Eastern reflector, 23 October 1908


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





. .
. HEALTH
In Charge of F. C. NYE
V .
.
I Ma
over
i. Extern Vicinity- Advertising Rates on Application
the Tar He.- Mrs. Frank James returned
wagon carts by the to her home near Tues-
A G. afternoon.
, N. For C A. Fair, of Ayden. was
the t Tuesday.
V.-. .
of
Fri
Moore
; who enters I
Rev, T. H. King returned
Monday, where
m the preached Sunday
. H. S. last Mon I Ilia Miriam Johnson went U.
I Greenville afternoon.
hi Ufa Is
wise for bis
The man woo his
is wise both for his and
himself.
You may Insure health by guard-
it. It is worth guarding.
At the first attack of disease,
which generally approaches
through the and
itself in innumerable
TAKE
. j
i-
I .
G ;
th
pro
at
gin
rim
J.
J.
tore,
v. .
. .
m in need of a g d and J- D. Cox has returned from
ii buggy will do well to South Carolina.
. . Mr. rt A. G , Rev. Mr. Forbes, of Farmville,
. . vi before will aid Rev. H. E. Tripp in a
Buggy is series of meetings, beginning
we would advise Monday night after the third
your orders month. All are
Dr. B. i Cox left morn- most cordially invited to attend
he these s
. day. Mrs. Laughinghouse, of
A line of beat is visiting relatives here.
jut in. A. ft Co. spent Sunday
T. H. King left this at home and returned to
morning for Edenton where he I ban Monday,
will preach at th church Rev. Mr. Goodwin, of the
t. in the absence of at Ayden, tilled Rev.
r. Par tor who is holding E. T. appointment at
; . this week. I the Free Will Baptist church here
pr it; fall day the Sunday. A large congregation
to have your painting done, was present
We have I . n h as-; H. Jackson is taking In the
of colors. State fair this week.
A. km Co. Mrs. F. C. Nye and children
i had
E. .,. just in ac ton. Sunday visiting at
And save your health.
Nan i Scarce.
Naming after news-
papers St, Louis
infant christened Louisa
Great, fancy thundering
down the ages as I she
Brown, the
Vindicator Smith, you remember to say
Red Dog Gulch Bowie pleasant to Mrs.
. a w. I .
Probably She Meant it
Lucille, a carefully brought up
of returned
from her first party in great glee.
was a good
id, and talked nice
N. Y. Telegram.
WHY COLDS RE DANGEROUS.
. -rug
and
Gr. n-
. .
la not so spent at the home of
give now but will be O H. Jackson.
Get you one of Rosabel Taylor, of
for His Experience.
are telling about
one John White of Eat
Carolina, a thrifty
who that the
Lord wanted him ti go t,
as a In spite of the
entreaty of hi friends against
it, he his farm tool
nave
colds end them without
kind, do n t for
moment imagine that colds not
know
and buTS
in a common cold Consumption
is by a but th cold I
prepares rec-
of the that
would
is the same h
eases.
fever, co arc
I to be acted
child a You will
a from ti is real dun i-r
a c lid than in any bat of
common The and
way to cine a is to
Co sh Ram
many elf.
have made t a s
of a large -.-; of
his j worM L. Wooten
just before
her mother asked.
yes I was the en-
reply. I and
said, enjoyed myself, Mrs.
Townsend; I had a lots better
dinner than I thought I'd
The r
family to Egypt, expecting a
special revelation from tie Lord
to teach him the language of the
natives and provide for his daily
After nine months in
the far country lie ins written
his friends for m may to
begin life over
He learned some sense, but the
was high. Charily and
Children,
and C.-ward
Had a CalL
Ada . the widely
Found Van's Body.
N. C , Oct. Sat-
while out
Creek,
a of men found
ii-. y of a man named Bank
Sanders, who had bean missing
several The d
Slew Companion f r Mistreating Little
Girls.
Charlotte, N. C. Oct.
an acrobat
Haw hers show, who
Sunday killed a fellow
by him in his
head with a store, has confessed.
said h I slew Kit-
because had
mistreated little
girls in the show for whose care
was
Died
Mr L. G. Whichard died at
o'clock this morning at the home
of his mother, Mr. D. L. Which-
ard, in township. He
a stroke of paralysis a
few Weeks ago from which his
was some
son of the
Barber Co.
V ii
i you one of
in ac Sunday .
r-u me, when a friend recommend
ed Dr New I
just in The officers of the Mission I pan taking it. an-i three bottled sir
the Baptist church
.-. c
. i.
pi ,. ; ate the coming year were elected
as J. t
tiers at once you will never .- Greene, president; F. F. Cox,
n There is better and vice president; Miss
more comfortable desK on the secretary.
market, I your order to
G. Cox Mai i fa- Co., Win.
J; v . I received another
had a slight of paralysis
partially r-n-i it is I death resulted. . .
had another over fifty years of age,
while cut walking alone in the. and the eldest so
Mot.- i i,. years I Mr. James Whichard.
Si old and a well-to do farmer and;
to hive a coroner's; Question for Good of The Tax Payers.
jury returned a verdict to
effect deceased came to his Editor
death by natural causes.
CHAPPED SKIN.
Is saving co I re and
throat -1 wide. So
;. . . .-,; store.
and.;. Trial bottle , . .
skin on
or lace be cu-ed in one by
applying Salve, it is
burns
and o by L.
or.- John White, of ton and Coward Wooten.
I tern North Carolina, a thrifty
The Failed.
papers arc
Who pays the. bills for
the circus signs from the
U light pole, tax payers or
the men who went to the circus
on passes for the of
orating the poles K.
Cr,
Mr. D, A. one of who dreamed that the
n , i men not r I wanted Egypt
Robbed by
Charlotte, N. C. Oct. 13.-D.
M, living twelve miles
lot
; C-
. v v ; Greenville
C are adding
to their
One of the pettiest lines of i n hi.
of the banks to give th
crockery ever in
at Harrington i
and Co.
th.
guaranteed I.- f
They
., ck
in x i in
that
in-
proper
will mean postal banks,
u of a nice up to-, d ,;.,. and
and . , ., .
,. was
en. r- ii
is
W a . iv
on hand.
ring in Barber Co.
L. k R bite, of
he-. Friday.
Remember the Hunsucker bug-
, to see
cf runabouts be-
fore you buy. Prices are inter
eating.
G. one of our most
. y n and
is erecting a real
sand i specialty.
d I I
Has- v n I Co.
I- lira A. W. Ante
Co
Mr. and Mrs. R. Croom went
Friday
Your i
comfort
at certainly
ought t-
it tHe room So much
depends upon the comfort of our
school room. Many a boy and
girl had his health injured
by neglect along
this Let us give our
n i fort able and beautiful
school rooms and they will hail
with delight the time for the op-
of school. Give our desks
a trial and be convinced.
es A. W. Ange and
Louisa Cox went to Ayden Fri-
day to visit relative.
For A house and lot con-
located to business
section of town, with good barn
and stalls. G. A. Kittrell, Win-
N. C.
suit of clothes come
examine our line of men's and
boy's
Harrington
The and
stoves are among.,
tho best. We have them at
that will interest you. We also
a full line of and
piping. Harrington. Barber
Co.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. arc now in position to sup-
ply you with their Tar
Carts, box bodies and Tumbling
bodies. Prices made right. Call
and see th m.
Harrington. Co.
Y u builders will do well to
A W. for win-
and doors buying.
I am row in northern markets
purchasing our fall stock. They
will be in soon. us a call
be convinced that have
one of the lines of goods
in town. J. F. Harrington.
For sale-A nice little one
horse farm three miles east of
Winterville and four miles from
Ayden. For terms apply to E.
J. Winterville, N. C.
Our immense fall and winter
Stock of dry goods, shoes, no-
clothing, hardware and
. ; in
ii ha written
. . come
. price was
Fair.
The we-k following the State
fair in Raleigh the colored
hold their industrial fair
be held
k South-
from
rates.
in Charlotte. He thoroughbred -hire pigs at
absolutely indifferent about Mi
apprehension and admits taking
the money.
guaranteed by the government.; hi
I This would put the government j
deep into the s Where
would take m y out of tho Part r, N. Y. a
, .; . . . ,, r iii war, win a
a no,
in the of r. . . .-.
government.
For Sale-A four-horse f;
one mile south of Greenville
is line tobacco land and has t
tenant houses. For
John W. Tucker.
m,
lira
i dollars each.
Farmville. N. C.
H. S. Tyson.
Notice of Sale.
Notice is hereby given by the under-
signed Ivy Smith, administrator of
I. d. that the
personal of Jesse I. Smith, de-
ceased, will be exposed to public sale,
i for cash to the highest b on
Tho moral of this is plain.
The Democratic party stands
for guaranteeing lank deposits;
th Republican party stance, In
its pledge in its platform and
a hobby of the for
a portal savings bank.
bankers-not ail of them by any
against
n,, than Iv to roe.
I snout much i. doctoring n
.-, . trouble,
i. I then Electric Bitters,
Homicide at
N. . Oct. 12.-W.
Harrell. of
platform and in favor of man of a
the in platform,
does it mean Dies it
Farm for Sale
Will for n
cured mi I n -w take th m e farm, In one . the to o
we I of water.
K CLAYTON
N. C.
. Thursday, the day of November,
I at the late residence of the said
Jesse L. Smith.
Said estate of horses,
mules, cattle, hogs, carts, wagons and
other farming implements, corn, fodder
hay, cotton seed and household
kitchen furniture.
it
Sale will begin promptly at
This the 2nd day of Oct., 1908.
Ivy Smith, Administrator of
Jesse L. Smith, deceased. w
train, is dead and Amos
well, Seaboard Air Line op-
the Democrats Seaboard, is under
would carry out their rd on chat go of killing Harrell
while the Republicans would f.-. Sunday.
the people, d
ton Dispatch. on board tho tram No.
from Norfolk and had been
be t in a ; parted. When the train arrived
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
Bank of Winterville.
AT WINTERVILLE.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business July 16th. 1908.
.
Loam and discounts stock
Overdrafts Surplus
Furniture and
I . I.
Hunkers
York. Oat In
package not much larger than
an nary traveling A.
at and while it was
at station
shots rang at the rear
today
to Port Myer. where token effect in Barrett a
It will be ass the M in a minutes,
tomorrow. Hr
. he will probably r.-1 Would Farm.
i in
. .
r,.
.;. i i .
I . int
ail
Undivided less
and
i tuxes
1,173.891 my, payable
certificates
mM deposit
182.30
oat
880.001
400.00
1,787.16
Total
if 10,588.41
15.93
10,583.41
A farmer on I, r. e
crockery is coming in every day thirty
Give us a call. We are prepared , l one . my
. It i.-. wort i U
to give you a article at ,,,,. h i
living prices. A i h u. K farm t. i
For sale-One good
hand cheap. u Ba of Rural I, Gull.
c n Winterville N C ford, They tone
C I. r,. . . n t w y ht
are running a first g ,. , . n C
now at the Cooper st-r . I .
Give u a call
is certainly u ,
and the h. G. Cox
Co., is d
b to the test of
and sworn t i me,
W H Wingate,
apes, peaches,
. . ii
I SYRUP
CONFORM TO NATIONAL DRUM LAW.
An mm .
, A . -fa MS o CHICAGO.
. i. m, -s.
THE EASTERN
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner
Truth in Preference to Fiction.
One Dollar Per Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. OCT. 1908
NUMBER
BICKETT AND SMALL SPEAK.
DEMOCRATIC RALLY AT JOHN-
SON'S MILLS.
BIG DAY AT FARMVILLE. CONGRESSMAN JOHN H. SMALL RE
A CITY HALL
Fine Speeches by and Small-
Large Numbers Hear Them.
N. C, Oct. 1908.
was a Democratic day
Farmville. There has
such a throng of
here on occasion as this
little city saw today. They came
from every direction, and by two
o'clock the Lady Turnage opera
house was packed to overflowing.
When the county candidates
had finished Mr. J. B.
James introduced Hon. Locke
that able, eloquent and
matchless orator the
Mr
speech by saying that one among
the fundamental principles of
Democracy is that every man
has the right to vote for whoever
a he no leas
he was
before h.- W is def for t
Mr.
a masterly
way the history of the
achievements.
from
SPEAKS TO LARGE AUDIENCE
FRIDAY NIGHT
Horse Back Crowd
Brats
Dinner
Grit ton, N. C, 1908.
Democracy was out in full
force at Johnson's Mills Thurs-
day. Preparation for this Dem-
rally had been going on
for two weeks. It had been
heralded through thin community
that Hon. T. W.
date for attorney general and
Hon. Jno. H. Small, candidate
for congress, would arrive from
Weldon.
A procession of one hundred
young led by two of Pitt
and sweetest
young ladies. , horse back, met
these two distinguished speakers
at the station, was
in this the Ayden
brass band, give to
Democracy the ring of At
o'clock, L. H. Cox. chief
r d that this
procession of
Democracy was in sight of
Johnson's Mills There were
already present fully eight
con of men,
and children from the
oldest to the youngest The old
gray-haired J interrupted with aD-
The greatest applause
I of the day came when he sub-
Three Buildings Destroyed and an
Infant
Norfolk, Va. Oct. 20.-A fire
. . . that started at this morning
Discussed National, State and County
Politics Aeolian Band Furnishes
Were Present
TWO MEN SHOT WITH
C. F. WHITE AND A. B. KITTRELL Town Will Erect Nice Building Some-
wonderful
refrained
is own Ian
n party, but
called for
pealed what they
each other. H-
to know more am
than he did. M r.
the
He r.--
. -d said about
lid they ought
u each other
Craig was f re
A large audience assembled in
Masonic Temple opera house, Fri
day night, to hear the speech of
Congressman John H. Small,
ladies being among
them. The Aeolian Band was
present and enlivened the
with excellent music.
After an introduction by Chair-
man P. C. Harding, of the
county executive committee,
Mr. Small spoke for some over
an hour filling his hearers
-m which they expressed
in frequent applause. Mr. Small
first referred briefly to notional
issues, then gave the
rec rd of the two parties in
Carolina. point-
corruption and bad
government when the
cans were in control, contrasted
with th- honest administration
and good government under
Democratic control.
babes that they
trained up in the way that
should go, the good history
to pledge anew their faith in the Bryan from tn Chicago con
principles of Democracy, and 1896 to the White
demonstrate to these people that J Q people e
I never heard a greater speech.
I At the of Mr.
they arc not forgetful of what
the Democratic party ha done
them in the past. It was
Democracy's day, and if there j
was a present he was I
silent in seven languages.
The band had arrived, and
when it struck up on
the old headed war
got young again.
Hon. T. W. Bickett and Hon.
Jno- H. Small, amidst a great
demonstration of enthusiasm,
were escorted to tho platform,
while the band played
of
H. W. Whedbee introduced
Hon. T. W. Bickett, in a
speech.
Mr. Bickett spoke for an hour
and a half, and our people have
never heard a greater speech.
If it be true in politics, that as
you sow so will you reap, there
will not be a Republican in this
section of the county on
3rd. next. This can
not to Mr.
speech, and will not even at-
tempt to give a synopsis of it.
Hon. Jno. H. Small was next
introduced by Col. F. G James.
In a great speech Mr. Small
expounded the principles of
Democracy.
The people listened to both of
these speeches attentively, and
when the speeches were over
the people is good
for us to be
Our people were not forgetful,
and when the speaking had fin-
there was barbecue, chick-
en, turkey and everything good
to eat. There was enough left
to feed two hundred people. In
all it was a fine day for our great
party, and the spirit of
racy is abroad in the land.
Craig's speech Hon. Jno. H.
Small, our well known congress-
man, spoke for on.; hour. Most
of his speech was devoted to
State issues.
The old time Democrats, who
had traveled for miles to hear
these eloquent men, went away
rejoicing.
The Ayden band furnished
music for the occasion, was
a Democratic day and Farmville
will the same old majority.
i a time seriously threatened
this city with a disastrous con-
the in
lire in a district thickly
surrounded by name buildings
and a stiff breeze blowing at
time. A fortunate shifting in
the direction the wind great
aided the firemen in get-
ting control of situation, so
that by a little past o'clock
tin danger over.
The fire was discovered in
the rear of the store
C. F. Brown, No. Washing-
ton street ii-is holding and
the Jockey adj in-
in destroyed,
toe stuck of the
Hardware Co,
Every stall in the
JocKey Club was occupied
and several
rushed there to get the horses
out. An later
snowed that two and John
a boy, were miss-
an Italian
of s. story of a
near tire,
excited and Began throwing his
window
his mad desire to save his prop-
the father up his
months old in a mat-
tress and burled it out of the
window. The child crushed
to death in the fall to the pave-
DANGEROUSLY WOUNDED.
A Tragedy Sunday Night
Shocked the Entire
the Cause.
A -it tragedy
curred h.--re
which
snowed us
drew of the
ling the
on
town on
against th
Th- .
Star., .
Palm
lunch.
out
in
pi-
Mr.
he
in i.
i a i
one
sum-
tree
Mr. D. C
plans which
aldermen
The plans show that th. build-
will be a hands and
en one. It will occupy
the entire spice between the
market house and the Hooker
bu
ville Wholes-;
the walls
buildings.
The
white pr.
and be two .
One th
devoted t-i
of our citizens are
wounded, and the
recovery very much
; occurred a little
I ck. Messrs. J. H.
I A. B. Kittrell were
he counter in Harper's
Jen partaking a
the Green-
C . a id will
if huh of these
will
will
Jurors for November Term Court.
First W Bailey, D
W B F Tripp, J W Gay,
A V Lang, Elisha D
F Lang, Peter Brown, James L
Little, L Ii Brown, H R Johnson,
F L Andrews. L J D
J W Flake, J F Cox, W
E J R Gay.
Second week-D W
J Harvey Boyd, W L Bryant, C
L Thigpen. S M Crisp, Isaac
A J T A Duke,
C D Whitehurst, M M Ewell, J F
Evans, C P Moore, W K
James Brown, It F E F
Williams. T H Bowers, C A
Bridgers.
When he referred to education-
matters he said that there was
no county that gave better illus-
of this subject than Pitt,
for this county had made such
progress educationally that it
stood at or near the head of the
list in the State. He said Pitt
had the best county
dent in North Carolina, and that
our school buildings and
advantages were as good
as any. He complimented the
community spirit prevailing in
Greenville and Pitt county and
referred to securing the Eastern
Training school as a result of
our people working together.
Mr. Small's speech was an
excellent one and he showed
plainly why every voter should
support the Democratic ticket on
the 3rd of November.
Several of the Democratic
county candidates occupied seats
on the stage, but none of them
made speeches, all of the time
being given to Mr. Small.
will you.
Fine Potatoes.
Mr. W. F. Carroll, of
township, is taking the lead in
sweet potato raising this season.
Tuesday he brought The
tor eight potatoes of the Norton
yam variety, the combined
weight of which were pounds.
Beats Them All.
The statesman the speaking.
The editor booms the town,
lever does the popping,
The damsel turns him down.
The poet does the dreaming,
The farmer clears the woods.
The eagle does the screaming.
But. the stork delivers the goods.
Ex.
Subscribe for The Reflector.
A Toast.
Here's to you, dear ladies,
May you live one thousand years,
To sort keep things lively,
In this vale of human tears.
And here's that we may live,
One thousand years, too.
Did we say thousand
No, a less a day.
we should hate to live on earth
Marriage Licenses.
of Deeds K. Williams
has issued licenses to the follow-
couples since last
WHITE.
Ollie Van and
Ward.
V. E. Staten and Bertha A.
Patrick.
Moses J. Harris and Pennie V.
Tripp.
COLORED.
Ernest Jones and Hannah
Hines.
Peter Bagley and Jennie John-
son.
by
Nashville, Tenn., Oct.
Colonel R. Z. and Captain
Rank in, Trenton, are
the latest victims of night rider
outrages- Rankin was hanged
and into his swaying body a
number of shots were fired, the
shots causing death. Taylor is
missing, Governor Patterson has
offered reward, and has
abandoned his political campaign.
Two companies of militia are on
the way to the scene of the
Foot Lake, in the
part of the
State, and two other companies
are under arms at Memphis.
Governor Patterson reached
Union City, miles from the
scene, about midnight and in
response to his telegraphic or-
a company of militia-
men met him at the station.
Armed posses are the
s vamps and woods in the vicinity
of the lake but no trace of Taylor
or the night riders was found
The two were taken
from Ward's hotel, at Walnut
Log, carried into the woods, and
while one was hanged and shot,
the other was made away with
in some manner.
. White was on the
someone on the
to him to come in
up to the counter
to Mr. Kit-
calling him, which
plied that he had
Ir. White drew a
. Mr. Kittrell
air and held it out
to ward off the
then drew a
J three shots, the
lid, one entering
K breast above the
u i i striking him
id. Mr. Kittrell then
. the from Mr.
. s hand shot the latter
in the with the
w. upon, felling him to the
floor.
Mr. then handed the
pistol to Policeman
who the room.
Both men are dangerously
wounded. At this writing Mr.
Kittrell is said to be sinking and
it is not thought he can live
many hours. Mr. White was
taken on the morning Norfolk
Southern train to the hospital
in Washington.
It is a most lamentable tragedy
and is deeply regretted by all
people of the community,
reason can be assigned for the
difficulty except that Mr. White
was drinking and supposed he
had been Re-
Monday.
i city hall will
brick front
in height.
ground fl -or will
quarters for the
and h and
the other side arranged in offices
for city clerk and
tend, of the water and
plants and storage room for
electrical A stairway
will i . up from the enter of
the front to the story
in which will mayor's
office and court room, for
the water and commission,
and a large hall for the firemen
and other meetings.
Work will begin on the build-
in a short
will you.
Mr. John S. Harris Dead.
We with regret of the
death of Mr. John S. Harris,
which occurred at his home in
Falkland township on Tuesday,
after a long illness. Mr. Harris
was about years of age. and
Candidates at
Fountain, N. C. Oct. 1908
The Democratic candidates
spoke here yesterday to
one hundred voters. Every
argument made by the
cans here a few days ago was
successfully answered and they
Mr. Allen B. Kittrell, who
on Sunday night was shot by
Mr. C. F. White, died about
o'clock this morning. While
his death was expected, this
sequel to the awful tragedy
cast further gloom over the com-
Mr. Kittrell, was nearly
years age, a widower, and
leaves eight children, three sons
and five daughters. He also
leaves three brothers and two
brothers
L. L. Kittrell, of Winterville;
W. J. Kittrell, of Grifton, and
Charles Kittrell, of
township. He has been living
in Greenville the last few years
and conducted a grocery store
on Fifth street. He was a quiet,
peaceable, hard-working man
and had many friends.
The remains were carried to
his farm near Haddock's Cross
Roads for burial this afternoon.
Daily Reflector, Tuesday.
is survived by one daughter and
four sons. He was truly a good
man, and one of county's
y best Among his
neighbors ho known as a
Ni man of exceeding kindness and
generosity, and was never known
to turn a deaf oar to an appeal
for charity or help. He was one
who loved uprightness, and his
own life was marked with the
highest honor and integrity.
His death is indeed a loss to the
county.
Magazine
requires the services of a man in
Greenville to look alter expiring
subscriptions and to secure new
business by means of special
unusually effective, position per-
prefer one with
but would consider any
applicant with good natural
salary per day,
with commission option. Ad-
dress, with R. C.
Peacock, Room Success
Magazine Bldg., New York.
will
The curtain has fallen over
the terrible tragedy that occurred
were defied to prove the false in Harper's Palm Garden Sunday
Wilson Firm Makes Assignment.
Wilson, N. C, Oct. Cut
Brown, dealers in men's
statements made by them.
Much good was done by the
speaking, and this section of Pitt
county will give the same old
fashioned Democratic vote.
For Sale-A four-horse farm,
. one mile south of Greenville. It
furnishings, made an is fine tobacco land and has three
to Alvin Clark for the benefit of houses. For particulars
their creditors. The and see John W. Tucker.
we to live their
And learn th, t you had passed m not yet given OUt.
night, and both participants
have passed into the beyond.
Mr. A. B. Kittrell, as has
ready been stated, died here at
o'clock Tuesday morning, and
a little past o'clock that after-
noon the wires brought the in-
formation from the hospital at
Washington that Mr. C P. White
was also dead. His mother,
sister and one brother had gone
train and were with him when
the end came. The remains
were brought to Greenville on
the evening train.
Charles F. White was years
of age and eldest son of Capt.
and Mrs. C. A. White.
the parents he is survived by
three brothers, Messrs. S. T,
J. B. and R. C. White, and one
sister, Mrs. J. L- Fleming.
The funeral took place at
o'clock this afternoon, interment
being in Cherry Hill cemetery.
Services was conducted at the
grave by Rev. M. T. Plyler.
The pall bearers Messrs.
R. C. Flanagan, J. C. T in, H.
W- Whedbee, J. L. A.
H. Taft, F. M. Wooten, R. L,
to Washington on the morning Carr and T- R. Moore.
if-
. o
POOR PRINT





Department Stores
E II A N I. B
SEE
MOSELEY BROS.
FOR
Life, Fire and Accident
INSURANCE
PROMPT AND CAREFUL
GIVEN TO ALL BUSINESS.
Pi
H g
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The Bank of Greenville,
AT GREENVILLE, N. C.
At the close of business, September MOB.
Liabilities.
Velvets, Linings,
Dress Goods Wash Goods,
Flannels
Linen;.
Quilts, Com-
forts, Notions, Buttons,
Em-
Ribbons,
men's Veiling,
Patterns, Art Goods, Hand-
L;, Women's Hosiery,
Men's Hosiery,
Hosiery, Women's Under
wear, Underwear,
underwear. Fan-
. I.-. Goods,
. . S . 1- is
. . Shoes, Men's
ii Men's Hats
Boy's Hats. Ken's Caps,
Boy's Caps, Corsets, Over-
alls, Lacks Waists,
Waists, Petticoats.
Fancy Knit Goods, Infant's
Wear, Furs,
Misses Children's
Jackets, Draperies,
Window Shades,
Table Oil cloth. Floor Oil
cloth. Linoleum, Bags, Suit
Cases. Mattresses, Furniture
Chairs, Cradles, Baby Car-
Rubber Goods, Toys
Clocks, Silverware, Cutlery,
and JO c. Goods,
Brae, China, Glass Ware,
Crockery, Lamps, Tinware,
Enameled
ware, Oil Stoves
Baskets, Candy, Groceries,
Butter, Cheese, Fish, Pro-
visions. Cheroots, .
FAKIRS OF
One Who
INDIA.
Our Buyer is now in
markets. New
i- h
Tortured Upon
Bed cf
In India there arc numerous pen-
of different sects, called Fa-
etc., who make a vow to
live at the expense of the public
and travel about begging, the
York Press. The are
cunning, hypocritical
and impudent They do all sorts
of silly stunts and are altogether a
disgusting lot. Sometimes they as-
in troops of or
levying contributions wherever they
The total number of
in British India is about
Among the various brands or
breeds of you will Una the
the
the the
and the genuine
of the more
. ,. the hold
i-,.,. i in the
and have assisted the Brit-
government as far as they dared
in nutting them to work. On the
other hand, some rich property
owners treat the frauds with the
greatest e.
A few years ago there was a Fa-
who lay on a bed of spikes
and took the name of
which means nos es
or At the
ago of ten this man began a life of
i . .
M l . ,
, ; ho v, at I
to another. At one town n
shut himself no in a cell, to
do tor twelve i here
b until vermin I
hi. and left marks which la
ed life. The rajah,
pit, him. opened the
CENTRAL
Barber Shop
Edmond Fleming props.
Resources
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts secured
All other stocks, bonds
and Mortgages
Banking houses,
and fixtures
Demand loans
Due from
Cash items
Gold coin
Silver coin, including
minor coin currency
National bank notes
and other U. S. notes 13,105.00
Located in main business sec
of the town- Four chairs
in operation and each one
sided over by a skilled barber-
Our place is inviting, razors
sharp. Our towels clean. knowledge and belief.
thank you for past patronage i Subscribed and sworn
and ask you to call when fore this 28th day
good work is wanted. bomber,
ROBT. I. HOWARD,
stock 25,000.00
Surplus fund 25,000.00
Undivided profits, less
current expenses and
taxes paid 16,065.64
Notes and hills
counted 2,600.00
Bills payable 41,000.00
Time Mr,
of 81,407.98
01,865.71 118,363.64
Cashiers checks
outstanding 1,054.18
Total
2,400.00
8.072.32
11,378.01
36,391.70
8,660.06
516-00
1,424.21
Total
State of Carolina, County of Pitt,
I L. Little, cashier of the above-named bank, do sol-
-ear that the above fig,
to be
of
TOBACCO
IT COST MORE
BUT THEN
IT LASTS TWICE AS LONG
mos. am. c.
Notary Public.
O. MOVE,
A. ANDREWS,
W. B.
Directors
roe by
S- M.
H. A.
i Skinner, J
WHEDBEE
D-l-X-l-E
Moving Pictures
Open from 7-11
Adults, Children,
but are
.,,; . . . be of real
.- . our family
you away
Mutt s Life your
It will by your
H.
Ha. is- will explain.
GOOD WATER
MEANS
Good Health
Analytical tests made by the Director
TORY OF HYGIENE under the control of the NORTH CAROLINA
BOARD OF HEALTH at RALEIGH, N. C, shows that the water
supplied by the Greenville water works is PURE.
For the protection of patrons samples of water are submitted monthly
and the reports of the . are always on file in the office of the
Commission for inspection.
Discard the old well or pump and get the benefit of the advantages
offered by the Water Department. It not only means that you will
always have good water to drink, but it will prove a great convenience.
Nothing to do but turn the spigot. No more pumping and g.
We furnish gallons per month for and allow you a dis-
count of per cent, if bill is paid by 5th of month succeeding month in
which service is rendered. This makes the cost only cents.
Information gladly furnished to anyone regarding cost making
tap, etc
L. D. WADE, Superintendent.
and him
forth. T.-.-
was furious this net
j-u
Banks
. j places to bank,
r v the United States laws, as
j well as most rigid govern-
I supervision, make them
so. w w
IN WHAT KIND
MENTAL COM-
YOU NOW IN-
YOUR SPARE
NOT BRING IT
BANK
WILL BE PER-
AND PROMPT-
YOU JUST AS
AS WHEN WE
YOUR
THIS IS A
FACT
NOT
HOT
AIR
OF DOPE OR
ARE
VESTING
CHANGE WHY
TO THE NA-
WHERE IT
SAFE
LY REPAID TO
CHEERFULLY
R E
IT.
i-
.
. f he-
I .
n on
was nothing to I
a bed
he cried, and the rajah,
lest the curses of the
should his
complied. And this bed f
became a sort of triumphal
car for He sot out i
on
This bank has been established over two years, during
which time it has served the banking public faithfully and
built up a large and prosperous business. The best service
is none to good for both our town and country customers.
Our Stockholders and Directors are responsible, well-to-do bus-
men.
Therefore in the selection of your bank, have permanency
in view and establish yourself for your present and future well
being with a good sound bank.
The National Bank of Greenville
Capital Stockholders liability
F. G, JAMES, Pr. J. P. V-Pres.
F. J. FORBES, Cashier.
Subscribe to The Daily Reflector,
journeys
drawn on this awful bed nil around
the country for thousands of pules,
the poor worshiping him
as a pod. He traveled in this way
for thirty-five
was, however, not con-
tent with the supposed merit of his
self torture on the of spikes.
tried to pat himself to greater
by causing water t; fall on his
head day and night in the cold sea-1
son, drop by drop, from a pot with
holes in it placed over him, so that
he might constantly uneasy, and
when the hot weather came ha
himself in an opposite man-
by causing logs of wood to he
kept burning around him to make
his sufferings from the heat greater.
This wretch never earned a rupee.
was the most re-1
of all Ho held his.
arms over his head until the
of the blood plopped. His
nails grew to he talons, and his skin
seemed to grow to the bone, so that
the joints refused to work, he
could never take his arms down
Ho sat with his legs tucked
under him till they became useless.
Every day ho was brought out to a
and seated upon a
skin. The people came aim
supplied him with the most delicate
food.
Th Spider's Appetite.
The spider has a tremendous
petite, and his
all human competition. A scientist
who carefully noted a spider's con-
of food in twenty-four
hours concluded that if the spider
were built proportionately to the
human scales ho would eat day-
break, a small
gator, by a. m. a lamb, by n. m.
a young by o'clock a
sheep and would finish up with a
lark pie in which there were
birds. Yet, in spite of his
appetite, a spider has won-
power of refraining from
food, and one has been known to
live for ten months when absolutely
deprived of food. A beetle lived in
a similar state of for
three years.
The Greenville Banking Trust Co.
DEPOSITED BY
John Doe
Greenville, N. C Aug. 1908.
PLEASE LIST EACH CHECK SEPARATELY.
Currency.
Silver
Gold.
CHECKS AS FOLLOWS
Greenville
Total
430.00
ARE ENDORSED.
than a Deposit receipt given by
The GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST CO.
A DELIGHTFUL DEAD NEVER DIED.
For of
At the home of Mrs. J. Had-
dock, of Winterville, Mrs. M.
Louisa Cox, on the 76th
of her birthday, entertained
the club most
selected of
Romans for the Bible reading,
after which was sung one of her
favorite hymns, Sweet
the Name of Jesus Sounds.
Mrs. A. D. Cox then offered a
suitable prayer.
The minutes of last meeting
were read, and some unfinished
business attended to. After this
the program for the evening
Care o. the
by Mrs. B. T. Cox. A
Man's by Mrs A. D.
Cox. Clean by Mrs.
Maggie Butt.
A letter from Mrs. Cox to the
club was read by Mrs.
J. D. Cox, after the part-
hymn was sung.
As a motion for adjournment
was offered, an invitation came
for all to repair to the dining
room, where fruit, punch, cake
and other nice were
served
table was beautifully
orated with flow, is and
cakes, prepared mostly by the
hostess herself.
Cox is one of the oldest
and most exemplary Christian
of this Sb
has been noted through her
whole life for the sacrifices
Democratic at Places I
in Pitt County.
Science Has the Fact of
a Future Existence.
The only satisfactory answer
to the momentous question,
are the dead alive must be
founded upon facts, says Alfred
Russel Wallace, in the November
During the last sixty
years evidence has been
in part of the world
which affords demonstration that
the so-called dead have never
really died at all, but have passed
into a new and higher stage of
existence. Many of these are
able to communicate with us, and
most of them assure us that
when they wake from the sleep
we call they find them-
much more alive than
ever they were before. And
this is only what we might ex-
for we all feel that our
mental faculties are to so e ex-
tent clogged and stifled by the
garment of flesh, and that only
when in the most perfect health
do our higher faculties attain
their fullest expression.
This rapid entrance on a state
of spiritual well-being and hap
pines seems to be very general
those who have led
good and lives,
but is by no means universal.
who have led or
lives, or have given way
tr passions of and kind,
have a different awakening, into
a world of or gloom,
often of solitude for r. longer or
period and infinitely
in the ac-
previous
Hut whatever germs of good
are In them are ultimately
The Democratic candidates for
the legislature and the various
offices will address the
people of Pitt county at the fol-
lowing times and
Fountain, Tuesday Oct. 20th,
at p. in.
Arthur, Wednesday Oct. 21st,
at p. m.
Winterville. Thursday, Oct.
22nd, at p. m.
Falkland, Friday. Oct. 23rd. at
p. m
Black Jack, Saturday, Oct.
24th, at p. m.
Stokes, Wednesday. Oct 28th,
at p. m.
Grimesland, Thursday Oct.
29th, at p. m.
X Roads, Friday Oct.
30th, at p. m.
Grifton. Friday, Oct. 30th. at
Friday. Oct. 30th
at night
Ayden. Saturday. Oct. 31st, at
p. m.
Bethel. Saturday, Oct. 31st. at
p. m.
The following
speakers will be with the
dates
Hon. R. B. Glenn, at Winter-
ville. , T
Hon. J. H. Small and Hon. J.
B. Grimes at Grimesland.
Hon. J. B. Grimes at
dine.
Hon. J. H. Small at Grifton.
Hon. J. B. Grimes at Bethel.
F. C. Harding, Chairman.
W. L. Brown,
ESTABLISHED 1875-
S M SCHULTZ
Wholesale and retail
and Furniture Dealer. Cash
paid for Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed
Oil Turkeys, Eggs, OaK
Bedsteads, Mattresses, etc.
Suits, Baby Carriages, Go-Carts.
Parlor suits Tables, Lounges.
Safes, P. and G ail Ax
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Cheroots, Henry George
Cigars, Canned Cherries, Peach-
es, Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup,
Jelly. Moat, Flour, Sugar, Coffee,
Soap, Lye Magic Food, Matches,
Oil. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds, Orange, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Prunes. Currants,
Raisins, Glass and
Wooden ware, Cakes and Crack
Macaroni. Best But
New Royal Sewing Machines
and numerous other goods.
Quality and quantity cheap
cash. Come see me.
whole n i the kind
for others, tr n helpers,
one another's
of spirit helpers, and
thenceforth progress toward a
S M
Not Quite;
Flow often you v
done
nail or screw or
. lacking. Have
P tool a ml prepared for
I Our
Is. Is a nod
P we will see tool
R not lack a
t article.
I Of v
I You get Harm s
t- Horse Goods
of
HEADQUARTERS
For FARM Supplies and HARDWARE.
Don't tail to see our machine.
W carry a lull stock, also a lull line pi re-
pairs tor our Machines only, which W
There is none bitter.
they always give perfect satisfaction.
would also call you attention to our .
Wire Fencing
A CAR LOAD JUST ARRIVED
We carry the best quality only of Lime
Cement sod keep a stock on hand. Hear in
mind that Baker Hart's is the place to
a Close Call.
higher and happier state,
In giving a farther description j pending on themselves
tn;,. ;. would
well to say speaK to m-;
that I may it really was
WHY COLDS RB DANGEROUS.
l,. . have contracted ordinary
a sermon high
us better and holier things. It t , a not
was a treat to meet with
Christian lady,
that went out to,; ,,,
all present. It was not SO MUCH tho that
the repast th joy, bu. to w
fellowship of kindred minds.
It is sweet to behold one who
is fast the la
down of burdens with
unwavering trust in Him who
directs all our plans.
To add to tho beauty of this. remarkable cures wee.
Mrs. Cox's letter in w. sale by Jno. L.
Oct. 7th, i and ward
Dear
Mrs Via I. Croom, the widely
months I with a
New Discovery. J
Si. It. and three bottles
I a complete cure. The of
life cough and remedy,
throat is wide.
U Wooten's drug store.
and Trial bottle tree.
j p.
Corey
. -Hi i
; . meas es cough arc
.-IV n more to
a cold.
Use from that more real
a cold than any of the
mm . ailments. The and
to cute a cold is to
Cough lie
many remarkable cures by
We meet time to time
to talk and to
life and the training of children
and I have just a few words I
wish to say to you. If you
would have a happy home, be
kind, patient and loving and
teach your children humility,
love and obedience.
Provoke not your children to
wrath, but bring them up in the
fear and of the
teach them honesty, truth and
nobility, for these there
is no true character and if you
would help them add stars to
their crowns, teach them to love
the Lord and obey His command-
. .
Today you meet with me to
celebrate my 76th birthday and
I feel that the Lord has blessed
me in many ways, all through
my life and praise His name
well with me as it
is. wish you all a very pleas
ant meeting and hope that love
will reign supreme in our hearts
for love is the fulfilling of the
law. t
In the sunset of my life. I
would ask a question of you soft
low Will you love me now that
that I am old and feeble
May the help us and
grant all that is best for us.
Yours with many good wishes.
and a heart full of love.
If, Louisa Cox.
Butt, reporting
THAN ENOUGH IS TOO
MUCH
To maintain health, a mature man or
woman needs just enough food to re-
the waste and supply and
heat. The habitual consumption
of mire food than is
poses Is the prime cause of stomach
troubles, rheumatism and disorders of
the kidneys. If troubled with
revise your diet, let reason and
not appetite control and take a
U Stomach and
Republican Canvas.
The Republican candidates for
the legislature and the various
county offices will address the
people of Pitt county at. the fol-
lowing times and
Oct at o'clock.
Stokes, Oct. o'clock.
Bell X Roads, Oct. at
o'clock.
Bethel, Oct. 2-1, at o'clock.
Winterville. Oct. at
o'clock.
X Roads, Oct at
o'clock.
Oct. at night.
Grimesland, Oct. at
o'clock.
Prominent speakers will be
with the candidates at each
All are invited irrespective
party affiliation.
R. C. Flanagan,
Fernando Ward. Sec.
Tax Notice,
I will attend the following
places en dates named for the
purpose of collecting taxes due
for the year
C r. Store,
Tuesday, Oct.
day. Oct.
Bell's X Roads, t
Friday. Oct.
Black Sat-
Stokes, Saturday.
Oct.
All persons owing are
notified to meet me and pay
the same. L. W.
Sheriff.
Oct. 6th, 1908.
Wei Weber j
Style with and
with player, ,
Vow, Mid club piano. .
ORGANS
MILLER
Tho will probably be;
In simply a pi mo,
Will be playable by hand or by the,
mechanical attachment at It la
the moat popular piano m the
today. .
For best piano at any and on
easy terms, call or
A. J.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
It want HORSE to trot
fast and strong buy
hill assortment always in stock to choose
the highest, in feet there is none be.-
I it being guaranteed per cent. pure.
It you wish to build it is to i t
to see w as we are in position to look alter
ever need. forget that our line
General Hardware is kept complete with
the very best quality goods. U e can
your orders from B box tax to a car load
nails. Give us a call.
Baker
NORFOLK
DIVISION PASSENGER DEPARTMENT.
Fitzgerald, Kerr,
Goldsboro, N. C,
Special North
. C, 1308.
The Southern Railway will sell
occasion, at the following rates, aim I. in l
one admission to the Fair Grounds.
Washington K, Frederick,
Far-v b
Fares for children live years age r
half of the above fares. under yo m
five v. ;. n .
sale October th to 17th, I.
it October 19th,
H. C.
Wood's Liver Medicine in liquid
for malaria, and fever, .
the r, y and bladder, brings
quick relief to biliousness,
bottle contains
quantity of ft BUS sue FWd
S M by Jno. L-
Hay, Oats
What Satisfaction and Ease of Mind Disability insurance Gives. You Would
Never Without it.
of W. B. He will sell
you Better Feed and More for Less
Money any man in town.
READ
Where Bullets Flew.
David of N. V. a
vet- ran -f the civil war, who lost a
Electric have done is Wort
more than live hundred do to, me.
much money for a
bid case of stomach V
purpose. I then
they me. M
. tonic, and they keep M
BUS at JnO. L- b
drug store.
Big Crowds.
were paid
Barred in of Gentler Sex.
Little Francis, seven years old,
was being questioned, in the
parlor, by oldest sister's beau
as to what constituted his studies
at school. writing.
spelling and arithmetic,
promptly replied the little fellow.
you know anything about
vulgar asked.
replied the indignant
child; know they are some-
thing you oughtn't to be talking
about before Nov-
ember
N C.
September the
Mr. H. A. White,
Greenville, N. C
Sh During the summer you prevailed to
Cotton seed Meal, nuns.
Brand, Chicken Hominy, Cracked
Corn, corn Meal and all kinds of
Feed.
The check . .-.--. ,
also covering cost operation is very much
highly recommend the Maryland and your, d . the prompt U
rendered.
Very truly
L.
to.
There
to the State fair
at Raleigh Thursday, and
people witnessed the game of
foot ball between the A.
;, control and take a M. College and
Chamberlain's Stomach and n University. The score Of
Tablets you will soon be all to in favor of
again. For by Jno. L. .
Wooten and Coward Wooten. I A. OX
FOR CHAPPED SKIN.
Chapped skin whether on the hinds
or face be cured m one b
a Salve. It IS
for burns
and For sale by L. Woo
ten and Coward Wooten.
Arrangements have been made
with the Western Union
graph Company for the returns
the National and State
to be received here on the
night of Nov.
Subscribe for The Reflector.
NORFOLK, VA.
Cotton Buyers, Brokers
in Stocks, Cotton.
and Provisions,
PRIVATE WIRE
to New York. Chicago
and New Orleans.
r ft.
PERRY CO.
NORFOLK, VA
Cotton Factors and handlers of
Ties and Bags.
and shipments
solicited
If are a sufferer pile, Man
Zan will with
ST first application. Guaranteed
S by L, Wooten,
Hardware
Dev,, and
farm
Edge Tools.
FOR CHRONIC
-While in the army in KM I
taken with .,
M of South ft.
since many r. but
Mr AW-Miles, of
me to try Chamber am a
Ch era and
bottle of stopped H ones.
J. U and Coward
Wooten.
NEW MARKET FIRM.
We have leased the front stall, west
Bide of h in market
and can reeds -n
beef, meats. Bah, r
promptly anywhere
Persons having beef-cattle or h.
to Fell would do well to see
FLEMING or. CO
Phone, No.
POOR PRINT
V.
-V





Department Stores
SEE
MOSELEY BROS.
FOR
Life, Fire and Accident
INSURANCE
I PROMPT AND CAREFUL
GIVEN TO ALL BUSINESS.
Vt
H IV D T
H C
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The Bank of Greenville,
AT GREENVILLE, N. C.
At the close of business, September
Velvets, Linings,
Dress Wash Goods,
White Flannels
Linen;. Toweling Domes
Blankets, Quilts, Com-
forts, Notions, Buttons,
Trimmings, Em-
Ribbons,
men's Veiling,
Patterns, Art Goods, Hand-
kerchiefs. Gloves,
Li, Women's Hosiery,
Men's Hosiery,
Hosiery, Women's Under
wear, Underwear,
underwear, Fan-
Let th Goods,
L-
i.-s,
. . Shoes, Men's
,.; Men's Hats,
Boy's Hats, Caps,
Boy's Cap, Corsets, Over-
alls, Waists,
Waists, Petticoats.
Fancy Knit Goods, Infant's
Wear, Furs, Jackets,
Misses Children's
Jacket, Draperies,
Window Shades,
Table Oil cloth. Floor Oil
cloth. Linoleum, Bags, Suit
Cases. Mattresses, Furniture
Chairs, Cradles, Baby Car-
Rubber Goods, Toys
Clocks, Silverware, Cutlery,
and JO c. Goods,
China, Glass Ware,
Crockery, Lamps, Tinware,
Enameled
ware, Oil Stoves
Baskets, Candy, Groceries,
Butter, Cheese, Fish, Pro
visions, Cheroots, ,
Snuff.
FAKIRS OF INDIA.
Our Buyer is now in the
markets. New
f r t t
Vi
v, .
,.
One Who Tortured Upon
Bed cf
In India there are- numerous pen-
of different sects,
etc., who make a vow to
live at the expense of the public
travel about begging, says the
Now York Press. The are
conning, hypocritical
and impudent. They all sorts
of silly stunts and are altogether a
distrusting t- Sometimes they as-
in troops of or
levying contributions wherever they
The number
n British India is about
Among the various brands or
breeds of you will find the
the
the Use
and Hie genuine
t . ,,, ,;.,. i nod
. , the Brahmans, hold
ti .,. i ants in the
tempt and have assisted the Brit-
government as tar as they dared
in putting them work. On the
other hand, some rich property
owners treat the frauds with the
greatest reverence.
a few years ago there was a Fa-
v. lay on a bod of spikes
and took the name of boa-
which means .
or At the
of ten this man began a life
n . . .
I . M. . . ,
-I . i
a fa,. , I
to another. At one town he
shut himself up in a cell. vowing to
do tor twelve years,
ho remained until vermin I
hi; and loft marks which la I
ed through life. The rajah,
pity h in. opened the door of
cell and him step forth.
poor wretch was furious at this
f and heaped
the .
op turn.
To. . was nothing to
we a
CENTRAL
Barber Shop
Edmond Fleming props.
Located in main business sec-
of the town. Four chairs
in operation and each one
sided over by a skilled barber-
Our place is inviting, razors
sharp. Our towels clean.
thank you for past patronage
and ask you to call again when
good work is wanted.
Resources-
Loans and discounts
Overdrafts secured 1,060.1
All other stocks, bonds
and Mortgages
Banking houses,
and fixtures 8.072.32
Demand loans
Due from 36,391.70
Cash items
Gold coin 610.00
Silver coin, including
minor coin currency 1,424.21
National hank notes
and other S. notes 13,106.00
Total
Liabilities.
stork 25,000.00
Surplus fund 25,000.00
Undivided profits, less
current expenses
taxes paid 16,065.64
Notes and hills
2,600.00
Bills payable 41,000.00
Time
of 21,497.98
91,865.71 113,363.64
Cashiers cheeks
outstanding 1,054.18
Total 224,083.41
RED EYE
TOBACCO
IT COST
BUT THEN
IT LASTS TWICE AS LONG
THUS ass. tn c.
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I James L. Little, cashier of the above-named bank, do sol-
swear that the statement is true to the best of my
knowledge and belief. JAMES L. LIT I LB, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to
I fore me, this 28th day of I I. Q.
A. ANDREWS,
r BOOT. I. HOWARD. W. B.
Notary Public Directors
FOR ELI
S- M.
H.
WHEDBEE
K C
D-l-X-l-E
Moving Pictures
Open from 7-II
Adults, Children,
but are
be of real
our family
. you away
Life your
It. will d by your
is.- will explain.
GOOD WATER
MEANS
Good Health
Analytical tests made by the Director of
TORY OF HYGIENE under the control of the NORTH CAROLINA
BOARD OF HEALTH at RALEIGH, N. C, shows that the water
supplied by the Greenville water works is PURE.
For the protection of patrons samples of water are submitted monthly
and the reports of the . are always on in the office the
Commission for inspection. ,.,. j ,
Discard the old well or pomp and get the benefit of the advantages
offered by the Water Department. It not only means that you
always have good water to drink, but it will prove a great convenience.
Nothing to do but turn the spigot. No more pumping and -g.
We furnish gallons per month for and allow you a dis-
count of JO per cent, if bill is paid by 5th of month succeeding month in
which service is rendered. This makes the cost only cents.
Information gladly furnished to anyone regarding cost malting
tap, etc.
L. D. WADE, Superintendent.
Banks
,; . . j . places to bank,
I far tr United States laws, as
well as most rigid govern-
supervision, make them
so. W W
IN WHAT KIND
MENTAL COM-
YOU NOW IN-
YOUR SPARE
NOT BRING IT
BANK
WILL BE PER-
AND PROMPT-
YOU JUST AS
AS WHEN WE
YOUR
OF DOPE OR
ARE
VESTING
CHANGE WHY
TO THE NA-
WHERE IT
SAFE
LY REPAID TO
CHEERFULLY
R E
IT. j j
i,. i
,.;.,
This bank has been established over two years, during
which time it has served the banking public faithfully and
built up a large and prosperous business. The best service
is none to good for both our town and country customers.
Our Stockholders and Directors are responsible, well-to-do bus-
men.
Therefore in the selection of your bank, have permanency
in view and establish yourself for your present and future well
being with a good sound bank.
The National Bank of Greenville
Capital
Stockholders liability
F. G. JAMES, J- P. V-Pres.
F. J. FORBES, Cashier.
Subscribe to The Daily Reflector.
be cried, and the rajah,
I lest the of the
should blight his
complied. And this bed of
spikes became a sort of triumphal
for He sot out
on long journeys and was
drawn on this awful bed all around
the country for thousands of miles,
the poor worshiping him
as a pod. He traveled in tins way
for thirty-live
was, however, not con-
tent with tin. supposed merit of his
self torture -n the lied of spikes.
Ho tried to put himself to
pain by causing water to fall on his
day and night in the cold sea- j
son, by drop, from a pot with
holes in it placed over him, so that
he might constantly uneasy, and j
when the hot weather came he
titled in an opposite man
by causing lops of wood to K-1
kept burning around him to make
his sufferings from the heat greater.
This wretch never earned a rupee.
was the most re-,
of all He held his
arms over his head until the
of the blood stopped.
nails prow to and his skin
to prow to the bone, so that
the joints refused to work, and he
could never take his arms down
again. Ho sat with his lops tucked
under him till they became useless.
Every day ho was brought out to a
nubile place and seated upon a
rein. The people came
supplied him with the most
food.
Th Appetite.
The spider has a tremendous
petite, and his gormandizing
all human competition. A
who carefully noted a spider's con-
of food in twenty-four
hours concluded that if the
were built proportionately to the
human scales ho would cat at day-
break, approximately, a small
gator, by a. m. a lamb, by a. m.
a young by o'clock a
sheep and would finish up with a
lark pie in which there were 1.0
birds. Yet, in spite of his
appetite, a spider has won-
power of refraining from
food, and has been known to
live for ten months when absolutely
deprived of food. A beetle lived in
a similar state of for
three years.
The Greenville Banking Trust Co.
DEPOSITED BY
John Doe
Greenville, N. C Aug. 1908.
PLEASE LIST EACH CHECK SEPARATELY.
Currency.
Silver
Gold.
CHECKS AS FOLLOWS
Greenville
Total I 430.00
AND
than a Deposit receipt given by
The GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST CO.
i IV
A DELIGHTFUL I SO-CALLED DEAD NEVER DIED.
Democratic at Varies PUces
in Pitt
For
ville.
At the home of Mrs. J. Had-
dock, of Winterville, Mrs. M.
Louisa Cox, on the 76th
of her birthday, entertained
the Mothers club most pleasant-
selected th. 8th chapter of
Romans for the Bible reading,
after which was sung one of her
favorite hymns, Sweet
the Name of Jesus Sounds.
Mrs. A. D. Cox then offered a
suitable prayer.
The minutes of last meeting
were read, and some unfinished
business attended to. After this
the program for the evening
Care o. the
by Mrs. B. T. Cox, A
Man's by Mrs. A. D.
Cox, Clean by Mrs.
Maggie Butt.
A letter from Mrs. Cox to the
club was read by Mrs.
J. D. Cox, after which the part-
hymn was sung.
As a motion for adjournment
was offered, an invitation came
for all to repair to the dining
room, where fruit, punch, cake
and other nice were
served
table was beautifully
orated with flow, is and
cakes, prepared mostly by the
hostess herself.
Mrs. Cox is one of the oldest
and most exemplary Christian
at this
has been noted through her
whole life for the sacrifices
for others, has obeyed the
one another's
In giving a further description
a, H
well to say speak to
that I may it really was
a sermon from to teach
us bettor and holier things. It
was a treat to with
humble, Christian lady, get,
the inspiration that went out to i
all present. It was not so
the repast th but
fellowship of kindred minds.
It is sweet to behold one who;
is ft
down of burdens with and
unwavering trust in Him who
directs all plans.
To add to the beauty of this
report take pleasure in giving
Mrs. Cox's letter in
Oct. 7th. 1908.
Dear
We meet time to time
to talk and to home
life and the training of children
and have just a few words I
wish to say to you. If you
would have a happy home, be
kind, patient and loving and
teach your children humility,
love and obedience.
Provoke not your children to
wrath, but bring them up in the
fear and of the Lord;
teach them honesty, truth and
nobility, for without these there
is no true character and if you
would help them add stars to
their crowns, teach them to love
the Lord and obey His command-
. .
Today you meet with mo to
celebrate my birthday and
I feel that the Lord has blessed
me in many ways, all through
my life and I praise His name
it is as well with me as it
is. wish you all a very pleas
ant meeting and hope that love
will reign supreme in our hearts
for is the fulfilling of the
In the sunset of my life, I
would ask a question of you soft
low Will you love me now
that I am old and
May the L-rd help us and
grant all that is best for us.
Yours with many good wishes,
and a heart full of love.
M. Louisa Cox.
Maggie Butt, reporting
MORE THAN ENOUGH IS TOO
MUCH
To maintain health, a mature man or
woman needs just enough food to re-
pair the wast. and supply and
heat. The habitual consumption
of more food than is
poses Is the prime cause of stomach
troubles, and disorders
the kidneys. If troubled
revise
not appetite control and take a
doses of Stomach and
Liver Tablets and you will noon be all
again. For sale by Jno. L.
Wooten and Coward Wooten.
Science Hat the Fact of
a Future Existence.
The only satisfactory answer
to the momentous question,,
are the dead alive must be
founded upon facts, says Alfred
Russel Wallace, in the November
During the last sixty
years evidence has been
in part of the world
which affords demonstration that
the so-called dead have never
really died at all, but have passed
into a new and higher stage of
existence. Many of these are
able to communicate with us, and
most of them assure us
when they wake from the sleep
we call they find them-
selves much more alive than
ever they were before. And
this is only what we might ex-
for we all feel that our
mental faculties are to so e ex-
tent clogged and stifled by the
garment of flesh, and that only
when in the most perfect health
do our higher faculties attain
their fullest expression.
This rapid entrance on a state
of spiritual well-being and hap
pines seems to be very general
among those who have led
good and lives,
but is by no means universal.
Those who have led selfish or
lives, or have given way
to passions of and kind,
i into
m e- i v. .-.-
have a different awakening, into
a world of or gloom,
often of solitude for r. longer or
shorter period infinitely
varied in the surroundings, ac-
their previous
I But whatever germs of good
I are in them are ultimately
oped through the kind
of spirit helpers, and
thenceforth progress toward a
; and State, de
mainly on themselves
The Democratic candidates for
the legislature and the various
offices will address the
people of Pitt county at the fol-
lowing times and
Fountain, Tuesday Oct.
at p. m.
Arthur, Wednesday Oct. 21st,
at p. m.
Winterville, Thursday, Oct.
22nd, at p. m. . .
Falkland, Friday, Oct. 23rd, at
p. m
Black Jack, Saturday, Oct.
24th, at p. m.
Stokes, Wednesday, 28th,
at p. m.
Grimesland, Thursday Oct.
29th, at
X Roads, Friday Oct.
30th, at p. m.
Grifton, Friday, Oct. 30th, at
Friday. Oct. 30th
at night.
Ayden, Saturday. Oct. 31st, at
p. m.
Bethel. Saturday, Oct. 31st, at
p. m.
The following prominent
speakers will be with the
dates
Hon. R. B. Glenn, at Winter-
ville. ,
Hon. J. H. Small and Hon. J.
B. Grimes at Grimesland.
Hon. J. B. Grimes at
dine.
Hon. J. H, Small at Grifton.
Hon. J. B. Grimes at Bethel.
F. C. Harding, Chairman.
L. brown.
ESTABLISHED 1875-
S M SCHULTZ
Wholesale and retail
and Furniture Dealer. Cash
paid for Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed
Oil Turkeys, Eggs.
Bedsteads, Mattresses, etc.
Suits, Baby Carriages, Go Carts.
Parlor suits Tables. Lounges.
Safes, P. Ax
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
West Cheroots, Henry
Cigars, Canned Cherries, Peach-
es, Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup.
Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar, Coffee,
Soap, Lye Magic Food, Matches.
Oil, Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Prunes. Currants,
Raisins, Glass and
Wooden ware, Cakes and Crack-
Macaroni. Best But-
New Royal Sewing Machines
and numerous other goods.
Quality and quantity cheap
cash. Come see me.
HEADQUARTERS
For FARM Supplies and HARDWARE.
Don't to see our Mow imp machine.
We carry a lull stock, alto a full line pi re-
pairs tor our Machines only, is
There is none bitter,
they always give perfect satisfaction,
would also call you attention to our . .
Wire Fencing
A CAR LOAD JUST ARRIVED
We carry the best quality only Lime and
Cement and keep a stock on hand. Bear in
mind that Baker k Hart's is the place to buy
P A
Not Quite
to
t How you
thins done
nail or screw or
u, fer lacking. a
tool box be
Via
Is a
a we sec your tool
box doe not lack a ;
A;
You get Harm
horse Goods
of
hill assortment always in stock t choose
the highest, in fact there is none bet-
I it being guaranteed per cent pure.
It you to build it is to you j int c t
to see as are in position to look
your every need. Don't that our MM
General Hardware is kept complete with
the best, quality goods. W e fill
your orders- from a box of tax to a cur load c
nails. Give us a call.
Had a Close Call.
j p.
WHY COLDS i RE
colds from thorn without
t o, -lit of y kind, do n t for
. that cold aw
,,. , id chrome h
in a common cold t
a but cold
a the for tho reception
tho
,.,. . wish nil
i I a,
. ca whooping sough arc
mow to
child a cold. will
y-v IV. in more
lurks In a cold than in any other of the
common The and
way to cure a cold is to take
Chamberlain's Cough
many cures W
have made a staple
of trade over B
tho rid sale by Jno. L. Wooten
and ward Wooten.
Mr I, Croom, the widely
i it. and three bottles affected
la compete The
life saving cough and c-W and
lung throat healer is wide,
U drug store.
Trial bottle tree.
Corey
NORFOLK
DIVISION PASSENGER
ft Kerr,
Goldsboro, N. C, Oct.
Special North Carolina
Republican
The Republican candidates for
the legislature and the various
I county address the
people of Pitt county at the fol-
lowing times and
Oct at o'clock.
Stokes, Oct. at o'clock,
X Roads, Oct. at
o'clock.
Bethel, Oct. at o'clock.
Oct. at
o'clock.
X Roads, Oct at
o'clock.
Oct. at night.
Grimesland, Oct. at
o'clock.
Prominent speakers will be
with the candidates at each
All are invited irrespective
party affiliation,
K. C. Flanagan,
Fernando Ward. Sec.
Tax Notice.
I will attend the following
places en dates named for the
purpose of collecting taxes due,
for the year I
I q r. Store,
I Tuesday, Oct.
day, Oct.
Bell's X Roads, t
Friday. Oct.
Sat-
Saturday.
Oct.
AH persons owing taxes arc
notified to meet me and pay
the same. L. W. Tucker.
Sheriff,
Oct. 6th, 1908.
Weber
Style and
Em
Letter, with
piano. ,
ORGANS
MILLER
The will probably be
Ir simply a pi I
will be playable by hand or by the
mechanical at wilt It
the most popular In the
For beet piano at any and
easy terms, call on or write.
,,. . Slate r air-
Raleigh, w. C October 1908.
The Southern sell round
.- i , ., C return on account-
to Bale y- ;,.
the following rate, h h l
one to the
Fare
Wood's Medicine in liquid fern.
for malaria, chills and
the r, kid. and bladder, brings
relief to
Peasant to take
bottle
quantity of th;
relief. B M by Jno. L. Wooten,
A. J.
N. C.
It you want your HORSE to trot
fast and strong buy your
Oats
for children five years of age and
half of tho above under
TAT KM
H. C.
fit. i.
vi.-n ,.
What Satisfaction and Ease of Hind Dis
Never Without it.
ability Insurance
Gives, YOU Would
READ
of W. B. He will sell
you Better Feed and More j in
Money than any man m town, j
Greenville N C
September the
Mr. H. A. White,
Greenville, N. C
During the summer you to by
me
to
was
B Barred in of Gentler Sex.
Little Francis, seven years
was being questioned, in the
parlor, by his oldest sister's beau
as to what constituted his studies
at school. writing,
spelling and
U a- r
you know anything about;,. t-102. WU.
was asked. I VA
time alter purchasing MOW, ,, ;,
Place headquarters Corn, Hay, S
Oats, Cotton Seed Meal, Hulls, , . cost is very
Brand, Chicken Horn Cracked the Maryland and prompt
Com, com Meal and of; J truly
Feed.
-A
Where Bullets Flew.
Parker, of N. Y., a
vet ran of the civil war, lost a
foot Gettysburg;,
Bitters done worth
than live
much doctoring for a
bad case of stomach trouble to
I then tried Bitters.
and cured mo. now take
Z they keep me
and West Jno. U. Wooten a
Big Crowds.
There were paid
to the State fair
at Raleigh Thursday, and 5.000
people witnessed the game of
foot ball between the A.
M. College and George-
town University. The score of
the was to in favor of
M.
vulgar .
replied the indignant
child; know they are some-
thing you oughtn't to be talking
about before Nov-
ember
FOR CHAPPED SKIN.
Chapped skin on the hinds
one b
Salve. It
for sue taM
I. Woo
ten and Coward Wooten.
Arrangements have been made
with the Western Union
graph Company for the returns
of the National State
to be received here on the
night of Nov. 3rd.
Subscribe for The Reflector.
NORFOLK. VA.
Cotton Buyers, Brokers
in Stocks. Cotton. Grain
and Provisions,
PRIVATE WIRE
to New York. Chicago
and New Orleans.
-i
ii
liar
PERRY CO.
NORFOLK. VA.
Cotton Factors and handlers of
Bagging Ties and Bags.
and shipments
solicited
for
Lead and Zinc P Stove and
Edge Tools,
NEW MARKET FIRM.
If arc a sufferer pile. Man
Zan PUS will bring with
the first
by Jno. L. Wooten,
CHRONIC
in the army in
taken with chrome
I fa since tiled r. but
any
Mr A. W. Miles. f l's
me to try Chamber a I
era and U a one
stepped it st
For sate by J. U Wooten and Coward
Wooten.
We have the front stall sat
aid of hallway, in market now.
and can r
beef, meats, r
Ian an; here m
to sell would do well to
No. as.
CO.





-mm
mm
EASTERN REFLECTOR
PUBLISHED FRIDAY
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor
Entered as second matter Jan. 1907 at the at Greenville. N
C , Congress of March
Swill in to
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY OCT. 1908.
ELECTION FORECAST.
The New York Herald in
a forecast of the presidential
election gives the following as
the probable standing in the
States at present
Total vote in Electoral Col-
MS
Necessary t elect a
dent
Republican, reasonably
Democratic, reasonably surf
Doubtful Republican leanings
Doubtful Democratic leanings
In the balance
Taft to win must gel. doubt-
voles
Bryan Co win must get,
doubtful voles SI
V SiRE
California
Connecticut
Idaho
Illinois
Iowa
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
New Hampshire
New Jersey
North Dakota
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Island
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
The Raleigh Times says ex-
Judge Montgomery has brought
suit against Mr. Thomas Dixon
because of that letter. Accord-
to the way we look at it.
Judge Montgomery started the
matter and got only what might
have been expected when lie
stirred Mr. Dixon. But it is
not entirely a new thing for a
man to get the worst end of a
controversy and then try to even
by bringing suit for slander.
S. C, and Con-
cord, N. C, have both recently
had crimes that the
people of the respective
to a desire to engage in
lynching. We are glad that
prompt action on the part of
officials prevented the contour
the township in which this plated lynchings, yet the crimes
work is done shall bear every i in question are of entirely too
cent of the expense. We will frequent occurrence,
not ask you to take our w for ,
this, but respectfully refer you j throughout the
to the records of the board of, State regret to learn that Dr. B.
county commissioners, and to F. Dixon, Democratic candidate
the private laws of 1903, pasted State auditor, while alight-
a Democratic legislature, i in from a train at Greensboro,
Friday, made a misstep
road in Greenville township for
a period of from one to two years,
at the expense of the tax payers
of the w hole county.
Now. boys, you know this is
false. As a matter of fact, in
the place, tin- agreement is
that the convicts shall work on
this road not to exceed fifteen
days, and in the second place
the laws of North Carolina say
are spreading abroad
thousand sprained an ankle.
we expect to take up
ti
i later.
dent will prevent his making
further speaking tours.
The strongest evidence that
the Republican part j is unfit to
with the affairs of this
is the fact that they
continue their campaign of mis-
representations.
,.
There is not
as. that
. j is not false, and not a promise
that they would fulfill. It is a
ramble to see who can make
most noise, in case Taft
Many Democrats in Halifax
county seem to have been dis-
with the ticket
by tin- regular county
convention, and recently held
a mass meeting in which
ticket was named.
not look like a proper proceeding.
Total
be elected,
I can get the most
Alabama I
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
Missouri
Nevada
North Carolina
Oklahoma
South Carolina
Tennessee.
Texas
Virginia
I u no .
j postmasters know
I must work or they
will be.
lie The
that
forfeit their
to office. There are more
. now than
masters like to see. The more
Republicans the more
tit ion.
Each county's representation
in conventions is based on the
vote for governor in the county.
Lets make the vote for Kitchin
in Pitt county so large this
as to increase our number
of delegates in conventions for
the next four years.
We wonder where the Depart-
of Justice was when one
noted Federal criminal from
Pitt county, after having been
duly convicted, went to Wash-
City accompanied by
Candidate Taft, in his flying
trip through some of the South-
Slates last week, insinuated
that the people of the South
lack intelligence. They are in-
enough not to vote for
him.
Instead of succeed-
Taft after eight years of the
latter, as suggested by Son-in-
law there is more
likelihood of Parker succeeding
Bryan along about that time.
There is no question of elect-
the entire Democratic ticket
in Pitt county by a handsome
majority, but the thing to do is
to make the majority a record
breaker for the county.
When the time comes to vote
don't do any scratching. Walk
up to the ballot box and put in
whole Democratic ticket
and show that you are in favor
of good government.
The Republicans are organ-
dubs in different parts of
Pitt county. The last one re-
ported was organized at
u few ago with
members.
There were several prominent
speakers with the Republicans
at Fountain Tuesday, the most
prominent being W. J. Manning,
and W. R. Dixon, postmaster of
Farmville.
Treasurer Herman of
the Democratic national and succeeded in
the law
Total
i live committee, has mad
j. lie the donations to the .-
is fund up to October 9th, The campaign committees are
1- the names of all who ones needing funds,
dollars or more. Jas the government is said to be
J There were very few of the large running millions behind in meet-
doubtful, contributions, and the total from j expenses. The people will
sources, including try to put a stop to that kind of
Indiana
Kansas
New York
South Dakota
Total
DOUBTFUL,
Colorado
Montana
Nebraska
Ohio
Total
THE
Maryland
Delaware
Total
left over from the Denver when election
amounts to only comes.
1607.65. You will not hear of the j
committee letting The postmaster general has
their donations be made known
before the election.
Chairman Filer, of the State
executive commit-
tee, is figuring on ma-
in the State, and his
are not going to miss it
very far.
There is plenty of truth to talk
about to make an interesting
without either side
resorting to falsehoods. No
Roosevelt imitators are needed.
There would not be so much
lard times if people would just
make an effort to pay their
debts, instead Of seeing how
they can put off doing so.
You are going to hear
thing like Pitt county giving a
big Democratic majority on the
3rd of November.
Chairman Mack the light
is won, but we hope the boys
will not put up their guns until
the night of Nov. 3rd.
A FEARFUL ARRAIGNMENT.
Mr. Bryan and others have
sought to set the President of
the States in the proper
light before the public in
to his hypocrisy, double-
and course violation of
the proprieties of his great office,
but this has not been done so
as by the Republican
New York Sun. A copy of this
editorial from that paper, every
word of it justified by the facts,
should be in the hands of every
voter in the country, and to give
circulation and emphasis to it
The Observer is printing it con-
royal command that ex-
gentleman and trust-
worthy custodian. Mr. George R.
Sheldon, the treasurer of the
Republican national committee,
has visited White House to
sit as Saul at the feet of
lie and learn from an eminently
man how best to raise
the sinews of war. The White
House bulletin which narrates
the important meeting gives the
assurance that the President
laving pat some ginger in the
campaign most chemists would
call it dynamite will now
part vigor to a delicate patient
by a hypodermic injection of
greenbacks. The Washington
correspondent of our neighbor.
The Herald thus speaks of the
immediate effects of the active
of Mr. Roosevelt in
the of a comparatively
empty campaign
will In- something do-
in the region in which Mr.
Sheldon circulates in the very-
near future. Balance sheets of
the campaign fund, totals from
which are reported to the
indicate it has in-
creased heavily since lie took up
the matter of adding to the as-
sets. Several large
which have been hanging
back have been shaken down by
the President's vigorous
and have rattled into the
Roosevelt's qualifications
for this work are beyond
The past has shown that in
campaign funds he is
by ordinary conditions
of official propriety or common
decency.
but Theodore
would have sent for dear
to raise money on the
eve of an election, coupling with
the invitation the stimulating
assurance that few weeKs
hence, before I write my mes-
sage, shall get you to conic
down to discuss certain govern-
matters not connected with
and the insurance companies ac-
in use for his re-election,
could write a letter to his rival
candidate for presidential honors
so full of assumed indignation
and righteous horror at a truth-
accusation that his country-
men gladly accepted the false
answer for the true charge and
triumphantly carried the
and chief beneficiary of the
corporation contributions to a
great personal triumph as the
very exemplar of moral probity
and superior righteousness
but Theodore Roosevelt
could so steal livery of the
court of by clothing that
which closely bordered on exec-
blackmail in a cloudy veil
of smug hypocrisy
Mr.
special qualifications as a
collector we venture
the prediction that the
which will fellow his inter-
will not fall as thickly
as do the autumn leaves.
least the thinking portion
of the American people know
Mr. Roosevelt better that they
did four years
This is nothing short of
and of all it is de-
Observer.
What Will Do
in when ran
Bryan there were mil
if idle
The factories
H. E. Bryant, special
respondent of the Charlotte Ob-
server, who went along with the
Taft train reported the can-
S speeches on his Hying
trip through North Carolina, said
of Mr. Taft voice is weak
II
You Republicans are dirty
boys. You must have forgotten
that the good people of Pitt
county are now, and have always
been, opposed to such false re-
ports as you are spreading over
this good county. You must sit
up and take notice that the
Democrats are going to correct
these falsehoods. We would
pity you if we thought such re-
ports were due to ignorance.
For an instance, you have
lated the report that the county
commissioners have entered into
a contract whereby the convicts
are to be worked on one mile of
and his mental faculties
One can readily believe the ref-
to his dullness of mental
faculties, by his version of the
meaning of the guarantee of
bank deposits which he tried to
explain to his Danville audience.
issued a circular instructing
government to keep
out of politics. A rigid enforce-
of that order would
put to an end the
can campaign in North Carolina.
Candidate Taft says he hopes
after the 3rd of November he
can stay quiet a little while.
We expect he is going to get his
wish and can stay very quiet the
whole time Mr. Bryan occupies
the White House.
the campaign
A Tammany
Just as we are bragging about
pretty weather the announce-
comes that a cold wave is
on the way.
What Mr. Dixon said to ex-
Judge Montgomery ought to be
enough to satisfy him.
Ex-Judge Montgomery
found out that he called
up the wrong man.
As long as this sort of weather
continues you need not stand in
awe of the coal man.
The Republicans in this county
are trying to convince the
that the county afFairs have
been mismanaged. You
are challenged to show
one instance of mismanagement.
The records are open to the pub-
and we ask you to bring
forth the records to prove to the
people that you are not telling
falsehoods.
An Indiana woman has sued
for divorce from her husband on
the ground that he has been
drunk thirteen years. He might
have known something would
happen when he run up to that
unlucky number.
Say, man, don't forget to reg-
About the next step now due
in the line of civic improvement
and lineal for Greenville is
to stop spitting on the new side-
walks. Big gobs of tobacco
juice leave ugly stains that are
not ornamental.
Journalistic Responsibility.
An understanding of its own
responsibility to the community
is essential in the instance
grafter taking his toll of suffer-
and shame could not have
been more direct.
Roosevelt
would have directed two years
later an investigation by the In-
Commerce Commission
f the Union Pacific Railway
system, upon the receipt of in-
formation conveyed by Mr.
James School field Sherman that
Mr. declined to be
mulcted further for campaign
but Theodore Roosevelt
could have detached from bis
cabinet the Secretary, who was
officially most intimately con-
with commerce and in-
and therefore with great
corporations, and make him the
chairman of the Republican
committee
but Theodore Roosevelt
would have sought, through his
personal selection of such chair-
man a contribution of
from the Standard Oil Company,
to help re-elect himself V
but Theodore Roosevelt
would for his own protection
have written simultaneously a
were closed; a had been
on for three year, and the
try was
Mark that prince of
chairmen, sent out the full din-
cry; the Republicans
promised employment to all idle
people and .- to
come p. d. q. ft came.
i , ii and
Theodore Roosevelt, we have the
idle men and we have the man
who brought on the panic to
them idle insisting that
his policies are the policies
we have Bryan and his
party promising prosperity if
can get rid of Rooseveltian
rule.
The men are idle. The panic
is still on Tin
Will me nib men for a
continuation of the panic and
the man who or will
seek something different
feeling that it can be no worse.
Ii is our liberate opinion
that they will for Bryan
and that's one reason why
feel the Man from Nebraska
be the next the
I States. Of course no
one knows the is
it is not settled, and
the anxious
seat. What will the Idle men
do Everything,
Subscribe for
to any journal that wishes to do
its duty. In its news columns it letter which directed Mr.
is clean; it stands consistently
for civic improvement and for
the real things of life, and it is
not moved by any considerations
from the lines of right as it sees
them. The newspaper is a pow-
but there are newspapers
and Post.
to return the Standard
Oil contribution and then tacitly
permit its retention and actual
use in the campaign ,
but Theodore Roosevelt,
with the money of Mr. Harri-
man, the Standard Oil Company I
hi o x o
IX
J I
the speaking. The county can-
simply announced them-
selves with the exception of Mr.
Job Moore, candidate for the
senate, who made quite a lengthy
speech. We have heard no com-
upon the speeches of Mr.
Rape seed at J R Smith Mer.
Co.
Mrs. H. C. Coward visiting
f in Cary.
you planted your gar-
den is the question every
one is asking. Woods Seed are
the best for the South- You will
find all kinds perfectly fresh at
Drug Store. Don't make
the mistake of getting some
kind
The rand and several of our
citizens went to Johnson's Mills
Thursday, while many others
went to to attend
a by the Red Men.
M. M. makes, the best
cold that can be made at
the cold the year
round Try one.
lira, Blount, W. M.
Edwards and wife and others
from here in attendance upon
the Raleigh fair.
Smith Co. Dixon are running
their factory and mills on full
time. General sawing trimming
and repairing of all kinds neatly
done.
at the opera house
Wednesday evening is said to
have been fine.
You will find a nice line of
coffins and caskets hand at
J. R. Smith Co ,
The meeting at
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT.
IN CHARGE OF J. M. BLOW.
Agent of The Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. Advertising rates furnished
night with W. E. Hooks and I were shocked when heard j
went with the band to Johnson's of the sad occurrence.
Sunday morning just before
the arrival of the o'clock train,
Josephus Jones and his loving
spouse, Jones, were seen
to be in waiting to take their
departure for other and perhaps
more congenial scenes. Both
were pretty you-
so, and was gloriously so.
Now and then they would goto
the rear of the depot and kiss
the bottle containing the fiery
fluid to enliven spirits cheer
drooping souls to befit them,
maybe, for anticipations of joys
brighter in view, at last
and a bale of cotton in
contact came, and the platform
received the falling woman upon
its while Josephus stood and
gazed unable to lend a helping
hand. Upon her own sources,
and her own resources alone, the
prostrate at last arose and
as the train glided in she, with
the aid of a helping Land, climb-
ed aboard, with Josie soon to
follow, and away they sped to
pastures green and fields afresh
to gain new laurels and notoriety
often enjoyed where troubles to
are unknown and sorrows
never come. The scent was not
only disgusting, but in the ex-
Dockery or Mr. Moore and as we
Mills next day.
The Ayden tobacco market is
Dixon Dixon at
Brick are paying prices way
up yonder.
W. J. Hemby went to Or-
Thursday.
Having been appointed
for precinct No. Content
township, for the election to
be held Tuesday. November 3rd,
1908. All persons of said
who have not heretofore
registered for said election and
are entitled to do so will please
at my office in C.,
and register in accordance with
the elections. This
September 25th, 1908. J M.
Blow, registrar.
Cotton is coming in slowly.
The prices are discouraging but
if tobacco is not getting there,
The sash, blind and door
will begin operation in a few
days. The building is complete,
the machinery has been placed
and everything about it seems
to be in pie order.
Louis Manning, of Winterville,
made us a pleasant call yesterday.
Bertha Richardson, col., was
carried to the asylum at
Thursday by police I disgraceful, mid if justice
were not present are
give a synopsis.
unable to
SPROUTS.
N. C, Oct. State Ottawa
ITEMS.
with three accessions to the
Smith,
son,
Richard had been done instead of a corn-
church closed Wednesday her accompanied, j seat on a fast
moving
It is indeed an unfortunate case j they would have spent the
church. During the meeting the both husband and wife are j a to ponder and
attendance was large and the
J. R. Smith Co. Dixon have
held in high esteem by our
sens, white and colored alike.
The livest people row
thing; .- . the postmasters, whiskey
taring plant. Besides their and revenue doodles.
line of work they are The other.; will come later on.
tobacco hogsheads to and
used or. this market. have, been in the
Julius Brown, of Greenville, v -siting, have come home,
was here Wednesday on legal.
business. . ,
For some four or live weeks a
J. R, Smith Co. Dixon have
a nice of coffins and caskets
on hand and can furnish hearse
when desired. Give them a call
when in need of any their
goods. This firm has a good sup
for
think the way is
hard, and the devil after awhile
hi
Misses Mum- j
ford went to Winterville Sunday
to visit friends.
Hon. Claudius Dockery and the
Republican county candidates
held forth in the Brick
warehouse Jay. There s
the usual Saturday
N. C. Oct. 1908.
Sam Harper went to Ayden
Monday on business.
J. D. Stokes went to Greenville
Tuesday.
R. D. Stokes went to Green-
ville Tuesday.
W. B. Harper went to Ayden
Saturday
H. M. Stokes went to Ayden
Saturday.
Misses and Bessie Bar
per went to Ayden Saturday
shopping.
L. L. Stokes went to Ayden
Saturday.
Miss Lizzie Stokes attended
the fair at Raleigh last week.
J. D. Stokes went to Green-
ville Saturday.
Mrs D. C Stokes
day in Greenville shopping.
J. A. Stokes went to Ayden
Saturday.
Misses and Bessie
per, Sam Harper, C. M. Stokes,
R y Stokes and J D. Stokes,
attended church at Smith's
school house Saturday night.
Gray Moore spent Sunday
morning here.
Mrs. Emily spent Sun-
day at D. C.
Sam Harper, Roy Stokes and
j. D. Stones attended church at
Gum Swamp Sunday afternoon.
Miss Carrie Chapman is visit-
at L. L.
Roy Stokes, J. D. Stokes and
S. P. Harper went to
Sunday night.
J. D. Stokes went to Green-
Miss May Brooks came in
Friday evening preparatory to
taking charge of her school Mon-
day morning at Smith s school
house. She boards at Ivy
Smith's.
R E. and C. E.
went to Greenville
Saturday to sell tobacco.
Mills Smith went to Farmville
Saturday.
T. E. Little went to Greenville
Saturday.
Miss May Brooks went to
Greenville Saturday to attend
the teachers meeting,
by Miss Agnes Smith.
C. E. took one
bale of his cotton back homo
Saturday for the lack of price
enough, just Hue all of the
farmers ought to do if they
could.
Bob Joyner, of
visiting his sister.
Smith, week,
Mrs. A. J. of
burg, was in our town Sunday
Mrs. Bettie Carraway was
visiting at Ivy last week
Miss of
Greenville, visiting at D.
Smith's Saturday night and
Sunday and returned home
the evening with her grand-
father, Mr. Ferry.
Mr. Burk, a spectacle man.
was passing through our section
Tuesday and sold Mr. and Mrs.
R. A. a pair
TO
Mrs. Mills
Latter.
State Chairman A. H.
has sent to Ii .
in every part
following
l b a
ma area
pleasure to a few
in regard to the i .; . J
to enclose you r. g mat
which I hops may t-s inter-
to you.
Republican
and speakers make a v
and cry, they e .
Democrats do i. Con-
federate soldiers On
our tick t y a i the
names of . r
auditor, ii. A.
Graham for r of
agriculture patio m U
of the brave men of tin
will not i he
of ; C
Republican S-. . .
same
that now b it
V Ii I t
bills Co a bum
did, however,
elect Abe
t .
A,
i.
refuse to
in honor of i; i . .
mm. if
a -in
WOT,
j. r
cg-
has
the
to
. I
your
in town and many to ville today on business.
ply of first a few property by coming art
good busies and are run and Pi
making hogsheads and repairing.;
is a busy mar. Wall,
Rev. E has returned ltd N. C.
from Raleigh,
J. J. Edward
received another
big red and white cow with brass
on end of horns has been
with my cattle end has recently , ,
Now Ready for
I have taken her up shall i -j
. i
her. The
inspection
New Fall and Winter Styles
From Chas. A. Stevens Bros.,
The Greatest Exclusive Establishment in the World
For Women's Wear
I now have ready for your inspection the complete largo
ion books, the of materials, showing an immense
Miss Julia after spend-. variety of styles in high-class man-tailored Suits. Skins and
Son her home Dresses, made to order according to your individual measurements
loud from your own selection of materials, perfect fit and satisfaction
Mrs. C. D. Smith happened ton
to misfortune of getting
some sawdust in his eye Tues-
day evening, and it gave her
so much that Mr. Smith
took her to Greenville to the
doctor Wednesday for
get it out.
R. E. went U
Greenville yesterday to s-11 t
getting to th ,
We learn that a preacher from your shot
Wilson will preach at that has ever .
school house Saturday night,
Oct. 17th, and Sunday,
a. m. .- J. Ci . ;
Mills Smith carried a load of, over charge r ti-. to
tobacco to Greenville this morn- i working of chi
C . ode
Mr. and Mrs. C D. Smith went before a Christian cm r
to C. L. Tyson's Sunday. Ho hi
The public school at Smith's as utterly
school opened Monday will bring Hi
with Miss May Brooks principal w their .
and Miss Mary Joyner assistant were contained read
teacher. We hope and believe before a I v de-
that they will be considerable of t .-st
help in cur Sunday school. church, of Fr r
Mr. and Mrs. Hay wood Smith pilfered to the J
J. he D .-m
j-.-
toll of
; j ;
no ;
maintaining ti. .
;. . it
nothing will prevent
; o- party
Lying j.
returned to
of a school r.
Maryland,
Ayden and we are informed will
Also a complete line of ready-to-wear apparel of all
The styles have undergone a complete change and if you wish
wood Wire
inches, inches, inches,
inches. Call and see them.
Rev. Mr. and Rev.
T. H, King, who have been here . for your fall and winter apparel. Through Stevens
held their yearly meeting at,, ,,
year garments absolutely correct and up to-date it is imperative
these fashion books and samples of materials before
went to Greenville Tuesday.
i for publication. pi
for several. days conducting a
series of meetings in the Baptist
church, have returned to their
respective homes, and
Winterville.
For public school books go to
J, R. Smith Mer. Co.
and Bibles also on hand.
Miss Addie Johnson has her
millinery emporium over the
store occupied by the J. R. Smith
Mer. Co.
plain gold ring between
the residence of Mrs. Agnes
Blount and the store of J. J.
Hines Co. Any one finding
same will be liberally rewarded
by leaving at store of J. J. Hines
Co.
Those who attended the Prim-
Baptist association at Seven
Springs from here have returned
home.
For Sale A valuable farm
near Ayden containing sixty two
acres of which ten acres are
cleared, same will be sold on
reasonable terms. For further
particulars apply to Walter
Grifton, N. C. R. F. D.
w.
The Masons hold their semi-
monthly meetings now at night
instead of the day time.
M. M. Sauls has just received
a fine lot of perfumes and toilet
water,
Gus Forbes spent Wednesday
I take charge
i here-
The colored Free Will
thousands of women their wants every season who
Jumping Run, this county, near by we handle only the very latest styles at
Grifton, the last three days of popular prices and that we guarantee more than satisfaction.
week There were thou- It will be a pleasure to me to have, you call and see the line
sands present, the crowd whether you wish to buy or not. i
reaching as far, it is said, as
of the
one mile on each side of the
church, All the latter part of
last week the trains were crowd-
ed with colored people on their
way to the meeting. In this
community last Sunday a colored
person could scarcely be seen.
All were gone.
Miss Esther Johnson, of Win-
spent from Saturday
until Monday here with Miss
Helen Johnson.
serve and assure you of prompt and courteous attention.
MRS. J. T. SMITH, Jr.,
Ayden, N. C.
Representing Chas. A. Stevens Bros., Chicago.
OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN
in the State of North Carolina, at the close of business Sept.
Ivy Smith and Lloyd Smith i
went to Greenville Tuesday.
F. Marian Smith and Miss Rosa South based on chi
D. smith went to Greenville children worK in
Tuesday. cotton mills P.
Jack Frost put in an appear- m., m., . i
this morning being the minute for food or Kit. Ten per
first of the season that cant of the children . to
seen, but not enough to do much j work before j i
damage. contract consumption and it is
estimated that the wage
I of children i the
I cotton mills North C is
but per
Toe editor i Fr rt
declined t pi l the
address and wrote me North
for
facts.
Fire in
Resources
J. W. Sparks, of Georgia, and discounts
former resident of Ayden, . . .
here on a visit to relatives. Furniture Fixtures
Mrs. Carrie Aldridge and little I
daughter spent the
Liabilities
., , . .
110.04 Capital Stock . .
010.501 Surplus fund . .
with the family of her father,
Elder C. C. Bland, and returned
to her home in Winterville Mon-
day morning.
Charlie Ross, an old Ayden
boy from Winterville, is here
visiting his parents.
The small rise in cotton last
week caused a Blight rush on our
market Saturday and Monday.
We regret very much to learn
of the awful tragedy in Green-
ville Sunday night. Both
pals were well known in our
community and each had hosts
of friends and relatives
Due from
Cash items
Gold .
Silver coin, including
minor coin currency
National bank miles
and other U. notes
6,000.00
12,828.64
200.001
1,244.68-
6,900.00
Total, 191,726.00
Undivided profits, less
current exp. paid
Hills payable
Deposits subject to ck.
Cashier's
23,000.00
11,260.00
46,168.64
Total, 191,726.00
As the result of the fire which c
broke out in the three-story, j
brick building of No. Market
street, occupied as wholesale
grocery store by Messrs Samuel
Bear, S-., Sons, Friday, up-
wards of in property Ions j
resulted and the firemen had
of the toughest lights with the
blaze in their experience.
Star.
NOTICE.
W. H. Smith has purchased j
the interest of A. Cox in the
Carolina Milling
Co. and will conduct the
at the sane place- All
work promptly looked after. Mr. I
Cox will still with the
Company.
Wood's Seeds.
STATE OF NORTH
COUNTY PITT
I. J.
the
R. Smith, Cushier of the above named bank, do solemnly
statement is true to the best my knowledge
SMITH, Cashier.
J. R. SMITH.
R. C. CANNON.
L. DIXON.
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to be-
fore me, this day of Sept.
1908.
STANCIL HODGES,
Notary Public
Dr. Joseph Dixon
Physician and Surgeon
Office over Bank Building
AYDEN. N. C.
MISS C. MEREDITH,
Graduate Nurse
Ayden, North Carolina.
Seed Wheat,
Oats, Rye
We are not only the largest
era in Seed but
sell the best,
heaviest qualities. Our an
from tin-
Stops, and our warehouse
are fully equipped the best
and most improved machinery fur
If you superior
crops
Plant Wood's Seeds.
Vices quoted on request
Q Fall
full information about all
seeds, mailed free.
WOOD SONS,
Richmond. Va.
A-
POOR PRINT





AFRICAN MARRIAGES.
Peculiar of th Different Na-
Tribe.
The marriage customs of west
and southwest Africa are in
cases peculiar. of
course, in different tribes, but have
broad lines in common.
A coastal tribe always considers
to an inland tribe,
and even its meanest member
claims to rank higher than the
most powerful man of an up
try tribe. A man may marry any
woman lie likes of any tribe, it be-
held that be gives her his own
status, whatever that may be, but
it is unheard of for a woman
to her. As a re-
some of I he women of the most
superior coast tribes, like the
look to marriage with
white men and frequently attain to
it. , ,
on i sines
absolutely -a the matter of mar-
I iv
n-.-
i ,., . .; i consul the
with Rifts, the father cal
of
On
Notice of
i Superior court before
i D. C. Moore, Clerk.
Notice of Sale.
other
view-
he i
from
mi
the family to
the I viii
i.
was ;
tin
. i at i
with
the
his pm
.
r.
the I
with .
down u
On
i.
For
require t
after
other
and
in the old days
or v. inc.
he pays over an
the dowry. On tho
ti his parents
i to we
n next he e ills
. r-in-law pro-
If I ll I
. . it-
ii . ind in
, man
i of the
e away.
; IS mi .-
-1
V.
in
Carolina,
Pitt County.
B. F. and wife Nannie E.
Ed. Forbes. W. Harvey Allen and
wife Katie R. M. D. Cr
and wile Clara J. C. H.
Forbes, Mrs. Nora A. M. Al-
and w f e Bertha E. Allen, and
Pearl A. Forte,
vs
Neva A. Forbes.
NOTICE OF SALE FOR PARTITION.
By virtue of the judgment and decree
the of Superior Court,
made in the above e-titled on
the 6th of October, 1908, the
J. L. Fleming, i
t appointed by in said decree,
will to the highest bidder for cash,
for partition, at the court nous.- door
of Pitt county in Greenville, on the 9th
of November. 190-, all the right.
and inter t of the parties to t e
aforesaid proceeding in and to the f I-
lowing described tracts or parcels of
land, to
lit A Certain tract or lot of land,
in said county and State, and bounded
as Lying and being in the
town of Greenville, on the south side
of h street and on the west side
I Washington street, beginning at a
e at intersection of street
. .-I street, and
about feet to a stake
come.- of lot No. thence with
westward about f at to a stake,
the and parallel
v. street feet to
thence with
to the corner of Washington
street, the beginning, it being the
eastern half of lot No. as shown on
a map made P. Matthews In 1.-92 of
the Will on land, containing one
fourth an acre, more or less, and be
conveyed to Victoria Me
Gowan the Greenville
is hereby given by the under
signed Ivy Smith, administrator of
Jesse L. Smith, d. that I he
personal estate of Jesse L. Smith, de-
ceased, will be exposed to public sale,
for cash to the highest b Oder, n
Thursday, the 12th day of November.
1909, at the late residence of the said
Jesse L. Smith.
Said estate of horses,
mule, cattle, hogs, wagons a d
other farming implement--, odder
hay. peas, cotton seed and household
and kitchen furniture. . , . , ,
Bale will begin promptly at clock.
This the 22nd day Oct.,
Ivy Smith, Administrator of
Jesse L. Smith, deceased. w
Notice to
Having duly qualified before the
court clerk of Pitt county as
of of t. t.
II. in.-.-, deceased, notice is hereby
given to a I person indebted to the ea-
to ma e immediate payment to
undersigned, and all persons hay-
against estate will
notice that they must present the
for payment to the u i
on before the 23rd September,
or this notice will in bar
of recovery.
This 23rd d y of
J. Mari-hall t-x,
of C. F. Harriss.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
Greenville Banking and Trust
Company
AT N. C.
At the t September
L. E Smith, administrator
A. stokes, deceased,
Lena Stokes, widow of m
of Win.
Notice To Creditors.
Having as executrix of John
S. deceased, late of Pitt
county, this is to notify all persons
having claims against the estate of the
said deceased t exhibit them to the
it It in saw
stoke and Austin undersigned within twelve months from
AW this date notice will be plead.
By of the power sale con- A ons to said estate
in a decree the Sup . immediate payment,
made D. C. Moore, c of the f
Resources.
and discounts 9188,818.26
Overdrafts
All stocks, bonds
Mortgages
and fixtures
Demand loans
Due from
Cash items
Silver including
minor coin currency
National bank notes
and other U. notes 10,027.00
i. . . .
Superior court, on the 6th d
the undersigned I. E.
as a of the m.
A. Stokes, to public at
the count house door on
Monday, the 9th day of October, ion
u. o'clock. It the . la.,
, November term Pitt county
court, the f How track M
land to the highest bid
Said land being
of Pitt and l
and in the Creek i
joining the lands of L. E He lie
Haddock, Henry k. a others,
containing acres more or fins
s is made for the purpose making
for the settlement of the i state
A. .-, deceased.
This the 8th day of October,
Tins the 7th day of September
Susan
F. G. James, Attorney.
Executrix.
1,206.63
2,618.47
711.02
Liabilities.
Capital stock f
Surplus fund
Undivided profits, less
current
taxes paid
Notes and bills n-dis-
counted
Bills payable
Time
of 28,068.88
168,208.88
021.29
Due to bunks,
26,000.00
15,000.00
4,786.76
18,160.00
Fall Millinery Opening
at Big Store
Wednesday, Oct. 7th.
ALL TO ARE INVITED.
The Way the Police Descend Upon
Them In a Raid.
THE PLOWING SECT
Ancient Superstitions of the j
of the Soil.
Total 1264.957.30
88.00
Total
Get The best for Comfort
and Borden Felt Hat-
and a piece Bern-
stein Iron Bed have no equal.
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
I S Carr, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my
T AFT BO Y D
SKILL, CUNNING AND DARING.
Secrecy Ii Maintained by the
Official and Policemen Are
, Kept In Dark Until the Last
Club.
J Tue police recently carried out
some raids on bin
and It may lie M
learn these raids are
ThU H bow it is done In As
a the suspicions have
i been confirmed they apply to the com
of police for a warrant to
enter. The warrant authorizes certain
I Officers mentioned by name to enter
; the In the name of the kin. Or-
II A policemen are not permitted to
I V carry out a raid, hut the detectives
I can call upon them for assistance at
the critical moment.
I I I Absolute secrecy is enforced
up to the moment of entry. i
in and by deed which
of in the office of he
of Deeds f Pitt in book -t-,
and the same lot de H, I
C. and
an to Noah Forbes, by deed which
P, i of record in the e of the Reg- North t
of Dee-is of Pitt county, In I
0-8, page reference to both
which deeds is hereby made an ac-
L. K. Smith.
Adm. o- A. Stokes, deceased.
C Harding,
Notice
f Annie
vs
is ii
i w r
k. I-
his
. . . . .- i
.
i i re- in
.
limited
matter
v in- i
i . f f
But it is rare
able to
wish. Di-1
of the
rel
. .
in
Pr
The
a r
troubled
thought
occasional -1 e
by
self.
On one of
formed q
in
rot to know
had made i impression on
usually n
put some I to
description.
That certain tract or
land i-- county
as follows K and being in Green-
ville township, at the
Kinston road near the home place
of Noah Forbes, deceased, and
With the new north V. west
poles; thence south west -J
thence north nest if poles to a small,
. i. .- tin n I. along
t i f to a
north 1-1 west
. Ml pile;
thence south 91-4 east GO to a
, stake ; th south east poles to
n stump, M. G. B hue near
Kinston a thine the
i south l-i 1-- poles toy
stake and water oak north
, west poles to stake thence
north
east poles to the Kinston road;
thence the Kinston road south
,; , west poles to the beginning,
i acres
certain arc of
Ian I, am State, i.
. foil i i; i it. Green-
v bee inning at th,
, . and the
. . . . of N . i.
and with Kinston r ad
. . . u, B bridge
I n the said thence with the
to much I various courses of the ditch across the
., he fell I I the th. v h the
i. i. u nun south 1-2 east is poles.
I thence north cast thence
. . , poles . inning,
acres re
;. certain i r
Hampton
in Superior Court.
Notice by u
En of Vacant Laud
S. S. Smith and J. T.
enter and the following
la d to
hip
. . N C, on Indian Well S-. and
i at bran h. the lands of
no. Moore. S. S. Anton Mills.
Cl Cannon's hi n . b
W. H. I
and containing more
or less.
, This day of
S. S SMITH,
K. Willi I -t y Taker.
Any person or par- title
--r Interest in the
must file their protest in
with me the n x thirty
d or they be v law.
K. Williams,
Entry taker
edge belief.
Subscribed and sworn to before
me, this day of September
1908.
Notary Public.
S. Cashier.
E. G. FLANAGAN,
K. O.
J. L.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.
at Bethel, N. C.
at the close of business September
School Books and Supplies
A. B. ELLINGTON CO-
Forth
of in I
r in
v .
, .;. .-to
. a v,. .
n t the
me i
T-e earned
a as
ha keen commenced In the
C Pitt c to lain a
e in Is of
and aid defendant will
take notice t he is required a .-
pear at the n term of lbs u
of Pitt county to l- he d on the
alter the I at Monday in No-
K th a. . f
0-. at house
v in in. C and answer
or to the In said
a or the plaintiff will apply to
court for the relief demanded in said
This the of October, Mm.
Ii. C. t s C.
A ton
Notice to i.
I as executor of Sue
ion, decease , late Of
ville, lilt county. North Carolina, this
is to notify all persons h cl nm
inst the estate of said decease to
exhibit them to tie undersigned within
twelve from this date, or ties
notice be pleaded in of their
recovery. All persons de to said
,,.,. in-
C. Dupree,
F. G. ltd
Resources
Loans and discounts
Furniture and 1,810.00
Due 8,889.08
coin, silver coin
all minor coin
currency, bank
notes other U. notes 8,899.81
Total 841.986-68
Liabilities
Capital stock
Surplus fund
Time cert, of deposit
Deposits sub to check
Total
16,000.00
8,326.00
1,697.70
8,804.08
27,868.18
11,086.68
AT COST
For a Short While
A Card.
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt,
W. Cashier of the above-name .
,, swear that the above statement is true to th.
ind belief. W.
Subscribed and sworn to be-
fore me, this 80th day of
S. T.
Notary Public
auK,
best
sol-
if my
its
All Our China, both
and
V i PRESENT
A chance replenish
W. O.
Dir i tors.
Notice
. , it; u
i tract,
foil.
bid clerk, who was helping him
in l .;
they've with a;,, wire fence, corner on
the old man n M running south
; . i ,, 1-8 1-2 poles; thence north
sure I it v. Mm a .,,.,. . o g a
worship to come down . the
to us, but, aw, a u , ,.,. branch below the
dam thence south 1- cast Bi
i thence north in 1- east
to the road thence down the said
I road IT poles ; thence north
poles to a thence
Why He Attracted. north 1-2 to red oaks near the
i- who had the reputation I mill thence south
A I . ,;., to William
of using strong the golf i
links on a an
would d for the likes i
if o he added with
could bin found.
I hereby announce that I have
, removed for the practice of my
profession from Falkland to
Greenville. Residence on Third
1.- virtue of the power of sale con. next door to J. L. f
tamed in , c.-rt a n j- ,,
WM, I b found at nil times
F. the day of when not professionally engaged
, re . r ll.
of I in county, N. C., in Dr.
book page the
will expose to sale, the
house in tire to
h r on Monday, Nov. mi
1908, a fact or parcel
lain lying aid being In of
Pitt and State of North Carolina and
,, to That
, hind in Dam township
the lands of . H. I
the C Alien land
and containing acres mere or
lens, same d to
m by B.
this mortgage given to secure the
of i money to satisfy said
deed. T- of sale cash.
This 9th day of October, 1908.
r. G. James, Tyson.
Attorney. Mortgagee.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OP
at Farmville, N. C.
at the close of business Sept.
Liabilities
AT COST
Ail our baseball goods at cost.
S. J. NOBLES
MODERN BARBER SHOP.
Hot and Cold Baths
Electric Massage
Cosmetics
A specialty. Electric
Massage and Hair
tonic given to ladies
at their homes
Opposite J. R. J. G.
BOOKSTORE
Notice of Sale.
1-t acres, or
on to play nine holes. of October, u
Looking after he had driven
off, he saw a great crowd following.
Shore
good and had. all trail
close I s th looks of inter
and expectation.
The broker paused turn .
He smiled politely and nervously.
ho said, this
is very flattering. I hope I am m
this afternoon. I trust
shall play well enough reward
nil this Kindly
-Oh, it isn't replied an
lawyer,
came out to
Journal.
L. Fleming
Commissioner,
Notice
with it chuckle.
Home
An Inch of Rain.
The rain fell in buckets, the
thunder racketed terribly and the
lightning drew zigzag lines of bright
cold upon the violet sky.
you, too. don't know what an
inch of rain is said the
weather clerk, as he looked at bis
rain measuring instrument.
few people do, it seems. I'll explain
it to you.
acre is square
inches. An inch of water
acre is therefore 6,272.010 cubic
Inches. That amount, at cubic
inches to the gallon, equals
gallons or pounds or
tons. , . ,
inch of rain is, in other
words, rain falling at the rate of
tons to the
Bulletin.
By of the power sale eon-
tainted in a Mortgage Deed executed
and delivered by R. D. Cox and wife.
Mattie K. Cox, to Harrington, Barber
Co. on the 28th day November,
1906 and duly ed in the
of Deeds office of county. North
Carolina, In Book P page the
undersigned will expose to public sale,
the Court door in Green-
for cash, to th highest bidder,
on the 5th of November.
the real property, to
One town lot situated in the town
N. C situated on the
east side of Rail Road street and on the
we t aide of Academy and
bounded on the North by A. G. Cox
and on the west by J. W on
the south by I. Cox and on
the east by Academy street, containing
1-2 acre more or less, to satisfy said
deed.
day of October, 1908.
BARBER CO.
North Carolina. I Superior court before
Pitt county i lb C. Moore. Clerk
Jas, A. Moore, Tims. Moore. Harvey A.
Moore, Edward Moore,
and husband. Mills.
Cox and Ed Cox, Haggle
Elks and husband. Henry Elks,
vs
Elisabeth Moore, widow of John Moore.
Mattie widow of
Willie Moore, deceased, and
Moore and Alice May Moore, Chi
and heirs at law of Willie Moore,
d ceased.
NOTICE OP ton PARTITION.
virtue of the and decree
of the clerk of the Superior court, made
in the above entitled cause, on the
day Of October. the undersigned,
Fleming, commissioner eel
the court in said decree, will sell to
the highest bidder for cash for
at the court house door of lit
county in Greenville, on day of
November, 1908, all the title and
interest of the parties the aforesaid
proceeding in and to the de-
scribed tract or parcel of land.
That certain tract of land lying and
being in the county of Pitt and in
township, on Cow Swamp, ad-
joining the lands of Robt. Smith. Elisa-
beth Moore, and the Joe tract
of land, containing acres, more or
This the 7th day of Oct. 1908.
J. L. Fleming. Commissioner.
ARE YOU SURE
That It en-om you
hand
w, Sit h
mid r oilier la
any where your
I Why not
MAKE AND FREEZE YOUR OWN ICE CREAM
In MINUTES
fOR A PLATE with
i ICE Powder
It I. no Simply of
and
Tim
quart., of lea pare and whole.
June. A run
bought
for end ill Mat.
Tow-
Vanilla, Straw
and Unfavored.
Sold all Rood
The Pure food Co., to Roy, M.
Resources
and discounts
Overdrafts
and fixtures
Due from
Cash items
Gold coin
Silver coin
minor
bank notes, other
s. notes
Total
Capital stock
Surplus
Undivided profits
Dividends unpaid
Hills payable
Time of deposit
subject to
Cashier's
Total
10,000.00
5,000.00
1,000.00
33,000.00
9,528.01
. 17,180.24
W. M. DAWSON
and Gents Tailor,
Greenville, N C.
Altering, pairing.
Scour i Chemical a. d Dry Cleaning.
Satisfaction or no charges.
In rear of s Bar
Shop.
STILL WITH
The
Mutual Life
INSURANCE COMPANY,
OF
NEW YORK,
OLDEST IN AMERICA,
LARGEST
IN
THE WORLD.
1843. Assets over
H. BENTLEY HARRISS
Office. Slice
GREENVILLE. N. CAROLINA
State of North Carolina, County of
II R. Davis, cashier of the above-named do
swear that the above statement is
knowledge and belief.
and sworn to be-
fore this 29th day of
Notary Public
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
FOR CHICKENS AND EGGS.
At New Market in front Nor-
and Southern Depot.
I. Q. SMITH.
sol-
my
j. R, DAVIS, Cashier
F. M. IS,
It. L. DAVIS.
Directors.
GREENVILLE DISPENSARY
General Statement for Quarter ending; October 1st, 1908
Bales quarter ending
Oct 1st
Inventory Oct. 1st ,
Total
8.262.66
Notice to Creditors.
W.
IN
Groceries
And Provisions
Cotton Bagging and
, vs on
Inventory July 1st I
Purchases, stock
quarter
Purchases, bottles
quarter
Salaries
expenses
Freight and
taxes paid
Profits
Total
Administrators Notice.
will be pleaded in bar of recovery. payment.
This 12th of October.
ltd of G. W.
Fresh kept con-
in stock. Country
Produce Bought and Sold
Cash paid to Town and
Com.
178.10
890.68
.
7,600.00
PAUL
THE TAILOR
Can be found on Fourth street
prepared to clean, press repair
Mens Clothing and ladies Skirts
All work done promptly, suits
made to order when
Tour patronage Solicited.
FALL BULBS
are now arriving;, plant
to get best results A nice
line of and Ferns in all
sizes. Choice cut flowers a
specialty, wedding bouquets
and Floral offerings at short
notice. Mail. Telegraph, and
Telephone orders receive
prompt attention. Phone
Raleigh, N. C.
COAL COAL
COAL
J TURN AGE before buying
for the winter. He can give
you a bargain.
PHONE NO
DR. L. C. SKINNER
PHYSICIAN
Office corner and Third
formerly occupied by the late Col.
A. Sugg.
Taken Up.
no excitement the station on that
and the men on duly BO
of what is In the wind. Plans
of the house are drawn
by the Mr
doorkeeper of the is prepared m
the slightest alarm to sand
to hi- customers, every vestige of
will
and raid fall. A
ruse, therefore, baa to lie
will disarm
paring the day n body Of
n will receive n
from fie station that they m
required to parade a certain boor.
and with no Idea what Is
of them. They are drawn up
In line, and after names have been
called over they ore dismissed from
the station one by one. with the hi-
junction be in Immediate
of n certain street In couple
of and not to
before the prearranged moment
The on the
la one In chaw of the raid.
alway
. a well dressed man about
the club
. for him
Hi
corner the
. .- hr I
duly Then. till l
of lab
be conveyed to the
force
while the unconscious l;
fate, Us
The to surmount I
pet past I doorkeeper
Is not successfully done raid
end In failure. Presently the son
a drunken Is heard In
and two apparently rough
lug men staggering
they near the entrance to the club
begin disputing and soon come M
blows. The doorkeeper peeps
the wicket orders the men away
One of the men rushes St the
and the doorkeeper to
outside like a and at the same
time shouts out something about the
of the house. The combat-
ants continue lighting, and the officer
at the corner comes along and order
them The men return,
to It out with the doorkeeper.
The noise Increases, attracting home-
ward bound gentlemen In evening
dress, who gather round urge the
men .
The doorkeeper by this time becomes
alarmed, for the rowdy crowd will
frighten away his clients. Perhaps
tills moment a member of the
club arrives and seeks admission. The
door la opened With the utmost caution
to admit him. Before he has time to.
fasten It the two officers hastily secure
the member and rush upstairs,
two combatants were disguised police-
men and the onlookers detectives.
As soon as entrance into the club
been effected the constable at the
corner sounds his whistle, before
the sound has died away the WOOlS
Is alive with police. If
boasts of n trapdoor on the
SACRIFICES TO THE GODS.
That In
Roman of Old
That Are In India and j
of th Siam. Farmer.
The formal Inauguration of the plow-1
season Is very ancient and still is
observed In some of the
Among the by the Institution
of various religious festivals connect-
ed with agriculture the seasons came
to be regarded with a sort of sacred
reverence. Before the old Roman put
the plow Into ground he went to
the temple of the goddess of earth.
one of whose priests performed
certain propitiatory rites. Virgil In
advises the Roman bus
bondman to observe th signs on
en according to the crop he desires to
produce. The time to plow for flax,
barley and the sacred poppy was when
balance has equalized the hours of
day and sleep and halves the world
exactly between light and shade When
Taurus ushers in year with bis
gilded horns and sits facing the
I threatening bull is time for beans. For
wheat and the should
hide themselves from your eyes With
the dawn. Many have
Maria sets, but th desired crop bus
baffled then, with empty
first of all the poet admonishes the
farmer to the gods offer
sacrifices
India thee are certain days when
It Is unlawful to plow. Mother Earth
Is supposed to sleep six days In every
month, and on such days she
to be disturbed her slumber.
In northwest India the cultivator
employs n pundit to select
time for the commencement of
plowing. Great secrecy Is observed. In
some pines the lime selected is in the
In others daybreak Is
time
The pundit goes to a field, taking a
brass drinking vessel and n branch of
the sacred which Is
In frightening evil spirits
mar haunt the Acid. the
broad world, and the
great snakes which support the world
lire supposed to he propitiated and
reconciled by this ceremony. The pun-
satisfies himself to the direction
which the great snake Is lying, for
It occasionally moves about a little to
ease Itself of lbs great burden of the
broad world which it carries. The
pundit then marks off Imaginary
line. Five In lucky clods
earth are thrown Op. water Is
sprinkled In the trench five times with
the sacred mango bush lo Insure pro
Caution must be exercised
lest the charm be broken and
fortune Imperiled. The farmer
must remain secluded during the
lowing no salt must be eaten,
money, or Are given away.
Among the lief ore plowing
the farmer makes a offering o
butter and molasses In his own field
and again the village shrine.
The Chinese begin plowing on the
first of their solar Anciently
the rite's which were celebrated by the
Chinese st time were
but rationalistic sovereigns
mated one expensive religious rite oft
another until nothing was left ex
cent the Imperial act of homage to
heaven and earth and agriculture In
the ceremonial plowing.
The Siamese observe a rite called
about the middle of May
which is preliminary to plowing
season, and It is not proper for any-
one to plow until the ceremony Is
over The court astrologers determine
the time for It. On the day fixed by
them the minister of agriculture, who
Is always a prime or nobleman of
high rank, goes with n procession to a
piece of ground some distance from
capital. Where the festivities are
to take place n new plow, to which a
pair of buffaloes are yoked. Is In
decorated with flowers leaves
The minister guides the plow over
If You Need a Piano
THREE FONTS
SHOULD BE CONSIDERED WHEN YOU PURCHASE
Is the Piano strictly
quality, and mad by a reliable
a tone-
An From
Start
Finish
to
The use of best materials, best construction
skilled workmen, by U
lad , . its
I years of ma MOW
same i .-.-,. m ;
at the bead f
Instruments. Its sweet tone does .; I mango,
f the
so often by dealers to i
chase is because then is more in I. sale.
How can I obtain the PIANO the
money, value being considered
Answer BUY
Straight
from
E the
PIANOS ABE T THE
, CUSTOMER BY
I thus guaranteeing
, of ten obtained when an pa-sea
through several ownership reaching
the customer.
How am I to
claimed for it
know what I
will prove all
Answer-You are
Safe
from
Fraud
a . i
PIANOS In US. m a
um have
been in the . hall s
aid to all we gladly
refer.
The is sold for cash or on terms to suit purchaser.
G G Representative, Box No. Greenville, N. C.
As
BRICK TALK, No.
Masons prefer our brick to those of other makes. WHY
trowel just
one breaks
Because all they have to do is mark
where they want to break it to fit a pint and first
right.
REASON. There's no twist. They're MADE.
Think of the saving of TIME in this to say nothing of the
brick broken up of other kinds in trying to break one See
the point
We have plenty on hand and they are sold at COMMON
BRICK PRICE.
PLANT ON K. CAROLINA
BY. GOOD BATHS ON A. C. L. K. A
WALTON BRICK CO., Macclesfield, N. C.
UNDER MANAGEMENT DUNNING BRICK CO. C
lbs house boasts of n on toe watched by the spec-
roof, the Bash of lanterns I be seen w k r ,,
U I. MOORE W. H. LONG
Moore and Long
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
N C
BREAD BREAD
Mrs. Whitley at the
near courthouse, bakes every
bread, rolls, cakes and pies. Or-
filled anywhere in town. lee
cream sold daily.
Dark red heifer with white on tail
and legs, unmarked, judged to be.
about months old. Owner can get
by proving ownership and paying
charges. Warren Peyton.
Pitt
Wood have ordered a
wood sawing machine and will
soon he prepared to saw wood
any length for use.
R. D. Harrington.
W. HARVEY,
If. M.
Taft Vandyke
House Furnishings.
DR R. L.
Dentist.
GREENVILLE, N.
Dry Goods and Ladies Dress Goods.
I have purchased the interest of the
late B. E. Patrick in the firm of B.
Patrick Co., and will continue to
carry on s general dry goods business
at the same stand.
A ladies department with a special
of dress goods and trimmings has been
added, Miss Nellie being in
charge of this department. The ladies
ate cordially invited to call and lo-k at
this line. . B. .
GREENVILLE N
MM
F. DAVENPORT
General Merchandise
PAPER HANGING and PAINTING
I am prepared to do first-class
Paper Hanging and Painting.
Drop me a note if you want
in my line.
I. A. WEST.
R. F. D. No. Greenville, N. C.
BRICK BRICK
I have on hand a Urge supply of
good machine brick. Will quote
prices on and can All orders
promptly.
W J Gardner,
Tho Man. Bethel, N. C
there, the men having been con-
among the chimney pots since
It was dark. The front door Is secured
and the police form n guard
the house, so that escape Is Impossible
Meantime scene upstates Is one
of the Wildest excitement. The Ram-
Intent on business, had not no-
the In the passage
first Intimation they of
state of affairs Is when the door Is
thrown open and the officer In charge
calls on I hem to regard themselves
his prisoners. Then they their
position. The tables arc overturned
and card counters money roll nil
over the floor as the members endeavor
to escape. They make for the street
door. hut. balked In this direction,
to all parts of the house to hide.
The crestfallen members of the
are to the station, each In
the of two officers. Then the
house Is searched for tho gaming
Inch Of place Is
examined, for gamblers have remark-
able contrivances whereby they can
bide their apparatus in the event of
being raided. Tops of tables arc knock
ed off. flooring taken up and walls
for secret cupboards.
of chalked string regarded as
with these more
proofs the case Is ready the
magistrate. The evidence Is laid be-
fore him. the proprietor and
arc charged and the sentence
passed or a heavy fine Imposed on the
who are especially interested
In the length and folds of the silk or
his lower garments, because the pros
of the season and Its character-
wet or dry. are to be predicted
from these as he follows the II
the robs rises from his there Will
be disastrous rains. If It falls below
his ankles I here will be a drought. II
the folds reach midway between knee
ankle the Benson will be prosper-
After n proper number of furrows
have been turned old women strew
of different kinds In them SM
bulls are released from tho yoke and
allowed to feast open The
grain which the animals eat most free-
will be scarce next harvest, that
which they refuse to will
In Yorkshire It was considered
wise to disturb the earth with plow or
on Hood
INAUGURATION PULLMAN SLEEPING CAR LINE
Raleigh, and Atlanta, Ga.
via
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Atlanta, Ga., on the following convenient
RALEIGH p. m.
noon.
Call on Ticket Agents Southern Railway Company or connection
lines for detailed information, or
CHAS. L. HOPKINS, T. P. A.
Norfolk, Va.
e,
gazing Intently at a dead
dog, In u resigned tone at Inst
is
blurted out
my dear quoted M.
la bark lost
growled and passed on.-
London Fun.
It Is for a man attempt-
many things to do welL-
J.
C. D. TUN STALL
Opposite Center Brick Warehouse.
General Merchandise.
S M O O R I N
Successor to FLEMING S MOORING
General Merchandise.
Pulley
Home of Women's Fashions, Greenville N. C.
POOR PRINT





In Charge of F. C. NYE
Agent of The Eastern and Vicinity- Advertising Rates on Application
Fr-h drugs just ii. I Remember the Tar Heel Give us a call. We are prepared
wagons and carts made by the to give you a first class article at
Hisses C Olivia A. G. Cox Manufacturing Co. living prices.
, -t N. C. For Harrington, Barber Co.
;. . .;.
t , d
live m -J
A lot of at. just in,
ton, Barbe Co.
. J St
a.
Ange Co. for I
g ard ti lowest prices.
G v. Glenn is billed to
they cannot be
second
For good
hand buggy cheap.
Miss Bryan returned to c. Cox, N. C.
Gold Point Sunday morning. We are running a first class
Any one in need of a good ard market now at th-1 Cooper store.
buggy will do well Give us a call Button,
see Mr. at the A. G.
Cox Manufacturing Co. i are Your Boy. and Girls Read-
they buy Buggy business
rushing and we would
This popular remedy never to
effectually cure
Constipation, Sick
headache, Biliousness
And ALL DISEASES arising from a
Liver and Bad Digestion
The natural result Is good appetite
an j solid flesh. Dose elegant-
u and easy to swallow.
No Substitute.
ROANOKE ASSOCIATION.
Laxative Cough Syrup always
quick relief to colds,
hoarseness, whooping-cough and all
and throat trouble. Pleasant
to take, gently laxative. Sold by Jno.
I. Wooten, druggist.
Returned From Bridal Tow.
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Hart, who
were married in Beaufort on the
morning of the 6th. reached
Greenville Friday evening after
their bridal tour of Northern
cities. A few friends called at
their home in to
congratulate them and
the bride to our town.
Winston Man Found Dead.
Oct
dead body of W. J. Hayes, a
well-known notary public and
collector, was found in the
woods in East Winston with
a pistol lying beside him.
He had probably been dead
hours when discovered by men
who happened to pass by. He
had been drinking several days
and indications point to suicide.
He was ;. ears old and leaves a
wife and two children.
and lowest prices. d advise .
B. Glenn is to early. They are bound to read some-
with the candidates went to They read trash
at one . less you give something
The nor will give f better that is equally interesting.
A Try The Youth's Companion.
Ice at
day.
Dr. C. L. Pi
was i d an ad
to the our
town, hi i i ac Pi f.
finding in the line duty
for courage and unselfish-
nets. More than such stories I
.
.
. T. H-
as a good speech and we hope
l F A. Edmund was in the of adventure in
,. .- the stones, and the heroes and
section . . . , ,. ,
These pretty fall days is the h
time to have your painting done.
We have beet, with large as-
i sort men t of colors.
A. W. Ange Co.
O. W. Rollins, M. B. Bryan and
.;. Cox and Nan L u
. . a
i.-
now but the an t will be
Get one of those
ii n just ii at liar
j lei Co.
D. Johnston, Kin ton
.-. at here
i r. i flour just
Harrington, Barber Go.
u. Sparks, of was
He ii a form r
Little Liver for bilious-
sick-headache. They you
well. c. Try them. Sold by Jno.
L. druggist.
Died.
Mr. If. Jefferson House died
in , , , . . , u
. . . Thursday at his home near Has-
Tar River Association ,. ,; ,
Will be Held in Green-
ville.
From Tuesday night to Thurs-
day night of this week the
churches in the division
the old
sell in Martin county. He was
rust of the Wilmington Wei-1 . ,
delegates and
A Healthy Family.
whole family has enjoyed good
we using Dr. King's
New Lite Pills, three years
A. of Rural Route
ford, Maine. They and tone
the system in a that does
you goo. c at J o. L. Wooten's
drug store.
don railroad had
meeting in Rocky Mount for the
purpose of organizing a new
association. About fifty churches
were represented.
The introductory sermon was
preached Tuesday night by Rev.
J. T. Jenkins, of Wilson. After
.-.
sermon the association or-
T M Ar.
the new for 1909.;
There will be fully as many
iii, as clerk.
Ron
to
of Rocky
moderator and
I o
S tbs
Mount, as
J. A.
ii bu i-3
t-l
. . ;.
. . . E
day c
the bet i Known
in the world.
of The i
freewill
laws for the
e pi of the paper.
n. v
h .
-ii i
,. i i
I ,
one
1909
was adopted, An Incident at
a id a- selected as altogether in knowing
j hew. A woman on West
were filled with Market today when tin parade
J he of interesting sub-j went by. She had five children
j, re i. with that work and seemed , perfectly at home
. . i a . i
Salisbury Man Kill Himself.
about ten had boon
an invalid from paralysis. T
He was a son of the late Elder gal fifty
David a brother of fears, killed himself here to-
Mr. D. E House and uncle of night taking an overdose of
Mr. J. L. Little, of Greenville. opium. dead body was
He leaves a wife and several found In a of woods near
children.
Bit Pi ice For a Coin.
At ale of old and rare coin
in iv . last we. k. a
piece was bid off at
The coins were
minted in county,
Carolina, ard
one was dated 1834. It
To those kidney and
for the s relief
n ha first of
t. day testify to their rem r able
and tunic properties. trial
morning They purify the blood, bold
and b- by Jno. L
government of the
was purchased in 1882 for
by U man tor whom it was
sold. Statesville
in reading Another woman, for
Would Mortgage the Farm.
A farmer on Routs It, Empire,
Ga. W. A. Ii-d by name,
Salve cured the two
r one on my
. more than weight
I would not without it if
no
. lie i
ii
J led i
. i
III V
it . .
I a, U
. I
fair
-U
J. I------ l
J u.
may be
to report.
ii of
tO
ling.
. r
, ; , . -I . Ill
.-. ., . .
. , T. t
Prices talk. , . .
ox o important as welL Sunday B, A.
, J ever displayed m bring the farmer into Education,
r. at Harrington with the at
, ,. , , , , . ., . . . sores iv. r one on my
reports her. asked if she could not help it is worth
it. her. Oh no; she was all l ; . , ,
., . , , . I had to the to get it.
. Greenville her husband had the Only at Jno. L. Store.
ch for the across the street. How many
be held; others Four And Train on East Carolina Ry.
the woman was happy.- J Mr Henry Clark
next meet- Record. president of the East Carolina
Railway, having the interest and
Experienced found
, by taking them a
b of , BETH Balsam.
J. W. All- It illness caused by impure water
p p and of War
T. M. Ar-
. by j L. Wooten.
Barker . Co.
J id V. if
Point, came
in last eight
and Sunday with her parents.
the Hunsucker bug-
King. Call to see
nice Stock of be-
you Prices are inter
are carrying a nice line
and Caskets, Prices are
right and can nice hearse
service. A. G. Cox Mfg. Co.
Miss Lydia Roberson is visiting
her sister, Miss Vivian, at the
dormitory.
Chickens and eggs a specialty.
Come and get the best prices.
Harrington, Barber Co.
Quite a number of our young
men attended the play at Ayden
Wednesday night.
We have opened a large
line of best ware. Come
and get your pick.
A. W.
Rev. T. H. King filled his reg-
at the Baptist
church Sunday morning and
night. Large congregations
were present at both services.
At the close of the services Sun-
day morning the ordinance of
baptism was administered to
three iris and two young men
who recently united themselves
with the Ayden Baptist church.
Quite a number of the Ayden
people were
Miss Chapman left Mon-
Pitt Wini at Fan-
Mr L. Joyner returned this
W May from state fair at
have M Mrs. W. J AllX
G. j stock farm on exhibition at
General education and e fair and was awarded two
H I i.-.
and hi. y are nu fore id u- -c J. j. J ;,. the
When need of a to , tor .- .
date suit of clothe-come and the i and the other for best grade
examine our line of men s and roads makes traveling State u cow. Mr. Joy-
boy's clothing. pleasant, ii no, difficult. at his farm,
Harrington Barber Co miss . Dr.
The and I rural mall deliveries, the I. M. Mercer; Periodicals. T. L v
stoves are on table of Vernon.
ii
the best. We have them at prices
that will interest you. We also
have a full line of heaters and
piping. Harrington, Barber
Co.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. are now in position to sup-
ply you with their Tar Heel
Carts, box bodies and Tumbling
bodies. Prices made right. Call
and see them.
Harrington. Barber Co.
builders will do well to
see A W. for win-
and doors before buying.
For nice little one
horse farm three miles east of
and four miles from
Ayden. For terms apply to E.
J. N. C.
Tuesday morning at 7.30 Jesse
Forrest, of Vanceboro and Miss
Annie Nelson, of our town, were
happily united in the bonds
of matrimony, in the Methodist
church. The wedding march was
beautifully rendered by Miss
Butt. Rev. H. E. Tripp per-
formed the ceremony.
after the marriage they
drove through the country to
Vanceboro, the home of the
newspaper on
farmer early on the day of its
publication enabling him to trans-
act much of his business by mail
Sunday school committee-
Halifax, C. W. Wilson; Edge-
C. J. Austin, Nash, L. T.
and to take advantage of early Vaughan; Wilson, R. E. Hagen;
information as to fluctuation in Martin, S. A. Newell; Pitt, W.
the prices of his farm products. H, Beaufort, S. P.
Good roads mean that farmer
and the members of his family
can enjoy to a degree the society
of their neighbors and friends
in the town and country. They
mean that his children can be
more regular in school attendance
and can receive to a greater de-
the advantages of
They mean the bringing closer
together of the and
try, with on both
sides, for as the farmer is
fitted by being brought into closer
Willis; Washington, J. Taylor.
Order of business-G. P.
rill, W. H. J. A.
Religious pas-
tor and deacons of the Greenville
church.
Finance committee-J. W.
Anderson, L. Pittman, C. F.
Ellen.
LAME BACK
This is usually caused by
rheumatism of the of the small
of the back, and quickly cured by
Chamberlains Liniment two or
three times and the
parts at each application. For sale by
j. L. Woolen and Coward Wooten.
development along the line of
the East Carolina Railway in
view, has decided to put on a
passenger service on November
which will be operated
from the Hookerton end in con-
with the Atlantic Coast
Line Railroad via Tarboro, for
travel North, via Norfolk,
more, etc.
This will enable the citizens of
Hookerton, Farmville, and
stations to make close connection
with the morning train on the
Line at Tarboro for Nor-
folk and Baltimore, and return-
they will have a train
Tarboro at 12.20 p. m. or
upon the arrival of A. C. L. No.
train from Norfolk.
The passenger train from Tar-
to Hookerton will be
in connection with the Nor-
folk and Southern at Farmville,
making the quickest time to
and making good
for Greenville, Washington
and Wilson.
Furniture and fixtures
Demand loans
Due from Banks
and Bankers
Will sell for cash a items
Gold Coin
all
Farm for Sale
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
Bank of
AT WINTERVILLE.
In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business July 15th.
Loans and discounts Capital stock
Surplus funk
1,178.68
200.00
acre farm, in one mile of the town of
Farmville. No dwelling house on the
1,178.80
20.00
825.00
400.00
fitted by , including
touch with the town, so all of mi nor coin currency
business interests of the
prosper as the result of the
I l
.- .
day to begin her school groom. Mr. Forrest is a popular
CLAYTON
Farmville, N. C.
near Stokes. She taught there
last year.
Miss Cora Carroll and Harvey
Stokes were here Sunday.
Rev. W. A Forbes, of Farm-
ville. came in Tuesday to aid
Rev. H. S. in a series of
week at the
church.
young man of Vanceboro and
Miss Nelson was one of our most
popular young ladies. We wish
them a happy and successful
life.
Our immense fall and winter
stock of dry goods, shoes, no-
clothing, hardware and
crockery is coming in every day.
with which the farmers can
do their shopping. Good roads
also benefit the inhabitants of
towns and cities by affording
facilities for pleasant country
drives. They invite the
man to the establishment
of country and suburban homes,
such as he can enjoy only when
he is assured that the condition
of the roads will be such as to
enable him to h his place of
business promptly in all kinds
of weather.-President Finley,
the So. Ry.
Pigs-1 have for sale a few
thoroughbred pigs at
five dollars each. H. S. Tyson.
Farmville, N. C.
STRAY UP.
I have Stray male year
ling, black three logs Whits be
low knees, unmarked, looks about
two years old. can get same
by proving proving property and paying
charges.
Oct.
J. R. Galloway,
R. F. D. No. IS. C.
National bank notes and
other V. S. notes
Total
188.80
10,888.11
Undivided profits less
current expenses and
taxes paid
Bills payable
Time certificates
deposit
subject to check
Cashiers checks
standing
178.08
8,600.00
f, 7112.70
Total
16,688.41
State of North Caroling County
is true to the best of
Subscribed and to before me,
this day of July, 1908.
R. Johnson,
Notary Public.
J F Harrington,
; E Lineberry
W B Wingate, Directors.
LAXATIVE COUCH SYRUP
MS TO MUM
An
CO. V. A.
FOR ALE JNO. L. WOOTEN.
r-
EASTERN REFLECTOR
D. J. Editor and Owner
In Preference to Fiction.
VOL. No.
COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA.
One Dollar Per Year
NUMBER
TEDDY AND BILL.
CONFIDENT OF VICTORY.
Behold, I and my fathers, the,
s trust
unto your supplication for, lo, Have
these many years, because you to The
have our N. C, Oct. 26-The
and voted as ye would and not as telegram received at
headquarters here
FARMVILLE NOTES
South Are Filled With
Now it came to pass in the
seventh year of the of
Teddy, that is called the
Terrible, that there was great
murmuring the people
and much arose, and the
people said, we will not have this
man to rule us, for, behold,
our dinner pail that were wont
to be full are empty and we have
not therewith to replenish
them ; and we dare not go into
the market-place to buy for
ourselves and families for the
prices are high, have we the
shekels wherewith to buy for
we directed you- Therefore, go
to, now, and when the
month is come, assemble ye and
say. we will Bill to rule
over us, for thus saith the king
And if ye shall do this ye shall
have exceeding great reward,
and ye shall still be permitted to
be a part of my dominion, and I
will continue to receive tribute
from you. And Bill went out and
did as the king commanded.
And it came to pass that there
was in the land of Dixie a goodly
province, the same that is called
it; and also, our din-
pails have no bottoms- And
great want was abroad in the
land, for food was and
shekels were scarce, and the
people said; Behold, for many
moons the king has promised us
relief and it is not yet; and, lo,
say unto the people of
Halifax that at a certain
hour on a certain day T
will tarry a while in your
land in a certain city that is
called Boston, and I will
set myself before your eyes that
ye and with
,. ,, c good advice delight your
the people may look
v.,
demand f And the
People
sore and spent and assembled to do
the promises o. the king. they Is
And the king said within
self. I must depart into h f Ku , And
. r t a i
the strewed flow-
n he should
no and with the timbrel and
the harp and the trumpet and
this
A. H. Eller,
Chairman Democratic State Com.
Raleigh, N. C.
We are confident that Bryan
will win in the electoral college.
I am wiring to urge you to call
upon the voters of your State to
be active and to appeal to those
in strong Democratic to
the full Democratic vote
so that a Dig majority of the
popular vote will be cast for
an and Kern. A large majority
of the popular vote will help to
secure the reform to
which our party is committed.
Av majority in
will help the Democratic party
everywhere. Please leave no
effort untried to get out the full
Democratic vote in your State.
to the Democratic papers
which have done so much in this
campaign to aid in this work.
Norman E. Mack.
will you.
THEY ARE SQUARE PEOPLE.
Africa to slay me the lion,
tiger and the for I Ml
and for my sport,
so I will call together my
and my centurions and my and the voice did
from ail over make a joyful noise. And
cry was beard,
voice he and caravan
not for nigh three score years. in their midst
been heeded in the capital city, a to gaze
because, forsooth, they nave not; prince one
espoused the cause of and;
strong men
land, yea, even also
land of Dixie, whose
the cause of haggard gray his
my political fathers ; and that is called
cause a great throng to assemble I j and
hands and said, Praise be unto
time
in the city that is called Chicago,
and there shall they be you;
people that hereafter I him that the bag, great is
who cometh from Ohio, hear ye him And he
rule over them, for, verily, is be y up his ard said Be.
not a great man. greater in girth wake him
than all others And is he for not
my friend And is it not divine-, and the
appointed that I, Teddy, shall
choose him who shall occupy my
throne until I return unto my
own And, moreover,
Bill fat to bursting with
policies And the throng as-
and did as the king
commanded, and the king did
lift his hand, and the throng did
shout, Hail, King Teddy; Hail,
Bill
Now, it came to pass that in
the tenth month the King sent
out and called Bill into his pres-
And when Bill was come
into the presence of the king, he
fell upon his face the man-
in those and cried, O,
King, live forever Behold,
have I not unto thy
commands to obey them And
have I not gone at thy bidding
to spread thy glory unto the ends
of the earth, yea, even from the
great ditch that is called Panama
to the far Islands of the sea
And am I not filled with thy
policies both inside and out
But what am I that I should lift
mine eyes to behold thee Then
the king said, arise, Bill, and hie
thee to the great city by the lake
and thou shalt enter the
house of one that is called Pull-
man, and ho will have ready his
cars and his servants and they
shall take thee in great state
through a corner of my kingdom
that is called Dixie, for the
of that land are benighted
and have never beheld a Mai,
live prince; and thou shalt say
before sinners. And the people
clamor the more, and some said,
he spoke not the words of truth
and soberness. Then stepped
forth Tine that is
named Martin, and in his hand
he held a cloth white as pure
snow and he did wave it aloft
and with it he did wig wag, and
the caravan departed from the
goodly land of Halifax, and with
it departed Prince Bill and all
the servants.
And the people were sore vex-
ed and murmured among them-
selves and said, We will not
have this man to rule over us;
and, moreover, is not the king
the chief of the club that is
called Ananias and is not Prince
Bill his political son and heir
Verily, our land shall still be
called solid.-South Boston, Va.
Gazette.
Man Made Happy With Check He did
Know Belonged to Him.
Mr. Joy Wingate, a good
farmer of township,
walked in The Reflector office
this morning to tell us an
he had in selling tobacco
and which he said he thought
the public should know. About
two weeks ago he sold a load of
tobacco at the Star warehouse
branch of the Farmers
dated Tobacco Co. He got a
cluck to and
went home contented with the
sale, though he did closely
examine the sales statement
given him with the check.
On Monday Mr. Wingate
brought more tobacco to the Star,
and Mr. the auditor, asked
if he had his sales statement of
two weeks ago with him, as a
mistake had been made la the
settlement which the company
wanted to Mr. Win-
gate did not have the statement
with him but said he had it
among his papers at home and
could bring it today. He brought
the statement today and a com-
of it with the sales book
of the Farmers Consolidated Co.
disclosed an error of and
another check for this amount
was handed to Mr. Wingate.
He was a well phased man at
finding himself that much better
off than he thought, and he did
not fail to praise the integrity
of the officers of the
dated- .
Farmville, N. C. Oct.
Col. Harry Skinner spoke to
quite a crowd here Saturday
evening and of course he very
gracefully propounded the
of the day and ex-
plained the other side of the
Democratic party and compared
it to the Republican party's
emblems of purity which made
the whole quite an interesting
speech for we Democrats as well
as the few Republicans.
Mr. Samuel Brewer, of Marl-
died night about
o'clock after suffering a long
time from paralysis. He was
out fifty years of age, a
of the Free Will Baptist
church, and leaves a wife and
on a daughter to mourn hi death.
On Saturday night about
o'clock, Oct. 17th, Mr. T. L. Allen
lost his dwelling house and en-
tents with a narrow escape of
being himself. It seems
that Mr. Allen's wife and child-
were visiting their uncle, Watt
Parker, and Allen being
alone went over to a neighbor's
to spend the and
returning home he went into
his room and the door and
in a few minutes the fire came
bursting out from an adjoining
bed-room. Before he had time
save anything whole
house was in a blaze. His loss
was a heavy one, being nearly
a thousand dollars with only a
little insurance.
HOUSE DEMOCRATIC BY HUNDRED YEARS OF METHODISM.
Chairman Lloyd in Three Centennial Celebration by in
State.
Chicago. Oct. house
Oct. 27.-
Democratic by probable The centennial of
majority and possibly, in is being celebrated
opinion Jam-s T. this week with.
chairman of the in the Hay Street
Campaign church. Th
who made his anti- which will through
election prediction today. Lloyd Thursday was
. morning by bishop A. w.
-The congress consists son. of J
of members. There have that night on the Lay-
bee,, elections in Oregon and men's
Maine and six Republicans were Col. John F. , PI w
SoS from States. Of U. N. C delivered an address
yet to be elected, it is
reasonably sure that there will
be Democrat and
leaves sixty districts to
doubtful. If our
are correct, all the
districts may yet be given to the
Republicans, and yet the D mo
would
a of
will
of Respect.
At a meeting of the Ladies
Magazine club in Farmville,
North Carolina, on October
1908, following resolution
were unanimously
Whereas, it has pleased our
Heavenly Father to call to Him-
self our faithful member and vice
president, Mrs. Sue May
ton, we desire to place upon the
records of our club our
of her many virtues, as well
as the great loss we have
at her death. A charter
member, and ever ready and
active in the work to
which she gave the services
of her well stored her
warm heart, her wit and
keen sense of humor.
We feel that the
as well as the club she loved,
has sustained a loss by the death
of this good woman.
Be it resolved that a copy cf
these resolutions be sent to our
county papers, and also to the
family of our friend, assuring
them of our deep sympathy in
their hour of trial.
Miss Morrill, Sec.
J. Stanley Smith, Pres.
seven. doubtful districts
our judgment is that the
have at least an equal
chance, and may probably elect
as many as thirty additional
members out of this class for
D which would mike
a total Democrats am
Republicans, a Democratic ma
Ci
, principal gains would be
in the Northern Mississippi Val-
in New
The reason for the gain
is due to the dissatisfaction of
the people with existing political
conditions, and their disgust at
the autocratic rule of the present
Speaker of the House of
will you.
Sunday Mails and
The Sabbath Observation As-
of this State held its
annual meeting in High Point
last week. Judge Pritchard was
one of the speakers of the
ion. Among other things the
association passed the following
That this
do most earnestly solicit
from the people of our State their
support in an energetic
crusade for fuller Sabbath
to the of
which the pushing back of many
encroachments will be necessary,
and since if an inroad is to be
made at all it must begin some-
where, therefore it is suggested
by this convention that our en-
first directed against
Sunday mails and Sunday news-
papers as productive of
seriously detrimental to
Sunday afternoon on
A feature of the celebration
format
pastor of Bay
Dr. L. L Nash, of Gibson, a
former pastor of Hay Street
church, preached an excellent
sermon Monday morning on
the of the
World, Rev. A. Smoot,
of Wilmington, also a
pastor, delivered a very enter-
Monday evening
on Hundred Years of
Methodism in
Among the speakers en the
program is ex-Governor T. J.
Jarvis.
At this morning
Rev. W. H. Moore D. D. of
Rockingham, preached an
. in tho Hay Street
church. This evening Rev. T.
N. Ivey, D. D., editor of the
Raleigh Advocate,
delivered a scholarly and highly
address n
aid and Rev.
D. II. of Mount.
discoursed eloquent I
The centennial celebration is
i a end will
undoubtedly aid in the-
o the o of Methodism.
will you.
Tuning.
Our Mr. W. H. Daniels is now
in Greenville. Mr. Daniels is
one of our factory tuners and
can give your piano a through
overhauling. We guarantee his
work or will refund your money.
If your piano needs attention
apply M. or G. G.
box Greenville. Do
not phone but write your order.
G. G.
will you.
Soil of Pitt County.
Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 22.-W.
E J. L. Burgess, Mr.
Hardison and Mr. have
been detailed under the auspices
of the United States and the
North Carolina departments of
agriculture to make a complete
soil survey of Pitt county,
an area of square miles,
during the coming winter and
the survey to be similar
to that already made with such
marked good results in New Han-
over,
mans and portions of Craven,
Jones and Lenoir counties. The
surveys have had the effect of
greatly extending the trucking
interests and it is intended that
they shall extend ultimately
throughout the eastern section
of the State with this same ob-
in view.
Big in
Raleigh, N. C. Oct 27-A gain
of more than in the
resources of the State private
and savings banks in North Car-
is shown by the summary
of the condition of banks just
from the office of the
North Carolina corporation com-
mission here, the gain being in
local asses.
For m calf so-
D. ltd
reliable Wilson heaters
at Taft Boyd's,
st re for rent. Apply
to D. D. Haskett.
Everybody the Wilson
heaters are the best.
For mattings, rugs and squares
see Taft Boyd.
Fresh grapes, peaches,
pears, celery, oranges.
S. M. Schultz.
Chairs of all kinds, single or
in sets, at. Taft Boyd's.
For Rent or horse
farm. Good house, water,
seriously detrimental to house
Sabbath observance and Chris- at office.
d w
The sidewalk on one side of
Dickinson avenue out to the A.
C. L. railroad completed and
the workmen are coming back
Marriage License.
Register of R. Williams,
has issued the following licenses
since last
WHITE.
J. H. Forest and Annie
son.
George Smith and Eva Smith.
J. B. Johnson and Leila t.
Tripp- c k
David Williams and Sarah
comparison with the total
sources shown by the last
summary, three months ago.
The total resources shown
the report just issued is
The total deposits, time,
subject to check and in
is
Listen-Will your widow and
children live in ease and comfort,
or in debt and drudgery Its up
to you. The Mutual Life is the
best.
P. S. Moore and
rick.
COLORED.
C. C. Worthington and
Bullock.
Walter and Lena
James Warren and Jennie
Johnson,
Ricky Whitfield and Adeline
Little.
George Little and Hattie Net-
down the
speed.
For pool and bill
tables and fixtures and pool
room furniture, belonging to the
F. White. Apply to S.
T. White, administrator.
d w
Beginning Saturday, Oct. 31st,
we will run a day redaction
sale. Will i educe prices 1-3 on
entire stock of shoes, dress
goods, notions, cloaks, laces, etc.
J. F. Davenport Co.
Only two parties can carry the
risk on a married man's life.
One is a sound if i-
company,
Which carries see
Bentley Harriss The
Mutual Life.
POOR PRINT


Title
Eastern reflector, 23 October 1908
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 23, 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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