
NO
a M
-AT-
SI
ARE KNOCKING
THEM
WASHINGTON
For Dry Goods, Hats. Caps, Shoes, Trunks,
Boys Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Gloves,
and a big Use of Caps, Cloaks, and Bootees.
Come to see Every day a bargain day and everything a
bargain. Mends,
W. T. LEE CO.
,. n
DIVIDEND RECORD IS THE RESULT
the highest rate of Interest consistent with safety.
economy of management.
S. low death rate, from a careful selection of risks and
its business to the United States
It will to interest to see what we do for yon before
placing your Ufa insurance.
Good territory open Agents in North Carolina.
T. ARCHIBALD GARY, General Agent.
For Virginia and North Carolina,
Lift Insurance
1901 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va.
FALL SELLING.
Putting it Strong.
Washington, it. v. Or.
The Secretary of War returned
to the city on Wednesday and the
President on Thursday, and they
awaiting them a condition
affairs that caused them no little
disappointment. The news of con-
trouble in the con
friction between the Civil
Commission and the military
and impossibility of
reducing the military force now on
islands, notwithstanding the
fact that some men will
t to be brought home, because
of the expiration of the terms of
their enlistment, all combine to re-
Republican predictions
and worry
According to the latest advices
are trying Cuban
policy in All
persons found outside towns
will treated as It's
not surprising that Roosevelt
squirms at pass to which Be
colonizing policy has
brought
Senor chief translator
for provost marshal general of
is in the city. Be is a
and knows the
Philippine character well, and he
says that the United baa
been premature in undertaking to
control islands by a civil com
mission, that insurrection has
not been put down and the
strong arm of the military is
maintenance of peace. He
intimates the Commission has
been duped in choice of their
native advisors of their
and be cited case of
one having fail-
ed in position first assigned
him, of Governor of
gas, has been appointed judge of
one of the in spite of
fact he has never practiced
Mr. Hopkins proposes to do his
share towards the dissipation of the
surplus by establishment of a
permanent Census Bureau. That
a permanent Census Bureau might
be maintained any in-
crease of coat and perhaps an
increase of efficiency, is not denied
but Representative bill
will not do so. His bill provides
for a salary of for the Di-
rector, Ex Gov. W. R.
an assistant director at per
annum, and numerous other
with ties varying from
to Undoubtedly
with the present republican ma-
in Congress there will be no
trouble taking care of
plus.
The report comes from White
House that President is going
THE OUSTS.
Shoe for Ladies which is durable and stylish and
as suitable for bad weather as for swell occasions and moderate
priced. The one in which all these questions are com-
to the greatest degree
Is Our Famous
American Girl Shoe.
A Shoe as good as its name.
Tell ad
Daughter
and all the
Ladies that
T Our FALL
V OPENING of
w ill take place on
Tuesday and Wednesday,
October 1st 2nd.
H. C. HOOKER.
For footwear of all kinds call
on us, we are the Feet Fitters.
j. p. k m,
Three Times The Value
OF ANY OTHER.
ONE THiRD EASIER.
ONE THIRD FASTER.
Agents wanted in all unoccupied
territory.
WHEELER WILSON,
Atlanta, Ga.
For sale by
S. T WHITE,
Greenville. N. C.
Seasonable- Song.
The have come,
the saddest of year. The small
boy leaves the swimming hole, the
farmer stuffs the steer. The urchin
trudges off to school, the pullets
begin to lay. the preacher gets a
move on him. the coal men
their day. The trees put on their
sombre hue, the as-
on the its
fills, the toper calls for
The lonely church oyster laughs
glee, for now his time come;
the have appetites,
the boys must spend their
and the meat barrel is empty, and
the short of liver, and
thought of winter makes your
column quiver.
gets his little gun and sallies
through brush and stubble, and
shoots the colt
and no of I
Suspicious Emigrants.
The rapid increase in the
vote is significant. The
fact that during the last live years
increase in the vote has
exceeded of the white by
per cent, can only be ac-
counted for by the supposition
the are coming to this
State from the South. It is very
Suggestive that the Southern
never emigrate to in
such numbers u just previous to
an election. Is there any natural
for f in this city- we
have who have proven
themselves wormy citizens of the
arc average
Southern emigrants
desirable Sen-
ORIGINAL OBSERVATIONS present remarkable demand
for novels and the influence of that
Made By The Orange, Virginia, Observer demand on the literary product are
discussed by Dr. Talcott Williams
The devil is always entertained . the Review Reviews for No-
free the mansion of a mean man.
As corn is high this fall, why
not let your hogs and grow
Some men think the beet place
fur a red button-bole bouquet is on
to introduce two innovations his i r the nose.
And why not merchandise and prices will
back the statements made concerning them, we
have every right to it There is
wrong in excellence when the
sis within the bounds of when facts are
given without misrepresentation.
Our States Facts.
facts, something well worth remembering.
Counters and tables piled high. Stacks and stacks of
boys and youths Every pi bee
ed and packed with shoes. Wee an show yon to
entire satisfaction. Counter room needed in
goods department. Selling must continue to
relieve the pressure. early before the best
things are gone. All the latest styles and weaves in
goods. Agents for Standard Patterns.
RICKS WILKINSON.
message. First, be
proposes to write it all himself, in-
stead of assigning to the members
of his Cabinet, those portions deal-
with their respective depart-
secondly, that he is go-
to send It to Congress in type-
written form, it having been
custom, heretofore, to typewrite it
and then have it transcribed with
pen. manuscript copy was
then sent to Congress, which body
immediately turned It over to the
Government printer who set it up
and within almost
Incredibly short time, printed
copies to the House and Senate. I
understand, too. that
dent will recommend establish-
of a Department of Commerce
and Industry.
It has been made known at
Navy Department Rear Admiral
is to be succeeded
as Chief of the of
by Rear Admiral Henry C.
Taylor. Rear Admiral
shield will be given command of
the European station, so that the
transfer will be in the nature of a
promotion, rather than otherwise.
Some Orange people are engaged
in ache corns all year
on their feet.
The world accords more room
and greater respect to the heels of
a wide a-wake mule than it does to
the head of a lazy man.
It appears that President
Is his dinner
table. Wouldn't another pair of
eye-glasses help him to a better
discernment t
Judge Connor, of Wilson, Is
held in high esteem at
home and the state at large. He
is a candidate for the associate
on Supreme Court
bench. He would make a wise,
faithful, honorable judge,
there would never be any
of corruption on bis
Messenger.
Mr. D. Walker, of Char-
has been endorsed by
members of the bar of that city a
a candidate for election as
ate Justice of Supreme Court.
The number of novel-
readers has been in-
creased, while the cost of
i has been cheapened. short,
all the conditions of literary pro-
have been transformed.
This fact was pointed out by Dr
Williams a year ago, the Review
of Reviews, and the past twelve
months have only confirmed the
predictions be then made regard-
prosperity of the American
book trade. Dr.
review of Read
and Written in there is a
survey of the American history and
biography the year, by William
R. Shaw, together with a brief dis-
of some of
changes in methods.
Arthur Foley
Lord of London, con-
tributes an interesting paper to
the Cosmopolitan
Overcrowding of Great Cities
and Remedies for Apropos
of the discussion of the of
England by Americans, Edmund
furnishes in the same
an essay scoring Englishmen
for their narrowness of intellect.
he has a bit at Amer-
intellectual life in the
century.
The size of the cotton crop last
The be price it was sold at
days are full of sunshine and the brought enough money to many to
nights are full of frost,, and enable them to save an adequate
is full of stove pipes buy their groceries and
the joints are lost. O, springtime Ibis year for the cash. Rut
has its drawbacks, but it doesn't they did not save it. We arc told
have them nil. for worst part
of the year is just before the fall.
Orange, Va. Observer.
Suppose all the teachers in the
public schools could cook good
corn bread all kinds of meats
and could teach their pupils to do
it, and it was a requirement of
law to do it, what an incalculable
it all would be. There
are other things we rarely see cook-
ed in a wholesome way that might
be included in our supposition.
by many In honest confession that
they recklessly this
Unit they could have done without
and fell no discomfort thereby.
The consequence is that have
occasion to lament their lolly in
light of size price of
cotton crop they are now mar-
A full crop next year can
leave no net earning, for it will
lake all clear gains to pay up losses
sustained this year. wisest
course is for the farmer to resolve
firmly that he will accumulate
We are trying to modest In OUT needs to
thought. How to effect all his and
great good we arc nut able to say A pf mortgaging crops
We know there would as is
ties in the way. The beginning manhood of our
would not be perfection; nut j . this evil is
might be taught in the start. as impaired en-
pupils could learn lessons that
would to comfort, peace,
health and happiness of
homes as they told over and over
the how of bread making and such
like. Then would come economy
in this working. Our
dent of schools leaner
the most he knows it all
where economy was a thing of
His knowledge in Ibis
dissipated aspirations and
temptations to
Bridge News.
I there, j
The leisure time of the farmer Is
almost at hand, the rush of crop
gathering is over, and be has time
to look about for the
coming year. This time, however,
book, be but should
employed in the proper
came the most port at ion of the Soil, composting fer-
around camp tires in n of I and taking such steps as
four years a Virginia school, i are necessary a effective
Most of us like do not often get j drainage lb in we have had hereto-
good com bread. That is a great fore. Tb past year, with its
the usual have
pressed necessity of greater
effort in this direction, and the ex-
many should enforce U.
Crops thoroughly drained laud
suffer less from drought or excessive
rains than those where drainage is
lens perfect. This has been lately
taught to be a matter of fact,
not of theory
News.
It a Easy to Say
but at must nil go from lien
ed boom into to chill outer
nets wheezing. Avoiding
winter is them is not
lake Allen
begin when -II is young and nut
until it settles the lung.,
then, even with Allen's
relief w ill be slower.





mm
mm
rm
BUB
EASTERN REFLECTOR
X. C.
D. J. WHICHARD, Ed. Owner
Entered t the Post Office at
Greenville, N. C, as Second-Class
Mail Matter.
Friday, November 1901.
the assassin
dent was electrocuted
in the at Y.,
Tuesday morning at o'clock. He
had to be carried forcibly from his
cell to the death Id his ex-
the falls upon the
last scene of the great tragedy.
The Raleigh last week
brought together the greatest
of disgraceful side shows
ever seen in the State. People
who were in attendance are out-
spoken in condemnation of such in-
decencies and swindles. The fair
had better be abolished than to be
the cause of such things as this.
Prominent Republicans of this
State are presenting S. B. Adam
of Greensboro, for appointment as
successor to the late Judge T. C.
Fuller, of the Court of Private
Land Claims. The President in-
formed them that as Judge Fuller
was a Democrat he would probably
appoint a Democrat to succeed him.
Hon. Josiah Tinner died
day morning at Hillsboro. He
was about eighty years old, and
Was perhaps one of the best
men in the State. He was
ally prominent during the
period following the civil
war, when as editor of the Raleigh
Sentinel be made himself famous
by his attacks on carpetbaggers.
He was arrested on the charge
being with the Kn
but was released from jail
on a writ of habeas pus. He has
out of public life the last
years.
JAKE LATHAM ARRAIGNED
Held for January Term of C
Jake Latham, colored, who on
last Friday struck Mr. W. H.
Proctor the head with a shovel
the death, was
a preliminary this morn-
before Mr. C.
Justice of the Peace.
Jake was represented by Col.
Harry Skinner and entered a plea
of not guilty answer to the read-
of the warrant charging him
with murder.
Several were
and their testimony made a strong
case against the
the Justice remanded him to jail to
await the January term of
court.
Of the witnesses examined Mr.
D. D. testified that as he
was coming down bis home
at the Pitt street
corner be saw Jake Latham in a
about halfway the
house Proctor
and the corner. Proctor was
coming behind the wagon. Jake
stopped and Proctor came up,
with buggy whip in hand
the butt of it resting on ground.
Proctor stooped as if to pick up
something and as he was raising
up Jake struck him over head with
shovel. Jake drove off. Witness
helped carry Proctor the
Dr. E. A. testified as to
the character of the wound
that it was the cause of Proctor's
death.
Rev. J. X. Booth testified that
from his home be heard the noise
on the street and some one crying
come here. He went out and saw
wagon going off, also saw several
Proctor getting him
up in the house. Witness
looked after Proctor's horse that
had left on street then
take him under a warrant. The
colored man called Proctor a liar
when Proctor toled him be had
stolen his barrel. Proctor run in
the gate toward the house and wit-
drove by. She looked back
and saw come out the gate
the colored man grabbed up
the shovel and told Proctor come
to him if he dared. Witness
drove looking back again
saw Proctor as if be was picking
up something, aid when he was
about hall straight the colored man
strucK him he fell. She did
not see the colored man of the
and not see Proctor hit
him or offer to bit him. saw
some go wining to Proctor.
There was a large crowd in the
Court House during the progress
of the trial.
TIN WEDDING.
Mr. Mrs. R. W. King Celebrate Their
Tenth Anniversary.
Monday evening Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. King, at their residence on
avenue, were at home
to their many friends, it being the
anniversary of their marriage.
The occasion was of ease and
elegance, affording great pleasure
to all attendance.
Dr. R. L. and Miss Clara
Bruce Forbes received the
front hall and passed them
to Capt. R. Williams who con-
ducted them to the rooms.
In the front parlor were Mr. and
Mis. King who were assisted in
receiving by their two little
Misses Mattie
and by Mr. S. T. White
and Miss Across
the cud of the parlor was a
arch of Mr. Mrs.
King standing in the arch
underneath a large of white
When some men set their hearts
on anything they never let up.
Sixty years ago Ella and Mary
sisters, were the belles of
Jersey Shore, Pa. Gideon Thomas
loved Ella Mary, and fur the
life of he couldn't tell which
he loved most. So he flipped a
copper lo decide which ho should
ask to be and it Hipped for
Mary. He her. They
were ably happy wedded
life for fifty years, then Mary died,
Ella remained single, and in due
time Gideon courted and married
her without Hipping a copper.
chrysanthemums, Mr. White
in and assisted putting him to bed. the small arch on the right
Mis. W. H. Proctor testified that and Miss the arch on the
Mr. Proctor bad hitched his left,
horse and took
STATE NEWS.
Happening hi North Carolina.
The Masons of Rocky Mount will
hold a bazaar and fair the hut week
in November.
Cowper, a in-
man of Raleigh and well
known throughout the died
Monday.
A little three-year old girl, near
Salisbury-, while playing with
matches set her on fire and
was burned to death.
J. B. Andrews, Durham
county, lost his barns and contents,
stables and several head of horses
by tire a few nights ago.
Fire broke out among the booths
in the midway at the Raleigh fair,
Friday Light, a colored boy
locked in one of them was
burned to death.
P. A. of Roxboro, has
experimenting with the
of Havana tobacco has
grown some flue specimens. He
believe- it can be successfully
grown in this State.
Baptist Services.
Rey. C. A. of Goldsboro,
arrived Monday to do the
preaching at the meeting in the
Baptist church this week. He
preached his first Monday
night, bis subject being faith. He
said there were those who believed
their works would save
while others believed they would
be saved by a mixture of works
and faith, but he was ready to tell
them, with the Bible as the only
source of authority, that only
through faith the Lord Jesus
Christ are we saved. He said man
is not saved by his works, but his
works are a of his being
saved, by his works is the
measure of reward given. But
without faith it is impossible to
Over the arch burned ten j please God, and except ye believe
out the and on one side were Jew Christ ye are
and asked her for his whip. She
law Proctor and Jake talking and
saw Proctor dodge as if he was
struck at. started off and
Last week a Concord photograph
advertised that on last Monday-
he would make baby pictures free
a. in. and p m. On
that day between hours
there were swarms of baby car-
at his door. When the
tares were taken be would inform
the mothers that lie no charge
for taking it but would charge for
all pictures wanted. There was
much kicking at this way of
securing Times.
this State said a
prominent visitor the other day,
commercial lawyers. We want
men who practice law for law's
sake; men who expect to rise mere
as lawyers and to make
living only from the law. The
profession and hundreds of
are badly hurt by the fact
that a largo proportion of law-
run their offices at a side line
to cheap
in Charlotte Observer.
The war against trailing skirts
as means of communication of
diseases is carried with vigor
Germany. Thus, hi Kins
have put up a notice that
Belong skirts are to be admitted
within
and the keeper Indies
whose skirts are his opinion
long, while in Switzerland,
outside Dresden, notices arc-
on the trees that of trailing
be lined.
thinking there would be trouble
she went up from the basement.
Jake picked up shovel from
and raised it, Proctor dodged. Jake
struck him be fell. She cried
for help Mr. up.
Witness also Milled as to trouble
between Jake and Proctor about
the water barrel about
oils threats made Proctor.
Mis C. B. testified
that she CM in her yard, saw Jake
standing up in wagon the act of
He struck some
thing but could not sec what
on account of rose bushes
log the view. Jake drove off. She
weal to gate and saw Proctor
on ground and saw Mr. Gard-
going up to him. Did i see
Mis. Proctor when Jake struck but
heard her scream that Jake bad
Proctor.
B. Heath testified that be
saw at the gate. Jake
drove up and slopped. Heard
tor tell Jake he was a liar, and
that it he did not bring the barrel
home he would get out a
for him. As Proctor came
to his buggy Jake; struck at him
from the wagon. Proctor jumped
back and hit at Jake with small
end of Jake drew shovel
again and Proctor went in the
house and came out, they
went behind so witness could
not see them but heard a
lick heard Mrs. Proctor scream.
Mr. Thompson testified that he
was at the roof of
near by heard some talking.
Haw Proctor around as if
to get buggy. Jake struck at
him with shovel and Proctor jump-
back, striking at Jake with
Jake drew shovel again
and Proctor went house
came out. Jake drove off.
Mrs. Pauline testified
that as she drove around the corner
from Fifth into Pitt street she saw
a wagon going up the street, with a
colored man it. She did
know him, but drove up Is hind
him thinking lie was going across
the bridge. As she drove up to
where Proctor lived he drove his
horse nut the big gate and she
drove between buggy
and wagon. Proctor said
something to colored man
about a i el and told In in if be
did bring it home be would
figures 1891 and 1901 opposite. condemned already.
second room Senator j Mr. Jenkins is an earnest speak
Mrs. F. G. James served the r, Riving the truth
with oyster cocktails from a huge W in God's Word, and
Of ice, and Di, and Mrs. J. as the only source of authority.
L. presided at the lunch
bowl. Mayor's Court.
In the third room salads, sand-1 w H j
beaten biscuits and olives of cases in his
were served by Col. Mrs.
and Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
each o. rooms the floral
decorations were exquisite, in the
latter a banked with bright
dahlias am. sprays of fern with a
the center lighted
tapers nil around being particular
beautiful.
In opposite room across the
hall was a large tin ship laden
with the many wedding presents
from friends. In this room
cream and cakes were served
Mr. and Mm. T King and
Mr. Jesse and Miss Bessie
Patrick.
There Were many who called to
Mr. and Mrs. King
and wish them many more happy
anniversaries.
Getting In Good Shape.
The Democracy nation is
gelling in fine shape for 1901. The
of I lie Hay State have
named Josiah the best
mayor ever had, for Gov-
and while he will fail of
election year, bis candidacy
will be worth much to the party.
Tammany Hall has named a spot
less man and able lawyer, Ed-
ward M. for mayor of
Greater York, and going
to lie elected. This will assist ma-
in harmonizing all Demo
factions the Empire
State. Everywhere Democrats
are full of hope, getting back to
first principles and preparing
great battle and a splendid victory
along truly Democratic
lines next presidential
Star.
since last
Mack Butts Jas. Cherry,
riotous and disorderly conduct,
fined cost each, total 95.00.
Lawrence Ward and Peter
HI Hint, riotous and disorderly con-
duct assault, bound over to
Superior court.
Jas. A. Batten, and down,
fined and cost, total
fast and reckless
fined and costs, 01.20
Win. assault, fined
and costs,
Ed. Fleming, assault, fined
cost, 05.10.
Henry reckless
lined and cost total 13.25.
The remains of
K. Davis, of
who was for so many years chair-
man the Committee on Foreign
Relations were brought to Wash-
this week by his widow and
interred at Arlington, in the
division, a lot having been
set aside for the
Bat Sale Yet
On Tuesday G- W. Venters, Jr.
of Chi cod township, sold a barn
of pounds of tobacco at the
Liberty Warehouse, that brought
257.09. The several lots as
lbs at at
at at at
at at at This
was an average of nearly all
through, and is the nest sale that
has yet been made on the market.
But Liberty is just leading
things anyway. This week
sales have been large every day,
the Liberty has averaged
on everything on floor,
big bus of scrap. They are
hustling on- at Liberty.
More Letters Soon.
A private letter from Mr. T. C.
Davis, of Wilson, says that in a
few days be will send Re
at other series of his
collections of We
know this announcement will give
pleasure to our readers. Mr. Davis
expresses regret that the old Ma-
sonic Lodge building is burned
says be will miss it when he comes
to Greenville. He also lays
from many letters he has re-
about Inn he
is convinced I
has a wide circulation.
Winterville Department.
NEWSY
N. C, Oct.
A. G. Cox bas lbs pork for
tale at cents per pound gross.
A Special next
days we will give a nice present
with each buggy we sell, provided
we sell for Car-
Co.
Mrs. Dr. of was
here yesterday.
W. H. and Mrs. J. S.
left Monday for
ville, Va., to visit relatives.
W. A. West was the guest of J.
D. Cox Sunday.
Send in orders for Tar Heel carts
wagons. We are prepared to
fill orders G. Cox
Mfg. Co.
A first class second mow-
machine almost as gold as new
can be purchased cheap by apply-
the office of the A. G. Cox
Mfg. Co.
W. E. Brown, a very
merchant, of
were visiting Dr. B. T., and J.
D. Cox this week.
Sam of Grifton, was
here yesterday.
H. D. Martin, of Wilson, spent
Saturday and Sunday with It. II
Hunsucker.
Land For tract of
land lying about miles of
and miles of Ridge Spring. It
is fine tobacco laud and is
as the Allen Jackson place. Apply-
to A, G. Cox.
Robert Rouse and Mr. Taylor, of
Lenoir. came to see and spent the
day with W. H. Rouse Sun-
day.
Mrs. Mary Ann Williams, an
aunt of Mrs. Rowan Cooper, died
near here Monday night was
buried Tuesday morning.
Louis Manning, a little son of
B. F., fell from some cotton
day afternoon and broke bis arm
between the wrist elbow.
I. A. Sugg, Jr , of Greenville,
came down Saturday and
left Monday morning.
free school commenced Mon-
day Miss Bryan us
teacher.
G. It. Dixon and wife went to
Black Jack yesterday will re-
turn today.
W. M. Carroll, of Kinston, has
visiting friends near here for
the past few days.
of came
here visiting Sunday.
A. G. Cox will pay highest
cash price for cotton seed.
WE S THE WORK.
And that is the reason the old Greenville Warehouse is
selling so much We get the highest price for every
pile sold on our floor. The farmers see this, and appreciating
the hard work we do for them they bring their tobacco.
We treat all alike, get the best price time. Bring your
next load to the Greenville Warehouse and we will show you
the truth of this. We have every accommodation for you and
your team.
We are independent of
Warehouse Trusts.
J. C.
R. S. EVANS.
D. S.
Our Line of
New Millinery
will be convinced that a
prettier, more stylish display was
never
Made in
Greenville
Pattern Hate. Ready to-wear Hats, Sailors,
Baby Cloaks and Caps. The very newest
and styles in everything in my line.
Prices lower than ever. Give me a call.
mm. m. .
Greenville, N,
A PROCLAMATION BY THE
NOR.
Reward.
COVER.
The never feels tho
of taking the gold cure.
Carolina,
Executive Depart met.
official inform
has been received at this Depart-
that at Falkland, Pitt county.
N. C, on or about December 22nd.
1900, John Parker shot and
killed Alex Little.
it appears that
the said John H. Parker has fled
the State, or so himself
that process of law
cannot be served upon
Now, therefore, I, Charles B.
Governor of State of
North by virtue of an
in vested by law, do
issue my proclamation, idle,
a reward of two hundred
for apprehension de
livery of the said John H. Parker
to the of Pitt county at the
Court house in Greenville and I
do enjoin all officers of State
and all good citizens to assist
bringing said criminal to justice,
Done at our City of
I 28th day
October, in the year
. of our Lord thous-
and nine hundred one and
hundred and twenty-sixth
American Independence
By
Chan. H.
P. M. Private Sec.
II. Parker is
nearly six feet high of spare build,
weighs about bas
boyish face, is almost beard
leas, has blue eyes, light hair, is
slightly stooped and is about
old.
TONIC LAXATIVE
If yea have soar stomach, indigestion, baa
breath, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney trouble, low
of appetite, insomnia, lack el energy, bad blood, blotched or
or any symptoms and disorders which tell the story of bad Inapt,
Impaired system, Will Core You.
It win clean eat the bowels, the liver and kidneys,
mucous membranes of the stomach, purify your blood and pat
on your again. Your appetite will return, your bowels move
your liver and etas to trouble yon, your akin will dear and
freshen and yon will feel lbs old time energy and buoyancy.
Mothers proper to their tee
diarrhea, treaties, Sad Meal
It regular without or stale,
nature, digestion, clean coated In
It I legal
Mr II mid ink for U. ,
For Salt by
in N.,. Una, V , ., lb. aS.
aw We r u hi W. hi M
lb. or In,;
I l I
Mr. sold hit crop
of apple on the trees last week for
Hie orchard is located on
the Mountains, one of tho
finest fruit sections in this
This is a fair of
what can be made of good or-
chords.-
tier. J
None genuine unless
Red Cross is on label
Don't i In a Substitute
WE CHALLENGE THE WORLD
TO PRODUCE THE EQUAL OF
for Chills, Fevers,
Night Sweats and Grippe, and
all forms of Malaria.
DON'T WAIT TO DIE I
SPEND CENTS AND BE CURED I
CURES RUE FUNS I
THY IT. w NO CURE NO PAY. PER
DELIGHTFUL TO TAKE.
Real Estate Transfers.
Recently there been some
other transfers of lots in South
Greenville.
T. r purchased
two lots, adjoining, the east side
of Evans street, that, formerly be-
longed to Messrs. O. A. and
W. B.
Mr. purchased the home
and lot, on opposite side of
street, belonging lo Mr. W. R.
Mr. Smith bas purchased a farm
near Hamilton, in Martin county,
and will move the first of tho
coming year.
couldn't raise a
mustache with a derrick.
License,
Register of T. R.
Issued the following marriage
this
Fulford and Sally Ana
Wind bum.
Q. B. Haddock Geneva
Smith.
Humphrey Hattie
W. W
You Wist Vow
take Tasteless Chill
Tonic r, the f Is plainly print-
ed n allowing that It la ail
ire and in a form.
Cure, No
The goal to literary success de-
pends upon keeping to the write.
r--r
NOW
Mr. JIGGERS
If yon want to avoid Shoe trouble Fall come here.
Every man likes a neat dressy Shoe, it is difficult-
many times, to combine style with comfort. The aver
age man has neither time nor inclination to try on Shoes
for half an hoar to which pair hurts the least- He
He wants to be fitted QUICKLY and we DO IT No
need to ask if our Shoes are durable. We guarantee
them to give satisfaction or money back. Here are
some special the
Our stores has long been famous for the style and comfort of its
This season we are showing a greater variety of styles
than ever, including Kid, and Box e
Calf; all sues and widths.
One of most popular lines in Men's Shoes consists of Patent
Leather, Kid, French Calf and Enameled a
Leather; all sizes and widths.
Men's Patent Kid and Patent Leather Shoes, hand sewed
for smart dressers, equal to custom-made
Urn 17.00 and
OTHER- GOOD THINGS IN MEN'S FALL SHOES.
COME SEE THEM.
SHOE DEALER.
EASTERN REFLECTOR
NOTICE.
If there is a CROSS MARK
in the margin of this paper it
so to remind yon that yon owe
The Eastern for
subscription and we request
to settle as early
We need what YOU
owe and hope yon will not
keep us waiting for it.
This notice is for those who
find the cross mark on their
paper
LOCAL REFLECTIONS.
Pansy Plants and cut Flowers
for sale by Mr. D. D. Haskett.
Most of the public schools of the
county will begin next
Jersey and Charleston, Wake-
field and Cabbage
for sale by Mrs. D. D Haskett.
Fresh Goods Buckwheat, Cit-
cleaned Currents, seeded
Raisins at M. Schultz.
Mr. W. T. Lee is something of a
long handled gourd raiser. He
brought one to The
Inches long.
T. H. of Martin county,
sold six pounds of tobacco for six
dollars the Greenville market
Wednesday. He had a large lot
here.
Attention is called to the notice
to and also the notice of
land sale by Charles
Executor of Lewis
ceased.
Tuesday evening
series seat The Reflector two
huge turnips. One of them weigh-
ed Si pound the other was
nearly as large.
machinery for the steam
laundry was delayed in shipment
which holds tie plant back from
starting up. Everything else is
ready and machinery is expect-
ed in a few day.
lover no i cock Las offered a
reward of for arrest and
delivery to Sheriff of Pitt
of John H. Parker, who on the
22nd of last December and
killed Alex Little, at Falkland.
See notice in this paper.
Died.
Mr. Lewis died Sun-
day night at his home about seven
miles from Greenville. He was
quite old and a good citizen.
month
Honor Roll.
. Masonic Hall School,
ending Oct.
Chit,
Ethel Cheek,
Hocutt.
Addie Rollins.
Whist Came.
Tuesday evening Mrs. J. I.
Woolen, in honor of guest,
Miss Nannie delightfully en-
a few of her friends in
a very interesting whist game.
Dainty refreshments were served.
Almost a Centenarian.
Rachel Peyton, an aged colored
woman, died here Tuesday.
was somewhere and
years old, and some of our
people, whom she nursed faithful
their infancy, remember her
most kindly.
Land Posted.
All person are hereby forbidden
under penalty of the law from en-
hunting, fishing, or in any
way trespassing upon my land
known as Braxton place
adjoining Fred James
Harris and the land.
O.
Died at School.
Miss Settle Coward, aged
of Willow Greene
county, died at f be Normal and
Industrial College at Greensboro,
Monday evening. a
of Mm. W. A. Harden. The
i cumins wore taken to her former
home evening for inter-
Mr. Proctor Dead.
Mr. W. H. Proctor, who on last
Friday morning was assaulted by
Jake Latham, colored, and struck
on the bead with a shovel, died
Monday afternoon about o'clock.
He never regained at
all after being struck, lingered
in agony three days.
Should Be
The attention The
TOR is called to an error in printing
the amount to received by
class pensioners, it appearing in
print as it
been We do not recall Hie
article, but print this those
who call for their war-
rants may know that- those the
fourth-class will receive only
each. ,
Public
The Hoard of Education at
July meeting passed a motion that
public schools of the county
should begin not later than
first Monday in November. The
of the- Schools,
Prof. W. H. requests us
to call the attention of the commit-
of the county to this fact
so that may comply with this
requirement by beginning their
schools next Monday if they have
not already begun them.
As we come toward the Christ-
holidays, larger space the
magazines is given to fiction. The
Cosmopolitan includes a tragic
Story of the Mexican foot-hills by
Thomas A. very clever
society story by Carolyn Wells,
one of the Old by Rich-
ard Le an in-
Indian narrative by H.
T. George, and a story by
R. Crockett.
HOWDY DO.
Some Speak to Me, Some to You.
Tuesday. October 1901.
W. L. Davis went to Wilson to-
day.
Lamb, of is
in town.
W. H. Cox, of Kinston, spent
today here.
E. T. Forbes went to Ahoskie
this morning.
H. W. left this morn-
for Tarboro.
Dr. Jno. L. went to
Weldon today.
R. L. Smith left on the morning
train for Norfolk.
J. E. Starkey left Monday even
for Grifton.
E. Victor Cox came
morning from Ayden.
Rev. C. A. Jenkins came in Mon-
day evening from Goldsboro.
Mrs. H. A. left
evening for Kinston.
L. H. bas taken a
with Z. V. Johnson Co,
S. V. left morning
for Oxford on a happy mission.
Mrs. E. M. Cheek returned Mon-
day evening from the Raleigh fair.
A. J. returned Mon.
day evening from Scotland Neck-
Miss Winnie returned
Monday from Raleigh
fair.
W. E. Nichols returned home
from a trip to Rocky Mt. Monday
Mr. Mrs. W. J. left
Monday evening's train for
Kinston.
Mrs. J. M. Griffin, of
county, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
L. W. Lawrence.
Mr. and Mrs. G. U. left
this morning for Rocky and
Washington City.
E. A. went down to Kin-
Monday evening
Christian
Rev. D. W. Davis went down to
Kinston Monday evening to attend
convention.
Misses Ella Delia of
Ayden, came up on morning
train spent day here.
Mrs. W. T. and her
daughter, Mrs. Wilkinson, came
in Monday from Raleigh.
Miss Helen Forbes
home Monday evening from
Raleigh fair a visit to Wilson.
Calvin Smith, of Robersonville,
passed through Monday evening
on his way to and returned
morning.
Milton White and Tom Duke re-
turned Monday from the
Raleigh fair, having been left at
Weldon Saturday.
Mrs. J. D. Proctor Mrs. Dr.
Jones, of rime-land, passed
through here this their
way to the convention at Kinston.
Mesdames W. It. H. U.
Harris,. H. L. Coward, tie-
Hooker, H. M. Starkey and Misses
Mamie Moore left
for Monday evening to at-
tend the i-i convention.
Wednesday, October 1901.
Jesse went to Weldon to-
day.
W. J. Rollins went to Bethel to-
day.
J. A. Laue left for Tues-
day evening.
M. A. Alien went to Kinston
. evening.
B. W. Mosley returned Tuesday
evening from Bethel.
Mrs. Laura Brown came Tuesday
evening from f
E. B. came from Kinston
on the morning train.
W. L. Brown Tuesday
evening from Baltimore.
Mrs. H. A. returned
home from this
Misses Ella and Delia Smith re-
turned to Ayden Tuesday even-
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Tucker, of
Norfolk, came in the morning
train.
Mrs. Ola left on the
morning train for Newark, N. J.,
to visit friends.
Miss Nannie Cofield is visiting
her sister, Mrs. W. R. in
South Greenville.
E. B. Dixon home from
Oak Ridge Tuesday evening where
he has been attending school.
C. E. Gardner, of Goose Nest,
came in Tuesday and re-
this morning.
AND
Factory to Consumer, No middle mans profit
worth choice goods
at prices-
BOUGHT BIG LOTS OF
Clothing, Notions, Shoes, Hats,
AT HALF THEIR VALUE. CUSTOMERS WILL GOT THE BENEFITS.
Boys
SIZES
TO
and Suits, Price IS
,,
Sixes to
Mens
Suits, Trice
-0
Odd Coats.
and Co Coats
and i
and
and
Boys Knee Pants.
and ii kind, sizes to
and
add
Mens Pants.
mid ; Pants, now
SO and
-50 and
and
These prices for cash s
No goods charged at these prices.
MENS BOYS DRESS SHIRTS
Dozen.
to Shirts now l
to
to
to
to
pieces.
A full line from lie to c now
The bluest value offered.
MENS
-ii.
mid now
and
GO and
and
and
STEEL ROD CONG CROOK-
ED HANDLED.
U to kind,
, Shoe.
Mi s OH in w
allies tips
stock on hand.
You must them.
Sample
in bats fur
SO
All I Window Shades.
ALL CO
Regular price
NOW
price
Bought Enough Goods For Ten Small Stores.
ELL.
DRESS GOODS.
All shades, all kinds, nil quality. The arc
at the Immense stuck. Come sec us and bring along
Clocks and Watches. j
watches now
. ,, ., or tell about us.
day clock at
The cheapest and best line we
ever had. Special
from to
Silks-1997 Yards.
the cheapest to the best.
All qualities. Don't fail to et
of the choice patterns.
Ladies Muslin Underwear
Bead; to wear. Ask our saleslady in department
to show them to yon. Chemise, Petticoats, Drawers,
at less than cost of material.
AH Linen
Worth now
Carpets, Floor Oil Cloth
Biggest line in town. All Kinds.
FURNITURE.
leather Couches, quality
quality Styles
Hall Racks, Cribs, Carriages, Get
Calicoes
Others sell cheap calico. Watch
tin- colors They will run out be-
yon leave town.
Woman Children Hosiery.
prices,
lei-t In mi the mills. is a rare
for ladies to get a
The Loom.
Barker's Mills,
Bleaching, without ticket, yard
Ids c.
C. T.
The Big Store
Greenville, N C.





I ,,
Grove's
Tasteless Chill Tonic
has stood the test
for years.
One Million Six
Hundred Thou-
sand bottles were
sold last year.
Do you think it
pays to try others
Have You Forgot
What
I STILL CARRYING AN
in DATE USE
Dry Press Goods, Shoes
Hats, Shirts, Hardware
Tinware,
AND A NUMBER OF OTHER THING
WHICH I TO MENTION
to fee me for Barrel of Flour or Pork.
Yours to please
White.
AFTER TWO YEARS PREMIUMS HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE
OF NEWARK. K. J. POLICY HAS
I.
Cash
Paid up Insurance,
Extended Insurance work automatically,
Is Non
B. Will be re-Instated be within while you
re living, or within three after lapse, upon satisfactory evidence
of and payment of arrears with interest.
second No Incontestable.
Dividends are payable at beginning of the second and cf each
succeeding year, provided the premium for the current year be paid.
They may be To reduce or
To Increase the Insurance, or
To make policy payable as an during the lifetime
of insured.
J. L.
Greenville, N. C.
AYDEN NOTES.
N. C, Oct. 1901.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Smith,
Farmville, spent and Sun-
day night with relatives at
Hotel. Mr. Smith returned hi
Farmville yesterday, Mrs. Smith
went down to Kinston on the
freight to attend the convention.
Miss Lizzie Combs spent
day and with her parents
at
Prof. Hodges and Lizzie
Anderson went to Greenville Sat-
Rob Anderson spent Sunday
with his mother near Farmville.
Y. M. and wife, Farm-
ville passed through Monday on
their way to Kinston.
Miss Annie Smith attended
church at
C, L. Tyson went to Tarboro
Monday.
Miss Daisy Mumford is spending
ibis week with her sister, Mrs.
Kinsey Hardy.
Miss Blanche Cannon spent Sun-
day in country.
Paul Moore went to Kinston
Monday.
C. E. Johnson, of Winston,
spent Saturday night and Sunday
in town.
Rev. Y. C. conducted
vices in the Seminary Sunday
and night.
J. C. Smith came down from
Monday night to
visit relatives at Smith Hotel.
Claude H. Daniels, of
more, spent Monday night in town.
An old prize-fighter who died in
Boston recently, got a first-rate
eulogy from the preacher who con
ducted his funeral. This prize
fighter, said the preacher, died
Christian man, and in of
this claim it was stated that this
dead boxer never a drinker,
had always spoken against the
loon, work it, voted against
it and invariably gave his earnings
to his It Is rather strange
to bear a prise-fighter
from the poll pit, but the object of
this Boston preacher's was
an exception and was about the
only one on record who didn't own
a saloon. He did not belong to the
class of latter day artists whose
names, in big letters of in-
lights, illuminate the
streets of New
Observer.
of
Men who have married sisters
to have a great deal of
sympathy for each other.
The which women have
about secrets is always to keep
those that are not worth telling.
Generally the woman who knows
how to cook dislikes to do it as
much as the woman who doesn't
know how likes to do it.
What a woman can't understand
is how a man will stay up every
night for six weeks running all
over town trying to make votes for
a candidate he doesn't know, but
gets hopping mad if he has to run
across the to get some pare-
for his York
Press.
GREENVILLE, X. C.
The la good wort awl low priest
Hist Photograph. aw
Halt .
loses
anal
hand all the sad
Trail., June 12,1886-
Dr. C. St. Look, Mo.- I
truly say that roar greatest
in that the world
has known. I have used It two yeses,
and do not Use to be without a box all the
time. Mr baby would hardly bare
through his seam if I had not
used your powders. He U now strong and
well, and baa all bit teeth. allow
opportunity to pass without
mending to mothers. May
reward yon for the good you hare done
through this remedy.
Respectfully, Mrs. A. 0-
The Cosmopolitan has endeavor
ed to make itself known by timely
contributions to all important
Frank Moss, so well
known in and
investigations, contributes
Misgovernment and
A warning to to
November issue. This con-
a serious difficulty in a way
that will be found interesting not
only to New Yorkers, but to
dents of every part of United
States.
Chill Pills cure chill, and all
malarial troubles. That Is they were
made for. Cure after other remedies fail
No care, no pay. Price St bottle
Coal may go up in price, but
always goes down in chutes.
it
IN 1866. J
j. w.
Norfolk, Va.
Cotton Factors and handlers of
Bagging, Ties and Bags.
Correspondence and shipments
solicited.
my wort. No to
and The Try
beat guaranteed to all.
S to a. m to please.
RODOLPH
NOTICE.
As lam now la the hospital in Bald-
more for the of op-
I bare placed my books
in the hands of my brother, lb.
Wiley at the
Brown, and gives full authority to col-
and receipt for same. I earnestly
those Indebted to me to call on and set-
early as possible.
ZENO BROWN, H. D.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Letter, of administration the
of Tingle deceased baring this day
been Issued to me by Clerk of S-
perter of Pitt notice b
hereby given to ad parsons holding claims
on said to present them to me for
before day of
r, or this notice will be plead in bar
of their recovery. All persons indebted to
said estate are to make Immediate
settlement of their indebtedness
This the day of October
D. M. WILLIS,
Administrator of Tingle.
ft BLOW, Attorneys.
OLD
ton daily at A. M. for Green
leave daily at
M. for Washington.
Steamer leaves
Greenville Mondays, Wednesday
and Fridays at A. X. for Tar
leave Tarboro for Greenville
Tuesdays, and
at A. M. carries freight only.
Connecting at Washington with
Steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore,
New York
ton, and for all points for the West
with railroads at Norfolk.
Shippers shoe Id order freight by
the Old Dominion Co. from
New Clyde Line from
Bay Line from
and Una from
Boston.
JNO. SON,
Washington, N. O
J. J. CHEERY,
Greenville, N. C.
NOVICE TO CREDITORS.
Baring qualified before the
court Clerk of Pitt county as
the last will testament of J. P.
Manning, deceased, notice Is hereby fires
to all persons Indebted to estate to
immediate payment to the
and all persons against said
estate are notified to present same
in months from date or this notice
wilt be plead In bar of
This day of October. ML
J. L. O. MANNING,
Executor of J. P.
For Sale.
My Fares rear N. C.
Containing about about IS la
cultivation. Twenty ecru of this Is floe
or truck I Good buildings, to-
water, etc. For further
address C. T. PP. AL,
Box Berkley, Vs.
THE GREENVILLE
ASTHMA CuRE FREE.
kiln I ft Permanent Cure In all Cases
SENT ABSOLUTELY I ON OP
There is nothing like It brings
FOR
instant relief, even in the worst It cures when
all else tails.
The C. P. Wells, of Villa, Ridge, III., says.
bottle of in good
tell how thankful I feel for the
good derived from it. I a slave, with
putrid ton throat and asthma for ten years. I de-
of ever being cured, saw your advertise
tor the Ibis and
disc at, and thought you
but resolved to give it a trial. To my
astonishment, I lie trial tided like a charm.
We want to send to every dial treatment of
similar to the one that cured Mr. Wells. We'll send it by mail post
paid, absolutely Free of Charge, any sufferer who will write for it,
even on a postal. mind, though you in despairing, however
bad case. will relieve and cure. The worse your
ease, more glad we it re to semi it. Ho not delay, write once, ad-
Bros Medicine Co., East 130th St., N. Y. City.
Sold by all Druggists.
can be quite where s sold
is going to bit you In the fall and winter
it may sell in bowels, producing seven
pain. Do not be alarmed nor torment
yourself with fears At the
first sign of a cramp take Perry
Painkiller in warm, water and
relief comes at once. Then Is but one
Painkiller, Perry cents
Newspaper Only.
When the great English
was
whether he street car and
omnibus advertising and posters he
I because I don't
believe in them. They may do for
some users, but we have tried
them and found they did not pay
us. We pi., our faith to
and we know that our invest-
Rec
Thames Prescript law Malaria
Chills and la a bottle of
Chill Tonic. It la simply Inn
and quinine In a form. No cure,
no Pay. Wee
A FACT
ABOUT THE
ht the
tag la
ii
THIS IS A FACT
which may be
Tint's Pills
They
They bring the
mind. They beta health sad
to body.
TAKE NO
Within the past two years
has been spent for poison with
which to kill prairie dogs in West-
Kansas. The little animals
appear to poisoned food, and
are increasing in numbers so rapid
that In a few years the whole
State will probably be overrun with
them.
RHEUMATISM
to am
A vegetable remedy that post-
lively cures long stand-
greatest blood
knows. Has hearty
I of leading
alter thorough trial.
cent, of the treated.
per
Ml by
NOTICE TO
Letter testamentary this day
lo me upon estate Lewis
demised, by the Clerk of
Superior of Pitt county, U
hereby to all persons having claims
against laid estate to them lo me
for payment or before 30th
October 1902, or this notice will be plead
bar of their recovery. All indebted
estate arc notified to make
payment to me.
This the of October, 1901.
of
JARVIS ft BLOW, Attorneys.
LAND SALE.
By power tome lasted by
the fast will of Lewis
deceased, I will on Monday, De-
2nd, 1901, before the court
la sell at sale to
bidder cash that tractor
parcel of land la
county, lying on South tide of
Branch and adjoining land or Lewis
Will
Moore and
more . less. It the tract o
deeded to Lewis by
and known part of liar
man tract.
This the day of October,
CH
of Lewis
CO.
Manufacturers of
Boon, Sail, Blinds,
Interior and Exterior Finishings
for Fine Modern and Cheap Build
We solicit your patronage and
guarantee to give satisfaction in
prices, styles and work.
Please send your orders to
Co.
GREENVILLE, N.
1879.-------
S. M.
Wholesale retail Grocer and
Furniture Dealer. Cash paid for
Fur, Cotton Bead, Oil Bar
Turkeys, Egg, Bed
steads, Matt Oak Suits, Ba
by Carriages, Carts, Parlor
suite, Tables, Lounges, P.
and Gail ft Ax
Meat Key West Cheroots,
American Beauty Cub-
Cherries, Peaches,
Pine Syrup, Jelly, Milk,
Floor Sugar, Coffee, Meat, Soap,
Lye, Magic Food, Oil,
Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, Oar-
den Seeds. Oranges, Apples,
Dried Apples,
Prunes, Currents, Raisins, Glass
and China Ware, Tin and Wooden
Ware. Cakes and Crackers,
Cheese. Best Batter, Stand
ard Sawing I nu
other goods. Quality and
Quantity. Cheap for cash.
la ass.
II
of Reedy
L.
LAND
virtue the Superior
of Pitt county mads a special proceed-
i entitled John I. James a wife Lacy
A. James vs. Sallie Bryant, John R.
and Millie Williams; undersigned
Commissioner will sell for cash before lbs
court in Greenville Tuesday,
described pie
ale
leads of H.
and th
Cotton Bagging and lies always
Fresh goods kept constantly
hand. Country produce and
sold. A trial will convince
D. W.
W. R. BRO.,
N.
The in every
pertinent and prices low
lowest. Highest market prices
paid for country produce.
Mm,
day
o'clock m , the following described .
reel or tract of land situate in Carolina
tire lands of M. R.
Town
the day of November, at
MI
or tract of Ii
II. D.
win and
scree more or less.
This Oct. 1901
F.
J. U. J.
the land deeded
Roebuck.
D.
Ross to
LAND
By virtue of s decree of Superior
court, made by His Honor W. H.
Judge May term, of PM
court in of C. D.
Casar sad
Rickey Hill church, lbs undersigned
will sell tor cash the
door la Monday
the day of November, follow-
described piece, parcel or lot of land
situate in Town of
known Hickory Hill colored Baptist
church lot, and s part of lot Ho. Be
ginning at the corner of lots T sad
Greene Street running with line of
West fort, then Norths
straight parallel with street St
feet, thence a direct line parallel with
line to street, thence with
Greene street to the beginning, containing
2-1 yards.
This 1st, 1901 F.
ATTENTION AGENTS I
Mr. John C. General Agent for
North sad Virginia, of that Well-
Popular Company,
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT
Life Insurance Co., of J.
Desires to announce lo its large of
policy to las
generally, of North com-
will now la this
state and from eats will lame
sad policies, lo all de-
siring the wry bast insurance la lbs beet
If the local agent la yew has act
yet completed
JOHN C.
Stats Raleigh, N. a
Assets
Paid policy
at
lo the .
IN-
SADDLES
-A GENERAL LINE OF
nil
Also a nice Lin. of Hard ware.
COME TO BO. ME.
B.
Norfolk, Va.
Cotton and Broken la
Stocks, Cotton, Grain and
ons. Private Wires to New York,
Chicago and New Orleans.
Th Commoner
WILLIAM i.
Editor Publisher,
TERMS In Advance.
One Tear II, Six Months
Three Sing. Copy
No traveling canvassers are em-
eyed. Subscriptions taken at
The
and
will be sent together
one year for or Daily
one year far payable la ad-
. .,
FOB
SI II
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J.
TRUTH TO
VOL. XX.-
PITT COUNTY, N. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER
a M
-AT-
NO
ARE KNOCKING
THEM
For Dry Dress Goods, Hats. Caps, Shoos, Trunks,
Boys and Mens Clothing, Gents Furnishings,
and a big line of Baby Caps, Cloaks, Mitts and
Come to see us. Every day a-bargain day and everything a
bargain. Your friends,
W. T. LEE CO.
The
DIVIDEND RECORD IS THE RESULT
Securing highest rate of interest consistent with safety.
Rigid economy of management.
Low death rate, resulting from a careful selection of risks and
limiting its business to the United States
It will be to your interest to see what we can do for you before
placing your life Insurance.
Good territory open for Agents in North Carolina.
T. ARCHIBALD General Agent.
For Virginia and North Carolina,
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company,
1441 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va.
SKINNER AND THE ANGELS.
A Fireside Tale.
up them chunks,
set down by me, here,
that man I'll tell
That Skinner-man, my
His name Is Mister Skinner,
Ho lives here, in the South
call him Harry Skinner.
The man with mouth;
He's fur every party
The South has ever seen,
in the middle.
He's often talked between.
Some this Ulster Skinner
walked the bat
there look mighty proud
A Ku Klux Democrat
Aid then that Mister Skinner
Well, Skinner stepped behind
fer the Populists
Upon their hayseed nine,
the onset's,
what was good,
This Harry Skinner,
what he could.
now this Mister Skinner
tuck another stand
at them offices,
As a
with them colon d
He's quick strong
them offices
which them angels long,
But which them colored angels
Can never ketch, they know,
Because that Mister Skinner's
at
The talc was told and silence fell.
Talc-teller went to bed
But over dying fire
Sat wife, with low bent head,
And as she brushed, from furrowed check,
A tear that stole down there,
She softly prayed that Skinner might
Some office grub yet spare
For wingless, colored angels here,
With instead of hair
, . JNO. It. MORRIS.
Charlotte Observer.
THE
Shoe for Ladies is able and stylish and
as suitable for bad weather as for swell occasions and moderate
priced. The one in which all these questions are com-
to the greatest degree
Is Our Famous
American Girl Shoe.
FALL SELLING.
Putting it Strong.
And why When the merchandise and prices will
back up the statements made concerning them, we
have every right to it There is
wrong in excellence when the
sis is within the bounds of truth, when facts are
given without misrepresentation.
Our States Facts.
Just facts, something well worth remembering.
Counters and tables piled high. Stacks and stacks of
mens, boys and youths clothing. Every place
ed packed with shoes. We can show yon to your
entire satisfaction. Counter room needed in our
dress goods department. Selling must continue to
relieve the pressure. Come early before the best
things are gone. All the latest styles and weaves in
goods. Agents for Standard Patterns.
RICKS WILKINSON.
Bombshell in the Fire.
A named Holly while
plowing i ii a field a mile and a half
of town the other day, unearthed a
bombshell and threw it out on th
ride of the field. Yesterday after-
noon it was fun ml by a crowd of
colored children, who were delight-
ed with the beautiful plaything,
and after rolling it around the floor
fur a while, decided to place it in
the fire and sit and watch it melt.
This took place at the house of Jim
Kirk on East Market street, and a
few minutes after the bomb had
been deposited in the fire there
was a terrific explosion and a sound
of wailing in that household. Jim
Kirk's little girl, had
two fingers torn off and her brother
received a serious wound on the
leg. The exploded bomb which
was filled with balls, etc.,
mantle, tore a hole in
the roof of the house, set fire to a
bed and several other pieces of
furniture, and played havoc in
The Place to
get the Best
Goods for the
Least Money
then yon will
go straight to
H. C
IF
YOU ARE
Complete stock of fall and winter goods
now ready for j our Inspection, and our
A Shoe as good as name.
SEW MILL INERT
cannot lie surpassed anywhere. The
ladies should not fail to see our stock.
e-a
For footwear of all kinds call
on us, we are the Feet Fitters.
my h g.
The Circus.
Dr. J. U. Alexander hits a
Contribution in today's paper
upon the Institution
which provides the entertainment
of the masses. Our friend of the
Greenville recently
had an excellent editorial in the
same line, and ii gives The
pleasure to endorse both. The
people of the towns have many
means of those of the
country few. The poorer people
of the rural districts, the tenants,
croppers and hired laborers, white
and black, have few sources of
amusement, and to them the circus
Depreciation.
One the which keep
some young people from rising is
a habit of self-reproach, of self-
criticism. are always
ting themselves looking for weak
points their characters, and con-
blaming themselves for not
doing this or that. In other words
they turn their eyes inward so
much that their thoughts become
they do not see themselves
as they really are; they become
narrow and pessimistic, and
fail not from lack of
but of the foolish and
fatal habit of self-depreciation.
They have minds with
dismal pictures of their short com-
and have reproved them-
selves so much that they have act-
become
All Kinds at The Reflector Office
Josiah Turner and His
Mr, Turner's accounts of his
street fights were the things
in contemporaneous literature.
Judge W. A. Moore, of the
court, for him one
day, but in Starting to assault him
slipped fell. Turner, greatly
he could be amused at
anything, for he never a
over Dim and punch-
ed in the with his
la, and never got tired afterwards
writing about man who fell
down at Win II. Bailey,
then of Salisbury, challenged him
to a duel. Turner replied to the
is a so to j challenge through his paper, sign-
the women and children of the log the name of his office devil, a
families, if they come t. town boy named Hall, to the letter,
circus day and see no more than i Hall was supposed to take the
the st parade, they have had a off his chiefs and
break in the monotony of their wrote frequent open letters to Mr.
lives and have beard music Bailey, Inviting him to mortal com-
witnessed sight to lie remembered I bat. Turner could take the most
pleasantly and talked The t rival incident of a man's life, or
circus is the I the the peculiarity his per-
everything in the nature public appearance, and make him a
BAKER HART,
FOR SUPPLY.
Accidentally Kills Himself.
A most distressing accident
curred Rocky Mount Tuesday.
Tom Davis, the eighteen year old
son of Sid Davie, one of the most
efficient policemen in State,
dropped on a doorstep a double
gun which he was
handling. The hammers struck
and discharged the gun. The load
went through his stomach. The
young man only lived an hour
Southerner.
The Best Prescription for
Chills and Is u of Grove's
Tasteless Chill Tonic. It la simply iron
and quinine In a No cure,
no Pay. Price
We have just added Steam Supply to our business and
will fell anything in this line very low. See us when in of
Globe and Anglo Valves, Standard
and Angle Valves, Check Valves, Water
Oil Cups, Air Cocks, Steam Hancock
U, S. Injectors, Cocks, Steam
Pipe all sixes, Pipe Fitting all sizes.
COMPLETE LINE OF Packing, Rubber Belt,
Belt, Leather Belt, Belt. Lacing, Belt Hooks,
SOLE
entertainment common
We arc not sympathy
With those would put
taxes upon it as to keep it away
because it money out of the
It distributes a
deal of money and is worth to
people all that it costs. live
the Circus It furnishes fun to the
people who have least Inn and
does an hundred fold more good
than Observer.
we hear the
a thing. It is
a afterthought upon
a have visited to re-
call how its people, with ac-
cord, it tip. know by
experience that it does good
j to talk up anything warmly. It
helps a School, church, a
to talk them up. We may
By Nerves I another, bat not so happy a
with opium ti-in- phrase, one not so heard,
the of m
cough Is symptom goes from bad lo There are
Allen's Lung balsam not merely pi.
the nerves lo sleep, It gets right down lo town, their school their
of trouble mi-l so cures u. ,.
deep sealed of throat whatever they con-
lg with. Such talk has more
than talking up.
A Shrewd Trick. is to be
glad to hoar and believe in
s symptom goes bad to I am
He. Du n it waste lime and money on many w ho appear prefer talking
i ., mi. j-
Ion's Lung Balsam does not merely talking They disparage
George Ellsworth, one of the;
Morven safe who .,
convicted at recent term of An- i
rag
books and
cm. calamity. Many a preach-
m has been impaired.,
not destroyed, by talking him
BOO Criminal and sentenced ,,., . . . . ,,
, ,. ., , for at least squally
to years in the penitentiary, but, i,,,., ,.,. ,, . .,
reasons he might have been
whose was appealed, received iii, ., .
increased power for
a lot express th s morn.; g., y M
examined the
burglar
saw bound , the back one of ,.
hem he saws were concealed so m ,
cunningly II was only by th,,
Harvesting Sewer and Drain Tile they M in t has lost trade
found These sill cut t,
if ,, , ,, y
and had gotten hold of Bridge New,,
they would soon have been
and Intelligencer. Comfort From Doctors.
Doctors say is not
Tins is poor lo a who
reels as If his fact was pierced with hot
needles and turn a thousand pairs of
A word to
Garland Cook Stoves.
BAKER HART,
Building.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Know What You arc Tutting
When lake Tasteless Chill
Tonic ti- is plainly
el o every It
Ira and in s
Cure, No
Indoors sod Parry
fol-
. .
lows this told.
but
There


Title
Eastern reflector, 1 November 1901
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
November 01, 1901
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/18561
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy