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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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mm <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of S. C. CARROLL <lb/>
Authored The Eastern Vicinity-Adverting Rites or Application <lb/>
C me end examine our of eggs a specialty. <lb/>
boy's spring hat-. Came and get the best prices. GOOD <lb/>
that tut been up. Harrington, Barber Ca <lb/>
. g, i . r Attention to Cooler. <lb/>
Barber i . nice line , <lb/>
U Magdalene Cox left Casket. Price, are p <lb/>
day m for right aid can nice hearse <lb/>
ton h re she will visit her service A. G. Cox Mfg. Co, <lb/>
troth-.-.-. v. W. E. Cox. line of a; d boy's <lb/>
A. V . <lb/>
A i <lb/>
Trousseaux. <lb/>
What secret relation there is <lb/>
between matrimony needle- <lb/>
o. men a a. a s .-.- <lb/>
Co. have .-am- straw opened up. We el work one of wooden <lb/>
r i <lb/>
es end m from the wide brimmed the <lb/>
As soon as the <lb/>
the nicest bat I engagement ring is safely on, <lb/>
Harrington the girl flies to a sewing machine <lb/>
B of best <lb/>
We desire to cull your kind. e to the last moment. <lb/>
n. Barber i Co. attention to our Handy <lb/>
is now a- <lb/>
for June. <lb/>
. m , J ;,;. V at d when yon will There no prettier than <lb/>
. .- lay <lb/>
dainty <lb/>
u .------- . <lb/>
., . for housing your tobacco, a woman engaged on <lb/>
We hate orders now for more bit needlework for her <lb/>
than for future trousseau -artists have made it <lb/>
and would, therefore, urge study for painting from time <lb/>
customers co place their orders immemorial -but in the name of <lb/>
as early as possible which will nil that is reasonable, where <lb/>
. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
Car I I of bay just in. <lb/>
W. i i Co. <lb/>
l.- <lb/>
siting Mies Eva getting th-m when want-line necessity for providing <lb/>
, j to the great dozens and dozens of <lb/>
d- might be somewhat merits, dresses enough to <lb/>
j. years. And hat ditto I know a <lb/>
V a need lime to bride whose j th <lb/>
those tobacco furnaces. tied seven hundred I by <lb/>
have it and can give you a good ribbon bows for her hi <lb/>
AW. and worked one <lb/>
trucks and Hues are same. <lb/>
s i w <lb/>
hon B <lb/>
S . <lb/>
chin i wall kinds. <lb/>
be . the <lb/>
your or n <lb/>
she <lb/>
was perfectly<lb/>
, . . C x to., g ax Manufacturing Co. existing without <lb/>
m . . C i <lb/>
s. . tee work and prompt content to t <lb/>
L j <lb/>
. MaKe your tobacco tight <lb/>
., by, paper Africa . <lb/>
w ,,. <lb/>
F. A intended to . . <lb/>
. R . P Ayden. where,, a could I . , . <lb/>
, . . , .,,.,. she wanted right along, <lb/>
re very good and t o s. <lb/>
c . . . , . . ,. <lb/>
. c us d i t . girl s el ., <lb/>
. . . i , far co, <lb/>
LIVER. <lb/>
A torn J the whole <lb/>
HEADACHE, <lb/>
Dyspepsia, <lb/>
Skin and Piles. <lb/>
i no better rt-mt-d tor <lb/>
IT <lb/>
LIVER fiLLS. as a trial prove. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
OF THE OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
AT N. C. <lb/>
At the business April <lb/>
I. <lb/>
. loans <lb/>
i ;. coin <lb/>
, r coin, including <lb/>
minor cm <lb/>
i Nat bank miles and oilier <lb/>
I I . S. note <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
i. fund <lb/>
15,000.00 <lb/>
650.00 <lb/>
,,, i less <lb/>
ii an taxes pi <lb/>
Time of deposit <lb/>
ck 8,051.61 <lb/>
Cashier's check 1.00 <lb/>
New June -r,,,., <lb/>
men, women and <lb/>
have in Pitt Com <lb/>
try in .- r . <lb/>
A. K <lb/>
ink, do solemnly <lb/>
our <lb/>
v. .- <lb/>
A--; Cashier <lb/>
I ha. I lie e state <lb/>
and <lb/>
K GREEK, <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Harrington, <lb/>
CONDITION OF <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co., <lb/>
AT N. C <lb/>
A. the April . <lb/>
for h she i <lb/>
Mi Tl mas hat i <lb/>
who for th . . <lb/>
. joy. <lb/>
r. A G I <lb/>
C ., C <lb/>
J R . G Ills <lb/>
this morn <lb/>
We your I i <lb/>
tern of h <lb/>
of Winterville, ins I <lb/>
II the bank. <lb/>
solicits your patrons and <lb/>
ant r . i <lb/>
Mr a E. I. Mumford, <lb/>
of Morganton, <lb/>
G. E, Jackson's Thursday <lb/>
Ne of; . <lb/>
A. Ange C <lb/>
taxes at Hanrahan. <lb/>
Carri an <lb/>
daughter, who i <lb/>
b in the near <lb/>
Ayden, I yesterday. <lb/>
C organized a <lb/>
singing class . i i Quite <lb/>
a number were <lb/>
their names for <lb/>
The class will Thursday <lb/>
night, i . <lb/>
Last Saturday i the g <lb/>
back bring Th worst foe for v. year, <lb/>
to lumbago, <lb/>
all other he p id over r <lb/>
t. a. a u th benefit Than a An- <lb/>
, Salvo the nicer and <lb/>
;,.;. b, . Cures r I l, . <lb/>
John K Wool n. m, r I ill . <lb/>
Burns, Scalds, <lb/>
KING'S CROSS ROADS ITEMS. <lb/>
Kings X Roads, June 1909 ; <lb/>
ii.- <lb/>
nun's <lb/>
6,000.00 <lb/>
1,500.00 <lb/>
bk h <lb/>
i i r <lb/>
minor com currency <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital Stock <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
profits less <lb/>
expenses taxes pd 853.99 <lb/>
Time certificates of 8,559.68 <lb/>
Deposits to check <lb/>
Total <lb/>
6.18.45 <lb/>
1.276.00 <lb/>
Got Hit Pen. <lb/>
Mr. W. Brown, whose tug <lb/>
Mrs. W. S. E. Smith a id waR by the com <lb/>
of the town cam Smith visited Mus Lena Green- <lb/>
and organized the young I last Saturday night i ville. came in Friday to get the <lb/>
Christian Union. The Addie O. I and Parker fountain pen offend <lb/>
following officers were Smith attended the by The fir <lb/>
C. J. Jackson, president; H. D- meeting at Otter's Creek the best Mr. <lb/>
Me born, vice Miss and Sunday. t;, beat suggestion, and <lb/>
Lura Cox. teacher; Ethel w E. Smith and family spent the happy possessor of the <lb/>
,,; Tyson, near beat p <lb/>
Miss Farmville. <lb/>
Butt, J. L. V h Woods <lb/>
OF County of Pitt, <lb/>
I W II Cashier of the above-named bank, do sol- <lb/>
. swear that Urn above statement is true to the my <lb/>
W. Cashier. <lb/>
knowledge belief. <lb/>
Subscribed sworn <lb/>
fore <lb/>
1909. <lb/>
this <lb/>
to <lb/>
day of May. <lb/>
S. T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
M. Blount, <lb/>
S. M. Jones,<lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
i, is visiting <lb/>
Ki week. <lb/>
A of or boys and <lb/>
fishing day. i i . <lb/>
re , ii of c ., i r <lb/>
t my actually caught three gr t <lb/>
mm <lb/>
II-. i N. C . <lb/>
Thursday June 1909. <lb/>
At the annual communication <lb/>
of Winterville No. <lb/>
A. F- A. M. hell on the above <lb/>
the following officers <lb/>
w. elected ensuing <lb/>
John Cheek, W, <lb/>
A. W Ange, S. W. <lb/>
W. B. Wingate, I W. <lb/>
R. H. . r as. <lb/>
Ii. W. Tuck. r. <lb/>
A i; w m and <lb/>
. just . <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
False Statement Corrected. <lb/>
My competitors are trying to <lb/>
. ma i i I <lb/>
Spun Carroll, k brother. Walter Worth- <lb/>
W. i M treasurer. <lb/>
Th v g a book en Misses Ethel Reid and Lillian <lb/>
I, Uplift of r week <lb/>
The young people here believe In grandmother, Mrs. W. G <lb/>
, ,. -.--o . <lb/>
orders for tobacco Hues by the morning service, when <lb/>
A Sympathetic Critic. <lb/>
The minister was resting after <lb/>
his <lb/>
which bring quick . get .- <lb/>
telling farmers they have small son asked him <lb/>
of liver disorders.<lb/>
chills fever, Th- en <lb/>
Ear. false, , I am still very <lb/>
much in the flue business and <lb/>
bought me out of <lb/>
patterns and <lb/>
will treat you have a large stock on hand. <lb/>
thin and we are sure Flues now ready for delivery. <lb/>
th much he achieved Mn Ora IS on , , ,. <lb/>
no For Long Lome early to the us. <lb/>
KIM Mr,,, t H. SM. M <lb/>
the it make tired <lb/>
all. it preach, my <lb/>
Well, it makes me tired, <lb/>
too, to hear you, <lb/>
for June. <lb/>
Greenville today. <lb/>
Mason. <lb/>
Tl Masonic lodge at <lb/>
Is pat In a <lb/>
tut.- with nozzle attached. May <lb/>
directly tin; parts. <lb/>
Guaranteed. Pries Sold by John <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Miss Carrie Smith and C K Co., Greenville. fed <lb/>
. will treat you will treat you will treat you <lb/>
Mrs. Parker <lb/>
at K. <lb/>
will hold its annual com- M . how, ,, h, <lb/>
for the election of ,.,., y,,,.,. <lb/>
officers on the in d Helen <lb/>
this month, 19th. Following farmers are well <lb/>
the meeting a barbecue . ,, s <lb/>
All are; v,, <lb/>
LAXATIVE COUGH <lb/>
CONFORMS TO NATIONAL FOOD AND LAW. <lb/>
, . and Bronchial Remedies, because It rids the <lb/>
An Improvement over many i Guaranteed to <lb/>
by MEDICINE CO. CHICAGO. U. A. <lb/>
FOR SALE WOOTEN. <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
Truth In Preference to Fiction. <lb/>
One Dollar Per Year<lb/>
VOL. No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. JUNE 1909 <lb/>
PROF. R. H. WRIGHT PRESIDENT annual meeting <lb/>
OF EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS <lb/>
TRAINING SCHOOL. <lb/>
Of tie <lb/>
Prof. C. W. Wilson Abo <lb/>
for Opening the School <lb/>
This Fall. <lb/>
The trustees of East Carolina <lb/>
Teachers Training school were <lb/>
in session here all day Friday. <lb/>
The most important matter be- <lb/>
fore them was the election of a <lb/>
president of the school. After <lb/>
considering this important <lb/>
in all of its phases Prof. <lb/>
H. Wright was <lb/>
chosen. Prof. Wright, <lb/>
who was in the city at the <lb/>
of the executive committee, <lb/>
had an interview with the board <lb/>
and after going fully over the <lb/>
situation and the opportunity for <lb/>
the development growth of <lb/>
the accepted the <lb/>
Prof. Wright was born in the <lb/>
county of Sampson in 1870 and is <lb/>
therefore in the very prime of <lb/>
life. He is a son of Mrs. Bettie <lb/>
Wright, who is herself a noted <lb/>
teacher and was the founder ard <lb/>
promoter of the high <lb/>
school in that county. After <lb/>
completing the in his <lb/>
mother's school he entered the <lb/>
University and graduated at <lb/>
that institution in 1897. He then <lb/>
taught a year at Spring Hope <lb/>
and two years at Oak Ridge <lb/>
Institute. He then took a year's <lb/>
course id training ft Hop- <lb/>
kins University, Baltimore. <lb/>
While at Johns Hopkins he was <lb/>
elected a professor of English in <lb/>
the Woman's College, Baltimore. <lb/>
His work in that department was <lb/>
so eminently satisfactory that he <lb/>
was chosen principal of the East <lb/>
Baltimore high school, which <lb/>
he now holds. This is a <lb/>
high class institution, hiving <lb/>
students and teachers. <lb/>
Prof. Wright is a of <lb/>
high attainment and a Christian <lb/>
gentleman in the sense of <lb/>
that term- The board of <lb/>
tees esteem themselves <lb/>
in securing him for <lb/>
de it of this new institution- <lb/>
Prof. Wright will come to Green- <lb/>
ville as soon as he can arrange to <lb/>
move his family and take up his <lb/>
new work with a spirit and de <lb/>
termination to build up a great <lb/>
State institution, which shall <lb/>
render eminent service to the <lb/>
State and one of its chief or <lb/>
The board arranged to secure <lb/>
the services of Prof. C. W. <lb/>
son, who has been for a number <lb/>
of years principal of the graded <lb/>
school at Scotland Neck. Prof. <lb/>
Wilson will do work under the <lb/>
direction of the executive com- <lb/>
This school is fortunate <lb/>
in securing the set vices of this <lb/>
fine teacher and most excellent <lb/>
business man. <lb/>
We are informed that <lb/>
board elected some of the lady <lb/>
teachers, but their names will <lb/>
not he given out until they have <lb/>
accepted. <lb/>
The board also directed the <lb/>
executive to select <lb/>
other teachers and make their <lb/>
to a subsequent meeting <lb/>
of the board when final action <lb/>
will be taken in completing the <lb/>
faculty. <lb/>
We are assure by the board <lb/>
that the work of organization of <lb/>
the teaching force will be com- <lb/>
at an early day and that <lb/>
everything will be in readiness <lb/>
to open the school, the exact date <lb/>
to be determined hereafter, <lb/>
notice of which will be given in <lb/>
ample time. <lb/>
The four buildings <lb/>
constructed, to <lb/>
refectory, and two <lb/>
now completed, the <lb/>
power house and <lb/>
is <lb/>
that the c may no cc ;. <lb/>
it fact the <lb/>
will open this fail. <lb/>
Shore, of <lb/>
impressive <lb/>
the annual <lb/>
Woman's Home Million So <lb/>
On Tuesday night, June 1st, <lb/>
Woman's Home Mission So- <lb/>
of the North Carolina con- <lb/>
M. E. church South. <lb/>
I convened at Louisburg for its <lb/>
118th annual session, Mrs. R. P. <lb/>
John, president in the chair. <lb/>
The conference was extended <lb/>
a most hearty welcome Rev. <lb/>
F. A Bishop, on behalf of the <lb/>
church; by Mrs. on <lb/>
behalf of the W. F. M. Society, <lb/>
by Mrs. J. A. Turner on behalf <lb/>
of the H. M. Society, and by <lb/>
Mrs. Ivey Allen on behalf of L. <lb/>
Female college. These were <lb/>
responded to by Miss <lb/>
of Gatesville. <lb/>
The roll call on Wednesday <lb/>
morning shown a large number <lb/>
of delegates and visitors <lb/>
I The president's message was <lb/>
i gracefully delivered, her subject <lb/>
being it means to be a <lb/>
member of the W. H. M. <lb/>
The reports from the confer Me <lb/>
officers showed a marked in <lb/>
crease along all lines; and by <lb/>
comparison with our work ten <lb/>
years ago Mrs. showed we <lb/>
had grown from twelve <lb/>
to sixty-one, and id <lb/>
of five present at th annual <lb/>
meeting we had nearly seven <lb/>
times as many. On Wednesday <lb/>
night. Rev. J. H. <lb/>
Greenville, in his <lb/>
manner preached <lb/>
sermon. <lb/>
He complimented the worK of <lb/>
the W. H. M. S. and assured us <lb/>
that his heart is with us in this <lb/>
great work. The district <lb/>
Washington district <lb/>
i was glad to note this, and she <lb/>
, hopes soon to see Greenville join <lb/>
in this great Home Mission work <lb/>
There were quite a number of <lb/>
new auxiliaries reported, five of <lb/>
are in th; Washington <lb/>
I district. There also <lb/>
good papers read discussed; <lb/>
some of which were in <lb/>
the Field of the M. E. . <lb/>
by Mrs. J. E. Under- <lb/>
wood. and how <lb/>
to raise it, by Mrs. T. W. <lb/>
by Mrs. J. E <lb/>
Brown. After Mrs. Brown's <lb/>
paper was read. Miss Elizabeth <lb/>
Davis, our deaconess from <lb/>
Tampa, Fla , spoke very inter <lb/>
of her experience in <lb/>
rescue work. <lb/>
Miss Sarah Lowder, our <lb/>
trained worker at then <lb/>
spoke of her work among the <lb/>
factory people at that place. <lb/>
On Thursday night of confer- <lb/>
there were special services <lb/>
by the children of the baby roll <lb/>
and brigade department. A <lb/>
collection of was taken, and <lb/>
on motion of Mrs. J. A. Spier, <lb/>
who has of this work in <lb/>
our conference, the baby of Mrs. <lb/>
J. A. Turner, president of <lb/>
burg Auxiliary, was a life <lb/>
member of the W. H. M. Society. <lb/>
On Friday night Mrs. R. B. John <lb/>
gave a most interesting and in- <lb/>
lecture on one of the <lb/>
books of the Reading Course, <lb/>
which showed <lb/>
the great possibilities of Home <lb/>
Missions in the west. This being <lb/>
the closing service of the great- <lb/>
est annual meeting the N. C. <lb/>
ever held. <lb/>
It was encouraging to note the <lb/>
intelligence of our women in the <lb/>
I work, and the improvement in <lb/>
Why, when the <lb/>
subject of tithing was discussed, <lb/>
Bro. R. C. Craven, being th i <lb/>
only man present, remained in <lb/>
case he was needed to the <lb/>
THE MUSICAL CLUB. <lb/>
by Dr- ail Mrs. Laugh- <lb/>
house. <lb/>
The Musical Club met with Dr. <lb/>
and Mrs. Charles Laughinghouse <lb/>
Thursday evening, and the meet- <lb/>
was a most delightful and <lb/>
interesting one. <lb/>
After the members and guests <lb/>
had received a welcome <lb/>
upon arrival, they were served <lb/>
fruit, punch by Mrs. R. J. <lb/>
the hall- <lb/>
With Mrs. Hooker presiding <lb/>
the club first transacted its <lb/>
i ore item being that meet- <lb/>
will be suspended during <lb/>
j the months of July and <lb/>
. leaves but one more meet- <lb/>
; to be held before the sum- <lb/>
mer intermission, which will be <lb/>
; held with Miss Smith <lb/>
on the 24th inst. <lb/>
The musical program of the <lb/>
evening was then rendered as <lb/>
, follows <lb/>
i Instrumental duet by Mrs. Higgs <lb/>
and Mrs. Carper. <lb/>
Vocal solo by Miss <lb/>
j Smith. <lb/>
I Instrumental solo by Miss <lb/>
Cobb. <lb/>
I Reading on Musical Club work <lb/>
by Mr. Pander. <lb/>
duct by Mrs. Hooker and <lb/>
j Mr. <lb/>
Assisted aliases Irma Cobb <lb/>
and Mary James the hostess <lb/>
served delight f r <lb/>
A half hour was spent in sing- <lb/>
familiar songs in chorus <lb/>
which proved a very enjoyable <lb/>
part of the evening. <lb/>
The club <lb/>
i at an announcement that <lb/>
i Misses Helen Marie and Harri <lb/>
. Day and Phyllis Woodall, of <lb/>
I the faculty of Meredith <lb/>
j College, Raleigh, will give a re- <lb/>
in the opera house here on <lb/>
30th. <lb/>
THE IDEA. <lb/>
MARRIAGE WAS ROMANTIC. <lb/>
Reflector Error as to Person <lb/>
Who Performed Ceremony. <lb/>
A New Movement Launched. <lb/>
Washington. D. C, June <lb/>
The Democratic situation down Through being misinformed <lb/>
in North Carolina is becoming was in error Mon- <lb/>
interesting. There is much talk in stating that the ceremony <lb/>
here of what baa become was Rev- D. W. <lb/>
as move- j Arnold at the marriage of Mr. <lb/>
which is said to T. D. Parish and MUs Helen <lb/>
plate the retirement of Senators Brinkley Sunday morning, a it <lb/>
Overman and Simmons and six as performed by Justice of the <lb/>
of the North house H. Harding. There was <lb/>
to elect Josephus alto more romance about the <lb/>
Daniels, editor of The News and; marriage than we knew of at <lb/>
Observer, at Raleigh, now first writing. Miss Brink left <lb/>
Democratic committeeman her home that morning and went <lb/>
from the State, to d Sim- j to the home of a friend near the <lb/>
and former A. C. L- depot to await the <lb/>
Robert B. Glenn to succeed Over- rival of the train from Kinston <lb/>
man. In this scheme Daniels is , on which s e was expecting Mr. <lb/>
to do the writing and Glenn the . Parish. On getting off the train <lb/>
I speaking. he saw her waiting for him at <lb/>
I It v. be that it was th of d <lb/>
said in the d there once <lb/>
I national campaign that both of Harding been <lb/>
I these ambitious Tar Heel, ,. was also at the <lb/>
Glenn, exp cabinet <lb/>
d went with the man to <lb/>
puces in the case the lady was wait- <lb/>
William Jennings Bryan. <lb/>
Bring led in their ex When the ceremony start- <lb/>
they will now strike the lady at whose home the; <lb/>
tor the . As <lb/>
expires first me Runs are. <lb/>
I for the present, at him. <lb/>
Although is daily <lb/>
protection rates in <lb/>
he is denounced <lb/>
.- and a <lb/>
he refuses to consent <lb/>
were, being taken entire y by <lb/>
surprise, made a that t he <lb/>
marriage not take place there, <lb/>
as her husband was away and <lb/>
some unpleasantness might arise <lb/>
over it. Hasty consultation fol- <lb/>
lowed, and to avoid disc very the <lb/>
wedding party were directed t <lb/>
discriminations the lout the back door of the home and <lb/>
CK Taylor, colored, <lb/>
r from county chain gang <lb/>
th. morning. He is out <lb/>
ye -s old, dark cake color <lb/>
sickly appearance, and <lb/>
weighs about pounds. <lb/>
He took with him pairs <lb/>
low cut shoes number and <lb/>
suits Clothes one of the <lb/>
brown check and others <lb/>
j light check. Will pay reward <lb/>
for capture of this and re- <lb/>
turn to camp. <lb/>
Joseph Supt. <lb/>
redacts of his State and section. <lb/>
The course the wind is <lb/>
indicated by the clamor that is <lb/>
heal. The cry from certain <lb/>
quarters will with <lb/>
and the lumber <lb/>
and, secretly, <lb/>
this will be with <lb/>
other goad <lb/>
These are the reports that <lb/>
Came to Washington from the <lb/>
North State. Senator <lb/>
Simmons is the His <lb/>
through a hole in the dividing <lb/>
fence to back door of the <lb/>
boarding house near <lb/>
by. they did, and meeting <lb/>
Mrs. at her dining room <lb/>
door busy about her after- <lb/>
breakfast duties, made known <lb/>
their mission to her. Mrs. <lb/>
Critcher advised that she <lb/>
was not pr. pared tor greeting <lb/>
such company just nine, <lb/>
I but they might go up the hall to <lb/>
, the parlor for the ceremony. The <lb/>
invitation was accepted and the <lb/>
In the Senate is the , . . . <lb/>
. I ceremony quickly performed, the <lb/>
thing in sight. leaving at once for the <lb/>
are forming, said a Norfolk Southern depot where <lb/>
question. <lb/>
Another feature, <lb/>
the popularity the con- <lb/>
lit <lb/>
It had four <lb/>
SALE-A new two- <lb/>
story brick building in a hustling <lb/>
South Georgia town for half <lb/>
price. Guess that's cheap. It <lb/>
will pay you to investigate. <lb/>
National Loan Trust Company,<lb/>
year; namely Hertford. La <lb/>
Grange, Elizabeth City and <lb/>
Louisburg again. Mrs Scott <lb/>
put in her application years <lb/>
ahead for New Bern. It was <lb/>
unanimously decided to go to <lb/>
Elizabeth City as they have <lb/>
oysters there. <lb/>
Louisburg entertained the <lb/>
conference royally, giving a <lb/>
grand reception at Louisburg <lb/>
Female college, and had planed <lb/>
to give one at Greene Hill House, <lb/>
one mile from Louisburg. where <lb/>
was held the first Methodist <lb/>
conference in America, April <lb/>
1785, but the weather was to <lb/>
inclement. <lb/>
However all visited the old <lb/>
house, and each was presented <lb/>
a picture of it, by <lb/>
burg Auxiliary. <lb/>
On Saturday morning all left <lb/>
for borne, wishing Louisburg <lb/>
of this <lb/>
occasion. Mrs. J. Parker. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
leading from the State. <lb/>
of Democrats <lb/>
I at different times in the past, <lb/>
; has been said to have resulted <lb/>
j only in the miking of more <lb/>
I Democrat but it is doubtful if <lb/>
assaults some North Care <lb/>
papers and individuals are <lb/>
making on the delegation <lb/>
one can <lb/>
strengthen the party. <lb/>
I see it, the basis of the <lb/>
charge against the congressmen <lb/>
is that they did not vote to put <lb/>
lumber on the free list. Before <lb/>
the national conventions were <lb/>
held last year the press through- <lb/>
out the United States rang with <lb/>
charges that the paper mills <lb/>
were in a and there was a <lb/>
demand that wood pulp and <lb/>
print paper be put on the free <lb/>
list- That cry found a response <lb/>
in the Denver convention; and <lb/>
then without there being any <lb/>
proper consideration of the <lb/>
matter, a demand was added <lb/>
that the on lumber and <lb/>
limber should also be repealed. <lb/>
H. E. C. Bryant, in Charlotte <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
they train for <lb/>
Morehead City. <lb/>
INSTITUTE WORK. <lb/>
Two Meetings to Be Held in Pitt. <lb/>
Raleigh. M. C. June 1909. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
The State Department of <lb/>
culture is planning to send out <lb/>
several parties to engage in in- <lb/>
work this summer. It is <lb/>
our desire to cover the as <lb/>
well as we can. The several <lb/>
articles that have been published <lb/>
in some of our State papers <lb/>
within the past few call- <lb/>
attention to the great drain <lb/>
made upon our State for home <lb/>
supplies brought into North Caro- <lb/>
from r states cause cur <lb/>
farmers to stop and consider if <lb/>
there is not a way of <lb/>
farming than the o which we <lb/>
are now <lb/>
Several hundred thousand <lb/>
dollars worth of corn, hay, meat, <lb/>
fl wheat and other fa-m <lb/>
products brought annually into <lb/>
s of our counties and most <lb/>
of it sold to farmers is the <lb/>
st can be <lb/>
mads in favor of a change of <lb/>
farming method-. The <lb/>
are intended to correct this <lb/>
practice as much as possible. <lb/>
The speakers will <lb/>
of crops, special crops, <lb/>
rotation of crops, soil improve- <lb/>
fertilizers, stock raising, <lb/>
dairying and q of <lb/>
vital interest to the of <lb/>
the State. <lb/>
In your county we hoping <lb/>
to hold Greenville <lb/>
and Grimesland. I will thank <lb/>
you very much to publicity <lb/>
to this notice and ask your read- <lb/>
attend the institutes. We <lb/>
e them to come to <lb/>
help make the institutes worth <lb/>
In many sections th -re will <lb/>
so due <lb/>
of which will be <lb/>
later. want the farm- <lb/>
wives to attend <lb/>
most out of <lb/>
them that th y can. <lb/>
Y very truly, <lb/>
i T. B. Director. <lb/>
Parish <lb/>
Sunday morning at the <lb/>
of Mr. A. H. Critcher, Miss <lb/>
Helen Bruce Brinkley was <lb/>
j married to Mr. Thomas D. Parish, <lb/>
the ceremony being <lb/>
performed by Rev. D. W. Arnold <lb/>
The bride is n daughter of Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. and J. P. Brinkley and <lb/>
t took her Is by <lb/>
i . The couple left on the <lb/>
excursion train for <lb/>
City. <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
THE CHOICE A GOOD ONE. <lb/>
Oak Ridge, N. C, June <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
The friends of Prof. R Ii. <lb/>
Wright at this place they <lb/>
number the whole population, <lb/>
not only congratulate him upon <lb/>
his election to the presidency of <lb/>
the East Carolina Teachers Train- <lb/>
School, but they congratulate <lb/>
the school upon securing the <lb/>
services of Prof. Wright. <lb/>
Prof. Wright was for <lb/>
college at Oak Ridge Institute, <lb/>
graduating with the class of 1893, <lb/>
and after he graduated at the <lb/>
University he accepted a position <lb/>
with this institution, having <lb/>
charge of the departments of <lb/>
senior English and mathematics. <lb/>
After spending two years here <lb/>
he resigned co take post <lb/>
ate work at Johns Hopkins <lb/>
and after a year he was <lb/>
elected to a professorship in the <lb/>
department of history in the <lb/>
Baltimore city college. After <lb/>
two years he was made principal <lb/>
of the Eastern Baltimore girl <lb/>
college. <lb/>
No one who knows Prof. <lb/>
Wright has any doubt about his <lb/>
scholarship, experience, or ca- <lb/>
to make a line executive <lb/>
officer for the East Carols a <lb/>
Teachers Training School. II <lb/>
i a splendid scholar, i thorough <lb/>
gentleman and , pop <lb/>
t and . <lb/>
officer. The State i.- fortunate <lb/>
in his prospective lathe <lb/>
educations work of such <lb/>
in its borders J. A. <lb/>
Tyson- King. <lb/>
Your presence is requested <lb/>
at the marriage of <lb/>
Miss Lena King <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mr. Benjamin Franklin Tyson <lb/>
Wednesday moral g. <lb/>
thirtieth <lb/>
nineteen hundred and nine <lb/>
at eight o'clock <lb/>
Christian Church <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
No cards issued in town. <lb/>
LOCAL BRIEFS. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Red and black peas at S. <lb/>
I Schultz. <lb/>
Everybody wants the best <lb/>
, flour, it is Henry Clay, at S. M. <lb/>
Schultz. <lb/>
Hay Hay Hay Three car <lb/>
, loads. See me before you buy- <lb/>
JG F. V- Johnston. <lb/>
For house corner <lb/>
i Third arid Washington streets, <lb/>
; known as the T- R, Cherry <lb/>
place. Apply to Ed. H. <lb/>
tobacco trucks for sale- <lb/>
One hundred of the cheapest and <lb/>
best tobacco trucks for sale. <lb/>
Come at once. <lb/>
J. R. J. G. <lb/>
ti cod <lb/>
Don't you need flues <lb/>
We have flues ready to deliver, <lb/>
n hi t lot of iron in st good chance to day and and a to <lb/>
serve you. all right. A. G. C . y arc . <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018048_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
UTE TO J. A- <lb/>
Ha <lb/>
No. <lb/>
C Lodge <lb/>
r. <lb/>
June <lb/>
. . i <lb/>
tor i i <lb/>
other r w r r. <lb/>
. ind <lb/>
for- tut h . <lb/>
th. i Broth i <lb/>
A I <lb/>
r c <lb/>
whoM no ti re <lb/>
torn <lb/>
Brother w . ii <lb/>
. X. C. <lb/>
I h <lb/>
was to <lb/>
h be <lb/>
lived hi <lb/>
three year, <lb/>
M Life Co <lb/>
he . m <lb/>
L. <lb/>
r . <lb/>
Jane <lb/>
of bi <lb/>
i I s <lb/>
b- <lb/>
b. <lb/>
was i <lb/>
fly reunited. <lb/>
Resolved. That oar lodge be <lb/>
. . . or a period <lb/>
. ; and ti <lb/>
of our or Pr r Hy- <lb/>
mm r- <lb/>
i . , bit <lb/>
-i copy I e i to <lb/>
I r ; -1 . -n. <lb/>
E. I. <lb/>
D C, M re, Coin-<lb/>
RESOLUTION'S OF <lb/>
re a Almighty <lb/>
wise seen fit <lb/>
. r from amongst us <lb/>
J. M. Blow, the <lb/>
Lend Sole. <lb/>
By virtue of the authority in me <lb/>
v I i . r<lb/>
Superior it the cm of W. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
R. UR i I w. <lb/>
Voice that administered Pitt Superior court on t d k- <lb/>
. . r i and virtue <lb/>
or to the Solemn if o r dole <lb/>
. is now hashed for-t the April term l court <lb/>
, . ,. I and on v docket Ni to <lb/>
on t . , . <lb/>
looked our own with the will. to public nail to <lb/>
. r- bit h Core house <lb/>
glances of v ,. N,.,,,, ,, <lb/>
Charity and Benevolence will <lb/>
,., ll the <lb/>
. upon us more. m ,,.,. w. .;. and G. R <lb/>
land that nave us the true as bong a one-hail <lb/>
i; in and to a certain <lb/>
lies motionless, ,,,, in Pitt <lb/>
the warm heart is and bid <lb/>
now in toe sanctuary us a ,,., <lb/>
bosom. The soul too <lb/>
. ., . i j . thence with said pond to a <lb/>
thrilled promptly and so often , ,;,,,. ,.,.,.,. ,; <lb/>
to the manly sympathies of comer In <lb/>
. . . . .-. and on <lb/>
has risen at last from it ,,. , <lb/>
Che tenement of to its G. by <lb/>
, . . V . . ., , Rodrick v. their rather and <lb/>
mansion in ti M the place. <lb/>
one or <lb/>
REPORT OP THE CONDITION OP <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE, <lb/>
AT GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
At of Fiscal Year ending Hay, <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
and <lb/>
mill<lb/>
a No Hit Game <lb/>
Sere to <lb/>
I an interesting game of ball <lb/>
Robers <lb/>
; . detested that t.-nm by <lb/>
i wore of to The home <lb/>
n to reach .- <lb/>
it ice daring the same, that <lb/>
in the first and ninth in <lb/>
third, . <lb/>
Fierce for the locals pitched <lb/>
of but had very <lb/>
f, i r support Lanier a coming <lb/>
pitched superb ball, i. That a link from cur end- <lb/>
not a He was in less chain of fraternity has been <lb/>
of being scored on at severed which can never be re- <lb/>
Banking houses <lb/>
Furniture and <lb/>
items 1.864 <lb/>
and due from 40.008,48 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
. Surplus fund <lb/>
26,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, less <lb/>
cur exp taxes pd 18,888.66 <lb/>
Deposits 182,998.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Dividends paid to <lb/>
SURPLUS AND <lb/>
this date <lb/>
Total <lb/>
I mm; <lb/>
182,051.68 <lb/>
the first and ninth in , <lb/>
The <lb/>
travel tho valley of the shadow <lb/>
glorious and ever<lb/>
on nigh. <lb/>
Le <lb/>
of cash <lb/>
the of June <lb/>
II. Long, <lb/>
in the death of <lb/>
. . support that Brother Blow we an<lb/>
for visitors loss. We miss him a <lb/>
id, a brother and <lb/>
and<lb/>
than; <lb/>
th y I av <lb/>
I i <lb/>
to <lb/>
sent b<lb/>
. . . <lb/>
n . <lb/>
H. <lb/>
. I Pt <lb/>
John <lb/>
. i. <lb/>
western Sta re- <lb/>
gain i in v <lb/>
A;, <lb/>
give up <lb/>
I . . <lb/>
i a single <lb/>
. limes up. line- us left aching <lb/>
and ll i. I. We <lb/>
Robert not that hi days were number <lb/>
Car m and th m would now <lb/>
in the las <lb/>
ray, nature. But his rec rd is <lb/>
G b a Ii ; arc <lb/>
he sleeps in p ice. <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
lilt . <lb/>
Will Moore. <lb/>
The <lb/>
take than an <lb/>
i. ha h n <lb/>
, r court I e a <lb/>
In Sup. Court. <lb/>
will <lb/>
. ll <lb/>
. hi <lb/>
b. h- <lb/>
i ti front the <lb/>
. an i u <lb/>
. or abandon. and a <lb/>
v . and I i <lb/>
. r in e th is <lb/>
, to Ii I of t e Si- <lb/>
pelf no to <lb/>
I- on th i Mi id I <lb/>
M, n r n ii if <lb/>
I he a <lb/>
, mi I i ; <lb/>
. e. N . HI . <lb/>
.- i <lb/>
, . , . i the r the <lb/>
in i <lb/>
C. M or. S. C. <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
Ai w . f Plan <lb/>
BA <lb/>
Service to <lb/>
M ORE <lb/>
L I <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb/>
and <lb/>
on Saloon Decks. <lb/>
E Table Dinner Club Breakfast SB to <lb/>
Poll attention and th beat In every way <lb/>
of daily <lb/>
p. in. Arrive in re a. m., connecting with rail <lb/>
. . . and all i and w.-t. <lb/>
. i . and <lb/>
L i. CHAS. L HOPKINS, T. P. A. <lb/>
NORFOLK, Va. j <lb/>
. w<lb/>
t M ; ; <lb/>
Lani i- an <lb/>
. v Ci rs <lb/>
Way lite <lb/>
kin I. i <lb/>
the In<lb/>
T ; f-s . i <lb/>
P am . comm .--<lb/>
remain v the . w . <lb/>
, sadness i I that they may Super or court ens of Pit c . , <lb/>
i rum- . t tin- <lb/>
; led by . <lb/>
led . i bear . <lb/>
., mercy, <lb/>
. .; <lb/>
n r main m <lb/>
Not to <lb/>
to Washington <lb/>
JUNE <lb/>
VIA <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad <lb/>
, A- th- remarkably low fate of from <lb/>
. i. <lb/>
W. . . . <lb/>
. <lb/>
at <lb/>
cl <lb/>
, Struts by <lb/>
.,. on <lb/>
. . I <lb/>
. <lb/>
. Hi <lb/>
I. <lb/>
ll <lb/>
v by . <lb/>
V . <lb/>
I . <lb/>
. . <lb/>
th t <lb/>
this . . . <lb/>
to bi <lb/>
they <lb/>
in mi n can . <lb/>
kn I <lb/>
ti , <lb/>
V. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
be <lb/>
. i Tin Free <lb/>
mi copy be r <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
Gr <lb/>
III <lb/>
,;. . I notice <lb/>
. I . ; <lb/>
in I i i <lb/>
mo to u . r gm . all h r- <lb/>
on as <lb/>
i-y pi I <lb/>
I., or i o the i <lb/>
I . i , o <lb/>
or it in bi j lead r id <lb/>
Thia <lb/>
B. W. J, m <lb/>
i . A. M, button <lb/>
ltd<lb/>
, r <lb/>
ii . <lb/>
o ii. <lb/>
. . that <lb/>
no mis I him, no <lb/>
shot . i <lb/>
i . i I <lb/>
v. child lull on <lb/>
mother's I i I hi <lb/>
is in I m <lb/>
his native c amid <lb/>
seen and . i i <lb/>
. <lb/>
; i <lb/>
v. <lb/>
II <lb/>
. <lb/>
J.<lb/>
C, <lb/>
,. i u<lb/>
to year y u <lb/>
I i with I <lb/>
i. th.- trade dim <lb/>
;. . . . n <lb/>
m tr r <lb/>
. you want <lb/>
i k id d q <lb/>
;. . Creditors. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
i mi <lb/>
PUt a- i <lb/>
, T. i i. <lb/>
I , . . i . M <lb/>
I . . I <lb/>
i tin i . i i <lb/>
i . .<lb/>
i , . i I <lb/>
. tin i if Mi <lb/>
or th notice <lb/>
. ; 18th . j of <lb/>
J . <lb/>
J- eT. . <lb/>
ale f i , <lb/>
for <lb/>
tween and twelve years of half fare <lb/>
will be Sc <lb/>
. , On lib a. in I p. <lb/>
i iv, .-. n a. in. .- ii in. <lb/>
Arrive Vb, 8.0 p. m. a. m. <lb/>
Arri-f D. C. m. <lb/>
. return i n any I <lb/>
up . Mo. . <lb/>
. i city on tie W.-t-i-i n. -i here <lb/>
i.- d I. o -I v and I is in. <lb/>
b more of their -l Capital i <lb/>
i . B l- and V ard and <lb/>
which e Hunt It <lb/>
1.-v.- for well one <lb/>
tan I i-in-e. ,. <lb/>
i I call re a. <lb/>
W. H, A. C. I. R . G vile. N. C. <lb/>
I. i. <lb/>
Manager, In Agent, <lb/>
Mil <lb/>
-t-i <lb/>
BOWEN <lb/>
W. P. <lb/>
you want your HORSE to <lb/>
tau strong boy your <lb/>
Letters of a ii n up n ll <lb/>
Hate of d d, <lb/>
friends<lb/>
. i <lb/>
I or i <lb/>
re-u I if Pitt t; i m <lb/>
. I t and <lb/>
of J. .-.- . <lb/>
vI, . . i . . to been by a I l in <lb/>
. i. i . i. . Superior court Pitt I <lb/>
in ,,, ,,,. u , . to all <lb/>
this YOU Will . i ant said I <lb/>
, .- . <lb/>
. . , ii sign I on or before th <lb/>
V l- n ii <lb/>
Si <lb/>
and Calm <lb/>
f , <lb/>
i Tacking <lb/>
for Adv. <lb/>
.; Order<lb/>
well. <lb/>
The c . j . <lb/>
of <lb/>
on breast, a <lb/>
forest . i <lb/>
t.-ops, m i m <lb/>
b, i . <lb/>
e'er . . <lb/>
d . m i it. <lb/>
BO <lb/>
OF <lb/>
with <lb/>
80th, 1909, ; we rd <lb/>
the of b <lb/>
J. A. . I <lb/>
g it. Brother w is a <lb/>
faithful member of <lb/>
and we n with Borrow <lb/>
that our rank--, are again <lb/>
yet humbly submit to the <lb/>
will of Him who all <lb/>
well, We deeply <lb/>
the of our deceased <lb/>
brother, who been so <lb/>
faithful i ins long suffering; <lb/>
to- other members of his <lb/>
family who moat keenly feel <lb/>
their Iota, A-d may they so <lb/>
that again <lb/>
oil I the plant, <lb/>
stay on the hill i <lb/>
i i do us <lb/>
sue i hi i hi at;. It will p-y you <lb/>
i run yo i I i <lb/>
longer, the i ill <lb/>
h u will have n <lb/>
its I i ; and <lb/>
us <lb/>
and . . Tho <lb/>
. I <lb/>
on or <lb/>
. r<lb/>
i . <lb/>
pet <lb/>
ill, i <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
i. <lb/>
. , <lb/>
I i <lb/>
A. ; <lb/>
. . <lb/>
N. in,. <lb/>
H i IN <lb/>
rut Co i ts. I <lb/>
By i. <lb/>
. ed n a in <lb/>
op Ware- , . i . <lb/>
I .--. ill . . <lb/>
. i i <lb/>
i, . . . <lb/>
C R T <lb/>
l or this notice u ill in- in i <lb/>
of their rec All p <lb/>
i l r late are i l i In <lb/>
in i payment <lb/>
Thia day of June <lb/>
R. I. Davis, , <lb/>
. Jon a, d .- <lb/>
mis i- Wow. Alt; a. <lb/>
V, <lb/>
and <lb/>
Cats <lb/>
Corn. <lb/>
Sharpened<lb/>
Typewriter <lb/>
none butter <lb/>
All do <lb/>
W. P. EDWARDS <lb/>
W. B. He will sell <lb/>
you Better Feed and More <lb/>
Money than any man in town, <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
Place is headquarters for Corn, Hay, <lb/>
Oats, Cotton Seed Meal, Hulls, <lb/>
Brand, Chicken Hominy, Cracked <lb/>
Corn, con Meal and all kinds <lb/>
Fred, Salt, Lime and Cement. <lb/>
. . . ES <lb/>
. on, i .  <lb/>
i,, W- <lb/>
. ti I the tow. i of <lb/>
he excursion to the <lb/>
. i in- <lb/>
after <lb/>
and more ears had to be added <lb/>
at in. excursion c <lb/>
ed a large crowd and everything <lb/>
passed oil Pitt <lb/>
as made a fine <lb/>
in; train reached Green- <lb/>
ville on the return trip at <lb/>
o'clock at night, and ail who <lb/>
went report a fine day. <lb/>
i . i. . <lb/>
i or f to <lb/>
The on <lb/>
certain lot i r i i i I of Ian l i n <lb/>
. . nil IV, . i <lb/>
limb i rd I'd h i . I if <lb/>
land , K. A <lb/>
Parker . . . r . i <lb/>
in w i- n ad <lb/>
f i ti n, . I it yin <lb/>
ill and Sta , the <lb/>
Gr . <lb/>
all to i ;. I e <lb/>
I in I <lb/>
Thia . day of e, I <lb/>
I-. ii. i . <lb/>
P. C. I tty ltd <lb/>
P. M, Johnston tor mill <lb/>
repairs and supplies. Terms <lb/>
they may all be <lb/>
Stray Up. <lb/>
ha taken up n mi tiled yearling <lb/>
with . a out one <lb/>
y I, can gel me by <lb/>
pr -v ii g pi ind pa I v s. <lb/>
I. <lb/>
I t H. i, i . C. <lb/>
G j <lb/>
Cotton . <lb/>
f. . r kept con- W <lb/>
In stock. Country <lb/>
I Harden, <lb/>
North Carolina <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
N. S. Sunday Train. <lb/>
next Sunday the <lb/>
Norfolk Southern will <lb/>
though on Sundays from Cotton handlers r <lb/>
Morehead City and Bagging. <lb/>
Beaufort. The train will leave <lb/>
Raleigh at a. passim <lb/>
at reach <lb/>
about noon. Returning <lb/>
it will leave Beaufort at p. <lb/>
m., some over live hours <lb/>
at the seaside. <lb/>
solicited <lb/>
Nelson for salt <lb/>
by Carr and <lb/>
CO <lb/>
to Norfolk, Va. and Return <lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Line will <lb/>
have tickets on pale for all trains <lb/>
i trip fare from Farm-eh Saturday and for Sunday <lb/>
and Arthur from Green- forenoon trains commencing Sat- <lb/>
vile, Simpson and May 29th and continuing <lb/>
., . o Saturday Sept, 1908; <lb/>
; to return Monday follow- <lb/>
DAIRY PRODUCTS. <lb/>
I moved my to th.- the famous seashore resorts <lb/>
urn- i am ., <lb/>
d than ever to furnish of Virginia and North Carolina <lb/>
all Dairy Products. Will make delivery , minimum <lb/>
I hens TM. For information ca on ticket <lb/>
I, I, I agent or write T. C. White. <lb/>
W. J. G. P. A. <lb/>
to The p. T u<lb/>
18- <lb/>
ROUND r-3 <lb/>
I am now offering some very desirable Residence lots for sale. <lb/>
If you are expecting to build you a home or want to make a paying investment <lb/>
it will be to your interest to see me. <lb/>
I also have some splendid Manufacturing sites on railroad sidings for sale. <lb/>
Terms to suit <lb/>
L C- ARTHUR, Greenville, <lb/>
mm <lb/>
ft V J J <lb/>
Norfolk and <lb/>
i- J <lb/>
Railway <lb/>
Harry K. Walcott 2nd tit M. <lb/>
TR G DEPART M EN T. <lb/>
LEAVE GREENVILLE <lb/>
. For i. <lb/>
p. m. ton, Hertford, E City. Suffolk, and Norfolk, and <lb/>
to <lb/>
NEW KILN FOR <lb/>
O i C R<lb/>
WALTON BRICK COMPANY <lb/>
MACCLESFIELD, . C. <lb/>
fl <lb/>
.<lb/>
To every one who <lb/>
I For Chocowinity, Washington, <lb/>
a. I For Wilson <lb/>
p. i late <lb/>
Raleigh, <lb/>
ARRIVE GREENVILLE <lb/>
I From Washington, Chocowinity, and Inter- <lb/>
mediate <lb/>
i From Norfolk, Suffolk, K Hertford, <lb/>
m. Columbia, Belhaven. Plymouth, and Inter. <lb/>
a. m. t From Raleigh, Zebulon, and <lb/>
p. m. ions. <lb/>
only <lb/>
no. <lb/>
p. <lb/>
as information; and are <lb/>
H. C. <lb/>
PASSENGER AGENT. <lb/>
NORFOLK. <lb/>
NATURE'S WARNING. <lb/>
Gr People Must <lb/>
and Heed It. <lb/>
ills some quietly <lb/>
Hut nature always you <lb/>
Not tho kidney . <lb/>
See if the color <lb/>
If there are and sediment, <lb/>
I frequent, scanty, painful, <lb/>
It's time then to use Dean's <lb/>
Pills. <lb/>
To ward off disease or <lb/>
j bet es. <lb/>
have done great work in tins <lb/>
locality. <lb/>
I Mrs. T. A. Mitchell, Chestnut St., <lb/>
N C, a long <lb/>
kidneys were weak, causing <lb/>
secretions to pass irregularly. <lb/>
I There a eon dull ache across <lb/>
the small of and I had bear- <lb/>
, down pains through my abdomen <lb/>
bothered me both day and night. <lb/>
reading about Kidney <lb/>
WOMAN <lb/>
BE IN- <lb/>
cash <lb/>
or pays<lb/>
pure lases <lb/>
will send your name and ad- <lb/>
dress we will mail <lb/>
Mother Cray's a <lb/>
certain, pleasant herb for <lb/>
Women's ills. It is a reliable regulator <lb/>
and never-falling. If you have pains <lb/>
in the back, Urinary, Bladder o Kid- <lb/>
trouble, us this pleasant union <lb/>
aromatic herbs, roots and leaves. All <lb/>
Druggists sell it, cents, or address, <lb/>
The Mother Cray C. Le Roy, N. Y. <lb/>
count will give absolute . e ;<lb/>
to <lb/>
THE PAY OF ACTORS. <lb/>
size x inches and <lb/>
w h o p u h o <lb/>
on account we will give <lb/>
Popular Picture <lb/>
all <lb/>
In <lb/>
Were Fairly Largo Even <lb/>
tho Sixteenth Century. <lb/>
efficient actor received in <lb/>
1635 as largo a regular salary as <lb/>
of which sum is the <lb/>
modern equivalent. The lowest <lb/>
known valuation set an <lb/>
wages at cents or in <lb/>
money about a year. <lb/>
These are all new and are the most popular sellers <lb/>
in nil <lb/>
the large cities. We make ton this Oiler to <lb/>
Rugs. Come at once and get tin <lb/>
pick. They are yours tor days. <lb/>
Furniture And House <lb/>
en <lb/>
In <lb/>
la y Q low. <lb/>
Goods <lb/>
Installments. <lb/>
Kills a- d impressed, I pro-; emoluments an ac- <lb/>
I used them in strict 1590 are not likely to <lb/>
I I <lb/>
; W N<lb/>
AV<lb/>
cf <lb/>
Sec.<lb/>
G. L. <lb/>
Bonds, Life and Fire. <lb/>
NATIONS THAT DIED. <lb/>
Poland her <lb/>
. v r , own and follies. <lb/>
Meet of Them Went to Their Doom <lb/>
as Did common people in <lb/>
countries which died but <lb/>
-one down The <lb/>
perished like that. <lb/>
The empire of tho west became <lb/>
s-i m In-1 Unit could make <lb/>
no stand its enemies. <lb/>
by tho barbarians and <lb/>
not the <lb/>
of a vast empire, hut the city of <lb/>
with the the <lb/>
and pains I and <lb/>
became normal. I feel <lb/>
b r in every way and therefore <lb/>
commend Kidney Hills as an <lb/>
rem to other Kidney <lb/>
, . <lb/>
For side by all Price <lb/>
cents Co . Buffalo, <lb/>
Yo.-k, for the <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Remember the t and <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
of <lb/>
j . ., j. noticed with <lb/>
m,. interest the many tinted bars <lb/>
an. bands that in the shape of <lb/>
tongues of from <lb/>
wood burning in a lire. These <lb/>
line result of <lb/>
i-i of <lb/>
the people never stood together in <lb/>
ii of or <lb/>
Poland was big country, but it <lb/>
divided m <lb/>
and <lb/>
more powerful, nil three <lb/>
took a large. <lb/>
the <lb/>
mar <lb/>
woo <lb/>
fuel. The blue .- from<lb/>
. Tilts i- from the <lb/>
.,.,. rod from mag- <lb/>
r-,. <lb/>
. . m <lb/>
of the <lb/>
popes, over which tho pontiffs <lb/>
reigned as kings, finally tho city <lb/>
was taken without a real light by <lb/>
the soldiers tho king Italy. <lb/>
Tho empire of tho had its <lb/>
capital at Constantinople, <lb/>
it was tho greatest power in j <lb/>
the world, it became honey- <lb/>
combed with vice and enervated <lb/>
with pride luxury; also it grew <lb/>
old weak. <lb/>
Then the Turks made a tigerish <lb/>
spring on Constantinople and took <lb/>
it by storm. The lust of the Greek <lb/>
emperors died sword in hand, and <lb/>
his descendants are living in Eng- <lb/>
land today in very humble <lb/>
Egypt, once so powerful and fa- <lb/>
under the was con- <lb/>
by Rome and was afterward <lb/>
swamped by the <lb/>
Tho great moguls used to reign <lb/>
in India. In the days of Queen <lb/>
Elizabeth the mogul, or emperor <lb/>
of Delhi, as he was sometimes <lb/>
called, was so powerful that he <lb/>
thought it a vast condescension on <lb/>
his part to receive an embassy from <lb/>
the maiden queen. <lb/>
But as time went on the groat <lb/>
rajahs, or tributary kings, rebelled <lb/>
against the moguls. <lb/>
rent asunder by the wars between <lb/>
rival rajahs. This gave the <lb/>
France at first hold the upper <lb/>
hand and nearly conquered th <lb/>
land. Rut then England drove <lb/>
France and seized the empire <lb/>
of the moguls for herself. <lb/>
Tho heir of the moguls still en- <lb/>
joys a pen lion given by the British <lb/>
got eminent. <lb/>
Poland used to occupy a big place <lb/>
on tho map of Europe, At one time <lb/>
was much <lb/>
ore <lb/>
II-. and <lb/>
share of Poland in <lb/>
In tho trio of robbers made <lb/>
a second swoop. Only the ghost of <lb/>
Poland left. Another year saw <lb/>
the end of tragedy. The las <lb/>
remnants of Poland swallowed <lb/>
up by Russia, Prussia and Austria. <lb/>
The fate of the republic of <lb/>
ice is one of must dramatic in <lb/>
all history. Its doges ranked as <lb/>
the equals of tho proudest kings. <lb/>
Its alliance was coveted by the <lb/>
greatest powers. All real power <lb/>
rested in the hands of the dreaded <lb/>
council of ten and tho secret throe. <lb/>
The latter was a trio of living mys- <lb/>
and were known by name to <lb/>
practically no one in <lb/>
So the government of Venice was <lb/>
a terror to its own people and the <lb/>
world. Then <lb/>
came upon the scene, and <lb/>
of St. Mark <lb/>
C. n l In <lb/>
Henri -are. ninth. <lb/>
. . do that <lb/>
tin re i. in i II to or <lb/>
after <lb/>
every I says <lb/>
M. to one's play <lb/>
so In have a chance win- <lb/>
n little and little <lb/>
or few <lb/>
mm ; I of I. . <lb/>
ll,. e arr Ills i as t- <lb/>
one a million <lb/>
tram s in. I a I .-i <lb/>
a franc or n m of in- <lb/>
n and one of losing <lb/>
a million <lb/>
SPRING AND SUMMER <lb/>
IN <lb/>
North Carolina Mountains <lb/>
Tin Him i <lb/>
SCENERY UNPARALLELED <lb/>
at in j aid Pi u it this <lb/>
have fallen below in our <lb/>
money, while the remuneration duo <lb/>
performances at court or in 110- <lb/>
houses, if accounts of <lb/>
1594 accepted as the basis of <lb/>
reckoning, added some <lb/>
Actresses did not appear until <lb/>
female parts being <lb/>
taken by boys. Among <lb/>
earliest wore Mistress Noll <lb/>
of king's playhouse and <lb/>
Both from having <lb/>
;,. o earning pro- <lb/>
carious about tho theater, <lb/>
were raised to the affluence of a <lb/>
performance, about in present <lb/>
value. <lb/>
By the we reach David Oar- <lb/>
by the <lb/>
, In- <lb/>
I, k hi If <lb/>
, .- n .- <lb/>
. d -1 t <lb/>
n in <lb/>
t ; Hie <lb/>
I for lit. After <lb/>
in I I <lb/>
were lb <lb/>
. -i ion, over <lb/>
ll. <lb/>
I c <lb/>
OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
The Greenville Trust Co., <lb/>
AT N. C, <lb/>
At the close of business, April 28th, <lb/>
, e in <lb/>
Resources Ll. <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
; . <lb/>
cur. <lb/>
Dividends <lb/>
Time <lb/>
,. <lb/>
r. I; <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
and <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
loans <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash<lb/>
Silver in.-hiding <lb/>
minor in currency <lb/>
Mal notes <lb/>
other S. notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
1,374.511 <lb/>
1,000.001 <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
1,9117.02<lb/>
and <lb/>
aid <lb/>
7.038.1 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
2.1100.07 <lb/>
. I <lb/>
Mi<lb/>
I I- I <lb/>
II <lb/>
. I <lb/>
. . ill I <lb/>
of hot <lb/>
-i <lb/>
I era <lb/>
r bi-<lb/>
. . . <lb/>
. . v <lb/>
OS. It <lb/>
ti l<lb/>
Sell <lb/>
The acetylene lighted buoys of tho <lb/>
Swedish coast keep In action seventy <lb/>
days without renewal of the single <lb/>
tubes of fifty liters of dissolved <lb/>
Ingenious automatic <lb/>
makes this possible. A bright reflect <lb/>
tog surface and a black absorbing on <lb/>
give expansion by daylight, <lb/>
cloning a valve and shutting off <lb/>
the gas. but at night action ceases, <lb/>
the valve opens, and the gas, <lb/>
lighted, continues <lb/>
Plain Dealer. <lb/>
Not Silent. <lb/>
am this letter with a <lb/>
lent he wrote to her. and Just <lb/>
he dropped a little of the hot <lb/>
wax on bis thumb and feat out a howl <lb/>
of pain that could be heard clear <lb/>
the cornet, <lb/>
Dealer.<lb/>
go by but they <lb/>
with what <lb/>
Railway Train, with <lb/>
Coaches a. d Parlor Car, Golds- <lb/>
DUN and N. C , via <lb/>
Durham, Greensboro and Salisbury, on <lb/>
following <lb/>
No-21 ; <lb/>
6.45 a. Ar p. m. <lb/>
8.45 a m. Raleigh Ar p. m. <lb/>
m. Durham Ar 5.25 <lb/>
12.30 p. m. 3.10 p. m. <lb/>
2.10 p. m. Salisbury Ar m. <lb/>
3.50 p. m. Ar p. m. <lb/>
p. m. Ar Newton a. m. <lb/>
6.07 p. m. Ar a. m. <lb/>
6.53 p. m. 10.21 a. m. <lb/>
6.35 p. m. Ar M a. m <lb/>
8.15 p. m Ar 8.00 a. m. <lb/>
Other convenient and <lb/>
Through Car <lb/>
mill ml M uH <lb/>
May 15.1901. <lb/>
For an to fares, <lb/>
lea, etc., call on Agent of this Company <lb/>
or the undersigned <lb/>
1.1. J. If <lb/>
I Mm <lb/>
Ch H C. H. C. N. t<lb/>
1.0.10 <lb/>
ll <lb/>
v . t <lb/>
I- I <lb/>
ll <lb/>
. d lb <lb/>
. I <lb/>
lit w <lb/>
for He pi <lb/>
must be <lb/>
of in the f <lb/>
platers -1 will double <lb/>
what it i- <lb/>
then Io now. <lb/>
a- the then seemed, it <lb/>
soon common, <lb/>
being paid lo Mac-ready and <lb/>
even r. Hat it i, of <lb/>
dwarfed Into insignificance by the <lb/>
emoluments received from the <lb/>
American public by such artists hi <lb/>
and Irving, <lb/>
was paid a night, <lb/>
which seems to have struck the Pa- <lb/>
dumb with astonishment. It <lb/>
is difficult to apportion Sir Henry <lb/>
receipts apart from Miss <lb/>
Tern's. But they undoubtedly won <lb/>
high as a night<lb/>
STATE OF NORTH <lb/>
. s. Carr, <lb/>
that th. <lb/>
nuts <lb/>
. r I . <lb/>
lief. <lb/>
ll WOT <lb/>
this J <lb/>
Andrew J. <lb/>
c. <lb/>
Moore, .<lb/>
VII <lb/>
L. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
It. <lb/>
. .- <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Now n White store on rive <lb/>
More room <lb/>
to i-i-e me. <lb/>
Com<lb/>
C. D. TUNSTALL <lb/>
Opposite Center Warehouse. <lb/>
General Merchandise. <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
College of Agriculture and Mechanic <lb/>
Arts. <lb/>
The State's for <lb/>
Courses in <lb/>
in Civil, Electrical and <lb/>
Engineering; i; <lb/>
Dyeing; In Industrial <lb/>
Ch Why not lit yourself <lb/>
by one of th e <lb/>
D. H. HI LI., <lb/>
West N. C. <lb/>
Deciding the <lb/>
Two bosom friends were at <lb/>
over ownership of an umbrella <lb/>
tell you it's persisted the <lb/>
first man. <lb/>
say that umbrella's <lb/>
asserted the other. <lb/>
wrong. I've had it for <lb/>
fix months least. Sec the <lb/>
but they're not your <lb/>
they're the initials of th <lb/>
man I borrowed it <lb/>
Geese. <lb/>
A Georgia editor wants to know in <lb/>
what part of the country the <lb/>
in lie found. That Is hard <lb/>
any. would <lb/>
Tennessee, <lb/>
some BODS New York. <lb/>
of <lb/>
PAUL <lb/>
THE TAILOR <lb/>
tic found on Fourth street <lb/>
prepared to clean, press repair <lb/>
Mens Clothing and Ladies Skirts <lb/>
All done suits <lb/>
made- to , <lb/>
Tout <lb/>
When in ht the <lb/>
On boardwalk and inlet. <lb/>
apply to <lb/>
MRS. ll- I <lb/>
-ti I <lb/>
You are liable to an attack of some <lb/>
form of el e and <lb/>
pr beat kt-own <lb/>
Seth <lb/>
J. I . WOOten. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018048_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Dr. Edward Everett Hale. the <lb/>
A aged chaplain of the apart for listing, list takers are <lb/>
D J WHICHARD States senate, died Thursday at in every township to <lb/>
EDITOR AND <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Year <lb/>
Six <lb/>
Single Copy <lb/>
rate may be had upon <lb/>
t th business in The <lb/>
Reflector corner Evans and <lb/>
Third Street. <lb/>
The whole month of June set about as reasonable to tax min- <lb/>
for the privilege of preach- <lb/>
in the city, or for a man to <lb/>
his home in Boston. He was <lb/>
years of age and hail been in <lb/>
failing health several months. <lb/>
E in the post office at Greenville <lb/>
N. C. mail matter. <lb/>
FRIDAY JUNE 1909. <lb/>
S ragtime music is a <lb/>
back number. And Sousa ought <lb/>
to know, if anybody does. <lb/>
An exchange want to know <lb/>
can a rabbit swim. He can if be <lb/>
wants too, go far as our consent <lb/>
When you travel and meet up <lb/>
with people tell them this i <lb/>
Greenville, yours if you <lb/>
Those who were nut expecting <lb/>
congress to do any reforming of <lb/>
the are nut likely be <lb/>
disappointed. <lb/>
Several towns in the State are <lb/>
planning for fourth of July <lb/>
If Greenville wants a <lb/>
large crowd in town about that <lb/>
time it is time some steps were <lb/>
being taken in that direction. <lb/>
The Reflector has received a <lb/>
number of congratulations on <lb/>
slogan that was selected for <lb/>
Greenville. It is generally <lb/>
conceded that Greenville, <lb/>
if you has the true <lb/>
ring to it.<lb/>
The State i- a new <lb/>
organization added to the <lb/>
existing in This <lb/>
chili composed of State officers <lb/>
and those connected with the <lb/>
State work at the capital, the <lb/>
membership being limited <lb/>
fifty. <lb/>
Opponents of the income tax <lb/>
are getting ready to offer a <lb/>
for the bill now pending <lb/>
in the senate. Of course. The <lb/>
the people, and there is no <lb/>
excuse for failure to list. <lb/>
charge board against the cow <lb/>
that furnishes milk and butter <lb/>
for family and make her pull <lb/>
We see that Warrenton, a dray to pay her <lb/>
town very much smaller than <lb/>
Greenville, is to have a large <lb/>
cotton factory. Greenville <lb/>
ought to move up for <lb/>
something like this. If smaller else, <lb/>
towns with less capital and few <lb/>
advantages secure <lb/>
factories, it looks like our <lb/>
pie might do the same thing. <lb/>
board. This special tax against <lb/>
newspapers is one that Charlotte <lb/>
should hasten to wipe out, from <lb/>
a sense of gratitude if nothing <lb/>
A Nebraska girl swallowed , rich folks want to dodge all the <lb/>
lot of gun cotton with suicidal and have it <lb/>
intent, and the doctors tied Mk <lb/>
to keep her from exploding. <lb/>
tariff. <lb/>
The IS the name of a <lb/>
paper that has been start- <lb/>
auspices of the <lb/>
Senator Clay, of Georgia, says <lb/>
the duty congress is putting on <lb/>
cotton bagging will cost th <lb/>
South live million dollars a year. Training <lb/>
. I School at Concord. We have re- <lb/>
If you are not doing your part the copy it <lb/>
to help Greenville grow, you are contain much interesting mat <lb/>
not the proper person in com tor about the school. <lb/>
plain at what somebody else <lb/>
The Durham is won- <lb/>
it would be like if <lb/>
Washington dispatches say the Democrats were to get to- <lb/>
that President Taft taken get her and adopt such a plat- <lb/>
sides with Senator Aldrich for form as they really <lb/>
the defeat of the income tax Guess it be just like it is <lb/>
proposition. now. the men elected on the <lb/>
platform voting contrary to it. <lb/>
B, N. Hike ha- made another <lb/>
donation of to Trinity <lb/>
College at Durban., making a <lb/>
total of <lb/>
ed to that H ii. <lb/>
There is much goo property <lb/>
in and around Greenville on <lb/>
which then should be buildings <lb/>
If you are con tern plating the <lb/>
. purchase i here, hut bold- <lb/>
n the free list will Hie thought that <lb/>
cheap, r. you <lb/>
Diamond <lb/>
give lots u far n it is <lb/>
and producers. Being permitted will <lb/>
to buy d an mid fr e <lb/>
duty is . great <lb/>
y in four calculation. <lb/>
i- mgr. party <lb/>
t John <lb/>
Just think of a chewing gum Small have returned to Washing- <lb/>
trust forming nearly -even t-mi from their trip through East- <lb/>
million capital. Who North Carolina over the <lb/>
ever there was so much route of the proposed inland <lb/>
money in such a small thing. They express de- <lb/>
light over the trip and are en- <lb/>
About half of tax listing time for the waterway. <lb/>
gone by, and the outlook is <lb/>
that folks must come up faster i We see no reason for <lb/>
in the next two weeks or some ling Governor Kitchin for giving <lb/>
body is going to be double taxed, good positions at his disposal to <lb/>
men who were prominent in <lb/>
Senator Overman says him get his office, To <lb/>
tariff bill now being considered do so is both human nature <lb/>
by congress is the most unjust rule of politics. For one we <lb/>
and iniquitous ever passed. Yet have always believed that <lb/>
there are Democrats who are the <lb/>
helping it along. <lb/>
The way the Sugar Trust has <lb/>
been made to cough up ten and <lb/>
a half million dollars in <lb/>
shows that the trusts <lb/>
can be reached when the courts <lb/>
go after them right. <lb/>
It is beginning to look like it <lb/>
makes little difference, so far as <lb/>
the interests of the people are <lb/>
concerned, what the political <lb/>
complexion of congress is, as <lb/>
they all more or less eat out of <lb/>
the same spoon when they get <lb/>
there. <lb/>
If men could destroy their <lb/>
past utterances, embarrassing <lb/>
parallels might not jump up to <lb/>
show their insincerity in either <lb/>
former or statements. For <lb/>
instance, what Senator Simmons <lb/>
said about Mr. Bryan in the <lb/>
campaign of and what he <lb/>
says about the same man in 1909, <lb/>
do not tally well together. <lb/>
Ex-Governor K. B. Glenn is <lb/>
reported to have enjoyed a good <lb/>
hearty when he read <lb/>
story from Washington City <lb/>
sent to the Charlotte Observer <lb/>
about himself and Mr- Joseph us <lb/>
Daniels succeeding Senators <lb/>
Overman and Simmons. No <lb/>
doubt others enjoyed a laugh <lb/>
over the article, as it was not <lb/>
hard to see that the author mutt <lb/>
have been drawing largely on <lb/>
imagination. <lb/>
The government received in- <lb/>
formation that filibustering ex- <lb/>
for Venezuela were be- <lb/>
fitted up at Elizabeth City <lb/>
and Edenton, in this State, and <lb/>
precautionary steps were taken <lb/>
to prevent such invasion of lieu <lb/>
laws. Revenue cutters <lb/>
are Eastern North <lb/>
Carolina waters for the purpose <lb/>
of preventing the of <lb/>
such an expedition. <lb/>
The old raying is go away from <lb/>
home to learn the news, hence <lb/>
that is a rather interesting <lb/>
statement by Mr. II. E C. <lb/>
ant. Washington City <lb/>
dent of the Charlotte Observer, <lb/>
which he semis that paper re- <lb/>
a reported movement to <lb/>
have the two present North Car- <lb/>
senators succeeded by Mr. <lb/>
Daniels and ex Gov. <lb/>
R, B. Glenn. <lb/>
The Herald says Durham <lb/>
a large cotton mill just by <lb/>
a little effort on the part of the <lb/>
citizenship. The be- <lb/>
that proper effort on the <lb/>
part of the people of i his town <lb/>
would secure -nine factories <lb/>
here. They certainly are need- <lb/>
ed enough for something along <lb/>
I this line to be done, and there <lb/>
is every opportunity lure to <lb/>
make manufacturing enterprises <lb/>
pay.<lb/>
We have received the <lb/>
the A. and M. College <lb/>
at The issue of this <lb/>
year includes, in addition to the <lb/>
various courses in agriculture <lb/>
and in engineering, a full list of <lb/>
the alumni Of the college, A <lb/>
glance at this list shows that the <lb/>
young men educated at the col- <lb/>
are closely following the <lb/>
professions for which they were <lb/>
trained. These men are be- <lb/>
coming a power in the State's <lb/>
industrious life. Persons de- <lb/>
siring copies of the <lb/>
may address Registrar's <lb/>
West Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
Rev. A B. Grumpier, who <lb/>
was once a Methodist minister <lb/>
but several years ago left that <lb/>
church and became the leader of <lb/>
what is known us the Holiness <lb/>
sect, has publicly recanted his <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
of in North Caro- <lb/>
Gastonia, June in <lb/>
the extreme was the death here <lb/>
yesterday morning shortly after <lb/>
o'clock of Mr. Leonard <lb/>
land, who died in the city <lb/>
as the result of injuries <lb/>
Saturday night at <lb/>
o'clock when he jumped from <lb/>
fast train No. as it passed <lb/>
through Gastonia. His skull was <lb/>
i fractured in at least two places, <lb/>
his head bore two or more gap- <lb/>
wounds, both legs were <lb/>
broken and other marks of the <lb/>
accident were apparent on his <lb/>
body. <lb/>
Asheville, N. C, June 15.- <lb/>
Two miners, Woody and English, <lb/>
are dead as the result of a cave- <lb/>
of hi love, lie also <lb/>
urged those who followed him <lb/>
into his church to <lb/>
turn to the church, s with which <lb/>
they formerly affiliated.<lb/>
Oar Fact Ten <lb/>
Of all the towns of wonderful <lb/>
growth in North Carolina or any <lb/>
oilier Southern State none can <lb/>
surpass and few equal Spray, in <lb/>
this State. According to the <lb/>
News, that town <lb/>
now has seven cotton mills, two <lb/>
woolen mills and numerous <lb/>
smaller industries, and there is <lb/>
always a demand for laborers at <lb/>
good wages. The annual payroll <lb/>
is employment is <lb/>
furnished persons This is <lb/>
a showing much larger towns <lb/>
might well be proud to boast. <lb/>
It is all the more remarkable <lb/>
when coupled with the fact that <lb/>
only a few years ago Spray was <lb/>
a small village no factories <lb/>
at all. Really its existence be- <lb/>
as a manufacturing town, <lb/>
for it was of no consequence <lb/>
far-sighted and enterprising <lb/>
business men began t build <lb/>
factories there. Then it rapidly <lb/>
sprang into an important <lb/>
audit has con- <lb/>
to grow and its business <lb/>
to increase with every passing <lb/>
year. It furnishes evidence of <lb/>
what energy and pluck on tin- <lb/>
part of a few business men will <lb/>
do and also shows what building <lb/>
up of former waste places in our <lb/>
State has been done by the man- <lb/>
industry. <lb/>
While it is gratifying to note <lb/>
what progress Spray has <lb/>
through its cotton mills and <lb/>
other factories it is still <lb/>
gratifying to know that then <lb/>
are many Sprays on a larger <lb/>
Holiness church to return to the j in a mica mine in Mitchell <lb/>
county. The men were not killed <lb/>
outright, but Woody died before <lb/>
aid reached them, forty-eight <lb/>
hours after the accident. Eng- <lb/>
died in a few hours after <lb/>
being taken oat of the shaft. <lb/>
the next sixty days bids <lb/>
for a site for the North Carolina <lb/>
Knights of Pythias <lb/>
will be received from towns de- <lb/>
siring to secure the location for <lb/>
this institution. George I. <lb/>
Hackney, Asheville, grand <lb/>
is ex chairman and <lb/>
J. D. Durham, <lb/>
of the Grand <lb/>
commission, that has in hand the <lb/>
matter of selecting the <lb/>
of the orphanage. A site at Dur <lb/>
ham is understood to have been <lb/>
tentatively selected, but this is <lb/>
subject to change in the event <lb/>
there is sufficient inducement <lb/>
offered by some other town in <lb/>
the State. <lb/>
Mr. D. Smith, of Winterville, <lb/>
was brought to the city on the <lb/>
late Coast Line train, yesterday, <lb/>
and taken to the Mr. <lb/>
Smith was suffering with a most <lb/>
acute end severe attack of <lb/>
appendicitis and immediate <lb/>
operation was found necessary. <lb/>
When operated upon the <lb/>
was found to be <lb/>
nous. Though he rallied well <lb/>
f n m the operation and seems <lb/>
some Letter today, his condition <lb/>
is most and little hope is <lb/>
ONLY A BUCK SHEEP. <lb/>
Bat He Give a Mid Cold Shivers. <lb/>
Mr. M. J. Briley, who lives at <lb/>
the Leonidas Fleming place, five <lb/>
miles from town, had an <lb/>
a nights ago that <lb/>
fords himself and neighbors <lb/>
some amusement since it is over. <lb/>
Mr. Briley was awakened about <lb/>
o'clock by the barking of his <lb/>
dogs. He looked out to see what <lb/>
the dogs were after and they had <lb/>
bayed something on the porch <lb/>
but were giving the of <lb/>
their barks plenty distance. <lb/>
He crept out to a of the <lb/>
porch for a better view and saw <lb/>
a big black something standing <lb/>
In the end f the perch, <lb/>
undisturbed by the k- <lb/>
of the dogs <lb/>
Seeing this big black obj. ct in <lb/>
his porch put old chills to <lb/>
lug stress Mr. buck <lb/>
until after watching for some <lb/>
moments from his place <lb/>
behind the corner he concluded <lb/>
it looked like a she. p. He went <lb/>
after bis wife to join in the <lb/>
and they f <lb/>
that it was in fact big o <lb/>
Just how the <lb/>
there at that time of night could <lb/>
not be told, for no neighbor <lb/>
nearer than had any <lb/>
she-p. <lb/>
Kinston Free <lb/>
Greensboro, June V, hen <lb/>
James W. H. May In company <lb/>
with Deputy Sheriff John W. <lb/>
Weatherly, went into a cell of <lb/>
the jail at noon today to <lb/>
out a prisoner who was wanted <lb/>
in the court house, John <lb/>
who was occupying the cell with <lb/>
the prisoner wanted, suddenly <lb/>
r j began Jailer May over <lb/>
smaller scale in North Carolina. tn head a big linked iron <lb/>
Each one demonstrates tin- value chain, cutting a bad scalp wound <lb/>
which every new cotton mill or Ion his head through his hat be- <lb/>
of that kind is to I the assailant with the aid of <lb/>
its locality and to the State a- a deputy sheriff, the jailer and <lb/>
whole, shows with what care the the other prisoner could get him <lb/>
industrial enterprise in our State <lb/>
should op <lb/>
Brown at <lb/>
Hendersonville, <lb/>
Wednesday at o'clock p. m. <lb/>
the marriage of Miss Nancy <lb/>
Lou of <lb/>
to Dr. Zeno Brown, of <lb/>
took place- at the home of the <lb/>
bride's parents. Dr. an Mrs. J. <lb/>
R.-v. Dr. . W. <lb/>
Moore officiating, the <lb/>
being the impressive ring <lb/>
of the church. <lb/>
The bride, a remarkably hand- <lb/>
some young woman of the <lb/>
type, was beautifully gown- <lb/>
ed in voile trimmed in <lb/>
lace and pearl trimmings, and <lb/>
carried a shower bouquet of <lb/>
bride's roses. <lb/>
The home was made beautiful <lb/>
with tasty decorations of green <lb/>
and white, with banks <lb/>
ramblers. In the <lb/>
room, before an altar <lb/>
entertained for his recovery. banked with white roses, the <lb/>
You had just as well get the <lb/>
matter fixed in your mind that <lb/>
if you wail to list your taxes <lb/>
before the county commissioners <lb/>
penalty will he double tax. <lb/>
The alignment u the tariff <lb/>
question, at present, demon <lb/>
that this is a large <lb/>
try and the interests of different <lb/>
sections are diversified, con- <lb/>
with each other. It also <lb/>
demonstrates the fact that our <lb/>
contention, a year ago, for a <lb/>
platform with but few planks, <lb/>
was events should <lb/>
now learn the makers of plat- <lb/>
forms a lesson for the future. It <lb/>
is a difficult matter to make a <lb/>
platform that will suit every <lb/>
part of the country, so the best <lb/>
plan is to have just as few planks <lb/>
as possible, and let the local is- <lb/>
sues right themselves- It now <lb/>
seems that what is one section's <lb/>
medicine is another's poison, <lb/>
and Democrats, as well as Re- <lb/>
publicans, in congress, are <lb/>
both the medicine and the <lb/>
poison in large doses. The end <lb/>
is not the consumer is <lb/>
not relieved of the pains of tax- <lb/>
that is forced upon him. <lb/>
Relief is wanted <lb/>
ham Sun. <lb/>
One of the most ungrateful <lb/>
things we know of in connection <lb/>
with Charlotte, is the special <lb/>
tax which that city levies on its <lb/>
newspapers. is the <lb/>
greatest town in North Carolina, <lb/>
and its prestige is due more to <lb/>
the newspapers there than to <lb/>
any other factor. These papers <lb/>
work hard for Charlotte day. <lb/>
after day, and that they should j <lb/>
have to pay a special tax for stuff see F. V- Johnston. <lb/>
privilege is absurd. It would be <lb/>
Couple were united, afterwards <lb/>
receiving the <lb/>
and good wishes of the <lb/>
aid a few immediate <lb/>
The wedding march was played <lb/>
by Mr. Ed winds, assisted <lb/>
by Edna Hart and Annie <lb/>
Leah Smith. <lb/>
aid Mr-. Brown left on <lb/>
train for a short trip, <lb/>
after which they will be at home <lb/>
in Charlotte <lb/>
down and tie him. Spense has <lb/>
been in jail eight weeks awaiting <lb/>
admission into the asylum, <lb/>
been sent here from High <lb/>
Point. He has been very quiet <lb/>
and orderly, showing no signs of <lb/>
being dangerous until the sudden <lb/>
attack on the jailer today. <lb/>
Coming Jane Thirtieth. <lb/>
Of Miss Helen Marie Day, who <lb/>
with her sister, Miss <lb/>
Day Miss Phyllis Woodall, <lb/>
will give a recital in Masonic <lb/>
Temple opera house on June 30th, <lb/>
the New York Post <lb/>
Helen Mane Day's rendition <lb/>
of her songs was accomplished <lb/>
with the same care and success <lb/>
that mark all of her work. Her <lb/>
voice is fresh and brilliant in <lb/>
and is well managed. She <lb/>
received the enthusiastic <lb/>
of the audience and mer- <lb/>
the many recalls that the <lb/>
audience insisted upon when her <lb/>
numbers were finished. She has <lb/>
a beautiful clear and expressive <lb/>
voice showing great skill, <lb/>
much of the opportunities <lb/>
offered. Her work been re- <lb/>
with enthusiastic <lb/>
of appreciation in of <lb/>
he larger cities of the United <lb/>
States and Canada, where she <lb/>
appeared. She has a fine <lb/>
stage presence and great drama- <lb/>
tic ability. <lb/>
Pita is put up in a <lb/>
tube with nozzle May Le <lb/>
applied directly to the parts. <lb/>
Plies Sold by John <lb/>
L. Woolen. <lb/>
S in K I o r<lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT. <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. Advertising rates furnished <lb/>
you can get nice ceiling and <lb/>
flooring, windows and door <lb/>
seed at Mer. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
J. R. Smith went to Greenville made to order at J. R. <lb/>
Friday Smith Co. Dixon <lb/>
M. M. and <lb/>
CROSS ROADS ITEMS. <lb/>
Sauls makes the best <lb/>
cold drinks that can be made at <lb/>
the lea cold the year <lb/>
round- Try one. <lb/>
Everett went to Zebu <lb/>
Ion Thursday and returned Fri- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
They tell me that J. R. Smith <lb/>
Co., Dixon are manufacturing <lb/>
as good wagons, carts and bug- <lb/>
as can be found any where. <lb/>
See them before buying. <lb/>
Jesse Cannon and wife went <lb/>
to Greenville Friday. <lb/>
Seed peanuts for sale by J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
An expert rider was <lb/>
here yesterday shoeing us ho <lb/>
well he could ride. <lb/>
Spring dress goods laces and <lb/>
to match at J. It. Smith <lb/>
Out of the names sent to <lb/>
Dr. Sauls for cur new tobacco <lb/>
warehouse, the committee <lb/>
sent in <lb/>
by J. B- Pearce, of Ayden. <lb/>
Names came from various places <lb/>
in North Carolina, Georgia, <lb/>
South Carolina and Alabama. <lb/>
M. II. Sauls has just received <lb/>
a fine lot of perfumes and toilet <lb/>
water. <lb/>
Mrs C. C. Needham continues <lb/>
very sick. <lb/>
Paris Green at J. R. Smith Co. I <lb/>
Rev. T. H. King, of <lb/>
ville, was here Friday making <lb/>
for the union pro- <lb/>
nit Hie pastors <lb/>
church folks town to be- <lb/>
next <lb/>
R hose for <lb/>
-1 n is of <lb/>
the i on the <lb/>
J. Smith Co. <lb/>
at J. R. Dixon Co. <lb/>
We can shoe your mules <lb/>
horses, repair your carts, bug- <lb/>
and wagons on short notice. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co, Dixon. <lb/>
Tr a bucket of use <lb/>
third less than lard at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
Car suit just received at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
N, C. cut at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co <lb/>
School books, tablets. Bibles <lb/>
and Testaments at J- K. Smith Co. <lb/>
bushels nice country corn <lb/>
at per bushel at J- R <lb/>
Smith. Co., Dix n. <lb/>
J R. Smith Co. have the <lb/>
largest sign in Ayden, <lb/>
Shoes for Ladies and <lb/>
Gentlemen. <lb/>
Field peas, rape and millet seed <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Any kind of sewing machine <lb/>
needle you at J- K. Smith <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
King Edward, of Great Brit- <lb/>
is one of the greatest of the <lb/>
of Europe. There's <lb/>
only one in Amer- <lb/>
but that's the greatest of all <lb/>
shoes, and one shoe bears <lb/>
this mark of <lb/>
For sale by J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Money buy better shoes <lb/>
for they <lb/>
I are guaranteed to satisfy, <lb/>
shoe dealers everywhere <lb/>
Smith Co, <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
N 1909. <lb/>
Agnes and Trilby <lb/>
spent at <lb/>
Smiths, in <lb/>
had choir practice <lb/>
Smiths school louse Thursday <lb/>
night. <lb/>
v lives tier <lb/>
h i j i r. <lb/>
tWO <lb/>
 he mi <lb/>
.,. . in peas, <lb/>
mixed Japan and will <lb/>
get another good crop from same <lb/>
land. It always pays to raise all <lb/>
the home supplies you need. <lb/>
The above is a sample of what <lb/>
can be done. <lb/>
Mrs Haywood <lb/>
her brother, if. <lb/>
attended choir practice at Smiths <lb/>
The Brick ware- <lb/>
house is for rent. It is <lb/>
located and lighted. The <lb/>
right man can do a good business <lb/>
here this season. Apply to J. R. <lb/>
Smith Bro. <lb/>
Mrs. Joe May. of <lb/>
spent Friday with Mrs. J. R. <lb/>
Turnage. <lb/>
Harrows and cultivators at J. <lb/>
R. Smith Co. <lb/>
J. J- and J. R. Turnage <lb/>
returned from Asheville <lb/>
Mason's fruit jars, caps and <lb/>
rubbers for same at J. R. Smith <lb/>
Ca <lb/>
Prof. Cale. of Grifton. was <lb/>
here yesterday- <lb/>
Rape s ed and Millet seed for <lb/>
sale by J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Edwin Tripp has taken a <lb/>
with J. J. Hines Co- <lb/>
Lime, cement, window, doors, <lb/>
locks and hinges at J. R. Smith <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
have gone to Whitakers to visit <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
All kind sewing machine need- <lb/>
shuttles, bobbins and <lb/>
needle th readers for sale by J. <lb/>
R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Miss M. A. Johnson Co are <lb/>
offering everything in millinery <lb/>
at cost. It will be to your <lb/>
interest to see chem. <lb/>
We were surprised to find that <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. Dixon are car- <lb/>
such a nice line of coffins <lb/>
ind caskets of all prices and <lb/>
grades a them when needing <lb/>
anything this line. <lb/>
Buy your <lb/>
stair <lb/>
ard filling of J, it. Smith <lb/>
Co. Dixon. <lb/>
Don't elsewhere, when <lb/>
ard Smith <lb/>
went to SnOW Hill Saturday and <lb/>
n turned Monday. <lb/>
Mrs. C. C. Cobb. of Norfolk, <lb/>
and Miss of Wilson, <lb/>
who are B. P. Cobb <lb/>
to Greenville <lb/>
and <lb/>
had a nice little <lb/>
school at Smiths school house <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
Rev. J. B. Cook, Pastor of the <lb/>
church at Greenville, <lb/>
came up Sunday evening and <lb/>
preached an excellent <lb/>
Brother J. F. Stokes brought <lb/>
him up here. <lb/>
Next Sunday, June 20th, is <lb/>
Mr. G. Hinton <lb/>
appointment at Smiths school <lb/>
house, and Sunday school at <lb/>
o'clock. We hope all who can <lb/>
will come out- <lb/>
Miss Joyner, of Greenville, <lb/>
came up Sunday and returned <lb/>
home Monday. <lb/>
Patrick Cobb, of Kinston, was <lb/>
visiting in Smithtown Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday and left on the <lb/>
evening train Monday- <lb/>
Miss Nannie Parker, of Greene <lb/>
county, came yesterday to visit <lb/>
Ivy Smith. <lb/>
Mrs. C. E. and <lb/>
children went to C- L. Tyson's <lb/>
near Monday and re- <lb/>
turned in the evening in the <lb/>
rain. <lb/>
We had heavy Friday <lb/>
evening and at night and Sun- <lb/>
day evening and night, and yes- <lb/>
it rained nearly all the; <lb/>
afternoon up to o'clock at <lb/>
night. Entirely too wet to <lb/>
in the fields to work, it looks <lb/>
like the farmers will lose their <lb/>
oat crop unless it fairs off <lb/>
The held their debate at <lb/>
Smith's school Saturday <lb/>
night and will debate again this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
i Kings X Roads, June 1909. <lb/>
H. T. Smith left Wednesday <lb/>
to take a with the E. A. <lb/>
Brown Tobacco Co <lb/>
W. E. Smith and wife visited <lb/>
his sister, Mrs. Hattie Randolph, <lb/>
near Greenville, Saturday ard <lb/>
Mrs- Addie Corbett spent <lb/>
Sunday in Falkland visiting Mr- <lb/>
J. C. Cook. <lb/>
Mm Nannie Moore, from near <lb/>
visited Miss Lanie <lb/>
Ty.-on last week. <lb/>
Misses Minnie Smith, Lanie <lb/>
Ty on and Nannie Moore were <lb/>
Mis Irene Smith last <lb/>
Mrs. S. M. Smith spent, last <lb/>
Tuesday with Mrs. W. S. E. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
R L. Matthews and wife <lb/>
with his mother, Mrs. <lb/>
Bettie Matthews. <lb/>
J. T. Matthews returned home <lb/>
Sunday from <lb/>
Mrs. Laura Moore, of Snow. <lb/>
Hill, visited W. C. Moore <lb/>
day Sunday. <lb/>
Misses Irene Smith and Nannie you <lb/>
Moore went to Fountain <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Some of our farmers are <lb/>
of curing some tobacco <lb/>
the last of next week. <lb/>
Mrs. W. E. Smith and Miss <lb/>
Irene Smith spent Friday at H. <lb/>
. Tyson's. <lb/>
The Home Merchant. <lb/>
In an editorial on it <lb/>
Pays to Buy Goods at <lb/>
the Independent, of Liberal, <lb/>
recently had this I <lb/>
deserved appreciation of the <lb/>
any thought of j <lb/>
sentiment or that <lb/>
owe allegiance to anyone the <lb/>
cold, hard truth is that the retail <lb/>
merchants of our town are the <lb/>
best business friends we <lb/>
The retail merchant conducts a <lb/>
school of commerce for our <lb/>
the tuition is free. <lb/>
Every man, woman and child i <lb/>
gets the benefit of seeing in the <lb/>
home town about anything that is <lb/>
of real importance. He protects <lb/>
u against fraud and deceit. He <lb/>
stands for the square deal. <lb/>
rod your home merchant <lb/>
land then found your note for a j <lb/>
hundred dollars in the bank d <lb/>
i day as a result. You never paid <lb/>
for a range that warped out <lb/>
of shape in six I <lb/>
your wife getting her <lb/>
back. He never you <lb/>
for a buggy that <lb/>
you found out afterwards could <lb/>
be bought anywhere for <lb/>
I the home merchant is <lb/>
just like you. He lives where <lb/>
he does business and bis success <lb/>
j depends on making a friend of <lb/>
and your neighbor. Like <lb/>
you, he has to <lb/>
retail merchant is the <lb/>
one great factor in our <lb/>
system and this is true sole- <lb/>
because he renders us better <lb/>
service than we can get else- <lb/>
where. Take him away and our <lb/>
home town is gone; take our <lb/>
home town away and we deprive <lb/>
our children of the retail <lb/>
which is the greatest single ed <lb/>
factor in modern life. <lb/>
No. it cannot be. The retail <lb/>
merchant, will continue to abide <lb/>
in our affections, so long as we <lb/>
value our homes, because <lb/>
the average citizen is proud, <lb/>
of his town always tells how <lb/>
close his farm is to and he <lb/>
secretly despises t e method of <lb/>
peddler system is <lb/>
now known to be the legitimate <lb/>
father of the whole <lb/>
FLEMING WALLACE. <lb/>
Mr. Chair Fleming Weds Mist Anni <lb/>
Wallace at <lb/>
Jamesville. N. C, June 1909. <lb/>
At the home of Mr- and Mrs <lb/>
Wallace, their daughter, <lb/>
Miss Annie Wallace was married <lb/>
to Mr. Fleming. <lb/>
day evening, June 9th, at nine <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
The front hall door and rooms <lb/>
were tastefully decorated with <lb/>
potted plants and cut flowers, <lb/>
while the awaited the <lb/>
arrival of the bride and groom. <lb/>
wedding march was render- <lb/>
ed by Miss of <lb/>
ville, N. C., Miss Cherry, of <lb/>
Washington, the hall a <lb/>
the <lb/>
JUNE <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore <lb/>
his issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
E. B. Thomas and Hellen R <lb/>
Galloway. <lb/>
Hal Basset Charles and Gladys <lb/>
Cornelia Chapman. <lb/>
W. F. Harris and Bettie <lb/>
Lawhorn. <lb/>
W. Carson and Fannie <lb/>
lames. <lb/>
Thomas D. Parish and Helen <lb/>
Brink <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Ward and Hettie Per- <lb/>
kins. <lb/>
Alfred Teel and Fannie Eaton. <lb/>
Tyson and Sallie Newell, <lb/>
dry Atkinson and Lizzie <lb/>
Bragg. <lb/>
p ,. t ,,. , bi. In e tea <lb/>
and Emma <lb/>
NO need or sun BRING from <lb/>
i o allow anyone to <lb/>
r from rheumatism, as the pain <lb/>
can always e relieved, and in <lb/>
eases a cure effect d by applying <lb/>
The relief <lb/>
j which h alone <lb/>
many its cost t nuke <lb/>
Gorham. <lb/>
u I on account of the r <lb/>
f affords lo <lb/>
you have give it a <lb/>
will treat you u. L. am <lb/>
f it <lb/>
until <lb/>
For <lb/>
Coward S <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. <lb/>
At tin- Close April 28th, MOO, <lb/>
Liabilities<lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loons and discounts 17,887.42 Capital stock <lb/>
Overdrafts unsecured To surplus fond <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures . . , , <lb/>
,. , , . I profits, less <lb/>
Demand loans 2,500.001 <lb/>
Due from 80,880.04 cur. exp. and 175.20 <lb/>
Cash items Dividend unpaid 120.01 <lb/>
Gold coin sub. to check 48,408.84 <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin cur. 1,810.04 <lb/>
hank and other <lb/>
Notes 8.188.00 <lb/>
bridesmaid, then followed <lb/>
with his best man Mr. E <lb/>
I. Fleming, of Greenville, C , <lb/>
and following came the <lb/>
leaning on the arm of her <lb/>
Miss Kathleen <lb/>
wore a suit of old rose with <lb/>
to match. The ceremony was <lb/>
performed by Rev. Mr. P ; <lb/>
of N- C, the pastor <lb/>
of the bride. <lb/>
As the bride and groom passed <lb/>
out the parlor they n <lb/>
greeted with . <lb/>
The presents were <lb/>
handsome and numerous, allow- <lb/>
the ea of many friends <lb/>
and relatives. <lb/>
The bride is a young lady <lb/>
many attractions and groom <lb/>
a popular employee the Dennis <lb/>
Simmons Lumber Co. <lb/>
many friends wish them a happy <lb/>
A Treat in <lb/>
ville People. <lb/>
On Wednesday, in <lb/>
Masonic Temple ho i . <lb/>
three ladies of the music faculty <lb/>
of Meredith of Raleigh, <lb/>
will give a recital that <lb/>
a rare to the lovers <lb/>
of Greenville. These a- <lb/>
Miss Helen M Day, M z <lb/>
Day. contralto, <lb/>
and Mies Phyllis violin- <lb/>
program tI; excel- <lb/>
lent one- <lb/>
Helen Day ha a <lb/>
. th a <lb/>
and Europe. She was soloist <lb/>
for th In of <lb/>
I ; a <lb/>
York I i ad <lb/>
. ft <lb/>
in Gem <lb/>
Watch <lb/>
s. <lb/>
Ht IN IOWA. <lb/>
Our family were all and raised <lb/>
in Iowa, and nave used Chamberlain's <lb/>
Colic, Cholera d <lb/>
at for years. We <lb/>
know how good is from <lb/>
in it. In fact, <lb/>
El Paso, toss, writer's lilY was <lb/>
raved by the prompt use of this <lb/>
We are now engaged in <lb/>
at <lb/>
a have introduced remedy h -r . <lb/>
It has very successful and is <lb/>
constantly in <lb/>
Bros. is for ale by J. <lb/>
L. Woolen and Wooten. <lb/>
WOMEN VI HO a <lb/>
Th <lb/>
. v in face we <lb/>
I.-. <lb/>
th A <lb/>
n ls am cm <lb/>
Kidney <lb/>
. at In . . <lb/>
; . <lb/>
a k wonder- <lb/>
. I II , ;. . <lb/>
I . , . <lb/>
. .-. j . . . i.-, ,. <lb/>
skin, c i . Mary ill m- <lb/>
in w men owe their h arid I <lb/>
them. at all t. <lb/>
Wanted-Ten to fifteen <lb/>
with to work in knit- <lb/>
ting mill at Scotland Neck, N. C. <lb/>
Girls and boys not under <lb/>
years of age can work. Nice <lb/>
town, good graded school, none <lb/>
bitter in the State. Pay while <lb/>
learning the work. Fine <lb/>
for those wanting nice <lb/>
work. If interested write. <lb/>
J. L. Bowers or A. <lb/>
Neck. N. C. <lb/>
ii, <lb/>
A Guaranteed Cough remedy i <lb/>
Lax cough , <lb/>
croup, hoarse- <lb/>
nets and ail bronchial i IT el .-i . <lb/>
for is to r.-- <lb/>
ti. I n laxative, <lb/>
S. by Join L. Wooten. <lb/>
will you <lb/>
A -n cf <lb/>
One of i m c <lb/>
forget which ore <lb/>
just at present, i both are <lb/>
good, an <lb/>
in connection with the taking of <lb/>
the oath of office of Judge Jam- <lb/>
S. Manning. The Bible used <lb/>
in administering the oath <lb/>
office to the new m . i f <lb/>
Supreme Court as one given <lb/>
him by his father in March, <lb/>
1871. Manning kept <lb/>
and used the r since <lb/>
and it is certainly something <lb/>
that should indicate to others <lb/>
the true inward nature of the <lb/>
man. This one should be <lb/>
as true as a man's for Ms <lb/>
mother All outside r. <lb/>
which may or may not bee. <lb/>
indication, cat; be rush, d <lb/>
aside, because t. i alone <lb/>
indicates the true spirit of the <lb/>
ma-. <lb/>
The n him by <lb/>
father thirty-eight years o had <lb/>
been kept and by <lb/>
Judge Manning and such an in- <lb/>
is worth than mere <lb/>
passing notice It i n <lb/>
to think deeply and tenderly of <lb/>
a-id i .-. it . i <lb/>
ally by who kn a ., ad- <lb/>
mire -In. ; v i .- <lb/>
ton <lb/>
Norton yam potato .- <lb/>
slips for sale by L. C. Arthur <lb/>
NOT <lb/>
. head . i <lb/>
Is, . <lb/>
tripe, I . . ; -l U, <lb/>
n, <lb/>
Governor . . i <lb/>
to commute to Hi imprisonment <lb/>
No o o has over a b i <lb/>
or balm to with <lb/>
Salve. Its Of <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Total <lb/>
STATE NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY PITT <lb/>
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb/>
the statement is true to the best of my knowledge b-lief. <lb/>
SMITH. Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 5th. day of May, <lb/>
STANCIL HODGES, <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
Correct <lb/>
J. R. SMITH. <lb/>
ELI AS TURNAGE. <lb/>
DIXON, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
perfect r of tuts, Corns, Bun s, <lb/>
Sores. Scalds, <lb/>
Eczema, for Sore By. <lb/>
C Id Sires, Chapped Hands its <lb/>
Infallible Plies, Only at All <lb/>
Nice lot of new <lb/>
memorandum books etc. at <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Mr <lb/>
R. L. JEFFERSON BROS. Founts, N. C. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
Dr Joseph Dixon <lb/>
Physician and Surgeon <lb/>
Office over Bank <lb/>
AYDEN. N. C. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
W. H. Smith has purchased <lb/>
the of A. Cox in the <lb/>
Carolina Milling <lb/>
Co. and will conduct the bus- <lb/>
at the sane place All <lb/>
work promptly looked after Mr. <lb/>
Cox will still with the <lb/>
Company. <lb/>
MISS C. <lb/>
Graduate Nurse <lb/>
Ayden, North <lb/>
who lost paring <lb/>
Mr. Charles Whichard at <lb/>
after b. in <lb/>
pursued for sometime was cap- <lb/>
tried at and <lb/>
be hanged. <lb/>
was taken to Supreme court <lb/>
and the of the lower <lb/>
hereupon <lb/>
an effort as made to get <lb/>
mutation of sentence. This <lb/>
the governor declines and the <lb/>
will have to pay the <lb/>
penalty of his crime with his <lb/>
life. <lb/>
A Stricken F.- <lb/>
-y i ; ; <lb/>
of Mr. ; no Mrs. I l V i-t <lb/>
died r. <lb/>
street, . <lb/>
O;<lb/>
Marring bl r <lb/>
of no h i i I t <lb/>
t I <lb/>
. <lb/>
and much <lb/>
for th <lb/>
you <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018048_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SP- <lb/>
m t <lb/>
i------- <lb/>
he New York Life Insurance Company<lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
a Line on Prospect. <lb/>
e a very personal <lb/>
in;. m n to bat <lb/>
approaching would you can t <lb/>
of your <lb/>
-c, I bate established <lb/>
this r more than twenty <lb/>
years, i yearly Income I- well <lb/>
Into the hundreds of <lb/>
dug. have <lb/>
an i also bate real <lb/>
valued s millions. Cm <lb/>
l quit satisfactory. Now. <lb/>
. . i . r Hie hand of your <lb/>
N Herald.<lb/>
v ; <lb/>
h iv b n . most b <lb/>
. i k- bi eh i across <lb/>
,, . a i <lb/>
T. . i i. process of <lb/>
, i iii I I r ; s den <lb/>
I vi <lb/>
Th i. hes r. t-did this . t. <lb/>
11.--. art first t I; e . <lb/>
; -ire i t <lb/>
H Mean Way. <lb/>
,; v. ,. if had mad <lb/>
. . , i. Wen. what <lb/>
bat to v. and your feelings <lb/>
it was the the way ho raid f. <lb/>
. no he ask m-me II <lb/>
,, it. He he said. <lb/>
,;,;.; ., i perpetrate this <lb/>
Pawing Neighbor. <lb/>
The was half in hysteria <lb/>
when her friends went over to he <lb/>
where she in her delicate <lb/>
party drew on long divan. <lb/>
It's that girl who just U ft <lb/>
she lamented, ill never lit <lb/>
her again if see her fir-t. she <lb/>
pawed me I was flattered when <lb/>
she i an to balk a th i until she <lb/>
h . to paw me. Everything she <lb/>
she emphasize by hit- <lb/>
Iii a blow s re, on the <lb/>
r or the arm or the hip. I <lb/>
an ex-pugilist feel <lb/>
i ; , Why Jo they <lb/>
let f i i ; c come to parties <lb/>
.-., ;. with a Tort <lb/>
Press. <lb/>
Just <lb/>
of Wire, and inches j <lb/>
T; a of the House. <lb/>
spends all her In <lb/>
Ah. she I- <lb/>
.;,, illy. Rot the <lb/>
allow her the kitchen, and the maids <lb/>
don't warn her the or par-1 <lb/>
Post <lb/>
Also a Car Load of Machinery <lb/>
just arrived, consisting of <lb/>
mowers, rakes, gasoline en- <lb/>
disc harrows, smooth- <lb/>
harrows, weeders and all <lb/>
kinds of farming implements <lb/>
H Bra I f I mill <lb/>
Talk About a Slogan for Greenville I <lb/>
fee is par <lb/>
. ft <lb/>
per- <lb/>
;.;, at i i r any point <lb/>
This adds to the wear of s- p. It explains d <lb/>
the re--n why t <lb/>
until n lit. <lb/>
There are other unusual of RALSTON <lb/>
SHOE cm will to you. <lb/>
look ; <lb/>
Get Busy is Her Cry <lb/>
Like the Beaver, get the fever <lb/>
, GET BUSY<lb/>
if a v. -a<lb/>
RY ICE CREAM <lb/>
Coward Woolen <lb/>
OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE <lb/>
in every line <lb/>
THE CENTRAL <lb/>
MERCANTILE<lb/>
i I <lb/>
Hand-Decorated Dinner Sets given to our Customers <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY FREE <lb/>
MISS ETHEL BOWLING <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
drew the handsome hand-decorated dinner set FREE, Wed- <lb/>
June You get the one next Wednesday, June<lb/>
The clock stands in a part of our store and will be <lb/>
lowed to run down and stop at stated intervals. <lb/>
Our Liberal Offer is as <lb/>
With each purchase you make at our store we will give <lb/>
a card on which the time of day is stamped. Bring cards to our <lb/>
store on the date and time specified thereon, and a complete dinner <lb/>
set will-be given to the person present holding the card on which is <lb/>
stamped the nearest correct time the clock stops at Wed., June <lb/>
AND SATURDAY, JUNE WE WILL GIVE ONE FREE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
see some of the papers are <lb/>
claiming Mr. Taft the <lb/>
of judge to Henry ; <lb/>
Connor because tin- Republicans <lb/>
could not scree upon one of <lb/>
their number. That may look <lb/>
to some folks as the true <lb/>
but I don't view it in that <lb/>
light. If the balance the <lb/>
publicans WOUld keep their eyes <lb/>
on Marion Butler they would see <lb/>
the hole the hog went through. <lb/>
It to me this <lb/>
when President tuft narrowed <lb/>
his conclusions down to two men, <lb/>
Connor and Skinner, then t was <lb/>
Butler got in B piece of his <lb/>
cunning work. He hates <lb/>
Skinner with undying hatred, so <lb/>
what does he do He sends Mr. <lb/>
Taft he was almost per- <lb/>
to appoint a <lb/>
communication that if he gave <lb/>
the appointment to Connor, lie <lb/>
would have the <lb/>
nation held up in the senate and <lb/>
see at he was not confirmed <lb/>
See Butler wanted Connor to <lb/>
have it in to Skinner <lb/>
and by his threat forced Mr. <lb/>
Taft to give it to Connor. I <lb/>
give Butler credit for <lb/>
i r's appointment of his <lb/>
audacity in trying to bulldoze <lb/>
the president, and if <lb/>
dent had been as mean a man as <lb/>
I am, lie would have seen into <lb/>
Butler's trick to defeat Skinner. <lb/>
say us mean a man as I am, as <lb/>
it has been said that it lakes a <lb/>
mean man to catch op with a <lb/>
mean one. <lb/>
studied Butler so much <lb/>
ever since he destroyed the <lb/>
Peopled Party, trying to over- <lb/>
throw the Republican party in <lb/>
-tr It <lb/>
t u. <lb/>
a T <lb/>
Write to-day; Mention this Paper. <lb/>
SEND CENTS <lb/>
fad Tc <lb/>
cf n. t if <lb/>
r.- i.-n. <lb/>
, I -u ,<lb/>
A. <lb/>
It is a pleasure to call <lb/>
to the advertisement of the <lb/>
North Carolina College of <lb/>
culture and Mechanic Arts. The <lb/>
State greatly needs industrially <lb/>
trained men, and the college is <lb/>
rapidly helping to supply <lb/>
need. Its graduates are bu-y <lb/>
and successful -n many lines. <lb/>
Many of our farms show the <lb/>
practical value of th train- <lb/>
The railroads, public high- <lb/>
ways, rooms and hip- <lb/>
building plants on the col- <lb/>
for civil engineers. Oar <lb/>
lighting and water plants and <lb/>
our machine shops are being <lb/>
manned by its Not <lb/>
a of us men are benefit to th <lb/>
How Running and Ready lo <lb/>
Orders. <lb/>
The Greenville Ice Plant. <lb/>
which The mentioned <lb/>
some weeks ago as being in <lb/>
I course of construction, was r <lb/>
completed and is now run <lb/>
I ring on full time, turning out <lb/>
tons of ice per day. City water <lb/>
j has been pat i.; at the ice plant, <lb/>
that the filtered water can be <lb/>
used, and the product of the plant <lb/>
is absolutely pure. Hill John- <lb/>
son, the are deter- <lb/>
mined to see that the people have <lb/>
Cause to comp of not <lb/>
aide to get ice hereafter. The <lb/>
output of their plant is sufficient <lb/>
to supply the home demand and <lb/>
also have a surplus for filling out <lb/>
of town orders, which they will <lb/>
do promptly. For the city de- <lb/>
livery they are now running <lb/>
wagons that cover the town <lb/>
each day, morning and afternoon, <lb/>
and call order will be tided be- <lb/>
tween the regular rounds of the <lb/>
delivery wagons. <lb/>
This is a enterprise that <lb/>
should have the support of th <lb/>
people of tie town. These Ken <lb/>
have at es <lb/>
it is v <lb/>
town, both In con- <lb/>
PONDEROUS PLODDERS. <lb/>
a i <lb/>
tending or managing cotton <lb/>
and Its chem- <lb/>
taking high rank -x- <lb/>
stations, <lb/>
plants and of <lb/>
culture, cannot <lb/>
better than fit r <lb/>
their at the same <lb/>
that thy being educated. <lb/>
and i The <lb/>
best way to build up your town <lb/>
is to stand by homo enterprises. <lb/>
STOMACH TROUBLES. <lb/>
TROUBLE MAKERS OUSTED, <lb/>
a from <lb/>
trouble King's N w Life <lb/>
she's see his <lb/>
and fly, in re he s <lb/>
North Carolina, that am tickled m-i r his row, fine . <lb/>
with all his infernal <lb/>
and can read his writing as fast work right, at All <lb/>
as he liens it. He always takes <lb/>
the reverse side of what be <lb/>
wants, and it be best <lb/>
ways for any party to never look <lb/>
at the hack of his neck, for he <lb/>
has led every party that has <lb/>
honored him to defeat and <lb/>
destruction And my word for <lb/>
thing the Republicans <lb/>
in North Carolina can do, is to <lb/>
outlaw him at their next, state <lb/>
kick him nut. <lb/>
For they will always have trim <lb/>
lilt- u him as long they <lb/>
allow him a voice in their a Hairs <lb/>
and deliberation. <lb/>
Am I Ask yourself <lb/>
the question. If you had <lb/>
in Mr. place, not knowing <lb/>
Butler for what ho is, would <lb/>
you nut done just as Mr. <lb/>
did, and give it to <lb/>
when n man tries to <lb/>
venture to say you have <lb/>
done just like he did. Butler <lb/>
is no fool But he is so infernal <lb/>
mean when he can't rile on top <lb/>
remarkable <lb/>
have been <lb/>
stomach and Liv <lb/>
tire man who ha I <lb/>
f stomach <lb/>
r let-. <lb/>
over <lb/>
tie t- <lb/>
was cured by a few of <lb/>
in tat lets. Pries rents. Sam- <lb/>
. free J. L. Woolen and Coward <lb/>
Wooten'S Store. <lb/>
Cress a River That <lb/>
Has Steep Banks. <lb/>
It Is a great tight n S line of <lb/>
elephants b rivet <lb/>
b They cud us <lb/>
ground their trunks <lb/>
step and n a slip or <lb/>
a miss, every <lb/>
as If tile were to take a <lb/>
header Into Lbs -rater. Then <lb/>
or swim, as the CaBS may <lb/>
sod swim not <lb/>
la-j to cross a mile of deep water <lb/>
if need <lb/>
mast say. however, that <lb/>
of sluing on back of a <lb/>
Is the reverse of pleas- <lb/>
ant. on <lb/>
barrel at <lb/>
any and you under. <lb/>
that, swim so low In <lb/>
the water that are sure a <lb/>
ling, In India means an excel- <lb/>
lent chance of fever <lb/>
laving crossed the stream, they <lb/>
must climb the of the bank, and <lb/>
this is the most peculiar operation <lb/>
nil. Down on their knees they go and <lb/>
trunk nod dig out a foot- <lb/>
bold for themselves and so step <lb/>
step work their nay to tho top, <lb/>
position being sometimes like that of a <lb/>
try climbing up a wall. As they reach <lb/>
the top a lurch sideways and <lb/>
shoot one lea; straight over the ban;, <lb/>
then give a lurch to the other and <lb/>
shoot out the oilier leg in same <lb/>
way. which brings Into the <lb/>
of a hanging by <lb/>
from the of it Then they <lb/>
come to the r knees <lb/>
a great . Ill and kicking of <lb/>
their bind bring to <lb/>
level grout I II. <lb/>
Iii of . e perilous <lb/>
I never knew elephant t <lb/>
miss his foot hold, ah a-.-h was <lb/>
a case where one f the herd got <lb/>
stuck In the mud and sank gradually <lb/>
deeper and until only Ills bend <lb/>
and part of his I irk could lie seen. <lb/>
The rajah ordered ten other elephants <lb/>
to brought tip. and they were hitch- <lb/>
ed to the unfortunate by <lb/>
palling ill the given word <lb/>
brought bellowing comrade out <lb/>
of the mud with a plump like tho pop <lb/>
of a thousand ton of In- <lb/>
BAKER AND HART <lb/>
the <lb/>
stuck <lb/>
goods only. <lb/>
to buy Hardware, <lb/>
to n in. quality <lb/>
Implements A <lb/>
Plows, Mower.-, Harrows Stalk <lb/>
and Cultivators <lb/>
it <lb/>
both riding <lb/>
American Fence Wire <lb/>
I the most In on hand. <lb/>
Complete stock ready mixed <lb/>
P A INT <lb/>
t. <lb/>
ran- <lb/>
tiled <lb/>
it the highest in all <lb/>
teed per cent pure. <lb/>
promptly. <lb/>
Those wishing to purchase <lb/>
will do well to see us as we carry <lb/>
but the best. <lb/>
It you give is a <lb/>
call. We will your business and <lb/>
will take tare t your orders <lb/>
tee prices. When wishing g men- <lb/>
in the above don't f. to look tip<lb/>
P. <lb/>
n a r <lb/>
of everything he tackles, and in <lb/>
this ease he caused the president <lb/>
to do what he wanted done to <lb/>
kill Skinner for judge. think <lb/>
said enough for you to see <lb/>
the hole the hog went through. <lb/>
Yours Truly, <lb/>
A SPRAINED ANKLE. <lb/>
As usually treated, a sprained ankle <lb/>
will disable the injured person for a <lb/>
month or more, bu; by <lb/>
Liniment and observing UH <lb/>
directions with each a <lb/>
CUTS may be effected In man, cases in <lb/>
less than one week's This <lb/>
is a Is preparation <lb/>
ii fur a t r bruise, or when <lb/>
laid up with chronic or muscular <lb/>
mat are certain to be de- <lb/>
with the pr f which it <lb/>
J. L and <lb/>
iV <lb/>
Mrs. S. Dudley Dies Suddenly. <lb/>
The many friends <lb/>
were greatly shocked about <lb/>
o'clock Wednesday afternoon, <lb/>
upon learning that Mrs. s. I. <lb/>
Dudley had died suddenly at h v <lb/>
home about a mile from town. <lb/>
Mrs. Dudley a chill <lb/>
and while she had been up and <lb/>
looking after household <lb/>
.- since then she bed complain <lb/>
ed of not feeling well. About <lb/>
ck she t <lb/>
tog doctor for <lb/>
Ca-1 a- e P. M. Johnston <lb/>
when in town <lb/>
id boiler repair w. any- <lb/>
thing you may need. Shop op- <lb/>
Hotel Bertha w<lb/>
who ha had <lb/>
v will be <lb/>
pl to that a c be i f- <lb/>
by <lb/>
a- soon as the child i. done <lb/>
Wipe it with a Soft in-fore <lb/>
lowing to nurse. <lb/>
trailed n with best <lb/>
B. r I. <lb/>
toward Woolen. <lb/>
P M. JOHNSTON. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Rum rt pa a of <lb/>
Si erecting Engines, <lb/>
i i machinery, all sys a <lb/>
for her child Who was Agent for <lb/>
. , . . u j I Eh novelties. us a trial. <lb/>
later Mr. Dudley AU arK and terms <lb/>
went to the house from his w I. left H. L. <lb/>
, . ,. . . e i prompt or phone <lb/>
and was talking to his wife as she N <lb/>
lay n lo n When he <lb/>
. r <lb/>
SITE OF <lb/>
Arid New. It Abounded In Fer- <lb/>
end Gardens. <lb/>
Travelers Bud hard to believe that <lb/>
Madrid ever with water. <lb/>
Tho modern town stands on so bleak <lb/>
and arid eminence. Its surround- <lb/>
save In early spring, are so <lb/>
parched and dusty and tho water <lb/>
cry of Is so in <lb/>
and one fancies <lb/>
Madrid must have thirsty <lb/>
the beginning. <lb/>
Yet Its ancient coal of arms was a <lb/>
largo flint half Immersed In water. <lb/>
With striking it on <lb/>
side. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE, <lb/>
AT FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At of April -Sh. <lb/>
Loans and discount <lb/>
in-cured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Cold coin <lb/>
Silver coin, ling <lb/>
minor coin <lb/>
the y.,, miter <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
stock <lb/>
8517.22<lb/>
to If the room she called <lb/>
him back in a tone that y <lb/>
she was in distress, and if i I <lb/>
back he was horrified to see; <lb/>
that she was dying. She <lb/>
away in a few moments. <lb/>
Mrs. was a daughter of <lb/>
the late Mr. D- H. Moore, <lb/>
was an excellent woman. She <lb/>
was married to Mr. Dudley about <lb/>
four years ago while he was <lb/>
and they made their <lb/>
in Greenville during his <lb/>
continuance in that after- <lb/>
wards moving to the Johnson <lb/>
place across the river where Mr. <lb/>
Dudley conducts a dairy. Be- <lb/>
sides the husband she leaves one- <lb/>
child six months old. <lb/>
Sow often you can get a <lb/>
or driver <lb/>
gar lacking. Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
emergencies. Our hue of tools <lb/>
Is a yen could desire, and <lb/>
we will that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a single <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
lOt<lb/>
DIXIE ICE CREAM <lb/>
be made frown la <lb/>
at cost of <lb/>
One Cant a Plate. <lb/>
Stir contents of one <lb/>
ICE Powder <lb/>
into a quart of and f <lb/>
No no heating, nothing <lb/>
else to add. Everything but tho <lb/>
ice and milk in the <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed. <lb/>
This makes quarts of the <lb/>
delicious ice cream you ever ate. <lb/>
ATe I <lb/>
packages at your grocers, <lb/>
or by mail if he docs not keep it. <lb/>
tree. <lb/>
The Food Co., la Roy, N. Y. <lb/>
A RESCUE. <lb/>
How Bert K. Lean, of Wash. <lb/>
was saved from a death is s <lb/>
story to thrill the world. ham <lb/>
he writes. en a <lb/>
lung trouble that a i expert <lb/>
doctor here. Then paid a <lb/>
visit to n specialist in Spokane, <lb/>
who did not help inc. Then went to <lb/>
California, but without benefit. At <lb/>
used Dr. King's New Discovery, <lb/>
which completely cured me now <lb/>
am as web as For Lung <lb/>
Trouble, Bronchitis, Colds, <lb/>
Croup and Whooping Cough <lb/>
its supreme. t and Trial <lb/>
free. Guaranteed by all i rue, <lb/>
You get <lb/>
Horse Goods . c<lb/>
J P, <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
a sort it. <lb/>
ponded was the <lb/>
I was bull r. <lb/>
My II. . <lb/>
Such Is mi i in lent. <lb/>
This device was en <lb/>
the city In Us days <lb/>
V. had on d <lb/>
lung greatness lie- <lb/>
I cause he Us ell with <lb/>
i hi f a liver lie was <lb/>
who the of <lb/>
I voting It to the rank capital It <lb/>
was left, however, Ills sou. Philip <lb/>
II. to promulgate tin decree <lb/>
town to he <lb/>
At time Madrid was a <lb/>
town III and <lb/>
Woods and with spring <lb/>
and wells lavishly supplied by nature. <lb/>
Tie now a melancholy, <lb/>
. r stream, was of a measurable <lb/>
depth But with the of <lb/>
her Into palaces and lodging <lb/>
for the royal <lb/>
the cutting down or trees to swell <lb/>
the royal treasury the Inevitable fol- <lb/>
lowed. The sun of well nigh sum- <lb/>
has burned the site <lb/>
of the old town and its <lb/>
suburbs and dried tho natural <lb/>
At present the climate Mad <lb/>
rid is nearly the most trying in nil<lb/>
Notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
s. <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided <lb/>
cur. exp and <lb/>
Time of deposits <lb/>
-its Mil., to check <lb/>
Cu I <lb/>
Total <lb/>
5,000.00 <lb/>
i-1 <lb/>
8,198.28 <lb/>
oil <lb/>
f STATE County of <lb/>
I. It. i-. <lb/>
.-. . . is t rue to I <lb/>
. ; and . J. I <lb/>
mid sworn to I ore <lb/>
me, . of April, <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Notary<lb/>
. solemnly <lb/>
my <lb/>
. Cashier. <lb/>
. Turnage, <lb/>
v;. <lb/>
V. Davis, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
or <lb/>
Tin Roofing <lb/>
Go to L- <lb/>
EVANS<lb/>
and Plumbing <lb/>
i a <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Next door to J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Mr. Richard Randolph Hurt. <lb/>
Mr. Richard Randolph, who <lb/>
works Sat factory of the <lb/>
Building Lumber Co., was <lb/>
painfully hurt. Wednesday after- <lb/>
noon. He was about to throw <lb/>
the belt off a machine when the <lb/>
piece of timber he was using for <lb/>
this purpose was caught in the <lb/>
Mil kid hurled e- HI <lb/>
and <lb/>
cut. <lb/>
A FACTS TROUBLES <lb/>
A slug lib liver always brings a <lb/>
dull, feeing to the <lb/>
body. When the liver works properly <lb/>
the courses h in <lb/>
s bright red When the liver <lb/>
s inactive the I becomes dull <lb/>
muddy, and it is of BO mat- <lb/>
t-r. A Nat many try to get a <lb/>
line, clear, pink and white complexion <lb/>
by rubbing things on their laces. <lb/>
t rub a life d the <lb/>
yellow comp would remain <lb/>
for tho liver causes it. Only hi, <lb/>
red blood line complexions. <lb/>
Blood loaded with impurities the <lb/>
sends the es out through <lb/>
the pores i f the and turns the skin <lb/>
a brownish <lb/>
To get rid of the dull, heavy feeling <lb/>
and muddy yellow complexion get the <lb/>
liver to working Two bot- <lb/>
of will do it nine limes <lb/>
Hit of ten. If you are troubled with <lb/>
and straining use <lb/>
r with the <lb/>
M, M Sauls. Ayden, N, and J. w. <lb/>
Bryan, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
A City of Changes. <lb/>
the Austrian sea gate o <lb/>
Montenegro, was held by Montenegro <lb/>
once for a little time. Montenegro ac- <lb/>
quired it In with the aid of n <lb/>
squadron. Any of <lb/>
who was contemporary with <lb/>
the rise and fail of Napoleon must <lb/>
often have had to pause and <lb/>
what country he belonged to. for. <lb/>
been for centuries, <lb/>
taro became Austrian by the treaty of <lb/>
and Italian In by <lb/>
tho pence of It ; ab- <lb/>
the French <lb/>
and wrested from it In 1813. Dual- <lb/>
In Russia <lb/>
to give It up to Austria. <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith <lb/>
stables, next door to John <lb/>
building. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875- <lb/>
t i <lb/>
S M <lb/>
LIZ <lb/>
the Rhyme. <lb/>
The prince regent, afterward George <lb/>
IV., once offered to any one who <lb/>
could a rhyme for <lb/>
This was merely child's play to Sher- <lb/>
who happened be present. <lb/>
With scarcely S thought he <lb/>
Tho Tort r. had. <lb/>
He the a her. <lb/>
And now. sounds. I'll take your <lb/>
For there's a rhyme <lb/>
London Answers. <lb/>
ti. L <lb/>
GREENVILLE, C<lb/>
. Whedbee. <lb/>
Wholesale and Grocer <lb/>
and Furniture Cash <lb/>
paid for Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed <lb/>
Oil Turkey's, Oak <lb/>
i Bedsteads, Mattress etc. <lb/>
i Suits, Baby Car . <lb/>
I Parlor suits I t, Lounges, <lb/>
.-, P. Lori Ax <lb/>
Snuff, h Lift lot Key <lb/>
i- h roots H George <lb/>
Ci ran, Canned is, <lb/>
ea, Apples, Pin i Syrup, <lb/>
I Jelly, Meat, Flo Coffee, <lb/>
His Degree. <lb/>
the son sent away to col- <lb/>
got his degree <lb/>
should say so Why. he wrote <lb/>
last week that the faculty bad called <lb/>
him In and given him the third degree. <lb/>
That boys <lb/>
Ledger. <lb/>
JOSS Lye. Matches. <lb/>
LAWYERS. N. Cotton Me j <lb/>
Garden Seeds, , Apples, <lb/>
MOORE w. II. Candies, Dried Apples- <lb/>
, ,, Peaches, Prunes. Currants, <lb/>
and I Raisins, Glass and <lb/>
.,., Wooden ware, Cakes and Crack- <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW Macaroni. Cheese, lest But- <lb/>
a R PI K N v I I. LR N C New Royal Sewing Machines <lb/>
and numerous other goods. <lb/>
Quality and quantity cheap for <lb/>
cash. Come see me. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
H. O. <lb/>
The does job work. <lb/>
S MS <lb/>
Our Greenville, yours <lb/>
come. <lb/>
you <lb/>
;. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018048_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
MM MM <lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of S. C. CARROLL <lb/>
Author J Agent of The Eastern and Vicinity-Adverting Rates on Application <lb/>
tad examine our line of Chickens and eggs a specialty, <lb/>
boy's spring hat, Come and get the beet prices. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
We are carrying a nice line of <lb/>
Con <lb/>
men's and <lb/>
that las just been opened up. <lb/>
Harrington Berber Co. <lb/>
M. r. Spur, of Coffins Caskets. Trices are <lb/>
in town yesterday. right and can nice hearse <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. have earn-1 service. A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. <lb/>
mer robes and dusters. men's and boy's <lb/>
Hiss Lilian Stokes, of Stokes, straw hats opened up. We have <lb/>
spent Wednesday night with them from the wide brimmed <lb/>
Kittrell and return palmetto to the nicest dress hat <lb/>
ed Co. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
v.<lb/>
.- <lb/>
N. C , June <lb/>
Quite a number of our young <lb/>
people attended church at <lb/>
thy Sunday. The children's ex- <lb/>
were entertaining. <lb/>
Las; Monday night Mrs. <lb/>
no died, after a long spell of <lb/>
sickness, at the home of her son. <lb/>
P. A. Wayne, and was buried <lb/>
Anew line of best You will need lime to repair Wednesday. She had led a no- <lb/>
. , ,, those tobacco furnaces. lite and be greatly miss- <lb/>
Barber Co. It and can give you a good price I ed by her many friends. <lb/>
Harrington. m Miss Ida came home Sat- <lb/>
Mis, Katie returned from , on. , A. to. I . . , <lb/>
a Arthur, Mr. few days with his parents <lb/>
B. Ernest Cox and Manufacturing Co. I Corey and Claude <lb/>
v went to N a went to Ayden <lb/>
tee good work and prompt day. <lb/>
We are carrying sewing ma- Misses Geneva Edwards, Lena <lb/>
chin M Ma tobacco barns Tyson, Jimmie Edwards and H. <lb/>
using good sheathing paper. M. Stokes spent Saturday night <lb/>
We can supply you. M Sunday with Lela <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. Roach. <lb/>
Misses Dora Cos, Cur Sunday School Is still pros <lb/>
Kittrell and Ethel Carroll, of vi <lb/>
C. and F. Cox left were out Sunday and we <lb/>
v for forehead attend hope they will come again soon, <lb/>
the assembly now in Miss Belva spent <lb/>
day night with Miss Carrie Chap- <lb/>
Faulkner and man. <lb/>
be bewildered you breaK the <lb/>
. on hand. have <lb/>
tn A W. Ange i. o, <lb/>
Alter i several days <lb/>
visit. hi re, Miss Liz- <lb/>
x a d home yesterday. <lb/>
ml that A. G. Cox <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Truth in Preference to Fiction. <lb/>
One Dollar Per Year <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. JUNE<lb/>
. have flue . <lb/>
iron already on hand and arc session. <lb/>
prepared to furnish Misses Wilde . <lb/>
flues for th n won. Hattie of Ayden, spent Miss Lizzie Barney U <lb/>
mad right and workman- Sunday with Miss Craw- week with <lb/>
ford. Mrs. W C. <lb/>
c Bi y- Theodore Cox went to Green- <lb/>
in U <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. cm- <lb/>
A .-. ville Monday. and spent several days <lb/>
. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox spent visiting relatives. <lb/>
crockery just re Sunday in the country with Mr,. W Cannon and <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. relatives. tar Jessie, i pent Saturday night <lb/>
Ayden, was Rev. E. T. Phillips filled his with her sister, Mr,. N. . <lb/>
regular appointment at the <lb/>
Will Baptist church Sunday Rev. T. II. King will fill his <lb/>
; . r her; <lb/>
B. was in town lay night. We hope to see a <lb/>
ME <lb/>
that word l <lb/>
in town yet .-. A . <lb/>
C. S. i. is selling to- <lb/>
o ti <lb/>
is the <lb/>
a and fa <lb/>
. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
V. . . . Miss <lb/>
r, i; Ayden, spent <lb/>
with Mrs, 0- t.<lb/>
nigh <lb/>
r. <lb/>
. . r Co. <lb/>
of . S., last with <lb/>
U; . ;. <lb/>
u ii ere glad <lb/>
to <lb/>
C. r Ash <lb/>
vi end the V. <lb/>
M. t A. <lb/>
Ali Hun ; who <lb/>
Dora Cox <lb/>
for some time, returned homo <lb/>
y. <lb/>
; . of all styles. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co <lb/>
. H. V, Brinson, principle <lb/>
School at Belcross, <lb/>
w town last i <lb/>
A r. lot of men's and <lb/>
just in. <lb/>
I Barber Co. <lb/>
N The Public.-Trucks <lb/>
and I ace flues must go. <lb/>
ha e me material, guarantee <lb/>
w Prices cheap, <lb/>
Call or A. G. Cox <lb/>
curing Co., Winterville, <lb/>
R C. <lb/>
We are going to sell out our <lb/>
, a for <lb/>
a . <lb/>
J C x <lb/>
SI <lb/>
Mrs. W. H. Rouse and <lb/>
re, Lillian, Louise and Earl, of <lb/>
cam in from their h me at began <lb/>
large crowd present. <lb/>
evening at the home <lb/>
of N, Corey, a sociable was <lb/>
Miss Carrie Johnson <lb/>
At the crowd <lb/>
I refers to Dr. Pills and <lb/>
HEALTH. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
v ill, <lb/>
Sick hi<lb/>
. Ir Hie <lb/>
You <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
REPORT THE OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
AT WINTERVILLE, N. C <lb/>
At tile close of business April <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
furniture and <lb/>
loans <lb/>
I from <lb/>
coin <lb/>
Silver coin, <lb/>
minor currency <lb/>
Not bank notes and other <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
1.178 <lb/>
S. note <lb/>
95,000.00 <lb/>
fund 080.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, <lb/>
expenses and taxes n; <lb/>
Time of deposit 202.20 <lb/>
Deposits subject to ck <lb/>
Cashier's check 1.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
2,887.40 <lb/>
l 1,380 <lb/>
Crop Poor. <lb/>
New June <lb/>
in publish- <lb/>
in the hall ; Miss <lb/>
I -d i. , . I h. r Cam d in the . <lb/>
fully I with music, in <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, I t County, <lb/>
We. K Green, Cashier and F. A. Edmondson, Asst Cashier <lb/>
of tho above named hunk, do solemnly swear the above state- <lb/>
i- true the best our knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. E. GREEN, <lb/>
Asst. Cashier. Cashier <lb/>
. .-. th . <lb/>
W. L;. Harper, fr near <lb/>
BI ck Jack, w is . i ti<lb/>
E ill i r v ho has <lb/>
b n visiting h r Mrs, <lb/>
fore ii ii-. th <lb/>
At ten were in <lb/>
the m by Mis e <lb/>
Lillie Corey and <lb/>
where cream and <lb/>
d and sworn lo <lb/>
s day of May, <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Harrington, <lb/>
A. ti. <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
belt as a tin <lb/>
i he plant <lb/>
Taking the <lb/>
condition of <lb/>
much to be <lb/>
A. Kittrell, returned to her served. The guests <lb/>
. . Mu i i <lb/>
R. Carroll went to Green- <lb/>
vi. j <lb/>
Kate and Chap <lb/>
man and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde <lb/>
to Hookerton <lb/>
today. <lb/>
We your special attention <lb/>
to the last statement of the Bank <lb/>
of Winterville, showing the <lb/>
excellent Condition of the bank. <lb/>
solicits your patronage and <lb/>
guarantees prompt service. <lb/>
leave for th r ti about <lb/>
twelve, having a most en- <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
began to The supply of labor <lb/>
THE CONDITION <lb/>
supply , <lb/>
adequate, though Bethel Banking <lb/>
of complaint in BETHEL, N. O. <lb/>
some <lb/>
f -r and bring <lb/>
c f to <lb/>
all oilier of kid- .- <lb/>
They h.-s a ton.- lo of Mi h,, <lb/>
He p ii rs . <lb/>
health. old by without benefit. Then s <lb/>
KILLS TO THE FIEND. <lb/>
The toe for l- years of i hi <lb/>
At close o <lb/>
BETHEL, N. O. <lb/>
business, April 28th, <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
John I. <lb/>
BACK JACK ITEMS. <lb/>
Jack, N. C , June <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Cox and <lb/>
children, of Ayden. spent Sun- <lb/>
day Mr. and Mrs. Henry <lb/>
Dixon. <lb/>
Lillie Buck was the <lb/>
i vii v . guest of Miss Z n Edwards <lb/>
lot i at j Saturday night and Sunday <lb/>
cost If you want a Stella and Annie <lb/>
of u c see us Gaskins were the of Miss <lb/>
A. Martha Clark Saturday night <lb/>
Fruit jars nil all sizes. I Sunday. <lb/>
A. W. Co. A. O. Clark and little <lb/>
For improved daughter, cf after <lb/>
mowing machines, etc., spending a few days here re- <lb/>
ea Harrington Barber Co, turned home Sunday evening. <lb/>
Mrs. Guy Taylor, of Ayden, Miss Clara Bell harper re <lb/>
Sunday here with h- r turned home after spending a <lb/>
few with s here. <lb/>
A. Clark Sunday <lb/>
COX'S MILL ITEMS <lb/>
Cox's Mill. N. C June <lb/>
a number of our people <lb/>
i Salve <lb/>
him. v. -Sow . <lb/>
ma, Infallible for <lb/>
Burns, Scalds, Cuts, at <lb/>
all Druggist.-. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and <lb/>
Hue from and <lb/>
and . <lb/>
coin currency <lb/>
Loses Two Fingers- <lb/>
Saturday afternoon Mr. D. D. <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
1-J Capital Stock 6,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund 1,600.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses and taxes pd 1,858.09 <lb/>
Time certificates of 8,660.08 <lb/>
Deposits sub to check 27,671.60 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
0,181.96 <lb/>
has a hogshead do sol- <lb/>
Thursday. We hope they had factory here. accidentally . ., , , ., . <lb/>
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. <lb/>
Kittrell, She returned to Ayden <lb/>
on the night train. <lb/>
Guy Moore was in town yes- <lb/>
after tobacco flues. Guy <lb/>
was a stud mt in W. H. S. last <lb/>
a line time. his right hand in a kn <lb/>
Henry and was so badly cut <lb/>
Roy, are both quite sick the amputation of part of <lb/>
mumps. H ape they will soon be two fingers was i; Mr. <lb/>
Overton has been unfortunate; <lb/>
C. C Bland, of Ayden, in this particular, having met <lb/>
filled his appointment at Ms with several accidents. A few. <lb/>
Gowan house Sunday, A years ago he lost part of a finger, <lb/>
large crowd out to hear him. of his left hand. j <lb/>
R iv. T. H. King, of <lb/>
filled his appointment at Mill's For Sale Long j <lb/>
house y afternoon, cotton seed, Call on <lb/>
our people were out to Co., Greenville. <lb/>
hear him and report a <lb/>
sermon. Woods r liver rag- . <lb/>
The oat crop in this s is <lb/>
line and being cut. Tobacco and <lb/>
swear that the above statement true to the best of my <lb/>
and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed sworn to be <lb/>
ore me, this day of May, <lb/>
S, T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary Public, <lb/>
W. H. Cashier. <lb/>
M. O. Blount, <lb/>
S. M. Jones, <lb/>
Staton, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Mills was the <lb/>
guest of Miss Martha Williams <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
were no debate Friday <lb/>
night, th <lb/>
For , it .-. . be one <lb/>
HORNER MILITARY SCHOOL. <lb/>
1851-1909 <lb/>
J. C. HORNER, Oxford, N. C. <lb/>
j many friends <lb/>
i.<lb/>
i of I <lb/>
a i. is . inch <lb/>
. welcome <lb/>
Prepares for or <lb/>
com are looking well with a fair Vt <lb/>
Cotton is small <lb/>
for the tune of year a fr a as an center. <lb/>
poor stand. Other crops . . <lb/>
doing hue. The will treat you <lb/>
c ask for and If we can <lb/>
to have ii got d it looks <lb/>
just now as if m <lb/>
ii. . <lb/>
e v. i e service h re <lb/>
night and <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
i-e one .<lb/>
. ; i . bi i d <lb/>
. , <lb/>
will treat you right<lb/>
H SYRUP <lb/>
CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOD AND LAW. <lb/>
by CO. A. <lb/>
FOB SALE BY <lb/>
in North <lb/>
June <lb/>
Joel Chatham, an aged citizen of <lb/>
this township, was run over and <lb/>
killed yesterday afternoon by- <lb/>
passenger train No which <lb/>
leaves here at just outside <lb/>
the town limits, near Connally <lb/>
veneer plant. <lb/>
had been to town to do some <lb/>
shopping and was returning <lb/>
home, walking on the railroad <lb/>
track. The engineer blew the <lb/>
danger signal, but it seems he <lb/>
did not notice the approach of <lb/>
the train until it was too close <lb/>
for him to get out of the way. <lb/>
Raleigh, June 19.-The <lb/>
today decided <lb/>
the state treasurer to <lb/>
accept the bid of the Raleigh <lb/>
for the entire i-sue <lb/>
of State bonds July <lb/>
at mis giving the <lb/>
principal and premium. <lb/>
Mr. J A. Bowie has a unique <lb/>
device for his mail box. It is <lb/>
apparently automatic. When the <lb/>
letter carrier places the mail in <lb/>
the box and moves oil, he can see <lb/>
the moving toward the house <lb/>
apparently of itself. The box is <lb/>
on and by means of a <lb/>
cord attached it is drawn on two <lb/>
of wire into the house, i <lb/>
When it is robbed of its contents <lb/>
a push sends it back to its want- <lb/>
ed place on the roadside with <lb/>
matter posted or to receive again <lb/>
from the En- <lb/>
N. C Jane <lb/>
Miss Bertha Landlord, the young <lb/>
girl who was seriously injured <lb/>
afternoon in a runaway <lb/>
accident, died last night shortly <lb/>
before from injuries <lb/>
sustained. While oat driving, <lb/>
and in going down a hill, <lb/>
shaft of the buggy broke, the <lb/>
end jabbing the horse in the side, <lb/>
and caused him to run away. <lb/>
She was hurled to the ground <lb/>
and h r fractured. She <lb/>
received medical attention and <lb/>
was taken to the hospital, but <lb/>
death ensued. <lb/>
On Friday morning, a very <lb/>
p life came to a sudden <lb/>
end. Mr. William Thornton was <lb/>
a man who did for him- <lb/>
lie pulled his own teeth, <lb/>
cut his hair, and made his own <lb/>
coffin. Thursday he took to the <lb/>
grave yard such tools as are <lb/>
needed in grave-digging, saying <lb/>
that his life would soon end. <lb/>
Friday morning while in his <lb/>
garden pulling weeds he fell <lb/>
dead. He was about years <lb/>
old. The deceased was a <lb/>
resident of Elevation township. <lb/>
Herald. <lb/>
Wadesboro, N. C, June <lb/>
John who was arrested at <lb/>
charged with an assault <lb/>
with to commit rape on <lb/>
Katie Jones, was given a <lb/>
hearing this afternoon <lb/>
and held for the next term of the <lb/>
Superior court. Both parties are <lb/>
The Jones woman <lb/>
bears a good reputation. There <lb/>
is considerable feeling against <lb/>
Davis in the neighborhood. <lb/>
Fayetteville, N. C, June LI. <lb/>
The sun this morning rose upon <lb/>
the greatest day in the history <lb/>
of Fayetteville. The celebration <lb/>
of the 1341 h of the <lb/>
signing of the Liberty Point <lb/>
Resolutions was an event never <lb/>
to be forgotten. The thousands of <lb/>
persons thronged the avenues of <lb/>
the city from morning till night, <lb/>
and aside from the thrilling ex- <lb/>
at the laying of the corn- <lb/>
for the monument to <lb/>
commemorate the heroic patriot- <lb/>
ism of the thirty-nine sinners of <lb/>
the famous declaration, there <lb/>
were spectacular event through- <lb/>
out the day to the <lb/>
most by the myriad people. <lb/>
GREENVILLE WINS AGAIN. <lb/>
President an lye on Pretty Game With Team at Farm- <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
MINISTER'S WIFE SKIPS <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Saturday Mr. H. A. White. <lb/>
secretary of The Home Building <lb/>
and Loan Association, received <lb/>
a Mr. S. <lb/>
, president of the North Carolina <lb/>
and Loan that <lb/>
The Reflector has been given the <lb/>
I pleasure and permission of <lb/>
publishing. <lb/>
Charlotte, N. C , June 1909. <lb/>
Mr. H. A. White. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
My Dear <lb/>
Friday afternoon the Green- <lb/>
ville added another to <lb/>
list of victories, when they <lb/>
defeated Farmville on their <lb/>
grounds by the close score of <lb/>
It was an exciting contest from <lb/>
the beginning to the end, and <lb/>
until the last Farmville man <lb/>
finned in the ninth, neither side <lb/>
was sure of victory. <lb/>
Greenville secured the lead in <lb/>
second inning when she sue <lb/>
The Wonder-Working Wireless N. C, June <lb/>
graph. Mr. of <lb/>
The Episcopal book still ville. spent Wednesday night <lb/>
includes special petitions for per- his sister. Mrs. Smith, and <lb/>
Wife of Rev Dr. R. C. of New <lb/>
hero, With Another Man <lb/>
June con- <lb/>
, of Centenary Methodist <lb/>
sons traveling by and yet left on the morning train Thurs-j church was <lb/>
ocean travel, for years past as for Farmville. -----startled morning <lb/>
safe as land travel, has become Mills Smith went to <lb/>
even safer with the coming of Wednesday evening to that his <lb/>
wireless telegraphy. The latest They had wife bad disappeared ard could <lb/>
case in was rep by the Smith's school house , The <lb/>
j l tire lulling o-- <lb/>
received a few days -n a man across <lb/>
marked copy of The Daily <lb/>
Reflector showing the condition <lb/>
of your B. L. association, but <lb/>
was so far my <lb/>
the plate on a hit. a sacrifice, and <lb/>
a slow grounder to second base. <lb/>
Another score was added in <lb/>
the fifth, when <lb/>
correspondence that I could not, from second base on <lb/>
acknowledge it until now, and I j two-bagger <lb/>
take this occasion to congratulate j center Farmville <lb/>
good showing, and j,, <lb/>
daily papers a few ago. In <lb/>
midnight darkness the Smith went to <lb/>
Line steamer ran hope-, ville evening and re <lb/>
aground off the Azores <lb/>
Islands in the Out Mr. and Mrs. Nichols <lb/>
of reach of all other means of get- at P. M. smiths <lb/>
ting human aid, the little wire- Friday evening. <lb/>
telegraph instrument ticked F. M- smith went to Rocky <lb/>
out Q. distress Mount last Wednesday. <lb/>
Call, the wireless call for help- Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Smith <lb/>
an lie, intangible message went to Greenville Saturday. <lb/>
in your <lb/>
run <lb/>
scoring <lb/>
in <lb/>
on Pollard's <lb/>
bid you Gad in this cause <lb/>
I know you will agree with me base <lb/>
when I say that our meeting at j near <lb/>
was all that could be <lb/>
I found much more <lb/>
enthusiasm and and larger <lb/>
scoring in the With a <lb/>
man on third and another on <lb/>
. second with no men out, it <lb/>
attendance than any former J like she would score, out <lb/>
meeting, and particularly am by the Greenville <lb/>
gratified by the fact that we had I boys caused them to be shut out. <lb/>
seventeen new associations to This ii; the third consecutive <lb/>
join our league. victory that the nine <lb/>
I have been hard at work w. L and <lb/>
B L matter ever since pay M <lb/>
words were pronounced in as fine <lb/>
oratory as over b. en <lb/>
heard in pulpit and no word <lb/>
of censure or bitter fueling <lb/>
his lips. It was a <lb/>
pathetic scene. <lb/>
Saturday. June Dr. Boa- <lb/>
man went to Durham to attend <lb/>
college <lb/>
Three or four days later Mrs. <lb/>
Beaman left New Bern, it is <lb/>
merely tic out into space Miss Nannie Parker and Ivy ostensibly for Rocky Mount, <lb/>
returned. I am going to <lb/>
S. C. in the morning <lb/>
home next week of <lb/>
make a speech tomorrow, <lb/>
am booKed to in Durham <lb/>
next week. <lb/>
Now, my, boy, keep up the <lb/>
good work, and I hope some day <lb/>
that we will have our annual <lb/>
meeting your good town. <lb/>
Your very <lb/>
S. <lb/>
Greenville joins the wish ex- <lb/>
pressed in the last paragraph of <lb/>
Mr. later, and <lb/>
right now extends league an <lb/>
invitation to meet hire in <lb/>
N. I. College. <lb/>
We desire to call attention to <lb/>
the advertisement of the State <lb/>
Normal and Industrial <lb/>
which appears in this issue, j <lb/>
Every year shows a <lb/>
growth in this institution devoted <lb/>
to the higher education of the <lb/>
women of North Carolina Dur- <lb/>
the past year the <lb/>
memorial building was erected <lb/>
and used for class purposes. This <lb/>
addition to the material equip- <lb/>
of the college greatly in- <lb/>
creased the efficiency of the <lb/>
work. <lb/>
The college last year <lb/>
total enrollment of students. <lb/>
of the nine-eight <lb/>
counties of the State had <lb/>
in the student body. <lb/>
Nine-tenths of all the graduates <lb/>
of this institution have taught <lb/>
or are now teaching in the <lb/>
schools of North Carolina. <lb/>
Their this year shows <lb/>
chat they can play good ball, and <lb/>
they do not promise <lb/>
ball, yet they do prom <lb/>
good, clean, base <lb/>
kind that is worth seeing- <lb/>
Score by innings R H E <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Farmville <lb/>
Two base hits; Bag- <lb/>
well, Pollard. Struck <lb/>
out, by Lanier by Turnage <lb/>
Base on ball, off Turnage off <lb/>
by pitched ball, <lb/>
by Turnage <lb/>
Lanier and Has- <lb/>
kc and Joyner. Um- <lb/>
Dr. Weeks. Time of game, <lb/>
through darkness of the Smith went to Greenville <lb/>
nigh. wild waste of <lb/>
waters while life and j A. j Flanagan and <lb/>
trembled in the balance <lb/>
of paying <lb/>
The roar of any one of th <lb/>
hundred waves louder than <lb/>
the call of the there <lb/>
was no burst of sound or of <lb/>
light, tale stranger <lb/>
., , e ii .; G- Grumpier and a <lb/>
than that of old magicians in the u y <lb/>
fury lore of our or his, came <lb/>
I miles away the steamer Princess Saturday <lb/>
Irene heard the its p- <lb/>
receiving instrument caught dale. Mr. Crumpler <lb/>
from the wave very good at Smith a <lb/>
cry of distress. <lb/>
mediately an of help I v congregations Sunday morn- <lb/>
son, <lb/>
of came over <lb/>
day visit relatives and re- <lb/>
home Sunday <lb/>
Little Martha Belle and <lb/>
Jessie of Farmville, were <lb/>
visiting relatives in our town <lb/>
Saturday and <lb/>
but nothing has been beard from <lb/>
her since. Notes found in <lb/>
place-, indicate that she <lb/>
has with a man named <lb/>
Grant, who has been in town <lb/>
for a few days. matter was <lb/>
known to but few prior to <lb/>
the Sunday morning services. <lb/>
The Methodist church is the <lb/>
largest and most influential in <lb/>
the city, and on. of the largest <lb/>
in the State and fr. <lb/>
charge over beta marked <lb/>
a period o. prosperity. <lb/>
traveled back across the nine <lb/>
and at night. <lb/>
Oakley. C. Jane 1909. <lb/>
John James, of was <lb/>
score miles of intervening ocean. I a here Sunday, <lb/>
and the Princess Irene started Greenville, Mr. and A of was <lb/>
under full steam to rescue th, and David pt weeK visiting <lb/>
endangered crew. By the after- i <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
June <lb/>
noon it had reached mm, of <lb/>
soon still another vessel, Having <lb/>
answered the same wireless call <lb/>
for help, came upon the sea.-. <lb/>
Farm <lb/>
church at Smith's <lb/>
Mouse Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. B- P. <lb/>
The Irene the and children, of <lb/>
the were attending Sunday <lb/>
took Steerage and u Sunday and spent the even <lb/>
passengers, and of the . <lb/>
on board no. out Mr and Mrs. J. F. Pollard <lb/>
was lost where, in other days, Sunday evening ac C. E. <lb/>
J W on. S <lb/>
saved. <lb/>
wireless telegraphy has only <lb/>
Yours if <lb/>
One of the best slogans <lb/>
for Greenville outside of <lb/>
the winner, is <lb/>
Healthy, Prosperous and <lb/>
which we failed to pub- <lb/>
in our list. This was also <lb/>
by Mr. J. W. Brown, the <lb/>
contestant. Greenville <lb/>
is truly healthy, prosperous and <lb/>
hustling, and it is easily the best <lb/>
town in Eastern North Carolina. <lb/>
We hope that the ladies from <lb/>
the county, visiting or shopping <lb/>
in town, will not forget to stop <lb/>
at the Rest Rooms, where every- <lb/>
thing is nice and comfortable. <lb/>
Ice water all the time It is <lb/>
no charges, whatever. <lb/>
Rests Rooms, Yours if you come. <lb/>
New Ayden Correspondent. <lb/>
Th- editor went to Ayden <lb/>
Friday afternoon to make at- <lb/>
for a manager cf <lb/>
tho Ayden department of The <lb/>
Reflector to succeed the late Mr. <lb/>
J. M. Blow, who served so accept <lb/>
ably in that capacity for several <lb/>
years; We are gratified to state <lb/>
that Mr. J. C. Noble will have <lb/>
charge of that department. He <lb/>
was recommended by several of <lb/>
leading citizens as a <lb/>
young man will qualified for this <lb/>
position. He will have charge <lb/>
of all the business of The <lb/>
tor around Ayden, and the paper <lb/>
will appreciate any assistance <lb/>
the people render him in helping <lb/>
to make it a success- Ayden is <lb/>
a good town, and The Reflector <lb/>
wants to do its part in keeping <lb/>
it before the public. <lb/>
New N. C. Industries. <lb/>
The Tradesman <lb/>
gives the following list of new <lb/>
industries established in North <lb/>
Carolina during the week end- <lb/>
June <lb/>
to- <lb/>
warehouse company; <lb/>
tobacco plant. <lb/>
Mount Airy-50.000 tobacco <lb/>
company. <lb/>
cotton mills <lb/>
Gold telephone <lb/>
company. <lb/>
works. <lb/>
hotel company. <lb/>
its victories.- <lb/>
Progressive <lb/>
Pool for Wilson, <lb/>
r. W. M. Wells, alderman <lb/>
from the first ward, is taking <lb/>
active steps towards having <lb/>
swimming pool where Wilson's <lb/>
can't-get-aways may have an <lb/>
opportunity of taking dips <lb/>
the heated season. The pool, <lb/>
when completed, may not be <lb/>
quite as enticing as it is in the <lb/>
old ocean flirting with mermaids <lb/>
and pulling the whiskers of <lb/>
goggle-eyed lobsters-but it will <lb/>
be far better than having no <lb/>
at all. One <lb/>
hundred and thirty-seven dollars <lb/>
have thus far been raised, and <lb/>
when the proper amount has <lb/>
been subscribed the work will be <lb/>
completed at once, <lb/>
The basis will be concreted and <lb/>
there will be dressing rooms for <lb/>
ladies and gentlemen, and <lb/>
gymnasiums will be added <lb/>
later. This public bath will be <lb/>
built at the station <lb/>
about one mile from Wilson, <lb/>
News and Observer. <lb/>
Why can't Greenville have <lb/>
something like this It would <lb/>
be a great addition to the com- <lb/>
forts of Greenville. <lb/>
Freddie told me <lb/>
that I the black sheep of the <lb/>
did <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
Mis Nannie Parker, who had <lb/>
visiting at Ivy Smith's <lb/>
days returned to her <lb/>
home with her father at Lizzie <lb/>
Sunday evening. <lb/>
Mr. Grumpier and his friend <lb/>
returned to Wilson Monday <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Now that the land has got dry <lb/>
enough to work, it would be <lb/>
good for the crops if they could <lb/>
all be plowed over in one day. <lb/>
Mrs. C. E. is <lb/>
suffering considerably with a <lb/>
carbuncle or something of the <lb/>
kind. <lb/>
Miss Willoughby, of <lb/>
Farmville, is spending some time <lb/>
at C. E. to <lb/>
Mrs. in her work, <lb/>
as she is scarcely able to be up. <lb/>
Boy's Arm Buses. <lb/>
Robert, 7-year-old son of Mr, <lb/>
and Mrs. H. Rountree, met <lb/>
with a painful accident an even- <lb/>
or two ago, resulting in <lb/>
breaking the left arm above the <lb/>
wrist. Mr. Rountree and the <lb/>
little boy were in the country <lb/>
and coming to a gate the latter <lb/>
started to get out of the buggy <lb/>
to open the gate. Just at this <lb/>
moment the horse started and <lb/>
the buggy a jerk which <lb/>
threw the boy out to the ground. <lb/>
Mas. and <lb/>
children, Gordan and Irma <lb/>
visited near Bethel Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
S. G. Williams an family <lb/>
visited at week. <lb/>
Taylor and children <lb/>
here <lb/>
T. A- Manning and family, of <lb/>
were here Sunday. <lb/>
W. J. v. hi; i of <lb/>
Mount, here <lb/>
last <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
turned <lb/>
from Virgin <lb/>
been <lb/>
Corn line in this <lb/>
section, cotton a little small. <lb/>
Regular service at Hickory <lb/>
Grove Sunday. A crowd <lb/>
attended. <lb/>
J. K. Barnhill and family, of <lb/>
Winterville, spent Sunday here <lb/>
with the latter's mother, Mrs. <lb/>
Taylor. <lb/>
Free to every <lb/>
plants of every sort given free. <lb/>
You have nothing to do but send <lb/>
a mule and plow to help pay <lb/>
postage. <lb/>
Ill, re- <lb/>
. evening <lb/>
she has <lb/>
for <lb/>
Red and black peas at M. <lb/>
one <lb/>
Going Ont of Business, <lb/>
We are closing out our stock <lb/>
of furniture and house furnish- <lb/>
goods, and for a few days <lb/>
will sell at and below cost. Per- <lb/>
sons owing us whose accounts <lb/>
are due are requested to settle <lb/>
at once. <lb/>
East Carolina Supply Co. <lb/>
Fell From Roof of House. <lb/>
Barney Burgess, colored, <lb/>
of the linemen of the Municipal <lb/>
light plant, had the <lb/>
to fall from the roof of one of <lb/>
Mr. D. W. houses on <lb/>
College avenue Monday after- <lb/>
noon. He was helping wire th <lb/>
house for electric lights, and <lb/>
while up on the roof, about <lb/>
twenty feet above ground, his <lb/>
foot slipped and down he came, <lb/>
considerably faster than the <lb/>
speed limit of eight miles an <lb/>
hour. He was bruised pretty <lb/>
badly, but fortunately no bones <lb/>
Everybody wants the best <lb/>
flour, it is Henry v. at S. M.<lb/>
Winterville, The Reflector. We need it.<lb/>
Don't forget that bill you owe<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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