Eastern reflector, 9 November 1906


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





f fOR THE LITTLE ONES. ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
to Ba Played To Spot From
With and Clothing.
Of course you boys and girls all Spots on carpel
how to play but clothing are not , remove.
you may not know all the games out dust t may
be with them. I on the
D know in the chalk
. , ,, . , . . is not at hand,
o. B is played m the p;, or on w
; . f the fabric if can get
U I the from the hand to ,, ,,. If not. apply a paste the I
he; round; are the eats. ,. to the right side cover
place your left hand to the Just. Leave it thus j
r twenty-four hours. Now lay i
h thicknesses of tissue or
paper over the chalk and
moderately hot iron .,
paper as the
the surface. This is best
by working from the wrong .
f nil the oil is not extracted,
household
alkali.
with the lightly closed,;
i and linger
the to one a
J. k now be thrown up, and,
while lie is the air, one of the
lour 0.1 the ground must be
up and put in the well.
Re eat the operation with
me I. and fourth
. be t
Tl., I. . DOW I
leaving the dead cats in a
Now may be tossed up, and
this I its l ;
n j u k do
or
It is t lie It
boy- girls are sometimes
over the spelling of the great
name. It is written in three
-it ways- Shakespeare.
and ii of
these is right The i-
ally preferred, though many of our
best scholars write it
that is right because
bis signature appears in
that form. At the same lime it
should be remembered that the
name appeared as Shakespeare on
the title page f books he
I, and this warrants the
lief th he accepted it as the
spoiling, in spite of the auto-
There is very lit-
authority for the form
Some
Ten Square Feet.
the have a elm- i
I o one gallon of water add a one
can of of lime and
r of common washing
so h. Allow it I
When l ti. ti into
fruit . or jugs. A
in a of water will
. the most soiled clothing,
Ii . perfectly. It will cut
a-e and dirt out of cooking
sinks drain pipe-. Dilute
lie water for except for
clothes. tightly cork-
I and plainly
Horseradish Sauce.
Put Lot .-. sauce; an over the fire
tablespoonful of utter and a
tablespoonful of Stir and cook
until blended, -n add
cu f I of strained soup stock, h ,
a of milk, half a
of salt, five whole peppers and a
of bay leaf, live minutes,
move bay leaf and peppers, add
three of grated horse-
radish, a minute longer an I
serve.
Care of tho Baby.
Don't give the baby any kind of
pie so called q that raw food or any kind of fruit.
M much in vogue among the pupils I Don't give the infant coffee, tea,
at tunes. It is, is the beer or any liquor or kind
square and J food except that is
ten feet No and I'm n an scribed.
or girl trips over it The infant sleep alone in
and I here is r differ- crib. Don't let the baby .-
thinking in a room near the Don't
have unnecessary clothing in the
mere u . I en square reel means the baby is kept,
an area equal to a
measuring ten feel on one ride and
one fool on Hie the parallel-
grim contains, therefore, ten
feet. Ten sepia how-
ever, h . no ten
feet on h of its Bides, which,
lore, col us feet.
Tommy's Doubtful Compliment,
A teacher instructing a class
f boys, and ml half an hour
faying to drive into their beads tho
i. man tho
lower animals, lint with
little sue
paid,
Care of Hairbrushes.
A way to clean
is spirits of ammonia and warm
water. Take a tablespoonful
ammonia to a quart of water, d ;
the bristles up and down in
water without wetting the bf .
rinse in clean warm water, sill.
well and in the air, but not ill
the in. Soap and soda soften
and will turn an ivory back-
ed brush How.
ah
. ; I i.
. b a pig,
I I
her by
VI He Worn. I.
A boy said
not . fl in till
was afraid last i
kit. hen elf ;. all lone
I was
by .
but I
It to
lie
av fully
a foolish b replied
as mother, ; ,, ,
dark
I of
find ate ,
Out
Ism in .
.,.
Hi
I've
To . nose J
Sea For Jan.
lire of
two- wax, Heat
gel hi r, mi . well and put away
needed. When it is to he use. I
a lump of on lop of the jar or bot-
in scaled and press it down
v. a hot shovel. This will
it, th.; Ill
Gr.-- Pie.
torn .
up id cupful , j
;. id one half j
in I
-mi e; juice loin
one .
h ill II i.Ill .
Paint
To
ill I.
and r
t I
. soil dot
a . n
in v . looks Ii
Am.
i of .
nil
. .
mini.
pen a v-
Ii
Cloaks
e V
Men's
full if tin
full ill, s- ts
b y
We guarantee
be exactly as we .
If you will avail
this you will re-
a greet saving.
GLOVES
ladies Elbow gloves
red, white and
blue, golf
and So cents.
INS
Ai
if d
re
A ft o m-s.
i v t; to
;. a. it lit
v I
I I
I.-, ii-s
i . ; . s
HI
i n
BRAND
ex
offer you
values
in i his line. Big
values in j
Pattern Hats and I
Novel-
ties, Eats made
IN
me Om
y- display.
pl
i I II;
i S
II buy it. right you it. Hoy-
every Suit
. Boys i-It and 1.00
fix-1
icy futility. Dark
Si till mil.
kid s
. I II I I
ii. gloves
Mens
Mt i
R I I
I vi s
loves
slopes
SO
to
1.75
Me.
Fur
ill
I J t i
U v
ft
tilts
iii.
pi
i ii i
M i. V.
ii ii brand
room
Steads, Solid
Solid Oak chairs.
i u
III i S
A V
i Is,
and enamel and
ii r
hit
. c.
iii.
i of i
I ll ,
i throw
. I
Th . ho
f I;. , . ,
-A I-M Tau ha . I.- .
On. dear, m l
Or I I
their m
Their u, . n ,
I lull ill.
To sit with i ii. . . Sour out
T-
.-
I ii.-
1.1.
ins.
tho
its ca
mil
.
or d then
ill not
torn.
be hung i.
n dry
If
In
too Ii
i .
at the
and Main Street, GREENVILLE, N. C.
EASTERN
i J Editor and Owner.
ml Friday.
GREENVILLE. PITT WORTH C NOV
K hi
HO MONEY IN THE TREASURY.
President C. C. Moore Secretary
T. B. Parker Far Behind in
No Relief
Not Paid.
The financial condition of the
North Carolina division of e
Southern Cotton Association is
poor. President C. C.
Moore has been laboring day and
night for almost a year to build
up the State organization and so
far has received but for his
services. His salary is
per year. Secretary T. B. Par-
was to receive He
is yet to draw his first dollar of
salary. There is nothing in the
treasury and the prospects are
rather slim for much in e
future. No effort has yet been
made to pay the State assess-
of for the support
and maintenance of the national
organization. The South Caro-
division has already paid its
assessment of in full.
North Carolina has not even
made a start.
The only method for raising
money for the support of the
State organization is to have the
county officer to n sure to
collect the cent levy on every
bale and forward the State's
share of three cents to the
proper authorities. Little
has been paid to raising this
money in the past, and hence
the present deplorable condition
of the State treasury
When I resident Moore started
out on s of the State
in September, he was forced to
sell one o his horses BO as to
procure tho needed funds for his
is. Such a condition of
things cannot continue much
longer. Che Observer.
Effected a Cure.
your husband as
much as tie
friend of the
no, replied the hostess
doesn't smoke at all now.
rejoined tie
Mar. I Bent Win of cigar
only Last
she rep lie d.
what broke him of the habit.
Daily Ne r.
FOUND PURSE.
It Fell Get and was
to Owner.
Mr. Jesse was return-
fro n Washington, Saturday
evening and as he was about to
get off of Capt. Ellsworth's train
at Parmele, picked up a
in the aisle. The purse contained
Mr. reported the
matter to Capt Ellsworth and
asked him to make inquiry for
the owner. This Capt. Ells-
worth did on his way back to
Washington and found that Mr.
H. S. Congleton, of Whichard.
who was returning home from
Baltimore and changed cars at
Parmele, had lost the purse. Mr.
Congleton came over to Green-
ville today for the purse and
was very glad that it had fallen
into good bands.
Great care should be exercised
by the property owner who is
going to buy paint to secure the
best and most economical paint,
as often big claims are made for
inferior paints. A poor paint or
inferior paint mere stimulant
like a treacherous expensive
which gives only temporary
relief to the home, while Town
And Country Paint is a perfect-
pure paint the result of over
years of good paint making ex-
and at the
right price from Hart
who are estimated be the
distributors of exclusively
high grade paints in the State.
If your house Zen for the
need of paint write them for
color card or see them at once.
Good Shown.
The second series of stock in
The Home Building Loan
Association began Saturday
nearly shares taken and
others spoken for. The i
series has nearly share operation. This is a fine show-
. an association six
Bridge Completed.
N C, Nov.
gr i railroad connecting
and Morehead City
rue -mi today- Master
Charles the
y old so of Charles
L thy, drove the last
nail completing the bridge This
structure ii feet long and
has two draws- The train will
run Into Beaufort in about a
week Beaufort is expecting to
have a big celebration when
station and all the
railway through town and the Y
and connections are completed
her in I Tangle.
The manner in which s
of are to be
settled has been announced by
the Rev John Roach of
Chicago, who told the minis-
that woman's belief in the
inspiration of the Bible was a
sufficient refutation of the
conclusions.
never saw a destructive
said Mr feminine
form, for a woman gets her
knowledge by
inspiration. Man with his
logic gen all tangled up, but the
average woman knows. If Mr.
with his logic is also
he has got himself
into the scrape of the
Cretan, who said that
Cretans York
Evening Post.
Diphtheria.
in town are
f diphtheria. They
ire the horn s of It. F. Wind-
th street and J.
C. on Lane.
Girl Killed by Gun Discharged.
Oxford, Nov. 8.- News has
here of a very distress-
lie; accident a few miles from
Oxford, near Mountain Creek, a
few days ago, when Miss Hazel
Currin, aged daughter
of Mr. and Mm. Matt Currin.
killed instantly by the
dental discharge of a gun in the
hands of the young lady's broth-
a little boy of years.
ii Refused.
M. C, Nov.
The much mooted bridge matter
has been disposed of for the
present at least Judge Thomas
before whom the case
was argued last week, has an-
his decision, which is to
the effect that he will not grant
the injunction asked for. The
plaintiffs will appeal to the
Court and the case will be
fought out there.
Mr. E. T. B. Glenn Dead.
Macon, Ga., Nov. 3-E. T. B.
Glenn, traveling auditor of the
Central Railway and brother of
R. B. Glenn, of North Car-
died at his home on Bond
street this morning in his 48th
year He had been ill several
weeks. A mother and four
survives him, besides his
R. B. Glenn. Gov.
Glenn will be present at the
He was here
days this week and had gone
back home after a supposed rally
of his brother. The funeral
probably take place tomorrow
AFTER HOUNDS.
rags Leans
H.
Constable W. B. Savage leaves
this morning for Greenville, N.
C, to get the blood hounds re
purchased by the county.
A full grown and he is
to be well trained, has been j, r
chased and two puppies
which are six months old. All
are fully blooded hounds and
when they are brought to the
city the had bitter
watch out when they get it in
their head to comm.-. murder.
There were so many -re and
was found to locate
the criminals that the
decided to purchase
hounds.
The dogs W be given a trial
n Monday and Constable Savage
expects to get back to the city
on Mes-
4th
Constable Savage arrived here
Sunday evening to examine the
logs which were purchased from
Mr. W. C. Hi m . The dogs
were given a test l id . a v. i
e taken to
row, Mr. -have
a reputation for goo-1 i
running down Is
A Long
An Irishman with one jaw j
much lien from a tooth I
lie wished have pulled, entered
he office i
When
into the
gleaming
Buffering Celt was
and saw lie
pa g
face, be positively refused
open his Being a mar
the dentist quietly in-
d assistant to push a
the leg, at
hen the Irishman open d hi
to y II the dent st I
at the y m
n was over, d intuit
. as much as you
. ad
n .
d. ed, as h ran his hand r
the . which assist-
ant had inserted the pin,
d I think them roots that
far
BLACKJACK
Jack, N. C, Nov.
Elder G. S. Johnston filled his
regular appointment at
creek Sunday.
J. W. and Abram Dixon went
to Sunday.
Harry Dunn and Miss
of Chocowinity, were
here yesterday.
C S. Porter and others from
here attended church at Salem
Sunday.
Several of the people from
here attended services at Mass
dona Sunday afternoon.
Mills, of W. H.
s home Friday and
returned Sunday.
Miss Maud left Friday
visit friends near Haddock's
X Roads.
J. O. Johnston attended
o at Bear Creek Sunday.
Miss Mary Midgett, of
co county, came in Sunday to
teach school here.
Mrs. G. S. Johnston spent Sat-
and Sunday with her
sister, Mrs. W. P. Buck.
Abram Dixon lost a fine young
horse last week with blind stag-
Charlie Mills, W. H. and Geo.
Adams all went to last
week.
W. A. Hudson is very ill with
typhoid fever. We hope he will
soon get better.
HUGHES HEATS HEARST.
Nor ft Every
Co
Old covers Herself in ; and
Buries the its Deeper
Than
. . ii . .-
r a
i i i
1902
. by MO ma-
ii it is Re-
members as-
this
publicans majority
. ball it.
returns while
Her vote than in
Le slight Republican
From All Over the as Received in Telegraph
S Tuesday v.-r, a good day for The Times says at Hughes
the North Carolina s elected by 40.000 to 50.000
did wt solid state ticket,
delegation. , Evening Post
look at Pitt , d Hughes, claims at
i Hughes election by 40.000
in
Hearst's cam-
rent states
believed Hearst had safe major-
NEW YORK.
Buffalo-At p. m state
despite claims to the con-
Lewis S. Chandler, candidate
Connor said that
. ., , , ,. pendent League and Democratic
. give Hughes a plurality ticket, when told that he had
-t and Erie county been elected said should be
very sorry to be elected
returns of
City give Hughes 6.966 plurality.
C county gives Hughes much gratified if I am elected as
. ; . . Hearst 3.842. it now seems to be to be
complete but-
City gives Hughes uncertainty. I understand, how-
plurality. ever, that my election is pretty
New first World assured, but whatever my
bulletin says returns indicate be my feeling is
has about but
majority gin Kings county. .,. j .
carried
The flashlight
the st; j is but
Utica Complete gives
Hughes Hearst
World bulletin says s
are that majority
The Herald says entire Tam-
many judicial ticket elected by
large majority.
MASSACHUSETTS.
cities and
in gave Guild,
for governor
Moran dis-
last year gave
and will lie
while cities am
13.507,
county
owns
7.783-
gave
Last
i. runes year they
that Ii Li elected- Bartlett
Try City c impute gives The in
Hughes Hearst f. In this State t one
and eight
ins 9.761. Re; loss OKLAHOMA.
Bay Sh Reports far received
I home, gave Democratic majority
Hughes
Syracuse Ci I y complete gives
Hughes Hearst
Democratic gain of 1904.
Hearst said
early tonight few telegrams 20.000.
I have received arc
in . convention.
KANSAS
reports
that Governor Hock, Re-
is re-elected by less
DAKOTA.
t be- Deep
I believe v. II win.
I will win. I
tut if is cut i
be
The Herald say.-, indications are ,
that Hearst carries Great No
York by
which
Bays it now
had carried
1.500 and
interest in election in
Crawford is elected
I Republican ma-
down
FLORIDA.
VI Demo
I.,
rats in I
The drain
defeated.
INDIANA.
The Brooklyn
supported
looks like Heart.
Erie county by
Greater New
The Times says indications
Hughes is elected by ma-
but Democrats possibly slow, Republicans elect congress-
claim state from
to 54.000.
. quiet in
elect Demo-
congressmen-
ISLAND.
and
Dem vote here about the
same as last year-
UTAH.
Howell.
Republican, elected.
CONNECTICUT.
New towns are
reporting; early and indicate en-
tire publican state ticket and
all Congressmen by
phi as large as two years
ago.
IOWA.
The vote for governor is large.
plurality of 1904 will
i. much reduced, but
point to his re-election.
large vote was
polled in state. Democrats are
elected in 4th. 5th and 8th dis-
Republicans carry state
and will control legislature
ting United States Senator.
NORTH CAROLINA
Raleigh her was
tine all over State. Re-
turns show larger vote than ex-
ed, running only a little
-dent votes.
Returns up to o'clock
pear to show election of
in and Crawford in 10th dis-
gained votes
in Blackburn's home county. His
total gain so far is Crawford
made gain in Hay wood.
carried Iredell by
Sta y by
heavy gain in city of
Dem carry State by
proximately 45.000. According
to careful estimate they
elect s Fight was
hot
Small.
Thorn, s, W W.
L. Goodwin. R. N.
. ; . Hackett, E. Y. Webb
and . Crawford.
We ii ; time and space
ogive only the total vote
the different received
in the county. Later we J
publish the full vote by town-
ships.
Slate Ticket.
Demon
Republican
For Congress.
Small Wood
For Solicitor
2.20-3 Edwards
For Senate.
Firming 2.331 King
For Representatives.
e 2.141
Whitehurst
Jones
For Superior Court Clerk.
Moore 2.385 Patrick
For Sheriff.
Tucker Fleming
For Register of Deeds.
Williams Bullock
For Treasurer.
White
For Coroner.
Laughinghouse Patrick
For Surveyor.
Jenkins
For Commissioners.
and 10th districts. The
en elected are J. H.
Kitchen, C. R.
W W. W.
elect balance of state ticket.
The Word says indications at
p. m, are that Hearst will have
60.000 in Greater New York and
that Hughes will come down in
Bronx with
The Herald says Timothy
Woodruff claims the state for
Hughes by
At o'clock it was stated at
Democratic headquarters that
election of Hughes was not con-
ceded by I state committee. No
estimates of pluralities being
made.
men. and
governor, by about
Cox
Brooks
I King
Holland
Spier
PENNSYLVANIA-
re-
turns indicate large Republican
gains as compared with last year.
WISCONSIN.
Milwaukee-Early returns
from interior towns show David-
son, Republican, running two to
one against democrat-
NEW
Is stated from re-
liable source that the Democratic
candidate for congress in ninth
Smith
Overton
Jones
Harrington
From
Tries to Catch Stream of Water
Hydrant.
Mr John Ivey Smith's hull
dog created lots of merriment on
the street Monday afternoon.
Policeman George Clark was
having the street sprinkled from
one the hydrants. The dog was
attracted by the stream from the
and ran out to catch it,
and for several minutes ran back
and forth grabbing at; I
and cutting up all
The dog did mind the water
at all and his capers were very
amusing
-L





i II IN 1.1
Jill
w-
If dies Closes
I Rain Coats.
Ladies Long Dross
Misses Long Dross
BIG STORE NOW FILLED WITH BEAUTIFUL
FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE.
Men's
. ,
s i -re
Mom. in areas too- M
Youths and buys J
We guarantee all goods to
be exactly as we represent,
you avail yourself of
this you will re-
a eat saving.
VT
ladies Elbow
red, white and
blue, golf gloves
and So cents.
Made each
and Gents.
CORSETS.
A tine lot Corsets. Well
made with tape to prevent
cents.
and Gents fine Mer-
last
wit trimmed handles,
each
RUBBER COATS
Ladies et inches
coats
I s II
III
A Very Imposing Nam.
of Cambodia, who
has ban attracting great interest
in Paris, has a very long
Bat
S o a p
The English translation
this imposing title is, who is
the supreme refuse, the being with
the sacred feet, the lord, the being I
most the
the excellent, the perfect one; the
descendant .;.
the i. c and glorious son ,
.- id; the. splendid leader the I
ran . glorious, illustrious, per
i . . ;, of the in a I
I of who is
i and is placed
n I i . n
we can you
excel values
in
values
Pattern lacs an
tics. Hats made
Big
in
but Experienced
MILLINERS
; c --ink.
. the c
i us f;
nil dwell n in the
;. ten r
taut to go him to i ail iv i
stupid , ,
.-.
go and then bur i n cs tn i
their
bad tin cf a ti a h e.
these ii . ,
They dread I . h
But I pr mi l em , u
hurry to e; c
then go aw
c-
to
to
re I
-aid
JUST
ONE
WORD that word U
It raters to Dr. and
MEANS HEALTH.
Are you constipated
Troubled with
Sick headache
Bilious
Insomnia
ANY these symptoms and many others
indicate Inaction of the LIVER.
Take No Substitute.
B .
Jan, i Not
I. I.
u k
i i
If
have been en r no is her
is I k tow that parish
priest, when she lived in the Sue
never appealed in vain to
her to relieve c of distress. She
always did with an ungrudging
spirit an I an open
Truth.
LAND
By oft in -i.-r I
of Fin n d m a L-
line of
and Bros
Always on display. It pleases all
Looks right when you buy it. Stays right after you wear Roy-
Brand Clothing tor Youths and HOy. Medal every S
Special in Pant . Knee Pants and
Specials in Mens Pants, Fancy Worsted, Quality. Dark
Ground Grey Stripes.
nil. i , , i
the
i . h
m i v ., r .
nil. ism at m .
land In
of
Ml W. II. Iv
III. in Cm I'll, I . I i
r . ,. ,.
1.1. n
to of ; . ,. .
i hi . t. i n u ,. n,
ii . n r. n r II . . ii
ii . Mi , ,. a.
K n.
in
by B m
i i- day i-f
. r.
f r in
ad will
i. I or id
lies i. f Novella
i in
h. ; lace
. . i i . . J
V .
. ; I .
Tin
I ;
i ma
T V s V i ,
You Stop Set-
; i Mi. . in;
Mrs ,. i i
Hum thin vein
. I. III I little
i III- I H. b
. l-f l.;. , , ,,, ,,, w
Shelia- ,
lb- I I.,,. r. ,. old,
She
I-. I in I
I I ;. of
. I
I have completed my trip n
testing and
If any
and will bring
measures to
a on the first Monday in X
teat them i on
E.
s w
To
rives
all Gloves
He
i gloves 1.00
Me- iv gloves
driving gloves
Mei s t. iii gloves
driving
Mens skin gloves 1.75
s gloves
shirts
A I. t princely braid
la CO Notice display
in north window.
lot
k -it es
w lour in ties
in tit s in d col is each
Furniture.
if Oak Slit it j i it
Dining room hairs, each
Odd Bed Solid Oak
Solid k ii eking chairs.
Easels, E
12.98
c;. and enamel and
B OP
bit
in I he town . Pitt
Icon tr. North
i.; ,. .,,
i i .
I o i ,.
ii mo
and pace a id we
t; ,.,
land bespeak tor his
H in.-s the mi s- iii p
Persons
said i r the
Mr. E Pie en, Green
e. N C. once
his the day . f A i
B Fie
. ii.
w.
T P. Taylor,
FUTURE i I
a h
and Main Street, GREENVILLE, K. C.
I Not Quite I
Bo h
w driver
Have good
S prepared for
I one i . i ii- line
ft. la yo d and
i, we will tool
, i lack a
a elide.
S Of Course I
You get Harness,
Goods,
and
-r iv. ,. ;
. . j,
i-. ,,. Q .
pt. and Ki
a a now
11-i w any
knobs or feet on the hot
torn.
PRICES
Column and Head
. . iv. .-no
and
fit.-. Id
per
A Rh . w rut; ti-
ha.
n.
Iv
and
High Mater
I. Wit.
D. W.
Co
IN
if Provisions
ii
as always on hand
ill
Fr sh kept inn-
I in Country
Produce Bo. end Sold
D. W.
O t
North Carol i n a.
In Superior
Court.
NOTICE.
Corey I
North l
Pi it County.
Lemuel Tee
Vs.
Ida Teel
. will tuba
,,,,,,
torn Hi-
r aim ,. r, i,
ha i. , ,,
I ,. Ural
S lilt
O.
lit. for
in
day Of
O. o. Moore
nun Brow.,
A II
Vi
it
t-
th
CO
th
th
b,
pr
de
To
the
be
Ni
bee
Jes
Ala
wit
at
ft
day
Announcement
We leave to we are
Wholesale and Retail
for--------n
Lead, Paints,
Colors, and and
Country Ready Paints.
There is n line in the world better than
It I it a
reputation for honorable wares and honorable
dealings.
If you use the Harrison Paints you need
never worry quality.
We you will f us with your
orders you want good paint for any
Have just a car load and
can give you Special Prices.
Baker Hart
N. C,
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE GREENVILLE BANKING TRUST
GREENVILLE, N. C.
of business 4th, 1908.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts i
Overdrafts, secured
unsecured
Furniture
Due from Ban
Cash
Gold m
Silver
National
Capitol stock paid in
Surplus 12,500.00
Undivided profits, 3,085.29
Bills payable 55,000.00
Deposits
line t u
u to 106.565 I
Due to 293.31
Cashiers ck 558.87
Total,
State of North Carolina. County of Pitt,
I, C. S Carr, of the above named bank, do solemnly
swear that is true to the best of my knowledge
belief
Subscribed and sworn to before
me. this 11th day of Hf 1900.
J MOO HE,
Public
C. S. CARR, Cashier
R. O.
F. G.
E. O.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
TH BANK OF
At the Close 4th
i .-. I Hi
, .
red
in r
Cash Item
Gold
Silver
paid la
Profits ax-
Tares Paid 12.8748
i no in i i
n Time of deposit 11,330.9
to check
Cashier's checks out-
1,617.12
7,2.19.00
North Carolina,
County of Pitt.
I. L. Little, Cashier of the above-named do
wear that the statement above is true to the best of my
l JAMES L. LITTLE,
and sworn to before
mo. this Kith of Sept, 1906.
WALTER G. WARD,
J.
R. W. KING,
J. R.
FOR THE LITTLE ONES.
Interesting to Be
Of course you I and girls ail
know how to play but
you may not ail the games
can with thorn.
Do you know in the
for It i- played in the
following
Roll the jacks from the hand to
the ground; arc the cats.
Then your hand near
with the fist lightly closed,
the thumb first finger forming
the opening to one ell.
Jack may now be thrown up, and,
while he is in the air. one of the
four cats on the ground must be
picked up and put in the well.
Repeat the operation with the
second, third fourth eats until
nil have been drowned in the well.
The left hand may now lie taken
away, leaving the dead cats in a
bunch.
Now jack may be tossed up, and
this time oil four cats must be pick-
ed up before comes down.
It is be ired at that
boys and girls are sometimes
over the spelling of the gnat
poet's name. It is written in throe
and Which of
these is right The first is
ally preferred, though many of our
best scholar write it
contending that it is right because
his autograph signature appears in
that form. At the same time it
should be end that the
name appeared as Shakespeare on
the title page of that he
and this warrants the
belief that he accepted it as the
spelling, in spite of the auto-
graph signature. There is very lit-
authority for the form
Tan Square Feet.
Some of Cue schools lime a
so called that
is much in vogue among the pupils
at times. It is. is the
between ten square fee
ten feel Now then n
unwary boy or girl trips over it
and answers, is no differ-
but a little thinking shews
them that there is a good den of
difference. Ten square feet moans
an area equal to a parallelogram
measuring ten feet on one side and
one foot on the other; the parallel-
contains, therefore, only ten
square feet. Ten feet square, how-
ever, means a square measuring ten
feet on each of sides, which,
therefore, contains square feet.
ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
To Remove Grease Spots From Carpets
and Clothing.
Spots on
clothing are not . remove. I
First brush out any dust that may
nave gathered on the soiled place.
rub powdered French chalk,
or, if this is not at hand, common I
chalk or magnesia, on the wrong
side of the fabric if you can get
it. If not, apply a paste of the
alkali to the right side and cover
to exclude the Leave it thus
for twenty-foul hours. Now lay
several of tissue or of
blotting paper over the chalk and,
set a moderately hot iron on it,
shifting paper as the grease i
pears on the surface. This is best I
by working from the wrong .
side. If the oil is not extracted,
sponge with household ammonia and
renew the alkali.
home of
yr
or
Water.
To one gallon of water add a one
pound can of chloride of lime and
four pounds of common washing
coda. Allow it to boil
ten minute. i cool turn into
bottles, jars or stone A
I in . tub of water will loosen
dirt in most clothing,
perfectly. will cut
grease e dirt cut of conking
drain
the water an pt for
we g i-
i an-l -1.
We have an j of these stylish salts
Also new in
a.
i- m over the fire
. hatter and a half
i .-. Stir and cook
add one-half
Dress D-p
Fancy smart Gray Plaids, latest
Our Department
into n
tablespoonful o
until blended,
cupful of strained e
a cupful of milk, half a
of salt, five whole and a bit
of bay leaf. Cook five minutes, re-
move bay leaf u rs, add ;
three of gr
radish, a minute lunger and
serve.
is ablaze with the popular s
when they see our line,
Shots for
I ;
i n
fr
Come show a
of
Tommy's Doubtful Compliment.
A teacher was instructing a class
of boys, and had spent half an hour
trying to drive into their heads the
difference between man and the
lower animals, but apparently with
little success.
he said, to
a little chap, you know the
between, say. mo and a pig,
or any other bride r
replied Tommy, innocent-
but another teacher standing by
laughed.
Why He Worried.
A Chicago boy said to his
not afraid in the dark, but I
was afraid last night. went to the
kitchen closet all alone in the dark
by myself, and I was awfully
afraid.
are a foolish replied
his mother, there is nothing in
the dark that can hurt
I wasn't afraid of an-
the rogue; was afraid I
wouldn't any cake
Caro of ho .
Don't the baby . i
raw food or any kind
Don't give the infant tea,
boor or any liquor or a kind of
food except that which is
The infant should sleep alone in
a crib. Don't lei
in a room near Don't
have unnecessary clothing in the
room where the baby is kept.
C L WILKINSON
Care of
A good way to clean
is with spirits of ammonia and n
water. Take a tablespoonful of
ammonia to s quart of water, dip
the bristles up and down in the
water without wetting the back,
rinse in clean warm water, shake
well and dry in the air, but not in
the sun. Soap and soda soften the
bristles and will turn an ivory buck-
ed brush
H. EVANS, Supt. h. A.
Manufacturing C i
GREENVILLE N. C.
Noses Out of Joint.
You cry and look so
I love you. dour, the same
I truly I you
E.-fore
But a little now.
You Know, and lie la r-mull
got lo most to
Tour nose la out of Joint, that's all.
Sealing Wax For
Make a of one-third resin
two-thirds beeswax. Heat to-
mix well and put away until
i needed. When it is to he used lay
a lump of it on top of the or bot-
to be sealed and press it down
with a hot shovel. This will moll
it, and thus seal the cork.
Green Tomato Pie.
Three medium size
chopped fine, half cupful of raisins;
one and one-half of
half each of cinnamon
and allspice; juice of u small lemon;
one teaspoonful of cornstarch, stir-
red smooth in a little Water. Rake
in open
Cleaning Paint.
To eh. paint dampen a clean
water, dip it in whiting
and rub the until the dirt is
removed. well in clean water,
dry with a soft cloth and polish with
a chamois leather. Paint cleansed
in this way looks like new.
Ants.
To get rid of ants wring out a
sponge in a solution of sugar and
water put it on a plate where
the ants congregate. Soon it will
be filled with the insects. Plunge
it in boiling water and use a.
in the same manner.
Don't you remember that col, day
They left me ,.,., hours In bed
when nurse came for me at
nose Is out of she said
baby's come to with
Well. then, that's the matter
now.
You might have known haw U would be.
Oh, dear, my head don't meow.
Or I you from the room.
Nice little don't a noise
When their give nil
Their to red
I tell yo, .-- t.
To sit with kit upon knee.
And It's no wonts fur to have
Tour put ea n ma.
Manufacturers of
Sash, Doors, Blinds. Monti
And all of
t,
Also
AND LUMBER, CEILING, Flooring
etc.
LARGE ASSORTMENT OF O
BLINDS ALWAYS ON HAND
. II orders will receive
guaranteed.
rapt
A Good Cosmetic.
Cucumber is one of nature's own
cosmetics. Try using a slice of
instead of soap for wash-
your face. Don't throw away
even the rind. Boil it and use the
water for washing your face.
In tho Laundry.
After starched garments have
been ironed they should be hung in
the sunshine to thoroughly dry and
that the sunshine may take away
any yellow spots caused by too hot
Irons.
A Cooking Hint.
If raisins and currants are rolled
in flour before using them in
or puddings and then the
last they will not sink to the bot-
tom-
He Was Enlightened.
A stout old gentleman with a
short temper was having trouble
with the phone, lie could hear
nothing but a confused jumble of
sounds finally became so i
ho yelled into the trans-
v-re a fool at the end of this
this was the i
A a
The will
gimme few pennies me
wife
Old me. In tin
fir-t place haven't got any
in the second place I have no en
iv use for a starving wife and in the
th id place don't wont a wife any-
Unrelenting Disapproval.
must admit that our friend
the courage of his
said one statesman.
the ease of such opinions a
answered the other, isn't
courage;
Star
Quite Contrary.
isn't it, about
about
when s man has a dry way
of telling them it whets people's
for
A at
Your Canadian will hook up a
couple of range ponies to his light i
buckboard or swing himself over tho
hack of a home bred borne
travel a trifle of fifty sixty miles
to a dance or frolic any
without thinking it over n
And along tho line of the railroad
the Fame. met n very genial
th ma while over
Ci North n .; I rightful
speed of eight miles an h who,
as ; . mi been
up lire o bit t i take dinner with
Aunt Hat The genial
lived Albert, and found
out after n little conversation that
I re some odd
in e up away. Think of traveling
f; a tn I ago to take
tea with s i -r Sue or
it u .
Washington Star.
of a Golf Ball.
One I rd of morsels of straw
being clean into solid timber
by the force of a tornado. Some-
what similar and equally
was the result of a strode
at golf made by A. Wyndham
on the famous Westward course
two or three years ago. He found
his ball in a bed of rushes, actually
impaled upon a rush, so that it
possible to pick up the ball and
it suspended upon the rush,
a golf ball, which is almost as
as wood, should be spiked in
fashion upon the point of
a thing a a rush a most
a bin i





I i
the
Advertising rub
AND FRIDAY.
AND
. lit Greenville, N. C, as second class matter,
upon application.
i office in Pitt and adjoining counties.
in Preference to
OF RESPECT.
To the officers and Members of
Lodge No. Ayden N. C.
We your committee appointed
to draft a series of resolutions
expressive of the respect and es-
CONDENSED STORIES.
Th Peril of on Railroads and
Mayor of New York,
who so narrowly escaped taking the, j
FALL SUIT
1906, kg leave to submit
That in the death of Bro. Cox
this lodge sustains a i
GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY NOV. 1906. zealous aw
shirked a duty imposed upon
and in recognition of our regard
be it
That in his death we
E. that j
V. Cox, who died October 29th,
the
WORDS WE APPRECIATE.
The editor of this as
n oilier of the Consolidated
Tobacco Company desires lo ex-
tend the thanks of the
to Editor Whichard for the many
nice and complimentary things it
has said in behalf of the
dated Tobacco Company.
When almost as a boy e
writer came from the farm to
engage in the tobacco business in
Greenville one of the first men to
extend to him the hand of friend-
ship and good wishes for
of the business was D. J. Which-
ard. During all the years
to our personal
edge this man has never failed
an opportunity to say and do
thing that he could for the .
of the tobacco inter-
of Greenville and Pitt county.
During the early days of ti e
m history when its fate
most hung in the balance, when
the other business interests of
the town were arrayed against
the tobacco market,
and the Reflector stood up and
fought for the mar-
He opened the columns of
his paper and many of the
of the county remember that
for a period of several years a
regular tobacco department was
conducted through the columns
of the Reflector. This cont
in no snail to making
permanent the success of the
market when it strong
efforts to keep it from going
down.
The truth is we have known of
no public enterprise that looked
to the and advance-
of the general interest of
the community that the Reflector
did not enter into the fight and
assist with all its power in bring-
about the successful build
up and development of these en-
and while all the
p e of the county may not have
agreed and may not have seen
as the Reflector saw
them, yet no one can doubt the
sincerity and honesty el purpose
of the Reflector in doing that
which it thought would result in
building up and protecting the
moral as well as the material in-
of the community.- L.
Joyner in October
Life.
It always helps a man to know
t t his efforts in any
are appreciated, and the
is doubly appreciated be-
cause it comes from a man
whom we know to be sincere. In
the past dozen or more years we
have been thrown much with Mr.
Joyner in business relations and
have always found him to be a
man of word, a man of value
to the community, and one whose
energy was indomitable. We
have k iv . u of his struggles ard
sacrifices in determination to
Greenville a great tobacco
r. and it has teen
if to
a y m render what
it could in undertaking,
and, r. he intimates, the result
speaks for itself
We have always had faith in
Mr. Joyner and faith in Green-
ville, and the belief that a strong
tobacco market would be a great
factor in the of the
town spurred us on all the more
to do what we could to establish
it
without her tobacco
there would be but one answer
a dead town. Hence we are glad I w deprived of the
i of his presence in our
every effort put forth this the wise
direction. words that often fell from his
u i u lips, and were of and
As has also been said several results to the order and u.
times in this paper, we have the brotherhood.
faith in the Farmers Consolidated I That we bow in humble sub-
, , on to the will of our great
Tobacco Company, and we be- Chancellor, who at all times
to prove the does that which is best and has
only the interest of his children
Ki., was dining in at
the i
A number of Americans in
the fashionable and they
took coffee together in the foyer
dinner, seated at little tables
the low white balcony, near the
orchestra, which affords so fine a
new of restaurant and foyer.
The talk turned to high speed
and its perilous high
spied of motor ears, express I ruins,
and I Ice.
Mayor smiled and
is undoubtedly,
it is going
greatest help to the farm
of any m tint has
ever been started.
Beware of Such Agents,
it is strange that People
easily taken in and so ready
part with their to some
dick tongued agent.
at heart.
That this lodge deeply mourns
the d i th Brother Cox and that
his absence from our lodge
will long be felt, and the place,
h so and acceptably I
-1 can not easily be
i. a page our records be
set aside to his memory with his,
name, date, and age in-
Some scribed then on.
he
request to
ago a man came into this J jg
county selling washing machine brother our s sympathy
rights, and all told in this their, and our sad, be-,
, . and consolation
about the scheme is true, it is a comfort point them to Him
far reaching swindle. If seems our Great Father who lo
the plan of procedure was . copy of these
this man to first sell a right be sent the family of our
a large sum, and then
die person to whom he sells out Free Will Baptist
filing rights to others on which publish same.
, . W. L. I
lie gets a royalty, and every vie- g
of the scheme in turn goes J. 2.1. Blow.
out and find other to be deemed
i i t The way in which one Okla-
making it a kind of endless announced that his
matter The actual selling mother was coming to visit him
of asking machines cuts but lit- may seem a trifle but it's
pretty safe to say that away
tie figure in it, as that would down in her heart was
in too slow, but the prouder than forty queens.
., Lt j s the way he did it;
is to sell the rights and The editor of the News-Re-
get larger sums. publican is going to tog up a
with such speed that
Mr. W.
farmer who had been of cuffs, if he can find any. got acquainted, yesterday we
ad give note aggregating Going to get shaved and going engaged, and today find he
to give note, to get our shoes shined and the ready owes me En-
for one of rights, was so we can walk
in Greenville Tuesday, to get right Ma's
a. advice as to how -bout Y know who th.
CO protect himself against the she's a good one too -one of th i sternly. You most not
of the notes He told old Quaker know. bu
collection notes, torn Ma lives promptly and
us he knew several people who our ma when we were born; well, replied the pert wit-
were caught just as he had been she was our ma out in ., .
. . . , . . western Kansas when we Now, then, what is your
something should be done to stop hunted None of your
SUCh imposition or. people. i ma when we drank parched Ledger.
corn in old Oklahoma in .
and she's our ma now. If
One of most hopeful you see us tomorrow
. i m down the street with a little
things observed in woman with a little her
election was that almost face you'll know that's ma. If
never had a ma you should
one like our ma,
5-
M F
in the Selection
a suit clothes ac-
companies poor judgment
in other things.
It is as bad to be under-
dressed as it is to be over-
dressed.
Wear Clothes in
with your station.
The sack suit we illustrate
here is appropriate for solid
substantial men in
Any Walk of life
Every detail has been
studied and to be in
keeping with the character
the man who wears it.
The style is conservative,
and yet keeps pace with the
trend of fashion. The
has been increased, the back
n form fitting, the lapels
broadened, shoulders m i-
and the front shaped
to accord with the prevailing
fashion without the extreme
IS
something dangerous about speed.
When I was n student at Princeton,
there was n middle cook, a
pie minded woman with a good deal
of money saved, who suddenly got.
herself engaged to a horse jockey. I j
law the cook standing looking out
her kitchen window with a dazed
expression one morning, and I said
to ;
is the matter,
she said, my
husband that is to be, everything
Suits in at 12.50 and
u y easy steps to
Our and Suits appear to
hive the most fiends.
FRANK WILSON
The King
A.
W. H. RICKS
Without exception the young men
walked up to the ballot box and too.
voted the straight Democratic
ticket. Int in North .
. , , , , . ., I he Georgia mill operative who
Carolina always lead into the a saloon for a sleeping car
Democratic party. hit ch; place, to
In this
section at least the Reward.
campaign just closed has been I will pay a reward of and
remarkably clean. Of course expenses, for the arrest and de-
livery to me of Will Turner, col-
here has been some who the chain
usually is, but on the whole the of Pitt county on Oct.
. , , , Very dark, about
campaign has been free from fa about
bitterness and nothing has pounds, feet o inches
high. Send any information to
Furniture Problem
We can solve it for you.
Leadership
furniture Sale Competition Is Brisk and
to create enmity between
men or cause heart burnings.
For a season there will be
from the of politics, at
which we should all be thankful.
It will be a good day the
country when political campaigns
become less frequent, that is if
a time ever arrives.
the or to
Joe Supt.
Greenville, N. C.
Nobody cares particularly what
hour, minute or second the pres-
voted, or
he wore, but we bet the press
dispatches tell it-
Now that a
Ask any business man declared that Adam was a
today what Greenville would be man there is room for doubt.
tell me that that young
feller from wot be staying
down at your place have got
caught it afore he came,
then, for he ain't touched nothing
stronger than milk since he bin
a Week.
What Might Have Bean.
confessed the penitent
man, a moment of weakness I
stole a carload of brass
a moment of ex-
claimed the
man What would you have taken
if you had yielded in a moment
when you felt
London
The taximeter system has been
i introduced in London, and one of
An r of I
i.-d pan died j
endeavored during a
of a passed
a bill for in
standing windows while
cleaning luring his lust
the old fellow to a
colleague that his object in intro-
papers there a how
by the how for that. it. y e
the bill, said he, not for the sake f t fa
of the but for the I don't know whether
they might idea of the a quid over for You
was suggested to me by the fen like
that a window cleaner aught fall j
Furniture Sale Claims are many and loud
WHO WHY
What decide it. There but one
test, sale is best and most important
that offers you
Prices on the Furniture Need
convinced. Tours to please.
E. TOT
Pictures Framed to Order.
This department is in C. NYE, who
resent the Eastern Reflector in
i aw I l a .
the fall of the year has come
and money is in greater circulation,
those in and on the
routes leading out from here,
who are in arrears on subscription
to the Daily Reflector
will confer a upon us
by handing the amount lo me -u
your earliest Receipts
will be promptly. Subscriptions
also solicited
P. C NYE.
Winterville Dent.
Mrs- J. K. and
daughter, Miss Minnie, were here
a short while Saturday shopping.
The A. G. Cox Co., are
still receiving orders for their
A full line of
and fruit at J B. Cut i oil Co
There in need nice will
pants P.
Co.
Remember Rev. J. E.
will preach to the Red Men here
next Sunday at p. m
The season is now at hand
when most of the farmers are
housing their corn and some of
them are worried about not
bodies in which to haul their
corn Now don't let this worry
Sou any longer for the A. G Cox
Co., has on hand a full sup-
ply of these bodies and would be
glad to supply your needs.
Ernest Manning and Oscar
authorized to rep-
and territory
Hunters in need of best loaded
Us can get them at J. B. Car-
roll A Co,
Water.
Cures
Liver e
V weakness, i-
at the
I T. x. Bro.
STRAY TAKEN UP.
I have taken up one unmarked
stray sandy color, weight
about or pounds. Owner
can get same by proving property
and paying
W. M. Jones.
P. D. Greenville, N. C.
buggy bodies and seats. This goes came down Tuesday from
show that they are putting .,. . , .
the best bodies and seats on the Greenville to vote.
market and we are confident you I are our entire line of
will make no mistake in sending.,. goods at Special low prices
them your order.
Mrs. Maud Hardy, of Oakley,
is visiting her mother, Mrs-
Pattie Sutton, this week.
lakes of
We sell II,
B. T. Bro.
W. C. Vincent, of Bethel, was
and it will be to see
them before buying elsewhere and
come before bargains
cent goods
now and goods
i and several others same way.
Harrington and Co
Two and pi
In in a new kid ting
null S. C.
es. Apply lo O. W. Jeffreys,
Tarboro, K. C
pleasant caller here Sunday We proud of these yet we
. , , , can mink of many things of
night We are always glad to we still stand in and
see him. one of these is a good laundry
m . f, ,,, , n , plant. The servant question is
Au g. becoming alarming and the time
on hand a full supply of their fa near at hand this must
Tar Heel cart and wagons. Bet- be and it that an
see or write them before you enterprise of this kind would
prove the situation-
We still m mil i f i ,
lee of off- The business done through the
ring to a very low Bank of Winterville amounted to
more than thus making
an excellent record. Others are
B t ox, toking advantage the bank
A private phone system has and not
just been put in connecting the school season is here and
dormitories, the office of A. G. your boy will need a good com-
Cox Mfg. Co , the store of A. W. winter suit. B. F. Man-
depot, and the Co., have them of all
residence of A. G. Cox. See them for Prices.
A Urge line of plaids of all , the line of
grades just at B. F. and umbrellas we ever
Manning Co. They are going, carried Harrington and Co
Call and see them at once. Good nice three crown raisins
What town can ours for at B. Carroll Co.
modern conveniences to its size
and age It has a first class Ange Co. before buying. They
electric light plant, a thriving are over stocked with mohair
bank, department stores, four goods, silks and nice shirt, waist
daily mails, three rural free de- goods.
livery routes going out into every The A. G Cox Mfg Co.,
surrounding section, and one now receiving daily orders for
Of the very best schools in the their improved cart We
State. I solicit your orders.
Plenty of best lime always on
hind at A. W. Co. New lines of fine dress goods
W. L. Smith, of Falkland, was arriving daily at Harrington;
here Sunday night. Co-
Nice sun dried apples fresh The is
and bright at J. B. Carroll Co. thin,; for tearing up rough land.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G- Chapman You them at Harrington
spent Sunday at
Notice of Dissolution.
We, the undersigned, have by
mutual consent dissolved co-
partnership and offer the entire
stock of goods consisting
merchandise at cost. A
discount offered. For
terms and particulars address R.
J. Little Co,, Conetoe, N. C.
R. J. Little,
J. H. Clark.
We will pay the highest mar-
price for chickens, eggs,
corn, peas or anything in that
line.
I lathe mi e
U III i
. m. I I. putrid
K . i t I. ii. v
in l--u
l i u, y
TO AND
HE
TUB NO
Y k lo ii r l mi. . r-
sup. -r . -I. a
him.- in
h- II- It-.-pi.
v r n Id ii be
Hire, I drill -ii
r. ail
. at She 1-1
u ether-111 r.-1
Ii- an
Farm
The firm hi
which Kid. I lived
situated at iii a
for rent the year par-
i In. in
James L. Little, N. C.
ltd w.
Barber Co.
The A. G. Cox Co.
just shipped a car load of their
Pitt county School Desk. Bitter
send them your order at once.
line of and
Winter millinery
ready for inspection nil e
O'clock Oct ,
FOR SALE.- One-half acre
corner lot with three room dwell-
conveniently located to school
and business part of town- For
particulars see
J. A. Manning.
Winterville, N. C
Rev. W. E. Cox, of Greenville,
Spent Tuesday night with his
Mrs. E. E Cox. Thursday Ml are invited I
to the drug of B. I. new the J.
Cox A for T. W. j R. Smith and Company.
trade and Ml I Misses
C- A. Fair was in town Sun- Why use that old
day. machine of yours when you
Call and see the large line of can get a brand new
ladies cloaks at B. for a vs
F, Manning Co. They are off- up, at CO.
them at a bargain.
The young men will do well to
see K- ; Co., before
buying fall hats. They are
STRAY TAKEN
I up .
all-nil fir. r
bargains on their black Split
entire lino.
We bought mill in
that any
thing ever saw money.
Harrington Barber and Co.
Ladies in need of
and patterns can find them
at B. F. Maiming Co.
buggies Man- f
A. G Cox Mfg.
are still in demand. Better send u mo
then your order. hot t
get by p,
property paying
J. F. May, N O.
SALE OF PERSONAL PROPER
TY.
Notice la hereby given that
at u noon,
will to at the of
the B. of
all the of the
, I- B.
A Pensioner.
An pensioner of France
died other day. Through all the
of and forms
an servant of
Charles tho hi t king of
had boon his stipend. In
Char u u pension of
year in o; c of his man
ants, year in and year oat ever
since, whatever system might he up
or down, the good fellow religiously
presented himself on pension day to
draw his and just as religiously
every succeeding finance minister
had it for him. When he died
the ancient pensioner was a
The
Claims Sustained
United States Court of Claims
Tho of International
Dictionary that it is, In
-i
enriched parts with
tho f adapting It to meet tho
severer . another
are of opinion that this allegation
most tho
that Las ii . and tho
1- ill u . ;.
It now hits been re-
been In
part, i u
the and a
than any
hut the world I.It Is perhaps n to that we refer
to tho in our work
the highest audio l-i of
and In r e pat It
be t i
A o.
above to
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
THE GRAND PRIZE
was given to the
at the World's Fair, m.
GET THE LATEST AND BEST
be
MERRIAM
CORRESPONDENCE.
Party, Cora
Politics and Personals.
Bethel, N. C, Nov. 5.1906.
The party given
by the Literary society
on Friday night last, in the
society hall for the benefit of the
graded school library was quite
a success. The attendance was
good and the receipts amounted
to over Miss Inez Thomas,
in a fetching gypsy costume,
made a charming daughter
the mystic art and foretold every
happiness for the fortunate one
palm with
Miss Whitehurst had
charge of the lemonade
and by her pleasing r
waxed many a tardy
from unwilling purses,
Miss Maud cut the
wedding cake and gave to the
lads and lassies a peep into the
book of fate with their slices of
cake-
The following you lg ladies
served the refreshments;
Alice James. Carrie Ila
Bullock, Lizzie Eb-
I William. Gladys Andrews
and Jennie Jones.
S. M. Jones gave an old tin e
at his
able home near Bethel on last
Thursday night. Quite a
of our young people attended
and had a most enjoyable time.
The songs, the old leader,
the crowd of huskers round
corn pile all in the ht
of a
back the pictures and of
Joel Chandler a d
Thomas Nelson Page
the young folks a living picture
f one ff the scenes of
de
Miss Effie Grimes
a few of her friends most
charmingly on Saturday even-
with a chafing party. The
following were the fortunate
Misses Bertha
Nannie Watson Etta
Huggins; Henry
and Harlie
Quite a number of our young
people attended the perform-
of the in
Tarboro last week.
Several Bethel folks attended
the Conetoe dance last Friday
night and report quite a swell
affair.
Miss Effie Grimes returned
Friday evening from a visit to
friends in Rocky Mount.
Mrs. Herbert Taylor, of Tar-
spent Saturday here with
her mother Mrs. Hetty Taylor.
Mrs. D. E. House, of Greenville
returned home Sunday afternoon
after a visit to her mother, Mrs-
Mayo, of this vicinity.
T. R. Andrews, C. M Warren,
Fred Forbes and Tom Moore, of
Greenville, spent Sunday here.
W J. Mayo, of spent
Sunday in Bethel.
On last night
Rogers an old suffered
a stroke of paralysis.
Don't Wait.
Again we would remind those
who have received statements of
what they owe The Reflector for
subscription, and have not y I
responded, to let US hear from
them We do not like to pub-
items of this kind, but the
money due is to help us
meet our obligations- All should
appreciate this and be prompt in
paying.
Jas f D
New, latest, and up-to-date Fall and Winter
Goods, Shoes, Silks, Woolens. Dress trimmings and
Cloaks, we only to give you a few price
but have lots goods and will take pleasure in
showing you
Make our store your
Dress goods in solid colors.
Plaids and mixed, the
newest at
1.00,1.25,1,50 per
SIMS AT ANA PRICE
and Shoes for Ladies the
things out and the most comfortable made a 3.00
3.50 and 4.00
Percales and
school dresses in figures
plaids.
. and cent
our underwear is complete.
F.
ton Mill Men be Prosecuted.
Washington Nov 2.-
The government is gong to pros-
North Carolina cotton mill
men for violation of the alien la-
contract law. This fact was
made known though not
officially announced, in a state-
from Assistant Secretary
Murray, of the Department of
Labor and Commerce, who de-
that the government has
decided to deport the English
textile operatives under arrest
Charlotte and Gastonia. There
have been twenty-three of these
foreign cotton mill operatives
arrest and the number was
J ht.
BoweN
HOME Of WOMAN'S FASHIONS.
Save the
The hot weather brings
with to ii by o ti V
f tapper. With u slum
es. Canned Goods, Package
Goods, Pickles, Butter Cheese, Coffee,
Tea, Cakes, Candies, Fruits, Ac as T carry, the and buy.
are easy and the all saved H will take no argument to
you of this if you visit my store and sue what I carry.
You can mo dour North of
J. B
Neat Job
Our specialty,
deflector Job Printing Office





mm
e Values In Mens, and young
lens Suits and Overcoats.
U. A. .-.
a ricks
Suit or to
production on our Clothing
they are better values than obtainable else The
same cure is taken to give our customers the best. ere is
not the equal mite or Overcoats in Pitt county. It will
pay yon a short while to over this line Clothing. It
meant more Style tor you and values you don't else-
where. It is not possible to describe the elegance of our
Clothing. You must see the line to appreciate it.
RAIN 12.50 TO
A Guaranteed Raincoat
Rain
The cuts shown t he f and view o
Coals no introduction to good Dress rs. Th -y h i introduced by
mine-. i f to m our in oat your u i is c
line of
A .
Mi t.
A Black L-. tin best mine
Grey t
w ill a black pi
Pi i. e
Special, form or loose
if
forth
25.00
S FORBES.
THE OUTFITTER.
tint
MM
Selling
AYDEN
PASHA.
Manager
. ,
ll all.
i u,. for Daily If you need any paint be sure
I to call on E. E. Co. They
ii . k i. a Will cover over
as much and wear as long
up a by street
quarter, old,
o lives the man
Ii e ruled Egypt. If
i in Cairo to-
I you he is dead,
I r e do not know.
Ladies Dress Goods, Men's and Boys
Hats, Shoes and Notions.
-1 At and Below v-
us call up-
Also Heavy and Fancy and
Soft Drinks.
I-are mo
kicks
mug for
a. lit i a
. ll, . ,
e traveling through the
sections of
can but be impressed
l the surroundings contingent
In any and every local-
center to circumference
horses, mules, cattle and
he in excellent the
homes, the
in the highest state of
the scenery and land-
by any clime,
with inspection -f
bank account will readily
fine th skeptic mind
and
creator
b. eked i ; the bone and
hard oner-
winch lies the
;. thriving town of
n. A w factories, a
by capitalist.
;.
N, c,
A rare opportunity by the Farmers cf this
Section to get improved stock at common
Stock Prices.
on
and
j as and a good price.
John Owens, of Saratoga, a
l from the
spent Saturday and
I Sunday here.
We are displaying a very
line of art squares and
rugs. Cannon Tyson.
Mrs. R. M. Prince and child
have been on a visit to
her here, left for Port Nor-
folk Saturday.
If you wish to make your
mend or relative a handsome
present buy one of those rich
and beautiful framed picture;
Cannon Tyson.
Some time ago Mr. J. I. Hum-
lives but a few miles
Ayden, came to town
transacting his bush
ind conversing with a
at
. r
fruit of
; this .
ll as
id in
in e
I it
j not a land he hitched P
to y, yet the generous and home- After
rival there he missed his r
book and nowhere could t be
Three weeks la r he
j came to Ayden again and
to the pest where he usually
hitched his horse, in a v pub-
place, on getting out his
buggy there on the ground lay
long lost pocket b not
dollar gone, not a penny miss
Fortunate man,
and no wonder Mr. Hum
has had the sine
For good and cheap ll go to
E. E. Co, always have
fresh hand.
Miss Dora of Win-
was with . tends hen
last week.
We handle Goldman's shoes
for women. and children.
Every pair sold under strict
guarantee. On overcoats and
clothing Cannon Tyson can
please you in both quality
price.
A line borne farm
that
and
before the
everything
untold
, success of
phase and as an
successful in-
I speculations sure
seemed
of i e capitalist has not
heard for surely
is .- of prospective
a sure
of any venture
In a lit
of ti.
day,
v.
while Hi
a fa after bombardment of
h-m to exile for
in . on as allowed some
r in return to his
h after a week's
u Dative journalist, the
. of Even
now, in h year, he is a
big hut prime he must have
s- hair and
beard . r forehead.
the Turkish tar-
Ii; Ii I es, dulled little by
I. lighting up wonderfully
when I.- things which
. powerful
a mouth, which must
or. e have I hard and cruel,
by Though the
jay is I e an overcoat,
he heavily on a massive
ebony Mall Gazette.
Boxes.
The in. , as spending his
vacation in the
at the
i- in I
i I no iv, is such
e p. I.
I a pop ;
the n . I -ii.
mm higher I t . and
1.1 cap; n c i tow
n box
The postmaster I t of his
barred
-I can explain
see, the country
rover gel new boxes,
leftover when l a
make over
FALL, 1906
We are receiving ;,. u w
DRY GOODS,
ES
SIS
and it give s us pleasure to say
stock th as complete as we can
line of arid boy's
On Wednesday November 14th, I will offer for sale at my farm, three miles
c the Tarboro bout head of high bred bogs, about young
end a choice r bullocks of the Red Pole
and Polled Angus breed. I ill also s II sonic very fine mules. Only reason for sell-
is t t.- them with mares for breeding. lam ordering this sale of
m ck Iv s an experiment and if the farmers will buy this stock at anything
my in future Is to have an annual sale improved Here
raw r fine gilts, either of the Berkshire or China blood,
force mil on the red tor sole in such a manner that every-
one or l r. can I the chance to In other words you can buy one
or h o unlike. Let p one in this branch farming attend
his sale.
II
I L. i
nu
J.
Hi. in the op-
J. with a lira
alt
Ever v v-i I fr
in c at very lowest
-1 aid is run in
m-iii with
t i so veil in any
or sold by Give
me a O ll.
STRAY TAKEN UP
SI
I have taken up a cow and calf.
Cow is in Rood condition, black
with white list across shoulders,
nearly white Calf about
five months old, dark color.
Owner can get same by proving
properly and paying costs.
Stephen
Near School House, West
of Race Track.
J. H. Starkey.
Farms for Craven,
Wake, Beaufort and
counties in North Carolina
and Virginia. Tell me
wants. R. E. Prince, Raleigh at
LOST. On the railroad yard at
Greenville, a pocket book con-
about a trunk check
and gold ring A liberal
reward will be paid finder by
leaving at Reflector office.
Mrs- C T. Gardner,
Salisbury, N C
C.
d. t s w.
SALE OF PERSONAL PROP-
Dec 5th, I will
expose to public sale, to the
bidder for cash, all my
horses, hogs, farming
utensil and household and
en furniture. This sale will he
my home place on Great
a I you M
SAVE
at and one of
the best made,
There c n
PIANOS me
rot sold dealer bu
direct Dakar to
you middle
man's
EVERY PIANO
GUARANTEED.
Drop a line lot us
tell you all about it, a d
how we help you to own
this sweet ,.
Let us tell you M-
who
have bought m
Ad-
dress.
Three ways are used by farmers
for curing and preparing their to-
for the market; namely sun
cured, air cured and flue cured.
The old and cheap way is called air
cured; the later discovery and
proved way is called flue cured.
In flue curing the tobacco is taken
from the fields and racked in barns
especially built to retain heat and
there subjected to a continuous high
temperature, produced by the direct
heat of flame heated flues, which
brings out in the tobacco that
stimulating taste and aroma that
expert roasting develops in green
coffee. These similar processes give
to both tobacco and coffee the cheer-
and stimulating quality that pop-
their use.
The quality of tobacco depends
much on the curing process and the
kind of soil that produces it, as ex-
pert tests prove that this flue cured
tobacco, grown in the famous Pied-
region, requires and takes less
sweetening than tobacco grown in
any other section of the United States
and has a wholesome, stimulating,
juicy, full tobacco taste that satisfies
tobacco hunger. That's why chewers
prefer Schnapps, because Schnapps
cheers more than any other chewing
tobacco, and that's why of
Schnapps pass the good thing along
one chewer makes other chewers,
until the fact is established that
there are more chewers and more
pounds of tobacco chewed to the
population in states where Schnapps
tobacco is sold than there are in
those states where Schnapps has not
yet been offered to the trade.
A plug of Schnapps is more
economical than a much larger
plug of cheap tobacco. Sold at
per pound in cuts. Strictly
and cent plugs.
h ; n ore
acres
Bet who has
in I. r home with
i . for considerable
of lime, left Satin day for
t she reside
I MI -I
. lard nun iv.
. ll- ,.
pea Cox and
I of Winterville,
Lizzie and Lorena
from ; until Mon-
-i
Ion.
my hong, h
ion.
I and in
A lo
e. om.
READING ROOM STORIES.
Mil.
ill IS
get new boxes. So ;
to have
high
numbers
you won't any i- s than
Some other pot-
drew the lower my-
self rather et the big
for it makes w- n
little Post.
Parks F-.- the
One of many signs of an
awakened is the
clothing is exceptionally good this season
and if call our line,
we will convince that our styles are
he latest and prices as reasonable as can
be made. We have hard to give
of is mere complete this fall ever think
of steads. We
kw
We your business and if you will come to see we
treatment. our stoic or your
CO.
Leaders in Low Prices.
tho idea d diver ; November is not making much
their public spaces. pretense about the cold part of it.
. dozen years r. trued
may he n vacant
sign. hey are not so keen
Hi
The Home
for
.
book
n to Retain
e. . . a department
u library i
. a
She
read it all day.
railed for o
four sue. days
On tho i
the CUd
t, y
.
J,
in char e Unit she .,
tile
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, N. C.
ii n I h
at Cash
i buy, to i
i .
. , . . ., lie inquired
. billy . i, ,.
its tins way, i
B- R Wall came up on trail educated,
Monday from a visit to or
Is down the road- i and looked at
., . . .-T J in
all interested in cook j she
. and heaters it will pay I been for some time that I
o examine quality and was my husband's love. I
that Cannon Tyson are know my conversation isn't biter
eating, and I thought if I could read
of Winter- up on some useful things my talk
a short while table would hold him, and
he slay in
they wen
to
fountain
baa ;.
in a
trees or . ,
often .
-V.
I . i m-
; and
park areas. n
I a i id e.
v. it grove of no.- o
meadow, they ore
lo let it
Ayden
School
Stationery
I .
M,
in in
i f-
Now is
n n- f u
tablets, pens, ii i
we have a trout us
note fin- i;
i plain o-i
N, N.
To . I Mi n- . i
Bladder . i-r
s-. lie aim it
it we will
your a
full 11.00 size if
and if hem i., then
use IVA until
. entitles you
i to a bottle I VA L at
Only n. d number bottle,
away. thin i
v to t-it
SOL
NOW
Si A I
it
S warm
Levi
M.
S, No-folk,
t. r u.-sear.
b street-
of i
l n I It
I . n . lay . , j.
the mi win -i for r, i h-f i,
17- N. in 1904. Mir
or lot of n
Pin and In lo n
r i h- I . I ,,. ft .
of n i-r , n Una a
n,,. ,. road.
Man runs a e
h, a it
II In a ml. .-,. an
with f-
on
road to
a I an
en or h th .
Hi I I U M i , ,,,
nil i I it ii a
ii a ma pa run a. ad T h
Come in and examine my
CORN PLANTERS, GUANO SOWERS, DISC
BARROWS. SMOOTHING HARROWS,
AND HORSE STEEL PLOWS, WIRE
arc ma chin
Greenville Livery and
Transfer
Had ear
uM tr all .
me wept
o. in
O Ml
go, lie
ti. be now
buy-
n Tyson,
E. Cox is confined to
me on account of sickness.
now runs the town
and he proves a
too-
in E, E. Dali Co, foe
they will
and treat you nice.
Co carry a nice line
oranges and
Call on them for same.
. came up from,
he road yesterday. i
r cordially in-
Indies to call
cloaks and rain-
i.- husband's
new asked her
lip has ii string of hones at the
she
O i another occasion same
was by a brisk
e; woman of twenty-four or
with u very
way.
. you on
she asked.
attendant brought nut
volume on i.
those tire too large, I
have not time . e bis
books. Have not something
man article
on in in the encyclopedia.
i ton I have
not time to re-d that Yon see,
I'm over to India a mis-
and manly v.-ant to pet
the main points so I can confute
their Header.
iNT OF
THE BANK OF ;
N. J. r
; hush . AI
or Information Or
RESOURCES.
Overdrafts
furniture and
Due from Banks, ;
Gold Coin,
Silver Coin,
. bank notes and
F S. notes
Capital stock paid m,
fund
Undivided profits less
expenses, 720.80
Dividends unpaid .
Deposits subject to check, 41,002.48
Cashier's
1,232
Total,
5,045.00
Total,
Save Your Dollars
A n J v i. n l i I i i I i j,
i, u v i i i f l j i i t j u
get them cheapest. have
Cottonseed Hulls
STATE OF CAROLINA,
I, J. K. , Cl of the
sieve is true to the beat of my be-
ed sworn to
the, Ibis of pt,
Notary
J. B. Cashier.
lie- J i
J. B. SMITH
K.
HAY, CORN, OATS. BRAN, SHIP STIFF,
and can sell M me at very lowest also carry a
line
k these. See me before
and can save r
IF
LOW RICES FOR T
mm





ii- ii
PURNELL ROASTED.
Sheriff Replies to
Wilmington, N C, Nov. 5.-
Sheriff Frank H. Stedman, is out
in a signed card in the morning
papers today replying to the sen-
charges as to the
of the New Hanover jail by
Judge Purnell in the Federal
court last week. The -ard of
Sheriff Stedman is as
T that the re-
made upon me and my
in the United States court
by Judge Purnell when I was not
present were false and unjust in
regard to the fare of prisoners in
DR. BAXTER MATTHEWS A
IN BALTIMORE.
Last Chapter in a Sensational Wire-
Murder by a Greensboro
Baltimore, Md., Nov. In a
cheap lodging e on East
street at some time
the twenty-four hours
two o'clock this after-
noon, Dr. J- Baxter Matthews, of
Greensboro, N C, blew out his
brains with a shot from a cal-
revolver.
Dr. Matthews was convicted
my custody in New 9th, 1905, at Greensboro.
; county jail. The report of the, h poisoning of his wife De-
and also the reports of out of custody under bail pending
decision of his appeal r a
new trial, which was denied
him. and relatives and bonds-
men have been searching for
him for some weeks that he
and juries, all
ed or our best sub-
what I say. The
at issue is who is to be be-
the grand jury or the
States prisoners Would
States , before the court
Judge Purnell have reflected j be sentenced In the
himself it lie i , , ,. . ,.
he did so rather than serve
said to be twenty
., .,,
more credit upon himself if he , reason for his
had investigated before he made. his is supposed
such statements I am willing
for record and his
be published side by side and penitentiary, to be
let the people of North Caro on
Say who is right in this M lodging where
he ended his life he gave the
name of E J. Graham.
Immediately after his
which was of murder in the
second degree, Dr. Matthews
became a patient at Mount Hope
Retreat, near this city, and was
there under treatment for the
morphine and liquor habits for
months, finally being dis-
charged as cured.
KOSSUTH IN LONDON.
Mil Were Conducted
Formality.
When lie arrived in London the
a of the English people
teemed to know no bounds. His
entry like f a national
from a
-the in crowding
th i
in i mis an
gar., in his car-
with his saber
an
. V. I hen ho began
to speak,
i rural an I
tonsil ;
V. I
classic V-
ti
at i
of the I
K .
citizen
i,
in the . I
hi
of court
in .;
th
time mellow
; its ban any
in
Mi-e
ill
I k- ottered the hos-
of private
who took a-
in . Ii
r h he
-d n . A
him; hi- i
always . i their Hangar;
national stained in act
Ii of hi
tin rightful governor
Hungary. lie granted audience
like a prince, he enter
the room he v mi by
aid-de-camp us Ail
; I saluted
hr-r Brave
. Kilos of other no-
formalities
displeasure.
. i intention to
c is i
NOTICE
The agency existing
J. E. Winslow and J. W. Mills;
from Sept. 1st, 1904 to this date j
is hereby discontinued. All per-
owing notes or accounts
through said agency for
or mules, are hereby requested to
in at once and settle
All notes and accounts will be j
found at my office in Greenville.
This Oct.
J. E. WINSLOW.
It was a quiet election down
here in Pitt-
grapes, celery,
berries, sweet and sour pickles,
at S. M. Shultz.
i-
it
due- Tl
it
i it in his own, but in
i. as t that
. seemed to him
upon tin
of II the
of in her own gov.
I to illustrate to them
the ii v faith of
in the j of
ii m i- t improper he
i. ; n
i ii for the
h ire's.
h n.
Ii
tn
fee
he.
the
th.
v l
. . i r
i.
. r
I of the condition of
BANK
OF GREENVILLE.
At p. in the
C at of business,
Sect 1806.
RESOURCES.
Loans and Disc
f S. Bonds to secure
0.00
U. S. i
house,
Due National
12.297.80
Due State mid
Hank, rs f
Cheeks and other cash s
Notes of other National
Banks
cents
Lawful money In
Hank,
no
Legal-tender notes
fund will. I
In per I of
i,
had n-.
. for tin
ho in
no i in
lid
t. em man
i in his
indeed was
he
upon the
i.,, wanted
Total
CE.
I ha three for
each aid one for
These rotes were given for the
Swifts Washing Machine
right- Any buying or
for these notes will do so in
their own light, as I shall refuse
to pay en account of mis-
This Nov. 1st,
W. H.
paid ii I
i d profits. i.
pan 1.17
i hank
In V
to
n ii f M
n's
i ii bills ii 12,011.68
I v us hi i r
Total
Sit i i ill
l l ill
I . . V . C t thin if ill abort
run ill tie m hi is ii Hi lie
i . ii I i n lie.
J V.
IT i I
. f-
i i .,
THE REASON WHY
r b only by reason of the maker's intimate, thorough
knowledge of women's tastes and the requirements
of her that Shoes have achieved
First, they satisfy the eye and
-.-. distinction to the foot. Secondly, they fit
can fit Thirdly,
their large sale permits them to be sold at a moderate
price. This store secured and controls the sale of these
splendid shoes, because it believes them to offer the
wearer more real value and than any others
possible to procure. New styles now ready. Glad to
show even th h you do not care to buy.
,. J. is. M
J J WHICHARD, Editor and Owner.
and Friday.
ONE DOLLAR PER
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1908
N l
SHOT BY SECRET ASSASSIN.
Mr. L. Banks Holt the Victim.
Graham, Nov. L.
Banks Holt was shot by an
known person in his house at
o'clock tonight.
He was sitting in his bed room
when the telephone rang, Mr
Holt went to the and
called several times without
any response. Then a shot rang
out and when Mrs. Holt rushed
into the hall she found Mr. Holt
lying against the his face
streaming with blood. The hall
was full of smoke, The alarm
was given over the and
soon the house was filled with
j an anxious crowd,
Just to the right of the
is an open hall door, from be-
hind which the shot was evident-
fired, the assailant escaping
through the side hall door.
There are foot marks on the
freshly painted steps. The deed
was evidently committed by one
familiar with the house, who had
secreted himself Sus-
is directed towards one,
who is being traced. Mr. Holt is
not regarded as being in a
condition.
Another Cabinet Change.
Washington, Nov.
of the Interior Ethan Allen
Hitchcock will retire from Pres-
Roosevelt's cabinet on the
4th of next March, and James
R. of Ohio, at present
commissioner of corporations
will succeed him- Herbert Knox
Smith, now assistant
of corporations will be
appointed to Mr.
place. These changes and that
of Richards, of
the general land office on March
4th, were announced from the
White House today.
CAN SHOOT FIREWORKS.
That Will Nets the Boys.
The d of aldermen held an
adjourned meeting
night, t C matter.;
k-i over from the last regular
me. twig. One of these was the
matter of granting a franchise
to the Raleigh and Pamlico
sound railroad to run a track
across Dickinson avenue an.
Clark street so as to reach
the Atlantic Coast Line track
north Imperial factory.
t discussion the matter
was again deferred to a later
ordinance prohibiting the
booting of fireworks in town
was to be for
Christmas, between
the hours of p. m. r
a C. a m. December 26th.
There was much discussion
and several motions regarding
the hours of duty between the day
and night police. This was set-
by ordering the day police
to be duty from a. m- to
pm. and the night police from
m. to a.
Far-Sighted.
Little Margaret is a far-
sighted child and she always
in her thoughts for the
Recently her father
went to Boston on business; a.
the evening prayer time her
mother suggested that Margaret
should add papa safe in
To this
Goodness I did not know God
was in Then, ponder-
she continued, I'll ask
Him, for papa is very important,
isn't he
very, dear. If we did
not have our papa, we not
have this pretty house and all
our nice
papa give us all these
the little
without him would we have to
give them
I think it an
risk to have only one papa
a family. I think there should
s in case of
Ala., if So
One who observes well often
sees indications and suggestions
that the as the
older people sometimes call them,
are not altogether and uniform-
courteous, which means that
good manners are somewhat
passing jut If this is true it
a pity; for nothing so commends
one as good manners coupled
with a good life. To be sure,
some people whose lives are
and whose characters are
above reproach, have blunt and
repelling manners. But even
with these people it would be far
better for all if good manners
were coupled with the correct
life and unsullied character. It
is not always an intention to be
and discourteous, but of-
ten-times the spirit of
gets such hold upon the younger
people they forget to lay it aside
when older persons appear to
speak. Fun and frolic aid jollity
are all well enough, and some-
time frivolity is really good
place; but nothing should ever
be so far as to make it
seem a sacrifice of good manners.
Neck Commonwealth.
One Use for a Grave.
William a nephew of
John K. formerly consul
general to Paris, is a candidate
for county assessor in
Ind Democratic leaders
his eligibility, charging
that he had not be n a free hold-
for four years, required by
law. Young however,
proved that during the period
named he had owned half a lot
in the Cemetery, and
Attorney General Miller has de-
that the possession of this
feet of constitutes
eligibility in the eye of the law.
Boston Transcript.
BUCK JACK ITEMS.
a Club.
The ans Book club was
delightfully entertained on -he
aft. loon of Tuesday, the sixth
of N by Miss Janie
Br her pleasant home.
was in the form
of a debate as to the merits of
new s; Mrs W H.
took the side and
the opposing.
refreshments were
d and the club adjourned to
its next meeting with Mrs.
C. Carr
Black Jack, C, Nov. 1906.
Elder G. S Johnston filled his
regular appointment at Bear
creek Sunday.
J. W. and Abram Dixon went
to Winterville Sunday.
Harry Dunn and Miss Mollie
of Chocowinity, wee
here yesterday.
G S. Porter and others from
here attended church at Salem
Sunday.
Several people from
here attended services at
dona Sunday afternoon.
Mills, H.
school, came home Friday and
returned Sunday. .
Miss Maud left Friday
to visit friends near Haddock's
X Roads.
J. O. Johnston attended
church at Bear Creek Sunday.
Miss Mary Midgett, of
co county, came in Sunday to
teach school here.
Mrs. G. S. Johnston spent Sat-
and Sunday with her
sister, Mrs. W. P. Buck.
Abram Dixon lost a fine young
horse last week with blind stag-
Charlie Mills, W. H. and Cop.
Adams all went to t
week.
W. A. Hudson is very ill with
typhoid fever. We hope he
soon get better.
i d of Thanks.
I desire in this method to re-
turn my heartfelt gratitude to
the brethren of the Odd Fellows,
people generally and
the ladies, for their many kind-
shown mo during my re-
cent sickness I shall always
hold them in grateful
J. JPreparing Depot.
The for the and
depot; on
on Dick a is being
clearer, o put in readiness
for war t commence on the
buildings.
Taking Ore.
he following from a letter by
some writer to the Progressive
Farmer is worth the attention
of every farmer-
either shelter my tools or
burn them. A thing not worth
is not th saving.
wagon hasn't stood out
four nights n years. I have
i. . J my team for no other
purpose than to draw the wagon
into the barn.
thirty years of farm-
I have the same wagon I be-
with The same with my
horse-rake It cost thirty
years ago, and still does good
work. A new one can tie
bought for half the sum.
have never owned a reaper
because I haven't room to shelter
it.
keeping my build-
and contents insured every
hour, I use the greatest care in
regard to fire. A chimney or
stove-pipe that isn't right is
mediately seen to. No old stove-
pipe in the kitchen for
me.
My horses do lots of work, but
are not banged up.
stop them often when draw-
a load up
Died.
Mrs. Fannie Edwards, wife of
Mr. Alonzo Edwards, of Hooker-
ton, died Wednesday.
Mr Mrs. Robert Randolph
Cotten
request the pleasure of your
company
at the marriage of their daughter
Sally
to
Mr. Russell Benjamin
on Wednesday the
twenty-First of November
nineteen hundred and six.
at high noon
Greenville, North Carolina
Mow to be Great.
Here in a little clipping that
we found in one of our exchanges
a few days ago that we take
pleasure in publishing for the
benefit of some of our
you don't just like every-
thing you see in your home
paper, go around the streets and
howl. The editor is never sup-
posed to make a mistake and of
course cannot do so. Other
can, but the editor is
omniscient,
If you can't see a good point,
don't fail to see a bad one. If
a thousand pleasant things are
said of people, hunt for some-
thing unpleasant. If you don't
find it, howl some more; if you
do, howl anyway. Never mind
your own business; watch for
something to find fault with in
some other man's business this
will make you
field
One Way of Paring Off.
A number of years , at a
small town in Main, an
local election was take
and re was rival-
between the Republicans and
Democrats. Old Hiram Morse the
b was a strong Demo-
but many of the farmers
were Republicans.
On the morning of the election
a farmer came into have his horse
shod- The blacksmith said to
both busy. You're
a Republican and I'm a Demo-
Let's pair off We'll
of us vote, and it amount
to the same as if we both went
to the
This was agreed upon. After
the election it was found out
that Mar. e had paired off with
five Republican
ton Herald.
not
their noes.
Again
Coroner's Jury Blames Stewart lie
Atlantic City
Atlantic City, N. J., Nov.
After a stormy scene, lasting
several hours, the coroner's jury
late tonight agreed to place the
blame for the Thoroughfare
of Sunday, October
upon D Stewart, the aged
bridge tender. The jury dis-
agreed on many points. Accord-
to the coroner, Stewart will
be arrested on a charge of
Given a Respite.
Those who were expecting to
attend a hanging in Pitt county
on the 17th can change their
calculations. The governor has
given Sylvester Barrett a respite
to Dec. 18th, and an effort is
to have the sentence
against him commuted to life
A . trouble in
keeping foil in line as
long as it persists in putting up
candidates that part of the par-
r. without hold-
kl.
who have received statements of
what owe for
subscription, have not yet
responded, to let us ii from
them We do t id pub-
items of this, but the
money is needed to help us
meet our All should
to this and be prompt in
paying.
Trying to Hears Vote.
New York, Nov. 8.-Chair-
man Connors, of the Democratic
committee, today Issued a
call for a meeting of th
committee to be held hero to
morrow. The object
meting is to devise plans
safeguard the interests of the
Democratic
that, the
were holding I
that fraud was being
and that in his opinion then
were enough i
League ballots not counted i
reduce greatly
possibly to elect
Hearst.
Fell Over Grip.
This morning while the pas-
train was at the depot
some one set a grip on the
ground right in the midst of the
crowd A lady while going from
the train to the platform
bled over the grip and fell,
escaping injury. The per-
son who set the grip in such a
place ought to have had better
sense.
CHAIRMAN SIMMONS TALKS.
Fine Showing Fir Democrats.
Raleigh,
Simmons said r
majority is going to be
nearly to, if not quite
to that given two years
ago. We have made gains in
two-thirds of the counties, these
being simply wonderful in the
east. For example we
gained several hundred, in Le-
in Wilson, in and
Harnett, and in Sampson, Marion
Butler's own county. We have
carried more by majorities vary-
from to GOO. That
county had been considered
doubtful. Columbus votes for
by Jones by Cum-
b by Martin by 1.000.
Tyrrell by this having been
a doubtful county, Greene by
to Chatham by Up-
State, the have car-
Davie by and Caldwell
by a falling off in both
I figure that
majority is well up. somewhere
between and 1,500. Craw-
ford is elected by majority
have been talking to Locke
wire about that
district and he tells me that is
the figure in the 10th. We have
carried Pitt by The Re-
publicans actually talked about
carrying it. Wake leads in ma-
but Pitt makes a fin
showing- Splendid work
done in Sampson, where t.
Republican majority was
and we reduced it by
votes. I want to say that Ma-
Butler carried the State in
1894 by a campaign of gross m's-
and deception and
same this time,
bill The is
a great rebuke to him. The re-
will put an end t the cam-
speaking and r work
r the big postmaster . some of
whom actually for
State offices, and en here
there among
these being of
Reynolds, of Win.
Meekins, of
In the four or five divs
after the Bin Francisco fir
when got no mono
from the many applied
the ; for tickets on
promise to pay when they
reached their on, op
when they could. They gave
written promises and received
ticket. to all points in and out of
the State. The officials took
promises to pay to an
amount aggregating
ii nearly one r-
. It is
five months of
tar no less than or nine-
tenths of the full amount.
. en paid by remittance from
, . refugees to whom credit
b n extended, of
this came from grateful suffer-
had int. even been
asked to sign a pron to pay.
C NEGRO.
Sylvester Barr Who to be
it Asking
for L a
Sylvester Barrett, a of
Pitt county, was to be hang-
ed on the of No-
f murder of Walter
a constable, has been
granted till the
of December.
Barrett's counsel took an
j peal to the Supreme Court, but
; this was not sustained, and No-
was set for the date
of the execution. His counsel
are now r for a
of to life
and Governor Glenn
has granted the respite till the
18th of December, so as to give a
hearing in the and
Observer.
This part of November is quite
dry, but will not likely stay that
way long.
Neck Broken.
John Grant, of Snow Hill, was
returning home from Kinston a
few days ago when he fell off the
cart on which he was riding and
broke his neck-
Leslie's Weekly discovers that
editors are usually unfortunate
when they try to get office. Sad
but true. Ye editor is not a pop-
than. He is always
the wrong man or faMing to
praise the right one. Ye editor
had better keep out of politics if
he want to out hew
unpopular he is. He sees the
seamy side of life as it is but it
could, as a rule, he worse.
Greensboro Telegram.
Didn't Want to Arouse the Juror.
Mr. Chas. of
was in town one d-
last week and dropped into t
Superior court room to see
was going on While then
citizen was
charged with selling
contrary to the form of t
st; The prisoner n
lawyer ind Mr.
ways kind-hearted, generously
volunteered to him,
which he with tact and
but the evidence was too
strong for him and his man went
to the roads.
While Mr. was
the case to the jury, Mr. R.
J. Leinster, who was one of the
jurors, closed his eyes as if
sleep, bu was only playing
for he knew what was
going on. Seeing Mr.
s droop Mr.
d his voice to a stage
whisper. You'll have to speak
louder, said
Judge it please
your said Mr.
blandest smile, as he
turned the judge, of the
Jurors lee; I don't want
to wake him
An the court house roared.
Landmark.
Registered Letter With Dis-
appears.
It has just leaked out that on
the of October 26th the
biggest robbery that
occurred in this section in
years took place in the Fayette-
ville A registered
letter, containing in cur
to the Fayette-
ville National Bank by the Plant-
National Bank, of Richmond,
arrived here on the 1.40 o'clock
a. m train, and was regularly
receipted for. The letter was
supposed to ha e been plated in
the vault. On Monday morning
the letter could not be found in
the vault or anywhere else, de-
spite the most minute
Postmaster at .
notified the mes
at Washington and inspector are
now making a thorough
So far there is no clue
to the Dis-
patch, 5th.
Died.
Miss Jane Moore, aged
years, died Tuesday morning at
the home of her brother, Mr.
Richy Moore, miles below
Greenville, and was buried Wed-
She had been in feeble
health f r sometime. She leaves
three sisters, one brother, and
many relatives and friends
mourn their Sh was a
good, kind and obliging woman,
and was held in high esteem by
neighbor
.
mm


Title
Eastern reflector, 9 November 1906
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
November 09, 1906
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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