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DEPARTMENT
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON
Agent of The Eastern Reflector and Vicinity- Advertising Rate Application
The Pitt County School
WOODLAND ITEMS.
We have needles, bobbins and.
manufactured by The A. G. Cox shuttles, for any sewing machine
Manufacturing Company are in the country. Also needle Woodland, N. C, June
comfortable, neat and threaders, the very thing for J Mrs. G- W. of Ayden, spent
durable. Terms en liberal, affected eyes or dark days-
in the market come to see Harrington, Barber
us. we hive the for you. We have put in an assortment
W. went to Ayden of patterns for all styles.
Wednesday. I Barber Co.
We are carrying a nice line of How is your soul Let
Coffin and Caskets. Prices are show you our new lot of
right and can hearse j shoes. Harrington. Bart Co
service, A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. A nice six key soda fountain
B. J. EL B. for sale. R. D.
We have purchased the
as the
Lawhorn and F A. E
went to yesterday.
For spring arts goods,
and laces see us-
New lot just in.
Harrington, Barber Co-
Annie Bell, a well trained
nurse of came in a
few days ago to take charge of
the little son of Cox, who
For fresh fish see R. D.
on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturdays.
M. B. went to Green-
ville Thursday.
For cold drinks of all kinds call
at B. L fountain.
Wanted- At once seven tons
of beeswax at cents per
pound. M. G- Bryan,
N. C. dames E. F.
J. L. Jackson, of Greenville, i Elliott
to see
has been sick
came in last
brother, who
several day.
Just received, a nice lot
shoes.
Milling and Mfg. and will
be ready very soon to grind corn,
do general repair work and dress
timber.
Harrington, Barber Co.
A nice lot of matting just in.
A. W. Ange Cc.
We are now in to do
grinding every day general
repair work promptly.
Harrington Barber Co.
New Jot of dry goods and no-
just in. Better while
they ate cheap.
A. W. Ange Co.
Mr. and Mrs. James H.
and mother, of Oxford,
came in Saturday and spent
Sunday and Monday with Mes-
Tucker and L. F.
left Tuesday for
the Rain.
This rain is some kind of a
nuisance anyway it is looked at
It is ruining the crops, muddy-
the river so that the Pitt
county of
will be sadly handicapped to
subject matter for yarns.
It has made workmen let up on
Saturday, night and Sunday at
J. L.
Rev. R. R. Joyner, of Ayden, gins to answer for, including
spent Friday night at I caused.
Lucy of Ayden, might have to hire a carriage to
take his partner to the reception
Finer sad Mil
Mr. I have as com
arranged flour and corn mill
as twenty years experience in the
business would assist me in
building. I bought the very
latest improved and the very
best machinery to be had. I am
making as fine as any mill
in that makes a pure
If you have any
you want turned
who has been spending a few
days with Miss Nobles,
returned yesterday.
Mr. Stanley and Miss Lissie
Garris celebrated their, birthday
birthday Saturday with an ice
cream supper. They had a large
crowd and a good time.
Miss Lela is spend-
a few days with her aunt,
Mrs. Frank
Miss Abram is spending
a few days with Mrs. A- W.
Barber.
We are sorry to hear of the
illness of Mrs. C. T. Kittrell.
the various new buildings being
erected in town and is trying to straight flour.
take some of the glamor off wheat that
some of our June weddings., into flour, I will be pleased to
It has various and you. Yours truly,
Jonathan Havens,
anxiety caused a young Washington, N.
man in town who feared that he .
to Select
Some of
the county are taking advantage
of the opportunity offered by so
many teachers being here in the
summer school, and re coming
HEALTH
INSURANCE
The mu who insure his Is
wise for his family.
The mm who insures his health
as wise both his family and
Norfolk and Washington D. C.
for Miss Chapman is spend-
a few in the country
of visiting Miss Sadie Carroll.
J. H. Bryan, of Tarboro, was
Harrington, Barber Co in town today on business.
Miss Pearl Nelson, of J. L. Jackson came in last
is visiting Pattie Nelson. night from Greenville to see his
The is the Kind brother who has been very sick
you need. See us,
A W. Ange Co.
F. A. Edmundson spent Friday
in Greenville.
We call your attention to our
new line of groceries.
K. W.
For nice fresh corned herrings
see A. W. Ange Co. Winter-
ville, N. C.
Straw hats are going fist, buy
one, don't be W, Ange
ft Co.
Leave your orders for ice at H.
L Johnson's. Will be delivered
anywhere in town.
Matting and oil cloth, the
floor, buy some, cover it over.
Harrington. Co.
Before buying, see my line of
post cards, L. Johnson.
Field peas and peanuts for
sale by A. W. Ange Co., Win-
N. C
To reduce our stock before in-
we will offer for a
limited time, cheap, for
gingham calico,
wonted dress goods, to
suiting, ; percales, to
motor cloth, waist
goods, lawn, mohair
wool effects,
to table peaches, pie
peaches, shirts.
shirts,
shirts, Call and see what
we offer. A. W, Ange Co.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. are rendering good service
in the undertaking business.
Coffins and caskets cheap with
excellent hearse service.
Let us frame that for
you. Any size frame.
A. W. Ange Co.
A new lot of lamps just in.
Harrington, Barber Co.
Beef, sausage and fish, going
cheap. R. W. at Johnson
stand, on railroad street.
will never regret when
you a Hunsucker buggy,
by A. G. Cox Man-
Co., Winterville.
N. C-
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. las sold this season ever
cotton planters and
guano sewers which would
ally indicate a large cotton crop
this year.
Fresh herrings at
Barber Co.
for several days,
Mr. Underwood, of Durham,
was a pleasant visitor in our
town Sunday.
Miss Lessie King, of Durham,
who has been spending some
time with Misses Eva and Lucy
Bell Langston returned home
Monday.
Rev. E. T. Phillips and wife
and Miss Alice Baker, of Ayden,
came in Sunday. Rev. Mr. Phil-
lips tilled his regular appoint-
at the Free Will Baptist
church.
B. G. Taylor and Ola Kittrell,
of Ayden, were in town
day.
Miss Hulda Cox, accompanied
by Miss Hughes, of
Washington, came in Saturday
night and left Monday for
Greenville to attend the summer
school.
Mrs. J. L. Butt and family
left today for to
spend a few days visiting
Eli Ange, of Ayden, came in
yesterday left today for
where he has accepted
a position as bookkeeper.
Rev. E. L. St. Claire gave a
very able lecture for the benefit
of the Masons in the school
Sunday.
Miss Laura Cox spent
day and Sunday visiting relatives
near Ayden.
BLACK JACK ITEMS.
Black Jack, June
Dixon and daughter, Miss Lena,
went to Greenville Monday.
We are glad to say that Mrs.
W. L. Clark seems to improve
some.
Miss Dollie Dixon spent
day night and Sunday with Miss
Martha Williams.
Miss Lucy Arnold the
guest of Misses Stella and Bertha
Gaskins Saturday night and
Sunday.
The Public Library.
The public library will be in a
position to begin letting out books
to the people of Greenville by the
end of next week. The ladies
of the town under whose super-
vision the library was run until
their entire equipment was
destroyed by the fire in February
have set to work with energy
only renewed by this temporary
reverse and have already secured
quarters, which are finished
them gratis in the
building by the Chapter Masons
of the town. Seventy -even
dollars has been expended in
books and library furniture. The
books are expected to be here
by Saturday, June The
End of the Century and Sin
clubs at present have
charge. They have invited the
two other clubs, The
Round Table and Civic League
and the Carolina Club
ate with them by sending
upon a committee
which shall have charge of the
affairs of the library.
The Civic League has donated
recently, but as yet no
have been made
about sending representatives.
Mrs. W. A. Bowen. who was
librarian of the old library, has
charge of the new. She hopes
to have the secretary of the
Library Commission to pay
a visit here soon and help launch
the new library.
last night.
Last and in the opinion of
many the gravest fault cf the
seven days shower is fact
that it has f all efforts
of real estate agents to rent the
well ventilated Blow house on
Third street, which they say is
useful only as a good weather
residence.
River Continues
Observer R. M. Hearne has
received another warning from
Raleigh that the water in Tar
river will reach the foot stage
before the end of the week;
For the hours ending at
o'clock this morning the river
rose a foot and a half here, and
there was an inch more of rain
fall in the same time. There is
no telling how high the river
will go before it stops rising
The thing which the farmers
fear almost as much as a
of these heavy showers h
a spell of hot, fair weather
Such a period, they say, will
work as much havoc with the
cotton and corn crops as the
present rain. What they think
best for the weather man to send
them now is a lot of clouds who
are only
Vow nay Injure health by guard-
K- It Is worth guarding.
At the attack of
which generally approaches
he LIVER and
fest In Innumerable ways
And save your health.
This Afternoon.
Of the two marriages set for
today, one has already taken
place. At this afternoon
Miss Malissa Brooks was married
to Mr. Henry Tyson, of Farm-
ville, at the home of Mrs. B. G.
on Third street. Rev.
Mr. Bland, of Ayden, performed
the Reflector,
15th.
Mr. T. E. Dead.
Mr. T. E. Jackson, an excel-
lent man and prosperous farmer
died at his heme near Winter-
ville this morning, after an ill-
of nearly two weeks, with
typhoid fever. Mr. Jackson
was of age and leaves a
wife and seven children. Hi is
also survived by his mother and
six brothers, one of the latter
being Mr. J. L. Jackson of is
city. The funeral will take
place Thursday afternoon.
Informal Reception.
An informal reception to
bridal party and a few relatives
and friends at the h me of Mr.
E. B. followed the dress
rehearsal for the
Skinner wedding which took
place Tuesday night. A light
supper was served at p. m.
The marriage will take place in
the Episcopal church at o'clock
tonight
Added
J. H. Boyd, Jr., the new furn-
man, has added
in connection with his
He has already received a
stock of caskets and coffins and
baa placed an order for a hearse.
Now Quarter.
The new quarters in
the Wins-low building are as yet
leased by the lodge of Chapter
Masons alone. They hope that
the Blue Lodge Masons will come
in with them into the new
quarters at an early date.
for Reflector.
More Improvements.
The building formerly known
as has undergone s
remodeling. A new front
been put in and it is now divided
in two apartments, one to be
used by Smith as a
office, and the other b
tailoring establish
Congressional Contention.
The De congressional
convention of the first
to engage teachers for their fall district of North Carolina,
schools. This is a good idea, is hereby called to meet in Eden-
for the by visiting ton. N. a. on July
the school can see personally and 6th, 1910. at o'clock p. m., for
observe the work of the the purpose of nominating a can-
teachers, and with the assistance for congress end transact-
of the county superintendent such other business as may
and faculty can hardly go wrong Mon the con-
in making selections.
Chin. Dem. Con. Ex. Com.
1st. Diet N. C.
D. B. Bradford. S c.
Kept the King at Home,
For the past year we have kept the
King's New
Life our home and they have
proved a to all our
writes Paul of buffalo, N.
Y. Easy, but sure remedy for all
stomach, liver and kidney troubles.
Only at all drug-gists.
Miss Abrams left Wed-
Fat m ville, where
she has accepted a position.
BAKER HART
BAKER HART
The Up-to-date Hardware
Store
IT is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish,
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves, Enamelware, Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a full Line of Wall Paints
easy to put hard to come off. Place
now with them and you will be
pleased.
IF Special attention is called to our line of
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders,
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail to see us before buying, they
can supply your wants. Give them a call.
Baker Hart
Evans Street, N. C.
USED UNIVERSALLY
W HEN Metal were first introduced years
you had some excuse for being
But now
If you arc it can only be because you do not know the
tacts in the case.
They arc used today from the Atlantic to the Pacific for all kinds
of buildings, under all conditions.
They are fireproof, never leak and last as long as the
building itself without needing repairs.
For further detailed information apply to
YORK COBB, Agents.
MERIDITH COLLEGE.
Among the foremost college for Women in the South.
Course in Liberal Arts covering nine departments, and including elective
course in Education and Bible, which count for the A. It. degree, School
including Piano. Pin Organ, Violin and Voice Culture. School of Art,
including Decoration, Designing and of
which prepares students for college courses-Physical Culture under a trained
director. Full literary course per year, including literary tuition, board, room,
light, heat, physician, nurse, ordinary medicine and all minor fees,
in Club, to leas. Next session begins Sept. 1910. Address,
R T. VANN, President,
North Carolina.
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR
D. J. Editor and Owner
Truth in Preference to Fiction.
One Dollar Per Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JUNE
IO.
No.
FERGUSON-SKINNER.
NEW K. P. COMMITTEEMEN
Beautiful it the Episcopal
Church.
Rains will stop many things.
but not a wedding, and the very
inclement weather Wednesday
night did not prevent St. Paul's
Episcopal church from
filled to overflowing by those
anxious to witness the
of Mr. Edward Benjamin
son and Miss Margaret Cotten
Skinner.
For this event the chancel ff
the church was attractively
decorated with palms and ferns,
a wreath of evergreens arched
above from the of which
was suspended a huge white
wedding bell.
At o'clock, as the bridal
party assembled in the vestibule,
Mr. Charles James sang
Perfect Then as Miss
Helen Forbes played the wedding
march the party entered in the
following
First the ushers, Messrs. Willis
Hackney. Joe Eagles and R. C.
Welfare, of A. M.
Moseley. W. H. Jr., O. C.
Gregory, E. B. and C. S.
Carr. of Greenville; C. C. Skin
and Frank Skinner, of New
York.
Then the two dames of honor,
Mesdames E. B. and L
C. Skinner. Mrs. wore
white satin and Mrs. Skinner
white Duchess satin, and both
carried white carnations.
Next the girls, little
Misses Ada James and Margaret
Fleming, each dressed in while
and carrying a basket of flowers.
Following these came Miss
Ethel Skinner, maid of honor,
dressed white crepe de
with pearl trimmings, and carry-
white carnations.
The bride entered with her
brother, Dr. L. C. Skinner, who
gave her away, and as they
neared the chancel the
came from the vestry room
his best man, Mr. George Hack
Jr., of Washington, and
met them. The costume
was crepe de media with pearl
trimmings, and she carried a
shower bouquet of bride roses
and lilies of the valley.
The ceremony was performed
by Rev. B. F. Huske. the
ring ceremony being used.
As the wedded couple
about to descend from the
eel the attendants pulled ribbons
attached to the wedding bell and
a shower of rose leaves fell upon
them.
Following the marriage the
bridal party was entertained by
Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Skinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson left on
the midnight train for a bridal
tour to several northern cities.
The popularity of the couple
was shown in the large number
of wedding presents from
friends.
There were many out of town
visitors in attendance whose
names have already been pub
PARENTS REUNITED.
REMODELED MARKET HOUSE.
After of Newly Baby Leads Mr. and Mrs. Walter Now Has One W Cod as
Elected Officers. to Their Difference. Any u the State.
The Grand Lodge Nights off A happy climax of the legal That Greenville now has as
Pythias of North between Mrs. Lelia a market house as car. be
dosed fortieth annual and Walter Whisnant
he 20-months-old baby L For something like a year
aldermen had the matter
ed by A. E. Grand,
and C. C.
vice-Grand Chancellor,
Asheville as th place f meeting
for the 1911 gathering, n
of Mrs. A S. Bernard,
and heard appointment of
the Grand Chancellor of
standing committees and district
deputies for the n-w
year. The new orphanage at
was further
and a rising vote of thanks ex
tended to Rev. Dr. P. R. Law,
when an amicable
D.
settlement
under consideration of improving
the market house, and a few
was reached between the two months ago the committee w
parties. The parents will live instructed to proceed with th
together again and their j
which they fought I At an expenditure of
and each will contribute to the committee had th.
training to useful citizenship.
Their love for the little child
reunited them and they agreed
to go back home and forget all
enmity which at one existed
between them. It was through
Judge tint they
IMPORTANCE OF FINE FISHING
k Crop Every Farmer Should Plant Season There a Most One
Liberally. Atlantic Hotel.
we desire to remind City. Juno 20.-On
farm in of the importance of Saturday Mr. no I R. P.
planting available and had splendid
rated acre fishing. They -pant most
are valuable for the day. both filing in the
following j found and t owling and brought
,. ,, into the hotel two hundred fish.
They are a good human j and
, J l. M. Marks party
They ens of our In .
nutritious Is for stock. trout and blue fish on
They shade the soil during the . , o-u.
hottest part of the summer, thus
from
catch
, were back together.
chairman the orphanage com- .
also further
discussion of the of
colored lodge making use of the
name, and the supreme
lodge will probably be
or other steps taken for
the desired relief.
The Grand Chancellor an-
the following appoint-
entire interior of the market
house remodeled and
on thorough sanitary principles
All wood partitions and floats
and everything that could in any
way germs, were
ed. A was lair
with complete system
underneath. The stalls are
with metal railings with
proceeding instituted by Mrs. top counters across tit
Whisnant for the possession A receptacles
her child on Monday of last week j for are sanitary, and fish
The case is remembered be Kept in
of the most sensational of another part of the
removed from the
kind in this county in recent
years. A breach had occurred in
the family and this grew to such
an extent that Mrs Whisnant at
of Wind . L. , ;
Tribunal C. R. Barker.
bury; Dr. D- J. Hill,
J C. Clifford.
Judiciary
Taylor, Wilmington M. W. Bell,
Murphy; A. A.
Hickory.
Finance Commute J. H- Huff-
man. Statesville; F. L. Hunt,
Asheville; A. B
Greenville.
State cf the Order Committee
A. H. Holland. Winston
tempted to take her and live
with her relatives at Oxford.
While at tho station ready to
board the train her husband rush-
ed up in an automobile, snatch
ed the child from its mother's
arms and dashed Mrs.
Whisnant was left screaming in
the waiting room. She indicted
her husband for an assault to
which he submitted and paid a
The next step was a
I habeas corpus proceeding for
Salem; C. E. Brooks,
W. G. Lake.
Credentials Committee-
George C Goodman, Mooresville;
L. J. Kinston;
Holt,
Uniform Rank
C A. S.
Bernard, Asheville; W. Y.
a n. Raleigh.
Fraternal N.
B. Alexander,
State Deputy Grand Chancel-
J. D Hut-. Wilmington
The district deputies for the
fourteen districts into which I he
is divided, and act in
their districts the
of the Grand Chancellor,
were appointed-
WHAT NORTH CAROLINA GETS
Public Building Bill Reported
to e m the List.
Washington, D. C, June 18-
An omnibus public building till,
carrying authorizations for
aggregating
with additional
for continuing contracts stretch
over varying periods of
years, was reported to the House
today.
possession of her child and
during the hearing Whisnant
skipped away between the suns
with the child and fled to South
Carolina. He was apprehended
and back to answer a
of contempt of court.
For this offense a fine of was
imposed. Thinking the breach
might be closed and the parents
reunited. Judge Pell put the
in temporary custody of
Mr. with whom Mrs.
Whisnant
husband the privilege of paying
a daily call. This daily call had
desired effect and when
and mother reported to
Judge Pell yesterday, they had
agreed on a adjustment
by which they will live together
Observer.
meats.
The aldermen have adopted
regulations governing the mar
Every evening the occupants
are required to close, the
market policeman lakes charge
and the and
three times a week disinfectant
are used in all the s The
doors and windows have been
doubled screened to keep out
flies. L is now an ideal market
house and a credit to the town.
It is a place to which ladies can
afford to go in making
purchases, and it will be to their
advantage to do so. If at times
there is any criticism to make,
or anything found about the
that correction, the
committee will be glad to have
suggestions.
WITH MISS LILLIAN CARR.
Back to Her First Lore.
Miss Maud Nixon is back in
Greenville, which means that
fully live thousand folks are
delighted. She arrived
day evening from Charlotte and
is again in her old position in the
insurance office of H. A. White.
Miss Nixon lived here for quite a
while in the past, but left about
two years ago to see if she liked
other places better than Green-
ville. She found that she didn't
and has returned to her first
love, hence this rejoicing.
Here is a good illustration of
how one investment in Green-
ville real estate pays. Five years
ago Messrs. W. A. and James
Darden purchased some vacant
property on Dickinson avenue, a
portion of it being where the
while anticipated Norfolk Southern freight depot is
for several months, is unusual now located. The price paid for
during a session when a river the property was They
and harbor appropriation bill has said a portion of it to the railroad
been passed. for and also
Following are among the erected three store buildings on
items other end of the property
vision is made for the construe- from the depot. Last Saturday
of new buildings on sold the remaining vacant
of the property between the
Entertains In Honor f Miss
Pierce, of Warsaw.
Greenville has no more charm
, young lady and delightful
boards allowing than y.
Carr, and her host of friends
have on several occasions enjoyed
her hospitality, hence when tiny
invitations requested their pres-
from 10.80 to today at
a porch party, at the home of
Mrs. J- L. Wooten, given by Miss
Carr in honor of Miss Sallie
Pierce, of Warsaw, it is no won
that all who received them
were eager to respond with their
presence.
The guests upon arrival were
greeted by the hostess and her
mother, Mrs. H. L. Carr, and
PROFITABLE REAL ESTATE BEAL.
Part of Purchase Brings
With Some Left.
Mrs. Wooten, and then repaired,
to the parlor, where punch stock and contented,
aiding in the formation of
able nitrates,
If turned under, the vines add
fertility to the land
The presence of decaying
stubble and vines in the sou
helps to convert mineral sub-
stances into plant food.
If picked, the alone are
worth from tight to twelve
dollars acre.
The vines that on an
acre ore worth from six to ten
dollars for food.
Through roots peal put
into the soil from four to six
dollars worth of nitrogen per
acre. Most of our unprofitable
soils are in this sub
The vines, roots and stubble
help to make the soil loose and
cultivated.
They absorb and retain
moisture will aid the next
crop to go through a drought
easily.
roots of are good
go to consider
able depth and open up the earth
so that air and water can make
a deeper soil.
Peas get their nitrogen from
air, free of cost to the
so that very little nitrogen is
needed in their fertilizers except
for very poor soils.
Peas feed strongly upon the
supply of potash and phosphoric
acid, therefore these substances
should be supplied to them. Many
crops fail for the lack of acid and
potash.
The price of peas is high, but
this does not Keep the wise
farmer from planting them. He
is thinking of the ten dollars in
value he is to receive later for
every dollar invested in
now.
Let no farmer neglect to plant
abundantly of this important
crop. Plant some for hay; plant
some on poor land for turning
under; plant some for grazing by
horses, cows, hogs and other
farm stock; and by all means
plant and cultivate a few acres
from which to obtain seed peas
for next year's planting. Then
you will rejoice if the price is
high.
Plenty of on the farm
make loose, fertile lands, strong
pros
The party
abut two
Monday
had only been cut
hours.
Mrs. E. T. Mrs. Lamb,
Mist Lamb, Edwin Lamb
and Mr. Mays spent the week
end at the Atlantic. President
Limb party arrived Friday
in hit private
Mrs f New
the Atlantic for a month
Mr Mrs S. R Jacques
and Miss Constance Jacques,
G. today to
spend the r st the
Mrs. Thompson and
son, of Raleigh, will spend a
part of the summer also as a
guest of Atlantic.
Among the recent arrivals
Waiter Grimes. Raleigh; Col. and
Mrs. J, E. Robinson, Miss Re-
W. Powell,
Mr-
and Mrs. E. N. Dicker -in, Kin-
Dr.
D. M. Mi Weal L. I.
Moore, New Ben; Mrs. John
Wiley, will
tonight with her two children
and
W. C Young, of led a
beautiful German on
night.
FIGHT ON EVANS STREET.
served by Misses Mildred Carr
and Pattie Wooten.
The guests then assembled
around tables on the porch
and played progressive
over which they had
much merriment Miss Ward
Moore made the highest score
and was awarded the prize, a
cut-glass perfume bottle, which
she presented to Miss Pierce,
guest of honor. Miss Mattie
King made the lowest
heretofore acquired as , .,, ,,.,, ,,
and Monroe. the depot to received the booby
each; Hickory. 60.000; Cobb C. a pack of maids,
and Rocky Mount., for Thus on the original After the and
farmers.
C. R. Hudson,
State Agent F. C. D. Work.
Subscribe for The Reflector
Tarboro, Wilkes-
born.
For future expenditures
were made as fol-
lows
For North Winston-
, ultimate limit,
Charlotte,
ultimate limit, .
purchase of Messrs.
Darden sold worth, and
till own the portion occupied by
the three stores, which is worth
more than they paid for the
v. hole five years ago. This shows
the rapid development Green-
ville is making,
wafers were served.
During the entertainment Mrs.
T. E. Hooker sang several solos,
and Miss Lillian Burch gave a
number instrumental
The Reflector does job work.
Marriage Licenses
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore
has issued the following licenses
since last report.
WHITE.
J. C. Tyson and Loraine Home.
E B. Ferguson and Margaret
Skinner.
Henry E. Tyson and Malissa
Brooks.
C. E. Davis and Lucinda Man-
gum.
Claude Green and N.
COLORED.
Alonzo Cherry and Neva
Alonzo Armstrong and Nora
Staton.
Major Barnhill and Ella Davis.
Mesa s S. J. and N. L.
Hare Mix Up.
Messrs. S. J. and Noah
Tripp were
pals in a small sized s rap at the
corner of and Fourth
streets out nine Friday
night. Nobles i about fifty
or seventy-five F heavier
than Mr. Tripp, hut he bears
scars of the mix up. He
took several on the
pavement and stone curb
badly up his elbow
and shoulder. D. Chas.
Laughinghouse who examined
him immediately after the men
had been parted, found three
severe bruises on Mr.
face.
Mr. Nobles stated to
who around to
Bee how badly he was injured.
that the first blow which Mr.
Tripp had hit him had left him
almost stunned. To this he
attributed the fact that Mr.
Tripp had so evidently worsted
him in the fight. He denied
struck a single blow.
The trial which was to have
been held this morning, will take
place Monday at 10.80 a. in. It
could not he held today on
account of the of the
principal Mr, Abe
Mr. Nobles at first wished to
get out a warrant against Mr.
Tripp for secret assault, but a
warrant was finally issued for
each, charging disorderly con-
duct.
Dr. Hyatt Co mini
Dr. H. O. Hyatt will be in
Greenville at Hotel Bertha, July
4th and and Tuesday,
for the purpose
diseases of the fitting
glasses.
mm-
Goods, Dress Goods,
Groceries
Anything you need can be found at our store.
Call to tee us
J. G.
Greenville, N. C.
ATLANTIC HOTEL
MOREHEAD CITY, N. C.
Completely Renovated and Many Ne Features.
Opens June 1st.
Delightful Surf Bathing;, Finest Fishing in America, Dan-
Tennis, Motoring, Riding. Extremely low Excursion
Rates. Unsurpassed
Through Sleeping Car Service, via Golds-
and N. C.
Write Frank P. Morton, Mgr., Morehead City, N. C.
for rates and handsome booklet.
NOTES BUSY SHOPPERS
C. T. store
is where mothers teach their children to for
Big Bargains in Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Dry Goods,
Dress Goods, Notions and Millinery. That is
where everybody goes.
He it Try Him
Halley's Comet
U speeding along it- course the of
i la.-i
II. mi N. W Ry.
I I law I would
and the ah if I did not tell
you for mo. ll
of
in twenty and
was o pain in
three hours.
always a with me on my
For Indigestion, and
there E nothing better than
at drug stores, or sent
prepaid receipt of price.
Manufactured by
Leftwich Chemical Co.
Va.
In West Greenville beautiful
residence lots for sale on easy
terms. See Higgs Bros
S. J. NOBLES
MODERN BARBER SHOP.
Nicely furnished, every
thing clean and
working the very
best barbers. Second to
none in the State.
Cosmetics a specialty.
Oppose More
for
will treat you
Subscribe to The Reflector.
Fruit jar rubbers and tops
at S. If. Schultz.
wanting me
call W. J. Turnage.
Just received car of lime and
c mer. Cr; Atkins
building lots for
sale on easy terms,
See Higgs Bros.
Parker fountain pens, fountain
pen ink, and library
Reflector Book Store.
or doses will cure
my case of chills and fever,
trice
Cut glass suitable for bridal
presents. Pharmacy.
If.
I have a nice lot of dry wood
on hand, people wanting will call
me up. Phone
if W. J. Turnage.
Shingle your house while the
sun shine. Don't wait till sick-
comes in the home, but
order your telephone at once,
per day.
Ice am from Washington
City every day. it is delicious
Pharmacy.
Every be provided
with a first aid to the
you owe it to yourself and loved
ones. Telephone that's all.
man who has
a thorough college business
cation, wants position as book-
keeper. Box
Greenville, N. C.
For Sale or house,
ind lot situated in South Green-
ville on street between
Tenth and Eleventh streets. For
further information apply to
M. Clark. lit
I am unloading solid car best
tobacco flue iron today. Skilled
n busy making them up.
Phone your orders to No. or
write me at once. Located at
Greenville Supply Co's old stand,
near A. C. L. depot.
J. J. Jenkins.
freight service to all
parts of surrounding section puts
me in position to deliver
flues, in any quantity, right at
your farm. Located at Green
ville Supply Co's old stand, near
A. C. L. depot. Phone
J. J. Jenkins.
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.
Called to Meet Saturday. July 2nd
Meeting Jane b.
A convention of
patty, of Pitt county is
called to meet in the town of
Greenville on Saturday. 2nd,
1910, at m. for the
purpose i pointing
alternate to the State. Con-
and Judicial
lions when called.
Township meeting's be
held at the usual place.; In the
several township of the Count
on Saturday, June 1910. at
o'clock p. m. for the purpose
of appointing delegates and
at alternates, to said eon-
and the several town
hips will he entitled to appoint
the following number of
gates and alternates, to
By mutual consent G. F.
Thigpen and V. A. Ward, at
Bethel, dissolved co-partnership
the 1st of June, 1910.
G. V. Thigpen
d w V. A. Ward.
Beaver Dam
Bethel
Carolina F
No.
la No.
Falkland
Greenville
Swift Creek
By order of the Democratic
Committee of Pitt county.
This May 23rd, 1910.
F. C. Harding, Chairman.
W. L. Brown, Secretary,
We sell
Nothing but
SHOES
And are in a
Position to
Show best
Quality and
Style.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Telephone No.
market;.
Norfolk Cotton and wired
by J. W. Perry Co. Cot on
Yesterday
Middling
Low Middling 7-8
Low Middling 6-S 6-8
Fancy
Strictly Prime 1-4 1-4
Prime
Low Crude
LIVERPOOL
FUTURE MARKET
by Cobb
and Norfolk.
July
Oct
Dec
Co. Banker
re
May 1-8
May Corn 1-S
July Km.
Sept
Lard
Sept 1210
I ton .
in- 1-4
5-8
1-4
1297
48th Annual Convention E.
Boston, Mass.
Greatly fares via
Norfolk Southern Railroad, June
to July 2nd. Travel via Norfolk and
St Miner. tea voyage.
Tickets include meals ard in,
Ix r h while ab steamers. For
c information, to D. V.
Conn, Agent
address H. C s, G. P. A., Nor-
k. Va.
I Cobb Co.
NORFOLK. VA.
Cotton Buyers, Brokers
in Stocks, Cotton. Grain
and Provisions.
PRIVATE WIRE
to New York. Chicago
end New Orleans.
Notice to Contractor.
The board of county commission rs
and building committee of Pitt
N. C . entertain
for the erection and completion of
the new county court house ard
I jail, city of Greenville, in the
public square, in accordance with
prepared by Mil
burn, Heister and Co., Architect ,
Washington. U. C. A set of pi ins
will be on file with the register of
deeds and the on
and after June 1910.
Bids will be d until II
a. July 11th. bill must be
accompanied by a certified check on
some well known bank, made payable
to J. P. chairman, in the
sum of as evidence of good
faith if their bid i accepted they u ill
enter into contract at once ard an
e company's bond
in the sum of fifty per cent, of the
contract price the faithful per
of the contract. Should
tail to enter into contract, the
will be forfeited to the county as
liquidated damages by reason of
bide will be entertained for
the court house, the jail, the
cells, heating apparatus or for the
whole. Each bid must be and
ad to the register of deeds of
Pitt county and
for court route and The
reserve the right to reject
any and all bids,
J. P.
Chm. Beard County Commissioner--.
Use Hubbard's Top
on corn, cotton, pea
nuts, potatoes etc., and increase
the yield per cent. Car load
just received by The Central
Co. d w
Stray Taken Up.
have taken up a light
color, weight pounds, marked
and square in right ear. own
can get same by proving ownership
and paying charges.
Peter Grimes.
Greenville, N. C. R. F. D. No.
S IS ltd
Convection.
The Democratic congressional
convention of the first
district of North Carolina,
is hereby called to meet in
ton, N. C . on Wednesday. July
6th, 1910, at o'clock p. m , for
the purpose of nominating a can-
for congress and transact
such other business as may
properly come before the con-
A. L Pendleton.
Chm. Dem. Con. Ex. Com.
1st. N. C.
D B. Bradford. Sec.
OLD CLIPPER SHIPS.
That Wars Mada by
Sailing
In these record smashing times
one is apt to smile when mention is
made of sailing ships of other
but it is n fact nevertheless
that no moan records were achieved
by the famous American clippers of
the last century, many of which
were oven faster than the majority
of the steamers today. Today even
there are sailing ships that with
anything like a fair breeze can out-
strip nine out of ten ocean tramps.
During the period between
and the civil war the Flying Cloud
made some neat record in the
transatlantic trade, and these stood
till the were surpassed by the fa-
Guion liner Alaska in
The Flying Cloud made one day's
run of knots and another of
knots, equal to about twenty-
one land miles an hour.
During the period between
1800 there were packet ships
that bent the mail steamers across
the ocean times. Dick-
ens eroded in the old a
steamship, but be returned by the
packet Washington, which
beat the liner home by twenty-nine
hours.
A small packet boat, the Fidelia,
of about tons, accomplished the
Atlantic trip in days hours,
and the Dreadnought, whose own-
boasted that she had never been
in a race, averaged on one
trip knots hour.
There was a British ship, the
that made a really
wonderful record from Melbourne
to days, an average
of knots an hour for the voyage.
She came home afterward from
China in days. The per-
of the show-
ed a speed greater than that of
most freighters of today.
It is a fact that with a wind
the big five and six masted
of today develop a speed that
frequently enables their crews to
have the pleasure, up the
coast deep with cargo, of sailing
past some Norwegian or
tramp steamer
along on its most economical
consumption at a rate of or
knots an Weekly.
intended a successful
of performance last
lent
conjurer a dollar,
ha gave back a good one.
THE BEST IN
Furniture
and House Furnishings
is not too good for you. When you want the
best, and prices that are in reach of your pocket
book we can supply your wants.
Taft Boyd Furniture Co.
If you trade with us we both make money
Wiley Brown
STOCK
Assigned to S. T. Hooker
Must be Sold in
THIRTY DAYS
National Bank has leased the
building and these Goods must be
moved out. To do this quickly all
goods are marked down at and
below cost.
STOCK CONSISTS OF A GENERAL LINE
Notions, Shoes,
Trunks, Clothing, Etc.
Sale Will Begin at a. m.
FRIDAY, JUNE
Remember the Place and Come for Bargains
Wiley Brown
ON FIVE POINTS
Professional PROBLEMS
W. F. EVANS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GREENVILLE, N. C
Office opposite R. L. Smith A
stables, and next door to John
If Co's new building.
N. W. OUTLAW
Attorney at Law
Office formerly occupied by J. L.
Fleming.
GREENVILLE.
D. .
Gems That Are to Be Found In
the Old Arithmetics.
ALL OF THEM
Clark
Greenville,
CIVIL ENGINEERS
I SURVEYORS
N. Carolina
S. J. Everett
Attorney at Law
Loans made Real Estate
Dr. Older. Greenville, N.
L. L MOORE
W. H.
Moore and Long
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
anKH x N
DR R. L.
Dentist.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
JULIUS BROWN
GREENVILLE. N. C
harry Skinner. Skinner,
H. .
SKINNER WHEDBEE
LAWYERS. Greenville N. C
When visiting Washington, N. C.
Don't forget you have a standing in
to visit
Baker's Studio
Every thing well up to date
Kodak work a specialty.
Dr. F. Fitts, Osteopath
with
Dr. A. H. Zea y, at Kinston,
the opening an is
aver K store
Tuesday. and Saturday
Office a. m. to p. n.
o.
OWEN N.
W. RODMAN
GUION GUION
Attorneys at Law
Practices where
vices required,
ally in the counties of
Craven, Carteret, Jones
Pamlico. and State and
Federal Courts.
Office Broad Street
Phone NEW BERN, N. C.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
State Normal and
College
Maintained by the State for
men of North Carolina. Four regular
leading to Degrees. Special
for Fall Session
begins September de-
siring to enter should apply as early as
possible. For and other In-
formation address
J. I. FOUST, Pres, Greensboro, N. C.
Mexican
The finest Hy lire In II
a little Mexican named
Nat lies gather from oak
trees a branch covered with this
nests and It up In the house
The spiders begin on by whole
sale. nests very tidy
pretty and old A lot of
make home therein with
the spiders. The live on fly
legs, the crumbs and scraps from tho
table, and pay for bed
and board by keeping the web
perfectly clean refined, eating
everything and dropping no Utter In
the Mexican professional
Mrs. Is a very quiet,
orderly lady who never from
tier own fireside or strays from her
van back yard, but when a fly
very busy with her
. fork
frees.
-BIBLE
What Did He
Mrs. I g u, we
owe to nature. does
not send out her bills often enough.
New York Press.
That What Inquisitive Boy's
Told Him. and the Lad Start-
ad Out to Verify the
Examples He Dug Up.
Was Ion more a gen-
ago. did John's father study
his more thoroughly John
John la a seventh grade student
In public He asked bis
father to help following
asked how much money be baa
In replied. I bud
more I would more than
half what I now
money
a fool said the fa-
thin learner to ask the
cashier. Yon been
with problems like that for a week.
Suppose your teacher asked you how
old you are. you tell her
times as old as I am.
by forty-two. I would be thirty
years older than dud. and If dud were
one-fourth as old as he now II be
would my What would
teacher do If you answered In such a
manner In my day we bail practical
problems Id our
In order to bis father's
statement John went to public
for an old arithmetic
The librarian save him
Natural lie turned In Lie
pace marked
and
puts his whole flock of sheep Into
three Halt go Into one pas-
one-third Into another and
two Into a third. How many In the
said John.
exercises Here Is a man who
wains to Mud BOW ninny sheep he Has.
He I hem so he will know when
he has half of them. This half he
puts Into a pasture. T hen he counts
nut a third pills It in pen
Next he counts what's left and
he bus thirty Alter n little
he Bods how many In
Bock. Very practical, i guess dad
didn't study
The hook he examined was
Inductive arithmetic, edition
of In miscellaneous examples he
found the
Two ladders will together lust reach
the lop of a seventy-five feet
If the shorter ladder Is two-
I birds Hie length the other, what i-
length of
didn't lie measure each ladder
separately John naked himself.
problem is not practical. I dad
Is older I thought. I an
older
The written iii was banded
to The hook mis evidently
the war. for II was HI led
with problems dealing with battering
down f and the sustenance
of soldiers. One problem
It twelve t
can batter down a for-
tress in three hours, now long Will It
take for nineteen twenty-four pound
to baiter down the
line for a John re-
find says that I am going
to be a captain of
Another arithmetic of the same date
had famous fish problem with
which John's teacher bad troubled
for six weeks before he himself finally
explained If to the The
problem
bend of a Is ten Inches
long Us mil is as rood as Us head and
one-half body. The body is us long
as the bend and lull How long Is
the
Very handy problem for u butcher
John turned
edition 1808.
I'm sure to Slid something he
reflected
bare starts up twelve rod before a
bound, but she is by him
till has up one nod
minutes She runs the rate of
rods a minute, and the hound
runs at the rate of forty rods min-
long will the nice last, unit
will be the distance the hound
difference does It make bow
far the bound John asked a be
turned to Scholar's Arithmetic,
edition of The cost
of living made the first problem
practical for present day purposes.
John concluded. The problem us
I give eighty bushels of potatoes
at cents a bushel f
Bax at IS cents u pound for sixty-four
bushels of salt, what Is the sail
Another problem
good mini driving his guest lo
market was met by number, who said.
Good morrow, muster, with your
Says be In reply. have not
geese, but If I had half as many
I BOW have and two one
geese besides the number I have
already I should have How
geese the
long would you permit a man
lo live If be made such an answer to
you
John sighed he Wiped his
forehead handed Hie book back lo
the librarian. must have skipped
these practical Kansas
City Star.
THE WHEAT AND THE TARES.
the at the tun fa Kingdom of their Ft-
J.
we have Introduced by another parable a great
I Our study of u week ago showed various classes of bearers
B F the truth. To-day's study ignores all except the
bearers, which shows that our Loud foreknew the history of the
Age. We are Informed mat he and Ins Apostles sowed none but good seed,
hut that after the Apostles had asleep In death, the great Adversary,
Satan, over-sowed the wheat hold with tare Reed, We are told that
la not uncommon In the Orient. The seed Is very
different from the wheat, but the growing stalks look very much alike, and
even when beaded the resemblance Is close, except to the expert, until tho
beads then the head of the wheat becomes heavy, while the being
light stands upright. Only the expert can discern the wheat from the tan's
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.
SCHEDULES
Between Washington, Plymouth,
and April 1st,
while growing.
II
in
eat I
Master gave this parable to Illustrate how error would lie brought
Info tho church by Satan, and the children produced by the error would
In many respects resemble or counterfeit those produced by the truth. It
was impossible for Adversary to corrupt the seed of truth which Jesus
and the Apostles neither was ho allowed to Interfere with the sowing
of It. but ho was permitted to it the field and. If possible, to choke
the wheat, In a general way to deceive the outside world respecting the
true character of the children of the Kingdom.
We are to In mind the Almighty power of God by which he could
binder Satan prevent the bis plans at any and all
We are to remember that Divine Plan of the Ages many
things which God does not approve, but In his Word condemns. We arc to
remember that the Divine Plan spans several aces and that only the finished
work will fully display the Divine Wisdom, Justice, Love Power. We
are to remember in the present time. God permits the wrath of demons
and men to oppose his purposes, but only so fur as be can and eventually will
overrule these to bis glory and for the good of all in harmony with him-
self.
parable represents the as asking whether or not the
should be gathered out from the and thus the enemy's work de-
answer Is. No. because In so doing there would be such a com-
motion In the wheat field as to disturb all of wheat-so intimately were
the true and the false roots intertwining in society. Ill the
etc. Instead Master declared that should be allowed to grow
together throughout age until the time at the end of the age;
then the should be Instructed concerning the gathering together and
the separating of the two classes. The wheat would then be gathered Into
barn and the tares would lie bundled for burning, to the cud that none of
Hie bad seed might affect the future crop.
At the special request of disciples tho Master interpreted this par-
Jesus himself was the sower of the good seed of the kingdom mes-
sage. was the sower the crop of seed of false doctrine and
The time will be the end of this age. Just before the
ration of the new age of Christ's Millennial Kingdom. The wheat class will
those counted fit to be associated with the glory of bis Millennial
and the gathering into the or garner represents the j
We are never so ridiculous Hie
we have as by I hose we
For farther information, ticket agent, m
w. j. p. i. m. t. c. warns. p. a.
WILMINGTON, n. ;.
Norfolk Southern R. R,
NIGHT
Pullman Car Service
between RALEIGH. N. C. and NOR-
FOLK, VA. beginning June 5th.
The i . car line between Raleigh and
an I n. with
Read Town SCHEDULE
Daily
No.
0.- r
No
via Wilson,
Read Up
Duly
Set
N II
ti
Mil
J III
Southern
Ar
Hen S A. I- w.,. Ar
K. S and P.
I,.
on a. l .
change which this wheat class will experience. The Apostle explains .
this, saying. Is sown corruption; It is In It Is sown j
In dishonor; It is raised in glory; It Is animal body; it
raised a spiritual Tins Is the resurrection of
first -IT;
The tare class Is represented as being gathered out of the kingdom
In the sense that the church at the present is God's kingdom embryo
ill a state of progressive development or for glory and wort
of the future. All of the kingdom class are fully consecrated to and by
begotten or the spirit with a view to their Divine, spirit beings
In the resurrection. Others who are not thus spirit-begotten have no right to
class themselves with the nor to consider themselves heirs of the
kingdom. Their presence In Church Of la nut of order. They have
been permitted to commingle with the wheat centuries, but with the end
of the age the change will come Incidental to the Inauguration
of the
It would be mistake to suppose that there are lo be thieves and
of the baser sort among these Offenders, but they Include some whom
the Apostle describes as works of the and the namely,
anger, malice, hatred, envy, Strife. However, many are line people of
generous disposition, but not in Jesus. They are
blame-worthy not because of not being but because they are
in the nominal church and posing as Christians, are offensive this
reuse In the sight. Nor are they entirely to be blamed for thinking
themselves They Have been so to think act by
preachers and teachers, many of whom, like themselves, have no knowledge
of the Kingdom nor of the power which Initiates into
In it. gathering these Into lodges, societies,
Churches, sects, especially be an evidence of lite work
in progress. The true are exhorted to Hand fast in the liberty wherewith
Christ has made them free, and that they collie not Into to sects and
They are to avoid membership In but stand In the full
fellowship Of nil who are of the true class.
The casting these bundles Into the furnace will mean their destruction;
but we are not to understand the furnace to be a literal one, nor the lire
which will consume tares to be a literal lire. The lire with which this
age will end will a great of foretold in the Scriptures as
preceding and the Millennial time of trouble
never was since there was a In that time of
the delusions which now make the think themselves to be the true
will nil be will nil be reduced to their proper piano
the earthly recognize themselves as merely of the earth, earthy,
and not In any sense members of the spirit-begotten, elect church.
Hearken now to the Master's words respecting the Consummation of the
Church's In the end of this age lie says. shall the righteous
shine forth as the sun In the kingdom of that bath
ear to hear, let Not every one bus hearing ear. but this Is
Lord's message to those who have the proper attitude of nil who
have the ability to understand spiritual things. Let such understand that
with the close of fills age the lord's saintly ones. Irrespective of the earthly
church systems, will be associated with the Redeemer the glory of his Mil-
Kingdom and Will shine forth us the sun for blessing enlighten-
uplifting of tho human family.
ltd
lit
IS
I V
At
Union Station J
Ar
vi Ar
New via A r
Kinston, via Ar
via Wilson Ar
Ar
Washington Ar
NORFOLK, Avenue
II IS
it
I ,
o on p. y
via
via
Ion made at Norfolk with nil lines diverging.
I'm so trains operated call between New Bern
and except Sunday, between Now Bern
Nob V carry Pullman sleeping car- be-
tween Raleigh and Nor ilk. Make- close at Wilson L.
to and Wilmington. Mount, Ne v D. .
connect n at with R. AS S. to aid lorn
Kan with Sou. Ry. to from
complete information, or f r r of sleeping car y
to either ill th following i. T. Can or. agent. K. L. L y. i.
Raleigh, N. .; W. J Williams son, N. C; P. N.
C; L Ii ville, N. C II. L. Myers. Washington, N. C. I. H.
Bennett, New N. C
W.
Norfolk, Va.
Home if
Subscribe to The Reflector.
Pun
Among
of
h men
A Useful Femur.
Excited -Are you aware,
my dear sir. Hint
yours Is femur
Partner I
bought It was raid like.
don't match Hie other nohow.-
Punch,
A Strong Cup.
Guest cheap Look
here, waller. I thought I fold you t
tiring me strong cup of coffee
Walter-Well, what's
with You couldn't break
with an as.
His Pockets Were Empty.
an actor, fought a duel
in with an orator named Manuel.
The orator the swords-
would have run
through the body bad not Ids sword
n five franc piece which hap-
to be In the actor's This
drew from notoriously Impecunious
Journalist the exclamation. It
i been in place It
would have been all
Yolk
trip
bus-
Feminine Tactics.
are you talking insult
to It won y
baud or
so. I expect
on n sixty dollar
Her
your wife lover of
so or
Joys.
came across a bundle of
your old love letters today,
j Hid you read them over
I what was the affect of
that wondered which
was the bigger fool-you for
them or I for marrying you after re-
them.
house
Press
ell the
The Test.
seem be In
really believe those two
think as much of each oilier as they
do of
Note.
noticed one
what Is
one gets leaded It's
his wife who
Herald.
Pa's Definition.
Little what a mat-
prize -a matrimonial
prize, my son. Is the woman some
man News
The actions of men are like the In-
of a out what Is
most remarkable la them.
In
mode
1- the from
f the rank are not
exempt. It i- very
severity, en as lender Hie
sufferer a cripple for life. The
victim Is thrown upon his face,
each foot i passed through loop or
strong attached to a pole, which
is men. who.
twisting II round, lighten the ropes
render Hie feet Immovable. Two
executioners strike rails alter-
with .-if Ills
tree well steeped In water to
them supple. A -lore of these
switches Is generally ready for use In
the pond which adjoins the courtyards
of the houses of great. The pun
frequently lasts for hour
or victim faints
from
Heckling Humor.
A parliamentary candidate was hold-
a meting at which
the heckler was much In and
the candidate failed to
give s answer which was Judged
to lie satisfactory by the audience. To-
ward the end of the misting an elector
rose and quietly would yon
tell us what might be the name your
second Initial stands The
candidate, greatly puzzled
the purport of the question, asked
what way the Information could Inter-
est the audience. ibis ex-
plained the should
be o see r you could one
In No Hurry.
ninny wild a clergy
mini, their religion a the
little Hie Jam Inset, moth-
pounced on him suddenly, lie stood
tiptoe, hulling Jam with both hands
from the pot to mouth.
Ills cried
Ami only l-i-l you prayed to be
I is face, tin mask of
Jam. turned toward her.
Yes. put not tut after I'm
Announcements
For Sheriff.
I hereby announce a
candidate for sheriff Pitt
county, subject to the action of
the Democratic primary.
J. Cox.
For Sh riff.
I hereby a
for sheriff Pi ft.
subject to action of
Democratic
8.1.
I beg to submit my.-, if the
discretion of the
of Pitt at their
coming primaries f r Count
V. C.
For Sheriff.
I announce h
for the of sheriff
of county, to
Democrat c primary.
Joseph
For
I hereby myself as a
candidate for county treasurer
for Pitt county subject to
action of the Democratic primary.
B. Wilson.
C only
hereby announce myself a
candidate for the i dice of Treas-
of Pitt county, to
the action of
C. T.
d w
Our Greenville, yours if
come.
you
THE EASTERN
D. J. WHICHARD,
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA.
Year
Six Months
Single Copy .
rats may be had upon
application t the business office in The
Reflector corner Evans and
Third s
Entered in the post office at Greenville
N. C. mail matter.
FRIDAY JUNE. 1910.
Good roads an- the tiling that
must come.
Get on the good roads wagon
i d forward.
As I said unto yon, oven mi
say roads.
The candidate are busy
folks are at work-
and
went out to do some lynching
got the wrong The mis
take made their crime all the
worse.
not worry over the
governor of California breaking
up the light as
long as the Wake county scrap
is in progress.
It is better for that
the legislature did not meet
extra session, as there is already
enough going on in Wake to
keep the people occupied.
Don't forget that little matter
listing your taxes. You
haven't got much, you know,
it will be a small and
but little of your time.
Will Greenville ever have a
or place for out door
When a man he
he fills-in a mud
hole. Talk good roads.
Both sides of the family in
Wake county are saying mighty
hard things about each other.
One thing about the
machine, it can go high enough
not to frighten the mule.
The aviation dance is the
newest Guess some
wings will go along with it.
Whatsoever a man sows that
shall he also the rain
does not and wash it away.
If they beat the governor
California in the light matter,
he has certainly given it a big
advertisement.
The governor of California
says the light
shall not take place in that
State.
If North Carolina not get
a square deal it v. be the
fault of our con-
It looks like some Northern
papers had lie than tell
the truth when printing things
concerning the South.
Possibly the way they arrived
at the correct pronunciation of
automobile is that the biggest
part of it is the bill.
The man whom the Florida
mob lynched by mistake cannot
express his approval or
of the error.
So many aviators have come
to the front now that you seldom
the Wrights mentioned,
i et they once seemed to have a
monopoly on the flying machine
tax penalty prescribed for such the libel law for that there is no
failure. You had best get busy justice in the
and interview the list taker, i
There is just a week left in
which to do this.
at
As long as there is no occasion
for any to be offend at present, ed, but if Bro. Cowan don't in-
the can be dropped without that libel suit he will
fear of getting on have done himself a great in
toes, that it is no good ought to be
. . , . ., , I preferred against him
taste to put cards of thanks in .
next Concord
the newspapers. Hereafter The
Reflector will make a charge of
one cent a word cards of You are
thanks or resolutions of you haven't got
that it prints. If any are sent Cowan., and
to the paper for publication the Am you .,
made in the appearance of The
Reflector until about the first of
July, and after that time the
paper will speak for itself.
This tops it. A man who had
existing between the members i jail South-
X port prints a card about the ex-
received at
It would be matter of the
deepest regret to have the so-
and fraternal good feeling
the
THE FATS AND THE THINS.
Brilliant of Ball for
Day.
On the next anniversary of
our national independence. Mon-
day, July 4th, Greenville is to
have a game of base ball that is
the real article. It will be pure-
a local affair between the fats
and the thins of the town, and
the proceeds of the game, which
should be large in contemplation
the hands of jailer.
He wish to say in be-
half of myself, my and Mr.
Bullard that Sheriff Knox
his jailer and deputies have been of the immense amount of
as kind to us as courteous to will be divided between the
y. you fellows stop that and as obliging tons as we public library and the
could expect to be treated. I Greenville baseball team.
make this statement in justice Daily practices among the fats
to these officers to contradict a and the thins have already be-
report. that I have of be gUn with a view of each side
sender should count the between us libel its line up for the
and enclose the price according- m Z I There are many on both sides to
. talk. At any rate you might ho people of .,. for select from, and those fortunate
Wait for Cowan tn n. ,. ,. j.
There are people who stand
with their shoulder constantly to
the doing all they can for
advancement and
of their community. There are
I others who never put forth a
Getting close to the time fr hand toward community
wait for Cowan to
the He is of age,
let him for himself.
THE COMPANY.
primaries and county
building, are ever ready to
to select delegates to State, f-r their person-
congressional judicial con- d what the town and
The primaries for community builders do. The
county officers will come simply stand by and
, i wait for their property to en-
In a column dispatch of some I in value from what the
of the Tuesday morning papers I others do, Towns
about the marriage of Theodore
Roosevelt Jr. to Miss Eleanor
Alexander, just lines
were given to talking about the
bridegroom's father.
The Vermont Army of
the has adopted a res-
condemning the action
of the Stale of Virginia
the statue of Gen- R. K. Lee
in statuary hall at Washington.
Who cares what Vermont thinks
about it
grow faster when all are
united and work together for
progress. Lets all get together
to advance and Pitt
county.
In order to increase facilities
and enlarge its sphere of useful-
both a newspaper and
job printing establishment,
Reflector has
rated under the name of The
Reflector Company. This step
places The Reflector in better
position to reach its ambition of
being the leading paper in the
congressional district and of
having a job printing plant
passed by none in its Held.
What we hope to do is have a
daily and weekly newspaper
kindness shown us while we
were Reminds us
of some other cards of thanks
seen in the
Record.
It is said that a French work-
never goes in debt without
first seeing where the money is
to come from to get out, in which
he is quite different from most
men this country. What
most of us want is a chance
get in debt; getting out is left
tO the other
Record.
It will be time enough for the
Democratic party to be looking
around for a candidate for
dent after it has found out that
it is going to be allowed to put
up anybody. Durham Herald.
A Dreadful Wound.
The Greenville
The Times here, is agitating a
park for We hope
The i meeting with
more encouragement at Green-
ville than The Times. Both of
these growing towns need a park
and the longer purchase of a
lot is deferred Hie greater will
be the cost if tie park is to be in
from a knife, tin can, rusty nail,
representative of tins pro- works or of any other de
. , , . , l prompt h Ban.
section, lit which to prevent blood
p or gangrene. It's the quickest.
Why don't you talk more poll. convenient l cation Wilson
. , , , . Times.
tics a would-be candidate I
, ,, . If The Times is meeting with
wants to know. Hang politics,
. , any encouragement at all on the
man, we want roads.
the man who wants o go to the
legislature better let it be
known where lie stands on this
question.
the people who patronize it can
feel a and be glad to call
paper.
Early in May after it was de
finitely decided to incorporate
the business, which had been in
for sometime,
orders were placid for a
machine, folding machine, an
extra job other equip-
for the plant, and the in-
of these has since been
going mi. Si ill further equip-
will be added from time to
An exchange says the cam-
in Wake county is at
fever heat. Something ought to
given to reduce the fever.
In Virginia a law has just
gone into effect which makes
a misdemeanor for any person
to use profane or Indecent
over tin telephone, the
penalty upon being
not over That is not n
bad law.
When you see a network of
roads all over county
you will feel like a different
man. They are coming, too.
some of these day the people
I will realize how unwise they
i were in failing to make such
provision.
One thing can he said for
Greenville that deserves notice
and that is we have such a de-
cent lot of men and boys that a
near-beer saloon can't prosper
here. Of course there is some
of the vile stuff sold, hut it is
handled as a side line, not
through an imitation saloon, the
one that was here Having moved
away for the lack of patronage.
Raise the license tax and run it
all out so that we will continue
to have a good moral tone. We
wish we could say that blind
Justice Brown, of the United couldn't prosper here
States Supreme court, believes also, but the old .-oaks will have
that the government should dis- it you know. They will die a
arm and not be pushing natural death though after a
park matter, it is that much
ahead of what l he Reflector has
found towns do need j us business develop.
parks, no doubt about that, and ,,,,. plant may be
for its completeness ability
The bitter campaign between
the ring and anti-ring
Wake county over the
makes us how the
line up is going to be after the
nominations are made and the
real light comes on between the
and the
for war. lie is right. All
the nations should disarm and
there should be universal peace.
The promoters ought to have
felt of the governor of
to learn how he on the
Yes. it is dull, but you do not fight before they dropped
help things by i the big pavilion that was
about it. A better plan is prepared for it. The
some bustling and advertise. j and can move
but the pavilion cannot
T. Roosevelt has expressed the go along with them,
desire drop out of public
sight for the time being. Didn't
know he would ever grow tired
of the strenuous life.
while and we will be the
better for prohibition. Near-
beer and blind tigers are two
things we will rejoice in seeing
pass away.
Listen, gentlemen to this ans-
by Whichard, of the
Greenville Reflector, to a re-
quest for a description of Editor
Cowan, of the Wilmington Dis-
patch might easily be
taken for our twin brother. He
to turn out the very best work.
The present editor, who has
conducted The R. for
more than a quarter of a
is a large shareholder in
the enterprise, has been elected
president of the company, and
asks every patron to lend bis aid
in helping to make The
tor a useful and creditable news
surest healer for w, as
also for burns, bus, sores, skin
eczema, hands, corns
or at all
SUCCESS OF TRAINING SCHOOL.
Making a Record and
Capacity Nearly Twice Overran.
It is a requirement in. several
counties that public school teach-
some summer school
for four The
weeks of summer term t
Carolina Training
School ended Saturday, and some
forty odd cf the four
classes today for their re
homes. Many
who came with the intention of
taking the four course
have expressed themselves as so
delighted with the teacher train-
that the school is giving that
they cannot afford to miss it and
are going to remain through the
full ten summer term.
Still others are coming in to take
the of those who leave.
Up to the present time, since
the school opened last October,
the individual enrollment, not
counting twice those who first
enough to get a call
must win that honor by their
skill with the hickory, twirling
the sphere, or dexterous
Here are the candidates
for
Fats- Dr. E. A. R. L.
Humber, Hay wood A. M.
Moseley, Ernest
Simon Charlie Moore,
Charlie Forbes, Herbert White,
Roy Flanagan, C. W. Wilson, D.
C. Moore, Paul Z. T.
Broughton, Harry Whedbee.
Jimmie Starkey. W. H. Long,
Walter
White. Stuart
Carr, E. H. Taft, Tom Duke.
Fred Forbes, Tom Hooker, Kid
Skinner, Claude Tunstall, Dolly
Overton, James Little, R. H.
Wright, T. A. W. A. B.
X. Y. Z E. B.
Clark, D C.
Beach, Frank Wooten,
Hooker, Robert Jeffries, W. H.
paper. We feel entered for regular term and
having associated with us in this
work a of men of the high-
est integrity and business
and who are
ill the development of this east
em section.
The officers of The Reflector
Company are as follow
President, D. J.
Vice President, A O. Cox.
Secretary and Treasurer, B. B.
Sugg.
Assistant Secretary and Treas-
C. B.
L. Joyner, J. Everett, H. W.
Whedbee, R. J. Cobb. C. W.
and Dr. Laugh-
Others composing the com-
are equally well as
those mentioned. These gentle-
men associated themselves
with the enterprise because
You may forgot to list your
taxes, but the list taker will not
forget that you failed to do so,
nor will the county commission-
is just a little bit larger in size
and almost as good looking, but the interest they feel their
we him the hair
proposition, his top knot only
reaching a sandy hue. If so
near like us, you know be i
bound to be the real article.
A Pensacola, Fla mob that erg forget to impose the double If Cowan can't recover
section, and they realize that
nothing so helps to promote
progress as a good strong news
paper
No special change is to be
then re-entered for the summer
term, has reached about
twice the normal working ca-
of the school. For a new
institution this is a
record and indicates the
success of the school.
It also bears strong testimony of
the thorough work of the school
and foretells that the East is
destined to have the
educational institution North
Carolina.
President Wright and his ex-
faculty are enthused with
their work and are gratified at
the success of the school, and
everybody rejoices with them in
this.
Mart Pitt hi Norfolk.
The Consolidated Produce Co.
is a new concern that opened
here June at Roanoke Dock,
the place vacated by J. W. Banks
Co., who skipped last week.
The partners in the Consolidated
Produce Co. are J. W- Lee, M.
B. Bryan and Kittrell Co., of
Winterville. N. C, Messrs. Lee
and Bryan are here looking after
the receipt of
will be the
of the company. They expect to
do a general commission business
in all produce, including poultry,
eggs, fruits meats,
hides, News.
SOUTHERN WRECK.
Freight Train Gels Off Track red
Delays
The Norfolk Southern railway
had considerable
day night ard in
consequence passenger trains,
especially on Sunday, were put
badly off of time.
Owing to softening of the road
bed by rains, a freight
train in which were several
heavy coal cars, trot off the track
Saturday evening a miles
above Wilson. Until a track
could be con strutted around the
wreck, passenger trains bad to
meet there and transfer. The
train from Raleigh due here at
Sunday m ruing did not
come in until a little over
eight hours late- The excursion
train to Morehead and Beaufort,
due to pass here at a. m.
was two hours late, hence very
few people went on it.
Nervous
Break-Down
Nerve energy is the
force that controls the or-
of respiration, cir-
digestion and
elimination. When you
feel weak, nervous,
table, sick, it is often be-
cause you lack nerve
energy, and the process
of rebuilding and sustain-
life is interfered with.
Dr. has
cured thousands of such
cases, and will we believe
benefit if not entirely
cure you. Try it.
away
completely, and ma on th versa
of the I
clans but no permanent roller.
I apt o bad I had to live up m
taking it.
In few
I wot, much better, I
to Improve until entirely cured. I
am In again, and never
an opportunity to
W. L.
Creak.
Or.
and we authorize him to
price of bottle If It
to benefit you.
Miles Medical Co Elkhart, lad
Our Greenville, yours if
come.
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH
Authorized Agent of The Eastern Reflector for and vicinity. Ad rates furnished
We are representing the oldest
and strongest Life and Fire
Insurance Co. in the world.
Call us and let us consult
windows, cook
screen windows and groceries at
J. R. Smith Co's.
J R. Turnage has moved to
Ayden Loan Insurance, his new home in Ghent.
Co. Phone I II you have news items,
Mrs. O C. Nob e and this scribe and help us to make
tell
are visiting relatives at
Mount.
If you need a good open or
top buggy, wagon or cart call
on J. R. Smith Co. Dixon.
The National Cash Register
representative is in town demon-
straying the work of the
machines.
A nice line of coffins and
caskets always on hand with a
nice hearse at your service at
J. R. Smith Co's. mill.
Miss Rowe, the trained nurse
that has been attending Mr.
G. E. Jackson, returned to her
home Tuesday at Rocky Mount.
Now is a good time to advertise
in the Ayden Department-
R. W. Smith.
G. E. Jackson, one of Pitt
county's most substantial sons.
died at his home, near Ayden.
on Tuesday June 15th, in his
42nd year.
He was a man without a single
fault and his friends were
by his acquaintances. We
have known him from boyhood,
and have been closely associated
with him in many ways and in
his exemplary we have
never seen, nor have we heard
him in any way. He
was patient, sober, and
His word was his bond,
his life was one continued s r-
He leaves a wife and five
His interment was a
pathetic scene, strong men ard
women weeping as children. He
was buried near the, old home
stead, on the road, beside his
father, who preceded him only a
few years. Rev. T. H. King con
ducted the funeral obsequies.
Cook stoves and rep lira for
same at J. R. Smith Co's.
this column a creditable one.
Don't treat him like you do a
book agent, and then wonder at
the effort he is making.
We are not all like Josephus
Daniels, we need your co-opera-
R- Smith.
Miss Lee Nichols returned yes-
from a visit in the
try.
Call us, phone Let us rent
play She
will visit the exact spot where
Mary, queen of was
beheaded. She will sail about
the first of September on
her return to America from
by Steamer Chicago.
Will be absent near three
months. This will be a lovely
trip. then we
have a woman and
bought land
Car cement, lime, nails and
hay at J. R. Smith Co's.
Corn oats and hay at J. R.
you want to buy,
HORSE DISPLAYS FINE SENSE.
your houses and collect for you. lease, sell or rent houses or land,
Will sell your personal property. or want a job or wife,
land, stocks, bonds or end you mother of
money on reasonable terms- . . ,
Ayden Loan Insurance Co. want to employ additional help
Lime, Lime, 300-barrens just
arrived. J. R. Smith Co.
If you have anything to buy or
sell, let us drop it in the Ayden
column.
Milk churns, preserve jars,
milk coolers and Mason's fruit
jars at J. R. Smith Co's.
The water in little
creek is getting to be serious.
Be it remembered, in July 1894,
the water washed up several
dead bodies in the colored
at Little church at
Ridge Spring, better known
as Scuff non. John Pierce tells
us he witnessed the gruesome
sight, saw a woman drift-
ed around a with
lids and wearing apparel, and
bones like a floating
to and fro. We hope we may
not witness a repetition of this.
J. F. paints, varnish,
cites and at J.
R. Smith Co's.
Miss Annie daughter
of J. J. Edwards, this morn
for Norfolk, where she
join a European party and sail
from there to New York by Old
Dominion steamers. party
will on the 18th
York on Steamer j id
can find almost anything land at Scotland, travel
you want in hits, dry j through Scotland, England,
notions, trunks, Holland, Germany, Bavaria,
books, furniture, Italy. and
ware, crockery, lime, France, taking in the
REPORT THE CONDITION OF
THE BANK OF AYDEN
AT AYDEN, N. O.
At the Close of Business March 29th, 1910.
Resources
Loans and discounts 108,981.07
Furniture and fixtures
Due from 50,902.80
Cash items
Gold coin 40.00
Silver coin, including all
minor coin cur. 1,238.09
bank and other
Notes 3,785.00
Total
Liabilities
Capital stock 25,000.00
Surplus fund 12,500.00
Undivided profits, less
CUT, exp. and taxes pd. 5,421.89
Deposits tub. to cheek 50,180.20
Savings Deposits
Cashier's checKs
. outstanding
Total
27,208.90
237.02
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA.
COUNTY OP PITT.
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly that
above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
J. R. SMITH, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to
before this 4th day April,
HODGES.
Notary Public.
J. R. SMITH.
JOSEPH DIXON,
R. C. CANNON.
Directors.
no better medium than
of Reflector.
R. W. Smith.
chicken powders kills
crows, owls minks,
best remedy tor cholera, gapes,
indigestion and leg weak-
keeps them free from
causing them to pro-
duce an abundance of eggs.
a package at J. R. Smith Co's.
Cir nails, barbed wire, lime
and cement at J. R. Smith Co.
Protect your house against the
filthy flies, and mosquitoes by
putting in a set of the improved
screen windows and doors made
by J. R. Smith Mfg. Co.
and magazines
at Smith Co.
and rubber belting,
black and galvanized pipe and
other mill fittings at J. R. Smith
Co.
See our and cent bargain
counters, J. R. Smith Co.
cement hair, trowels
and Mason jars J. R. Smith Co.
poultry food and
hawk killer at J. R. Smith Co's.
Cm on us for ceiling,
and
We guarantee
faction.
J. R. Smith Co's. mill.
Screen doors made to order or
repaired on short notice at J. R.
Smith Co's mill.
tar, roof paint, at J.
R. Smith Co's.
We will repair your
trucks, wagons, carts and other
farm machinery on short notice
at J. R. Smith Co's. Mill.
Grain cradles and cultivator
sweeps at J. R. Smith Co's.
Constable.
I hereby announce myself a
candidate for township constable
subject to the Democratic
of township.
Daniel Smith.
W. C. has moved t
tie E. G. Cox house on East
avenue.
J. R. Turnage has moved to
his new residence on Third
street.
J. T. Smith and family re-
turned from a to More-
head Monday.
Miss Mary Love Gray, of
Hertford, is visiting Miss Olivia
Berry.
Miss Jimmie Davis has return-
ed from Washington.
Mrs. C. V. Cannon came home
Monday from Grifton.
The Junior Builders gave an
ice cream supper Thursday
After Out Narrow
He Backs Off Without Mishap.
Waynesville. June 20.-Several
people, who were near the Com-
bank yesterday, saw the
finest display of real horse sense
ever seen in Waynesville. but
the sight enough to cause
cold shivers to run over them.
One Colonel fine blood-
ed horses, a voyage of dis-
walked out upon the
ledge between the railing around
the court house and Depot street.
The ledge at one end where
horse went on is about eight feet,
wide but gradually narrows
toward the other end. The
street is some twelve feet below
and a perpendicular rock wall is
built up from the street to the
ledge.
Without seeing his danger the
horse, a beautiful animal,
running loose in the yard
back of the court house, walked
out upon the ledge and continued
to go for some twenty yards
until he saw that his path was
growing too narrow for bis com
advance. Attempting
then to turn he saw the extreme
danger of failing down the em-
which would have
meant broken limbs and probable
death, the horse displayed real
in stopping and
considering what was best to be
done.
After a
consideration of the whole
the horse began to back at
if under the spell of an expert
trainer. That he did until a
point was reached on the ledge
where the turn could be made
with safety, when, bringing bit
feet together for a pivot he mad
the turn successfully and gal-
loped off the scene. The noble
animal was applauded as he let i
the Observer.
HANRAHAN ITEMS.
Hanrahan, June it
was a watery deck that we stood
on last week. The rains poured
down, yet we did not go. because
there was nowhere else that we
could hear of that it was not
doing the same way, and in
Bolivia it was even much
to the extent of a cloud burst.
So there is something else for us
to do that we may yet be a hero.
We stood calm and tried to be
serene because there was no
other alternative. We have even
that stood
amidst the fire because he feared
to disobey the orders of a stern
father more thin he dreaded the
flames that rolled o'er him, which
could last but a moments. I
glad that even children are
being taught, and that most of
them are allowed to think,
SYSTEMIC CATARRH.
MR. C. A.
Mr. C. A. Dos Coal-
sufferer for a of lull paid
A Good Movement.
The work undertaken by
board of trade
building good roads in adjoining
counties is a splendid one and
one that will be beneficial in ;
number of ways. It will
only aid in making Winston
Salem's position with
to the national auto highway
cure, but it will be helpful ii
developing closer relations will
counties and will be wort
it costs and more in a
way. It is to be hoped
good roads committee's
for funds to further this
will meet with a liberal response
The citizens of
I could hardly spend money for
purpose that would be product-
of more benefit to this
city. It is a proposition that
cannot fail to appeal to those w
are interested in the
growth and development of this
Sentinel
Kept the King at Home,
parents or no attention o it,
the Lord for this is
provoke not your child- j
to or command them
to do a foolish thing, for this is
sin.
Miss Mamie Dawson, of
ton, is the owner of a chicken j
has three well developed
legs. All of the legs paint down-
ward. We suppose that the
mother of that chicken must have
been a comet gazer, and as
that the tail of the comet pointed.
downward, so this extra
on of the chicken should point
downward.
On reaching home Saturday
night about o'clock the moon
was shining in resplendent,
beauty the had
cleared away, and all nature
seemed to be rejoicing, and cur
soul was lifted up in
Yes we felt good, and as
we alighted at the gate, behold c.
stately lady stood there to meet,
yes, and to greet us. We em-
braced her, yes and many times
we kissed her. for we had not
her before since she was a
little tot, so
that it was my
it was not. Well, she was a
beer me very
bad pain In the bead,
liver, and various of my
body, besides Indigestion that
no trouble and anxiety. often .
when I retired at I would j
n l live through it. i tried
bat to no purpose,
knowing what my
trouble I wrote to of r .
reading of his treatment, fur advice,
t bin of my
he notified me at once bad J
catarrh,
After using the firm bottle of
l relief, so I continued use
until had taken four bottles, I
felt entirely oared. I II t-
believing that will ex-
the relief I
an a Tonic.
Mr. William P. Hawkins,
Westerly, It. I.,
with to give testimony in favor
of as a I have used the
came fur catarrh, and can
it all who me troubled in Unit j
Ask your t for a free Peru-
Almanac for 1910.
Gone Wist Again.
Mr. T. F. who has
several s crossed the
between Greenville and
if you supposed hied himself away
wife you see that W morning for the far West
again. Like on his
schoolteacher just on her he will thy until
home from the training school, that Pitt county home sick takes
ind decided to a few day he
with me and mine before she
went home. She in loud st without warning
of the training hoping it will not i
the teachers that the above
might describe, if they were in
dormitory or at their board-
places at p. m. last
day can prove an
One question we to ask
some teachers. Was it the
before he comes back h
Id a prince of good fellows,
may keep on
He
his trail.
A Woman's Idea.
is how to make herself attractive. But
without health i mi-J for t be
, t lovely in the face, form or A
late Henry Smith or one his woman will be nervous
descendants, who married Mils and and kidney
Celia Tucker long before the show pimples akin
See last week's Reflector.
NOTICE NOTICE
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fall goods which j night at the Glenn
we now have. We have taken great care in buying this year and we
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Ginghams, No-
Laces and Embroideries and in fact anything that is carried in a
Dry Goods Store.
Come let us show you.
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C.
We are prepared to furnish you with
House and Kitchen Furniture
at the very prices. Cash or
Cons ti us aid we will convince
AYDEN FURNITURE
NEXT DOOR TO
Rev. C. M. Morton tilled his
regular appointment here and at
Garris chapel Sunday.
Theophilus lost a valuable
i of log oxen Wednesday by
falling in a ditch, breaking their
necks.
W. J. Boyd's father died at
the Kinston hospital Sunday
and was taken to his
home Monday, at for
burial.
the past year we kept th- I
King of all King's New
Life Plus our home and they have
proved a blessing to all our
writes Paul of N
Y. Easy, but sure remedy for ah
liver and kidney trouble.
Only at all druggists.
A. ft M. College.
In the development of North
Carolina's industries, the North
Carolina College of Agriculture
and Mechanic Arts is taking
a foremost part. Its students
are giving their lives to
our farming, our trucking,
our dairying and stock-raising.
They are rapidly making their
into our factories, our
our shop.
They are helping to build oar
roads, our bridges, and our rail-
roads. Indeed, they are just the
men needed at this stage in the
State's growth. We are glad to
note that more young men than
ever before are seeking, through
this institution, a
place in our industrial progress.
We call attention to the
in this issue
In Your Homes to Stay
The Joy for croup and
never fail and the Goose Grease
for rheumatism and all aches
ind pains, highly p. all over the
land by young and old.
Sold by Greenville.
I N. C, and manufactured by
THE GOOSE GREASE COMPANY.
Greensboro, N. C.
and a wretched ex
Bitten
Christian
Mrs. M. Harriss
the honor of your present at
marriage of her daughter, Lena
Rivers, to Mr. Earl Turner
Christian, Wednesday morning,
the twenty-ninth of June, nine-
teen hundred and ten, at eight
o'clock, seven hundred and six-
teen, Dickinson avenue, Green-
ville, North Carolina.
Hut Electric Bitten prove a
go .-end to women want health,
beauty and friend. T
lier aid kidneys, purity the
blood; give nerve . bright eye,
pure velvety w-in,
lovely complexion, good health.
th m. c at i II druggists.
Attend township Primary.
Don't k that your township
primary Saturday to select
delegates to
and judicial conventions,
is a of little or
I, is if enough
to demand y
presence.
Ill
you
CO.
Flour and Cure Mill.
Mr. I have as com
arranged flour and corn mill
as twenty years experience in the
business would assist me in
building. I bought the very
latest improved and the very
machinery to be had. I am
making as fine Hour as any mill
in makes a pure
straight flour. If you have any
wheat that you want turned
HOTEL
PUn.
At of the ml
MISS C. MEREDITH
Graduate Nurse
Ayden, North. Carolina.
Lily's Oyster
Fresh Oysters
Coming Every Day
Can Serve You Any Way. Try Me
into flour,
serve you.
I will be pleased to
Yours truly,
Washington, N. I .
Subscribe to The Reflector.
Rooms n En-
With or without laths, II
day and Palatial Dining
Rooms. Unsurpassed Brow-
in free
to Quoit.
Sill lei
PP
H ;
mm,
Story of
By GEORGE BARR
1909. b, Bur
by Dodd. Md Q -f
i he
OF
Ring unite in
capital of
mi n i
a a
ft i yo r
r . who i
an Ill K
o police, inter ls
is him . the
IV King n tee royal
part., meet the prince I presented
to r .-ii g Aunt Loraine.
committee of t. n, c i
the prince, m t in an
ch m where t .
is ii , i s ii a e who is lo I Prince
with a VI-
s-
m la, who him her hat a
am not inns id, Mar-
ii mat the prince
VII, HI, IX g the
e of the w ten of n i cap and
me I the fourth Id th re. He
a i thrush crack
m a and for the
he id overpowered hi dragged
int a I it. He ii
Marians- th. u to the under
f tie -f ten.
XI Kin. before commit-
tee of hist who wish u kill him,
is to he de a
into same ti won King i
XI I King fol a jailer, dona hi clot
in- and, carries Lon into
a boat at in which the
anarchist leader lo t.
XIV Ki manages to g-t
be loves, a-ho-e, and th y hi e
in . car. XV O a waits b
a street with a to ill
e a- e In a p-rads.
K in; i. into
the r. n tie car. They start
back in an ox and w
h n in fr of girl
hut
prince a c Mar
is in control of th city.
XVII and
It XVIII.
l HE
t.-is a lefty
retail hi Its subdued An
lied with
a .;. far d---Mi
the huge was
that first
the Ii lire sitting upright In the
middle of Ii.
An old from th
head of the con h and
ion in a it.
i Ii mored, your
the bowing
The e's I . Ina
the eel . i
were .
I want u in i .
tell him I mean ii hen I I in
tailed the I
truly lie was
In the
deliver j
said
going out to young-
do what
said the boy, Ills eyes
In
court
I.
be be MU
Thou bU baud to bis
the vain to cover
played there.
mother used to My that Amer-
said the prince,
with candor.
may glanced
at the
by and two invisible heads
bobbed off In In
swift canal Up to chins
Swimming would have been
on account of the noise.
their
their bends, with their lo
King and the fell
way carefully the bed of
the stream.
A hundred yards from the gate they
crawled ashore made way
up over the bank Into
wild
They stealthily stripped themselves
of the w. t garments and after no end
of trouble succeeded In getting Into
dry Then lower-
ed the wet bundles into water and
quietly stole off through the brush to
king's highway, a mile or two
above town.
this path, for
Upper dually said
a good two walk up die
-o i where w gel lb
At o'clock, a the sun In-d
up with his long red lingers from he
hind the Monastery mountain,
Ion King and rude away Ii.
high In hill, in
freshed of bean.
son r. de with them, a sturdy, loyal
lad. who had leaped
chance to serve his prince.
Now let u to John
his In the hills, it goes with, in
saying that he found m truce of his
sister or her abductors. Oil
day a large force of
soldiers, led by It
found fagged,
and his half starved men
a rocky In the heart of w
That same night a
the and
new of the
In ii Hash It occurred to John
was n bottom
deviltry. Tho abduction L
ruin was u of his
I a return to
City, Ills men were at the
of the American. Moreover, the
prince himself decided accompany
sunrise the command, now
live or six hundred sir i n, pi k
ii Its way down
Mails toward
allies below I Mum
came me i-i
i to . III the rail
road imps, which a
fun r
i sound of In the
i . struck ens. Instantly the
entire fore was alert. A dozen hi
in rapid succession,
Ingle reports far ale
beat of few tore plan,
to attentive romp There n
DON'T GET RON DOWN
Weak and miserable. If you have
kidney it blander dull head
, d nervousness, in
the I and feel tired all over, get a
. f Mother Australian-
pi. cure. It never
fails. We nave many
from grateful people who have used
this remedy. As a r
it ha no equal. Ask for Mother Gray's
Au ; ii I. at druggist or sent
mail for cents.
Address, The Mother Gray Co.
N. Y.
the led by
King rode tie
of the he loved, uttering of
has any-
thing been heard from naked
He had thinking of
for days and nights
nothing said King
WHEN RAILROADS WERE NEW.
s, Trip That Along
First Trunk Lint.
Tin who ever made a
honeymoon I rip on a in
America more that to ex-
building of the world's
trunk line, C. F. Car-
in Ins book
Were I ban ablest states-
engineers mid
i State boon able to
m be
in half a dozen
bride so much
was Mrs. I. of
X. V. Mr. Mrs.
were in S C. early in
mi wedding
lour. When Mrs Heard
that a team was to
make its first trip with h train load
of passengers from to
Hamburg, six miles was
n.
C re
arm. A
ii.
n I;. Incisive cull I
ti fur net
gr ii i .
III lug d ii II
after
Oil Ii W a s
beard sen tries
v n rill
to shoulders
. the
a;
riders
a wild, glad
s h o 1.1 went up
from
horseman, lie had
his
lo its
almost the
of t e
guns.
lie
shouted, waving
bis bat.
John ran
toward the
ed group in the
road. lie saw
throe men. one of i. n.
all p war In his
found
ADD BLESS
SAID
so met hi for you to take
with you. Mr. King. my lucky
atone. It gives good
He unclasped hi small linger. In
the damp lay one of those
milky, transparent
common the world over and of
value only to mull, impressionable
boys. accepted It with pro-
found gravity.
you come back, Mr
King. I'm going to you. I'd do
it now. only Aunt you'd
be worrying about your title all
time and might be from your
mission. I'm going to make baron
r to lake tin
agreed,
The two cars
t rapt on f
they anything
train contrived to
tire system of sis
at n with
The bride ran
could talk of nothing
-he returned to llama
her brother-in-law, KI
id her
Late Shopper Delay Stores at
Established Hoar.
The kindness of the
mi of the town who have .
an agreement to permit
their clerks to work I
at seven p. m. each week day ex-1
t Saturday is being frustrated
by the numerous lady shoppers
who happen along a often just
Pt closing time. The clerks,
especially the lady in the
different stores are tired at this
time of the day and bate to be
deprived of their of
leaving at seven
have two alternatives open to
them. may the iron
clad rule in vogue in Mord
and other cities and leave in-
variably at sever, customers or
no customers, or can request
th lady shoppers to either come
earlier or postpone their shop
ping until the following morning.
that their wonting
should be observed and
r quest their in town to
help them.
A Trick.
Discussing some of the curious
kinks of salesmanship, a writer
in one of the business magazines
n in ii ks that if the salesman
can only get the he is
trying to sell into hands
the prospective customer while
its merits are being discussed
his chances of closing the trans
action are greatly improved.
Tout may be. but it i still
The Bank of Greenville
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Over
R. L. DAVIS, President J. A. V President
J. L. LITTLE. H D. BATEMAN, Asst Cashier
DIRECTORS.
R. L. DAVIS, of It. L. Davis Bros. e, N. C.
J. A. ANDREWS, Greenville, N. C.
WE of J. O. Proctor Grimesland, N. C.
K. W. KING. Greenville, N. C.
J. K. Greenville, N. C.
J. G. Greenville, N. C.
K. It. N. C.
S. T. HOOKER Prop Greenville, N. C.
R. A. i AIM. of Fountain Co. Fountain, N. C.
B. W. Cotton Buyer In. ville, N. C.
W. H. Merchandise Broker Greenville. N. C.
JANUS L. LITTLE . Greenville, N. C.
Business Cordially Solicited
eels, better to get info
I I Of
much
hut th
over the on-
mid
speed.
She
toe. When
in he gave
Lord,
; nil her
glowing account of
her trip that they were
fired The bride
groom become almost
ardent all lo
us his bride
Young Mr-
Ac it
court
D. C. Mo ire.
Willis F. V. Johnston, J.
Johnston and Addie M. Johnston,
Ky vii of of the clerk of
the i court, made by D C.
ii j Moore, clerk, on th. of May,
in the above entitled e
was
mi me
lung.
God. we've
cried die horseman.
i a
they were clasping
has King Where
i have yon been We looked for you
j after
ancient Interrupted
the other. arson can you
these troop on the march There's
not a moment to be
glory, man. tell me what It
What has The
what of cried grasping
King's arm In the clutch of a
sends his love and rescinds the
order of said King, smiling,
then ha
the city. It was all a game, this gel-
ling rid of you. The and the
others are besieged In the castle.
God. we got to you In time
Bark here a couple of miles we cam
upon a small gang of rubbers. We
a bit of shooting, and. regret to any.
no one was
la she.
tremble like that, old man.
She's safe enough In the castle. Oh.
It was a One game In
hi
While the troopers
ready for the march King
and related their story to
eager, horrified groups of officers.
Finally the battalion, augmented by
th from the d.
her opinion steam railroad
it to
o from Si w in in
hours At the
turn folks wore lo smile tit
this, but they
with the value f loco-
by this ardent
advocate,
Mrs,
was which
of men
and led them to stop which
resulted in building of
what is now known the Erie
road, the ocean
with the lake the
trunk line.
No railroad had a more romantic
one, which had it
inception in en romantic an
It required twenty your of
toil and anxiety, dis-
lo sot the line
through, but it was accomplished
at lust, the bridegroom and
bride were passengers on a
trip which will live in history.
time tho bride was a hand-
some woman of middle but
just us of her husband
as she was on that Oral trip, for he
was vice president of the the
line in the
world, and the trains did move at a
speed that would have carried them
from New York to Buffalo in
hours, just as she had
prophesied two before.
the ii silver
which will him
before
it to to his
chase the article
him in its favor. The certain
way to do this is exploit the
commodity in the daily news
paper. Well-advertised
do not have lo be pushed into
the hands of customers by sales-
men . They sell themselves
without any psychological ma
Notice.
The Rural Comes Once a Day
The Telephone keeps you in touch with neigh-
friends and the city every minute of every
day. Progressive farmers throughout the South
are install telephones in their homes and
our service.
The cost is low; the service is satisfactory.
Write to our nearest Manager, or
Line Department
HOME TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH CO.
Henderson, N. c
FACTS ABOUT PITT COUNTY.
SPEED OF WAVES.
will, on Sat-
the i av of e, 1910,
expose to nubile sale before t lie c
house door in to the if
est bidder for ill-- ti
d tract or of land, to
on the edge of the h-
bank of Tar a. a v. I ere
three h tree formerly near
the lower the bis; ,
r-ck and there at right
h the river to the big slough,
old Parker and Perkins line, thence
down slough to Parkers or R. d ,
banks creek, thence down said
to the river, thence up the river to the
beginning, containing acre more
and being the same tract
parcel of land purchased by E. C.
low y the administrator of
A. deceased, and being the
second tract of land described in a deed
from K. C. to John-
and record
ed in the registers office in Pitt county
in book Y-8, page This sale is to
made for partition, and will be at
o'clock m. on the day of June,
1910.
F. C. Harding. Commissioner.
CHESAPEAKE LINE
OFFERS EXCELLENT SERVICE BETWEEN
Norfolk and Baltimore
Elegant New Steamers Dining Rooms on Saloon Decks.
Table Dinner, cents. Club Breakfast. to cents.
service if desired.
leave Norfolk from foot of Jackson St. daily
at 6.15 p m., arrive at Baltimore 7.00 a. m., connecting;
with rail lines for all points East and West.
For further information and stateroom reservations, write
C. L- CHANDLER, G A. F. R. T. P. A.
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
Milt n Hour
Interesting about wines were
given by Dr. Cornish In one
of lecture. In the north Minnie.
lie said, waves had been measured, . . .
of which WM somewhat more j et q. th will expo,
than forty feet high, with ti public sale, th- court house
Notice.
By virtue of the of sale
t lined in to deeds of trust
and delivered Greenville
No. A. F. M.
L. J. one
dated t, and
dated 1st day of September,
and respectively recorded in the
of office of Pitt county,
North Can Una. in book page
et and in book page
For Slate
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work.
j. J. JENKINS,
mm, if If, H. e.
Roofing, Tin Shop Repair Work, and
Flues in Season, see
from crest to crest of feel. It
In southern Indian
wire attained their fullest
and they bad been measured
there with a length of feet.
In the Atlantic It had been
wave attained a speed of thirty-
eight mile n hour In wind about
forty-four mile an hour. Sneaking of
the swell Id wave that run free-
on the of after
wind hi ceased. Dr. Cornish said
during a storm In be
recorded breaker near Bournemouth
which t sixty-seven
hour and bad length from to
crest of 1,900 feet. In
he observed breakers on in an
shore which bid a speed In deep
of not less seventy-eight and
a half miles an Family
Herald.
door in Greenville tn highest
on May mm, a certain
Int or of land lying and being in
the county of Pitt and State of North
Carolina and in th town of
and known a the Masonic Tim
property, fronting on Third street
feet the south by
aid s- on the t lot No.
on which the of
d, on the north by lot No.
and on the wt th lot formerly
to Pr. W. J. Blow, except-
a part of said let SO feet square
heretofore convey I to th town of
Greenville and upon which the water
stand pipe of laid town Is located.
At the him and place we will
ell the brick and upon
I lot. to satin y said de of tr at.
Terms of sale cash.
day of April, 1810
James I. Little.
Robt. J. Cobb,
Trustees.
J S. MOORING
b Sass Waits Start w Mart Mai i stack.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Choice Cut Flowers
Roses, Carnations, Violets,
It all st tit
at It Its
artistic start
km Ills. Hull
Plants
Is sill unit
Mail. ti
by
J. L CO.,
J. C. LANIER
in
Tomb Stones
Iron Fencing
As in the Sail Surety
and Map.
Washington, D. C-. June
S. of
has just issued the report on
the survey of Pitt
North Carolina, in co
operation with the North Caro-
department of agriculture
The is accompanied by a
map showing the location and
extent of the
found. The following is a sum-
of the
C u
square miles and lier- in the
central eastern part the Stale.
With the exception the
swamps along the
areas of Portsmouth soils, and
the the county
good natural drainage. The
Tar river Bows across the county,
and this stream with its
and creeks in the
southern part of the county furn-
outlets for the drainage.
The elevation of the county
varies from feet don to
practically sea level, the average
elevation being about feet.
county is well supplied
with lints of transportation in
all directions, most of the towns
having good railroad facilities.
Greenville, the county seat
principal town, is a large tobacco
market, ranking third in the
State. There are several other
thriving towns are mar-
for the products of
county.
white is most-
of English descent, and well
distributed throughout the
There is a considerable
population. The county
offers inducements to settlers,
and particularly invites a more
intensive system of agriculture.
Some of its most fertile lands
have not been reclaimed; these
can be drain d, cleared and easily
cultivated. For unimproved land
the value ranges from to
an , and highly improved
land to Pitt
county could support many times
its present population, if all of
its arable soil were properly
managed.
county lies in the coastal
plain region. Its soils have been
derived from the weathering of
the of the Columbia
formation. Perhaps no
in eastern North Carolina
a greater variety of soils or
soils suited to a wider diversity
of crops.
distinct types were
recognized and mapped. The
soils of the Norfolk series are by
far the most important and have
been classes s sand, fine sand,
sandy loam, fine loam, and
very fine sandy loam. these
the Norfolk fine sandy is
the most extensive and most
valuable for farming purposes.
It is a mellow soil underlain by a
friable sandy clay, and is
adapted to the production of
bright yellow tobacco. It is also
well suited to cotton, peanuts,
Irish potatoes various truck
and fruit crops. The Norfolk
sandy loam is also a valuable soil
for tobacco, cotton, truck crops
and peanuts. Norfolk fine
sandy loam gives fairly good
yields of cotton, tobacco,
peanuts and oats.
is well adapted to early
truck crops, grapes, and
some other fruit, and
ARE YOU SURE
Thus Mm y aT u
VII I
Farmers should eat
more oatmeal.
Although the farmer today is able
to buy almost anything he wants to
wear or to cat he t paying enough
attention to food values when it come
to his own table.
II he been watching the
researches and experiments on
the question the best human food
fur muscle and brain be will heed the
advice all ides to more
Quaker
Quaker Oats is mentioned because
it is in this country and
Europe as the best all oatmeals.
Feeding farm hands on Quaker Oats
means getting more work out them
than you feed them on anything
else.
It is packed in regular sire pack-
ages, and in hermetically sealed tins
for hot climates.
WHAT A PAPER SHOULD PRINT.
Muses
folk fie sand, though as
productive, has about the same
crop The Ports-
mouth soils comprise a sandy
loam, sandy loam, and a
of
are still More of
the Portsmouth tine Bandy loam
Is cultivated than any other soil
in this These soils are
adapted to corn, oats and
Where cultivated,
yields of corn are secured. On
well drained areas of Portsmouth
sandy loam and fine
sandy loam cotton and some
truck crops do well.
There are a bilge number of
cops grown in Pitt It
i largest producing
county in the State, the average
annual yield being ab mt
pounds. Cotton is a very
important crop, more than
bales being annually
ed. Irish potatoes, and
are the tile
order or importance. Truck
crops are grown to extent.
Sweet potatoes, garden
tables, melons, and
orchard fruits are grown for
home and in cases
tie local markets.
mellow and easily tilled
soils of this county, together
with the level to gently tolling
surface, invite tn use of all
kinds of machinery-
climate is mild.
summers are long and warm and
the winters are short and only
moderately cold. There is a
long-growing season, thus
fording opportunity for the pro
of a wide range t crops.
Two or more crops cm be grown
each year on the same land.
Both soil and climate favor a
highly diversified agriculture.
The farmers, as a rule, are
an intelligent and in com
circumstances. Some
of them are very prosperous, as
is evidenced by their home
and farm improve
Was the First Aid Greatest
later.
There are who
hold up their hands in holy
when a newspaper prints the
story of a tragedy which involves
a scandal. The newspaper must
be map of bu.-y It
must print the doings of the day
the good and the bad. In an
address at Trinity college some
years ago. Dr. Lyman Abbott
demanded that the morning
newspapers should come to his
table with a clear and full story
of the th previous
day and night. He declared that
if the paper printed only the
good things, hi would be lulled
into it false sense of the world's
and make no to
redress the evils that should be
righted; if it printed only the
bad things, he would get a
jaundiced view of life and feel
the world was so bad it was
not worth while to put forth
effort to save it. He added that
he would trust no man to say
what he should know and what
he should not know of the
world's doings, and
Give me no expurgated news-
In his admirable address be
fore the
CATARRH GOES
So Does Throat, Bronchitis,
Croup and Asthma.
You can easily tell by reading the
symptoms below, whether you hive
catarrh or
Offensive breath,
discharge from the n stoppage of
the of the voice,
in throat, pings in a
cough, pain in i of h,
var of coughing,
low spirited m times, of
difficulty in breathing. Ml cf
force.
REPORT THE CONDITION Of
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.,
AT N.
At the March
Loans and
Overdrafts sec.
e and Fixture.-,
Due from
i Silver coin, including nil
Coward a ,,
remedy back it for
catarrh, called d r U. b.
High o which is . vaporized .
so antis Unit when it is I refilled
over the and germ
membrane, it kills rm life
rel in minutes, and cu es ca-
The price, including hard rubber w-
is only The hard lubber
inhaler will last a lifetime, so
that should you need a bottle of
you can it for cents
I col
1-28
LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock.
Undivided profits. UNIX.
a d taxes i aid
Time of
Sub. to
T-
7.500 on
1.831 t
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County f Pitt,
I, W. II Cashier of the hank, i
swear Unit the above statement is true
W II
people with the
he wielded when portray- .
their virtues, bat you and I
and every man who rend- it
know, that made
of Ins people their shame, he
made their virtue their glory.
heart of faith never rev led,
never gloried in the sin and
weakness and shame of
Raleigh News
Observer.
knowledge belief.
bod sworn to lie
this 6th day Apr
;. T. Carson,
Notary Public-
is m
S M
M.
Id. I a.
Jones,
St
Directors.
IF WOMEN
Chamberlain's i o d
on a that if are not sat-
after using two-third of a but
Comet Art Wet
Mr. J, R. Barnhill says
, your mo
North Carolina , be It is up to you to
Association, President J. At-1 to try. fold b, ail
in brief space, told what
an or print and the
motives that should actuate him,
you ever hear a plea that
only the good and the sweet and
the beautiful should be published
in the our
with crime, and the
are of sin and
shame and man's evil doings
Therefore a curse upon the loud
press, and chastise-
forever upon this
death, darkness and
sirs, the best journalist
that
his father, who was years of
ago when Halley's appear
ed years ago, told him that
the cornet year a very wet
year, and that very old people in
his day who th
previous comet year, said that
was also a wet year. Fol-
lowing up if holds
true, this year will be a wet one.
It is certainly wet s far.
What a Heap of Happiness
Bring to Greenville Homes
his Hard to do
B you hours mis r., at leisure
at work.
If women knew that
Backache pains c ma from sick kid-
, i
save much
Kidney Tills cure k kid
Many residents o; this i n
i hem
M-s L. I
K n.-ion N then-
i fit I from Do n s y
Till- justifies me in g
them. A dull, K m-
by twinges through
m- loins me fr long
I had but en i y W and
caused a
kid t-y Kid-
n-y Pills to in.-. I pro-
cur-d a box. After taking
the in my cu and d
h the kidney secretion
For sale dealers. P W
cents Co ,
New York, agents for
States.
ember the sand
take
D. W.
K iN
Groceries
And Provisions
Cotton and
s Oil
Fresh kepi won
in st. -k.
Produce B kin nod
And vet ill one Of the h is been
Ana yet in tuts r in use for ea
Lame is almost
c used rheumatism of the muscles
i vie as to
of Chamberlain's This
mens i not only prompt and effectual,
but in way disagreeable to
Sold by all druggists.
New North Carolina
The following industries have
been established in this state
during the past week as reported
by The Tradesman's Weekly Re-
view, of Chattanooga,
lumber com-
company.
Charlotte-$25,000 mill supply
company.
Shelby-Creamery.
-Steamboat company.
light
plant
I know Mint
its
in t
from
ion mill la
. . .
Is I not
AND FREEZE YOUR OWN ICE
It MINUTES
fOR A PLATE
Jell-O ICE Powder
It is to stir of
on IS. of
or lot to-
of anything This snakes
of and
A warn ran
for a dollar or two which will
for year, and will soon lava cost.
fr .
II
t , i, .
Bold by all
Pun Food Co., ti Ray, R. Y
Stomach and Liver
Tablets will brace up the , ban-
headache, prevent despondency
and invigorate the whole
by all druggists.
editor.
five books that Moses edited he
gave more criminal news and
more graphically, than today's
newspaper would attempt or
dare, as witness his incomparable
description of the disobedience
of Adam, the story of Cain, the
first murderer, the drunkenness
of Noah, the bold the subtle
falsehood of father Abraham,
the deep dark iniquity of
Some of those pages from the
meekest of man. reek with
crime, cry out, in fact, from the
dark of shame and sin
and man's woeful degradation.
Some of such crimes are
with thrilling, chilling dramatic
interest.
this must stand.
Moses, model editor, was
a man of faith and through this
obtained the promise. He be
in the people. He loved
with a great heart his fellow-
man. He had confidence in
their cause, and struck hard
for their freedom. Not even
the enticement, nor the allure-
of a king's court and a
life of luxurious and renowned
ease could woo from their
leadership, separate him from
their suffering, sever him from
their service. He believed in
the folks for whom he lived
and wrought and wrote. He
held up and heralded forth their
crime and sin and shame, not to
win and obtain prefer-
by it, but that their sense
of might correct it, that
their heart become sick
over it. and so turn from it
Moses told of the vices of his
or bowel complaint has receive --u h
oval. Th- t of the
of . t
and Remedy is th it cures.
by ail druggists.
ESTABLISHED 1875-
S M SCHULTZ
Whole-Op and retail Grocer
and But-iii Dealer. Cash
FEVER
The Leans the Fas lo
The baseball is sweeping
Greenville more fiercely than the
floods are roughing up in
Europe The bill p the
town lave organized
teams of from the nine
which J. I. Smith captains to
the kid team of Larry James.
D. W.
VILLE N
North Carolina
Notice to
Having qualified before the
court c Pitt county a
executrix of I
of W deceased,
notice Is hereby . Wen to all persona
hi th.- est t- ti make
to ; an I
all persons ml against I
i to press the
to the undersigned on or be ore the
h day of May. 1911 or t; i-i notice
will be pi ad in bar of it every.
This day of May, 1910.
Alice V. Martin.
of W. Martin.
Land S
By virtue of power me by a
But tWO new factions have mortgage d ed made Washington
, t, i . d wife, h
arisen, the Fats and the Leans. ,.,
. has been animated registered m book D
and Dealer. tan , Mm a in registry. II to th-
for Hides. Fur, Cotton Seed to gather around him a h r at court
i,. n. i. form like unto himself who be at noon, on
that they can put it all tn. day
over any nine men whom ,,
Roy Flanagan or
Oil Turkeys, Eggs, Oak
Mattresses, etc.
Suits. Baby Carriages, Go-Carts,
Parlor suns Tables, Lounges,
Safes, P. and Gail Ax
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key
Wat Cheroots, Henry George
Canned Cherries, Peach,
Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup,
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Coffee,
soap, Magic Food, Matches,
Oil. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
Garden Seeds, Oranges, Apples,
Nuts, Candies, Dried
Peaches. Currants,
Raisins, Glass and
Wooden ware, Cakes and Crack-
Macaroni. Best But-
New Royal Sewing Machines
and numerous other goods.
Quality and quantity cheap for
cash. Come see me.
S M
can get together.
The first game is scheduled
for Every man on each
team will pitch one inning, the
only rule as to the class of ball
to be played is that any man
who walks over must retire
the box.
Stand by the boys.
If you are not satisfied after using
according to directions two-thirds of
a bottle of Chamberlain's Stomach and
Liver Tab eta, you can have you money
back. The tablets cleanse and
orate the improve the
regulate the Give
a. trial and get Sold
Executors Notice.
Having qualified as executor of J. I.
Tucker, deceased, late of Pitt county,
N. C-, notify all persons
claim against the estate of said
deceased, to exhibit them to the under
on or June 1911,
this notice will be plead in bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to said
estate immediate
This June 9th, 1910.
C J. Tucker. Executor.
F. G. James A Son,
ltd
Survey and Map.
The soil survey and map of
Pitt county, prepared by the
government, is now ready for
distribution. It is a very useful
publication, giving minutely the
soil and topography of the
county. Those copies
can procure them by addressing
Congressman John H. Small.
Washington. D. C
Marvelous Discoveries
mark the progress of the
age. Air on heavy machines,
telegrams without wires, terrible war
inventions to kill men and won-
of King's New Dis-
save life when threatened
by coughs, cold, In grippe.
croup, bronchitis,
fever and whooping cough or lung
For all bronchial affections it has
no equal. It relieves instantly. It s
the surest cure, M. Black, of
Asheville, N. O., R. R. No. writes
it cured him of an obstinate couch
ail other remedies and
II, A trial bottle free. Guaranteed
by all druggists.
LINIMENT IS
World's
Greatest
Pain
For Rheumatism. Sciatica, Lain- Bad. Stiff
plain,. Colic
and all Bone and
and The Ark
Ce. Ye. I
corner
of Joe lot on lilt street
extend-d, theme a southerly
shout lit y two feet a
to a corn- r. in a wests i
about two hundred a d
feet to tie Williams north
we-t con on thence
a . inn about fifty two
feet to a c c one
of an acre, more or
This the 14th. day of May,
S J. Everett Atty. E. S. Brown,
Mortgagee.
gists.
Give them
by all drug-
I Not Quite
w How often you tan stet a j
W thing
M nail or screw driver or
lacking. Have a good
tool box and be prepared for
Our line of tool
a you could desire, and
we will lee that your tool
box does not lack a
article.
Of Course
You get
Horse Goods i c
J. P.
Corey
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before th
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as
of the estate of Stephen
C. Wooten deceased, is hereby
given to all person indebted to
to make immediate payment
to the nil person
having claims against said estate
notified to present the same to the
undersigned for payment on or before
the 2nd day June, or
notice will he plead in bar of
This day of June.
R.
of Stephen C. Wooten.
Sale of Land.
By vi of a decree i f the r
court of Pitt in special pro-
No. emit ed, J- A
wife, against Fanni i Grime
Mitchell et the ed com-
missioner will sell cash before the
court house door in Green- . t noon,
on Saturday July 2nd the
lowing described, piece or pa eel
and. situate in the county of Pitt and
in adjoining lands
of Pop--. J. Ira
and Lewis H. Worth-i BOO-
fifteen res arid being a
of the Porter land. Said sold for
partition.
This May 24th, 1910.
J. B, James, Commissioner
Stays Taken Up.
I have take up two spotted pig, one
male and one female, weight
pounds each, mark d fork in
right ear. Owner k-e n by
proving ownership n l m
C.
Greenville, N C, D.
ltd
.-
rs
I mm ,
,,.,
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON
of The Eastern Reflector tor and Vicinity-Advertising Rates on Application
The Pitt County School Desk
manufactured by The A. Cox
Manufacturing Company are
comfortable, neat and
durable. Terms are liberal. I Fresh herrings at
When in the market come to see Barber Co.
us. w hive the desk for you. We have needles, bobbins and
M. B Bryan sent to Norfolk shuttles, for any sewing machine
in country- Also needle
We are carrying a nice line of threaders, the very thing for
Coffins Caskets. Prices are affected eyes or dark days
right and can hearse Harrington, Barber
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. We have put in an assortment
K L cut to Green- of patterns for all styles.
Harrington, Barber Co.
For spring dress goods. How is your soul
cotton planters and Rollins.
guano sewers which would Refreshments consisting of
ally indicate a large cotton crop cream and cake were served.
this year. Several selections of music were
rendered before the hour of
parting when each declared that
embroidery and laces see us-
New lot in.
Harrington, Barber Co-
R. v. T. H. King, of
conduct- the funeral service at
the burial of G. E. Jackson. He
preached also Thur.-day at the
Baptist church.
r nice fresh fish see R D. ,
on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturday.
Mr. ltd Mrs. . H. Rouse
W. C. of Middlesex;
of Carey; C. J.
Jackson, of Knoxville, Tenn; and every day land general
J. L. Jackson, of Greenville, work
tended funeral of G. Harrington Barber Co.
Jackson. i jot and no-
For cold drinks of all kinds call; just in Better while
at H. L Johnson's fountain.
Let
us show you our new lot of
shoes. Harrington. Barber Co
A nice six key soda fountain
for sale. R. D-
We have purchased the
as the
Milling and Mfg. and will
ready very soon to grind corn,
do general repair work and dress
timber.
Harrington, Barber Co.
A nice lot of matting just in.
A. W. Ange Co.
We are now in to do
M. G. Bryan want to Grifton
today.
Just received, a nice lot of
ladies and shoes.
Harrington, Barber Co
Miss Annie Bell, a trained
nurse who had charge of the lit-
sick boy of Abram Cox, re-
turned to her at Washing-
ton today. She won many
A. W. Ange Co.
Car load of top dressing for
cotton just arrived.
A. W. Ange Co.
Winterville, N. C.
Land Plaster for sale.
Harrington, Barber Co.
Winterville, N. C.
Miss Janie Kittrell returned
Sunday from Bethel where she
a most delightful evening had
been spent.
ITEMS.
N. C. June 21.-
Miss Mattie Little, who had
spent more than a week with us,
returned to her home at Wilson
last Tuesday evening.
Miss Ruth Cobb returned from
Wilson to Friday,
accompanied by Miss Rosa Kin-
of Wilson.
Miss Bettie of
Wilson, is visiting at
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Beaman, of
Farmville, were visiting at Ivy
Smith's Sunday.
Jack Harrington, of Greenville,
was visiting in Smithtown Sun-
day.
Miss Flanagan, who
is attending the summer school
at Greenville, came up Saturday
evening and spent until Monday
with relatives and
J. S. Fulford has been very
sick for more than a week, but
has taken a slight change for the
better.
All of the crops that escaped
being drowned from the recent
heavy rains, as well as oats and
wheat, needs the attention of
the farmers all at one and the
same time.
Mrs. C. C. Cobb and Miss
Bettie went to Green-
ville Monday.
FIFTY FIVE THOUSAND.
Amount for Public Build-
if.
On Saturday the omnibus bill
in congress which carried with it
an appropriation of for
the erection of a public building
in Greenville on the site already
procured by the government,
passed the house,
bill went over to
Married.
before o'clock this
A little
morning a couple with
intentions, accompanied
by a few few friends, called at
the residence of Mrs. Anna Pat-
rick, on Greene street, where
Rev. E. N. Johnson has a
room, and inquired if they could
get the services of the min-
When the to preform the ceremony.
the senate All things being found agree-
Monday, through the efforts of the minister united Mr.
Senators Simmons and Green, of New Bern,
and Congressman Small, and Miss N. Harrell. of
was added to Greenville's
making the total for
building which was con-
curred in by the house when the
bill went back for ratification.
The last congress had already
appropriated for a site,
which brings the whole up to
Our people heartily appreciate
the good efforts of Senators Over-
man and Simmons and Congress
man Small in
ville.
Eure. The left on the
9.20 Norfolk Southern train for
the home of the groom in New
Bern, first sending a telegram to
the parents of the bride at
Eure advising them of the
Reflector. r.
popular remedy never to
effectually cure
Constipation, Sick
Biliousness
And ALL DISEASES a
Liver and Bad Digestion
The natural result la good appetite
y and easy to
Take No Substitute.
Swain
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chester
Beaman request the honor of
behalf of Greet at the marriage of
Congressman Thomas, of i their sister. Ada Louise Tyson, to
the third district, was also very Young Swain, on
friendly to Greenville and helped W evening, June twenty
much in the matter. This nineteen hundred and
means that Green-
ville is to have a handsome pub-
building.
AU ABOARD FOR RALEIGH.
friends during her short stay, has been attending a lawn party
who regret very much to see her
leave.
The is the Kind
you need. See us.
A. W. Ange Co.
O. W. Rollins went to Ayden
yesterday.
We call your attention to our
new line of groceries.
R. W.
Miss Janie Kittrell left Thurs-
day for Bethel to visit Miss Lillie
Bunting.
For nice fresh corned herrings
see A. W. Ange Co., Winter-
ville, N. C.
Straw hats are going fast, buy
one, don't be W. Ange
Leave your orders for ice at H.
L. Johnson's. Will be delivered
anywhere in town.
Matting and oil cloth, for the
floor, buy some, cover it over.
Harrington. Barber Co.
Before buying, see my line of
post cards. H. L. Johnson.
Field peas and peanuts for
sale by A. W. Ange Co., Win-
N. C.
To reduce our stock before in-
we will offer for a
limited time, cheap, for
gingham calico,
worsted dress goods, to
suiting, percales, to
motor cloth, waist
goods, lawn, mohair
wool effects,
to table peaches, pie
peaches, shirts,
shirts, shirts,
shirts, Call and see what
we offer. A. W. Ange Co.
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. are rendering good service
in the undertaking business.
Coffins and caskets cheap with
excellent hearse service.
Let us frame that for
you. Any size frame.
A. Ange Co.
A new lot of lamps just in.
Harrington, Barber Co.
Beef, sausage and fish, going
cheap. R. W. at Johnson
stand, on railroad street
You will never regret when
you purchase a Hunsucker buggy,
manufactured by A. G. Cox Man-
Co., Winterville.
N. C-
A. G. Cox Manufacturing
Co. baa sold this season ever
given by Miss Lillie Bunting.
Misses Hattie Kittrell, Miriam
Johnson and Dollie
came in Saturday from Green-
ville where they have been at-
tending the summer school.
Misses Kittrell and Braxton
returned Monday to resume their
work.
J. L. Rollins left yesterday for
to visit to his grand-
mother.
Miss Leasts King, of Durham,
came in yesterday from Kinston
to Misses Eva and Lucy Bell
Miss Crawford spent
Sunday in Greenville visiting
friends.
Miss Hargett, of Richlands.
came in a few days ago to visit
Misses and i Cox.
O. W. Rollins C. Cox
went to Ayden Sunday.
Miss Maude Louise
who has been the guest of Miss
Cox. left yesterday for
her home at
Miss Cox left yesterday
for to visit friends
W. B. Wingate returned
Thursday from a visit to Fair
Haven, Mass.
W. B. Wingate who has re
been appointed assistant
rural carrier, began work today.
Rev. H. N. Blanchard. of
Greensboro, conducted
at the Baptist church Sunday
morning and night.
MISS COX ENTERTAINS.
For the last few weeks the
home of Dr. B. T. Cox has been
the of social life for our
little village, Miss Maude Louise
of Salem, being the
of Miss Cox, who
several evening ago, gave a six
course luncheon in honor of Miss
and on Monday evening
June 20th, a delightful party, as
a fitting climax of the
social functions.
After a few minutes spent in
very pleasant progressive con-
there were various
amusements, the most inter-
of which was a drawing
contest that engrossed the at-
of each one for sometime.
Miss Cox was the winner
of the first picture, and
the booby was won by Mr. Jesse
BLACK JACK ITEMS.
Ed. W. Grimes-
land, filled his regular appoint-
here Saturday and Sunday.
There was a large crowd at all
the meetings. W. H.
Laughinghouse also was with us.
Miss Lula Mills, from near
Simpson, was the guest of Misses
Stella and Bertha Gaskins
day and Sunday.
Mrs. A. Clark, of
returned home Sunday after
spending a few days with friends
and relatives here.
Miss Ruby Gwaltney, who is
attending the E. C. T. T. S. at
Greenville, was the guest of Miss
Lula Mills Saturday and Sunday.
We are sorry to say that the
recent rains have damaged crops
considerably in this section. To-
is one of the principal
things damaged. Corn and cot-
ton are in the grass, but watch
the farmers and they will destroy
some of the grass.
The Farmers Union will meet
again Friday night.
There will be preaching here
Saturday night and Sunday.
Annul Clan of
Baptist Sunday School.
The class of Memorial
Baptist school will run
its third annual excursion to the
capital city of the State on
Thursday, June 30th. Take a
day off and go with us to see the
many places of interest and
sights around Raleigh. We pass
through several counties on the
route, giving you an opportunity
to see the different lands and
crops planted along the
Norfolk Southern railroad, and
also compare your home sec-
with others.
That afternoon there will be a
league game of ball between
Raleigh and Wilson which you
have time to see before the
train leaves.
The fare for the round trip is
only for adults and for
children under years of age.
W. S.
J. W. Bryan, I
J. B. Little, Com.
J. F. Stokes,
W. P. Edwards, I
at o'clock, Christian church.
Farmville, North Carolina.
There is a nice display of Par-
fountain pens at Reflector
Book Store, and they are the best
made-
School Ice Plant.
The ice of East Carolina
Training school has
been completed and the first
block of ice was pulled out of
the tanks Tuesday. This first
block decidedly a novelty
and attracted much attention
from the and others who
were present to see it. Mr. O. E.
Warren, the nurseryman, had
provided a handsome bouquet of
cut which were frozen in
the middle of the block and it
made a beautiful picture through
the clear glistening ice. After
being on exhibition a short while
this block was sent to ex-Gov. T.
J. Jarvis with the compliments
of the school and faculty.
Stomach and Liver
Tablets gently the liver and
bowels to expel poisonous matter,
cleanse tin- system, cure constipation
sick headache. Sold by all drug-
gists.
Tat Mikado Revival New York.
The have put the
on at the Casino
Broadway, New York,
with an all-star cast New York
is going wild over it, and every-
body is whistling it. The New
York Sunday World, ever alert
to supply its readers with the
most popular music, will give
two songs from the Mikado.
One is Little Maids From
School Are and the other
is He's Going to Marry
Yum Words and music
complete. Sunday World June
and July
Mr. L. C. Kim Dead.
Her many friends here ate
sorrowed at the death of Mrs.
Lou C. King which occurred
Tuesday night at her home in
Farmville. Mrs. King lived in
Greenville for many years and
had a host of friends and
here She was a daughter
of Alice Joyner, and leaves
a mother, one sister, two brothers
and three children. She was
twice married, her first husband
being Mr. B. S- Atkinson and
her second Mr. John King,
Mrs. H. B. Harris, Mrs. B. F.
Tyson, Mrs. C. J. Forbes. Mrs.
E. A. Jr. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cobb and Mr. J. F. King
went to Farmville this afternoon
to attend the funeral.
BAKER HART
BAKER HART
The Up-to-date Hardware
Store
is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish,
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook
Stoves, Enamelware, Fine Cutlery,
Handsome Chafing Dishes.
We Carry a full Line of Wall Paints
easy to put hard to come off. Place
now with them and you will be
pleased.
E Special attention is called to our line of
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders,
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the
very best quality.
Don't fail to see us before buying, they
can supply your wants. Give them a call.
Baker Hart
Evans Street, N. C.
To Palate Growers.
We strongly urge, those of our
friends who have not as yet dug
their potatoes, to dig at once
and store away in some cool and
well ventilated building, as after
so-much rain there is danger of
rot should they be allowed to re-
main in the ground longer.
-It is useless to try to sell or
consign with the market in its
present condition.
The buyers will not now give
There are not many more days, u per barrel f. o. b. Greenville,
left for tax listing, yet the list as for consigning, it means
takers tell us that not many of, present outlook, you
the people living in town have get nothing, with perhaps a
People Wait
USED UNIVERSALLY
WHEN Metal were first Introduced years
you had some for being
Rut now
If you are it can only be you do not know the
facts in case.
They used today from the Atlantic to the Pacific for all kinds
of buildings, under all conditions.
They are fireproof, never leak and last a long as the
building itself without needing repairs.
For further detailed information apply to
YORK COBB, Agents.
listed. Just why they wait to
get in the rush of the last few
days of listing time is not easily
explained, but it seems to be a J
habit they have fallen into.
When you know a thing must
be done, it is just well to
along and attend to it
bill sent back to you for the
freight.
Keep your potatoes at home,
and you will later get something
for them. Moseley Bros.
Subscribe to the Reflector.
MERIDITH COLLEGE.
including elective
School
Art,
Among the for Women in the South.
in Liberal covering nine departments, and
in Education and Bible, which count for the A. B. degree.
Music, including Piano. Pipe Organ, Violin and Voice Culture. School or
including and of
winch students college Culture under a trained
director. Full literary course per year, including literary tuition, board, room,
light, heat, t ordinary medicine and all minor
In the Club, to less. Next Sept. 1910, Address.
R T. VANN, Present,
Raleigh, North. Carolina.
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR.
D. J. Editor and Owner
Truth la Preference to Fiction.
One Dollar Fer Year
VOL. No.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JULY
1910.
No.
SCHOOL
TRUSTEES OF TRAINING SCHOOL
by Delegate. From
Parts of the
The Pitt County Sunday School
Contention met in Jarvis Memo-
rial Methodist church this morn
and was called to order at
o'clock.
After singing, be
Showers of devotion
service was conducted by Rev.
E. N. Johnson, who a part
of the 11th chapter of Numbers
and commented thereon, and
prayer.
The enrollment of delegates
showed there were about
representing over twenty Sunday
schools.
Rev. E. N. Johnson was elected
temporary chairman and Z. T.
Broughton temporary secretary.
Mr. J. Van Carter, general
secretary of State Sunday School
Association the
on the work of the county
association.
A round table was held on the
organized Sunday school work in
which a large number of
gates took part.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION.
The afternoon session of the
Count Sunday School
was opened with prayer by
Dr. Peden.
attending to some
tine business the association
listened to one of the finest ad-
dresses on the elementary de-
of the local school, by
Mrs. the
East Carolina Teachers Training
School, it has ever been our
to hear.
Following this address one
by Dr. J. W. Bryan on the or-
adult class, who, like the
speaker who preceded him.
touched high water mark, show-
the improvements in the
methods of today in comparison
to methods of former days before
the advent of the organized adult
classes into our schools.
Rev. E. Peden, D. D of
Ayden, then gave a strong talk
on training, giving
some ways of doing this much
needed work.
A abort season of prayer was
held, led by D. J. Whichard.
The committee on nomination
of officers, made the following
report which was
President, Rev. J. H., Shore.
Vice president, H. J. Langston.
Secretary and treasurer, Z. T.
Broughton.
Executive committee, J. H.
Shore, H. J. Langston, Z. T.
Broughton, Miss Lillian M.
Munn, H. C. Ormond.
The committee on constitution
made their report which was
adopted. This report
mended that semiannual
of this association be held
is March and September.
committee, on time and
place of next reported,
naming Sept. as the time
and Greenville as the place,
adopted.
committee on
th following report, which
Pitt County Sunday School
n in its first
d b g leave to j.
Hear Report for Part
Re-elected for Next Year.
TOWNSHIP PRIMARIES.
Con
Greenville next
for the past session and make delegates to the
arrangements for the next yea. gT Jg
Those present at this meeting
Y. Joyner, of Raleigh,
chairman; T. J. Jarvis. of Green
ville; A. of Scotland
Neck; Y. T. Ormond, of Kinston;
J. C. Parker, of Trenton; and R.
B- White, of Franklinton.
President Wright made his re
port to the trustees, and great sat
expressed over
year's work. The spirit chat had
dominated both the faculty and
student body
The report showed a total
enrollment of for the
school year. in the regular
session and in the spring and
summer school. Five states and
thirty nine counties of North
Carolina were represented among
the students.
Three counties adopted the
summer school here for their
teachers in lieu of holding a
county institute of their own.
Upon the recommendation of
r resident Wright all the regular
of the past year were
re elected for coming year,
as
Mrs. Kate R. lady
principal.
Miss Sallie J. Davis, teacher of
history.
Miss Mamie E. Jenkins, teach-
of English.
Miss Fannie M. Bishop, teacher
of music.
Miss Maria D. Graham, teacher
of mathematics.
conventions.
So far as heard from there was
no test of strength for any
dates for Supreme court judge
or corporation commissioner.
township endorsed J.
H. Small for congress.
Following is a list of the
gates from township that
have come up to this
Township.
DEATH OF CAPT
of Mart
Away-
Capt John King died about
6.30 o'clock. Saturday afternoon,
at his home near Falkland, of
pneumonia. The funeral took
place Sunday afternoon, con-
ducted by Rev. Mr. Morton, of
Farmville, and was largely at
tended- He was years old
last February.
In the death of Capt.
Pitt county losses one of it
and most influential
He was a native of the county,
and for more than half a
after reaching man's estate lived
on his farm near Falkland, with
ANTHONY.
RURAL MEET SOON.
to Bo and Wei Pretty Solemnized t
Rocky Point. N. C. June A very wedding was
The Rural Letter
annual convention to o'clock In the R form-d
held at Raleigh, July and church at by
Delegates.
Jonah
Claude Jones
C. E. Fleming
L. P. Dudley
Delegates.
M. G.
C. M. Tucker
Allen
J. F. Evans
J. W. Brooks
W. P. Clark
R. L. Little
Town
Delegates.
H. A. White
E. A. Jr.
F. D. Foxhall
C. S. Carr
G. James
S. Carr
T. White
W. Tucker
L. Blow
L. Wooten
W. King
S. Mooring
S.
Side
on near -.--------
the exception of four years
5th, promises to be the most in-
yet. are a nu-n-
of attractive s, chief
among them being th presence
of Fourth Assistant Postmaster
General who will visit
the North Carolina session at
Raleigh, on and the
South Carolina convention at
on the 5th. Gen.
is at the head of the
rural free delivery system and is
P.
C.
s.
A.
J.
R.
J.
W.
River.
Alternates.
V. C. Fleming;
J. G. Taylor
C. L.
Ashley
Side Rim.
Alternates.
B. E.
Bryant
Jesse
W. B. Stocks
J. W. Vincent
Josephus
Joseph
of
Alternates.
J. O.
W. D. Pruitt
A. M. Moseley
J. L. Little
F. J.
J. I. Smith
D. C. Moore
D. E.
O. W. Harrington
Frank Wilson
W. H. Long
D. L James
L. C. Arthur
O. L. Joyner
Henry Dixon
W. L. Smith
J. R. Jacobs
W. E. Tucker
Alston Grimes
W. P. Clark
J. J. Elks
J. Cox
W. H. Porter
W. L. Wootten
H. C. Venters
L. Edwards
Miss Birdie teacher
of Latin.
Miss Kate Lewis, teacher of
drawing. wan
Mrs- J. Ogden, a. stocks
teacher of household economics. c. Galloway
Miss Emma R. Jones, clerk,
Mr. W. H. teacher
of school supervision and
Mr. Herbert E. Austin, teacher
of science.
Mr. C. W. Wilson, teacher of
pedagogy and bursar.
Miss was elect-
ed as hospital attendant.
Mr. L R Mellows, A. B. of
Yale, was elected head of the de-
of English.
It was decided to create a de-
of primary methods,
the teacher for to be elected
later.
Before leaving the trustees
carefully inspected the entire
school plant, and expressed much
pleasure at its
Dr. J. E. Nobles
Township.
Delegates. Alternates.
E. Proctor
after the war that he engaged in
merchandising in Tarboro. He
was an even tempered man.
firm in his decisions, yet
I without harshness, ever
the highest to-
others. For twenty five year.-
be was a magistrate of his town
ship, and was looked up to as a
leader. He was a staunch Dem-
and always took active
interest in the conventions and
affairs of his party. He
this in State
senate, and was one of the first
judges of the county Inferior
court when that court was es-
He was a of
the Christian church and lived a
faithful follower of Christ.
Capt. King was thrice married,
his wife being Miss
Joyner, second Miss Bettie Cobb
and third Miss Fannie
His last wife died about eight
years ago. By his first marriage
there survived one daughter.
Mrs. B. R King, of Goldsboro;
Jesse C. Wilson
W. A. White
j. A. Smith
Dr L. E. Ricks
N. H.
C. A. Faucett
Alex. Gray
J. B. Galloway
L. A. Arnold
Macon Haddock
Porter
J. A. Mills
G. W. Venter
J. U. Gray
O. J. Galloway
carriers. I know each one in our
grand old would to
shake his hand.
Willis G. Briggs,
our checks, will make us a talk
We'd all like to hi hand.
too. Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt ban
just written me that h.- will b.
there on the fourth and make u.
an lecture. You
know there is no class of citizens
in North Carolina more interest-
ed in good roads than the rural
carriers. Dr. Pratt is doing
great work for his State just
now, more than any-
other State official. Hon. John
H. Small is expected on toe 5th
to tell us of his rural parcels post
bill that was recently introduced
in congress. Clarence H Po.
who by pen and speech is
so much to el our i be
loved State in a mental, moral,
physical and will
make us a short talk on the 5th.
And the Raleigh boys are going
to give us a smoker to which
number of the editorial
marriage are Mr. G. of profession have been invited.
I ll sill
Delegates. Alternates.
R. R. Fleming
M. T. Spier
W. L. Nobles
Carolina
Delegates
D. A. James
I. H. Little
G. It, Mooring
C. G. Little
A. Mooring
J. P. Fleming
j. p. Davenport
G. Z Kicks
Township.
Alternates
S. a
L. S. Barnhill
B. B. Whichard
A. B.
A.
Washington City, Mr. E C.
King, of Falkland, and Mrs J L
Fount-in, of Asheville; by hi
third marriage Mr. A. B. King,
of Goldsboro. Mr. S. V. King,
Charleston, Va and Mr. John
King, of Falkland. All of hi
children were with him during
the last few days of his illness
and when the end came. He is
also survived by one brother,
Col. V. M. King, of
and two sisters, Mrs. C. V. New
ton, of and Mrs.
Nannie Moore, of Farmville.
body assembled desires to thank
the people of the said Methodist
church and the said
for said kindness,
Bo it That this
extend to the pastor,
stewards and member i i
in deepest
for of
Thai this association also ex
hi
papers its thanks for the inter, ht
i hey have taken aiding the
Marriage
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore
had issued the following licenses
since last report.
WHITE.
J. S. Smith and Elizabeth
Lonnie and Flossie
Banks.
Louis and Bettie Mills.
COLORED.
Harper and Pattie Jones.
Quiet Hone Tab
at
A quiet but pretty home mar
took place at o'clock this
morning at the home of Mrs.
Mellie Harriss, on Dickinson
avenue, when her daughter, Mies
Lena, became the bride of Mr
B, P. Christian, of Portsmouth,
Va., the ceremony
formed by Rev. J. H. Show, P j
tor of the Methodist
The attired in a j
handsome traveling suit of tan
cloth with hat to
Mr. Christian la a
And an old time
with Webster's elementary
as text book will be
a feature of the occasion. Col.
Joseph Robinson, of the Golds-
Argus, and Mr. Clarence H.
Poe, will umpire the game and
award prizes to him that
down and him that
the The
railroads will reduced rates
for the occasion from the second
to the sixth of July.
The Capitol Inn will give
per day rates, which is about as
cheap as you cm stop at
so brother carriers don't fail to
go to Remember as a
body. heave, oh, we
have a pull and a long pull, a
strong pull and a pull altogether
means much. And after hearing
Dr. Pratt talk on good roads you
will go home and enthuse your
people on the subject, talk good
roads, act good roads and spend
a few dollars showing an example
and thus got a little leaven and
leaven the whole State.
B.
Secretary N. C. R. L. C,
pastor. Rev. Conner.
The contracting being
Mi-s Juli Elizabeth
daughter of Mr. C. E. of
and Mr. Peyton
Tunstall Anthony, a prominent
wholesale merchant of Green-
ville, N. C, of whom are
popular in their respective com-
Mr. W. S. Rhodes, of Hamilton.
N. C, was best and Miss
Eva K. sister the
bride, was maid of honor. Lit-
Miss Letha K. Fir. of
Pa., the bride,
was flower girl. Messrs, Harry
L. Mock, Lindsay Walter
Edwards and
were
The bride was attired in a
white satin c trim-
med with pearls fringe and
carried bridal rises and of
the valley. The bridesmaids wore
exquisite pink Empire gowns,
trimmed with crystals and wore
large pink and black hats. Little
Miss Letha Fair wore a beautiful
pink dress and hat and carried a
basket of pink carnations Lo-
wedding was
b Miss Mary El
Padgett
Q a number of relatives
and friends were present from
out of town. After the
a reception was at
the bride's horn, after which
the bridal left on tin
train for Washington, D. C, and
Virginia on an extended
wedding trip. They will reside
at Greenville. N C. Their may
relatives and friends
a long, happy and prosperous
POWELL G TS Y A S.
Compromise Verdict of Degree
la the Fames Case.
ton, N. C. June
The if State of North Caro-
E. E. Powell, for the
killing of Chief of Charles
W. Dunn, of Scotland Neck on
March lust, care to an abrupt
this when -x-
Charles B Aycock. of
counsel for the defendant, an-
that after careful con-
by and consul-
with the family of the de-
the defense had decided
to accept a verdict of murder in
second degree and await the
judgment f the curt. Solid-
or. John H. Kerr stated that the
state was Willing to pt this
verdict.
Judge G. W. Ward who is
presiding, stated that ho approved
saying
his opinion that the
pi s
Breaks an Arm
Mr. L- H.
Willie Fleming and Viola bride
popular
James Jones and Ida E, Rives, j many
A Bright Girl. Th
The other day th editor was
merchant of Portsmouth, and serious and
.
bet
tin people of in making known
the i; rial meeting purposes
church, Gr M- C. i w
j. the goodness of their
Id r t ; u I i W B
of th
s, R fl o
tor aid Ayden freewill
so kindly lent to
the use of
notices, etc., and;
Whereas, in its
visiting horn i where there
Is a cute little girl of about four
The statistical woo
report that Hi re were d.
present, representing
i v a
it
one of Greenville's very j this morning. He v a A t
They re- th river
, . j bridal of gasoline boat, v .
to the m i
. .-, A. n the
. t
Greenville, pa bride I He. r.
with . but the good
f go with
the action
i hat it as
jury v.
of
d a
and
en f
ii
take to
mi
ii;
I, the
me
as
six thirteen
and fourteen
Alter a few congratulatory
remarks president an I
secretary the ass
ed with prayer by B. F- have us bettered on
of pretty curly auburn hair.
little miss took a look over our
way. and turning to her moth r.
said look at
that man's toying, with
one of her own pretty by
comparison. It was a July
compliment, even If she dosing on
the hair might well
holiday.
Banks WOK
Bank of
Greenville Ba St Co.
ville, will nil ob of
and will h
Dr. Com.
it-. H, alt will be iii
Heat E July
id y d rut
for the of rig
diseases of the
B.
c i ; i o a r.
The es
, . . I i .-.
. ;, d thirty
. on.
, i i n
, . but us
at this tin
; ,
,,, the i the
pi . On of tn sud
, illness of a juror y
i n c m j I snort
until this-
before I
eye fitting morning. m ill had
considerable t bring
it
The .
Z a Our , am If you M. to
com f.
. ad Oaf