Eastern reflector, 7 February 1908






A DREAMING MATCH.
TO CUT UP
Treatment Is Waiting For ; Th. but the
pis Man Did Better.
Food poisoning no mm o if I Among the famous Indian
we the number of the past was George
Who eat more or from
two to tour time- a day. Yet it Bluff, S. C, was frequented by In-
n frequency than from fag and near In bench
supposed, the P Son a char-
in the majority of being very
light and the poison being thrown
. a single attack of vomiting or
a flight diarrhea.
liven of and wide-
spread poisoning, as are men
o in the papers as
occurring at picnics or church
val
or
anecdote is related of Mr.
and an Indian chief.
Chief from beyond the
Savannah river spent the night at
In the morning the
Indian said. dream last
said did
my red brother
dream you give me fine big
in possession at the
time.
The trader instantly passed the
rifle to the chief, saving, you
dreamed it, yon must have
Nest morning said to the
chief. dreamed last
dream asked
I dreamed gave me the,.
Vomiting be
Tl
and.
the eating of sandwiches
cream, the Dumber of laud
fro
greatest mortality is from
i poisoning
from poisoning, ho
of fatal epidemics
; sometimes as high
to do in ease of
us ; i r cent,
ti
WHAT A WATT
t.-- may
if it h i
. rt to by a
. I or ti
, by ti the
. the t resit with a feather or
n n . ; ; or.
as the h has boon
Ll, or if the pa-
some time
. the meal of mate-
. S. I I
t. and by an enema. If
i.; r an a
e r
re lot ding to quiet
. I
So I aid lie but the
I e Bill pleat;
m I at
I . I
ti.
I. . . ;
i to I r
. K i ; of the
pi
I , .-. e for
-1 are for the I i
family of -ex while
waiting for for so
a edition poi
ft r ti a care
as I as it can Le
Coils; is to treated by
ten
bi-
two
Ii, by of
, . , it . Ml
, tn . of
hi at I one r
mail render
f j dream inn, you must ha
m said the f, and the horse
v . transferred to the
Tho next morning the urn
dream last
did ray red brother
ires t e inquiry.
answered
gave me n coat you wear
v it. you must;
have said and tho In-
received red coat and cal-
morning it was
turn. said tho
loch's
-1 replied
; mi ten of la
an I
lid tho i .
dream, yon have am, at I
dream with mi
chief,
was
Some Speculation as to the Origin of
tho Phrase.
The phrase up
the plural is formed either with or
without the allowable. It
occurs, for example, in
Couch's but
the more common form is cut
or cut up The word is
a dictionary one. Dr. Murray says
that it is States slang.
He defines it as a prank, a caper, a
disturbance, a row, a He
quotes, as the earliest use Eng-
literature, this sentence from
Slick In
Italian singers their
jabber and didoes at a
lie says that the
gin of the word is uncertain.
But used the term
in in 1835, and
Professor Joseph Wright in his
Dialect says
that the term is known Ireland,
Kent, Isle of Wight, Cornwall and
also the United States.
ton used it with reference to a
met a man this morn-
from Halifax, a real conceited
critter, all shines and
Professor Wright as
the fir definition a disturbance.
noise, fuss, as in the speech heard
on the Isle r. Wight, kicked
up a dido about then
plural tricks, antics, eccentric
in Kent, ye be
there he be. a-cutting
manner and, lastly, a
plaything; oho used as a term to
denote articles which do not give
satisfaction to the owner, as trim-
ming on a dress or bonnet.
the learned Professor Wright
The Electrical Unit and Equivalent
In Horsepower.
In the electrical world one hears
and reads a great deal about
The current is measured
watts, the machinery is rated by
watts and lamps burn by watts. To
the ordinary layman all this
of watts is mystifying.
The to whom we owe the
idea of the horsepower was a Scot-
inventor, James Watt, and
when the electric unit involving the
idea of working capacity came to be
formulated the name of Watt was
chosen to indicate this unit, just as
that of Volta hat given us the term
volt and Faraday the farad.
Watt considered that, taking the
average, a London dray horse was
capable of doing the work of lifting
pounds through one foot of
gravity. Tho introduction of this
time the minute, gave the
unit of power, or rate of performing
work. This or its equivalent has
ever since been called a horsepower.
The electrical unit called the watt
is capable of being represented in.
terms of the horsepower, and in J- P. and Mayors
that form it is perhaps more
risible to those who familiar
with mechanical rather than with
electrical expressions
FINANCIAL STATEMENT.
Summary
Paupers outside Home of A and J
Home of Aged and Infirm
Indigent Deaf Dumb and Blind
Insane
Tax list
Elections General
Court House
Jail
Superintendent of Health
Coroner
Clerk Superior Court .
Register of Deeds
County Commissioners
Sheriffs and Constables conveying prisoners
Ferries
Bridges
Roads
Index
1859.36
2390.98
213.85
1440.00
203.11
2530.97
300.00
558.10
32.31
COURT COSTS
Sheriffs
Clerk Superior Court
Solicitors
Crier
volts
iv amperes, where the
the unit of electrical pressure.
The
watt is the product of
multiplied by amperes,
volt is the
and the ampere is tho unit of
measuring the density, or volume,
of an electrical current.
Careful experiments have demon-
that watts per second
are equal to foot pounds per
second, or, to state the equation in
form, watts equal one
its
does not venture to explain the horsepower. ,.,,,.
of the word; he does not The form In electrical pow-
a possible derivation. Did generally is sold is
. .;. c . from the fuss of hours.
Ii
on
Tin
Witness tickets
Miscellaneous
Training School
Roads General
General expense of
sewer
Total
6132.64
Total 3848.32
Total orders issued on
Amount of Receipts and Disbursements of the County of for
the Fiscal Year ending December 1st- 1907.
RECEIPTS
after the pious kilo cornea from the
An obsolete word A kilowatt, written
Truth.
In of Silas Hocking novels
there is on irresistible scene which
of the condemned as
too absurdly
A farmer
and his out strong minded
wife arrive for service, put up their
horse and cart at the village inn,
then take their places in their pew,
bringing their whip with them.
sermon tho farmer,
drowsy by the heat and the
alter effects of a heavy week's work,
nods and finally falls asleep. His
wife quietly reaches out for the
r;
Tips In
T . of how
to waiter at a
rant pi ; ; at one
tin c or p the fol-
lowing of reckoning the
amount, which is practiced by a
good many
be found u.
the principle is to reckon a pen-
a head for each person in the
party a for every
in the bill. course it the
party dines Very economically the
waiter will not come very well.
it found in Paris that a tip
calculated on this basis works out
very well in the of cat a.
dinner in private room th
same good, except that
twopence per head ; aid r each
member of tho party. The extra
length of bill case insures
the .-. . additional pour
thrice told tale may have
. originally talc of
. in speaks
a curve, with reference
tho of Dido, who bargained
as much land as could be
with a hide and then cut the
hide into a long and narrow strip.
Why not say glibly that cut up
is to cut up as Dido did
Let us honor the name of that no-
dame in every
Transcript.
Ons Kind of Economy
people have queer ideas of
economy, don't said
street man. other day
also k. v. i- therefore watt-.
The kilowatt hoar is the perform-
or work, t such a rate that
watts per shall be de-
livered continuously for one hour.
The kilowatt hour has a special
interest for the man who has his of-
or house lighted by electric
lamps, because the kilowatt hour is
the unit upon which the power and
light companies base their charges.
Electrical
Amount on Dec 3rd
Amount from L W. Tucker sheriff general tax list
Amount from L. W. Tucker insolvent list 1905
L Tucker sheriff schedule B. Tax
Amount from R. Williams Marriage License
Am ant from D C. Moore, C. S C. jury tax
t from Grifton
Amount from Ayden dispensary
Amount from J. W. Venters
D, J, Holland for
Amount hire of force roads
DISBURSEMENTS
quietly reaches for the a downtown. saw a
I whip in the corner of the pew, picks f ., o -c
it up and him a regular deal- m Jo to come
a, the ear with the lash, . .;.,, to
with a supremely tor The man
sequel, was what the would .,.,,, the
I to be an , , , ,
Thin Ma .
c i iii in
Ch ; n b r
been I in the for play.
some r tin n his own
Tho third district at
was intent upon a conviction,
however, and was doing his
none too successfully, to shake the
testimony of the defendant.
sure of ho
as tho book-i an
that not suit ease o;
the state.
I am came the
answer.
ember that
sequel. That was what the
declared to be an impossible
As a fact, the present writer
heard the whole story from
I lips. It actually happen-
ed before his eyes, and he was the
The heroine of the story
is still alive on her farm near
ton, Ga-
Old French Dial
dial said the curio
French dial ring of the
eighteenth century. can toil
the time with
The ring, of sold, was
chased, and where tho stone spar-
usually there was set a tiny
sundial.
you have said the
to stand in the right
way, holding tho dial so that the
sun and a tiny shadow
will toil Lie hour.
a than
It is only
good in the locality it is mode fer
and even unless it is set to-,
ward the right point of the com-
pass, will he several hours out of
the
Moon.
As tho care with
which preparations should be made
for marches, Brigadier Gen-
Sir speaking
at tho Royal Service
Garrulous People.
never bay any writing paper
of that man said the little
a suburban matron after she had
I carefully helped the blind man
waiting with a man on an down the steps. J
to go downtown. saw a for him and want to help him out,
but be has absolutely no
for my time, lie begins to
talk the minute he gets into tho
house, and he talks and talks and
talks some more. Generally
781.91
572.33
1625.00
31.10
1814.71
32,858.45
Amount pd. Co. orders as per vouchers filed 24,483.91
Treasurers commissions 747.86
Total disburse 25,281.77
Amount on December 1st. 1907 7626-68
condition of Pitt 1st. 1907
GENERAL FUND
To amount of indebtedness Dec 1906
To of claims audited from Dec to Dec
24,716.44
By amount of orders paid by Samuel T, White Treas.
During fiscal year ending Dec 1st 1907
Amount outstanding indebtedness Dec. 1st 1907 222.53
To be continued
he concluded, more
an accurate
with a laugh by the man who had
called r him naturally
what it was for. you give
that ticket chopper a fifteen cent
asked the friend. The man
admitted that he gave the kind he
usually smoked. said the
other, didn't you just come
across without saving anything
about it, pay your fare and save a
The man rubbed his chin
and looked serious. lie had become
SO lie-
for
in general conversation about every-
thing, from the weather to the
methods now used in tho public
schools. Every time I feel an
pulse to shut him off I
fellow He's And I let him
go on until he runs down of his own
accord.
beginning to think it is true
of all blind they are
tremendous talkers. Once in
I employ a blind piano tuner, and I
have to go out or he'd talk so much
so
he'd never the piano
iv sort of favor that he I Press.
thought of the other
York Press.
On the Map.
Two women chanced to meet on
n street tar in Chicago. how
do do, Mrs. ex-
claimed one of them. called
roar house one day last week, and
there was nobody at
Was Annoyed.
relations with the city
fathers were not always happy. On
one. ho. came up from
to attend a
House dinner which the lord mayor
of that day had taken into his
. to give to the representatives of
j and Tho worthy
moved,. Mrs. said chief magistrate meant well, but his
tho other. you know that wards of welcome to his guests were
When did you
ago. got
tired of living in all the noise and
bustle, end we went away out
the
where are you
v this state
moat hi
to it Why, Mr.
and your; honor, I'd beta
hundred on any
Evening Punt.
A Whistler Snub.
Welter Crane gives a character-
of the paint-
The as
was called, was to be
cordial when, disguised-as a Spanish
cavalier in with a, big
at a fancy dress-ball he found
himself alongside of Crane as
all in white. Crane says,
had met him previously atone
of his own private views and said
to him way of greeting that I
thought I had the
meeting before, but he only
aid dryly, and w
didn't set any ,
tut ton. said should always con- now.-
suit an almanac and not a new, neighborhood, Mrs
occasion in Smith Africa. Giles, and cant it
it on on
when the -force was directed to j
p. m. when
rose. Tho army waited In vain
to rise, some
delay and contusion occurred
when it was that oil that
particular a total
Mail.
, Only End.
A young couple had been, married
by n Quaker, and after tho
I had
complimentary. He con
the idea that he end his
low aldermen were accustomed to.
princes, dukes and ministers
to ditto, hut that it was, of course,
delightful to see gentlemen of an-
other sort. His general tone,
Preparing Gold
Finely powdered gold may be
pared by a most simple process. Fill
a unglazed earthenware bowl
with common kitchen salt, cover it
and expose it for some to
heat. The stove oven is a good
place for it. When the water has
all been dried out put equal
ties of this salt powder and honey
a glass grinding plate and mix
in with it necessary quantity of
gold leaf. Grind this up very gen-
being careful not to press hard
on tho mass. acts as a dis-
and the honey is used
it will not dissolve tho salt.
When the-gold is reduced to the fin-
est possible powder it must be
carefully washed with
an abundance of pure water to re-
move the salt and honey.
Antonius Aurelius, king of
the first and the last of hie
dynasty, had once his day of fame,
lie was the man who would be king,
and a short time he was one.
Aurelius began life as an ambitious
Frenchman; he ended it as a Ger-
man under the name of
dying in great poverty at
Marseilles, but for a brief period in
the fifties of tho lust century
was king over the In-
in South America. When
Von founded his
he found it necessary to have
his so he traveled over to Eu-
rope and created his own orders and
titles. Then he feigned till his
court was broken up by the govern-
of and Aurelius as a
en exile returned to Marseilles.
Two lived next door
to each other., and. having to call
on one of them, Green of course
went to tho wrong A
bed
she replied
1-y as if she bothered with ,
A Pear Dog.
A man in Missouri recently sued
a railway company for damages for
death of a hound killed on the
track. The company defended it-
to the m house, a upon the following ,
bed servant ML and i
Green asking. Is this Mr. John k o th
she replied
tho
to was
could possibly be plea- than j
for people satiated with greatness I door in his
way of change Green walked on a few yards or
such a of and
and slammed tho n. ,
but
here I could show you. live
just about half outside
the city Exchange.
the the butler's
The Face
Habitual worry in
tho action of facial
nerve of expression, as anatomist
call lines which in
course of time, become permanent,
The sumo is true of
the. I emotions and of mind, and,
thou art at end of. which are dominant in
thy i life of the will ere Ions
A few man
to- tho- good minister boiling with
wife- to be a
regular and
I thought you told me I
I friend, but I did not makeshifts compared with this,
sew, the Mall f L
The secret of the
which ago cannot wither is
and depilatories and electricity
massage and cosmetics are pool
Manners.
Is it no longer possible to be a
or a now that
nearly all the rules which
Conduct of these characters
are. disregard.-d The
the old pet-
are armed with rapiers, those
new with It is
I for the former to face
latter-without being destroyed.
a to have Wily rec-
and characters arc gen-
Being the
of the The few
so, when a bright thought struck
him. He returned at once and rang
tho same bell. Again the crabbed
servant appeared. said it
asked Green triumphant-
walked Answers.
it
said an economical fa-
express train attains great
speed, lightning is proverbial for. its
rapidity, comets are to
Said rabbit lined on defendant's
was therefore the
property rue defendant.
Plaintiff's dog was a trespasser
and Was defendant's prop-
without permission.
I deceased was not much of
a dog, it could easily
, have kept, out of the way of de-
And, having fully answered, de-
prays to
Her Choice.
An, east side tells of the
Wowing conversation, heard at
Xi
old-
style regarded as
interesting, but
of no practical value to themselves
or to Truth.
hurl themselves through space at breakfast between a mother
the rate of millions of miles a I and a small mother in
but, comparatively speaking, all. .
those things are snails, my daughter tor- speaking unkindly
snails.
replied the young
man, lazily puffing s cigar,
can possibly go faster than light
ten dollar bill after it is
her father.
never hear speak in-
such a disrespectful manner of your
contended.
but you
him; I
. .
VI
D. J. WHICHARD, and Owner
Truth in Fiction,
; t
r, I .
One Dollar Per Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY.
NUMBER
of the Department of. Tennessee and to the c gar
of the
Instructive
;.
Sessions la Greenville Mon
day-Practical Results of
Much Importance
In View.
As a result of the institute
work conducted in Pitt county by
the Department of Agriculture
the past summer and during
morning and afternoon sessions
in Greenville Monday, the
interests of the section
are likely to be advanced in three-
important particulars. A grow-
sentiment in favor of road
improvement will receive sub-
encouragement through
the availability of a department
road engineer; local problems
relating to the production of our
leading crops are to be definitely
ascertained and investigated
through the location in the
of a department
and th; prospects are that
by the end of the year the county
will hive a demonstration
such has proved so popular
and efficient in r sections in
bringing the farmer into closer
touch with tho spirit, aims, and
methods of the Department of
Agriculture. These things can
fail to materialize only through
the indifference of Pitt county
farmers; which is to say that they
are assured.
These institutes, secured for
this section by Congressman
John EL Small, serve their great-
est purpose when working along
the particular lines suggested by
local conditions; that cf Monday
for instance, answering some
special needs of the greatest to-
producing county in the
United States. Prefacing the
regular program, Mr. Small re-
to the wonderful benefits
derived from the State depart-
of agriculture or
stations, and the
greatest co operation between
these and the national depart-
The fact that so many of
our people are directly interested
in agriculture had led him to
repeated studies of these
with the inquiry as to how
they might best accomplish the
purpose of serving our
interests; from which,
coupled with facts of observation
among farmers, he had concluded
that the greatest benefit might
result from bringing the depart-
of agriculture to the people
rather than by trying to bring
the people to the department.
If any farmer lame to this
meeting with the mental attitude
an obligation
only to be bored with scientific
theories, he must have
a delightful sensation of
as he followed Mr. A
D Shame through a series cf
experiments in tobacco bleeding;
the account of field experiments
in Virginia with tobacco, by W.
W. Green aid E. H- Matthew-
ton, department experts and
practical farmers; Dr. J- EL
of the Bureau
on the relation between soils and
crops, with special to
tobacco; C. R. Hudson, of the
re-operative demonstration
and our own State Geologist. Dr.
Joseph Hyde Pratt, on the far-
interest in good roads.
Formerly identified with the
of the lower South, Illus-
and the re-
of intelligent seed selection
and plant breeding, the charts
reproducing experimental plants,
and the for separating
the inferior from the heaviest
and best seed, were particularly
instructive. Mr- made
the farmers of the county a
by the department's
in as the data at
Washington covers the conditions
in the case at hand. Mr. E. H.
of the Department
Virginia experimental force,
brought out this fact, and urged
the necessity of experimental
work in this section to solve
problems peculiar to the lo-
If you expect the De-
present of the seed separator
used in these demonstrations.
One will tho community
and farmer who desires to
do so can use it- Mr.
by the way, is the inventor of
this separator, which is simple in
construction and operation
does the work perfectly.
W W. Green, speaking of
fertilization, and curing
and basing the greatest progress
to help you in the very
best way, said Mr- Matthew-j phosphoric acid
son, you must cot the Depart-j North Carolina
pounds Cotton Seed Meal-
pounds Nitrate Soda
This, he said, would contain
per cent phosphoric acid, per
cent, potash, and a trifle over
per When it was
desired to get more organic mat-
into the soil by the use of a
compost, he
1200 pounds Tobacco Stems. C
pounds Cotton Seed Meal.
pounds Acid Phosphate.
The cotton seed meal would
come from our own fields, the
from eastern
and only the
HORRIBLE CRIME IN NEW BERN.
Woman Outraged in Her Home by
Two White Men.
New Bern was thrown into a
state of wild last
night when h became known
a foul crime had beer, perpetrated
by two unknown white men in
the very heart of the residential
section of the city.
At about o'clock, when
many people were at church, a
knock was heard upon the door
of the residence of Mr. S. L.
I Buck on Broad street. Mr. Buck
to do some worK here. potash would have to be brought, had gone to church and Mrs.
present policy of the department
is to send out, not more
but more men to work in
the fields and study local
As a further evidence of the
departments attitude in this mat-
and relating to one of the
along these lines on the use of means of popularizing the
the best seed obtainable, stressed j best that is known by the most
the importance of a thorough progressive farmers in the
preparation cf the soil for to try, Mr. C. R. Hudson spoke of
w shallow and frequent
cultivation of the crop Curing
tobacco properly was largely de-
by the experience and
practice of tho operator, while
the best results could be expected
the co-operative demonstration
work carried on under the
of Dr. Knapp. Mr. Hudson
said that the Department of
culture did not profess to know
everything about farming, but
only tobacco was ripe that through its acquaintance
and uniform.
With a force of logic and a
facility of expression, Dr. Joseph
Hyde Pratt, State Geologist, spoke
of our roads, upon the
subject That methods
of road now in use
amount to the annual
by the United of two
hundred and fifty million dollars
for that
mud bill touches a million a year,
make mud a subject of some
Dr, Pratt noted the
with the practice of best farmers
in the country, and through its
own investigators, it was in a
better position to know some
things than was the average
farmer. Its objects are to
sent the methods of the best far-
and induce their
Over farmers in the
South followed these methods in
1907, and this year there will be
about acres in
farms in North Carolina,
recent agitation in the matter of land probably another acres
railway rates and transportation devoted to co-operative demon-
with the fact of a remarkable
indifference to the condition of
our public roads. That it was a
common interest which he was
was shown by the fact
that mud is no of per-
sons. A rich man is as likely to
get stuck in the mud as a poor
man. Mud has a tendency to
work.
Dr. of the Bureau of
Soils, speaking of the relation
ship of soils to crops, would have
the farmer succeed in getting
the right crop on the right
To this end thousands of square
miles have been surveyed and
into the State Why buy from j was alone in the house. On
to pounds of filler to she found
ton, pay freight on it, and haul two white men, apparently about
it home. Don't pay for half a j middle age, who inquired if they
ton of sand, to haul miles over, for the
sandy roads, to dump out in a
field full of sand.
At the conclusion of Dr.
steel's talk, Hon. John H. Small
made a statement of a
he had laid before the
of county
of which would make the
services of a department road
available to the county.
He said that the department
might send men here to talk, but
unless this talk resulted inaction
little good would come of it.
He hoped three results from
this meeting, and it was with
the people of Pitt county whether
these results are to be realized.
He wanted the county to have
the services of a road engine r to
b-; furnished by the department;
I e wanted a tobacco man from
the Department of Agriculture
to come here and take up prob-
connected with tobacco
growing; and he wanted a de
farm in the county.
He hoped the people of the
would take the necessary-
steps to procure these valuable
aids to our agricultural progress.
On motion a resolution was
adopted thanking Mr. Small and
party, and endorsing the pro-
above noted,
receiving a negative
answer, they asked Mrs. Buck if
her husband was at home, and
were informed that he had gone
to church.
The two men immediate
rushed upon the defenseless
woman, one of them striking her
a blow with his fist, which
her to the floor. She was
and her head wrapped
with an overcoat until it
possible for her to make any out-
cry. While in this helpless cot.-
one of the incarnate fiends
accomplished his hellish
while the other stood guard, j
with a revolver in his hand, is
said by those who have made
investigation.
Some noise in another room,
about this time caused the men
to flee precipitately. The woman
struggled to free herself, as the
overcoat was snatched off her
head, when one of the demons
dropped his hat. She snatched
it, but the man grabbed it away
from her at the same time giving
her a vicious kick in the
They then disappeared into the
darkness Bern
Sun, 3rd.
lessen pride and respectability.
Mud taxes the farmer for three
hauls when only one is made.
The mud tax is paid in time as
well as
expense
in
mapped out by the Bureau of
Soils, and the recurrence of a
soil these
areas, with its to
. certain crops, are known. One
in money. It is at the I condition of a good soil is good
of some drainage. are other
HOTEL MACON IMPROVED.
our
rural
public schools farms below the one you are
Marriage
Register of It. Williams
has issued the following licenses
since last
WHITE.
J. H. Braddy and Lena Thomas.
G. Andrews and Carrie
Tyson
Alonzo Manning and Susan
mail service. Good
road-i could not be expected from
present methods- To build our
school houses under a similar
system of financing would be to
see the foundations rot before
the roof was on. Should issue
bonds for road improvement.
At the conclusion of Dr-
Mr. Small gracefully
testified from his own knowledge
to the efficiency of our State
as a public official. Said
that in matters of interest to the
State, in which the geologist's
department be of service
with the department at Wash-
Dr. Pratt always got
ahead of him in reaching the
authorities there. There is no
better official in North Carolina,
said Mr. Small, than Dr. Pratt.
of afternoon
in tomorrow's
The agricultural problem is a
Dr. pointed
out, full of plant food as the
one above. You should derive
benefit from these for ten years
before the tax collector finds
them To do this it will be
necessary to work these under
farms as you are now working
the topmost one. Get down to
them with your plow. Expose
them to the weathering influences
of air, sunshine, thawing and
freezing condition; them by
tillage and proper cultivation.
Good fertilization is largely a
soil problem. The United States
is spending one hundred million
dollars a year for fertilizers-
comprised under brands-
which, Dr. says, could
be reduced to about six different
fertilizers. Good fertilizers can
produce the best when
and Bessie
Julius Whitaker
Nicholson.
COLORED
Chas Richardson and Esther
Williams.
Oscar Moore and Taft.
Albert Peebles and Annie
Hardison.
Leslie Blount and Bertha Dud-
Henry Austin and Winnie
House.
Tobacco Sales for January.
According to the records kept
by Secretary C. W. Harvey, of
the Tobacco Board of Trade, the
of leaf tobacco on the; Contractor H. G.
f-r the month
of January were pounds,
and the average price
The sales for the season up to
the soil is supplied with organic
Corn growing in, . especially the
Georgia is a different proposition
from corn in the East or
rule for the application of
Entirely Remodeled and Under New
Management.
For generations past Hotel
Macon has been a landmark in
Greenville, and the quaint old
structure stood for years without
a change.
In the days of the late Dr. J.
G. James as far back as the
writer can remember, it was
known as the Macon House,
the doctor and his excellent wife
conducted a popular hostelry.
After his death, in the it
was conducted Mr. E B.
Moore who changed the name to
Hotel Macon, the name that has
continued with it.
After a few years Mr. Moore
moved away and was succeeded
by Mr. Charles Skinner, who
continued to conduct the hotel
successfully until recently he de-
to retire. His son, Dr. L-
C. Skinner, purchased the prop-
and his decision was to
remodel the building and convert
it into a modern hotel. With
Rogers m
charge of the work the building
has undergone marked changes
and looks like an entirely differ-
THE JOHN FLANAGAN
Greenville's Leading Manufacturing
Enterprise.
The stockholders of the John
Flanagan Buggy Co. held their
annual meeting Tuesday, and
found the affairs of the company
in a most satisfactory and pros-
condition, The same of-
were re-elected, these be-
E. G. Flanagan, president;
E. A. Jr., vice-president;
T. M. Hook, secretary; W. E.
Hooker, The board
of directors consists of the above
named gentlemen and R, J.
E- A. Sr. and R C. Flan-
Since the first of this year the
company has occupied its new
building on the corner cf Fourth
and streets. The build-
fronts Go feet on Fourth
street and extends feet on
street It is built of
brick, stories high, and
fitted with a large elevator,
light and sewerage.
Tho first Hour has a plate glass
front, next f Fourth
street containing the business
offices, the undertaking parlor
and the show room for finished
The undertaking parlor
glass show cases lighted by
electricity for displaying finished
coffins, caskets and burial robes.
In of the show room
are the wood shops smith
shops. These are equipped with
modern machinery all run by
electric power.
The front portion of the
second floor is a storage room
with racks for wheels, gears, and
other parts of buggies and ma-
for going in them.
car loads of material is stored
in this large room. Behind this
is the department for trimming,
upholstering and crating work
for shipment.
The third floor is by
the painting, varnishing, drying
and finishing rooms-
The entire building is a model
of convenience for carrying on
the work of buggy
and undertaking. The com-
works a large number of
hands and does an immense
being the largest
enterprise in Green-
ville.
The late Mr- John jar,
i founder of the business, built a
wide imputation for the John
Flanagan buggy by never allow-
anything but honest work to
bear his name, and when
saw that name on a they
know it was the best to be had.
His successors ate equally deter-
mined to live up the
made for the John Flanagan
buggy, and by turning out none
but first class work their trade
extends to several States-
It had bought
in the West. A variety of cotton for
Formerly identified with the originated under given climatic cotton meal is prob-
breeding experiments that and soil conditions will show a better source of nitrogen
have worked a revolution in the modifications as these con-than of soda, with the
great corn belt, Mr- vary from section to sec-1 exception of a little soda
has, within a half dozen years, The fertilization practiced crop- Dr,
demonstrated methods of in the heavy shipping leaf the following
proving tobacco of would prove most ton of fertilizer
dollars to the growers; methods factory for the productions of the or tobacco
applicable to the bright product bright tobacco grown on the old
of Virginia and the to Pine fields of North Carolina. It
Feb 1st were pounds
at an average of
Blind Tiger
Late Saturday night Policemen
Smith and Clark raided and cap-
a blind tire.-. It was run
by Luke Anderson, on
First street. Anderson was
Rooms have been re-
more rooms added,
MAKES CLOSE CALL.
Starts in Inviting but is
Soon Checked.
Jim Kramer, the peddler, who
occupies a room in tho front of
the
of and Fifth streets,
went out early night
and left a lamp, on which there
was no chimney, lighted in bis
room. About seven o'clock
there was a fire alarm.
place.
arranged, .-----
electric lights and sewerage burning quite lively in
pounds Acid Phosphate.
pounds Sulphate Potash.
in, making it modern and con-
There are now twenty
bed rooms, besides the
j lobby- dining room, linen and
bath rooms.
Mr. J. W. Hight, formerly of
. Louisburg has leased the hotel
given a hearing before Mayor .
Wooten this morning and bound, month He and h-8
over to superior court. He cordially welcomed to
could not give bond, so went to g,
ail.
Kramer's room, supposed to
have caught from the lamp. His
bed, wearing apparel and some
furs were all ablaze, but quick
work got them in the street and
no damage was done to the build-
The location was an inviting
one for a fire if the flames had
only gotten a good start, quite a
range of frame shanties
the stables.
POOR





to be
That the pavement
At and curbing shall be so put down
as to form one continuous
form sidewalk.
that if any property holder
The of aldermen had i shall fail or refuse to pay
quite a busy adjourned meeting, such pavement and
d.
night, and considered
several important matters.
Mr. P. C. Harding;, who was
previously elected to fill the
the first ward,
and entered upon the duties of
Mr- A. M. Moseley,
who was elected to fill the
in the fifth ward, declined
to accept and there is still a
in that ward. Alderman
T. R. Moore tendered his
resignation as a member from
the fourth ward, and ex-alder-
man F. J. Forbes, formerly of
the filth ward and who had re-
moved to the fourth ward, was
elected to succeed him.
The committee consisting of
Aldermen and
appointed to canvass the
bocks of the town and
petition for a
local made
the following report, which was
We, your appointed
to canvass res-
of the town and
ascertain the number
t red qualified voters thereon and
compare therewith a petition
addressed to this lord asking
that an election be to vote
the of prohibition for
Greenville, and which petition
referred to this committee,
b g to submit the following
We find upon the registration
names. also find
that of this number have died
and removed, leaving the
books registered voters.
And of the petition presented
we find, after removing
from those who not
curbing for the full extent of the
front line of his property, the
town shall charge the actual cost
against such property which shall
be collected at the same time and
in like manner as the tax on such
property is collected.
That J. F. is hereby
selected as such street engineer
and supervisor of said work, and
the mayor is hereby authorized
to enter into a contract with him
on the part of this board for such
and to sign and file the
paper writing which is now read
and adopted by the board as such
contract and which the clerk is
directed to spread upon these
minutes.
That the purchase of the ma
and the conduct of the
work be especially under the con-
mi and direction of the mayor
and Aldermen Bowen, Johnson
and Carr, who shall see that
proper bills and vouchers are
taken for all material purchased
work done and who shall
make detailed reports to this
beard at each regular meeting
the progress of the work and the
cost cf the same.
A contract in accordance with
the foregoing wan made with Mr.
he to furnish
reference of his ability to
the work requited.
Alderman Carr submitted a
proposition from the owners of
As a fitting testimonial to the GAVE HIS LIFE FOR ENTERS.
memory of our deceased
and as an of his in Employ
virtues, be it raw That we,
the members of Covenant Lodge, j
deeply mourn th loss which has I
come upon us and feel that a place
is made vacant that cannot be
filled; and further it resolved.
That we extend to the bereaved
family of brother White our
heartfelt sympathy in their great
loss and offer to them our help
and encouragement and the warm
open hand of the Friendship Love
and Truth.
That a copy of these
be sent the family of Broth-
White, and a copy be spread on
our minutes.
L. H.
W. F. Cm.
D. L. James
Railway hit Life
While
Message to
Seeds His
Congress.
Washington,
in of resolution and de-
tern ion, a message was re-
by Congress the
president today the
necessity for greater control of
corporations by the government,
deploring the in certain
quarters to create a reaction in
favor of criminal pro-
and asking for the re-en-
of the
act so that it shall be
It is probable that the records
of no government can show such
a strong denunciation of illegal
business ventures as is contained
in this message. It that
the president is as determined as
ever to do all In his power to
Removing n
fore g r
N. C, Jan. 28.-
Wesley a in
the employ of the Southern
way, yesterday gave up I i life,
to save a swiftly running pas-
train from being wrecked,
and a result in probable heavy
of life. He was crushed
the engine just as he had
succeeded in removing a heavy
obstruction from the track.
Jarret with other men of a
section gang, were repairing a
piece of track a short distance
east of Marion. The work
the use of a heavy
Upon hearing the
of fast moving passenger
train No. the gang made an
effort to remove all
POUNDS PAINT
Just Arrived At
BAKER HART
Heights and property I n out improper business
owners on Fourth street, agree-lings and deals in th s country.
to pave the sidewalk on the He points out that the use of
north side of Fourth street in labor cases has
in Greenville Heights j been abused and asks that this
to Evans street, provided the remedied by congress. He
town will pave the street cross also declares that the govern-
This was re- any damage to
fa-red to a committee consisting. Injured in its service
and
Saved the
that There was no real for a
but the in some way
become fast and tightly
the rail, and despite their
efforts they were unable to re-
move it, the obstruction lying in
such a manner as to cause a de-1 m
with consequent
and probable loss of life,
the train hit it.
With the train almost upon
them men, with the
of Jarret sprang for safety,
feeling that could
vent a wreck. He, however, re-
to make a last heroic
fort, and by almost superhuman
strength succeeded in wrenching
free and toppled it
from the tracks. His life was the
Where you will find a complete
line at all times. They handle
paints in car lots always keeping
good assortments, quality
celled, guarantee it per
cent pure- Don't fail to see
their line, of Heaters, cook
stoves, shot guns,
Enamel ware It is the
place to buy your shells. They
also keep on hand the
American Wire Fence, the kind
that is pig tight and different
heights. Their place is head-
quarters for Roofing, which you
will find in Iron, Gravel,
and Paper a look at
their plows and other
implements In fact almost
every want in the Hardware can
be supplied by
Hart
Sole Agent for
, Load and Paint, Jewel Stoves and Ranges. Syracuse
sacrifice, however,, as at that Implements Cant's fertilizer sower
j and those who directed
the removal of their names there- of Aldermen Bowen
from, that there remains thereon
voters. It The board recommended
i.-103 registered voters to call the water and light commission panic and yet the public seemed
a election there being a de- purchase and install an additional to demand panic.
of we recommend as soon as situation ameliorated
ion ended. the present filtering plant not and the country saved from a
Tho committee previously i being meet the needs financial wreck of tremendous
of the town- I Not by a knowledge
E. A. Kline submitted i the conditions, for the public
for constructing the road- had that and threw it to winds,
way or street from Third street A simple declaration of fear on
to the water and light station, j the part of a score of depositors
and a committee consisting of was enough to start a run on any
Aldermen Woodward and Hard-1 bank. Institutions were toppling
was appointed to enter every hand, not because of
contract with him for the work but because of the
inability of any bank to liquidate
all its liabilities on a moment's
pointed to Investigate claim
of Hopkins for
in November, by driving
into an excavation on Dickinson
avenue left while water
connections were made,
recommended that she paid
damages and the cost of re-
pairing her The commit-
tee was continued and instructed
to collect this sum from L. H-
the contractor who was
doing the work and left the ex-
open-
The matter of street paving
was taken up n-d discussed at
some length, resulting in the
adoption of the
The having had in con-
the engine struck him
he was crushed to death under
the wheels. The body
fearfully mangled. j
Th train was stopped and the.
remains of Jarret tenderly
up a; d brought to this city.
None of the passengers on the
train were aware of how close
they had been to disaster- Char-
News-
Edge Tools.
11-j
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT.
notice. And yet where millions
Hall of Covenant Lodge I. O-1 of J
F. No. Jan. 1903 for
Another face has disappeared tho n
the
from our councils and passed.
December spoke lightly
financial furry.
over the dark river to the haven
of rest beyond.
On Friday morning, the 24th, Simply by the
Tor some time tho sub- the dawn had the east-
reiteration of the true conditions,
E G FLANAGAN
Pres. and Gen.
T M HOOKER
Secretary.
W S HOOKER
Treasurer.
Organized in 1866, reorganized and
in 1904 with authorized capital of
Manufacturers of High Grade
of r
heavens.
the spirit of Broth- which a panic was
and it now appear-1 White was wafted I unwarranted And by whom
to the board that the eternity As if in keeping the truth hammered home By
has some the town should the a life well he American press.
enter upon a system of he passed away quietly
street improvement, and it peacefully and died- with his
further appearing to the s sleep.
that this experimental work can n death of Brother White
be advantageously done by the our lodge loses one of its oldest
board purchasing the mate-rid most faithful members. Al-
and employing an expert i though oftentimes
engineer to superintend health and .
I .- i. . office, several stores
M . , constitution, he gave that ail aggregating a
It is now on motion of J. I attention an., service to th order j
Wood ward ordered that th i work I d that won for him a
pf permanent street paving be-warm high
gin on Evans street at Third the hearts of his
Magazine.
Fire at City.
There was a bier Are More-
head City Thursday night.
Among the buildings destroyed
hampered were the Southern
a Western Union
street at
practical
Thaw
in Thaw
today i
In his career of long service to caM
and continue to Fifth street, I the order he was at one time not guilty.
and then by some route to be I Grand Guardian of the Grand Possibly that ends the matter,
hereafter determined to the A. I Lodge and also Treasurer of the.
C L. depot, and that vitrified
brick as tho for
the roadway.
That the abutting property
required to pay for
the cost of putting down the
sidewalk and curbing
which shall extend the full width
of the sidewalk from the proper-
line to the driveway, on Evans
street from Third to Fifth street,
as the board may direct the same ship
Grand lie was a
member of the committee from
the Grand Lodge appointed to
locate the Odd Fellows Orphan-
age, and he helped to locate that
institute at Goldsboro-
Faithful to his family, to his;
church, and of his order, the
name of Jonathan White remains
to us a synonym to devotion, up-
right character, and good citizen-
and CURE the
WITH
Dr. King's
New Discovery
FOR
Re
AND ALL THROAT AND TROUBLES.
OS MONEY
We wish to announce to our many patrons and friends that we now occupy our
new three story brick factory, on the corner of and Fourth streets, opposite R.
L. Smith's stables.
Our factory is modern in every respect, equipped with the best machinery run by
Electricity, and only the best material is used for our Buggies and Car-
We invite you to call any time to inspect the plant and material used, which
Mr. Flanagan will take pleasure in showing you, whether you wish to purchase anything
or not
Forty years experience at Buggy manufacturing, and the reputation our
have attained over the large territory in which they are used, is sufficient guarantee
our work is the best and that the interests of our customers is protected.
We make the best Buggy on the market for the money, -ll for cash or on
time, and protect the purchaser with this
K any spring or wheel breaks with fair and reasonable
within one car from date of purchase caused by
in material or workmanship, and is returned to by the
chaser, we will replace the same free of charge
We also have for sale the best Wagons made by of long- experience
and fully Piedmont and Hackney.
R. L Davis at Farmville and J. R. Harvey Co, at Grifton, are agents
for our Buggies, and all of our work sold by them is subject to our guarantee. .-
The John Flanagan Baggy Co.
Greenville, N. C.
How Many Bricks
Have You Sent
Away
busing heart of m of u to a lettered
t, t. , he
It is a notion fondly cherished j j sometimes it use
by some writes a with
English physician to a I s
journal, the day E than the
come the camera- brought into use to
entirely on of ,.
food. The tome to
i eating the daily be ed, may be u
by swallowing a tablet of
fallowing a tablet of
and ,, not ago aX a ,
for food will be ban garden A
in which It
If a a
ho big
stands. O
Dandy I . . .
w, how many
you tent
to into this big
how many T
Of the hundreds
of bricks pt
into the of
building the city where
has contributed not
a angle red brick.
try people, the people of
email towns and cities far
away from the big me-
have sent in
bricks for the
of this splendid
You may have sent in
a few hods of bricks your-
self without knowing it.
This
cent structure, which or-
a city you prob-
ably never will see your-
self, is built of bricks
bought with the dollars
people living to
Just like that
would like to have MM ft
new brick a nice, hefty
contributed to the or in
S S Tl K i through
country by a
is a Mail Order Store. See
will heW A
while the leopard had been added to
from an and and as soon as it
lowed meal will finally red to have settled down the
idea is of course to have it photo-
fallacious and plainly It seemed to be a ,
sound physiological teaching, few B and timid,
a dietetic consummation thus M anY of
entertained would probably
end to the extinction of the race by, l m its
i disease as a sequence of ; it had taken notice of him be-
The fact is that the volume of food ,
a definite purpose in to its kind. The
. . , followed the keeper
concentrated foods apprehension
of
to exhaust the secretory powers of . of the
the stomach, the . M
poured out in a quantity far m I
excel of the requirements of tot, to shuffle
food, and thus secretory energy, or on the floor of
Which is the key to assimilation, is
uselessly spent I n streak of lightning the
I meat essences j an ominous
merely the of, , and could
meal arc, for example, the most i was
exciters of a and U-
ion that we possess, but when pa . . f
of
in the direction of real . , ,, the
and most likely to . photographer
waste of a word, to . k ., squeak,
,, , tho some time alter
serve admirably, how, .-. . t w de to
M kind of e. or , am-
to food, preparing the ground V to be a
it, digestion; b . feature, with nothing
first item in the , w about
. us of spitting-the
kept within reasonable limits ,,,.; revealed
brines fowl a by suddenly
,.;,, muscular action el , ,. and
Whatever the under-
take they perform, and the man-
of this performing in social
affairs is with such ease as makes
it delightful. The career of Tar
River Lodge has been marked;
with many charming entertain-
meats, but none of them
passed in elegance and real en- The Mon .
banquet given OB. to
of the if you ere
was devoted to a reception safety,
in Masonic hall where a Y It any-
W U is not subject
and passed the time pleasantly. Q loss Try patting it
Mayor
tendered a brief hearty welcome rt
to the guests, closing with an in-j
repair to the
you at once are relieved of
all as to its safety
That alone b
cement and accord- to o-
in c-blue. to i
in the hall.
A scene of striking beauty was
their castle hall in its splendid
arrangement and artistic
in
orange and , account
be
Inane. . . n I P . I en
After an invocation by I. .-
the
quickly seated at the richly
tables enjoyed an e.-
tin
, u-i i .-, for camera and operator,
the stomach and the bowels, and res
the indications are . , recipient of innumerable
. , and bruise, which
I food. J i
. ,, . to a
to ,
Tho reducing f
tables enjoyed an
of oyster cocktails.
ham, turkey, crackers,
olives,
ice cream and cake,
was prepared by
th.-. C
Club.
C. p
toast master
t man to wear
ft,
-x
., v , to
, . question whet i
I .
, . n to I out
j The I
Have Pissed
are down
to
and a
bulk i IS , . tried to take n
natural i of performing sea
pounds mutton or b ,. worth
, would be reduced to tao ,.,,.
I,., ,, tie replaced to a h . ; . c
extent before the meat can oM . Ma ,, , I. d
ed or eaten. ,. I i and W
.- no the l
, . Ir
is introductions of
era. as well as
for e absent
t -I witty, am
.; tit re r p
. j its as lob
I a
. j d upon were m-
A.
i ire. course, pa.
eases, as, example, in illness m
;, ; h
ho spring in y
, the
H the camera was up-
. . . ., tea lion the
h. -I in quality, Hit, ; , feet pretty
i ., i i-. of m. m
. ft u absurd.
men will r
i with as much
; I will cover a
can never so In.
and
v-r
. but
harm
. fen did a little biting
an object was mode
, ft-
A Word o J
is
The a
Using mediums In all
. .
and Its
enjoyed
during the
year. Send in
ad and you
be Try it
Man's
OUT ,
. . . which
i t work was
and the
death, was f
;,. 43.0 for ; ;
i 47.7 and
,. ., I
, r
. . , , . worker he
. i on i Ho and hi.
, in
t .
A. wanted to finish up
the sessions of the
I senate toward a close of ,
, . mil, on U
morning at o clock.
. toasts I
, , to wore as i
ch
Mayor F.
I its R
F. C.
Orders and
to I
Arnold.
T. J.
II. B. Smith wore to ;
.-. . but
conditions prevented
. i U- ;
,.;.; present to u P
the program.
XI e banquet
. .
.;. .-i
remembered t
life.
Bald
.-.- .
,.
. n-
.
one
i morning ---.-
senator
M to f
general and
i ,. . stop
I mil
In lo
. nil, I l
of middle life . I .,.
day School
TO
.- . t wish
lends p
with the
. . j
Let your orders
for Job work
Come along so.
The Reflector.
the officer arrested ;
you were
own .
worship. He
me by the coat collar
threatened strike me with
unless I accompanied
him to-the
quietly attending to
business-making no
f any
. strange. What
taut business ,.
, a
Globe.
Advertise Advertise.
A Proposal.
suppose, Susie, that,
there comes to every Ionian sooner
or later an yearning to
gr her head
the
the
Jam in the world
-You are.
nail p area
out of
Do yen mean to say you
didn't
Plaintiff did
know
yet swear you
didn't lose that
it
bit, l to be ;
.
Greenville, will ref
summer months, others
temporarily .- .
it the exposition i
era
r t
; tho
. .
ti -n name
will
. i
me.
. n
a c
. . ,. l
at
.
h, ill I
Dr.
temporarily . . Ask Dr. snoop
tn . m .- , ,,,.,. t,,.
r.
.
TO MY PATRONS
i ;. and I wish to an-
nougat I am now situated
The plea a man
that commenced with mm
swear at M
honor, but she looked
it
instrument. This
built for
one
S a will
POOR PRINT





U II , . .
EASTERN REFLECTOR
PUBLISHED FRIDAY
D. J, and Proprietor
Entered ms second elf matter Jan. 1907 at the post office at Greenville. N
C under Congress of March 1879
in to
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. FEB. 1908
If Thaw was crazy he is crazy. If Mrs- Thaw will keep her
See decision not to return to the stage
the put-lie may soon forget all
Surely North Carolina has made
enough advancement in twenty
seven years to reverse a majority
of one hundred and sixteen
thousand against prohibition in
1881 to one hundred thousand
for prohibition in 1908. Don't
let it be under that figure-
The water wagon has a dry
about it.
Let's say it Watch j If the politicians will not try
Greenville grow. to make capital out of it any
the matter of passenger
Governor Glenn has a right to rates may not be agitated again
be pleased at the result.
. -----r Charlotte scores again, that
It looks like the senate walked, city having been selected as the
right into a trap set by a railroad place of meeting the North
Carolina Assembly in
lawyer
Plenty of time yet to think
about where you will spend the
summer.
It is not every man who will
j deliberately cut himself out of a
but a Milwaukee undertaker
The reasons some men prevented a man from commit-
for not favoring prohibition are suicide,
amusing.
The papers the past week have
contained many accounts of dis-
fires. In the midst of
such high winds as prevail fires
are exceedingly dangerous and
people cannot be too careful in
taking every care to prevent one
starting.
The extra session of the
was worth the price. With
agitation between the people and
the railroads out of the way at-
can be given to develop-
with good feeling and
harmony-
RANDOM REFLECTIONS.
By a Contributor.
A Mount Vernon woman
who has just divorced her fifth
husband, says she is not dis-
To the men in her
neighborhood, this announcement
must sound ominous-
Secretary Taft says that no
war is possible, and after one
has looked at the size of the bill
and the size of the. fleet, they
can't blame the for
their minds.
Anarchists plots against the
fleet now follow the daily
from Paris
An Ohio woman who revived
three times after being consider-
ed dead has died for the fourth
but even now her friends
are wondering whether she will
let it go at that or change her
mind once more.
The special session of the leg-
cost the State for mileage
and per diem about It
was well worth the price.
Governor has
meetings the farmers that lie was the man of the hour,
hi in Greenville Monday are and the action of the special
much legislature is an endorsement of
., his course-
Those papers who
fed down now see it in j The educational meet-
another light in Greenville next Monday
was gotten up in interest if
Don't kick about everything and for their benefit,
that is done, but get in the push a u they show their in-
and alone. t by attending
One trouble with the
is there are a
bills Here are mix rs
ii is the first time at t e
s n the side
and the people.
The Greensboro Record
are short on
not call in the directory makers
Ii was thought early the
wet. hat th session
at ire would be ready to
adjourn by today, but with the;
rats Lil the
J net j sight.
Speaker Cannon has jumped
down f on his perch and stays
hi an obstacle
the way the park;
Maybe he is going to jet
real wood, after he quits cursing.
In the midst of so many other
things to attract attention the
Pacific fleet was almost forgot- of
ten- City, led by Mr. E. P.
We like see d again Isaac
question out of politics so who was nominated
a man would have to stand dent for postmaster
office strictly on his merits. of that town, that his
.
gets the
State so should be
satisfied to let Charlotte have the
other one-
When some of you folks who
have money hid around the house
that, robbers have broken
and carried it off, you will wish.
that you hid put it in the bank.
There are seven banks in
Pitt county, either of which
keep your money in safety
pay you interest on it
The has shown quite con-
that Thaw is not a e
man, but just what the jury
it is another
At any rate the trial will
s j n be over and it is to be hop-
ed that it not come
It i- St id to have cost the Thaw
family to get Harry
def Looks like a big lot of
money to for so trifling an
in hi hardly takes that,
view a. The State of New,
York is also out expend-
ed In th prosecution of I haw.
A man . o said he was
On in Va.
the day arid offered a bet
to that Governor
Glenn, of North Carolina, will
assassinated before this year is
cut. All the fools are not dead j
yet, nor are all the. crazy people
in the Insane asylums.
The morning pa-
should not take so much to
heart the prospect of losing the
sixty odd barrooms in that city.
You boys will soon learn to get
along just as well without the
dram shops.
General P. Roberts, of
Gates, has announced himself a
candidate for the Democratic
nomination for secretary cf
State, and has been in h
the past week in the interest of
his candidacy. Roberts
is man and his
vice to the party has been long
and faithful, he is going to
2nd capturing this nomination
over Col. J. Bryan Grimes a most
We are yet not at the end of
discussion in connection with the
Thaws. It is now said that the
jury having declared that Thaw
is insane, family will take
advantage of to have his
marriage with Evelyn
annulled on the ground that he
was crazy when the ceremony
was performed.
COURTROOM COMEDY.
It looks like there is some
ground for the oft repeated as-
that the senate has
many railroad lawyers in it.
So far as we have seen no leg-
has arisen to the
in presenting a bill to
While a large majority for pro-
be looked Tor in the
State it is not coming
without effort. The liquor in-
will put up a hard fight
vent ground hogs running at and trying
to defeat prohibition.
South Carolina legislature
kill d a bill for prohibition in
that State, Doubtless they
thought to step from the whiskey j
in that State to
would be too rapid reform.
H- i for calling attention
i i .; i it, out
. .- i pot -l,
the Norfolk Railway;
makes that of the Atlantic Coast i
Line The;
A C. L. can de better, and ought
to for of comparison
nothing else
Greenville ha any number of
opportunities for development
that the business men could take
hold of to town's advantage.
There is already work in pros-
peer,
fill begin by
Which way will the street
go from Five Points to the
A. C. L. depot, is a question much
discussed. The decision
to depend upon the attitude of
people owning property along
Dickinson avenue.
Those who said the special leg-
would pass no bills out-
side of those mentioned in the
governor's message, made their
prediction too soon. A regular
flood of bills have been intro-
The compromise entered into
by the governor and the railroads
and approved by the legislature
in special session, should put at
rest all agitation in this State of
passenger rates. The people and
railroads seem satisfied at
adjustment and now the
of all should be to work to-
v for the advancement and
the State.
What a change has come
about Last year there was the
cry that the railroads could not
provide sufficient cars to handle
the freight that was offered them
for transportation. Now the
statement is made in the Wall
street Journal that in various
parts of the country 350.000
freight cars are standing idle on
the railroad sidings.
The Fayetteville Observer is.
very much against the State
a compromise in the railroad
rate matter. That paper thinks
the State had practically won its j
case in the courts, and that to;
change now is a i
will degrade the State in the
eyes of the Closing an
editorial on the subject The
Observer
.,.;. -n- for the ex-
of thousands of dollars
year. When work begins on
these the way will be opened of
other enterprises, There is no
need of anybody being blue or
talking hard times. On the other
hand cheerfulness should be
and the spirit of
should be stronger than
ever. Greenville is all right and
this is going to be one of the
town's best years.
a Pastas r th a r
and th
The woman Ma m the box, and
the was a very nice mannered, re-
woman, who kept a cheap
boarding house, and it was the de-
sire of one of her guests to lie dis-
honest that had brought her to the
court to make him pay bis board
bill.
old did you say you were,
inquired the lawyer, with
no reason on earth,, for an elderly
landlady is no more anxious to lose
a board bill than a young one.
did not say, she respond-
ed, flushing to the roots of her hair.
you be kind enough to say,
none of your business
the
judge.
said the lawyer, rubbing
his chin. much did you say
the amount was the defendant owed
for how long was
That's a week, isn't
weeks at a week is
I believe said
The witness was patient, but her
temper was not improved under the
strain.
that an extravagant price
to pay for board in your locality,.
inquired the lawyer
didn't pay it, answered,
the worm, beginning to turn.
The lawyer pave a little start of.
surprise, than became indignant
the very thought of a witness talk-
like that.
be he
said, assuming a tone of warning.
is a serious matter. I
if Tour prices were not ex-
and you have seen fit to
answer lightly, madam. Now,
madam, I ask you in all earns tries
if you mean to tell this court that
your prices are moderate and that if
should come to your house to
board you would charge mo
Answer directly,
and the barrister squared his
and assumed an imperial man-
The witness was not at nil abash-
ed.
she said simply,
thought not, I thought
interrupted the lawyer, bending
over and rubbing his hands.
continued witness,
should not charge you at all.
should make you pay in
London it-Bit.
LAWYER'S BIG FEES.
Mr. J. J. Laughinghouse spoke
a great truth in the
meeting Monday, when he said
the farmers of Eastern North
Carolina fail to get the benefit
to which they are entitled from
the government's aid in
agriculture because of a lack
of organization, and the farmers
have only themselves to blame
for such failure. It as long been
a mystery why there is not or-
and concerted action
among our farmers.
D. W.
IN
Groceries
And Provisions
Cotton Bagging and
Putting Your Foot In It.
Mr. George Ids book
and
tells the following
friend of mine in the
service visiting Borne in the
old days of the temporal power had
the honor of an interview with
The pope graciously offered
him a am told you will
find this very The English-
man made that stupidest of Oil an-
your holiness, but I,
have no a vice, j
if it was, you would
will remember the fol-;
lowing passage in
and o mi eon-
snail
will you honor mo
your highness.
I have no small vices.
if it were a
you'd be sine to have it, M. Beau-
scant.
y is i ban of
nil men have a a any-
thing They may lack in I
some, particular, have many
I but
the quality of is never
absent in a successful man.
matter what opposition he meets or
what discouragements overtake him,
he is always persistent. Drudgery
cannot disgust him. Labor cannot
weary him. lie will persist, no mat-
what or goes. It is a
part of his nature, lie could
most as easily slop breathing. It is
not so much brilliancy of intellect
or fertility of resource as persist-
ency of effort, constancy of purpose,
that gives success.
That Would H-v.
or
Several days after congress
bought out the rights of the French
Panama Canal company a group of
Washington correspondents entered
the office of the late John Hay, sec-
of state. They found him
puzzled to the verge of bewilder-
and they sympathetically ask-
ed what was troubling him.
Nelson Cromwell has
just been in Secretary Hay
explained. mentioned having
heard that he was to receive a fee
of for winning the Pan-
case.
T don't know what my fee will
Mr. Cromwell told me, it
does not matter much. I already
have more than I know
what to do
one man ever told me such
a mused the secretary of
state, that was Andrew Car-
When you gentlemen of the
press came in I was wondering what
it would feel like to have more
And a lawyer has
it What would Daniel Webster
Rufus Choate say to that
What would any of the shining
lights among old school lawyers say
to the wealth and power that have
come to a score or more of present
day corporation lawyers in New
York How would a fee of half a
million dollars for two weeks of
work, such as the steel interests
paid James B. Dill, strike them
What would think of the
which William got
for breaking the Plant will, or of
the paid Joseph H. Choate
for a single argument that the in-
come tax law was unconstitutional,
or, again, of John E. Parsons as the
recipient of for drawing
a deed, or of incomes from
to half a million a year which arc or
have been paid without protest to
other master counselors Broad-
way Magazine.
A Cheerful
With a scowling brow the
vaudeville agent awaited the next
applicant, who was long in com-
A long, lanky individual, with
n re than was absolutely
es and a countenance was
not t i came to desk
and f tones said,
what do you was
the reply.
I need a job just now about as
much anything answered
the lean person.
had any
indeed, I have been
it short I I you've
been with all the big stars from
Hamlet to interposed I'm
agent shortly. doesn't cut
any freeze with me. What's your
line
was the reply.
then, make me de-
the agent, with a snarl.
Tight Man.
Primitive man, by nature and
a lean in
the course of his experience that his
most v; part was the heart;
Hi i It . on the Left
would kill or, any rate, tho
period in human history men began
the rigid In lo fight with,
while they employed the left hand
arm chiefly to cover tho heart
or to parry the blows at that
vulnerable region. When weapons
of and defense look tho
place of fists and teeth tho right
hand grasped the spear or sword,
while the left held the shield or
buckler over the heart, this
way, beyond a doubt, mankind be-
c n e York
American.
Fresh Goods kept con-
In stock. Country
Produce Bought and Sold
GREENVILLE N C
North
Haired
arc no red haired
old
Red
There
The speaker, a red haired
went
The red haired have an
of iron in their blood. This
them to overflow with vitality,
wit, charm-
hut I wit boast, IV
She smiled, and her
toddy with a
His a net
that fin girl
, roll is married at
hatred old maid is
Humor.
There are many stories in Chi-
literature of practical jokes
played on tipsy people. One man
in early days when shoes were left
at tho house door, a custom borrow-
ed later on by the Japanese, used to
amuse himself by mixing up tho
shoes of his guests and rearranging
them at random, tho result being
that when the guests took their
leave, already half seas over, with
one big shoo and one little one,
there were many falls and sprawl-
in the road, much enjoyed by
the host who was seeing his friends
Century.
Ham.
ham is an old
dish, might have been set
before William himself. Wash
and scrub a small ham and I
soak for twenty-four hours. Wipe j
dry, put in a large granite or agate
kettle and cover with cider neither i
too sweet nor yet hard. Boil gently,
allowing about fifteen minutes to;
the pound. When tender it
cool In the Serve a
garnish of aspic telly oil
Cr ft
WINTERVILLE
This Department is in charge F. C. Nye who is authorized to represent The Eastern
Reflector in and vicinity.
Rubber boots, rubber shoes,
rubber coats, and heavy work
shoes a specialty.
Barber Co.
Winterville, N. C, Feb. 1st
G. T. Tyson, from near Farm-
ville, was here Friday to take
his son Elbert home to spend
Sunday
The stalk cutting seasons near-
here We sell one of the most
up to date stalk cutters on the
market See us before buying.
Barber Ck.
The Vance literary society
gave a good debate last night.
You may to hear from
the boys later in a public debate-
Our whole line of clothing must
go at greatly reduced prices.
Harrington, Barber Co.
A. G. Cox has constructed a
wood saw run by a gasoline en-
It does the work nicely
and it only requires a few min-
to devour a cord of wood-
Glass wire and mills just
Barber
E. F. Tucker, one of our rural
free delivery carriers, is detain-
ed at his home on account of la-
We can fin rush you all kinds
of and turned wood
work for on short no-
Carolina Mfg.
Company.
We notice from tho amount
Wire being carried from
Now is the time to purchase
your Box Body Carts while they
are cheap. The A. G. Cox Man- e Boyd Intimates that he will Treat
Co., have plenty of Blind
THE BUYER GUILTY.
them on hand. Call and see them.
There were regular services at
Reedy Branch Sunday morning.
A new line of dry goods and
notions expected this week.
Come and see them. A. W
Ange Co
Judge Boyd, of Greensboro,
who has been holding a special
term of the United States Dis-
Court in Raleigh in the
stead of Judge Purnell, has in-
from the bench that if
liquor from
THE AYDEN DEPARTMENT
This department is in charge of J. M. Blow who is authorized to represent The Ea in
Reflector in and vicinity
As authorized D-V
Eastern we take
and writing receipts for
x-e in We have a list
. all who receive their mail at
this office. We also take orders
for printing
In an election held here
day, for or against prohibition,
the dispensary won by a ma-
of four. This means that
the dispensary will still continue
parties who buy me dispensary win sun
J. K. residence near i blind tigers are brought before; p business at the same old
the oil mill is going up him under indictment by the stand, at least until Jan. 1st,
Prof. G. E Lineberry went grand jury, he will require
the school house
Sunday afternoon
A full line of overalls of all
kinds at A. W. Ange Co.
Mrs. A. W. is spending
some time with relatives in Mar-
tin
The time is almost at hand
when farmers will need such
implements as cotton planters
and sowers. So place
your orders early with A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Co for these
diets of guilty if the purchase is
proven, and will impose
in keeping with the sen-
dealt out to the blind tiger
men themselves.
The position of Judge Boyd is
1800.
Your lady friend would
one of those fancy boxes
of candy at
drug store, Ayden N. C.
Miss Mary Long Whitehead, of
the graded school faculty, spent
Car load of hard and soft coal
by J. R Smith Co. mercantile heretofore
Pine Tar cough will re- doing business in the town of
your cough and cold Get a under the
bottle from M M Sauls Cannon ard this
Car load of fine and coarse
salt at J K Smith Co. from the firm, this January
Light and heavy groceries. Lit. A. C. i
cigars and tobacco at Tripp Hart j C L Tyson,
and company. .
The prettiest baby caps and To My
cloaks in J R Smith co. j
that one who, by buying a drink. Saturday and Sunday with her
procures the breaking of the law, r, Mrs. Cherry, of Conetoe.
is himself guilty of violating the
law. District Attorney Skinner
expressed regret to Judge Boyd
that the grand jury for the term
had already been discharged,
goods then you be sure it would therefore be
to get -our supply in ample time, to act on the
are glad to report from the bench at this term-
York on -i cash basis again, Durham Sun.
so we may expect money to b,
cloaks in J R co. j
The largest and cheapest line withdrawn from the firm of
of stationary in town don't buy dog.
have examined M. M. business in the
herewith avail myself of this
patterns kept on hand, Opportunity of thanking my
latest styles. J. R Smith co. friends for their pit patronage
Car load of respectfully ask them to con-
lime and plastering hair at J. with Mr. R. C. Can-
Smith Co. them will re-
J. R. Smith Co. has bought one the kindest treatment-
half interest in Ayden Milling ft q l.
Mfg. Co. of Dr.
will begin at once to improve
plant. In a short time they will
be running on full time. It
Keeping
E . M iv.
f -1 on y v
, our p-
a outfit, saw and , New r Pi fa
All i late the f o .
els
easier, i ,. , . .
us Interest paid on time do, ton, or car load. F. V. John-ton.
posits. J. L. Jackson, Cashier.
entire stock of ladies jack-;
eta must go at slaughtering OAKLEY ITEMS.
prices Good health depends
Upon your keeping the body Oakley, N. C, Feb. 4th, 1903.
A. W Ange Co g. Belcher, of Charleston. S
here that there is a a, i s. o , e Milling and
of wire fence taking the of, The-A G Cox Manufacturing c. days last L,. .,,,,
be old rail This company are mother, Mrs. Bet- Jon .
See our line of books and
for holiday presents.
J. R. Smith Co.
Rev. Mr. of Kentucky,
will preach at the Christian
church tonight at o'clock.
ire cordially invited. mills, any
are . . h us i
Boys I have a wee line of safe I snaps made to order grist mill, ,, 4- Li .,,.
razors from to 6.50. you electric light plant lights
do well to one and undertaking establish-
in i
of pocket knives M A Sauls
Miss Laura Cox, of the graded -k M
school faculty, who turn i ,.,.,.,.
with a severe attack of work, newel posts and
la grippe, hi j, returned to her
duties ii.
p-
av expect money to ,
with Cotton seed meal fay the bag, time and money. See my t make and ,. ;,. ,, , Mi., ,,
line of and other brands. ,. , . M r
M, a u , wagons, carts and log box i.
u j, returned
.; school room
The Ayden Milling and
welded fence fast tie Belcher.
the of our Any one in need of good fence of
and v
many law suits concerning
m so do with barb w will to their in- here on Friday.
. I t.; , . .-. n U I
mis- j est to
they buy
i them before S. of the
i Norfolk Southern railroad,
buggies are still go-
want a nice up-to-
date runabout buggy you
better give him an call-
Mrs M. i- Bryan is visiting,
relatives near Whichard.
I wish co i many pa-
for their patronage for the
it the same old
, of the way of your next crop spent, two days here th-; past
The stalk cutter does, with
the work. Harrington, Barber. j q Highsmith, of Rocky
and company. I Mount, part of last week
Oliver at A. W. Ange ,,., j M
should- t
it A. W. Co. Miss Lessie of
Han dressed two days here the
. , d i
anything yen ,
want in either wood iron, m d of r
n short Buy e.-i . r -1
. cottonseed, milling timber and
kilns, for r I
timber. They h R,
id a i
I h
, t
r, of
y it
. . .;
of
I'll-
mow.
lie
nus bid i
There about cases c
la grippe in Ayden and from
ts ; hear we
five in
w I, w ;.
a necessary luxury. Any . .
entrusted to this company be . .-- u
neatness and piles.
.-;
Ar-
I. Is
the Milling Mfg. Co.
a rim or hair cut drop Now is the time to get single, D. of was
to see me. Cleaning aDd and double low down on friends.
pressing a specialty also.
W II. Worthington, Barber
Winterville, N. C.
Mi;.; came in
from S;. r afternoon
to spend
Misses Roland
Stallings and Ethel Flowers
Wen to today.
The rev y is here. AH
farm supplies can be secured
Tripp, fl patch Mr. a practical
and id to furnish the general I ;
him
line to ti, f .,. R
eat -f a J R. Smith r. ho
at A. W. A Co- Elder S. R. quite sick.
H. A Gray went co Tarboro
have a good bull Thursday.
for sale. Messrs Jenkins and Parker
opened a barbershop
Calendar. Oakley. clever
The Reflector has received a men and no doubt will do a good
beautiful from Swift
C is visiting
ea
them.
tit of
John R
known as J. K. Smith t o. I .
A full hue carpenters tools
Friday a
j. i i fittings.
R. Si.
d was Saturday.
i Co , Chicago. It U of three
very
id-, s
Mis P
farm supplies can Th will of the
from us Prompt attention . . . in
Bar- to any one on receipt of
cents in stamps.
and company
R. M. Page, of Stokes, spent
the night with J. R. Cooper.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Wanted two to five
. . year, on gilt-edge security. Ad-
Co., are now prepared to famish; Farmer, Reflector,
you with rice and up to-date Tar
Heel Wagons that are cheap be-
sides being durable- Call and
see them before you buy. Prices
hat talk.
Jno Flanagan and M. G.
in
an went to today
A new line of dry goods and
notions just in. Harrington
Barber Co.
F. F Cox went to Greenville
Tuesday evening.
Several more new pupils en-
school Monday morning.
Miss May Brooks came in
Tuesday evening from Grifton
to resume her duties in her
school near
Garden seeds of all kinds fresh
from the A. W. Ange
A Co.
Rev- T. H. King, returned from
Goldsboro Monday where he fill-
ed his appointment Sun-
day.
Taken Up--I have taken
up a stray cow, red color, butt
headed, marked swallow fork in
right ear. Owner can get same
by proving property and paying
expenses. OR. Gal
R. F. D. No. N. C
7-2-t-d 8-t-w-
N. C, Feb. u.--About
o'clock this morning Mr. B.
Belcher lost his stables and
barns by fire. Two horses, two
cows and calves, all of his farm
implements, fodder, corn and
hay were burned in the buildings-
Tho fire is believed to be the
work of incendiaries. Mr. Bel-
loss is between and
and it is not known if he
had any insurance.
B.
H. Smith purchased
est of A. in the
Carolina Milling
Co. and will conduct the bus-
in i at the same place Ail
work promptly looked after. Mr,
Cox will still with the
Company.
See F. V Johnston before you
sell your cotton seed.
The Jumping. Off Place.
had me in its grasp;
and had almost reached the jumping
off place when I was advised to try
Dr. King's New Discovery; and want
to say right now, it saved my life.
began with the bottle,
and after taking one dozen battles I
was a well and happy man
says George Moore, of N.
C. As a remedy for Coughs and colds
and healer of weak, sore lungs and for
preventing pneumonia New Discovery
is supreme. and SI. at J. L.
Wooten, druggist. Trial bottle free.
Plant Wood's
Garden Seeds
FOR SUPERIOR
TABLES Si FLOWERS.
Our business, both in Garden
and farm u one of the
largest this country, a result
duo to tho fact that
Quality is always our c
ft first consideration, r
We arc headquarters for
Grass aDd Seeds, Seed
Oats. Seed Potatoes, Cow
Peas, Beans and
other Farm Seeds.
Wood's
la moat
An spa
authority on all Harden
and Farm crops. mailed
bee on request. Write for It.
We extend sympathy the
bereaved.
Tripp Hart and Co have re-
are daily receiving
the nicest and freshest line of i
co on market
C. J. Tucker, of was
in town yes is
. .
C ii V
Hulls at J R Smith co.
j. Blow is confined to
room with a attack of
grippe. W e hope to see
on the street i sin soon.
Fancy coca ruts and
grapes, just rec i I
Johnston's. l
Edwards
received a load Ell
wire fence. Can furnish any
REAL
One thirty-seven acre I -rm
just outside corporation at
IA will b. sold on easy
Ayden ft -o
Mill supplies, belting, valves,
steam J. R. Smith Co
Lime cement, plastering hair
and a full line of hardware at
J. R. Smith Co.
Windows, doors,
butts, J, R.
Co.
re Creditors
. i . an
ed
i .-
. r
. i
be
. d.
. .
,.,.,. N i folk r.
Having duly before
the Superior court clerk of Pitt
k-ill ;.
. i .
i in,
Hi
, .,
given to ail persons t
the estate to make
payment to tho undersigned,
all persona having claims against
said estate m pr
to ; I for ;.
i or i the
be p.
. d if Jan.
T Cars n
E of J a Cars-in.
1-21 ltd
white
in
n or I e the 21st i . . .
of January, 1909 or I n e I
will be plead in i ; ;.
THE BANK OF
In the State of North a close of 3rd 1907.
When you need hay of all kinds
see F. V. Johnston.
Neighborhood Favorite.
Mrs. E. U. Charles, of Harbor,
Maine, sneaking of Electric Bitters,
is a neighborhood
here with It deserves t M it
favorite everywhere. It gives quick
relief In dyspepsia liver
weakness and general
Us on the blood. M a
makes it especially useful
as a medicine. This grand
tonic sold under guarantee
at J. I store.
Stray Taken Up.
I have taken up one yearling,
about years old, unmarked,
lowish color. Owner can get
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock
205.98 Surplus fund
., profits, less current
One from Ranks and Bankers
Items Deposits subject to .-heck
i outstanding
check
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts
houses
and Fixtures
coin
Silver coin, including
coin currency 2,165.73
Nat. bk notes other U. S. notes
8,750.00
437.43
16,199.81
016.00
, , . . iii
No bluff is so good that it can t Mme by proving property and
l. . u. U V.
be called by a better one.
H. E. Tripp,
ltd Winterville, N. C.
COUNTY. OF PITT , ,. ,
I J R Smith, Cashier of the above named bank, do swear that
the is to the best of my knowledge -1
Subscribed and sworn to be-
fore me, this 6th. day of Dec. J. R-
1907 R. C. CANNON,
STANCIL HODGES, JOSEPH DIXON,
Notary Public I
POOR PRINT





ft
What About
Christmas
With the our
readers we ask you the question of the hour
WHAT ABOUT I CHRISTMAS
The children are asking it with wondering
and hopeful expectations of what Santa
Claus is likely to bring them.
The older people are asking it, not so much
in speculation regarding the
that Christmas will bring to them, but
as an inquiry as to how they are to pro-
suitable and satisfactory presents for
and friend, without too heavy a
upon their time and purse.
we help y solve the problem and
p of doing your Christmas
shopping with pleasure satisfaction and
We offer the advantage of selection that
can he found in a very extensive snow-
goods- We-take pleasure
power to help you to just the right
the right price, so that you may leave our
-.-m you came, and perfect
your purchases in every respect.
W to invitation to call
and see our line of
HOLIDAY
Honing
Merry
to Bee every reader st our store at an
. .- one very
we remain,
Yours truly
M DYE
ANECDOTE OF A FLOWER.
K Russian Nobleman M
Plant
About two ago a Baa-
nobleman traveling in
co saw and admired the
plant, is a of
was m
fey the foe and
that he m to have
growing specimens In bis own
try. when leering Mexico he
procured some root to take home
to the czar as a present
On his first to after
he reached the capital city, he told
of the wonderful plant and asked
of the czar to present to
m the specimens which he had.
The czar graciously granted bis re-
quest and gave the roots to the
court gardener, who promised to
give the plants his beet attention
but unfortunately before he could
plant them properly as he intended
he was taken suddenly ill and died
without having accomplished any-
thing. . .
Another gardener was appointed.
In the meantime the roots lay in toe
sack in which they were first placed.
The new gardener, not knowing
their value, threw the sack away,
and It unheeded in a of
the garden day after day. Some
time afterward his little daughter
picked up one of the roots and in a
playful mood planted it, but paid
no further attention to it. The
czar forgotten all about it. In
course of time the ruler died and
Hie second gardener.
The plant in after put out a
few spikes for leaves, but did not
thrive in the cold air of Russia. It
new very slowly, and its origin was
not known i any one save the wife
if the former and the
child planted it.
Years passed, and still the strange
plant, with its thick, long, straight
now nearly sis tali, did
not bloom, but as it grew taller it
attracted notice, and the new czar
sometimes looked at it and wonder
if it would ever bloom.
In time he, too, died, and
the bloomed not.
But just after the coronation of
shot up from
W B j
Has just unloaded car
loads No. choice Timothy
Hay which will be sold on
Greenville market also
cars of Cotton Seed Meal
and cars of Cotton Seed
Hulls.
See Him
For Cracked Corn. Mill
Chops, Bran Oats of all
kinds. Corn Meal and Corn
Headquarters for all kinds
of Feed.
Close to i the Market
MAYBE
re
the
business value of being well
dressed; everybody
It grows out of the tact that
people have to judge your
ability and standing by the
way you look, until you give
them something else to judge
by.
That Means
that
w e
WANTS TO CUT OFF TRAINS.
Atlantic Coast Line Wants to Lessen
Service on This Road.
In a letter to the Kinston Free
Press, State Senator Y T Or-
says the Atlantic Coast
Line R. R. Co., has filed with the
corporation commission notice
L trains Nos. and will be
discontinued- These trains are but l
Letter on Rapid Writing.
Winterville, N- C, Jan. 1908.
Dear
In this short letter, I wish
tell of the inspiration I
from
Writing found in
to
re-
for
Jan-
at North
the
I know and have
CENTRAL
Barber Shop
Edmund S Fleming props.
Located in main business sec-
of the town- Four chairs
in operation and each one
sided by a skilled barber-
Our place is inviting, razors
Our towels clean.
thank sou for patronage
ask you to call again when
good work is wanted.
are in a position to increase
the business value of every
man in this town; we've got
Hart, Schaffner Marx
clothes for you; and it you
live up to your looks in these
clothes, you'll be a sure
in
Business,
S FORBES
those that arrive at Kinston from
Weldon at 12.30 o'clock p. m-.
and leave Kinston at o'clock
p. m. The corporation
has ordered that said trains
be not discontinued until there which system places
can be investigation and has position movement and speed
asked for certain information to before form and beauty still
enable it to act intelligently, felt that there
This information has not vet have a regular and systematic
been furnished but it is expected period rapid
at any time and the matter will
probably be taken up next week.
In the notice filed it is
AN OLD ADAGE
SAYS-v
purse U a
Sickness makes a purse.
The LIVER U the seat nine
tenths of disease.
go to the root the whole mat-
thoroughly, quickly
and restore the action the
LIVER to normal condition.
taught Give tone to the system and
Michael's System of Rapid solid flesh to the body.
Take No Substitute.
SWEEP STATE.
Notice lo Creditors.
qualified i
Notice
MAY PATE
the
copy SB worn. Carolina
Journal of Education,
All the suggestions are fine,
wish to emphasize, es-
the one about consider-
rapidity first, even at
neglect of form and beauty.
lit
B. of the
Fuming, deceased, is hereby
given to ail
to make
the and p on the 7th day of 1906 and
duly recorded in the Renter of
for payment on or
The House yesterday afternoon
concurred in the Senate
deed executed and delivered by
to the I J. F. Askew and wife to W. M-
duly th. Register of bill fixing May M as
-r the general election for
of m expose
plead in bar of re before court
house door in Greenville, to the
highest bidder on Monday, Feb-
17th., 1908, a certain tract
or parcel of land lying and being
in th county of Pitt and State
of North Carolina and described
of rapid writing. Now,
since I have made these
my own, we have a period
stated of rapid writing each day,
of letters.
This Jan. 1st.
L.
of W. T. Fleming
m-
FOR SALE
still
in the w make
the Old Staton Mill, c saw mill.
Grist mill, a id cotton , with o
land
menU thereon. yoke of
and four Iced -on mutes Win
sell together or part r or
shot up from
r I the rapidly j g Or T. R. BOMB
slowly unfolded-------
and white The
wonderful plant had
The said it
old and had in hon-
or of new Word was
to him, and he and-his whole
and ad Hie flowers and
the plant.
The poor i from toe r inn
had its re-
J century
will
R. L Davis, J. A. Andrew,, V-Pres. J. L. Little Cashier.
The Bank
New She
On 1st I will open
a Shoe Shop in the
on 5th street opposite Hotel
Bertha. Shoes made to or-
and all kinds of repair
work. Save your orders
at d k for mo.
READY
be pleaded to your
business sod solicits your patron-
age, with assurance of Us
ability to courteous and sat-
service.
With
SI
wanted
way
in
III
r.
GOO D EYESIGHT
Have you it
i a
if not, v-
of worker plumb-
It i e
Interest, bu do
When you call us in we
do honest at
honest and t
; to
your work she next time
you i plumbing. W e j
would like to your,.
work, be it much or little r
Give us a order i
If we don't deserve
Ducks for Bale a
In
. use.
Heavy And Fancy Groceries
to
in town
Complete
stock
whet
I am also ready to
you with Hay, Grain I
all kinda of Feed Stuff. I
Bring, send or phone your
orders and your needs will
plea
serve
Graduate Philadelphia College
of y and Optics
to
A traveler
hung up
Hie windows. Hi- first idea
is one of surprise that the children
should so often choose this
spot to their toys, but
presently lie learns that dolls
up
that s marriageable
daughter dwells in the house. The
., , ind
r p , who
term. c
torn is naturally confined peas-
ants, but nearly house has a
of corn ears hung up the
outer wall. This wreath is brought X-
back from the harvest festival,
With its
Capital paid in of
Surplus and
Profits of mow than
Making a Total of Capital
in cf
It has also
Deposits to
Making total tat fat the
of our custom rs mare than
65,000.00
240,000.00
It is the t of this bask to aid In every
mate way the development of the financial
and county.
W. C.
M. Clark
. IS
superstition that if it be
i a daughter of the house will , n Engineers and Surveyors
and be married. Where this is Greenville North Carolina.
. b ;,. I. d is taken to ., a I land
; ad wreath well within . ,, ;,. Office on
i . t p
or
Third el
Get Tie best for
Royall and Borden Pelt
cs and a piece
stein Iron have no
T . BOY
T A F J
Bern-
equal.
. V. .-i-
Tremendous High-grade Stock of Sine Mei
ville and Placed in C,
Having been brought to Green-
store for a quick
You must pay
Our Doors will be thrown open to the Public
C. T. MUN
January the
FORD.
1908
that those trains are j to see how hap-
and on account of reduced fares children re-
etc the is and are
ed. The statement of receipts and how nicely they a. .
and disbursements embracing
September October and
shows that in the operation
of these trains there has been no
loss but a small profit, though
Chairman Oates M Prohibition
Chairman of the Anti-
Saloon League Committee was
happy yesterday afternoon when
the State Prohibition had
finally passed both Houses. He
has i in Raleigh since the day
the Legislature met, looking
a day that I this general bill also
fail to note some stiff, cramped
letter, transformed to a more
copy.
There is great need of reform
in the method of teaching pen-
The chamfer of commerce A system of legible
, of Greenville has M y
action in this matter is
and sent a protest to the and . h the
corporation commission movement, is difficult to .-
these trains being . goes kind of the legislature
If all other towns interested will m , have heard US pa- no
Notice to Creditors
Having qualified before the
Superior court clerk of
county as of
estate of C Vincent,
is hereby given to all
persons Indebted
immediate the
undersigned, and all persons
having claims against Bald
are notified the
duly d, to
or before the 7th
day of December, 1908 or this
will In bar re-
This Doc. 1907.
M.
of O. S. Vincent
is follows, to Farmville
passed Senate bill prohibiting
traveling salesmen from solicit-
orders for intoxicating liquors
in prohibition territory. This
bill, having passed the Senate, is
now a law-
The bill advocated by Judge
before the Senate and
Jeremiah Fields, T. L. Turnage, j Judiciary committee to
D. B. Askew and others, and be-1 amend 1635 the
inK all of as to allow a wife to testify in
S against her
also being deeded to said John band, where the husband has
Askew in D. R. As- been charged with slandering
and others to which deed hip to ally lo pending
reference is made for a lull its
Pitt county Book of whether it would o a
to satisfy said mortgage deed-; aw no ; d, but
Terms of sale; Cash. arguments were
in behalf of it before
committees and in the House.
W. M. Lang and J. A. Lang,
Executors, Mortgagees
Jarvis Blow, Attorneys.
Notice.
Notice to Creditors
other temperance legislation.
asked about the situation; Having duly qualified
, . the Superior court clerk Pitt
he a . o as executor of the last
and the of Jennie
people will ratify it deceased, notice is here-
May 26th, by a given to all persons owing
Carolina has had enough estate to
of the rule and ruin of the Mm
at the or before the 23rd
of January, 1903. or this
to the and
traffic and i
completely.
will now put it out
Among the important general
bills passed by the House were
those limiting the amount of
stock and bonds railroads may
of North , J c
In the Superior court. Commission, the 00-
A. H. Taft vs- Mary Davis the law being t prevent
land under execution the
By virtue of a- execution i discontinuance of local trains
to the the the n of the
from the
n. a
be plead in bar f re
to engage in
a, trams may not school, g m us a ;,
A taken off.
writing is very often
a miserable scrawl.
We all know that many of our
business men write very illegibly,
giving a difficult reading lesson
to the receiver of their
cations.
This is a practical age, and we
HOUSE ADOPTS SENATE BILL.
Only Change Made Was to Cut Out
Objectionable Buxton Amendment.
After a struggle of four hours,
the House at last night I
passed the Senate rate bill, after j want practical results.
down the Yount bill an opportunity of attending
the Senate and had by a business college, so why
majority voted for introduce this
This Jan
date tor voting that will enable
us to sweep the Sate
people are with us and
they will show it on election day-.
It is their own fight-it involves
their own firesides and their own
offspring and they will this
question once for all. Every man
who loves humanity and wants
to see his State freed from the
23rd,
Executor of Jennie
Id
in this respect; and giving
certain of the
not let
large majority voted for the i us method of
Weaver bill Almost solidly j writing which embraces the two
the last vote the great essentials-rapidity
voted against every measure; legibility,
looking to any agreement, but on I ask the teachers of Pitt to
the vote to take the Senate bill reverse the method we have been
several Republicans and instead of saying,
their vote and supported the and get
Senate bill, thus Riving it a ma-, let us say,
of to
The Weaver bill was the best
of the two, particularly as
strengthened by the Justice
amendment requiring the rail- , s.
is invited to join in the fight at
Notice
of North Carolina, Pitt
County
In the Superior Court.
Hannah Home, vs Dennis Home
The will take
entitled as
KS to the
f Pitt county, to absolutely
county, at o'clock noon,
it the first Monday
March 1908, sell for cash to and to
and interest, which Bald railroads
Mary Davis, defendant has in Pine Level dispensary
the following described real es- Raleigh was riven
That certain, let or
parcel of land lying and being in
the town of Greenville, N. C.
Situate on the East side Wash
once and not let up till the battle
is Raleigh News and
server. fur her take notice that to to
of the
court said f told on
the Mon after the first Mon-
ii March it the 16th
day of March; -t the house
of the town
answer
t in action,
or demur
or t he
write rapidly and
to put in operation the
freight rate bill which
Pritchard enjoined. But the
House greatly strengthened the
Senate bill by cutting out all ref-
to the Corporation Com-
mission, thus making it
for a Federal Judge to en-
join the operation of the act.
The Senate will accept the bill
as by the House and the
bill as amended will become a
law today. It carries out the
recommendations of the Gov
A m
An involuntary petition ill bank-
was filed in the United
States clerk's office here late Sat-
afternoon by for the
Co., and others r-;, of January
beauty rill Norfolk, Va , against R. C Mo, n. C. Moore, c. C.
I have several pupils in first Cotter Bro., who conduct
grade who can excel some of the general merchandise business Notice,
older ones in their Grifton, N C The matter is ,,
attribute it to the con made returnable at New Bren on
practice of elements and j Saturday February 1st.
street, between the lot
occupied by Moses King, and wife
and the lot owned by J. R-
the interest of the Mary
a one half interest
in said lot, and being the same
referred to in the last will and
testament of her
Britt, recorded in will book No.
in the office of the clerk of the
court of Pitt county-
This the day of Jan. 1908,
L W. Tucker,
Sheriff of Pitt county.
the power to dispose of its dis-
liquors to either
in other or to whole-
sale houses in
News Observer.
Notice
North
Messrs by J. H. Smith and
principles. the
If it is not for; for the petitioning j e
one would be glad to hear a word tors. The liabilities of fig the will ex-
from some of the wide-awake Bro., are estimated at
in regard to this p-ob- with possible assets Monday,
L about
follows, to
Bogs D
I believe the editor will kindly j Journal,
allow us space for an
of thoughts. A Teacher-
The Reflector is glad to pub-
the foregoing, and its col-
are always open to the
teachers to discuss any subject
with their
In a conversation with ex-
tobacco buyer, we were
informed that tobacco bugs had
gotten into
putting his promises into
kt . , , l-n
statute but leaving no obligation
upon the railroad except its prom-
to Governor Glenn to put on
Bale the mileage book and to sell
interstate tickets at cents in-
stead of cents, as at present.
The bill also exempts all
pendent railroads not over
miles long from the lower rate
and lets them put up the fare to
cents. This, too, was in
dance with the recommendation
of the News
and Observer.
The senate was expected to
concur today in action of the
house in cutting off the Buxton
amendment, in which event the
special session would adjourn.
Did you ever hear a man, when
confined to a bed of or
from serious injury, ex
press regret that he had
himself paying life
See II.
Harris about the new Term
Policy of The Mutual Life of
New York.
county and that
tobacco,
I leaving tobacco or tobacco trash
Store in Greene County. in the pack houses from one year
, t h. to another, that the best
A special to The Kinston Free M . n
W. -and ,, old tobacco
store, at Jason, trash you finish
county, was totally destroyed by crop t a
fire Wednesday afternoon. f, the walls
Township, a-1 the
lards of Smith -ml Cannon,
Northerly B.
Cannon's Una to J. II. s Hi
thence a South East
smith's Una to Smith's line,
thanes a Westerly
smith's line said complaint.
westerly course I. J-,
line to the containing- sum
more or to
Terms of Cash,
This 2nd day of January,
J. U. W
J. L.
In the Superior
Pitt County Court.
Boyd vs. Noah Boyd.
defendant named
will take notice that an action
entitled as above commenced in
the Superior Court Pitt county
for a divorce from the bonds
matrimony, and the defendant
will further take notice that he is
required to appear at the next
term cf the Superior Court
Pitt county to be held on the
2nd Monday after the let Mon
day in March it being the 10th
day of March at the Court
house in said county in Greenville,
N. C, and or demur to
the complaint in action or
the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief demanded in
of Real Properly
In the Superior Court, Before
D C. Moore, Clerk.
North Carolina, Pitt County.
B. T. CoX, Administrator
vs
Effie Ti widow, and William
Clifton Stocks.
By virtue of a power f sale
made by D. C. Moore, clerk of
the Superior court, made in the
above entitled cause on the 16th
day of January, 1908. the under-
pinned commissioner will Sat-
16th day of February
1908, at o'clock noon, expose
to public Bale before the court
house door in Greenville, to the
highest bidder for cash the
described tract land to
Situate in town-
ship in the county of Pitt and
State of North adjoin-
the lands of Shiver
int
This 28th day of Jan. 1908.
D. C. Moore,
Clerk Superior Court.
Julius Brown, Atty. for plaintiff.
J. B. Sally Grey and
others containing acres more
or less and being lards
whereon Samuel Stocks and wile
formerly resided.
This 16th, day 1908.
F. C Harding, Commissioner.
The
Are caught in the oyster saloon
and in a few minutes the flames
had spread to the which
was entirely consumed. Efforts
to extinguish the flames were
useless. The majority of the
stock of dry goods were saved
ceiling of your
We our farmer
make a note of this.
Land Sale.
By of a decree of the
Superior Court of Pitt county
made certain special pro-
therein pending, entitled
Cannon,, administrator of
friends
Thought Him Dead.
In a letter received by a friend
in this city Informal, n is given
I Not Quite
ML How
Notice of Execution
North Carolina
total loss.
to several thousand dollars,
which is but partially covered by
insurance.
Meeting.
Monday is the day for the
educational meeting
here and the attendance should
be large. who say away
miss much that is for their
benefit-
Mr. Gurganus who was ill with
pneumonia and who was thought
to be dead, narrowly escaped
being buried alive. The
been prepared for burial and
had been placed in the coffin,
when sounds as if coughing were
heard coming therefrom- Upon
opening the casket the man was
found to be alive, and at last re-
counts was on the load to re-
Rocky Mount Echo.
Cicero M. deceased vs
Smith and I
on Monday, February 17th , 1908,
before the court H door m
tin- town of sell i-t
public sale to the highest bidder,
for that certain tract or
parcel of land situate in Swift
Creek township. Pitt county, ad-
joining the of Walter L-
John E.
Allen Cox, and others, contain-
ninety-two and one half
acres more or less, it the
tract of land upon which Cicero
M. Smith at the time of his
This the 15th day of Jan 1908.
Cannon,
of Cicero M.
Smith deceased.
Jarvis Blow, Attorneys.
can rot ll
screw driver or u- m
a Rood
T tool box and be prepared g j
i emergencies. Oar i of tools W
is a. could sire, and
we will see your tool .
f box does not lack a UM CT
useful K
Of Course f
You get
Horse t
J P.
Corey
. In the Superior
Pitt County Court.
L. vs. W. O. Mat-
thews, and G E. Matthews.
By of an execution
to the d fr m
the Sup court of Pitt county.
in above entitled action, will
on Monday 2nd day March
1908. P. m at the
housed or of this county,
to the highest bidder
cash to satisfy said execution, a
one half inter st, or all the right
title and interests in and to
following described real estate
which It Matthews has con-
lo W. G. Matthews, to-
House lot situated
on Pleasant Street, Bethel, N.
C, known as the Dock Andrews
place, and the same which
was willed to W. G. and G. ft,
Matthews by their mother, as
will fully appear of record, ad-
joining the of M. O.
. .
and and
an acre more or
This Jan. 30th, 1908.
L. W. ,
Sheriff-
POOR PRINT





r CONCENTRATED FOOD.
It Would a Poor and
to Humanity.
is a fondly
writes a
physician in a
medical journal, the day
OHM human race
subsist on highly
food. The time occupied in
the daily meals will saved
In swallowing a tablet of
essence, and all questions of
for food will ban-
while the
from on and hastily
lowed meal will finally disappear.
The idea is of course utterly
and plainly opposed to
physiological teaching. Such
a dietetic consummation thus
entertained would probably
end in the extinction of the race by
disease as a sequence of
The tact i- that the volume of food
definite in the
h c m foods arc
. . . and they also tend
, . . i era of
t . i, the ill live , es
i. .-. .; Ear in
,. , of that
I ; energy,
v . I assimilation, is
eon-
rely
most
, re-
. . but par-
i the
I exciter
i , avail m
. n i
i a i
t or i
I In
I W
I. excite hi
. .
ti and I
.
live organs arc not he was the recipient of innumerable
adapted for dealing with .;. , and bruises which
food. took i fie to heal.
It is an open question whether
PHOTOGRAPHING ANIMALS.
Some the Man
Camera
Today the camera penetrates
everywhere, and sometime- its use
is attended with
re- and Nowhere is this
more pronounced than when the
is brought into use in
lifelike pictures of wild
in captivity.
How hazardous this may be is
shown by the following incident,
which happened not long ago at a
big zoological garden A
line white leopard had ban added to
the collection, and as soon as it
to have settled down the
decided to have it
It seemed to be a fairly
quid and timid,
to be sure, but without any sign of
temper.
When the keeper entered its cage
it had taken little notice of him be-
the usual spitting and hissing
natural to its kind. The
therefore followed the keeper
u to its cage apprehension
trouble.
He set up his apparatus, adjusted
i-. took several picture el the
leopard, and all seemed
i shut up his camera,
t , chanced lo shuffle his
feet on a twice on the Boor
the w
. a streak of lightning the
leopard. an n m n
.-. m, an I he could
, . . v. eh
and
f I . I
mi -.-.-
in
tin life.
i. I t
. . sonic time i
. v. to
. llamas- . . i
rally consul I to I
lo with
. of
i its tr re by in
a dash tor camera operator,
the latter could be r. I
THE MALAYS.
Die- Seem to Be Governed by
Their Superstitions.
Malays will resort to any and
conceivable pretext to avoid
paying money on Friday. They be-
e that if they pay their debts on
this day they will overtaken by
poverty and want. Tuesday and
Saturday they consider generally
unlucky days, and if they shave or
cut their nails on either of these
days thereafter they will always be
in trouble and will perhaps die soon.
The Malay never sleeps in the after-
noon because of the fear that to
waste the hours of daylight tends to
shorten life. If a Malay finds his
clothes to have been bitten by a
rat lie is sure that it signifies bad
luck, and if he can possibly afford it
the clothes are given away in the
name of charity. There is a species
of bird called in the Malay country
which lives in the fields
and does not build a nest. It is be-
that whoever obtains a
neat will become invisible by
placing it on his head. Of course
the Malays believe there is such a
nest hidden away somewhere.
The Mains always abstain from
taking food during an of tho
sen or tin- moon and are exceeding-
careful about their baths, so as to
prevent attack of contagious
disease. The crow i- a bird of ca-
ill t the Malay, and
if it hoard cawing near a
it means death to one of
the inmates. In some other parts
o the world if an owl slight on or
l .; a ho and it is said to
or
house y e bun ed or sold for
or other misfortune. If a
bl
. k , id p I by that and I
Why From Rheumatism
Do know that rheumatic pains
can be relieved If you doubt this
jut try one application of Chamber
Iain's Pain Balm It will make rest and
sleep possible, and that certainly means
a great deal to any one afflicted with
rheumatism. For sale by all Druggists
and Dealers in Patent Medicine.
bride certain-
isn't very attractive- What
makes you think he will be hap
with
She's
Chamberlain's Coat Remedy a Safe
Means for Children.
In buying a cough medicine for
never be to buy Chamber-
Cough Remedy There is m
danger from it, and relief is sure to fol-
low. It is intended especially for coughs,
colds, croup and whooping coughs, and
there is no better medicine in the world
for these diseases. It is not only a
cure for croup, but. when given as
soon as the croupy co appears, will
prevent the attack. hooping cough
is rot dangerous when this remedy is
given as directed. It contains no opium
or other drugs, and may be
given as confidently to a us to an
adult. all Druggists and
dealers in Patent Mi
The difference between a burg-
and a promoter of high fin-
is that a burglar would hes-
to rob the widow and or
FROM THE ANTILLES.
A KEY TO INNER SELF.
Con h Remedy
City Councilman at
Mr. W. who is a
member of the City Council at Kings-
SOME WORD ORIGINS.
,. the road in writes as
., One tie of i s
y Cough Remedy had good on ;
The crossing of the
think have more
relieved if I had continued the .
Thai it was beneficial and quick In re
there is and it is
my intention to another
Fir sale by all Dru-gists and dealers in
Patent
PROGRAM.
I . it I . to speak, a
p.; . . .;. -i bl re is
to the d pro .
. .
is riving
of
sea are vicious
TI i
hi
i.
yet
in
. be red
.
.; to a i
II
in
seals arc
n are certainly extremely
curio-. and s to find out
t v Ives, I a
. who ti I to lake n
, a i . of pi
j, . had mi e w re-
i . .
his tripod and camera
at to I
,. . , . ; r sen lions
of and mad
for the -era. It was all done i
,. i the
r realized it the camera was up-
set the sea lion biting the
man's .- and feet pretty sharply.
The trainer got him away, and no
harm was done, but he ex-
plained to the camera man that sea
lions often did a little biting just
as will cover a three- an object was made
Weekly.
re, i
n . I
lien y that I diet
r in y and
in quality, but
the use i
; cat involving
the loss i some oilier
, raW H crossing the road
I .- e e am e. The dis-
; of finger
i. is almost unknown among the
Malays. They believe that if in-
in the habit will surely lead
It is by the Malay tn For Meeting, Saturday,
be a very thing to see a pig 8th. 1908.
or a Chinese funeral before the
rises. Whatever he attempts on Devotional
this day will be sure to prosper, Rev. M. T. Plyler.
Dreaming of jumping brooklet as-, Reading of minutes.
sure tho dreamer that he n Some difficulties
in a short time. Then the faithful; Grades
dreamer gives alms to the
poor and behaves gently and Lilly Grant
to all about him in an endeavor to T. H.
i. ill
f.-.,. jg physiologically absurd, if
The time when
not mischievous.
men will take for their meals and
be satisfied with as much
; piece can never be so long
the mechanism is as is
laws arc
Man's Beat Age.
age is a man at best
i lost likely to achieve his life
work The Rev. B. Meyer
put the age at forty-six. That
, i a but Dr.
rd at the Royal Cd-
i of ; the
lit.
d- .
people, which showed that aver-
v great
tin work 13.8; first
the gods and persuade them
t. lengthen hi life. To see a
key iii the morning is an evil omen,
and it signifies that the day will be
a bad one for trade. All of these
omens have palliations, and the wise
King.
Literature in the
Annie Per-
kins-
School discipline, Supt.
usually takes each one as a Julian B. Martin-
warning of danger or misfortune
that may be in part if not wholly
avoided.
p. m. General
on the work, led by Supt.
J. A.
Adjournment.
The above program promises
Found In Choice Adult Fiction
For Reading.
you know what sort of fiction
bast you know something
of the dreams and ambitions that
they never confide to a living
said a librarian who delights in
studying the personalities of the
patrons of library. in-
stance, there's a young man who
conies in here for books of the most
romantic sort. In there is
ways a mighty hero, who rescues
fair women and performs deeds of
great valor and is ofttimes sadly
wicked. This young man, I happen
to know, is reserved, passive and en-
gages little the world's activities.
But I that if be could make
himself over he'd be one of the mad,
daredevil sort.
week a young woman
comes iii here to whom her friends
always apply the adjective
She's supposed to be interested in
only the practical things of life, but
the fiction she delights in is of the
sort where irresponsible, unreason-
able women sweep everything
before them, and I believe she is
secretly regretful that she i not of
t. e. A sharp, shrewd
woman friend of mine has eon-
fessed to me her favorite books
are those in which the calm and
simple life is depicted. She likes
gentle little essay also, and the
way she sighed when she told me
about it revealed to me that it was
the life she would like to live if
would allow her to.
There's a old maid who
Comes . TO to take out
She a little one
saving she always liked
although s c never had any around
her. I can j-t see that one of the
cherished dreams of that little spin-
; was marriage s family of
boys growing up around her. A
hustling I man who has not
much time for reading always
chooses some tender, graceful love
story. talked with him some.
and lie admitted that the business
world far from satisfying him
that when he'd made money
enough he was to live in a
poetic
course there arc some be-
nighted people who will only read
such fiction as is recommended to
them by a of authority. But
tho people who have the
courage to pick out their own books.
You'll find scholarly men choosing
detective stories, self sufficient
en reading tale of dome-lie bliss,
doll-like inefficient women reading j
George Eliot and conventional
young men and women delighting
in tales of bohemian life. Of course
I do claim that the fiction a
man or woman reads is the key to
his or her true character, but that it
is an indication of another self,
which has bean kept in
New York Tribune.
In
Many Quaint
The once was only
an player of a part on
the stage. So the orator, who
a consummate was so a
The word, even in old
soon was applied to any dis-
because the life of such
person was found to the
histrionic art in striving to appear
different from what it really was.
English language took it up,
and the moral judgment of the Eng-
speaking people makes it carry
the heaviest weight of odium that
can be attached to personal
was once an
cent word, and simply
meant imitation, conveying no
that the imitation was to
be fraudulently substituted for the
original.
The was originally a
and the was on-
Iv a laborer or peasant attached to
the villa or farm. meant
merely a dweller on the heath, and
a was a dweller in the
open country. a Greek
word, meant only a private parson
distinguished from one clothed
with office, and in this primary
sense it often used in English
of centuries ago, as when Jere-
my Taylor said, is a duty
in great ones as well as in idiots.
was need formerly on-
in relation to funerals. Shake-
has many examples of the
word applied in this sense. It does
not formerly to have conveyed
idea of cringing or insincerity.
For in matter of the
origin of words present a few
of another A was
origins It n on and was so called
from ; inn, i he imported
male finery. says,
was perfumed like a and
Den Jonson fettles the question of
the sex of milliners in
the words, conceal such real
ornaments as these and shadow their
glory as a milliner's wife does her
rough stomacher with n smoky lawn
or black
is derived from file-
name of John who
ed tobacco into in
so named from the
Latin words and
because it had little
affinity with any known substance.
is from the
lice of the
it having been a common
practice among the Romans to avoid
service in the hence our word
poltroon for coward. The
Is an .,; n-i, bird, not from
key ell, though it was said to be
from Turkey hen it was first seen
in London.
Benjamin F. of
setts was a tireless worker when he
Started OH anything. lie and his
secretary, Clancy, says the
more Sun, oftentimes sat in the
until almost daylight when
the general wanted to finish up any-
thing.
During the night sessions of the
senate toward a close of congress a
on General Butler
one morning at o'clock. The
Fame senator called again when the
adj following
morning at daybreak and found the
. t work, their greatest work. ,,, still at work.
and that tho average age at you ever the sen-
death was For poets tho fig-1
Our Ugly Ancestor.
our said a
pockmarked, and small-
pox Was a recommendation if you some valuable suggestions to the
were looking for work. j We hope to see a large
I mean is that you could I number of them present next
not get a job if you had not had j Saturday. Please be at the
smallpox. one wanted a
in tho same order wore 15.0,
87.8, 48.9 and 61.0;
38.1, and 00.3.
Her.- comfort for those who think
of middle as Dal
day School Chronicle.
His
say officer arrested you
while yon were quietly minding
y i l-
your worship. Ho caught
I;, the cost collar end
in to strike mo with his
truncheon unless accompanied
ll , to the I
were quietly attending to
your no noise or
disturbance of any
seems strange. What is
your business
a burglar, your
the Globe.
A Proposal.
suppose, Susie, that
comes to every woman sooner
later an irresistible yearning to
Hay her head upon some strong
shoulder and give vent to the
of n full heart.
Thomas.
K Susie, if you feel
my shoulder is at your dis-
Telegraph.
Genera Butler raid.
tan find- mischief still for idle
hand- to
I never knew before
just who my employer Clancy
said, bowing.
Placing the
Counsel giant In the world of
cross arc
bringing actions, aren't you
have brought a few.
Con- didn't succeed in
the last, did you
came out of it all
right.
Com -el- -Do mean to say you
didn't lose i
did not.
didn't
sir, are on your oath.
know that.
yet you swear you
that action
did not. You threw
it away for Scraps.
Her Eloquent
The plea of a man arrested for
swearing at his mother-in-law was
that commenced with him
she swear at asked
the judge.
your honor, but she looked
Louis Republic.
ant who was liable at any moment
to be stricken down with the loath-
some disease; opened a
new-paper volume of
help ads. read like
A man between
twenty and thirty years of age to
be footman and in a
family, lie must have had
the smallpox in tho natural way;
a woman, mi-Idle aged, to wait
upon a young lady of great fortune
passion. Tho woman must have
had the smallpox in the natural
A Filtering Medium.
cotton i highly rec-
as a filtering medium.
It acts rapidly and is therefore
great value in filtering volatile
For ordinary household
use it is specially recommended
cause its and
ease of management. A large fun-
must provided, and the cot-
ton i- pressed more less firmly
into the neck, according to the sub-
stance to be passed through. Some
liquids are much difficult t-
manage then others, and this must
of course allowed fur. A little
practice will show tho housewife
how closely the cotton must be
packed to insure success in filtering
the various liquids with which she
has to deal.
graded school building promptly
at m., so that we may
begin on time and thereby be
able to adjourn at p. m.
Odd Combination.
course said the
visitor, you can buy anything
on earth in York and that
everybody on earth comes here to
But some of the combinations
of things that rind dealt in hero
A FIELD AND A GARDEN.
Wide
In tho Emotions to
Which They
Nobody ever suddenly
fond of a is the great
between a field and a gar-
den that no could do so. Al-
most anybody may take up garden-
and become fond of a garden
but a field is different.
by the same house do seem a little, fa r n garden, or at least
strange, instance, find here I of j, is so
wholesale concern whose special-
The foreign visitors to China had
to sec a native execution, an
the governor of the province for a
consideration had consented to
oblige them.
mercy, your
wailed the wretched criminals as
they cringed before tho governor.
we no
responded his
highness cheerfully. a case of
I win, heads you
To R. F. D. Patrons.
Postmasters at Greenville,
Stokes and
sire to call attention to the
practice of some patrons of rural
delivery of placing loose coins in
their boxes each time they desire
to dispatch letters instead of sup-
plying themselves with postage
in advance of
This practice imposes undue
hardship on rural carriers in
loose coins from boxes
and delays them on the service
of their routes.
The postmaster, therefore,
gently requests that patrons of
rural delivery provide themselves
and keep on a supply of
stamps consistent with and in
advance of their needs. It is
also very desirable that rural
patrons place in their mail boxes
small detachable cups of wood or
tin in which lo place coins, when
necessary, in purchasing supplies
of stamps.
By order of Assistant Post-
master General.
Washington, D. C, Feb. 1908
These same instructions apply
to all other rural routes and
patrons of s govern
themselves accordingly.
one
ties are dog collars and
that a queer combination It struck .
me but I didn't ask how it came
about because I didn't want to,
know. No doubt should have found
it all simple enough. This concern,
suppose, makes itself or it
represents manufacturers of these
two lines of goods, and that's all
there is to it, hut I preferred to en-
the novelty without looking be-
hind the scenes. Large town,
York, and I never come here with-
out discovering new, or
new at least to
Sun.
Due and Legal Form.
it is all over between us,
Miss said the young
man, pale, but calm, am com-
to ask for the return of the
numerous and costly presents I
given you from time to time during
the last fix months under the mis-
taken idea that I was your accepted I ,.
lover and you were my affianced
I n field without
she answered, you can j,, ,
can't claim now. All you can
do is. to give me the sixty
notice. By that
perhaps confidence will
Tribune.
Deepest Well.
The deepest well in the world is
probably the one at
Germany, some twenty miles from
Berlin, sunk for the purpose of ob-
rock salt brine. A bore
hole of sixteen inches diameter
was carried down to tho depth of
feet, where the salt bod began.
After a further descent feet
the bore was reduced to thirteen
inches diameter and then continued
till tho extraordinary depth of
feet was reached. New York
American.
the pageant of colors and
is SO varied and so soon past;
the borders arc always so
hand and within limits so
obedient that a garden may be-
come the most sudden and the most
commanding of hobbies. But a field
is not to be known so quickly. Its
friendship cannot be had in a year
nor even in a few years. But it is
a friendship which once given ends
only with the life of the friend.
An hour in a garden is like a
conversation with a happy and a
charming companion. But a morn-
in a field is like a walk with one
of those friends who are so com-
understanding and under-
stood conversation is needless.
The beginning of knowledge of a
field is feel of the actual earth
the solid soil of it under foot.
You cannot come to real terms with
earth in a Bower garden, though you
may find on I something with a
. crimps you cannot
e best all knowledge of
dewing it. But you
on a Bold
newly plowed or, still, being
plowed, and first and best-
knowledge is the of the
furrow, an extraordinary sense
of bounty. In a garden you cannot
rid yourself of a certain uneasiness,
almost a fear of trespass, if you
step on a Bower border or even if
you walk over H vegetable bed in the
kitchen garden. The gravel path
awaits clean and yellow, and
the only possible scraper is the box
edging. But a is a field, to
crossed with confidence and stamp-
ed about with heavy boots. Shoes
arc no use. You must have great
boots, with nails in them, tough and
secure over slippery furrows. Every
season, almost every month, changes
tho surface of that solid,
Spectator.
THE
OH
SUPPLEMENT.
C,
Of claims audited and allowed by
the Board of County
of Pitt County
with receipt and
and the financial
of said for the focal
year ending December 1907.
Amount.
No. To Issued.
Virginia Atkinson.
Millie Atkinson .
Charlotte Anderson------
Richard Anderson
Braxton .
. Hannah Braxton
H- for n-
.
O. Bird brother .
Frank Bright and mum.,
Battle.
Barney .
.
IS Martha .
Cannon .
Faith K
.
.
Clark .
.
Ruben .
.,, . V lie,.
.
A. Cornet .
Abram Prom
Ha .
.
.,; I .
.
SO ill.
.
;.,., , i , ore .
1.1 Kim .
.
Frank .
Gs ii-.
Bi -1 .
i am .
Am . .
Alex .
M -l demon .
i . .
. . i Holmes
.
.
.
w i oils
;. i .
B. o.
MM .
Joyner .
Ml C T------
A-lo r .
. ii
Bi I
.
Tl. i -I .
I. .
r- ,.
v .- i, i v .
i. .
Ni .
.
VI ; .
.
CK Mr
fit I.-
.
.
on Phillips.
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
1.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
3.00
1.0-1
2.00
1.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
3.00
1.50
1.66
1.50
SO
R.
7-t
.
.
.
C I .
Mary .
a. Smith .
Dells .
stocks.
Martha .
s.-, .
Teel .
f- Ell- n r .
Pr .
i , .
M Mr . W.
Mrs. Jno.
Wilson.
n; Si Wall -rs .
.
Mrs. Louis Hudson
Virginia Atkinson
Atkinson
wife .
.
Hannah .
it. C. tor
ll. Tyson .
O. Byrd and brother.
Frank Bright and wife
Battle .
.
Baker .
Martha .
A. Cannon .
Sarah F. Cannon------
Win. Cannon.
Nancy Cox .
Clark .
Susan Clark .
Willis .
.
N. J.
Clark .
Abram Dunn .
Henry Ball and
Ball .
Hannah
Peggy .
Titus Elks
Marshall Elks . .
Redmond Fulford
Fleming .
Foreman
Frank Grimes
Gay .
No To whom Issued.
Willis Graham
Alice .
-IS Alex. Greene .
Mrs Louis Hudson .
K. Henderson .
C. Horton .
Holmes
Frank
Robt. .
Ann E. Hines.
Hines
Jas. Ham and wife. .
Hunt .
Henry James .
Mary Jones, S. C.
Mary Jones. Or.
Lawrence Joyner .
Joyner.
Marina Johnson
Simon Johnson
Susan Johnson .
Langley------
Lang .
Berry Lee.
.
Wm. Legged .
Nancy Moore .
. .
Morris.
Elon May .
4- Mrs. J. U- Morgan . .
Mi Cowan .
Ashley Norris child
Annis Parker.
Watson Phillips
U A. .
Will. .
y Randolph.
.
I. Simmons .
Mary .
.
G W. .
Delta .
Stocks .
Martha
Fannie
.
Ellen .
Prod Vent its .
Margaret Vines
Louisa
Mrs, W.
Wilson.
ion .
,. i Walters.
Be u.
i-i Smith .
.
Virginia Atkinson .
Atkinson
Anderson
.
. Braxton .
Hannah Braxton
i H. c.
ii -i Tyson
k Bright
wife .
Bynum Battle .
Burney . .
Jno. C .
Cannon
i- j w . Can .
Km Cot .
Ph
Susan Clark .
Chance
j,. -.- .
A. J.
Dunn.
.
H , Dall and
. -.-.- Dall .
Hanni h n a . .
.
. ;
i t
. B i
Foreman .
.; .
u-. .
.
s Greene . .
. g y .
, ,, r ., ;. . .
C. t .
;., Isabella Holmes .
Frank s
Robt. .
Ann E.
id H and
i . i Hunt .
H .
. Jones, S. C
Or.
co Joyner
Joyner .
. . Johnson
, . , ii ion . .
its
1.001
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
2.09
2.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
5.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
2.50
2.00
3.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.50
3.50
1.00
1.50
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.50
1.60
1.66
1.60
1.00
7.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.60
1.00
1.00
No. To whom Issued. Ar
wife .
Jno. Braxton .
Hannah Braxton .
H. C for H.
H. Tyson .
Frank Bright and wife
Bynum .
Pennie Burney.
Sallie Baker .
Martha Briley .
Jno. S. Cannon .
Sarah F. Cannon .
Wm. Cannon .
Nancy Cox .
Phyllis Clark .
Susan Clark .
Willis Chance .
Phyllis Cobb .
A. I. Corbett .
Abram Dunn . . .
Henry Dall and
Dall .
Hannah Dupree .
Betsey Dunn .
Peggy Ellis .
Titus Elks
Redmond Fulford.
Fleming .
Foreman .
Frank Grimes .
.
Bottle Gay .
Willis Graham .
Alice .
Alex. Greene
Mrs. Louis Hudson .
K. Henderson.
C. Horton.
Frank .
I. i Robt Harden .
Ann B
H and win
Henry
did Mary Jones.
Lawrence Joyner------
Joyner .
Johnson . . .
Johnson .
Johnson
y Lani .
B.
Ml
or.
Wm.
Nancy Moore . .
I . ii
. i Morris .
Mn J. B. Morgan
and
for
2.00
2.66
1.80
1.00
wife
I i
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
3.00
1.60
2.00
1.00
1.00
l.-iii
1.60
2.00
1.60
8.00
1.00
1.501
1.50
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.00
.
. Parker .
ft. .
Wm. .
. h
Cilia .
L Simmons .
Spain .
.,.
and
V. .
l Simon .
. Ci- I-
.
v .
I Centers .
It Vinci . . .
Mrs. W.
Jno. Wilson .
Waiters .
House .
.-.
.
I y Cos .
Atkinson .
sister
Pollard .
-.- , Bell
Virginia Atkinson.
. .
,. I
.
Braxton
. .-.
To whom issued.
Morris.
Ashley Norris and
child .
Annis Parker .
Lucy Pollard .
R. A. Roberson .
Wm. Roberson .
Randolph .
I Cilia Rives .
I L. Simmons.
I Mary Spain .
L Jno. Sheppard .
G. W.
Polly Smith and sister
Delia Staton .
Stocks .
Martha .
Ellen .
Fred Venters.
Margaret Vines . . .
Mrs. W. G.
Jno. Wilson.
Basal Walters .
Mrs. J. B. Morgan .
Jno. Moore .
N. B Little .
J. R. Mil's.
kt Virginia Atkinson. . .
Millie Atkinson .
Atkinson .
Charlotte Anderson.
u Braxton .
Hannah Braxton .
H. C. for
H. Tyson .
Prank Bright and wife
Bynum Battle .
Barney .
Baker .
Martha Briley .
Marj or.
Frank Bell .
Jno. Cannon .
F. Cannon-----
Wm. Cannon .
.
Clark .
Clark .
9.17 CI .
C .
A. .
no Dunn .
Dunn
q j;. . n. and
p. . .
i ah
, , . .
,. will Full rd
H .- .
.
, ; Grim b .
i , ,. -.-
. . .
, . .
Vies C e. i
I .-. .- i. Hudson .
C. .
,. ., and wire
Frank .
.
-133 Al n .
A in K. II
, , ,; ,, and wife.
.-,;, C.
i i
.
; ; .
j . an .
.; i .
.
.
, s
N i .
Moors .
.
M i .
Amount
1.00
3.50
1.00
4.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
3.00
1.00
3.00
7.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
8.00
1.50
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.50
8.00
1.00
1.50
3.00
1.00
i.; o
1.501
1.50
1.30
. 1.50
I.
1.50
1-
1.00
2.0
No. To whom issued.
Betsey Dunn
Henry and wife
Dall .
Hannah Dupree------
Peggy Ellis .
Titus Elks .-
Redmond
Fleming .
Foreman .
Frank Grimes.
Betsey .
Gay .
Alice Gorham.
Alex. Greene
Mrs. Louis Hudson
K. Henderson .
C. Horton .
Isabella Holmes .
Geo. House and wife
Frank .
Robt.
.
Ann E. .
Ham and wire.
Hunt .
Mary Jones. S. C.
Lawrence Joyner .
Marina Johnson
Simon Johnson .
Johnson .
Lang .
Berry Lee .
Mph. h .
V H. Little .
.
y Moors.
i .
Moore .
.
Mn I. B.
J. ii. Mills .
. I
MM .
Parker .
. l Hard . .
n A. .
v Pi ; i l
lien-
i. i ions
Spain .
. .
c. V. Si
Polly Smith
.
ells Si .
I ;
.
.
V- i .
.,. G. am
; .
R, , .
Ad Hi
i ; no. Bra
. ,;,. .
1289 Millie .
1200 Laney on .
j and wife
H. C.
Tyson .
1295 . . Bright
. .
I- r .
. .
i lager .
, ink Boll .
. brother
C n- a
. , . V . Ml
non and
.
. .
12-H
SOS
I I-
and
No. To whom issued.
Stocks . . .
13-2 Martini
Ellen .
1375 Fred. Venters.
1376 Margaret Vines .
Mrs. w. Q.
.
1379 Walters.
1404 Gurganus.
1466 Virginia Atkinson .
1467 Millie Atkinson .
Atkinson .
Braxton
1472 C. i
H. Tyson .
1473 Frank Bright and
win .
1474 Bynum Battle .-
.
Sallie Baker .
Martha Briley .
Mary
Frank Ball .
is-i U Byrd and brother
Jno. S. Cannon
Sarah Cannon .
Wm. Cannon
.
i Cox.
.
. . .
. Phyllis .
I , i.
; I .
I .
, II .
.
; .
r .
. .
, I n
i .
.
, ; aim
. . i.
.
I .
.
Amount.
7.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
5.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
3.00
1.50
1.00
i Ml
1.00
I .
1.50
. i
and
1.0
. . . . . .
1.0 o B
. Pi .
,. . .
I. II
i.
.
HI .
wife.
8.00
wife
2.00
2.50
1.50
1.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
3.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
1.50
2.00
2.00
1.00
3.00
1.00
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.00
1.00
Johnson.
Ti-
Gal
Berry Los
.
Wm. .
Nancy Moors.
Morris.
May .
Mrs. B. Morgan
Louis .
Ashley Norris
child .
Annis Parker.
R. A.
Wm. Roberson .
Randolph
Cilia .
L. Simmons .
Mary Spain .
Sheppard .
G. W. Smith .
Almeta Smith .
Delia Staton .
stocks .
Martha .
Fannie
Teel .
Ellen
Fred Venters .
Vines .
Mrs W. G.
Wilson .
Walters .
Almeta Smith .
Virginia Atkinson .
Millie Atkinson .
Anderson and
3.00
1.00
1.00
8.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
HO
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.00
2.50
2.00
3.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.50
H,
re o
wife
3.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.50
1.00
3.00
7.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
8.50
1.00
1.00
l. tor H.
.
.
i-, nil B I sin and win
I .
. y .
. MarJ
Frank Bell .
I S. Cannon .
Sarah F. Cannon
Wm. Cannon .
Nancy ; .
j, , Clark .
n Clark .
i .
Is I b.
A, J. C
inn
. i
i a Dall .
Hannah
.
Titus Elks .
Redmond Fulford .
Fleming.
Foreman
Frank .
.
. B- .
Willis Graham.
Gorham .
Alex. Greene .
Mrs. Hudson . .
K. Henderson .
a c. Horton .
Holmes
Geo. House wife.
Frank .
. Robt. .
Ann B.
and
Hunt .
Henry
Mary S.
Joyner .
Joyner .
Marina Johnson . . .
Simon Johnson .
Susan .
Langley . .
Lang .
Berry
.
Nancy Moore
Delia Moore . .------
1.50
1.00
1.00
en
in I
.-
c,
-III
1.00
I .
.
i i. .
on
v Ra
Ills .
I .
Mary . j,
. Pi .
G, W. Smith .
. s th an
. ;. m .
pp.
. .
red .
,.
. . j. m
Jno. .
in l
. ;., . n and
s .
i, .
.
and
child
, Frank Bell .
and
Virginia Atkinson
Millie Atkinson
I i .
Anderson.
Jno. m .
Ham ah Braxton .
II H. C. for
U. Tyson .
Frank
wife .
Bynum Battle .
Pennie
Sallie Baker .
Martha Briley
Mary
Frank Hell .
and brother
S. Cannon
Sarah F. Cannon.
Cannon and wife
Nancy Cox .
Phyllis Clark .
Susan Clark .
Willis Chance .
Phyllis Cobb.
A. J. Corbett.
Abram Dunn .
.
1.00
., .,,
1.10
.
.
ii
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.00
I .
1.00
.
I,
1.50
.
1311
III
.
.
. Ho
,. v . . B. C. .
r . .
., ,. n on .
on
on
Langley .
On .
Lee
Poll .
.
Nancy Moore .
; Delia Moore .
Moor.- .
, Morris
Mr.-. J. B. Morgan .,
J, It. Mills.
s Norris and
child .
ii Parker .
j Pollard .
r. A. Roberson .
Wm
Randolph .
.-, Cilia Hives.
L. Simmons .
Mary Spain .
IS .
O. W. Smith . . . .
Polly Smith and ulster
; Delia Staton .
II
2.00
1.00
on
1.30
1.00
1.00
1.110
1.00
1.30
1.00
1.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.50
1.80
1.50
1.50
3.00
1.00
h c
n .
Dunn
H,
Hull .
h . . . .
I .
.
II . I . . .
Fleming
, ., j . pan in -ii
Frank
Bed f .
Bottle Gay .
Alice Gorham .
Alex. Greene .
.
Mrs Louis
K. Henderson .
C. Horton .
Isabella Holmes
Ham and wife.
Frank .
Robt. .
I-
inn
., .
1646
1- . I
1-1
1651
1653
1651
1655
1658
1659
I III
in
Ml
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.011
4.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
POOR PRINT





K.
I .
i;
IT
i;
i;
B. .
l and
i. I Hunt .
Joyner
OS Marina Johnson .
Johnson
. i n i .
M . ; . . . .
.
i . II .
I . Little .
y .
;.; Dells .
Moore.
. Ina . .
Morris .
Mrs. B. Morgan . .
it. .
Is Parker .
v Eliza Parker .
Lucy Pollard .
so A. Roberson .
Wm. .
y Randolph .
vi cilia Rives .
I. .
i Mary Spain .
Sh .
a, W. Smith .
i Hi Smith and
.
Delia S .
.- n n Stock .
ha .
i. nil .
.
.
.
I . v.
i r .
Oil . .
I hi .
on .
t .
i.
H. in .
; . .;.
.
l . .
.
.
.
Pa a .
;. I
Amount.
1.00
2.00
5.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
3.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
i 1.00
1.00
1.00
4.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
mi
1.501
1.50
1.50
1.50
go
1.00
8.00
7.00
I I I
i o
IT
c I .
.
i I .
; s . .
I . .
a . .
1775 Dunn .
H . .
ill and wife
I nail .
Kills .
Elks .
in .
r hi mine
I an .
. .
i .
Gay .
. .
On .
Hand . .
I II ; i. .
m .
; l-i Inn .
c Ho i
i .
H . Hard-e.
lie .
Ann B H
Jo. Ham and wife
I. Haiti .
. i, S. C. . .
v Joyner . .
Marina Johnson .
Simon Johnson .
s Johnson .
Gal .
Berry Lea .
. .
May
Nancy
Ma Moore .
no. Moore .
Morris .
Mrs. B. Morgan.
Mills.
Parker .
Lucy Pollard .
1822 K. A. .
Win. .
Randolph
Cilia Rives .
L. Simmons .
Mary Spain .
Jno. .
Q IV. Smith .
Polly Smith and
sister .
Delia .
Stocks .
1822 Martha .
Ellen .
1831 Venters .
1830 Margaret Vines .
1837 Mrs.
Jno. Wilson .
1839 .
i. Simmons .
1764 J. K. Mills and wife
Lucy Pollard.
Jesse W. .
.
Virginia Atkinson . .
Millie Atkinson
Laney Atkinson . .
Charlotte Anderson .
Jno. .
W. .
H. C. for
H. II. Tyson.
Frank
wife .
.
.
Martha
Mary .
O. Byrd and brother
Jno. .
Sarah F. Cannon . .
Win. Cannon and wife
Nancy Cox .
Phyllis Clark .
Susan Clark .
Willis Chance
Phyllis Cobb .
A. J. Corbett .
Abram Dunn .
Betsey Dunn .
Henry Dall and wife
Dall .
186.8 Hannah .
Ellis.
Elk .
Redmond Fulford .
Fleming
1791
1797
1799
1803
1804
1805
1806
IS IS
1809
1810
1811
1812
1613
1816
1818
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
is;, i
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1901
No. To whom Issued.
Foreman . .
Prank Grimes . ,.
Betsey Garris.
Gay .
Alice .
Alex. .
.
Mrs. Louis Hudson
K. Henderson .
C. Horton .
Isabella Holmes .
House and wife
Prank Hines .
Robt .
Ann E. .
and wife.
Mary Jones. S. C. .
Joyner .
Marina Johnson . .
Simon Johnson .
Susan Johnson .
Lang .
Berry Lee .
.
May Little .
Nancy Moore .
Moor,. .
Jno. Moore.
Morris .
Mrs. j. B. Morgan.
It. Mills and wife
Lucy Pollard .
It. A. Roberson .
Roberson .
loll Randolph
; ,, , Cilia Rives.
I ;.
2.00
1.00
I . .
1.00
1.00
5.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
;.
1.50 .
1.00
1.00 I
1.30
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.10
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.90
1.00 I
Ml
1.00
4.00 I
2.10
1.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
Jno. Sheppard
; c Smith .
Polly Smith and
.
Delia Staton .
Stocks .
Martha .
Ellen .
.
Venters .
S Vines .
; Mrs. w. c.
Jno. Wilson.
T Sam Walters.
-i .
. Harris .
R. L. fails Bros.
bur r .
t R. C. Beaman .
w Fleming .
Goo. It. .
T r .
R. I. Davis and
her .
1418 J. B Bullock
i. -i Flanagan
Comp .
1753 Tl Langley .
1771 R Ci Ins
W B. Harper .
i J, Holland.
1273
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
4.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
5.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.60
1.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
2.00
4.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.50
1.50
3.00
3.00
7.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
2.0
1.00
2.50
1.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
8.00
3.0
4.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
OF AM INFIRM.
IS J. A.
J. A.
j.
I I
1402
1571
1726
. A. .
J. a. .
J. a. .
J. A. .
J.
i. .
,. Han-.- .
i. .
i, Hard
Total
L. W.
5.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
2.-10
1.00
2.50
1.00
3.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
2.00
4.00
1.60
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
1.60
1.50
3.10
1.00
3.00
7.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
2.50
1.50
1.50
3.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
5.00
2.00
Tucker .
S. T. Carson. J. P.
J. M. Blow. J. P.
Louis Skinner .
S. Smith . .
C Moore
Tucker
1.08
, . . . 178.64
188.46
226.81
205.91
296.37
2.13.73
1.50
191.17
182.72
205.11
149.09
219.92
L. V. Tinker. Sheriff
L. W. Tucker.
L. W. Tucker, Sheriff
J. J. Corey .
S. T. Carson .
It. J. Grimes .
1239 Dr. L. E. Ricks
1249 L. W. Tucker
1391 L. II. Cox .
J. B. Williams
1422 G. G. Ward .
D. C. Moore. C. of C.
L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
1570 j. c. Gaskins. J. P.
S. T. Carson, J. P.
1734 Dr. it. J. Grimes .
1763 L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
C. Moore. C. of C.
L. W. Tinker, Sheriff
8.00
1.40
2.00
31.10
5.30
18.75
13.95
14.50
15.40
2.00
3.50
3.00
18.85
2.70
1.50
2.40
4.23
13.95
6.00
17.63
2.00
16.00
Total 575.33
TRAINING SCHOOL.
J. Bryan Grimes,
copy of act. 3.25
L. W. Tucker,
notices. 27.39
1211 W. P. Harding,
. 17.82
1213 J. H. Wilson, election 2.00
1214 Bell,
. 17.21
1215 J. W, Smith, election 17.21
1216 Marcellus Smith,
. 2.00
1217 Thad
. 2.00
IS J. S. Overton. elect 4.00
1219 G. C. Robertson,
.
1220 J. It. Blow, election 26.90
1221 W. L. House, election 4.00
1222 Shape A.
2.00
1223 J. J. Elks, election. 25.31
1224 W. W. Bullock,
. 4.00
1225 W. A. B. Hearne.
election . i 2.00
1226 Geo. J. Woodward,
1227 W. P. Ormond.
. 2.00
J. II. Smith,
. 19.58
It. A. Nichols,
. 2.00
1261 I. A. Parker, 4.00
1252 C. BarrOW, election 16.79
I IS W J. Rollins, election 2.00
1354 T. House, election
1208 S. C.
. 35.93
1278 it. Williams, Register
of Deeds. 2.00
1279 it. W. King,
. 2.00
1280 Jno. Z. Brooks, Com-
missioner . 4.00
M. T. Spier.
. 3.00
1252 Holland, Com-
missioner . 3.40
1253 T. Cox.
loner . 3.90
1394 J. K. Joyner,
n . 17.85
R W.
. 2.00
J. n. else-
ion . 2.00
I i L. J. Chapman,
. 2.00
1431 C. H. Langston,
. 2.00
J. P. Harrington,
. 2.00
W. L. Woolen,
. 16.88
J. Bryan Grimes. Sec-
of State, books
of Registration . 9.00
1596 E. S. Parker. 2.00
1804 type
writing . 2.10
It. W. King . 39.00
J. L. Fleming . 38.50
M. T. Spier . 20.50
w. II. . 32.06
1380
1881
1381
1384
1886
1386
1387
Total 213.85
TAX LIST.
W. R. Home 28.00
R. K. Belcher . 28.00
It. L. Joyner . 31.00
T. A. 10.00
R. A. Parker . 10.00
J. W. Smith . 24.00
Ivey Smith . 20.00
H. Collins . 20.00
1389 D. C. Barrow. 24.00
1397 B. F. Cox . 20.00
1398 W. G. Little , 24.00
1399 S. M. Jones . 52.00
1400 Wm. Staton . 16.00
1423 J. S. Fleming. 16.00
J. It. Overton. 28.00
1427 A. J. 28.00
Edwards
Co. 12.00
1451 H. C. Venters . 24.00
1452 J. Marshall Cox . 32.00
1453 F. G. Dupree. 34.00
J. H. Smith . 40.00
J. C. Gaskins . 52.00
1456 W. K. . 16.09
1457 L. R. . 32.00
145.8 Jesse Cannon . 42.00
. 50.00
R. F. Jenkins 50.00
W. L. Nobles . 32.00
J. W. Allen .
1463 I. A. Mayo. 66.00
1464 D. C. Barrow . 2.00
R. Hyman . 66.00
G. T. 6.00
I. R. Dozier 12.00
R. Williams 435.00
1460
1401
1462
1465
1673
1564
1748
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
3.00
1.50
4.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.50
2.00
1.00
1.50
3.00
1.00
1.50
1.60
1.50
1.50 I
1.60 1608 J. D. Garden
Total
Edward A Broughton
Printing; Co. books. 14.75
Co.
books . 263.83
1285 W. T. Hall . 26.00
1286 Geo. J. Woodward . 149.25
1444 J. Woodward. , 63.00
1445 W. L. Hall . 20.00
1607 J. Woodward. 15.00
4.50
Total
s.
Thus House
D. 0.1
Little
II A. Harrington
A. Joyner
Smith
w. Tucker
I. Tin
a.
I It.
B. Little
J.
L. Williams
C.
C. Wooten
G.
L. House
Broughton, book
A. Staton
M.
S.
H.
W. Smith
No. To whom issued
J. F. Davenport . .
L. W. Tucker .
Midland Chemical Co.
Water and Light Com
Fleming Mooring
A. H. Taft Co.
Anchor Supply Co.
Water and Light Com
L. W. Tucker .
C. T. .
Baker Hart .
C. T.
Water and Light Com
I. F. Davenport .
L. W. Tucker, Sheriff
J. S. Smith.
1243 A. H. Taft Co. .
1246 Water and Light Com
1248 L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
1250 W. B. Wilson Son
1405 C. L. Wilkinson Co.
1406 A. H. Taft Co.
1409 Water and Light Com
L. James .
1449 L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
1559 L. W. Tucker, Sheriff
1576 Fleming Mooring.
1579 Greenville Banking
Trust Co.
1592 Water and Light Com
1711 Taft Vandyke .
1712 Water and Light Com
1717 Midland Chemical Co.
1719 L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
J. R. J. G.
1710 C. T. .
Water and Light Com
1744 Greenville Co.
Taft Vandyke .
1749 p. Davenport .
1750 C. A, Dickens, repairs
1701 L. W. Tucker, repairs
1762 L. W. Tucker. Sheriff
Water and Light Com
W. .
A. H. Taft .
P. Davenport .
L. W. Tucker .
l. H. Ponder .
Taft Vandyke .
Baker Hart .
Amount
79.20
13.00
7.00
4.30
33.00
2.50
97.50
17.00
3.20
7.74
2.70
7.25
158.69
7.40
17.25
2.90
59.70
4.50
2.60
5.00
2.80
110.30
126.60
8.30
27.54
3.00
10.75
2.30
11.92
149.10
3.40
3.50
40.99
19.70
11.25
557.75
45.70
2.50
11.30
13.75
2.50
6.00
28.75
No. To whom issued
R. W. King . .
Jno. Z. Brooks
M. T.
D. J. Holland . .
N. T. Cox
Total
B. Nobles, M.
B. Nobles .
B. .
B. Nobles .
Dr. Zeno
J. Nobles .
Ill
Nobles
Nobles
Nobles
no
HO
J. B. Nobles
J. E. -Nobles.
Total .
CORONER,
C. O. H. Laughing-
house .
C. O. H. Laughing-
house .
C. O. H. Laughing-
house. . .
1438 C. O. H.
house .
C. O. II. Laughing-
house .
20.00
5.00
15.00
19.00
0.00
16.00
25.00
26.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
300.00
23.90
23.00.
21.50
15.40
Total 203.11
W. B. Wilson 16.30
Water and Light Com. 2.00
O. Hooker . 26.71
Vandyke 18.00
H. L. Cart. 9.00
Water and Light Com. 2.00
Water and Light Com. 3.00
Water and Light Com. 1.50
The Building and
Lumber Co. 7.65
s Water and Light Com. 1.60
Water and Light Com. 2.00
A. B. Ellington A Co. 2.30
Harriett 3.14
P. V. Johnson . 3.93
L. H. Ponder . 1.46
ZOO. Bland . 1.60
1246 Water and Light Com. 2.00
1250 W. B. Wilson a Son 4.50
1277 R. W. King . 1.83
1409 Water and Light Com 1.00
1411 J. II. J. G. 7.50
1435 L. W. Tucker
1567 S. T. White . 13.80
1589 It. J. Mayo . 80.19
1592 Water and Light Com 1.50
1600 S. R. v Son. 12.50
1601 Jno. Clark . 1.60
1593 W. J. Turnage . 2.50
1712 Water and Light Com 3.80
1842 Water and Light Com 3.90
Water and Light Com 1.60
Baker Hart 3.25
Total
244.80
JAIL.
W. B. Wilson 16.50
A. H. Taft ft Co. 6.50
Green Co. . 9.51
Water and Light Com 12.83
Water and Light Com 2.50
L. W, Tucker 100.80
Taft ft Vandyke 2.00
O. Hooker . 26.62
A. H. Taft ft Co. 21.75
J. F. Davenport . 8.20
S. I. Dudley .
H. L. Carr . 2.32
L W. Tucker . 144.60
Water and Light Com 2.30
C. L. Wilkinson 1.70
C. L. Wilkinson ft Co. 8.85
C. T. 14.15
A. H. Taft ft Co. . . 7.00
L. W. Tucker. 123.60
T. K. Hooker ft Co.
Baker ft Hart.
Water and Light Com
Total
OF
O.
C.
D. C.
C. Moore
C.
C. Moore
C. Moore
Total
FOIST Pit OP
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
Williams
1-74 Williams
Williams
Total 344.25
J. J. Elks 5.00
R. Home. 3.20
J. It. Spier . 6.00
J. 11.30
W. King . 4.00
Jno. Z. Brooks. 8.00
M. T. Spier . 6.00
D. J. Holland so
N. T. Cox .
It. W. King. 4.00
Jno. Z. Brooks . 4.00
M. T. Spier . 3.00
W. J. Holland. 3.40
N. T. Cox . 3.90
It. W. King. 11.15
5.93 Jno. Z. Brooks 19.00
M. T. Spier . 6.00
D. J. Holland. 6.80
N. T. Cox.
it. King. 5.50
Jno. Z. Brooks . 4.00
If. T. Spier. 8.60
D. J. Holland. 5.90
N. T. Cox. 3.90
R. W, King . 4.00
Jno, Z, Brooks . 10.00
M. T. Spier. 11.40
D. J. Holland . 6.80
N. T. Cox .
R. W. King . 13.40
Jno. Z. Brooks . 6.00
M. T. Spier. 21.90
D. J. Holland 10.40
N. T. Cox. 9.80
1279 R. W. King . 18.60
1280 Jno. Z. Brooks 11.00
1281 M. T. Spier . 12.75
1282 D. J. Holland 6.80
1283 N. T. Cox . 11.30
R. W. King. 9.20
1440 Jno. Z. Brooks . 12.00
1441 M. T. . 12.50
1442 D. J. Holland. 10.20
1443 N. T. Cox . 11.70
1582 R. W. King. 6.00
1583 Jno. Z. Brooks I 12.00
1584 M. T. . 17.50
1585 D. J. Holland . 10.20
1586 N. T. Cox . 18.10
1735 R. W. King . 4.00
1736 Jno. Z. Brooks . 10.00
1737 M. T. 3.00
1738 D. J. Holland 6.60
1739 N. T. Cox . 7.40
1779 R. W. King. 6.00
1780 Jno. Z. Brooks . 4.00
1781 M. T.
1782 D. J. Holland. 1.40
1781 N. T. Cox .
Total
CONSTABLES
J. R. Galloway,
L. W. Tucker
L. H. Cox. Con.
W. J. Hemby, Con.
Guy V. Smith. Con.
2.81 D. W. Con.
W. J. Tally. Con. .
D. W. Con.
J. W. Alexander. Con.
G. V. Smith, Con. .
D. W. Con.
L. H. Cox. Con.
W. C. Hines. Con.
K. A, Smith, Con. .
J. W. Tucker, Con.
1233 H. H. Stanley. Con.
1238 L. H. White, Con.
J. T. Evans. Con.
1392 L. H. Cox. Con.
J. II. Con. .
1446 W. J. Jackson. Sheriff
L. W. Tucker, Sheriff
1561 L. W. Tucker, Sheriff
1572 R. A. Smith. Con. .
Geo. A. Clark, Coll. .
1611 It. A. Smith. Con. .
J. F. Leggett, Con.
1729 D. W.
1841 It. A. Smith, Con. . .
1746 w. J. Hen by, Con. .
1747 j. w. Alexander, Con
1759 G. A. Clark .
1752 Town of
1700 L. II. White. Con.
1767 L. II. White. Con.
T. Evans. Con.
V. Smith, Con.
II. Cox .
w. .
1770
it. A. .
C. S. Smith.
1.65
36.65
8.95
2.10
2.75
2.20
5.50
1.20
2.30
2.7
6.40
2.00
5.20
1.40
3.90
3.35
1.15
4.55
1.40
10.80
9.00
1.60
2.80
7.65
1.40
2.13
3.03
3.30
2.4
1.701
6.16
4.76 i
2.05 I
5.81
6.50
5.20
1.50
2.80
Total 184.56 j
O. Proctor Bro. 16.00
H. Davenport .
. E. . 15.00
it. Davenport . 15.00
C Pro- tor. 15.00
It. Davenport . 15.00
. E. Proctor
it. Davenport . . 15.00 I
R. Dave . 15.00
k. Proctor
B. Proctor. 15.00
R. Davenport. 15.00 ;
R. Davenport .
E. Proctor . 15.00
It. Davenport . . . 15.00
. B. Proctor . 15.00.
. B. Proctor . 15.00,
It. 15.00
B. Proctor. 15.00;
Proctor. 15.00
O. Proctor Bro. 17.31;
It. Davenport. . . 30.00
E. Proctor . 15.00
R. Davenport . 15.00
Total 392.31
BRIDGES.
C. M.
B. M. Lewis .
L. L. Kittrell.
L. W. Lawrence .
J. C. Gaskins.
G. A.
A. .
Jno. W. James .
J. S. Warren .
R. It. Fleming
W. H. Adams.
Baker Hart .
L. W. Lawrence .
Holton ft Spier Co.
J. C. Gaskins.
J. V. Cox .
C. A. Faucett.
S. V. Joyner.
L. W. Lawrence .
J. C. Gaskins.
J. A. Forbes.
M. T. .
D. C. Barrow.
w. B.
W. B.
L. W. Lawrence .
J. L. Fountain ft Co.
J. C. Gaskins.
J. T. Moore.
M. O. .
G. F. Smith.
W. H. Moore.
W. J. .
L. W. Lawrence .
J. C. Gaskins .
l. w. Lawrence
1230 J. O. Proctor Bro.
1232 J. W. Smith .
1240 M. G. .
1244 B. II, Lewis .
1259 L. W. Lawrence
1263 Bryant .
1276 L. W. Tucker .
1272 Western Tel.
Company .
1393 Lev Pierce.
C. L. Blokes and R.
I. Smith .
Peter Hines .
1413 W. K.
1420 W. H. Skinner
L. W. Lawrence
1562 G. T. Tyson .
1569 J. C. Gaskins
1690 Robt, W. Brown
1616 L. W. .
J. O. Proctor ft Bro.
1710 P. R. Hines .
1722 L. H. .
1723 M. A. James.
1724 L. W. Lawrence . . .
1728 Jno. Brooks
1720 D. C. Barrow .
1731 C. S. Elks .
1743 Joe .
1769
1773 C. V. Newton.
1801 L. W. Lawrence------
W. J. .
Joe
L. W. Lawrence .
R. W. King .
Jno. L. Warren------
47.66
64.70
31.92
95.50
22.20
4.25
92.76,
17.63
6.15
11.46,
71.91
5.46
61.151
53.911
23.39
8.60
8.19,
42.00
25.47
4.00
3.00
I 4.50
5.61
117.97
57.60
43.75
37.48
2.00
19.10
14.12
52.61
23.45
43.60
14.58
4.27
19.81
56.60
20.67
44.50
42.97
9.66
9.42
4.32
8.75
46.88
10.15
10.38
26.48
156.65
239.50
25.12
8.25
26.33
39.70
7.72
17.56
135.00
6.60
8.00
49.30
37.50
63.32
1.61
6.68
Total
lie. Mis. GENERAL
Baker ft 37.00
W. J. Turnage . 3.00
Joe . 7.10
R. M.
C. S. Elks . 2.16
W. B. Brown . 3.00
A. D. Warren, Sheriff 15.15
H. L. Carr . 6.00
J. R. Smith Co. . 12.00
Baker ft Hart . 12.75
J. R. Turnage Co. 2.70
J. R. ft J. G. . . 26.05
Pitt Co. Buggy Co. 9.00
A. H. Taft ft Co. . . 2.00
W. B. Greene 11.30
J. R. Smith Co------ 6.00
Baker ft Hart. 4.30
Chas. . . 50.00
J. R. Bunting . 1.00
Jno. . 3.36
Sam-1 T. White 10.70
W. B. Greene . 9.75
Baker ft Hart . 6.40
A. D. Warren, Sheriff 8.20
W. B. Green . 6.00
C. T.
Pulley ft Bowen . . 5.25
Jno. Z Brooks . 180.45
J. R. Davenport . 15.60
J. R. Corey. 42.10
C. T. 10.80
W. B. Brown . 10.50
Boll 5.90
It. I. Smith, mules. 725.00
C. G. Stark, y 14.39
It. It, Fleming . 109.37
Joe .
Baker ft Hart. 9.55
. 49.25
Jno Z. Brooks . 32.39
L. It. 5.00
W. S. Williams . 6.55
It. B. .
II. R. Fleming . 20.00
10.17 Booker M. 15.00
1238 Pitt Co. Buggy Co. 5.50
1237 Town of Greenville 2.63
1255 J. J. Turnage . 6.15
1257 It. T. Smith.
1262 Joe . 6.60
1207 Jno. Z. Brooks . 769.02
1271 White . 3.45
1407 Taft Vandyke 2.50
J. It. ft J. G. 17.71
1258 l. it. 35.05
L. Perkins. 7.15
1417 W. G. Stokes . 7.50
1415 It. . 17.90
J. L. Perkins . 2.80
Baker ft Hart . 9.79
1679 R. W.
1694 W. Tucker, Com. 4.60
1505 II. Harding. J. P------ 2.15
1705 b. Bynum, p. 1.90
1706 J. T. . 7.40
1707 J. S. Ross . 2.40
1715 W. Bro. 8.40
1770 J. C. . 2.34
1785 Joe . 8.03
1786 L. H. White . 49.70
1787 J. R. Smith Co. 74.53
J. J. Turnage . 15.65
1788 J. w. ft Bro. 26.70
1803 A. D. Warren, Sheriff
J. R. Smith Co. 100.29
L. H. Stokes . 27.80
M. B. Bro. 2.80
J. W. Bro 7.40
J. R. Corey . 4.00
H. C. Edwards . 5.00
Joe . 1.42
Baker ft Hart 8.05
Total
GENERAL.
Expenses of Convicts While Work-
on
W. A, Savage 4.50
E. T. Forbes Bro. 10.00
Joe . 77.99
T. Will's
Joe . . . 3.00
C. W. Harvey 14.00
Joe . 217.30
Water and Light Com 1.70
T. White . . . 90.42
J. J. Turnage . 14.75
J. E. Carson . 32.83
E. M. . 3.00
Water and Light Com 1.35
J. R. ft J. G. 30.61
Joe . 213.10
T. White . . . 16.35
M. A. Fleming 24.22
J. J. Turnage . 31.50
R. D. Harrington . . 6.00
J. E. Carson . 7.07
. D. Harrington------ 6.00
Total
ROAD NOTICES.
Vance Belcher, 6.15
J. W. Tucker. Con. 1.50
J. Ross. Con.
R. H. Con.
W. J. Herby, Con. 2.10
J. T. Bundy, Con. 7.60
lilt L. H. Cox. Con------ 1.10
I. Fleming. Con.
1711 W. J. Hemby. Con. 1.80
Jno. T. Evans. Con. 1.30
1746 R. H. Con. 1.30
1741 L. H. Cox. Con.
Total
L. W. Tucker
L. W. Tucker
A. D.
J. C. Crawford
J. P. Nunn
L. W. Tucker
L. W. Tucker
A. D. Warren
1559 L. W. Tucker
1718 L. W. Tucker
1811 L. W. Tucker
1812 J. C. Crawford
1813 W. J. Jackson
Total
COURT COSTS, O,
D. C. Moore
D. C. Moore
1809 D. C.
Total 406.11
COSTS, SOLICITORS.
L. L. Moore 34.60
C. L. . . . 28.00
1810 C. L. . . . 67.50
Total .
COURT COSTS. J.
L. W. Lawrence .
L. W. Lawrence .
L. W. Lawrence .
L. W.
1725 L. W. Lawrence
1802 L. W. Lawrence.
Total 96.00
COURT COSTS, AND
Town of Greenville 15.20
C. D. Rountree . 14.52
H. Harding . 12.87
W. F. Harding 8.75
J. M. Blow . 4.95
J. M. . 1.66
T. Carson . 1.57
J. L. Hobgood. 1.05
J. M. Cox .
Alston Grimes.
R. B. Bynum. 1.12
R. F. Jenkins. 2.10
N. R. Corey. l.
J. W. Tinker, Con. 1.50
D. C. Barrow . r
If
No. To whom
J. C. Gaskins.
J. W. Smith . .
Town of Greenville. .
C. D. Rountree .
H. Harding.
J. M.
N. R. Corey .
R. E. Belcher.
Alston Grimes
S. T. Carson .
J. C. Gaskins.
Bell .
J. M. Blow .
J. W. Smith .
1831 It. L- Joyner .
1832 Abner Eason .
1833 J. S. Ross .
1834 J. T. Moore .
1835 J. H. Smith .
1836 R. A. Nichols.
1837 R. E.
1838 J. C. Gaskins.
1839 Alston Grimes.
1840 Bell .
1841 R. B. Bynum.
1842 E. J. Brooks .
1843 J. J. Elks .
1844 S. T. Carson.
1845 H. Harding .
1846 C. D. Rountree . .
1847 Town of Greenville.
Amount
7.95
1.15
6.22
1.00
2.12
1.32
2.27
1.70
2.12
1.50
3.57
1.65
1.60
1.15
1.57
1.57
2.72
3.45
1.90
16.02
11.67
Total .
COURT COSTS. CONSTABLES
F. B. Tucker
fl
J. T. Smith.
L. H. Cox
A. G. .
J. it. Galloway .
Vance Belcher .
W. J. .
Jno. L. Taylor .
Jno. W. Tucker .
G. V. Smith .
D. W.
L. Parker . .
G. A. Clark v.
J. B. Joyner .
J. W. Alexander
O. A. Clark . .
J. R. Galloway
J. W. Tucker . .
T. H. Smith .
L,
J. L. Taylor . . .
I, S. Fleming .
R. N. Nichols
1814 J. T. Bundy .
1815 J. W. Eason . .
1816 G. V. Smith .
J. B. Joyner .
1818 C. S. Smith . .
1819 M. Fleming .
1820 L. H. Cox
1821 J. T. Smith------
1822 J. F. . .
1823 I. S. Fleming . .
1824 L. H. White .
1825 J. W. Tucker .
1826 G. A. Clark . .
1827 d. w. .
1828 J. L. Taylor------
1829 J. R. Galloway
1830 T. H. Smith . .
3.60 j
1.20
1.45
Total .
1270
1713
1742
1744
1746
1764
1772
1774
1775
1777
1799
1806
1808
COURT COST
W H. Smith .
Sam X White. Treas.
Miss Lula Taylor . .
W. C. Hines .
Sam T. While. Treas.
L. W. Tucker .
W. H. Smith
L W. Tucker. Sheriff
Sam T. White, Treas,
L. W. Sheriff
T. White------
J. F. King .
T. White
H. A. Blow . . .
L W. Tucker. Sheriff
T.
D. C. Moore .
Miss Lula Taylor . .
T. White
J. J. Evans .
L. Tucker. Sheriff
j. J. Evans .
Miss Lula Taylor . .
Chas. E. Fleming . .
.
Saml T. White .
H. L- Carr .
D. C. Moore. C. S. C.
L. W. Tucker .
J. F. King .
T. White
6.00
418.20
19.50
19.30
15.90
10.00
19.30
586.15
28.36
337.80
8.00
8.00
12.50
10.10
3.55
19.50
344.80
6.00
63.80
8.00
19.50
12.00
6.00
635.70
1.68
10.00
24.40
4.00
1.10
Total
COURT COSTS W. T. C.
Will Kenney
W. J. Teel .
R. D. Harrington. . .
.
J. E. Nobles .
Raney Bryant .
Amos Bryant.
Erastus Oliver
D. R. Oliver .
Simon Harris .
C. B. Fleming .
J. H. Kittrell.
Jno. .
J. A. Wilson .
J. W. Wynn.
Jas. Dunn .
Walter Harding------
W. O. Ward .
O. C.
Silas Lynch .
D. L. . . .
L. G. .
Jethro
J. F. Davenport------
Matt. Harris .
W. F.
W. I-
Anthony Foreman . .
Calvin .
N. R. Corey .
G. L. Blount .
D. O. Berry .
Willis Grimes
Ben Sutton.
Tamer Sutton .
Nobles .
J. M. Blow .
W. H. Dew.
C. C. .
W. H. Cobb .
Albert Newton
.
Martin L. Franks .
Ross Floyd .
Jno. Floyd.
J. R. Galloway .
R- J- Grimes
Phillips .
Norman .
Will Kenney .
Julius Cogdell . .
Jim .
C. D. Rountree .
J. T. Smith .
T. J. Moore .
Will Andrews .
Jno. .
Cain
D. J. Holland------
No. To m issued
Jasper .
J. L. Tucker .
Joe Frizzle.
L. H. Cox .
Bryant .
Will Chancy .
Henry Wilson .
Joe Chapman .
Jno. Corey .
Pink Brooks .
Jno. Wilson .
F. M. . . .
Jesse Braxton.
Jno. Braxton .
Chas.
U. F. . . .
J. E. James.
W. J. Dunn .
G. A. Clark.
G. E. Harris .
E. G. Flanagan . .
Crawford . .
D. W. . .
I. E. Jenkins .
J. F. Stokes .
J. S. Jones.
Braxton . .
H. .
Geo. W. Reynolds
L. W. Tucker .
Jesse Brown .
D. C.
Jno. Matthews . .
J. A.
Jno. Cannon .
J. B. Cannon
J- W. Alexander . .
It T. . .
Hart .
G. Ward
Jan. Mobley .
T. . .
Mary .
R. F. . .
Langley . .
T. M. Hooker------
J. Turnage . .
W. Dunlap .
It. D. Harrington
Co.
Hill Nicholas .
J. B. Crawford .
Bill .
Barrett . . .
Jane Allen .
H. Cox .
T. H. Smith.
S. Joyner .
It. L. Joyner . . .
I Jones . . .
Henry Pugh .
Julia Cogdell . . .
J. A. Stokes . . .
Will Kenny .
Williams . .
H. Britton . .
Waller Howard .
Fred Edwards . . .
J. M. Williams .
W. J. Hemby------
M. M. Sauls .
Jesse .
Crawford .
J. II. Kittrell.
Lev Evans .
Rachel Evans .
J. Smith .
I Bert .
B. F. Patrick .
I Claude Evans .
H.
J. Tucker.
Church
Jas. .
Dan .
Jno. H. Williams . .
II on J. J. .
I'M- Jones .
Chas. Dudley .
K. L. Johnson .
Carr .
J. T. Smith .
Chas. Braxton.
Claude Braxton
Braxton
J. Allen. Jr.
C. D. Rountree Co.
Dennis Dew .
1850 J. L. Starkey.
1851 Lunsford Fleming .
1852 J. L. .
1853 C. C. .
1854 Matt. .
1855 L. M. Savage
1856 Joe Crawford .
1857 Charlie Brown
1858 S. S. Worthington. .
1859 L. H. Cox .
1860 J. F. .;.
1861 J. S. Ross .
1862 Monroe .
1863 T. H. Smith .
1864 C. Moore .
1865 J- T. Smith .
1866 Jno. Ames
1867 L. Tucker . . .
1868 Jno. Rouse .
1869 G. T. Tyson .
1870 L. Fulford .
1871 J. Baker .
1872 Claude Turner .
1873 J. F. Case .
1874 J. G. Fulford.
1876 R. J. Nichols .
1876 J. W. Crawford . . .
1877 Anna Gray .
1875 R. J. Ryan .
J. C. Thomas.
1880 T. F. .
1881 JaB. .
1882 Marshall Harper . . .
1883 Jno. . . .
1884 L. L. Ross.
1885 Jno. Sessoms .
1886 H. H. Stanley.
1887 Ed. Cross .
1888 Ed. Tyson .
1889 B. B. Bynum .
1890 G. W. Pittman . .
1891 G. C. Barrett.
1892 Willie Pittman . .
1893 J. T. Eason
1894 Abner Eason
1886 J- F. Leggett------
1896 Wm. Ann Tyson
1897 Will Barrett
1898 T. L. Turnage------
1899 W. G. Stokes------
1900 Emma Harris
1901 Harris
1902 L. H. White
1903 V. E. Staton
1904 Jesse G. Thomas . .
1905 W. H. . .
1906 E. H. Foley
1906 Church Moore
C. C. Baker
1908 G. A. Clark.
1909 Jas. Evans .
Jno. Johnson
1911 V. C. Fleming
1912 Will Edwards .
1913 L. W. Wilson .
1914 Sam Heath
1915 Williams
1910 Milton Carr.
1917 Walter Price------
1918 W. A. . . .
1919 J. .
C. J. Johnson
1911 H. C. Lovett
J. D. Jones
1.45
3.80
149.32
1.15
1.90
1.45
1.45
2.85
2.45
2.05
6.15
5.80
7.16
1.70
2.00
20.00
1.50
3.60
1.50
6.00
4.90
4.50
3.50
2.50
3.50
1.60
1.65
6.65
3.70
4.70
3.15
6.90
6.80
6.30
4.30
6.30
6.30
8.60
4.45
4.50
3.60
2.00
2.00
1.16
1.70
6.90
1.55
6.40
4.60
6.15
4.05
1.56
1.10
6.15
1.85
1.80
1.75
2.80 .
2.53 j
3.55
1.10
8.00
2.80
1.80
1.751
1.75
1.75
1.80
1.55
1.35
3.90
3.90
3.83
2.05
4.05
2.03
1.55
2.05
1.05
2.75
2.76
2.75
2.75
3.15
2.55
2.55
2.00
2.80
1.70
1.70.
1.65
2.5
1.10 i
7.60
3.85
3.85 j
3.85
3.85 .
14.32
1.65
2.55
To whom issued
A. A. Smith .
B. Bland .
Isaac Gardner .
Will Williams.
J. I- Williams.
Elks .
L. E. Elks .
C. M. Jones------
Wink Boyd.
C. D. .
; S. T. Carson .
I S. C. Page .
S. A. Gainer .
M. O. G. Ford
J. H. Andrews
Dr. J. E. Nobles,
Aaron Wooten . . . .
Wm. Fountain. M. D.,
expert .
4.87 Board of Health . . .
2.92 D. J.
3.60 i .
1.15 Dr. J- E. Nobles,
1.651 small pox .
1.15; Dr. Zeno Brown,
1.15 I small pox.
1.65; 1256 Jno. Flanagan
1.65 j Co. for
1.35 .
1.35 1200 Edwards
1.65 ton. C. S. C. books.
1.35 I 1261 Edwards
1.851 ton Printing Co.
1.35- Record Books .
I 1265 Office Sup-
10.001 ply Coo., Stationery.
2.55 I 1269 Dr. J. E. Nobles,
Small pox .
1284 A. L. Blow, attorney
1410 D. J.
Printing
Western Union g
graph Co.
; W- o. Printing, Book.
1743 Greenville Ice Factory 1.66 Awards
Amount
3.10
14.35
22.50
20.00
12.50
7.65
32.00
1.85
12.50
75.00
1.60
12.60
5.60
4.52
3.40
2.80
2.80
2.30
1.15
5.95
5.30
2.45
2.45
2.35
2.05 ;
5.20
1.85
2.00
2.90
2.15
3.10
2.60
1.50
1.05
1.75
1.75
1.75
1.70
1.55
1.75
1.05
2.15
1.95
1.95
2.60
2.20
2.15
2.13
1.93
1.55
1.53
1.15
1.15
1.15
133.45
1.60
1.05
1.05;
2.50
Total .
Edward-c k
ton. stationery .
Walker, Evans
II Co.
.
.
L. W. Tucker, gal-
laws .
. J. ,. Wooten.
.
Edwards
ton. J. P. .
L. Tucker. Sheriff.
Sylvester
.
D. J. pub-
annual state-
.
r D.
.
Alex. L. Blow,
.
Everett,
Co. stationery .
Walker. . Cog-
Co. stationery.
D. J.
.
Co.,
Record Hooks .
Edwards
ton Record
Chas. O. T.
house, small-pox.
Bryan Grimes. Sec-
of State.
Copy of Act------
W. B. Wilson, for
Confederate Veterans.
Edwards ft
Printing Co. J. P.
Dockets .
Harrell Printing
House, Blank Marriage
License .
Dr. Jennies Morrill,
8.39 i
ton Printing Co. N.
C Flag .
D. C. Moore, fr.
on Books .
Dr. J. B. Nobler, small
, pox .
o. II. ring. Pen-
Board .
r-. 1574 c. D, .-. Pen-
Board .
12.00 1675 a F. Evan, Pension
, Board .
. Edward.
ton Printing Co.,
, .- Record Books .
Walker. Evans
cry C. a. .
j News and Observer
Publishing Co., In-
Issue, Pitt
County .
Edward ft
, ton, Publishing Co.,
, So. To whom Issued.
Tax Receipts .
i, 1602 Sally Chapman.
to land .
,, T,; 1720 J.
l .
c no 17.1 Edwards
ton hi Co,
stationery C. S.
I J. B.
I J. Bryan Grimes,
Copy of Ac b.
P.
.
Dr. E. Nobles.
Edwards
ton Publishing Co.
Blanks. C. S.
Harrell House
Blanks C. S. C.
D. J. Whichard.
in an .
Jas. Jones, damage
to buggy .
3.30
7.50
10.13
61.40
50.00
1.73
10.00
2.00
0.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
9.00
100.00
Amount
27.00
6.00
8.75
6.10
7.50
. . 4.50
4.25
6.50
10.30 i
2.75
13.00
1.50
Total.
Summary on 4th.
In 1920 A. D. the
Stingiest Man in String-
town carted his House-
hold Goods to the Depot
and bought a ticket for
the
are you
to in-
quired a Citizen.
save
replied the Stingiest
Man. Whereat the
marveled mightily.
Now, be it known
that the Stingiest Man
in was wise
in his Day and Genera-
for along back in
1907 A. D. or there-
about it became the
Settled Habit of the
people to
purchase Largo Sheets
of Little Stickers bear-
portraits of G.
Washington, B. Frank-
W. and other Late Illustrious Ones, which
Specimens of Art they straightway stuck on envelopes
and sent to a Large and Luring Mail Order Concern in
Wherefore it came about that the Seven
Stores in Shut up Shop, one after the other,
until alone, in 1919 A. D. the Stingiest Man found it m-
upon him to begin purchasing these Small
Specimens of Art to present to the Maw of the Monster
in and the Aforesaid was Simply too Stingy
to stand for the Same.
ART OF DENTISTRY.
N Wu by the
Thousand of Ago.
It will many persons to
learn that fake teeth, gold caps and
fillings and dental bridges are by
no means modern creations. Six
thousand ago and probably
long before the dawn of Creek
the skill of the dentist had
reached a high of perfection.
Cicero in his treatise
ascribes the invention of
tooth drawing to Aesculapius, third
of that name. The first mention of
dentistry, according to tho British
Medical Journal, is found in
ho in several parts o
writing has a good deal to say
about toothache. From tho
the art its way to the
Etruscans. At the international
congress hold Borne in 1900
exhibited several
specimens of dental art which prov-
ed that something very much akin
to bridge work was practiced in an-
Italy so efficiently that it
lasted thirty centuries.
Artificial crowns have also been
found in tomb-.
dentures go back to a remote
antiquity. Or.
in the museum of the University
Ghent there is a set of artificial
teeth found in a tomb at
with jewels and vase.-. lie
gives their date as from live to six
thousand years before Christ.
In a collection antique surgical
apparatus made by Dr.
there is an artificial denture found
in a tomb at near Thebes.
which is believed to belong to the
third or fourth century before the
Christian era. Teeth stopped with
gold have been found in
tombs. In the temple of Apollo at
Delphi there was, act to Era-
a nephew of Aristotle and
physician to king
of Syria, B. C, a leaden
which was used in
of teeth. Obviously
of lead could have been used
for loose teeth.
In the laws of the twelve table,
made by the
B. C. it was expressly forbidden
to bury or burn gold with dead bod-
except when used for wiring the
teeth. In the construction of false
teeth recourse was had by the an-
to bone and horn. Some-
times human teeth were employed.
Benson found in some
made of sycamore.
In the first century of our era false
teeth were very common among the
Romans.
Dentistry shared in the decay of
the arts during the middle ages,
and we read that when St.
died in although he was only
he had but one tooth in
the upper jaw. French surgeons,
notably Pare, took a lead-
part in the revival of dentistry
Louis dentist used only in-
of gold in operating on
the teeth of his august patient.
From the time of Pare onward the
highest dentistry was in the hand
of surgeons, extraction being left
barbers and quacks.
DEATH.
A Trick to by Animal, to
Shun Enemies.
The I death by certain
animals for I purpose of
their enemies and thus
immunity is one of the greatest
of the many evidences of their in-
ratiocination. This
is not confined to any
family, order OX species of
but exists in many, from tho
very lowest to the highest. It is
found even in the vegetable king-
the well known sensitive plant
being an interesting example. The
action of this plant Is partly reflex,
as can be proved by observation and
experiment, and is not therefore a
process of intelligence.
An experimenter, writing in Win-
sen fur say, that he has seen
the feigning of death in some of
the lowest animals known to sci-
Some time ago while exam-
the inhabitants f n drop of
pond water under a high power
I,. noticed several
I.- . on the
of an The o Is sud-
drew in th i
in d sank to the bottom, to all
dead. The cause v. as
found to be the presence of a water
louse, animal which feeds on
these It likewise sank
lo the bottom niter looking at
the swam away, evident-
regarding them as dead and unfit
for food.
This was not an occur-
rent
ti.
for the
. has seen
twice i h i- i
what sense, lie a-ks, I those little
creatures the approach of
their enemy h it
and i animals
have and ears so
small the highest
ii visible, or
are of.-. utterly
to and incapable of being
appreciated by Si can
neither affirm nor deny either of
these suppositions.
Most are skin for food
by other animals. Most of the car-
and prefer fresh-
killed food to carrion. They will
not touch tainted melt when they
can procure fresh; hence when they
upon, their prey apparently
dead they will leave it alone and go
in search of other quarry unless
they are very hungry. Tainted
are dangerous to gel into
the stomach. Certain ptomaines
render it sometimes very poison-
Long year- of experience have
taught fact to animals, and
therefore- most of them let dead or
seemingly dead creatures no.
Bank of England
When a Bank of England note re-
turns to the bank it is never re-
issued, says Tit-Bits. It is canceled
by having the signature of the chief
cashier torn off. A day's signatures
thus detached often amount to a
weight of twenty pounds, so some
idea may be gathered of the
quantity of notes dealt with
in a day's business. After the
are torn off tho notes are
pricked in the register and sort-
ed into the dates of They
are than placed in boxes in the
vaults, where they are kept for five
years, after which they are burned
in s furnace placed in a courtyard.
Every morning at o'clock this fire
is lighted, and tho notes which were
received at the hank live years
are consigned to the flames.
notes being consumed in
this manner every week.
In Word.
Dinah came in to ask her mis
tress to write n letter. Name and
address being furnished, Mrs. Boss
waited for dictation, which was not
forthcoming. Dinah, being urged,
insisted that didn't care what
went in tho letter, wanted
a letter writ to
said Mrs. Boss, must
tell mo something to
answered Dinah after a
long pause, did think
was a mighty pretty
York Times.
to
to laughter,
of the soul, the happiness of the
heart, the leaven of youth, tie
of purity, tho echo of
the treasure of the humble,
tho wealth of the poor, the bead of
tho cup of pleasure It dispels
banishes blues and mangles
melancholy, for it's tho foe of woe,
the destroyer of depression, the en-
of grief. It is what kings
the peasants, plutocrats envy tho
poor, the guilty envy the Innocent.
It's the sheen on the silver of
smile.-, the ripple, on the water's de-
light, the glint of the gold of glad-
Without humor would us
dumb, wit would wither, dimples
would disappear and smiles would
shrivel, for Its glow of a clean con-
science, the voice of a pure soul, the.
birth cry of mirth, the swan song of
If you can't tee the Moral without
being look up the Ad. of an Oculist
in Paper and a
H.
The lecturer on health had fin
his and invited hi
auditors to ask any questions
chose concerning points that might
seem to need clearing up when s
lean, skinny man up and
what do you do when
you cant sleep at night r
stay replied
the lecturer, of course,
one should feel at liberty t
otherwise if he chooses. Art
there sere questioner
Mixed
Edwin Markham a dinner said
of mixed I was
teaching in Los Angeles used to
read every week a little country pa-
per whose editor's metaphors
an unfailing joy to me. Once, I re-
member, this editor wrote of a con-
temporary, the black is-
suing from his base throat becomes
a boomerang his hand and, hoist-
him by his own petard, leaves
him a marked man for He
said in an article on home life,
faithful watchdog or his good win
standing at tho door welcomes the
master homo with an honest bark.
In an obituary of a farmer he
was run at last.
Like tired steed, he crossed the
harbor bar and, casting aside whip
and spur, lay down upon that
from which no traveler re-
Herald.
After a long and wasting
a north countryman about
don his clothes for the first time.
called his wife from
adjoining room, than
ell thy
The good man, with a lively
of his emaciated condition, replied
gotten roe
but there's to
Tit-Bit.
.-rt
POOR PRINT





Summary
Paupers outside Home of A and J
Home of Aired and Infirm
Deaf Dumb and Blind
Insane
Tax list
Elections General
Court House
Jail
Superintendent of Health
Coroner
Clerk Superior Court
Register of Deeds
County Commissioners
Sheriffs and Constables conveying prisoners
Bridges
Roads
Index
1859.36
2390.98
213.85
1440.00
203.11
2530.97
558.10
392.31
Sheriffs
Clerk Superior Court
Solicitors
Crier
J. P. and Mayors
Constables
Jury
Witness tickets
Miscellaneous
Eastern Training School
Roads General
Roads General expense of
Convict; on sewer
COURT COSTS
2920-39
Total
Total orders issued on Treasurer
An of Receipts and Disbursements of the County of
the Fiscal Year ending December 1st. 1907.
RECEIPTS
Amount liar. Dec 3rd 1906
from L sheriff general fax list
5132.64
467.45
3848.32
Pitt for
54.71
12.10
from L. Tucker insolvent list 1905
1-5
781.91
1625.00
31.10
2.00
1814.71
32,858.45
from L. W sheriff schedule B. Tax
Ann.; from B Williams Bag. Deeds
fr n D C. Moor,, C. S C. jury tax
i from dispensary
torn dispensary
from W, Venters
J. Holland for
om hire of force roads general
Total receipts
DISBURSEMENTS
Amount pd. Co. orders i s filed 24.483.91
an s
Total i
Am-- on hand December 1st 1907
; condition of Pitt County Dec 1st. 1607
GENERAL FUND
To am ii 2.1906
To c aims En in Dec to Dec
24,715.4-1
By c orders paid by Samuel T. White Treas,
f year ending Dec. 1st 1907
t standing indebtedness Doc 222.53
CREDIT
By amount audited claims paid by Treas
Treasurers commissions
Amount on hand D. 1st 1907
FARMVILLE TOWNSHIP DR.
To amount on hand Dee- 2nd-1906
To amount from L. W. Tucker sheriff tax list
Total receipts
CREDIT
By amount audited claim by Treas
Treasurers commissions
Amount on hand Dec- 1st- 1907
TOWNSHIP DR.
To amount on hand Dec 2nd 1906
To amount from L W- Tucker sheriff tax list
Total receipts
CREDIT
By amount audited claims paid by Treas.
Treasurers commissioners
Amount on hand Dec. 1st. 1907
TOWNSHIP DR.
To amount on hand Dec 2nd 1906
To amount from L W. Tucker, sheriff tax list
Total receipts.
CREDIT
By amount audited claims paid by Treas-
Treasurers commissions
Amount on hand Dec. 1st. 1907
SWIFT CREEK
To amount on hand Dec. 2nd 1906
To amount from L. W. Tucker, sheriff Tax list
T receipts
CREDIT
By am audited claims paid by Treas. 323.91
Treasurers commissions 10.07
Amount on hand Doc. 1st. 1907
56.67
THE BORING
WASP.
97.57
3.14
110.01
97.07
24.11
842-32
706.47
21.87
866.43
728.34
138.09
90.82
495.09
585.91
497.71
512.64
73.27
33.71
395.57
429.28
95.80
7626-68
fl
24.401
To
Bi
Hi an
i of the various Stock Law Territory Funds for fiscal year
ending December 1st- 1907.
TOWNSHIP DR
To ion it on hand Dec. 2nd 1906
;. i int from L- W. Tucker, sheriff tax list
Total i
CREDIT
By audited by Treas.
I . commissions
Am hand Dec. 1st 1907
PITT COUNTY DR.
To. from L. W. Tucker, sheriff list
By a T. White Treas. Dec 2nd 190.1
. by Treas,
ii. emissions
i r.- i hand Dec. 1st 1907.
TOWNSHIP DR.
Co . on hand Dec id 1906
To a i. nit from L. W. Sheriff tax
Total Receipts
CREDIT
327.58
9.66
4.37
123-48
SPECIAL FUNDS
die various Township Road Funds for
December 1st. 1907.
DAM TOWNSHIP DR.
I by L W. Tucker, list
CREDIT
. ,. as. Dee, 2nd 1906 93.40
paid by Treas.
3.08
enc
2.95
B an .
i hand De 1st. 1907
TOWNSHIP DR
Dec 2nd 1908.
a. . . L Sheriff
Total t
CREDIT
r i . Treas. . 6-17
to-
1907
BE TOWNSHIP DR.
To am 2nd 1908
Ducker, sheriff tax list
CREDIT
By audited ii by Treas,
is i
.-. . I Dec. 1st 1907.
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP DR.
To am 2nd
To amount from L list
Total receipts
CREDIT
Bi audited claims paid by Treasurer
Treasurers commissions
Amount on hand Dec 1st.
TOWNSHIP DR.
To amount on hand 2nd- 1906
To amount from L W. Tucker sheriff, tax list
Total receipts
CREDIT
By amount audited claims paid by
Treasurers commissions
Amount on hand Dec. 1st 1907
TOWNSHIP DR.
To amount on hand Dec 2nd 1906
To amount from L. W. Tucker, sheriff tax list
Total receipts
CREDIT
By amount audited claims paid by Treas. 257.00
Treasurer commissions 10.85
Amount on hand Dec. 1st 1907
FALKLAND TOWNSHIP DR.
mount on hand Dec. 2nd. 1906
v L. W. Tucker, sheriff tax list
receipts
225.00
10.04
124.10
91.27
275.35
28.48
17.02
169.25
By am Hint audited claims paid by Truss,
commits n
176.88
5.27
Am Dec. 1st.
County,
Register of Deeds, in
do hereby certify that the foregoing is a and
of claims audited and by the Board -i
Con alt the Di and
, . .;. .-,,. l
for the c
an
of said county, both General and Special Fin
for c I y ear ending December 1st, 1907
n under my office Greenville.
12th of 1907-
RICHARD WILLIAMS, Register of Deeds
157.87
9.41
Acid
I . Franco
t ;. . . acid
, . . r . ;. one of ;
the w to vol-j n,
,.,,,; ,, I hie lie I ,
30.51
1,117.04
1096.18
yield the gas are found
generally in of
ground i. allow t. water to
rise, of the springs
In known
end
the . ink arc .
I . . i,. U given E
by re.
i . do ; ha a
found,
20.88
346.26
502.17
and t
per. on ha
. j o cap.
, . by mi
. Spots can ho
n t inn i. across
fields, the plants
from coming up through
the flat in of the ground at
points. show
of n great quantity of gas,
and it usually a very par
809.63
22.74
848.43
832.37
16.06
79.33
884.05
963.38
267.85
695.53
35.81
118.43
Flat Odor.
could live on
Mid Mr. wouldn't
cost much to live in a Hat
there's no odor cooking
known that you can't smell here.
The dumb waiter shafts and the
bold through floors and
water pipes seem
to make the building a
of smell conductor in
which no cooking odor la In
which all come to all.
if anybody In build-
turkey know that,
but nine, do know it full
if beef and cab-
or or fish. Then
Indeed, a surfeit and, I
if one could live on odor,
what a place would be to board
a variety and how
York Sun,
i . . .
j . to nu . do-
are nod by placing
.,. . hi in
where they kept for months
and fed on u species of seaweed
which Imparts the coloring mutter
to the gills.
carefully conducted
goth appears that in
green owe their color to
copper. Such
are in-i generally
as food.
ten
differ in appearance from ow-
their tint to vegetable col-
matter, being grass n
not dark green in color and baring
a verdigris-like slimy secretion on
the folds of the It is said
that the addition of a
steel fork stuck into such oyster-
becomes coated with cooper and
that if ammonia is added the
become dark York Sun.
Eat It. Way
In the Vienna mint the leaden
rails a containing
although forty-three
or about one and seven-
tenths thick, were eaten
through by an insect. The leaden
In a also damaged
like manner. Such damage
due to a sort of wood wasp, of which
there arc many aorta in central Eu-
rope. The largest of
black and yellow giant wood wasp,
resembles the true On the
of the elongated belly
the female has a very hard boring
device, about nineteen millimeters
long, black and
fluted, which lies in its sheath.
Ordinarily this borer la directed
backward, but when in use it is
turned about it base, so as to make
a considerable angle with axis
of the body, and is used like a rat
tail file until it makes- a hole about
eighteen millimeters
of an deep in the wood which;
it usually chooses to perforate.
The egg which female lays in
the wood develops into a caterpillar-1
like creature with six short legs and
without eyes. With its sharp, hard
jaws it in the trunk of tho;
tree tubular channels, which in-
cHase in diameter as it grows j
It swallows the wood which it
gnaws off, digesting the nutritious
portions and discharging the rest in
a form. For two years it
eats its way forward in this manner.
In the third year the insect creeps
out, biting with its jaws through
the thin wall which separates it
from the outer world, leaving the
home of its childhood to enter upon
a short life in freedom.
if a tree trunk which has been
perforated by inch a wasp and in
which egg has been laid he em-
ployed when insufficiently seasoned
bonding purpose it may hap-
pen that some day the insect, which
baa been two years working its way
through the piece, will suddenly
pear in the building. If a piece of
such timber which contains a larva
is by a leaden plate the
insect will not stop at this, but will
bite its through just as though
it were of wood.
Almost more wonderful are
performances of the boring cricket.
Although this is n dwarf compared
with the wasp, it has been able in;
to gnaw through tho lead-
en roof of u building to make
holes fourteen millimeters
five deep ant
four millimeters
in in printers stereo-
plates despite the fact that
reason of the antimony in such
they are much harder than
News.
Dramatic
us he clasped the beautiful
girl his great arms a
strange man came out and stood be-
lido them, looking exceptionally
foolish and idiotic, d possibly to
his
he said.
playwright had more than
he could put in the mouths of his
logical characters, and
in just here to get off a few of
them, I'll b, as quick n I can.
land m position, of
hit.
An
In
There were two elephants our
disposal, and myself and the in-
rode the first, each
half of the howdah. The
howdah has a and
habit of nearly succeeding
in cutting your legs in two. If you
bang your legs outside you may pad
the edge as much as J like, but if
you arc new to the game you will
wake in about half an hour from
an doze with the painful
conviction that the lower halves of
your legs have dropped off.
On squirming up into a position
from which you can view the out-
side world you will see they are still
dangling there, but with an
which suggests that
been frayed through to
the last shred. Abnormal efforts
low you to drag them safely inside,
and you think it will be better in
future to keep them there.
The elephant is almost fine a
; to see the surrounding
i try from as a London bus, and there
is a considerable element of excite-
i in his progression. The
I rode had a fatal habit when
ft came to a river bank or bit of
rough ground of looking around and
picking out what the worst
; bit he could see.
Down one side of a river it seem-
ed as if he was engaged in trying to
stand on hi head, and I could look
out of the howdah, although I was
lying therein, and observe the fishes
darting over the stones in the
just under my lord's noble fore-
head. More than once on these
the beast would patiently
slouch through trees and hush-
es off tho track in search of some-
thing edible quite regardless of the
fact branches threatened to
weep howdah and everything else
over the
Put one of the mot peculiar
sensations was when they took it
into their head-, to S scratch
against tho telegraph poles. It
would be n wonderful fine which
could withstand solid work tho
expects its pot to carry
out, when the beast lean-
ed hard and tho post . I
could t see tho mild and some-
what indignant surprise reflected
one Intelligent to the
Free s.
II
EASTERN
A Parliamentary
It an infer . -ion,
one the re, meetings
of religious convention, tho
New Hampshire mini tor told some
of his stories. is one
men in our ho paid,
is as good as gold, . wind-
ed that ho out.
it . by
on- of hi order to
avoid this
man's remarks . meet-
we make a minute
limit
Count
II
mil
eh,
but it has not yet made walkers of
us. testify that no
so generally beneficial us
Every or nature
other
tho
.
will tell you th I
means
is so good for knowing
Beware of losing or wasting inches
of time. They are foxes
run away With ninny
much be in them and
often the very things for
which High Kill them,
every one. Keep something
something that fits the interval.
Remember a famous was
written a lord chancellor
chose not to be idle throughout
fifteen minutes hie wife him
wait each day for dinner.
too, all the men, noble and eminent,
who have climbed to Um heights by
saving inches of All of as
cannot hope to become em-
but we reasonably and
easily make ourselves happy
wrought In the fragmentary
which we might
Ha
they replied as
with one mind
do right d. Ti the center of
the stage and talk just us long, as
you like. Wove been ill society
drams Punk.
G.-mo of
Each player must choose a trade
and go tho motions of
working at a. Fag if he is
n tailor must pretend to row D
if a t
bar of or shoe a horse. is
king, and he, too,
K very one works OS
m ho in king suddenly
gives up his trade up
of sonic else. Then nil
stop tho one whose
the king he
start with tho king's work. The
two go on till tho king chooses to
buck to his own trade, when all be-
gin working again. Any one who
fails to flop or to
the right time must n
A. Moving Appeal.
He motherless hoy and his
father's only child, hut some tho
relatives had decided
be sent a fifty miles
from home, and at last tho father
had agreed to tho plan.
hours alter his boy's
departure the father received a let-
which was, although not
as on example of spelling, so
much to the point and so in accord
with his own feelings that tho plans
for the future were read-
fasted.
wrote the exile,
all right hero, and I'm not
I believe, out is very
short, and you think you'd
bettor let us spend some more of it
together Your affectionate son,
.-.
country. Every walker proclaims
no other para it so ranch
pleasure. Still no one walks. Men
,, than Wears
so prone to imitate our English
cousins. Why does their love of
not arouse to emulation f
Conscience, fashion or inclination
impels us to ride, drive, row, SWISS
fish, golf, play tennis; even
chop and saw wood for
else if strenuous and
to the life, to nay nothing of
making gardens; we own drive
airships, automobiles motor
can of oil but we do.
not, will not and, in fact,
M- In
cut.
a correspondent of r. pa-
nor that no fatal
may feared yellow fever if,
the person as soon as the
appear, s tumbler-
of olive oil with tho of a
lime into It This
be repeated till vomiting
purging
int in
of tho says
the letter writer, n speedy eon-
follows, i
not only proved its
but have its
b of
both in and
D. i. Editor and Owner.
Troth In Pref Fiction.
VOL. No.
rm M
Chief
is n stud tho
tho ordinary of
food in on English middle chum
would be to maintain
wholly a French family of similar
said the epicure,
it is also a gratifying fact that the
French family couldn't
hired to eat it after it had been
rooked the average English mid-
family, that, after all,
it is not wasted so s France
A mm OF THE CIVIL
of Officers in
1861-64.
An old Confederate veteran, of
Pitt county, has contributed the
following for the of
the young men and boys of Pitt
county especially, and all others
generally.
At the organization of tn
government of the Confederate
States of America. President
Jefferson Davis appointed the
following list of Cabinet
R. W Barnwell was first chosen
for Secretary of State but ht
having declined, the tender was
made to Robert of
S. R. Mallory, of Florida,
was appointed Secretary of the
Navy; Judah P. Benjamin, of
Louisiana, was selected for At-
General; John H Reagan,
of Texas, for Postmaster
C C of South
Carolina, for Secretary of the
Treasury; Leroy Pope Walker,
Alabama, for Secretary of War.
of which President Davis
by any other
consideration than the public
welfare, having no friends to re-
ward or enemies to punish, it re-,
suited that not one of those who
formed my first Cabinet had
borne to me the relations of close
friendship or had
claims upon me; indeed, with
two of them I had no personal
There was in the Confederate
army eight full genera's, nine-
teen lieutenant generals, eighty
one major generals, three Hun-
sixty-seven brigadier
generals. The total number of
general officers was four hundred
and as
Full general with state and
date of commission. Samuel
Cooper, Virginia. May, 1861; In-
General; Albert S. John-
Texas, May. 1861; Robert
E. Lie, Virginia, June, 1861;
Joseph E. Johnston. Virginia.
July. 1861; P- G- T. Beauregard,
July. 1861; Braxton
Bragg, April. 1862; b.
Kirby Smith, Florida.
1864; J. B. Hood, Texas, July,
1864
Lieutenant Generals James
Alabama, October,
1862; Leonidas Polk,
October, 1862; H.
mes, North Carolina, October.
1862; William J. Georgia,
October, 1862; Thomas J- Jack
son, Virginia, October, John
C Pemberton, Virginia, October,
1862; RichardS. Virginia,
May, 1863; Ambrose P.
May, 1863; H. Hill.
North Carolina, July, 1863; Rich-
ard Taylor, April, 1864;
Jubal Early. Virginia. May 1864;
Richard H. Anderson South
Carolina, May 1864; Stephen I.
Lee, South Carolina, June 1864;
Alex P. Stewart, Tennessee,
1864; Simon B. Buckner,
Kentucky, September
Wade Hampton, South Carolina,
February. 1865; John. B. Gordon,
Georgia, February 1865; Joseph
Wheeler, Georgia, February,
1865; Nathan P. Forrest,
see, February, 1865.
Major and Generals
and other reminiscences
follow later.
NORTH CAROLINA BUILDING.
ASSOCIATION.
Position
Pats State in
to Sell the Buildup.
The Asheville Gazette-News
has the J
S Powell, president
of the North Jamestown
Exposition Commission, has re-
a message from Harry St.
George Tucker, counsel for the
receivers of the exposition, stat-
that Judge Waddill, in the
United States District court, has
made an order clearing the title
the lands on which buildings
now stand, so that the State is
now in position to sell the prop-
simply means that the
North Carolina building will be
saved The State was more for-
than other States in that
the rights had been secured by
thoughtfulness of Mr. Powell.
Under the plan on which the
State buildings were op-
or rights to the States to ac-
quire the land on which buildings
were placed, Mr.
Powell had that of North Caro-
duly registered, but it was
the only State which took
action, and when in the closing
days of the creditors
secured attachments and
it became a grave
at least as to whether the
rights of others had not taken
precedence to those of th
States
AEOLIAN BAND CONCERT.
Plays fer Large Crowd on
Lawn.
Everything was going one way
Saturday afternoon, and that
was around the court house
lawn The Aeolian band went
there at o'clock, to give an
open air concert, and a great
crowd gathered around to hear
the new organization make music.
The teachers, the town people,
the country people, were
swelling the number to a multi
The bend boys put up
best effort and made music
that brought them applause- It
was the second time the band
has in public, and under
the direction of Prof- Bailey good
progress is made. The
band has good talent in it, and if,
boys just stick there is no
reason Greenville should not nave
as good a band as there is in the
State. .,, , ,
Now not build a band
stand at some good place where
concerts can be given frequently
during the coming summer
Meeting and
Interesting.
Pitt County
held one of its and
most interesting meetings on
Saturday.
President H. B. Smith called
the meeting to order at and
the opening exercises were con-
ducted by Rev. M. T- Plyler.
The Miss Boushall,
read the proceedings of the last
meeting.
The first paper was read by
Miss Lily B. Grant on
Difficulties Encountered in In-
Her paper
was exceedingly practical and
helpful-
The next address was by Rev.
T. H- King on Teacher's
to the community in
which he Mr King
treated his subject under four
heads social intellectual, moral
and religious-and under each of
these the opportunity and
of the teacher was em-
Miss Annie Perkins read an in-
an instructive paper on
in the Primary
She held the closest
attention of the audience from
the first, her paper being a val-
production.
General suggestions on the
I work was led by Prof.
I He suggested among other
that the association have
an address in the afternoon of
the next meeting by some dis-
speaker.
The association regretted
absence of Prof. Martin, of
Bethel, on account of sickness.
After helpful by Pres-
Smith and Prof
the meeting adjourned. It was
announced that Superintendent
Joyner will make an address be-
fore the association at the April
meeting.
Several visitors were present
and the meeting was an exceed
enjoyable one-
by Miss Bessie Harding.
Reported for Reflector.
The League at
the home of Bessie Hard-
on Friday evening,
7th.
After the assembling of the
young people, it was announced
that the subject for the evening j
was Although we were I
somewhat out of date in
the anniversary of this
great general, our meeting j
been postponed for
reasons, the occasion was
by all present.
After the devotional exercises.
But on the program was a
cation by Ben Taylor, who en-
us in his usual
style.
Mrs. Carrie Hooker then sang j
an appropriate song affording a
great amount of pleasure to the
entire audience. I
Miss Nina Harriss fascinated
her hearers by
a beautiful patriotic
. I
us with;
her sweet, charming voice in a j
vocal selection, the appreciation
of which was manifested by such j
prolonged applause that com-,
an encore-
An interesting
contest was participated in by all j
present- The answers to this
contest were the es of gen
on Lee's staff.
Last on the program was the
singing of old songs the en-
tire assembly. The enthusiasm
exhibited in the singing of these
was sufficient proof of the pleas-
realized.
At a late hour we adjourned de
daring Miss Harding champion
hostess, as she ever proves in
her untiring for the en-
of her many friends.
THE LEAGUE OF DOLLARS SOUTH. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS.
B, Favorably by to The Visitor, Her, and People
o. War Claim.
r u r Feb 11-i Miss Helen Forbes has re-
cured from the by, h. L. f
people of the South if a bill re- visiting relatives here,
ported unanimously b the Acme ins a good
committee on war claims becomes m every night.
3- I of
claims for captured and came in Tuesday eve
abandoned property which was, F. C. returned
sold during the civil war and the evening from Washington.
proceeds turned into the Fannie Little-
States treasury. During that Tuesday evening to
war the government authorized -4-R Mrs w.
the seizure of abandoned prop .
to be sold the net pro-. Feb. 12th.
placed in the United States
treason. There was a provision, pF
that if any one should bring suit PARKER S CHAPEL ITEM.
within two years after the close
within two years alter
of the war and prove that the parkers Chapel. Feb.
property sold belonged to him regular services at
the money received would bK Chapel Sunday with
paid over, to do this the cit-
bringing the suit had to, A R went to
prove loyalty to the Union. This and return d Fri-
disqualified moss Southerners
until the amnesty proclamation, -y p daughter.
in which came; Saturday
too late to make claims to court,; A K House and
the two years grace having
of this bill is , D. c. Adam,, of
to enable the original of is spending this week
the confiscated property to get with people, A R. House and
the money it brought when sold. family
Wu Not Hospital.
A letter from Dr. James M.
of Kinston. says the
statement in The Reflector about
Charles Jones, who dropped dead
in Mr. C. C. store
after getting here from
Kinston. having been in the hos-
there, a He
says Jones was not in the
there, and that they do not
accept except in
Marriage Licenses.
Register Deeds R. Williams
as issued the following licenses
since
white.
Louis H. Roberson and Pearle
Nobles.
--W. E. Lang and M.
COLORED.
Thomas Jenkins and Dinah
Hines. . T ,
Arthur Jones and Louisa John-
Adams and Jennie
Brown and Mattie
Woodard and Lula Bell
Robert Taft and Maggie
Mooring and Melissa
Teel
May
Wilmington. Feb. L.
father of Freshman
James who was one of
the ten cadets subjected to
outrageous treatment at
the A. M. College one night
last week, has gone to Raleigh
to fully investigate the hazing
and has retained Herbert
Clammy, a leading criminal law-
advise him as to the best
course to pursue.
A letter from Mr. to-
night states that hours
the occurrence there are
vet five finger prints on the boy's
throat, where he was choked.
His is badly injured and may
be permanently affected as the
result of being painted with
of silver. The forepart of
his hair cropped close by the
hazers. the remainder of his hair
being left long. Mr has
been advised to call upon the
governor for the fullest
gate of such conduct as a state-
managed institution and to em-
ploy local counsel at Raleigh to
prosecute the offenders criminal-
Times.
Useful
The Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
of Chattanooga, Tenn. has sent
us one of their calendars and
weather charts for the year. In
past years we have found the
weather predictions on the Cal-
to be very accurate.
They will send one to any ad-
dress for cents in stamps.
Edison's Cement
Of all the Wizard Edison's in-
he has invented
some-none will be more eagerly
watched for than his
which will make it
for the poor man to own a
home. Several weeks ago Mr.
Edison announced that he had
put the cost of this structure at
and now he again says
that it will be even cheaper. Now,
if some other genius will
problem of getting land
cheap, we and other poor men
will send him a of
thanks. Times.
Last Round for Taxes.
I will make the last visit over
the county to collect taxes due
for the year 1907 at the following
times and
Falkland, Falkland township,
I Tuesday March 1908-
Farmville, Farmville township,
Tuesday March
Bethel, Bethel township,
March
township.
Thursday March
Grimesland, township,
Saturday
township,
Saturday March
C. D. Store, Beaver.
Dam township, Mar.
Roads, town-
ship. Tuesday March
Stokes, Carolina township,
Saturday March
Grifton, Swift Creek township.
Saturday March
All who fail to pay will be ad-
and cost added to their
taxes. Pay promptly and save
cost and trouble.
L. W. Tucker, Sheriff.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Quinn
spent Saturday night with T. L.
Little and family.
Miss Linda is spend-
this week with Misses Fan-
and Eva House.
R. R. Whitehurst, of Parmele.
visited A. R. House Saturday.
Our people are very busy
paring to plant crops.
R F. Pittman, of Ayden, will
preach at Parker's Chapel next
second Sunday. He is a good
preacher and all would do well
to hear him-
J. C. House spent Saturday
with his uncle, A. R-
House.
T. C. Quinn will move
row on Great Swamp.
There will be a party at Park-
Chapel school house Friday
night, February 14th. Every-
body invited.
We are J some eM
weather now, and have paved
streets most every morning.
There is much grip in our
neighborhood.
Another Liquor Bill Congress.
Safe Crackers Caught
Five safe wickers who blew
open and robbed the safe in the
at Dunn,
in Carolina and were
brought to Raleigh-
Washington, Feb.
Bacon, of Georgia, has introduced
a bill regulating the control over
in interstate commerce and
after they have come within the
borders of the State to which
the of
the State to insure strict enforce-
of option laws
What Corporations Contributed to
Campaign Fund.
Washington, D. C . Feb.
A resolution was in the
house today by Mr. of North
Carolina, directing the speaker
to appoint a committee of five
representatives to ascertain what
corporations contributed to pres-
campaign funds in the
1900 and 1904, es-
whether such a list will in-
any of the corporations
mentioned as law violators by
The president in his recent mes-
resolution requires
report con-
some time in, the
session so that the may be,
lid before the to
And Miss Ashford Will Not Marry Ex-
Senator Henry G. Davis.
Washington. D. C., Feb. 11.-
Miss Maude Ashford. of this
city, today announced that she
was no engaged to former
United States Senator, Henry b.
Davis, the Democratic candidate
vice president in the last
national campaign. Miss Ashford
stated that she broke the en-
last night. She said
she and the former senator had
then discussed the matter and
Miss Ashford referred to the
publicity which had been given
the subject and to the
ed opposition of some of the
members of Mr. faintly
to the proposed marriage,
said that she had no desire to
estrange the senator, at his age,
from his For these
sons she did not care to have the
engagement continued. Mr.
Davis declined to be interviewed
saying that he had no purpose of
making any newspaper state-
on the subject.
Hertford and Northampton.
Judge B. B. Winborne of
ford county, is in the city at-
tending the Supreme Court. He
stated yesterday that Hertford
and Northampton counties will
go large majorities for
and that the people in
those counties are well satisfied
with the work of the Legislature,
both as to for the State
prohibition election and settling
the passenger rate question.-
News and Observer.
Shut Door
Now that old summer
no longer causes us to
swelter and sweat at our daily
grind in the editorial treadmill,
and the mercury is nightly in-
in shameful flirtations
with zero, while the price of
coal is holding close communion
with the moon, we are often
sorely tempted to remind some
careless caller
A baptism of fire in depths
As hot as
Awaits the yap who quits a room
And leaves the door ajar.
T Democrat.
Wanted-Two fresh cows to
gal each. D. D. Haskett.
U ltd
S inscribe for The Reflector
POOR PRINT
.


Title
Eastern reflector, 7 February 1908
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 07, 1908
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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