<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <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>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00018071_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
v.<lb/>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of Wm. G. MORRIS j <lb/>
Agent of The Eastern Reflector for and Vicinity-Advertising Rates on Application <lb/>
. <lb/>
the of the Hunting <lb/>
and I Pump p-p Then see us <lb/>
;, Ca AW Ange A Co. love forever <lb/>
T service <lb/>
know an, Baptist church 3rd That a copy <lb/>
it. ,. .,.;.,. be Had, ism to two solutions be our <lb/>
,. . ., , , p per. If and three your record a copy be sen. to the <lb/>
. . ; . bereaved family and a copy be <lb/>
I . ;. just Reno <lb/>
; , . to anew lot and can supply <lb/>
Do You Own a Piano <lb/>
Stimulate the TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
strengthen the organs. <lb/>
the bowels, and arc <lb/>
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, <lb/>
In their <lb/>
arc widely as <lb/>
seas peculiar properties In freeing <lb/>
the system from that tie- <lb/>
sugar coated. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
WHO WILL GET THE PIANO. <lb/>
Th c r. v. in your <lb/>
Ill -i- Ci <lb/>
can b <lb/>
A W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Al Barker spent Saturday . <lb/>
Sunday t visit <lb/>
i . Co. <lb/>
. an . i es in. <lb/>
. Barber Co. <lb/>
, e Cox mother, of <lb/>
A; . . did here <lb/>
m. .- <lb/>
, . . Co. <lb/>
v. . II. C. In y have <lb/>
the right price <lb/>
in of spent <lb/>
Bu . . ii siting friend. <lb/>
. . b, <lb/>
relatives and fr <lb/>
a new supply rare <lb/>
A. W. Co. <lb/>
series of at the <lb/>
Baptist cloned <lb/>
i was very much <lb/>
I good by <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell, Corr,. <lb/>
J. F. Harrington. <lb/>
S. W. Clark, of came <lb/>
in Wednesday, to enter W. K- <lb/>
M. G. Bryan returned from <lb/>
Wilmington Wednesday- <lb/>
L. Z. T. <lb/>
ten. of Greenville, were la town <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
. attendance <lb/>
i , from country, were in town <lb/>
call writ- A. G. ah f Thursday. <lb/>
a preacher, v. ear-.- L <lb/>
glad to-earn that Ed. Walking Bryan went to Green- <lb/>
will preach right, Thursday <lb/>
A new lot of in. of traveling <lb/>
Harrington, Barb r Co were in our town <lb/>
. . b . , Mrs. J. H. C. Dixon went to <lb/>
Watch List Crow, and Help Some- <lb/>
body Votes. <lb/>
Today the closing of <lb/>
another week in The Reflector <lb/>
piano and the list pub- <lb/>
below shows what the <lb/>
candidates, and their friends <lb/>
have been doing. Miss Mary <lb/>
Johnson, who started out with <lb/>
a good still holds this <lb/>
with Miss Lottie Blow not <lb/>
far behind in place. The <lb/>
vote of other candidates also <lb/>
climbs higher each week. <lb/>
There are not many more <lb/>
weeks in which to work, as the <lb/>
contest will end Dec. 24th at <lb/>
noon, and one can tell what <lb/>
the closing weeks will <lb/>
The vote is not so but what <lb/>
II not, and you e to own <lb/>
soon, you owe it o yourself to ex- <lb/>
the ma display <lb/>
shown at the White <lb/>
rooms. A display really <lb/>
to a large city. <lb/>
In a will inspect a <lb/>
line pianos not alone stand <lb/>
in character of tot c, and <lb/>
general in a class to <lb/>
itself, but you m et with prices <lb/>
that stand here and <lb/>
incomparable where. Eight <lb/>
different makes t select from, none <lb/>
of those cheap v c tern department <lb/>
store stencils, but each one a stand- <lb/>
ard, of acknowledged fame and <lb/>
reputation in the trade, hour <lb/>
player-pianos of be known <lb/>
makes. <lb/>
We will take your piano in <lb/>
exchange for one of these self play- <lb/>
We also carry the <lb/>
ORGAN, the standard of the world. <lb/>
Old organs and pianos taken in ex- <lb/>
change, terms to s lit your <lb/>
When in Greenville visit our <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Next door to Carr Hardware Co. store. <lb/>
REPORT THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF GRIFTON <lb/>
AT GRIFTON, N. C. <lb/>
In the State cf Carolina, at the close of business, Sett. 1st, <lb/>
1909 <lb/>
. .-. <lb/>
. I repairs, on a <lb/>
u. barb <lb/>
., of . <lb/>
Thursday, and returned. some down <lb/>
Mi-s Ethel Carroll, who or eVen a new one, <lb/>
bis <lb/>
;. with <lb/>
p I laid. <lb/>
. . i carrying a nice line <lb/>
are <lb/>
t i race <lb/>
service. G. Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Julia Smith, from the <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
i. a large lot <lb/>
for winter <lb/>
M. M. and daughter, <lb/>
at J <lb/>
let of o s. <lb/>
at came catch up lead. <lb/>
yesterday afternoon to spend The should all do their <lb/>
A. Co. <lb/>
T. Ii King leaves here <lb/>
u day ft r den on <lb/>
want to <lb/>
buy R. D. bail Co. <lb/>
We are glad to <lb/>
Prof. Carlyle, Woke Forest <lb/>
the at her home near here. friends to <lb/>
Quite a number of our help them, from now until the <lb/>
attended the inauguration <lb/>
Greenville Friday. <lb/>
contest closes, <lb/>
will count. <lb/>
Every day's <lb/>
and the more <lb/>
Airs. H. T. who has the better your <lb/>
been visiting relatives and or winning the beautiful<lb/>
Loans and <lb/>
Overdrafts <lb/>
and <lb/>
Banking cur. ex. <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
and <lb/>
Cash <lb/>
Silver coin, <lb/>
minor coin cur. notes other U. S. Checks outstanding <lb/>
friends in Kinston, <lb/>
i heme Sunday. <lb/>
returned Boudoir piano which <lb/>
will lecture in . . be seen at the music room <lb/>
auditorium Monday night, of Bethel White. ft worth <lb/>
Nov 6th. in working for. and working hard. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. made Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. ., -n M merit <lb/>
a i of a solid car of ., Id value, possessing volume <lb/>
desk <lb/>
continually <lb/>
, Better place your or- <lb/>
A , <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
I car of Pitt G- Bryan. . and value, possessing volume <lb/>
today. The Mrs- J- and and tone to the best made, <lb/>
y increasing Miss Blanch of Shel-j Who jg <lb/>
manufactured The A, G. Cox <lb/>
Manufacturing Company are <lb/>
neat and <lb/>
are liberal. <lb/>
In the come to see <lb/>
us, nave the for ya. <lb/>
Preaching in the Free Will <lb/>
Baptist church next Sunday. <lb/>
We have them Fri- <lb/>
day and Saturday nights. <lb/>
R. D. Co. <lb/>
Several Masons attended the <lb/>
, . , . ,, .,. <lb/>
u ca services at Greenville <lb/>
Lex spent . . . . <lb/>
day at heme. <lb/>
j illy glasses, fruits <lb/>
of ah kinds and butter and <lb/>
see A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Miss Mamie spent <lb/>
it her <lb/>
We can give you a bargain in <lb/>
clothing. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Rosa Bell Taylor spent <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday Miss <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
-heating stoves <lb/>
and just received. All <lb/>
of best material and up-to-date. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
M. G. left here Monday <lb/>
for Wilmington to attend the <lb/>
a . <lb/>
The County School <lb/>
are tbs desks for you. Thy are <lb/>
cheap, comfortable. <lb/>
Prices i and workmanship <lb/>
guaranteed. A- G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
C . N. C. <lb/>
L b Satterthwaite, of <lb/>
i as peen sick at <lb/>
I. me, i . i M <lb/>
r, . m W. H <lb/>
J ; c r c iv d, a nice lot <lb/>
I . shoes. <lb/>
. B . her <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, G. T. Gardner, Cashier of the above-named bank, do sol- <lb/>
that the above Statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
knowledge and belief. G. T. GARDNER, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 10th day of <lb/>
1909. R. F. JENKINS, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
John Z. Brooks. <lb/>
C. J. Tucker, <lb/>
W. W. Dawson, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
We have just received a full <lb/>
supply of furniture. Give us a <lb/>
call. <lb/>
I am representing oldest <lb/>
and Life and Fire <lb/>
insurance companies in the world. <lb/>
in Bank building. <lb/>
J. S. Ross, <lb/>
A nice lot of dry goods and <lb/>
notions in. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Stray taken and <lb/>
white spotted bull, about four <lb/>
years old; mark under bit in <lb/>
both ears. Owner can same <lb/>
by paying damage and other <lb/>
cost. This October 1909. <lb/>
J. R F. D. No <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Mill tor establish- <lb/>
known as <lb/>
Milling and MTg is now <lb/>
for sale. consists of the fol- <lb/>
One wheat mill, one <lb/>
corn mill, one work shop with <lb/>
. boring machine, <lb/>
fish p. <lb/>
apply to W. H. Smith, Winter- <lb/>
N. c. <lb/>
highest price paid for <lb/>
. eggs, at A. W. <lb/>
spent last night with That is the <lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Boushall. It depends upon who has the <lb/>
turkeys wanted. most votes , by noon Christmas <lb/>
prices paid. A. W. Ange Co. j eye The way pay <lb/>
We have just received a nice subscription to The <lb/>
lot of cloaks, give us a call. A., or to if you are <lb/>
W. Ange , not already taking the paper, or <lb/>
M. B. Bryan, cf else to do so. Sub- <lb/>
came in last night to spend a paid in advance count <lb/>
few days with his parents, Mr. twice many voles as <lb/>
and Mrs. M- G. Bryan. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.,. <lb/>
AT BETHEL, N. O. <lb/>
At the of business, Sept., 1st, MM, <lb/>
twice as many votes as paying <lb/>
. up arrears. Come on and get a <lb/>
The assistant Bank examiner subScription receipt and vote for <lb/>
Baa in Hp , <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts tenured <lb/>
mil unsecured 138.44 <lb/>
Furniture 1,876.00 <lb/>
Due from and 2,991.90 <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
was in our town yesterday. He <lb/>
reports that everything is in ex- <lb/>
condition. <lb/>
Friday night at o'clock, the <lb/>
Total <lb/>
vote r g <lb/>
If not convenient j 1,917.92 <lb/>
to come to the office send it by <lb/>
mail and tell us who to cast your <lb/>
for. The votes will be <lb/>
Vance Literary Society and the you direct. <lb/>
Society of people ought to <lb/>
met in joint session in the Vance their subscription to The <lb/>
Literary Society hall. The P. A. next five weeks. <lb/>
L- S. furnished the music and many new be <lb/>
added to the subscription list. <lb/>
Every day as the end of <lb/>
I the contest draws near it <lb/>
. will increase in interest. Do <lb/>
treat as this; it was a great not Jet opportunity pass to <lb/>
and a pleasure to be present, j win this beautiful <lb/>
Our people are continuing to nothing what- <lb/>
preparations the ever n only have to <lb/>
which convenes with t The <lb/>
Baptist church here Nov. 16th, Reflector, or subscribe for it, and <lb/>
17th and 18th. We are expect-; the. paper Rives you full value <lb/>
one of the religious for your money, <lb/>
gatherings has. Here lathe the vote stands <lb/>
yet witnessed. Be sure to come today as far as the candidates <lb/>
and enjoy the many good things n, <lb/>
the V. L. S- gave a debate. <lb/>
After the debate an <lb/>
solo, by Miss Cox. <lb/>
It is very seldom we have such a <lb/>
6,000.00 <lb/>
4.500.00 <lb/>
Capital Stock <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses and taxes pd <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
Time certificates of 8,520.70 <lb/>
Deposits sub to check 21,446.38 <lb/>
for interest <lb/>
and taxes 250.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, W. II. Cashier of the above-named bank, do <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
W. H. Cashier. <lb/>
knowledge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this day of Sept., <lb/>
S. T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
Robt. Staton, <lb/>
M. Jones. <lb/>
M. O. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
turned in. <lb/>
rip saw and . blacksmith . Miss Mary <lb/>
For further information f bought a nice piano Miss Blow <lb/>
a B. Tucker <lb/>
that there will be a . Evans <lb/>
service in <lb/>
Baptist church o'clock a. m. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
AT WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business, Sept. <lb/>
Resources<lb/>
gt Co's. Turkeys a <lb/>
Goldsboro, t rough the holidays. <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF <lb/>
. the Great Spirit has <lb/>
iii fit to visit th i home of the <lb/>
. h r of our brothers. W, A., <lb/>
J. L. and John Nobles and take <lb/>
from them their loving brother. <lb/>
sister, Mr;. <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
when <lb/>
i , . i. week. <lb/>
d him. <lb/>
ed hi me. <lb/>
I i for <lb/>
A. W. <lb/>
R .-. Sylvester Hassell, of <lb/>
I will pr at Han-, <lb/>
church the third Sunday That we the members of <lb/>
in November, and Saturday I Tribe No No. O. <lb/>
Elder Hassell is one of M. bow in humble submission <lb/>
North Carolina's leading the will of the Great Spirit j m for two years. <lb/>
Miss <lb/>
Miss Maud Mooring <lb/>
M, Morris returned n with <lb/>
a wild turkey, which he cl <lb/>
in Craven county, a few g, y,,. <lb/>
J ago. i Johnson <lb/>
b. Mary Smith Thurs- <lb/>
day Mrs. G. Tucker, <lb/>
A. G. Cox, who has <lb/>
sick a few do t <lb/>
4.075 <lb/>
1,900 <lb/>
1,270 <lb/>
Loans discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixture <lb/>
Demand loans <lb/>
Due from and <lb/>
Silver coin, including <lb/>
minor currency <lb/>
Nat bank and other <lb/>
U. not. <lb/>
Total 14,414.91 <lb/>
5,000.00 <lb/>
650.00 <lb/>
Wiley Nobles, therefore be it s <lb/>
i well an excellent <lb/>
A w lot of dry goods and <lb/>
notions of all kinds just received <lb/>
at Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Buck left here Monday for <lb/>
Greenville, where he will work <lb/>
with West. <lb/>
and rely upon Him alone who Can mo th h-- <lb/>
I lit <lb/>
2nd. That we extend to the,, <lb/>
bereaved family our h <lb/>
Force I into Exile <lb/>
Wm. Oak. Okla, <lb/>
was from home. Mountain <lb/>
he thought, would cure a frightful <lb/>
Icing c that had defied all <lb/>
l. six <lb/>
Dr. K n. <lb/>
Now Disc writes, <lb/>
t kin r x hot lea I am s <lb/>
It th u- from<lb/>
A Sc tided Boy's <lb/>
d hi m Mrs. M It <lb/>
Ii r ii Ni K who ., <lb/>
all in l n die, H pa- <lb/>
ls n him. <lb/>
i d H <lb/>
Vi r nun <lb/>
. i i chi bl in , th <lb/>
, plies, <lb/>
ill J <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund <lb/>
1,173.53 Undivided less <lb/>
expenses and taxes pd <lb/>
Bills payable 5,000.00 <lb/>
Time of deposit 808.80 <lb/>
Deposits subject to 3,130.65 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Pitt County, <lb/>
We, J. E. Green, Cashier F. A. <lb/>
of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above state- <lb/>
is true to the beat of our knowledge <lb/>
P. A. <lb/>
Cashier. Cashier <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be-1 i <lb/>
A. Cox, <lb/>
R, <lb/>
R. J. F. Harrington, <lb/>
Notary Public. Directors <lb/>
fore me, this day of Sept., <lb/>
Subscribe Reflector <lb/>
vi it i <lb/>
sympathy trusting that when or, <lb/>
they can no follow the tis, asthma, croup, <lb/>
i c . h. end trial <lb/>
trails of tins life may they be by all <lb/>
reunited with their loved one on gists.<lb/>
SYRUP <lb/>
to punt food and LAW. <lb/>
or many Cough. and Bronchial Remedies, because It rids the <lb/>
. bowels No op. to <lb/>
or money Prepared by CO. CHICAGO. U. a. a. <lb/>
FOR SALE BY JNO L. 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, NOVEMBER I <lb/>
No. <lb/>
PIANO. <lb/>
SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY. <lb/>
But Who is to be the is the <lb/>
Everybody who into the <lb/>
music store of White <lb/>
sees a beautiful baby upright <lb/>
N, piano bearing the placard <lb/>
Piano is to be given <lb/>
by The Reflector as a Christmas <lb/>
That is a fast, the <lb/>
is going to be given away, <lb/>
but. who is to be the recipient of <lb/>
this handsome price puns is as <lb/>
much an uncertainly as the day <lb/>
the contest the first of <lb/>
October. Miss Mary Johnson <lb/>
started out in the lead with <lb/>
holds that position, <lb/>
with Lottie Blow a <lb/>
second- But others, as well as <lb/>
these, are at work, and there is <lb/>
no telling what surprises <lb/>
closing few weeks of the c <lb/>
will develop. of <lb/>
December will tell the story. <lb/>
From now until the close the <lb/>
list will be published more <lb/>
than that the <lb/>
friends of the candidates may <lb/>
keep in closer touch with their <lb/>
standing in the list. True all <lb/>
the votes are not published, <lb/>
of the candidates are hold- <lb/>
votes in reserve to come in <lb/>
before the close, but the list <lb/>
gives a idea of how they <lb/>
stand. The candidates and their <lb/>
friends should do their best work <lb/>
from now on. <lb/>
Of course the purpose of this <lb/>
contest is to get more subscriber <lb/>
to The Reflector, and if you <lb/>
want help a candidate win <lb/>
this piano you can vote for your <lb/>
choice by subscribing for The <lb/>
Reflector, or by paying up if you <lb/>
are already a subscriber. This <lb/>
must be done before noon on the <lb/>
24th day of December if you <lb/>
want the votes to count. It <lb/>
costs nothing to vote, as the <lb/>
paper gives full value for the <lb/>
price of subscription. Here is <lb/>
the standing of the votes <lb/>
Miss Mary Johnson <lb/>
Miss Lottie Blow <lb/>
Miss Lillie R. Tucker <lb/>
Miss Mavis B die Evans 4.865 <lb/>
Miss Beulah Mumford <lb/>
Miss Maud Mooring <lb/>
James Tingle <lb/>
School 1.900 <lb/>
Miss Lelia Stokes 1,600 <lb/>
Mrs. D. E. Nichols 1,270 <lb/>
Subscribe or pay your <lb/>
and vote for somebody. Do <lb/>
it now. <lb/>
Marriage License. <lb/>
of Deeds, W. M. <lb/>
Moore, has issued the following <lb/>
marriage since last re- <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
D. A. Jamie and Annie R. <lb/>
Whitfield. <lb/>
Thomas Beaman and M. Ellen <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
b. J. Pulley and Bessie H. <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
R. J. Tug well and Bettie <lb/>
Strickland. <lb/>
Butts and Sallie Money. <lb/>
Tripp and Martha <lb/>
green. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
James Jones and <lb/>
Dickerson. <lb/>
Ned Brady and Daisy Staton. <lb/>
Thomas Bryan and Nellie <lb/>
Turner. <lb/>
William Jones and Esther <lb/>
Adams. <lb/>
Walter Pitt and Julia Watson- <lb/>
Frank Langley and <lb/>
Nobles. <lb/>
Samuel Pitt and Mary <lb/>
Edmund Carr and Ella Tillery. <lb/>
Henry Smith and Pleasant <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
Henry Hill and Little. <lb/>
Ford and Mary Wooten. <lb/>
A Day of Memorial Baptist <lb/>
Church -Collection for Orphanage. <lb/>
All the services in Me <lb/>
Sunday were under <lb/>
the direction of Superintendent C. <lb/>
W. Wilson, of the Sunday school, <lb/>
and it proved a day of unusual <lb/>
interest to the large <lb/>
in attendance. The <lb/>
of Sunday school work was <lb/>
emphasized in all of the services, <lb/>
and a greater interest was <lb/>
that will result in <lb/>
much good. The Sunday school <lb/>
which met at recorded an <lb/>
attendance of <lb/>
At o'clock Rev. B. W. <lb/>
of Kinston, <lb/>
a large audience, his subject <lb/>
being Problem of the Big <lb/>
Mr. spoke of <lb/>
that period in the life en <lb/>
he is crossing from childhood <lb/>
to young large <lb/>
to be longer regarded as a child <lb/>
yet too small to be looked upon <lb/>
as a young with much <lb/>
interest pointed out the duties of <lb/>
the Sunday school especially the <lb/>
teacher, toward these big boys. <lb/>
He said that per cent, of the <lb/>
boys in this of life are <lb/>
lost to the Sunday school, and of <lb/>
the per cent, remaining <lb/>
per cent, become members the <lb/>
church, hence is seen the import- <lb/>
of doing something to hold <lb/>
the per cent, who are being <lb/>
lost to the Sunday school. <lb/>
suggestions were given by <lb/>
which this may be <lb/>
keeping in touch with the <lb/>
boy and knowing his life. <lb/>
by giving him something to do <lb/>
in his class room, and making <lb/>
j the Sunday school so interesting <lb/>
that it will attract him. Boys <lb/>
are naturally drawn where they <lb/>
find something doing, and he <lb/>
sail he knew of no instance <lb/>
where a boy had attended Sun- <lb/>
day school regularly for twenty <lb/>
years without becoming a <lb/>
of the church. <lb/>
At the evening there <lb/>
were three interesting Sunday <lb/>
school addresses. Superintendent <lb/>
Wilson spoke on Duties to <lb/>
the Mr. J. W. Bryan <lb/>
on Duties to the Young <lb/>
and Prof. W. H. <lb/>
on Duties to <lb/>
The choir gave excellent music <lb/>
at each of the services, and the <lb/>
splendid solos by Mr. M. <lb/>
Davis, of Beaufort, were greatly <lb/>
enjoyed. A voice superior to <lb/>
to Mr, Davis, is seldom heard <lb/>
and he sings with much sweet- <lb/>
Announcement was made be- <lb/>
fore the conclusion of the morn- <lb/>
service that no service would <lb/>
be held on Thanksgiving day <lb/>
and that the church might make <lb/>
a Thanksgiving donation to the <lb/>
orphanage a collection was taken <lb/>
for that purpose, amounting to <lb/>
about <lb/>
SOUTHERN COM. CONGRESS. <lb/>
To be Held in City Dec <lb/>
6th and <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
CORN YIELD. <lb/>
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL <lb/>
of in Caro- <lb/>
Washington. Nov. 19.- N. C, <lb/>
Hon. A. Fox, who has just W. O. Stone came near being <lb/>
returned to Washington alter crushed to death by a pound <lb/>
completing his trip of the country bed which to ring. <lb/>
j in the interest of the National The be. on a twelve foot <lb/>
Rivers and Harbors Congress pole and fell, her on the <lb/>
I found the most remark right side of cutting a <lb/>
ably interest, at a of to the skull an at the same <lb/>
of cities throughout the time bruising her shoulder. She <lb/>
Coast, in the Southern was knocked senseless. is <lb/>
rial Congress movement. remarkably well, <lb/>
large number of prominent men,; N. C, Nov, <lb/>
whom I had no idea knew of the; s <lb/>
commend as one of of church, <lb/>
the finest steps ever taken for i by j H <lb/>
the advancement of any secretary of the National <lb/>
of the United States, many Association of Chris. <lb/>
log seriously considered the i um of 670.70 <lb/>
the same step for th Pacific wag cash <lb/>
Coast States. It would in Baldwin, <lb/>
surprise me at all to see Besides this <lb/>
i Yield of Bushels Per Visitors Here and People <lb/>
, Created Comment. Travel. <lb/>
I Mr. J. F. d. <lb/>
yield of bushes of com R. C. White went to Norfolk <lb/>
on one acre has a great <lb/>
of comment, as will be <lb/>
.,,. . Besides this the <lb/>
Trans Mountain Commercial of the Atlantic <lb/>
Congress organized in <lb/>
near future, with the same end <lb/>
in co operative ad- <lb/>
of the Rocky <lb/>
and Pacific Coast States <lb/>
The practical lines on which the <lb/>
Southern Commercial Congress <lb/>
is being carried out appeal to me <lb/>
most strongly. It is an <lb/>
for the purpose of <lb/>
all other organizations and <lb/>
not for the purpose of <lb/>
in any way with any endeavor <lb/>
made for any one place. I ex- <lb/>
to attend all its sessions this <lb/>
year. <lb/>
All in attendant upon the <lb/>
Southern Commercial Congress <lb/>
which is to convene here Dec. <lb/>
6th and 7th, will be welcomed as <lb/>
part of the National Rivers and <lb/>
Harbors Congress, meeting <lb/>
the Willard-place <lb/>
December and Opening <lb/>
by President Taft. <lb/>
PITT BOYS WIN SUCCESS. <lb/>
Some Will Soon Move <lb/>
Into Their New Building <lb/>
Wherever The Reflector, man <lb/>
strikes any of our home boys <lb/>
who have cast their lot in other <lb/>
places, it is always a pleasure to <lb/>
find them getting along well and <lb/>
making success of their business. <lb/>
While in Norfolk Friday we took <lb/>
enough time off from the <lb/>
ties to look over the new building <lb/>
being erected by Whichard Bros. <lb/>
Co., wholesale dry goods and <lb/>
notion dealers there. This firm <lb/>
has had such a successful career <lb/>
that though they have moved <lb/>
once to larger quarters, it was <lb/>
not long before they found them- <lb/>
again cramped for room to <lb/>
accommodate their growing <lb/>
business. To provide for this <lb/>
they decided to erect a modern <lb/>
building, and for this purpose <lb/>
secured a desirable lot on Ran- <lb/>
street near the Atlantic <lb/>
hotel. They now have nearly <lb/>
and <lb/>
the society, of the <lb/>
institution, between <lb/>
one hundred <lb/>
dollars. <lb/>
By falling of heavy roof <lb/>
girder a at a large fertilizer <lb/>
being built in Wilson, Mon- <lb/>
day afternoon, a colored man <lb/>
was instantly killed and several <lb/>
other laborers injured. <lb/>
Wadesboro, N. C, Nov. 22.- <lb/>
Telephonic advices received here <lb/>
Saturday night told of the sud- <lb/>
den of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
James K. at their home <lb/>
north of Marshville. just over <lb/>
the line in Union county. Death <lb/>
both of these old people <lb/>
within the hour without previous <lb/>
illness and was caused by heart <lb/>
failure. They were settlers, <lb/>
well known and honored, both <lb/>
were over seventy years of age. <lb/>
Three daughters and one son <lb/>
survive. The funeral services <lb/>
were held yesterday. <lb/>
Wilmington. N. C. Nov. 22.- <lb/>
Sheriff A. S. Richardson, of Co- <lb/>
county, this State, was <lb/>
twice shot and severely hut not <lb/>
fatally wounded while engaged <lb/>
with a posse in effecting the <lb/>
capture of a white man named <lb/>
charged with murder, in <lb/>
a swamp near Causey, S. C, <lb/>
yesterday. had fortified <lb/>
himself in a camp in the swamp, <lb/>
where he had been in hiding <lb/>
since the murder, two weeks <lb/>
ago, and as the d <lb/>
fired ambush with a shot <lb/>
gun. It was while returning the <lb/>
fire that Sheriff Richardson was <lb/>
wounded, having finally <lb/>
surrendered under threat of the <lb/>
posse to set fire to the swamp <lb/>
and kill him on sight when he <lb/>
came out of his hiding. The <lb/>
prisoner was landed in jail at <lb/>
Whiteville, N. C, today. <lb/>
A frightful tragedy <lb/>
Friday evening near <lb/>
that has cast a gloom over that <lb/>
the following letter to T. B. <lb/>
Son from Mr. R H. <lb/>
Stockton, presented by th <lb/>
I Majestic Manufacturing Com- <lb/>
of St. <lb/>
St. Louis, Nov. 1909. <lb/>
T. H. Son. Raleigh.<lb/>
ed in your evening paper the <lb/>
following <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 1909. <lb/>
winner in the corn grow- <lb/>
contest in this country was <lb/>
announced today by Stat <lb/>
Commissioner of Agriculture, <lb/>
Mr. Graham, as Mr. J. F. Batts. <lb/>
who had grown bushels on <lb/>
The writer has been Interested <lb/>
in matters of this kind, and <lb/>
you not know that the <lb/>
exploitation of corn growing ha.- <lb/>
been progressing very rapidly in <lb/>
the west and for two <lb/>
Omaha has hid a corn <lb/>
where in <lb/>
has been given, but such re- <lb/>
cord of production has ever been <lb/>
shown. The writer also <lb/>
offered a premium there for <lb/>
the last two years. Last year <lb/>
the premium was not worded <lb/>
correctly and a seed man of <lb/>
Connecticut captured it, but with <lb/>
a great deal less number of <lb/>
bushels than this. <lb/>
Will you kindly advise what <lb/>
security was thrown around this <lb/>
measurement and inspection, <lb/>
obliging. Yours truly, <lb/>
R H. Stockton. <lb/>
For the benefit of those who, <lb/>
like Mr. Stockton, want to be <lb/>
the proof Mr. <lb/>
remarkable yield the facts in <lb/>
the matter have been fully <lb/>
investigated, and they bear out <lb/>
the claim that has been made. <lb/>
Mr. Batts, whose <lb/>
address is Garner, in a written <lb/>
certificate which he filed with a <lb/>
committee consisting of Com- <lb/>
missioner of Agriculture W. A. <lb/>
Graham, Col. F. A. Olds and <lb/>
T. B. Parker, says that during <lb/>
the year 1909 he grew on out. <lb/>
M. Jones went to <lb/>
C. M. to Ayden <lb/>
today. <lb/>
J. went to Norfolk <lb/>
g.- <lb/>
J. IT. Keel in<lb/>
C, Warren went to <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Harrington spent Sunday <lb/>
in Wellington. <lb/>
R. i . Harrington spent Sunday <lb/>
in i d <lb/>
D J. , returned <lb/>
fr mi Norfolk. <lb/>
W. B. Green, of Washington, <lb/>
Hi . here. <lb/>
i kins spent Saturday <lb/>
in returning Sun- <lb/>
day <lb/>
A Payne left Sunday <lb/>
for Henderson to spend <lb/>
Thanksgiving week. <lb/>
j Dr. and Mrs. M. I. Fleming, <lb/>
Hamilton, in Sunday <lb/>
evening to visit relatives. <lb/>
K. C. route agent of <lb/>
the Southern Express <lb/>
for this division, was here today. <lb/>
Rev. and Mrs. B. W. <lb/>
of Kinston, spent Sunday here <lb/>
with Mr. and Mrs. D. J- Which- <lb/>
ard. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Mr-ore <lb/>
went to Hamilton to <lb/>
visit relatives and returned Sun- <lb/>
day evening, <lb/>
N. W- Outlaw, formerly of <lb/>
Goldsboro, has arrived to open <lb/>
law here. See card on <lb/>
second page, <lb/>
B. Taylor and <lb/>
Charlie , of Washing- <lb/>
ton City, the of Mrs. <lb/>
W. H- Long. <lb/>
Miss Ida of Sara- <lb/>
toga, who has been visiting Miss <lb/>
Leonard Wilson, returned <lb/>
Friday night. <lb/>
Postmaster R. C. Flanagan <lb/>
Awarding of Gold. <lb/>
Over fifteen hundred persons <lb/>
witnessed the awarding of the <lb/>
gold at the store of C. T. Mun- <lb/>
ford last Saturday afternoon at <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
Mrs. Ernest hold <lb/>
coupon number won the <lb/>
first prize of in <lb/>
The second prize in gold <lb/>
was won by J. T. Moseley who <lb/>
held number and <lb/>
Stocks drew third prize in <lb/>
gold on coupon number <lb/>
Little Miss Bertie Warren was <lb/>
blind folded and drew the lucky <lb/>
coupons. <lb/>
Mr. is tendered our <lb/>
hearty congratulations on the <lb/>
of this sale. <lb/>
.-. .- mat a .- <lb/>
completed a splendid building community. Mr. Shade <lb/>
fast, four stories and Clark, a prosperous farmer living <lb/>
basement, and expect to move near there, had out in his <lb/>
intuit about the middle of field to pick some cotton <lb/>
F. who know them, had been Ult over from the <lb/>
and that includes nearly every <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina retail <lb/>
merchant, will be glad to know <lb/>
that these <lb/>
are meeting success. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector <lb/>
Barber Draw. Line on Long Faces <lb/>
A Morven barber <lb/>
and that if the men, <lb/>
who sold cotton for ten cents <lb/>
last spring, allow their faces to <lb/>
grow much longer, he will charge <lb/>
them fifteen cents per shave. <lb/>
He declares that he cannot live <lb/>
and shave these men at the <lb/>
regular price of ten cents. <lb/>
Wadesboro <lb/>
Bring your furs to <lb/>
Schultz for high prices. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
last picking and in the meantime <lb/>
leaving his two children, <lb/>
and years old respectively, <lb/>
alone in the house. In some <lb/>
known way the children pulled <lb/>
some burning wood from the <lb/>
fireplace which ignited the car- <lb/>
pet and in a few moments the <lb/>
entire house was in flames. Mr. <lb/>
Clark seeing the fire rushed to <lb/>
the house, but before he could <lb/>
reach it the roof fell in and both <lb/>
of the children were caught in <lb/>
the ruins and burned to death. <lb/>
Mr. Clark and family are pros <lb/>
over their loss, and the <lb/>
sympathy of the entire <lb/>
is extended them in their <lb/>
M. i bereavement.-New Bern J i <lb/>
year . , . , , <lb/>
acre of land in Wake county went lo Raleigh Sunday to see <lb/>
bushels of corn; that broth, r, E. G. Flanagan, who <lb/>
is in a hospital there. <lb/>
Miss Lillian Burch. who came <lb/>
home to spend two days, left <lb/>
Sunday evening to return to her <lb/>
school near Washington, <lb/>
J. B. Higgs returned today <lb/>
from Norfolk where he had been <lb/>
attending the waterways con- <lb/>
and Taft celebration. <lb/>
Representative M. L. Davis, of <lb/>
Beaufort, who has been spend- <lb/>
a few days with his sister, <lb/>
Mrs- R. L. Humber, left today. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Hearne, of Tarboro <lb/>
home trim a visit <lb/>
Kinston spent Saturday aft <lb/>
j noon and night here with her t <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Starke- <lb/>
measured the land in the <lb/>
presence of J P. Edmundson <lb/>
and J- J. Jordan, two disinterest- <lb/>
ed freeholders, who are not re- <lb/>
lated to the Batts; that he <lb/>
gathered and measured the corn <lb/>
in their presence. The land <lb/>
was square tract <lb/>
seventy yards on every <lb/>
Mr. Batts certified to the above <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Death of a Child. <lb/>
On Saturday evening the in- <lb/>
son, aged six weeks, of Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. E. G. Flanagan, died <lb/>
at their home on Evans street. <lb/>
The little one hid been sick <lb/>
through most of its brief life, <lb/>
and its death was not <lb/>
ed. A sad incident connected <lb/>
Card of Thanks. <lb/>
cu. an We take this means of <lb/>
with the death of this child is the people of <lb/>
that the father, who was so bad- vicinity tor their <lb/>
injured in the automobile consideration during <lb/>
two weeks ago. is <lb/>
hospital in Raleigh and could sympathy <lb/>
not be at home when his little membered and <lb/>
lone passed away. <lb/>
The funeral took place at <lb/>
o'clock Sunday afternoon in <lb/>
Cherry Hill cemetery, the <lb/>
vice being conducted by Rev. D. <lb/>
W. Arnold. <lb/>
Mr. and <lb/>
Prof. <lb/>
In <lb/>
North Cart <lb/>
Arnold Th . <lb/>
were Me-., <lb/>
War ,. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
. lull . <lb/>
department <lb/>
In Charge of Wm. G. MORRIS <lb/>
Authored Agent The Eastern Winterville and Vicinity- Advertising Rates on Application f <lb/>
. , . . ,,,., Then see us the sham of the Happy Hunting <lb/>
u. AW Ange Co. love forever i <lb/>
. . x service <lb/>
stimulate the TORPID <lb/>
the digestive organ, <lb/>
regulate the bowels, and arc <lb/>
as an <lb/>
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, <lb/>
la malarial districts their <lb/>
arc widely recognized. a the <lb/>
peculiar properties In treeing <lb/>
the system from that poison, <lb/>
coated. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
Own <lb/>
3rd. That a <lb/>
these <lb/>
Baptism was administered to two Resolutions be spread upon our <lb/>
. r . i bereaved family and a copy be <lb/>
; Suit W-have just received sent The Reflector for <lb/>
,  ,, ad can supply your lion. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
G. A. Kittrell, Com. <lb/>
J. P. Harrington, <lb/>
S. W. Clark, of came <lb/>
Saturday <lb/>
and Sunday at Chocowinity visit <lb/>
C Z, to enter W. K- <lb/>
. m o M. G. Bryan returned from <lb/>
at the Wednesday. <lb/>
closed Sunday O. L. and Z. T. <lb/>
of Greenville, wore in town <lb/>
WHO WILL GET THE PIANO. <lb/>
i . I . A <lb/>
in. <lb/>
I Harbor Co. <lb/>
, e and mother, of Baptist, <lb/>
j- Sf Si- . <lb/>
in. y . Miss Laura Smith and mother <lb/>
. e In <lb/>
For good and comfortable ,. from the country, were in town <lb/>
ii .,;., a good, and all <lb/>
call or write a. u. <lb/>
Cox <lb/>
as a preacher. <lb/>
have the d to learn that <lb/>
will preach on Tuesday night, <lb/>
A new lot of lamps just <lb/>
Barb Co <lb/>
The Thanksgiving service <lb/>
in <lb/>
Kittrell, received. Dice <lb/>
day herewith hi, l goods. <lb/>
o. <lb/>
d. k the right price. <lb/>
J of den, spit<lb/>
. .-.-. machines, <lb/>
i-r-. a, on <lb/>
u-. <lb/>
p II <lb/>
. H are g a nice line <lb/>
., and Caskets. Prices are <lb/>
and can nice <lb/>
service. A. . Co. <lb/>
Kittrell <lb/>
and Julia Smith, from the <lb/>
country, <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
i a large lot <lb/>
for winter <lb/>
We are Thursday. <lb/>
II, Q. Bryan went to Green- <lb/>
ville Thursday. <lb/>
a number of traveling <lb/>
men were in our town Thursday. <lb/>
Mrs. J. H. C. Dixon went to <lb/>
Thursday, and returned. <lb/>
Mi-s Ethel Carroll, who is <lb/>
at came in i <lb/>
lit List Grow, and Help <lb/>
Witt Votes. <lb/>
Today the of <lb/>
another week in The Reflector <lb/>
piano contest, and the list pub- <lb/>
below what the <lb/>
candidates, and their friends <lb/>
have been doing. Miss Mary <lb/>
Johnson, who started out with <lb/>
a good still this <lb/>
with Miss Lottie Blow not <lb/>
far behind in second place. The <lb/>
vote of other candidates also <lb/>
climbs higher each week. <lb/>
There are not many more <lb/>
weeks in which to work, as the <lb/>
contest will end Dec. 24th at <lb/>
noon, and one can tell what <lb/>
the closing weeks will <lb/>
The vote is not so high but what <lb/>
some candidate lower down in <lb/>
the column, or even a new one, <lb/>
catch up wish the lead. <lb/>
If not, and you e to own <lb/>
soon, you owe it o yourself to ex- <lb/>
the display <lb/>
shown at the White <lb/>
A really <lb/>
to a large city. <lb/>
In a glance will inspect a <lb/>
line of pianos not alone stand <lb/>
in character of tot e, and <lb/>
general in a class to <lb/>
itself, but you I m et with prices <lb/>
that stand here and <lb/>
incomparable an-where. Eight <lb/>
different makes t select from, none <lb/>
those cheap v c department <lb/>
store stencils, but each one stand- <lb/>
ard, of acknowledged fame and <lb/>
reputation in the trade. Four <lb/>
player-pianos of be known <lb/>
makes. <lb/>
We will take your piano in <lb/>
exchange for one of self play- <lb/>
We also carry the <lb/>
ORGAN, the standard of the world. <lb/>
Old organs and pianos taken in ex- <lb/>
change, terms to s lit your <lb/>
When in Greenville visit our <lb/>
ware room. <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Next door to Carr Atkins Hardware Co. store. <lb/>
yesterday afternoon to their <lb/>
the night at her home near here. <lb/>
Rev, T. H. King leaves here <lb/>
today for den <lb/>
Cattle to <lb/>
R. D. Co. <lb/>
are glad to announce that <lb/>
Carlyle, Wake Forest <lb/>
will lecture in the <lb/>
school auditorium Monday night, <lb/>
Nov. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. made <lb/>
a shipment of a solid car of Pitt <lb/>
desk today. The <lb/>
REPORT Of THE CONDITION OP <lb/>
THE BANK OF GRIFTON <lb/>
AT GRIFTON, N. C. <lb/>
In the State cf Carolina, at the close of business, Sett. 1st, 1909 <lb/>
, best, and get friends to <lb/>
Quite a number of our help them, from now until the <lb/>
attended inauguration in contest closes. Every day's <lb/>
Greenville Friday. will count and more <lb/>
Mrs. H. T. who you the your <lb/>
been visiting relatives and; winning the beautiful <lb/>
friends in Kinston, returned baby Boudoir piano which <lb/>
home Sunday. ; can De at the music room <lb/>
Miss Lucy Manning, of Bethel,; of It is worth <lb/>
came in Friday night to spend working working hard, <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. <lb/>
M. G. Bryan. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and Discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured 26.67 <lb/>
Banking Fur- <lb/>
Fixtures 1,199.52 <lb/>
Due from Banks <lb/>
and Bankers 2.611.04 <lb/>
Cash items 307.10 <lb/>
Silver coin, <lb/>
minor coin cur. 411.82 <lb/>
notes <lb/>
other U. S. notes 035.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Dr. M. M. Sauls and daughter, <lb/>
services <lb/>
. , ; r ,.,. , Kr, Is. Si. rapidly. Better place your or- <lb/>
A Q Cox <lb/>
Winterville. <lb/>
manufactured Cox In Will <lb/>
church next Sunday. <lb/>
Oysters We have the-m Fri- <lb/>
day and Saturday nights. <lb/>
R, D. Co. <lb/>
Several Masons attended the <lb/>
funeral services at Greenville <lb/>
We have just received a full <lb/>
cay and Sunday at . <lb/>
dried fruit a <lb/>
Of kinds and butter and A. W. Co. <lb/>
Mrs. J. O. Bobbitt and <lb/>
me . ,,, , . , l <lb/>
ii ; .,,.,,; Miss Blanch of Sh <lb/>
continually increasing , . . <lb/>
for it is an instrument of merit <lb/>
and value, possessing volume <lb/>
and tone equal to the best made. <lb/>
Who is to win this <lb/>
Company are <lb/>
cheap; comfortable, neat and <lb/>
durable, terms are liberal. <lb/>
In the market come to see <lb/>
us, we nave the desk for <lb/>
Miss Cox spent i <lb/>
sec A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Mamie Chapman spent <lb/>
-t her home. <lb/>
We give you a bargain in <lb/>
nice clothing. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
Rosa Bell Taylor spent <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday with Miss <lb/>
Cooking and -heating <lb/>
and just received. All <lb/>
of best material and up-to-date. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
M. G. Bi ya left here Monday <lb/>
for Wilmington to attend the <lb/>
celebration. <lb/>
The County School Desks <lb/>
die desks you. Thy are <lb/>
cheap, and comfortable. <lb/>
.- right and workmanship <lb/>
guaranteed. A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
Miss Louise Satterthwaite, <lb/>
Who has sick at <lb/>
her home, returned Monday to <lb/>
resume hi r i in V,. II. S. <lb/>
C re d, a nice lot of <lb/>
I . e d . did ens shoes. <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital Stock <lb/>
Surplus fund 500.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, <lb/>
less cur. ex. tax's pd <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
Time certificate <lb/>
Deposit <lb/>
Deposit subjects <lb/>
to check <lb/>
Cashier's Checks <lb/>
outstanding <lb/>
Total <lb/>
4,000.00 <lb/>
950.00 <lb/>
6.033.36 <lb/>
55.17 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I. T. Gardner, Cashier of the above-named bank, do sol- <lb/>
swear that the sieve statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
knowledge and belief. G. T. GARDNER, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 10th day of <lb/>
1909. R. F. JENKINS, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
John Z. Brooks, <lb/>
C. J. Tucker. <lb/>
W. W. Dawson, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
I am representing oldest <lb/>
and Life and Fire- <lb/>
insurance companies in the world. <lb/>
in Bank building. <lb/>
J. S. Ross, N. C. <lb/>
A nice lot of dry goods and <lb/>
notions just in. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Stray taken and <lb/>
white spotted bull, about four <lb/>
years old; mark under bit in <lb/>
both ears. Owner can get same <lb/>
by paying damage and other <lb/>
cost. This October 1909. <lb/>
J. R <lb/>
Winterville, N. C. <lb/>
Mill for establish- <lb/>
known as the <lb/>
Milling and is now <lb/>
for isle. It consists of the fol- <lb/>
One wheat mill, one <lb/>
corn mill, one work shop with <lb/>
boring machine, band saw, plain- <lb/>
saw and a blacksmith <lb/>
shop. For further information <lb/>
apply to W. B. Smith, Winter <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Tl highest price paid for <lb/>
eggs, at A. <lb/>
Turkeys a specif. <lb/>
spent last night with. is the question. <lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Boushall. It M upon who has the <lb/>
turkeys wanted. votes fa by noon Christmas <lb/>
prices paid. A. W. Ange Co. j eye The way vote pay <lb/>
We have just received a subscription to The <lb/>
lot of cloaks, give us a call. A. j or to subsCribe if you are <lb/>
W. Ange A- O. not taking the paper, or <lb/>
M. B. Bryan, of I else to do so. Sub- <lb/>
came in last night to spend a. paid in advance count <lb/>
few days with his parents, Mr. twice as many votes as <lb/>
and Mrs. M- up arrears. Come on and get a <lb/>
The assistant Bank subscription receipt and vote for <lb/>
was in our town yesterday. choice. <lb/>
reports that everything is in ex <lb/>
REPORT F THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co.,. <lb/>
AT BETHEL, N. C. <lb/>
At the of business, Sept., 1st, 1909. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from and <lb/>
condition. <lb/>
J Gold and silver incl d g <lb/>
If not convenient., <lb/>
. ,. minor coin currency <lb/>
to come to the office send it by <lb/>
. Barber A <lb/>
of G through the holidays. <lb/>
I ;. , week. <lb/>
C lied <lb/>
r ed h me. <lb/>
A t mi for sale from <lb/>
US A, Ange ft Co. <lb/>
s sister, Mrs. J. <lb/>
k. Mrs. <lb/>
when <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF <lb/>
the Great Spirit <lb/>
to visit the home of the; <lb/>
., r of our brothers. W. A. <lb/>
J. L. and John Nobles and take <lb/>
from them their loving brother. <lb/>
mail and tell us who to cast your <lb/>
Friday night at o'clock, the for -he votes will be <lb/>
Vance Literary Society and the j d you <lb/>
Literary Society j Hundreds of people ought to <lb/>
met in joint session in the their subscription to The <lb/>
Literary Society hall. The P. A. deflector in the next five weeks, <lb/>
L. S. furnished the music and and many new should be <lb/>
the V. L. S-gave a debate. subscription list. <lb/>
After the debate an j Every day as the end of <lb/>
solo, by Miss Cox. contest draws near it <lb/>
It is very seldom we have such a will in interest. Do <lb/>
treat as this; it was a great the opportunity pass, to <lb/>
and a be present, j Mp somebody win this beautiful <lb/>
Our people are continuing It costs nothing what- <lb/>
preparations the vote you only have to <lb/>
elation which convenes with yoUr The <lb/>
Baptist church here Nov. Reflector, or subscribe f or it, and <lb/>
17th and We are expect-1 paper gives you full value <lb/>
one of the greatest religious for your money, <lb/>
gatherings that Winterville has Here is the the vote Stands <lb/>
yet Witnessed, Be sure to come today as far as the candidates <lb/>
and enjoy the many good turned them in. <lb/>
are in Johnson <lb/>
G. Tucker bought a nice piano Mies Lottie <lb/>
a few days ago. Miss R. Tucker <lb/>
Remember that there will be a Mavis B He Evans <lb/>
service in the <lb/>
Baptist church at o'clock a. m. Miss Maud Mooring 3.485 <lb/>
M. Morris w turned homo with Xii . <lb/>
a nice wild turkey, which he 1.900 <lb/>
iii Craven County, a few e. Nichols 1.270 <lb/>
days ago. Johnson <lb/>
Mrs. Mary Smith spent Thurs- <lb/>
day with Mrs. G. Tucker, <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital Stock 0,000.00 <lb/>
fund 4.500100 <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
expenses and taxes pd <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
Time certificates of 8,529.70 <lb/>
Deposits sub to check 21,446.38 , <lb/>
Reserve for interest <lb/>
and taxes 250.00<lb/>
188.44 <lb/>
1,276.00 <lb/>
2,991.90 <lb/>
1,917.92 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, W. II. Cashier of the above-named bank, do sol- <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
W. H. Cashier. <lb/>
knowledge and belief. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 11th day of Sept., <lb/>
S. T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
Staton, <lb/>
S. M. Jones. <lb/>
M. O. Blount, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
AT WINTERVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business, Sept. 1909. <lb/>
Resources I Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock 15,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund 650.00 <lb/>
Hassell, of Wiley Nobles, therefore be it <lb/>
R .-. <lb/>
; will pr- at Han <lb/>
church third Sunday 1st, That we the members of <lb/>
in November, and Saturday I Tribe No No. 1.0. <lb/>
before. Eider Hassell is one of R <lb/>
North Carolina's leading <lb/>
well as an excellent <lb/>
p her. <lb/>
A new let of dry goods and <lb/>
B a of kinds just received <lb/>
at Harrington, Barber i Co. <lb/>
Jo.- left here Monday for <lb/>
Greenville, where he will work <lb/>
with Charles West. <lb/>
Mrs. A. G. Cox, who has been <lb/>
a few day, doesn't <lb/>
seem any better. <lb/>
Force into <lb/>
Wm. Oak. Okla . <lb/>
exile from home. Mountain <lb/>
M. bow in humble submission <lb/>
the will of the Great Spirit tor two years. six <lb/>
and rely upon Him alone who can <lb/>
comfort. write, .-id <lb/>
m, . a . . I t kin l; x Lot let am us <lb/>
2nd. That We extend to , .,. from <lb/>
bereaved family our heartfelt, <lb/>
sympathy trusting that when or. <lb/>
can no follow the, tis. <lb/>
., , . . , k c and trial <lb/>
trails Of life may they be free, guaranteed by all <lb/>
reunited with their loved one on <lb/>
A Scalded Shrieks. <lb/>
Mr <lb/>
Taylor Neb . K. i, <lb/>
when nil th would die, H i <lb/>
cured him. <lb/>
bu cuts, corns, <lb/>
Cures in. r <lb/>
boils, akin chap- <lb/>
hands. K on rout piles. at <lb/>
ail , store. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Demand loans <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Silver coin, including <lb/>
minor currency <lb/>
Nat bank and other <lb/>
U. S. not. <lb/>
Total <lb/>
1.173.53 Undivided less <lb/>
250.00 i expenses and taxes pd <lb/>
Bills payable <lb/>
189.93 Time of deposit <lb/>
Deposits subject to <lb/>
Total <lb/>
432.00 <lb/>
5,000.00 <lb/>
202.20 <lb/>
3,180.65 <lb/>
114,414.01 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Pitt County, <lb/>
We, J. Green, Cashier and F. A. Asst Cashier <lb/>
of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above state- <lb/>
is true to the lest of our knowledge <lb/>
P. A. EDMONDSON, <lb/>
Asst. Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 10th day of Sept., <lb/>
1909. R, H <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
K. GREEN, <lb/>
Cashier <lb/>
A. Cox, <lb/>
R. II. <lb/>
F, Harrington, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
Subscribe u <lb/>
drug-<lb/>
. <lb/>
CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOD AND DRUGS LAW. <lb/>
An many Cough. Bronchial Remedies. It rids <lb/>
by acting a. a cathartic on the bowels. No opiates. o <lb/>
or money refunded. Prepared by MEDICINE CO. U. S. A. <lb/>
FOR SALE BY JNO L. 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, NOVEMBER <lb/>
No. 4-7 <lb/>
PIANO. <lb/>
SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY. <lb/>
SOUTHERN COM. CONGRESS. <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
CORN YIELD. <lb/>
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL <lb/>
But ft is to b the Winner is <lb/>
Question. <lb/>
Everybody who into the <lb/>
music store of White <lb/>
sees a beautiful baby upright <lb/>
Boudoir piano bearing the placard <lb/>
Piano is to be given a <lb/>
by The Reflector as a <lb/>
That is a fact, the <lb/>
piano is to be given away, <lb/>
but who is to be the recipient <lb/>
this handsome piano is as <lb/>
much an as th-.- day <lb/>
the contest began the first of <lb/>
October. Miss Mary Johnson <lb/>
started out in the lead with <lb/>
votes, and Still holds that position, <lb/>
with Mis Lottie Blow a <lb/>
second- But others, as well <lb/>
these, are at work, and there is <lb/>
no what the <lb/>
closing few weeks of the contest <lb/>
will The of <lb/>
December will tell the story. <lb/>
now until the close the <lb/>
list will be published more <lb/>
than that the <lb/>
friends of the candidates may <lb/>
keep in closer touch with their <lb/>
standing in the list. True all <lb/>
the votes are not published, cs <lb/>
some of the candidates are hold- <lb/>
votes in reserve to come in <lb/>
before the close, but the list <lb/>
gives a general idea of how they <lb/>
stand. The candidates and their <lb/>
friends should do their best work <lb/>
from now on. <lb/>
Of course the of this <lb/>
contest is to get more subscribers <lb/>
to The and if you <lb/>
want help a candidate win <lb/>
this piano you can vote for your <lb/>
choice by subscribing for The <lb/>
Reflector, or by paying if you <lb/>
are already a subscriber. This <lb/>
be done before noon on the <lb/>
24th day of December if you <lb/>
want the votes to count. It <lb/>
costs nothing to vote, as the <lb/>
paper gives full value for the <lb/>
price of subscription. Here is <lb/>
the standing of the votes <lb/>
Miss Mary Johnson <lb/>
Miss Blow 21.825 <lb/>
Miss Lillie R. Tucker <lb/>
Miss Mavis B die Evans <lb/>
Miss Beulah Mumford <lb/>
Miss Maud Mooring <lb/>
James Tingle <lb/>
School <lb/>
Miss Lelia Stokes <lb/>
Mrs. D. E. Nichols <lb/>
Subscribe or pay your <lb/>
and vote for somebody. Do <lb/>
it now. <lb/>
., Memorial T. be Held in Walton Dee l-W- . W <lb/>
for Orphanage. 6th and 7th. ., , , J <lb/>
All the services in Washington. Nov. 19.-. N. C. I Mr. J. P. <lb/>
ah services who has Just W. O. Stone came near of bushes of <lb/>
Sunday crushed to death by a pound acre has crated a great <lb/>
the direction of Superintendent C. f trip of the country bell which she attempted to ring, of comment, as be seer <lb/>
W. Wilson, of the Sunday in fl interest of the National It <lb/>
and it proved a day of unusual <lb/>
interest to the large <lb/>
he be., on a twelve foot by the following letter to T. H. <lb/>
Rivers and Harbors Congress her on the Son from Mr. R H <lb/>
found the most remark- right side th.-head, cutting a Stockton, presented by th- <lb/>
interest, at a number of I gash to the skull an at same Majestic Manufacturing Com <lb/>
puny, of St. <lb/>
St. Nov. 1909. <lb/>
in attendance. The .,., <lb/>
of Sunday school work was cities throughout the Pacific time bruising shoulder. She <lb/>
emphasized in all of the services, Coast, in the Southern j was knocked is <lb/>
Congress movement. remarkably well, <lb/>
large number of prominent men, I N. C, <lb/>
whom I had no idea knew of the <lb/>
movement, commend it as one of Christian <lb/>
1,900 <lb/>
1,600 <lb/>
1,270 <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
of Deeds, W. M. <lb/>
Moore, has issued the following <lb/>
marriage licenses since last re- <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
D. A. Jamie and Annie R. <lb/>
Whitfield. <lb/>
Thomas Beaman and M. Ellen <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
B. J. Pulley and Bessie H. <lb/>
Moore- . <lb/>
R. J. Tug well and Bettie <lb/>
Strickland. <lb/>
Butts and Sallie Money. <lb/>
Bruce Tripp and Martha <lb/>
green. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
James Jones and <lb/>
Dickerson. <lb/>
Ned Brady and Daisy Staton. <lb/>
Thomas Bryan and Nellie <lb/>
Turner. <lb/>
William and Esther <lb/>
Adams. <lb/>
Walter Pitt and Julia Watson- <lb/>
Frank Langley and <lb/>
Nobles. <lb/>
Samuel Pitt and Mary <lb/>
mM <lb/>
Edmund Carr and Ella Tillery. <lb/>
Henry Smith and Pleasant <lb/>
Smith. . <lb/>
Henry Hill and Little. <lb/>
Henry Ford and Mary Wooten. <lb/>
and a greater interest was <lb/>
that will result in <lb/>
much good. The Sunday school <lb/>
which met at recorded an <lb/>
attendance of <lb/>
At o'clock Rev. B. W. <lb/>
of Kinston, addressed <lb/>
a large audience, his subject <lb/>
being Problem of the Big <lb/>
Mr. spoke of <lb/>
that period in the when <lb/>
he is crossing from childhood <lb/>
to young too large <lb/>
to be longer regarded as a child <lb/>
yet too small to be looked upon <lb/>
as a young with much <lb/>
interest pointed out the duties of <lb/>
the Sunday school especially the <lb/>
teacher, toward these big boys. <lb/>
He said that per cent, of the <lb/>
boys in this of life are <lb/>
lost to the Sunday school, and of <lb/>
the per cent, remaining <lb/>
per cent, become members the <lb/>
church, hence is seen the <lb/>
of doing something to hold <lb/>
the per cent, who are being <lb/>
lost to the Sunday school. <lb/>
suggestions were given by <lb/>
which this be <lb/>
keeping in touch with the <lb/>
boy knowing his life, <lb/>
by giving him something to do <lb/>
in his class room, and making <lb/>
the Sunday so interesting <lb/>
that it will attract him. Boys <lb/>
are naturally drawn where they <lb/>
find something doing, and he <lb/>
sail he Knew of no instance <lb/>
where a toy had attended Sun- <lb/>
day school regularly for twenty <lb/>
years without becoming a <lb/>
of the church. <lb/>
At the evening service there <lb/>
were three interesting Sunday <lb/>
school addresses. Superintendent <lb/>
Wilson spoke on Duties to <lb/>
the Mr. J. W. Bryan <lb/>
on Duties to the Young <lb/>
and Prof. W. H. <lb/>
on Duties to <lb/>
The choir gave excellent music <lb/>
at each of the services, and the <lb/>
splendid solos by Mr. M. Leslie <lb/>
Davis, of Beaufort, were greatly <lb/>
enjoyed. A voice superior to <lb/>
to Mr. Davis, is seldom heard <lb/>
and he sings with much sweet- <lb/>
Announcement was made be- <lb/>
fore the conclusion of the morn- <lb/>
service that no service would <lb/>
be held on Thanksgiving day <lb/>
and that the church might make <lb/>
a Thanksgiving donation to the <lb/>
orphanage a collection was taken <lb/>
for that purpose, amounting to <lb/>
about <lb/>
id. <lb/>
K. C. White went to Norfolk <lb/>
today. <lb/>
D. M. Jones went t. Kelford <lb/>
the finest <lb/>
ever taken tor I Dy J. H. <lb/>
the advancement of any secretary of the National <lb/>
of the United Slates, many Association of Chris- <lb/>
church, the i urn of 670.70 <lb/>
was raised In cash pledges for <lb/>
the orphan's home in Baldwin, <lb/>
surprise me at all to see Besides this amount the <lb/>
Trans Mountain Commercial <lb/>
seriously considered <lb/>
the same step for th Pacific j <lb/>
Coast States. It would not I <lb/>
T. H. BriggS Son. Raleigh. <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
The writer <lb/>
ed in your evening paper the <lb/>
following <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 1909. <lb/>
winner in the corn grow- <lb/>
contest in this country was <lb/>
announced today by the Stat <lb/>
C. M. went to Ayden <lb/>
today. <lb/>
J. went to N <lb/>
J. Keel in <lb/>
vim <lb/>
S. went to <lb/>
Earl Harrington spent Sunday <lb/>
in <lb/>
R. I spent Sunday <lb/>
Commissioner of Agriculture, in Seal rd <lb/>
th <lb/>
Congress organized in <lb/>
near future, with the same end <lb/>
in co operative ad- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
and Pacific Coast Stares <lb/>
The practical lines on which the <lb/>
Southern Commercial Congress <lb/>
is being carried appeal to me <lb/>
most strongly. It is an organ <lb/>
for the purpose of <lb/>
all other organizations and <lb/>
not for the purpose of <lb/>
in any way with any endeavor <lb/>
made for any one place. I ex- <lb/>
to attend all its sessions this <lb/>
year. <lb/>
All in attendant upon the <lb/>
Southern Commercial Congress <lb/>
which is to convene here Dec. <lb/>
6th and 7th, will be welcomed as <lb/>
part of the National Rivers and <lb/>
Harbors Congress, meeting <lb/>
the Willard-place <lb/>
December and Opening <lb/>
by President Taft. <lb/>
Pin BOYS WIN SUCCESS. <lb/>
Besides this am <lb/>
Society of the Atlantic <lb/>
Christian College <lb/>
society, of the <lb/>
institution, gave between <lb/>
seventy-five and one hundred <lb/>
s. <lb/>
By the falling of heavy roof <lb/>
girders at a large fertilizer <lb/>
being built in Wilson, Mon- <lb/>
day afternoon, a colored man <lb/>
Mr. Graham, as Mr. J. F. Batts- <lb/>
who had grown bushels on <lb/>
one <lb/>
The writer has been interested <lb/>
in matters this kind, and <lb/>
you may not know that the <lb/>
exploitation of corn growing ha.- <lb/>
been progressing very rapidly in <lb/>
the west and for two ye a is <lb/>
Omaha has hid a corn <lb/>
where premium a <lb/>
has been given, but such re- <lb/>
turned <lb/>
. . .-.- given, v w., <lb/>
was instantly killed and several cord of production has ever <lb/>
other laborers injured. <lb/>
Wadesboro, N. C, Nov. 22.- <lb/>
Telephonic advices received here <lb/>
Saturday night told of the sud- <lb/>
den deaths of Mr. and Mrs- <lb/>
Janus it. at their home <lb/>
north of Marshville. just over <lb/>
the line in Union county. Death <lb/>
both of these old people <lb/>
within the hour without previous <lb/>
illness and was caused by heart <lb/>
failure. They were I obliging. <lb/>
known and honored, both <lb/>
shown. <lb/>
offered a premium <lb/>
the last two years. Last year <lb/>
the premium was not worded <lb/>
correctly and a seed man of <lb/>
Connecticut captured it, but with <lb/>
a great deal less number of <lb/>
bushels than this. <lb/>
Will you kindly advise what <lb/>
security was thrown around this <lb/>
measurement and inspection, <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
K H. Stockton. <lb/>
D J. <lb/>
from Norfolk. <lb/>
W. S. Green, of Washington, <lb/>
spent J here. <lb/>
i Spent Saturday <lb/>
night In returning Sun- <lb/>
day King. <lb/>
Mrs. C- A Payne left Sunday <lb/>
morning for Henderson to spend <lb/>
Thanksgiving week- <lb/>
I Dr. and Mrs. M. I. Fleming, <lb/>
of Hamilton, came in Sunday <lb/>
The writer has also j relatives <lb/>
there for <lb/>
Some Will Soon Move <lb/>
Into Their New Building <lb/>
Wherever The Reflector- man <lb/>
strikes any of our home boys <lb/>
who have cast their lot in other <lb/>
places, it is always a pleasure to <lb/>
find them getting along well and <lb/>
making success of their business. <lb/>
While in Norfolk Friday we took <lb/>
enough time off from the <lb/>
ties to look over the new building <lb/>
being erected by Whichard Bros. <lb/>
Co., wholesale dry goods and <lb/>
notion dealers there. This firm <lb/>
has had such a successful career <lb/>
that though they have moved <lb/>
once to larger quarters, it was <lb/>
not long before they found them- <lb/>
again cramped for room to <lb/>
accommodate their growing <lb/>
business. To provide for this <lb/>
they decided to erect a modern <lb/>
building, and for this purpose <lb/>
secured a desirable lot on Ran- <lb/>
street near the Atlantic <lb/>
hotel. They now have nearly <lb/>
completed a splendid building <lb/>
x feet, four stories and <lb/>
basement, and expect to move <lb/>
into it about the middle of D.- <lb/>
who know them. <lb/>
over seventy years of age. <lb/>
Three daughters and one son <lb/>
survive. The funeral services <lb/>
were held yesterday. <lb/>
Wilmington, N. C, Nov. 22.- <lb/>
A. S. Richardson, of Co- <lb/>
county, this State, was <lb/>
twice shot and severely not <lb/>
fatally wounded while engaged <lb/>
with a posse in effecting the <lb/>
capture of a white man named <lb/>
charged with murder, in <lb/>
a swamp near Causey, S. C, <lb/>
yesterday. had fortified <lb/>
himself in a camp in the swamp, <lb/>
where he had been in hiding <lb/>
since the murder, two weeks <lb/>
ago, and as the posts approach d <lb/>
fired from ambush with a shot <lb/>
gun. It was while returning the <lb/>
fire that Sheriff Richardson was <lb/>
wounded, having finally <lb/>
surrendered under threat of the <lb/>
posse to set fire to the swamp <lb/>
and kill him on sight when he <lb/>
came out of his hiding. The <lb/>
prisoner was landed in jail at <lb/>
N. C, today. <lb/>
A frightful tragedy <lb/>
Friday evening near <lb/>
that has cast a gloom over that <lb/>
entire community. Mr. Shade <lb/>
Clark, a prosperous farmer living <lb/>
near there, had out in his <lb/>
cotton field to pick some cotton <lb/>
that had been Kit over from the <lb/>
For the benefit of those who, <lb/>
like Mr. Stockton, want to be <lb/>
K. C. Barrett, route agent of <lb/>
the Southern Express Company, <lb/>
for this division, was here today. <lb/>
Rev. Mrs. B. W. <lb/>
of Kinston, spent Sunday here <lb/>
with Mr. and Mrs. D. J- Which- <lb/>
ard. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. <lb/>
went to Hamilton Saturday to <lb/>
visit relatives and returned Sun- <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
N. W. Outlaw, formerly of <lb/>
wain nil . <lb/>
the proof Mr. has arrived to <lb/>
remarkable yield the facts offices here. See card on <lb/>
the matter have been fully second Pan. <lb/>
investigated, and they bear out <lb/>
the claim that has been made. <lb/>
Mr. Batts. whose <lb/>
address is Garner, in a written <lb/>
certificate which he filed with a <lb/>
committee consisting of Com- <lb/>
missioner of Agriculture W. A. <lb/>
Graham, Col. F. A. Olds and <lb/>
T. B. Parker, says that during <lb/>
the year 1909 he grew on one <lb/>
B. Taylor <lb/>
Hayden, Jr , of Washing- <lb/>
ton City, the guests of Mrs. <lb/>
W. H- Lon. <lb/>
Miss Ida of Sara- <lb/>
toga, who has been visiting Miss <lb/>
Leonard Wilson, returned <lb/>
i Friday night. <lb/>
Postmaster R. C. Flanagan <lb/>
acre of land in Wake county Raleigh to see <lb/>
bushels of corn; that brother. L. G. f who <lb/>
measured the land in the in a hospital there, <lb/>
presence of J- P. Edmundson Miss Lillian Burch. who came <lb/>
and two disinterest- home to spend two days, left <lb/>
ed freeholders, who are not re- Sunday evening to return to her <lb/>
lated to the said Batts; that he school near Washington, <lb/>
gathered and measured the corn j B Higgs returned today <lb/>
m their presence. The land <lb/>
was square tract <lb/>
seventy yards on every <lb/>
Mr. Batts certified to the above <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
In. <lb/>
Death of a Child. <lb/>
On Saturday evening the <lb/>
son, aged six weeks, of Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. E. G. Flanagan, died <lb/>
at their home on street. <lb/>
The little one had been sick <lb/>
Awarding of the Gold. <lb/>
woo I that bad been hit over .-- <lb/>
Over that include, nearly every and in the meantime through most of its brief life, <lb/>
witnessed the awarding of the W aid its death was not <lb/>
from Norfolk where he had been <lb/>
attending the waterways con- <lb/>
and Taft celebration. <lb/>
Representative M. L. Davis, of <lb/>
Beaufort, who has been spend- <lb/>
a few days with his sister, <lb/>
Mrs- R. L. Humber, left today. <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Hearne, of Tarboro <lb/>
home from a visit <lb/>
Kinston spent Saturday aft <lb/>
noon and night here with her t <lb/>
Mrs. J. L. Starke- <lb/>
gold at the store of C. T. Mun- <lb/>
ford last Saturday afternoon at <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
Mrs. Ernest hold <lb/>
coupon number won the <lb/>
first prize of 112.50 in <lb/>
The second prize in gold <lb/>
was won by J. T. Moseley who <lb/>
held number and <lb/>
Stocks drew third prize in <lb/>
gold on coupon number <lb/>
Little Miss Bertie Warren was <lb/>
blind folded and drew the lucky <lb/>
coupons. <lb/>
Mr. is tendered our <lb/>
hearty on the <lb/>
of this sale. <lb/>
Eastern North Carolina retail <lb/>
merchant, will be glad to know <lb/>
that these boys <lb/>
are meeting success. <lb/>
Card of Thanks. <lb/>
Barber Line on Long Faces <lb/>
A Morven barber <lb/>
and that if the men, <lb/>
who sold for ten cents <lb/>
last spring, allow their faces to <lb/>
grow much longer, he will charge <lb/>
them fifteen cents per shave. <lb/>
He declares that he cannot live <lb/>
and shave these men at the <lb/>
regular of ten cents. <lb/>
Wadesboro <lb/>
leaving his two children, aged <lb/>
and years old ed. A sad incident c means I <lb/>
alone in the house. In some with the death of this child Is the people of <lb/>
known way the children pulled that the father, who was; so bad- tor <lb/>
some burning wood from the injured in the <lb/>
fireplace which ignited the car- wreck two weeks ago, is in unremitting <lb/>
pet and in a few moments the hospital in Raleigh and could Sympathy <lb/>
entire house was in flames. home when his little membered and <lb/>
Clark seeing the fire rushed to lone passed away. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector <lb/>
Bring your furs to <lb/>
Schultz for high prices. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
the house, but before he could <lb/>
reach it the roof fell in and both <lb/>
of the children were caught in <lb/>
the ruins and burned to death. <lb/>
Mr. Clark and family are pros- <lb/>
over their loss, and the <lb/>
sympathy of the entire <lb/>
is extended them in <lb/>
M. I bereavement. -New Bern J <lb/>
The funeral took place at <lb/>
o'clock Sunday afternoon in <lb/>
Cherry Hill cemetery, the <lb/>
vice being conducted by Rev. D. <lb/>
W. Arnold. T <lb/>
were <lb/>
Mr. and <lb/>
Prof. <lb/>
In <lb/>
North Can<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
mm<lb/>
Invite You <lb/>
to inspect our line of <lb/>
Tailor Made Coat <lb/>
Suits, Skirts, Raincoats <lb/>
an- Mil on latest model, our <lb/>
rt titan elsewhere We are showing a bean- <lb/>
I if ill line of Drew Good in tin season's nicest <lb/>
weaves and coloring. Foil line <lb/>
Fine Laces and Embroideries <lb/>
always on hand <lb/>
Let us point out the features <lb/>
superiority in RaMon Shoes. <lb/>
Made over <lb/>
they tit from the first <lb/>
and need no breaking <lb/>
Genuine oak tanned soles <lb/>
j r;,; A all other materials of equally <lb/>
i h, quality. . . <lb/>
Style that duplicated J <lb/>
except high-priced custom <lb/>
You c in choose no more <lb/>
coining model than this <lb/>
No. <lb/>
Last<lb/>
Pharmacy <lb/>
FIVE POINTS <lb/>
Everything New and Modern <lb/>
COMPOUNDED <lb/>
by an experienced druggist, using only NEW <lb/>
AND FRESH DRUGS. <lb/>
Union <lb/>
A full line of Fine Stationery. Toilet Supplies, <lb/>
Cigars, Tobaccos, and everything handled by <lb/>
A First Class Drug Store <lb/>
HOT CHOCOLATE <lb/>
We have just received a Hot Soda outfit and are <lb/>
prepared to furnish Hot Chocolate and other <lb/>
Hot Drinks <lb/>
TRUSSES OF SORT KEPT IN STOCK <lb/>
OFFICES OF DR. IN THE REAR <lb/>
SHOES SHOES<lb/>
LOCAL BRIEFS. <lb/>
Subscribe for The Reflector. <lb/>
THE MARKETS <lb/>
Norfolk Cotton and Peanuts wired <lb/>
by J. W. Perry Co. Cotton Factors. <lb/>
Yesterday <lb/>
Middling 5-8 , . <lb/>
Low Mid lUng S-8 Ms-81 When you nave baggage to go <lb/>
Low 7-8 7-8 to phone No.<lb/>
Fancy 1-2 Keep The Reflector piano con <lb/>
Strictly Prime <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
1-1 <lb/>
Grades <lb/>
1-2 <lb/>
V 1-2 <lb/>
ANOTHER <lb/>
ONE <lb/>
NEXT <lb/>
I J. R. J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
r- CW YORK AND LIVERPOOL <lb/>
MARKET <lb/>
Wired by Cobb Bros Co. Bankers <lb/>
and Brokers. Norfolk. <lb/>
NEW YORK <lb/>
Dec. <lb/>
Jan. <lb/>
Mar. <lb/>
Dec in- 3-4 <lb/>
Corn 5-8 <lb/>
Jan Ribs <lb/>
May Ribs M <lb/>
Jan <lb/>
May <lb/>
Co ton <lb/>
test in mind. <lb/>
For room house on <lb/>
Fourth street, electric lights. <lb/>
W. B. Wilson. <lb/>
candies at Coward <lb/>
fresh. There <lb/>
is nothing better. j <lb/>
of collards for, <lb/>
, sale at the home on B. H. <lb/>
7-8 on Second street. <lb/>
Call by the Candy Kitchen and I <lb/>
get some of the nice fruits and <lb/>
by <lb/>
1-4 <lb/>
Dr. H. Hyatt, of Kinston. <lb/>
will be in Greenville at Hotel <lb/>
Bertha Dec. 6th and 7th. the <lb/>
Monday and Tuesday, for <lb/>
the purpose of treating diseases <lb/>
of the eye, ear, nose and throat <lb/>
land fitting glasses. Those who <lb/>
want work done will be charged <lb/>
no fee unless terms are agreed <lb/>
in. <lb/>
fresh made candies. <lb/>
Tangerines, grape fruit, or- <lb/>
grapes, bananas, <lb/>
pine apples, apples, lemons and <lb/>
cranberries at J. II. Co. <lb/>
Over a million cabbage plants <lb/>
for sale. Jersey Wakefield, and <lb/>
Charleston Wakefield and Early <lb/>
Pilot, all grown from Tait's true <lb/>
type seed. Delivered in field at <lb/>
per thousand, or packed for <lb/>
shipment at SI. per thousand.<lb/>
It is time for cold weather <lb/>
and now is the time to get <lb/>
your Shoes before the best <lb/>
styles are gone. We carry <lb/>
the strongest line on <lb/>
earth <lb/>
The and Regina Shoes <lb/>
Ladies, Guaranteed <lb/>
to wear as long as the longest <lb/>
and the most up-to-date <lb/>
styles. <lb/>
Our Black Cat Shoes for Children <lb/>
will fit every child's foot <lb/>
Don't Forget Our Piano <lb/>
Contest <lb/>
will close Dec. you had <lb/>
better get busy, and get your <lb/>
friends busy. <lb/>
Central Mercantile <lb/>
Company <lb/>
FAIR WARNING <lb/>
OUR LOW PRICES WILL STILL CONTINUE <lb/>
WE HAVE NEVER GIVEN SUCH VALUES BEFORE <lb/>
Creditors keep pushing us for their money is why we are having to sell <lb/>
goods at these low prices. <lb/>
E are sorry to say that we were so easy that every time we saw big values, we bought <lb/>
until we bought too many values, so here is where, and now is the time, when you can <lb/>
make your dollar do big buying at this low price, Fair Warning Sale, which is right at a season <lb/>
of the year that you never had this opportunity before. We are going to continue this sale, so <lb/>
that we can raise enough money to satisfy some of our creditors one hundred cents on <lb/>
the dollar. We plead to you good people, if you want bargains, now is the time to get them. <lb/>
We have thrown our stock on the market to pay honest debts. <lb/>
SELLS <lb/>
IT <lb/>
T. <lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina. <lb/>
RESOLUTIONS OF ESTEEM. <lb/>
of Lodge No. <lb/>
I. F. <lb/>
November, 15th, 1909. <lb/>
Noble Grand and <lb/>
Your committee appointed to <lb/>
draft resolution expressive of <lb/>
our sympathy for Brother <lb/>
Ernest Williams, <lb/>
That the angel of death having <lb/>
again entered the family of <lb/>
Brother Ernest Williams and <lb/>
therefrom his brother, <lb/>
Mr. Jesse Williams, again re- <lb/>
minds us that in the midst of <lb/>
life than is death. Therefore be <lb/>
it resolved, <lb/>
1st That in the death of Mr. <lb/>
Williams, the county loses a <lb/>
useful citizen. <lb/>
2nd. To the home of sorrow <lb/>
we assure them our sincere <lb/>
sympathy and we commend them <lb/>
to God for His comfort and <lb/>
protection. <lb/>
3rd. That these resolutions <lb/>
be spread upon the minutes of <lb/>
the lodge, a copy sent to the <lb/>
family and copy sent to The <lb/>
Reflector with request to <lb/>
Geo. H. Cole, i <lb/>
R. B. Jennings, Com. <lb/>
J. T. Cox. t <lb/>
SEEM <lb/>
MM MK <lb/>
auk. you <lb/>
pr <lb/>
To <lb/>
Write to-day; Mention this Paper. <lb/>
SEND CENTS <lb/>
L HUM ht, <lb/>
FARMVILLE ITEMS. <lb/>
Farmville, N. C, Oct. <lb/>
A goodly number of farmers <lb/>
tobacco to Farmville <lb/>
today and were very well pleased <lb/>
with the which they re- <lb/>
At o'clock today a public <lb/>
sale was conducted by Mr. Carl <lb/>
Turnage at the home of Mrs. Hill <lb/>
for the purpose of selling house- <lb/>
hold and kitchen furniture. <lb/>
The last conference <lb/>
for this year was held at the <lb/>
Methodist church on the 16th. <lb/>
On Thanksgiving day the ladies <lb/>
of the Methodist church at <lb/>
Why does a man when he <lb/>
becomes possessed of a <lb/>
raw-boned plug and a cart <lb/>
have to rein the poor crowbait up <lb/>
like a turtle treading water until <lb/>
it can't see ground before it. <lb/>
and goes along as if trying to <lb/>
read the answer to the tears <lb/>
Why does a girl whom nature <lb/>
has a clear and healthy <lb/>
complexion have to paint it until <lb/>
she can't wink for fear of crack- <lb/>
the enamel Why does she <lb/>
bang her hair like a Spitz poodle <lb/>
and make her head look like a <lb/>
window mop And why does <lb/>
she wear a hat that makes her <lb/>
look like an overloaded pack <lb/>
mule Why. bless, you, ail <lb/>
these things are the style, and <lb/>
that is all that can or ought to be <lb/>
said about En- <lb/>
Many school children suffer <lb/>
from constipation, which is often <lb/>
the cause of seeming stupidity <lb/>
at lessons. <lb/>
and Liver Tablets are an <lb/>
ideal medicine to give a child, <lb/>
for they are mild and gentle in <lb/>
their and will cure even <lb/>
chronicle constipation. Sold by <lb/>
all druggist. <lb/>
Cough ti <lb/>
Farmville will conduct a <lb/>
serving meals both night <lb/>
day. j <lb/>
M. D. Horton has opened a <lb/>
new grocery store on Main <lb/>
The old, old story, told times <lb/>
without number, and repeated <lb/>
over and over again for the last <lb/>
years, but it is always a <lb/>
come story to those in search of <lb/>
is nothing in the <lb/>
world that cures coughs and <lb/>
colds as quickly as Chamberlain's <lb/>
Remedy. Sold by <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happenings in North Caro- <lb/>
Winston Salem, N. C, Nov. <lb/>
men were killed and <lb/>
seven others believed to be <lb/>
dead as the result of a cave in <lb/>
today on the Southern Railroad <lb/>
near here. All of the victims, <lb/>
and Italians, were em- <lb/>
ployed by concrete contractors. <lb/>
Suffolk. Va. Nov. <lb/>
Mattie Taylor, years old, who <lb/>
was struck by a Norfolk and <lb/>
Southern train at Corapeake, N. <lb/>
C, died in hospital <lb/>
yesterday morning. Miss <lb/>
had been buying her wedding <lb/>
trousseau in Suffolk and on get- <lb/>
ting off the train in Corapeake <lb/>
drove across the track and was <lb/>
struck by a moving freight. Her <lb/>
body and face were <lb/>
both arms being <lb/>
crushed. The young woman is <lb/>
a daughter of Taylor, of <lb/>
Gates county, N. C, and was <lb/>
popular and pretty. <lb/>
WE no longer handle Wire Fence made by the Trust. Have <lb/>
received the agency for the famous D KALB IRE- <lb/>
FENCE Strictly Independent. Car load just <lb/>
Don't fail to see it. Bi t Fence at Best Prices.<lb/>
Wright's Inaugural. <lb/>
The editor regrets much that <lb/>
the of duties prevented his <lb/>
attendance upon the inaugural <lb/>
exercises of Mr. Robert H <lb/>
Wright, as president of the East <lb/>
Carolina Training School at <lb/>
Greenville last Friday. Green- <lb/>
ville w wide open its doors <lb/>
to the throng attending. The <lb/>
exercises were held in the <lb/>
of the school. Many no- <lb/>
table addresses were delivered <lb/>
by leading educators of the State. <lb/>
President Wright's address was <lb/>
a splendid effort and <lb/>
ed wisdom of the in <lb/>
selecting this young North Caro- <lb/>
as the head of this <lb/>
school which is destined to exert <lb/>
a powerful influence upon the <lb/>
educational development of East- <lb/>
Carolina. The school now <lb/>
has over a hundred young women <lb/>
are trained as teach- <lb/>
Practically all the eastern <lb/>
counties are represented in its <lb/>
student body. The school has a <lb/>
faculty. Snow Hill Stand- <lb/>
ard Laconic. <lb/>
street. <lb/>
There will be prayer meeting <lb/>
at the Baptist church Thursday <lb/>
night each week. All are <lb/>
invited to attend. <lb/>
Work has been resumed on the <lb/>
Disciples church. <lb/>
A Thanksgiving service will be <lb/>
held at the Baptist church at <lb/>
p. in . Nov. 25th. The collection <lb/>
will be for the orphanage- <lb/>
It is reported that there will <lb/>
be a Thanksgiving dance in <lb/>
Farmville. will have the <lb/>
largest number to give thanKs, <lb/>
the devil, by those who attend <lb/>
the dance, or God, by those who <lb/>
attend Divine services and make <lb/>
an offering to for the Or- <lb/>
Lame back comes on suddenly <lb/>
and if extremely painful. It is <lb/>
caused by rheumatism of the <lb/>
Quick relief is afford- <lb/>
ed by applying Chamberlain's <lb/>
Liniment Sold by all druggist. <lb/>
Resolution of Sympathy. <lb/>
Whereas, the Great Spirit has <lb/>
again entered the family circle <lb/>
of a worthy brother, S. T. <lb/>
White, G. S., of our tribe, and <lb/>
therefrom his sister's <lb/>
devoted husband, therefore be it <lb/>
resolved. <lb/>
1st That we, as members of <lb/>
Tribe No. ex- <lb/>
tend to our brother and his <lb/>
the sincere sympathy of our tribe. <lb/>
d That we would commend <lb/>
the ones to the loving <lb/>
car and keeping of the Great <lb/>
Spirit that He will keep them <lb/>
through this their sad hour. <lb/>
3rd That a copy of these <lb/>
resolutions be spread upon our <lb/>
minutes, a copy be sent to our <lb/>
brother and a copy published in <lb/>
The Daily Reflector. <lb/>
J. W. Brown, <lb/>
W. L. Patrick, Com. <lb/>
J. F. Smith <lb/>
Just received Repeating <lb/>
Rifles, No. made by <lb/>
Swiss government. Cost j <lb/>
each. We will sell for ten days <lb/>
at each. <lb/>
Come and see how we do it.<lb/>
Christmas Edition. <lb/>
The holiday anniversary <lb/>
edition of The Reflector, <lb/>
10th is to be a handsome <lb/>
paper of eight or twelve pages <lb/>
with a beautiful cover. Every <lb/>
merchant, business man and <lb/>
professional man should be re <lb/>
presented in it by an advertise- <lb/>
Bring yours in now. We <lb/>
are going to issue two thousand <lb/>
copies and you will be well re- <lb/>
paid for all you want in space. <lb/>
Hart <lb/>
LEAD RS IN HARDWARE <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
N. Carolina <lb/>
Christian Convention. <lb/>
The State convention <lb/>
proper began in Wilson <lb/>
day. The address of welcome <lb/>
was delivered by the pastor of <lb/>
the Wilson church, and the <lb/>
response by Rev. W. Arnold, <lb/>
of Greenville. The first day's <lb/>
session was taken up mainly with <lb/>
reports of the ministers. <lb/>
most prevalent <lb/>
the dry cold weather of the <lb/>
early winter months. Parents <lb/>
of young children should be <lb/>
pared for it All that is needed <lb/>
a bottle of Chamberlain's <lb/>
Cough Remedy. Many mothers <lb/>
are never without it in their <lb/>
homes and it has never <lb/>
pointed them. Sold by all drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
When a cold becomes settled <lb/>
in the system it will take several <lb/>
treatment to cure it, and <lb/>
the best remedy to use is <lb/>
I Cough Remedy. It <lb/>
will cure quicker than any other, <lb/>
and also leaves the system in a <lb/>
natural and healthy condition. <lb/>
Sold by all druggist. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors <lb/>
Having qualified before the <lb/>
clerk of the Sui court of Pitt <lb/>
county as administrator of Arnie E. <lb/>
Dudley, late of Greenville. <lb/>
Pitt county, N. C, is to all <lb/>
persons claim the <lb/>
estate of said deceased to present <lb/>
them to the undersigned within twelve <lb/>
month, from this date or this notice <lb/>
will be plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to said will <lb/>
pi. mike immediate payment. <lb/>
This day 1909. <lb/>
S. I. Dudley, <lb/>
HUMAN HANDS <lb/>
TOUCH IT. <lb/>
I Prom th. our <lb/>
tn m- <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
tor <lb/>
ICE CHEAP Powder <lb/>
In become contaminated. II ll <lb/>
mire Our factory U M <lb/>
a your <lb/>
ICE e Mk <lb/>
Mn, <lb/>
Simple. . , <lb/>
make, to quart, or Tel- <lb/>
In <lb/>
cent a plate. <lb/>
flavors Straw <lb/>
tat <lb/>
loll h <lb/>
mail II <lb/>
doe. not keep It. <lb/>
The Food Co., l Roy, N. Y <lb/>
WANTED <lb/>
GIRLS AND BOYS <lb/>
We want Girls and Boys <lb/>
to work in the <lb/>
Tarboro Knitting Mills <lb/>
At Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
and in the <lb/>
Runnymede Mills <lb/>
Near Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
The work is light, no dust or <lb/>
dirt and the pay is good. We can <lb/>
furnish you a house in the town <lb/>
of Runnymede or West Tarboro. <lb/>
A Free Education For Your <lb/>
Small Children <lb/>
We have good schools at Tarboro, <lb/>
and Runnymede. <lb/>
We have had steady work all the <lb/>
year. Do not fear a shut down, <lb/>
we will have work for every <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Come and See the Work or Write <lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER <lb/>
TARBORO <lb/>
Mrs. Sarah Dudley Passes Away. <lb/>
One of Washington's oldest <lb/>
passed this morning <lb/>
in the person of Mrs. Sarah Dud- <lb/>
relic of the late W. L Dud- <lb/>
at her home No. West <lb/>
Third street. <lb/>
Mrs. Dudley was stricken with <lb/>
paralysis last Saturday and <lb/>
never survived. At the time of <lb/>
her death she was years of age. <lb/>
She was a woman of broad <lb/>
and noted for circumspect- <lb/>
of walk. deceased <lb/>
leaves four children to mourn <lb/>
their Mrs. J. A. Dudley. <lb/>
Mrs. R. J. Manning, Miss Lula <lb/>
Dudley and Mrs. Maud Slocum, <lb/>
of Rochester, Pa., beside a <lb/>
large number of grandchildren. <lb/>
Washington News, 16th. <lb/>
MORTGAGE SALE. <lb/>
By virtue of a mortgage executed <lb/>
and delivered by K. L. Hill and wife, <lb/>
and D. Johnson and wife, to K. G. <lb/>
James, on the 6th day of March. <lb/>
which appears of in the <lb/>
of the Register of Pitt county <lb/>
in book E-M the undersigned <lb/>
will s II for cash, at noon, on Saturday, <lb/>
December the 1909, before the court <lb/>
house duo- in . C, the <lb/>
following <lb/>
One in the of Greenville, <lb/>
situated on west tide of the A. C <lb/>
L. and h side of the . S. Rail- <lb/>
roads i ear the of said two <lb/>
and being same leased from the N. <lb/>
S. receiver.-, and the ice plant and all <lb/>
the machinery, of every <lb/>
and description, together with tho <lb/>
buildings used in carrying on the <lb/>
business by Hill Johnson. <lb/>
Al-o one in the town of <lb/>
Greenville, beginning at a on <lb/>
the south aide of Fifth st. and west side <lb/>
of Reade at., extended and running with <lb/>
Fifth street. westerly course feet <lb/>
to a thence a southerly course <lb/>
said lot one hundred and twenty <lb/>
feet to a stake on Reade st. <lb/>
thence a northerly course with Reade <lb/>
street to the beginning, being the lot <lb/>
on which the old ice plant formally <lb/>
stood. <lb/>
This November the 1909. <lb/>
F. G. JAMES, <lb/>
R. L. DAVIS, Pres. J. A. ANDREWS, V.-Pres. <lb/>
H D. BATEMAN, Cashier. <lb/>
The Bank of Greenville <lb/>
With the Experience of I Years. <lb/>
Board of Directors <lb/>
And a Capital of <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
We are in position to take good care of our old <lb/>
customers, and also prospective ones. <lb/>
Business Cordially Solicited. <lb/>
JAMES L. LITTLE, Cashier <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. <lb/>
SCHEDULES <lb/>
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Greenville, <lb/>
Hid Kinston, Effective April 1st, <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How you can get a <lb/>
thing g <lb/>
nail or screw driver or <lb/>
lacking. Have a good fit <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for K <lb/>
emergencies. Our line of tools <lb/>
Is a you could desire, <lb/>
we will see that your tool <lb/>
box does not lack a <lb/>
useful article. <lb/>
Of <lb/>
You get <lb/>
Horse Goods i c <lb/>
of <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
NOTICE- <lb/>
By virtue of the power of sale con- <lb/>
in a certain mortgage deed <lb/>
and by Martha J. <lb/>
Forbes to B. F. Tyson on the day <lb/>
of 1909. and duly recorded in <lb/>
the register of deeds office of Pitt <lb/>
county, North Carolina, in book D-9, <lb/>
page the undersigned will expose <lb/>
to public sale, before the c house <lb/>
door in to the highest bid- <lb/>
per, on th 6th d of <lb/>
a certain tract or parcel of <lb/>
land lying and being in the county of <lb/>
and State of North i and <lb/>
described a follows, to One lot <lb/>
in the town of Greenville In that <lb/>
of said town known Stump or <lb/>
New town, h Hickory Hill <lb/>
Baptist, church lot, Blown and <lb/>
others and the same lot h <lb/>
descended to said Martha Forbes <lb/>
from Sarah Cooper, her mother, and <lb/>
being the same lot whereon the d <lb/>
Martha J. Forbes to <lb/>
said mortgage deed. Terms of sale <lb/>
This 2nd day of November, 1909. <lb/>
B. f. Tyson, Mortgagee <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
a. m, <lb/>
II a. m. <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Norfolk <lb/>
it <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
Plymouth <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
Ar. p. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
Ar. u. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
T. C. WHITE. G. P A. <lb/>
WILMINGTON, N. O. <lb/>
Call and see P. M. Johnston <lb/>
when in town for general engine <lb/>
and boiler repair work and any- <lb/>
thing you may need. Shop op- <lb/>
Hotel Bertha. w <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
See P. M, Johnston for your <lb/>
mill supplies and mill repairs. <lb/>
All work <lb/>
For Rent-4 horse farm, lo- <lb/>
miles from Greenville. <lb/>
Apply to C. L. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having qualified as Administrator of <lb/>
Lang, deceased, late of Grifton <lb/>
Pitt county, . C, this is to notify Ml <lb/>
persons having claims the es- <lb/>
of said deceased to exhibit them <lb/>
to the undersigned on t r before the <lb/>
18th day of r, or this no- <lb/>
will be pleaded in liar of their re- <lb/>
All persons indebted to said <lb/>
will please make immediate pay- <lb/>
This October 13th, 1909. <lb/>
W L <lb/>
F. Son, <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
FOR THE BEST <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
and House Furnishing <lb/>
always go to TAFT VanDYKE<lb/>
C. D. TUNSTALL <lb/>
Opposite Center Brick Warehouse. <lb/>
General Merchandise. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
I D H <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Subscription One Year <lb/>
Six<lb/>
rate may be ha upon <lb/>
I the office in <lb/>
Building, corner Evans and <lb/>
Third st <lb/>
It is well to In- patriotic and <lb/>
keep in tin of the <lb/>
past, to of men long since <lb/>
gone rehearse achieve- <lb/>
unit to dwell upon <lb/>
progress our country has <lb/>
thing keep alive in us a <lb/>
of pride patriotism, <lb/>
for ours is truly a goodly M to <lb/>
But we are living with the real <lb/>
Ami now Mouth Carolina is <lb/>
trying to claim the <lb/>
In keeping with its annual i of The <lb/>
torn to observe Thanksgiving. Courier says it was <lb/>
day. The Reflector will j Charleston <lb/>
not issued tomorrow. of Charlotte. <lb/>
hope every the the <lb/>
has enjoyed blessings has promptly called it <lb/>
during the year to till his heart Mouth <lb/>
with such a feeling of gratitude trying to claim some- <lb/>
the day , Car <lb/>
of Thanks- <lb/>
A event in Norfolk this <lb/>
week is the inland waterway <lb/>
convention. Hundreds of <lb/>
gates from all along the <lb/>
tic will bra in attendance, <lb/>
and President Taft Andrew <lb/>
Carnegie will be guests of honor. <lb/>
Entered in . at Greenville <lb/>
N. C, as second- in 1.1 matter. <lb/>
FRIDAY NOV. 26.1903 <lb/>
INLAND WATERWAYS CONVENTION <lb/>
By far the best meeting the <lb/>
Inland Waterway- Association <lb/>
has held was in Norfolk <lb/>
last wet k. The attendance was <lb/>
very large, and more interest <lb/>
was awakened in the movement <lb/>
than has been known heretofore. <lb/>
About the best speech made at <lb/>
this convention was by Congress- <lb/>
man John II. Small, who was <lb/>
one of the leading spirits there. <lb/>
Mr. Small spoke on Thursday <lb/>
emphasized the need of <lb/>
mediate work on that portion of <lb/>
the waterway between Norfolk <lb/>
Beaufort, <lb/>
The most notable day in the <lb/>
history of Norfolk was Friday, <lb/>
when President Tuft went down <lb/>
to speak on the waterways and <lb/>
other questions, and to be the <lb/>
guest of the city for the day. <lb/>
The city was beautifully <lb/>
rated and every mark of respect <lb/>
honor was shown the <lb/>
visitor. Features of the <lb/>
day were a military and naval <lb/>
parade, an oyster roast at Cape <lb/>
Henry, a display of <lb/>
and a smoker to the <lb/>
members of the press. <lb/>
dent Tuft spoke three times and <lb/>
at every appearance was given u <lb/>
ovation. Norfolk did her <lb/>
self great credit in the way the <lb/>
president, the delegates to the <lb/>
waterways convention, the <lb/>
of the press and the thous- <lb/>
ands of visitors were entertain- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
There were a thousand covers <lb/>
at the smoker given at night in <lb/>
honor of the press. Besides <lb/>
tors from other places, there <lb/>
were some seventy odd from <lb/>
Washington City, among in <lb/>
being correspondents represent- <lb/>
leading papers of all parts of <lb/>
the country. It was a <lb/>
gathering of the <lb/>
they were given a royal <lb/>
reception. Norfolk made a most <lb/>
impression on her vis. <lb/>
all left the <lb/>
praises of the leading seaport <lb/>
city of the Mouth. <lb/>
in the present, and The <lb/>
tor of who love to talk <lb/>
about things right now, to speak <lb/>
of men who are doing things to- <lb/>
day in uplifting, and bettering <lb/>
around them, and who are <lb/>
making things come to pass. <lb/>
We have in mind a man of <lb/>
type, Mr. John F. who is <lb/>
agent Put county of the <lb/>
farm demonstration work under <lb/>
the direction of the Slate and <lb/>
government agricultural depart- <lb/>
Mr. is a good <lb/>
farmer himself, and in addition <lb/>
to carrying on his work his <lb/>
duties take him much among <lb/>
farmers who are co <lb/>
with tin- demonstration work, <lb/>
to instruct am advise with them <lb/>
wherever it is needed. In this <lb/>
way he is doing great good to <lb/>
his fellow the re- <lb/>
is better tunning, improved <lb/>
crops larger yields. Not <lb/>
only this, but Mr, is a <lb/>
good roads advocate from the <lb/>
lie believes in good <lb/>
roads, talks good roads, says <lb/>
is going to keep it up until <lb/>
Pitt county has a bond issue <lb/>
to build good roads <lb/>
over the county. He says it <lb/>
does his heart to <lb/>
sentiment growing so rapidly <lb/>
wherever he go's about, the <lb/>
county. That is what The <lb/>
likes to <lb/>
schools, good farms, good roads. <lb/>
These are the things to make <lb/>
our county blossom with pros- <lb/>
Greenville has the beat slogan <lb/>
we have ever heard, and it is <lb/>
entirely tin-en- <lb/>
ville, yours if you <lb/>
giving. Who can recount the <lb/>
blessings of the year without <lb/>
realizing that they have been <lb/>
more than were True <lb/>
some have received more than <lb/>
others, but to every one The Federal court in Missouri <lb/>
come enough for gratefulness to rendered a decision declaring <lb/>
the of all the Standard Oil Company an <lb/>
The best spin, of legal combination and ordered <lb/>
is that which us to its dissolution within thirty <lb/>
impart some blessings to took an <lb/>
who are less fortunate, and the <lb/>
should be gen- <lb/>
remembered There are <lb/>
few so poor but what they might <lb/>
do something, though it be small, <lb/>
to help someone more needy <lb/>
than themselves, and the gift <lb/>
that God loves best i that which <lb/>
comes cheerfully mil of a grate- <lb/>
heart, your offering be <lb/>
His greater <lb/>
blessings will be yours. <lb/>
Near a few <lb/>
days ago, there was B terrible <lb/>
automobile wreck. The cur con- <lb/>
three men and two ladies. <lb/>
While on a bridge the man who <lb/>
was driving turned loose the <lb/>
wheel to light a when <lb/>
the cur run and fell a dis- <lb/>
of feet. All three of <lb/>
the men were killed and the <lb/>
ladies badly injured. <lb/>
thing The Reflector re <lb/>
very much to is the <lb/>
probable disorganization of Caro- <lb/>
Club. The been of <lb/>
such benefit to Greenville <lb/>
that it would be a serious loss <lb/>
for it to cease to exist. We <lb/>
hope some arrangement can be <lb/>
made fur the club to continue. <lb/>
peal to the Supreme court of the <lb/>
so that the final <lb/>
outcome of the matter is yet to <lb/>
he determined. The govern- <lb/>
regards this decision of the <lb/>
Missouri court us a great victory <lb/>
in the prosecution of trusts. <lb/>
Quite a number of near-beer <lb/>
dealers in Wilmington were <lb/>
rested Wednesday on the charge <lb/>
of running De- <lb/>
from Baltimore were <lb/>
employed to work up the case <lb/>
catch the <lb/>
they did in a few days. It <lb/>
would be a good idea to have <lb/>
regular paid detectives for this <lb/>
purpose in every county in the <lb/>
State. <lb/>
There is likely to be some <lb/>
from now until spring <lb/>
that will show the need of good <lb/>
In his speech Norfolk, Fri- <lb/>
day, President Taft expressed <lb/>
himself as favoring building <lb/>
of large fort between Cape <lb/>
Henry to pro- <lb/>
the entrance of ads. <lb/>
Roads against invasion from <lb/>
foreign enemy. There is already The president's <lb/>
a land fort at Old Point proclamation has come, and even <lb/>
and if this additional lit it was late and short, it ii <lb/>
fort suggested by the president good. <lb/>
is built, Norfolk harbor, one of <lb/>
the best on the Atlantic coast, <lb/>
would be impregnable to attack. <lb/>
President Taft said he is going j <lb/>
to devote himself during the re- <lb/>
of his administration to <lb/>
securing this fort between the <lb/>
Virginia capes. <lb/>
If the Standard Oil Company <lb/>
is dissolved, worm cure <lb/>
may not be so rapid. <lb/>
We read the other day of a <lb/>
who hid his money in abed <lb/>
tick. His house burned down <lb/>
and the money was lost with it. <lb/>
the money been put in a <lb/>
bunk be would have been that <lb/>
much better off after the fire. <lb/>
Some people do not seem to <lb/>
realize what bunks are for, and <lb/>
the protection these institutions <lb/>
them. <lb/>
The latest in the way of <lb/>
N. C. Nov. 1909. <lb/>
Mrs. C. E. lit- <lb/>
son, Melton, went to C. L. <lb/>
Tyson's Thursday evening and <lb/>
returned Friday evening. <lb/>
Mrs. Mills Smith left Thurs- <lb/>
day morning for Wilson to at- <lb/>
tend the State convention. <lb/>
K. ML went to the <lb/>
convention at Wilson Thursday <lb/>
morning and returned in the <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
Mrs. Ivy Smith, Mrs. Mills <lb/>
Smith. Mrs. T. A. Nichols, Miss <lb/>
Nichols, Mrs. H. M. Star- <lb/>
key, Mrs. T. E. Robinson and <lb/>
David Smith returned from <lb/>
son, where they had been attend- <lb/>
the State convention, Friday <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Little, of Wilson, <lb/>
came Friday evening to visit her <lb/>
people for a few days. <lb/>
Mrs. C. E. and <lb/>
Miss Mattie Little went to Hay- <lb/>
wood Smith's Sunday evening- <lb/>
Bryan, Winterville, <lb/>
was visiting at F. M. Smith's <lb/>
Saturday evening. <lb/>
Rev. G. H. Crumpler. of the <lb/>
A. C. College at Wilson, came <lb/>
down Saturday evening and filled <lb/>
his regular appointment at <lb/>
Smith's school house Sunday, and <lb/>
preached very good sermons <lb/>
morning and night. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. B. P. <lb/>
and children were stopping at <lb/>
Mills Smith's Sunday evening. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Hay wood Smith <lb/>
were at C. D. Smith's Sunday <lb/>
evening <lb/>
Mr. Mrs. Jim Flanagan <lb/>
were at C. E. horn's Sun- <lb/>
day <lb/>
Little Belle and <lb/>
Jessie Smith returned home Sun- <lb/>
The farmer who sold his cot- day evening having spent <lb/>
ton at cents and has U deliver j since Friday evening with <lb/>
The mull who is exposing the <lb/>
customs graft in New bus <lb/>
received a letter <lb/>
threatening bis life and the <lb/>
destruction of his family if In- <lb/>
dues not quit and leave the city <lb/>
The Beaufort cut in the inland <lb/>
waterways was endorsed by the <lb/>
waterways convention just held <lb/>
in Norfolk. which has <lb/>
been partly made, will mean a <lb/>
great deal North <lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The man who does not talk for <lb/>
his town is not the right kind of <lb/>
a citizen; and a class not much <lb/>
better are those whose only in- <lb/>
is what they can get out <lb/>
of somebody else. <lb/>
Asheville is having a bad time <lb/>
over the schedule the Southern <lb/>
Railway recently put on, making <lb/>
it so inconvenient for <lb/>
in lying over at a junction <lb/>
going to and from the south. <lb/>
With the government after <lb/>
the oil trust, the tobacco trust <lb/>
and the sugar trust at the same <lb/>
time, some of the lawyers see <lb/>
good times ahead. <lb/>
now with the price of the staple <lb/>
cents is a joke, but it serves <lb/>
him right. <lb/>
Norfolk done things up in <lb/>
style for the <lb/>
of President Taft, but we <lb/>
venture to she did not beat <lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The Wilmington near-beer <lb/>
dealers are learning that our <lb/>
prohibition laws wore <lb/>
mergers is about the largest a are be <lb/>
undertaken in this country. It <lb/>
is the absorption of the Western <lb/>
Union Telegraph Company by <lb/>
the American Telephone and <lb/>
Telegraph Company, which will <lb/>
ultimately bring practically all <lb/>
telephone and telegraph <lb/>
under one control. <lb/>
The Washington News prints <lb/>
the story of a man trying to en- <lb/>
a house in that town by go- <lb/>
down the chimney. He got <lb/>
hung in the chimney and came <lb/>
near that he cried <lb/>
for help. His cry awoke the <lb/>
owner of the house, who, taking <lb/>
in the situation, called several <lb/>
neighbors to help extricate the <lb/>
would-be burglar. The chimney <lb/>
had to be torn down to get the <lb/>
man out. The News adds that <lb/>
the man was committed to jail <lb/>
and will be tried for burglary. <lb/>
Wonder if that point will not be <lb/>
an interesting one for the law- <lb/>
to contest. While the man <lb/>
slid eight feet the <lb/>
can it be shown that he <lb/>
entered the house No doubt <lb/>
that was his intent if he had not <lb/>
got stuck. The case is going to <lb/>
be an interesting one. <lb/>
A dispatch from London says <lb/>
that one person out of every <lb/>
thirty-two in that city is a <lb/>
per. If that statement is true it <lb/>
shows an appalling condition of <lb/>
poverty and hardship. It is <lb/>
hard to understand why people <lb/>
will congest a place where there <lb/>
is nothing for them to do. The <lb/>
largest cities attract them and <lb/>
seem to prefer to stay there <lb/>
and suffer hardship rather than <lb/>
go to the country or towns where <lb/>
there is better opportunity to <lb/>
get something to do. <lb/>
The Piedmont Press is the <lb/>
name of a new paper started at <lb/>
Hickory. <lb/>
One class that Greenville has <lb/>
no use in the world for is the <lb/>
growler. <lb/>
Surprise marriages seem to be <lb/>
in order now-a-days. <lb/>
. <lb/>
The is a bird, and <lb/>
so often loses his head. <lb/>
Man has just had a big snow- <lb/>
storm, so says the scientists. <lb/>
On twenty men were <lb/>
taken alive out of the Cherry, <lb/>
Ills., mine after having <lb/>
entombed there for a week. <lb/>
This discovery led to the belief <lb/>
that others of the miners are yet <lb/>
alive- A large number of dead <lb/>
have been found. <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector, <lb/>
According to Herman <lb/>
Speaker Joseph Cannon <lb/>
should be highest seat <lb/>
in the Roosevelt Club. <lb/>
In other words Editor <lb/>
says Speaker Cannon is a liar or <lb/>
he is a fool. And it <lb/>
goes without saying that Editor <lb/>
is no fool. <lb/>
ignored. <lb/>
Planning for Christmas pres <lb/>
is now uppermost in the <lb/>
minds of many people. We <lb/>
hope it will he a sane <lb/>
in this respect. <lb/>
The Greensboro Record has <lb/>
started its twentieth year. The <lb/>
Record is one of the papers that <lb/>
does things and makes its pres- <lb/>
felt. <lb/>
A good many p from out- <lb/>
side the neighborhood attended <lb/>
services at Smith's school house <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Mattie Little <lb/>
H. Crumpler left Monday morn- <lb/>
for their homes at Wilson. <lb/>
Forest fires are doing up <lb/>
things in Beaver Dam towns lip <lb/>
just now <lb/>
Mr. Hedgepeth made a lecture <lb/>
on farming last night at Smith's <lb/>
school house and organized a <lb/>
club there. <lb/>
An officer was around this <lb/>
morning looking after some law- <lb/>
breakers and they are having a <lb/>
trial at this writing. <lb/>
President Finley, of the South- <lb/>
Railway, a speech at Sal- <lb/>
division that existed for <lb/>
sometime in the Baptist church <lb/>
of Wilson has been adjusted and <lb/>
the two factious have re-united. <lb/>
Over a million cabbage plants <lb/>
for sale. Jersey and <lb/>
Charleston Wakefield and Early <lb/>
Pilot, all grown from Tait's true <lb/>
type seed. Delivered in field at <lb/>
per thousand, or packed for <lb/>
shipment at per thousand. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Congressman has <lb/>
proven that he has a stronger <lb/>
Thursday said that fl,, of them thought, <lb/>
no area of equal extent in point all right. <lb/>
world is the agricultural out- <lb/>
look brighter than in the South- <lb/>
And he said lots <lb/>
of other good things, too. <lb/>
A I county jury render- <lb/>
ed a verdict damages <lb/>
against the Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
in the suit brought against the <lb/>
railroad for the killing of W. A. <lb/>
Stewart, a lawyer in Dunn, who <lb/>
was run over by a freight car in <lb/>
February. <lb/>
The amount of wheat to be <lb/>
sown per acre will depend on the <lb/>
fertility of the soil On strong <lb/>
clay loam well suited to wheat <lb/>
the plants will tiller or spread <lb/>
more than on thin soil, and less <lb/>
seed need be used . As an aver- <lb/>
age amount would say five <lb/>
pecks, but on thin land would <lb/>
sow six to seven <lb/>
Progressive<lb/>
People opposed to football are <lb/>
finding strength for side of Wilmington is proving to be a <lb/>
the argument in recent occur- good jungle for blind tiger hunt<lb/>
Poor old Duncan He gets all <lb/>
the blame every time The <lb/>
You cannot express your <lb/>
thanksgiving in any more grate- <lb/>
way than in remembering <lb/>
the orphans. <lb/>
The report now comes that <lb/>
government holds that the <lb/>
graph and telephone merger is <lb/>
illegal, and is after it. <lb/>
to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
administrator of the estate J. I. <lb/>
Fleming;, deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
given to all persons indebted to the <lb/>
state to in immediate payment to <lb/>
Durham tight is the undersigned; and all persons having <lb/>
claims against said estate will take <lb/>
latest. <lb/>
notice that they must the same <lb/>
to the undersigned for payment on or <lb/>
before the 24th of November. 1910. <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This 24th day of 1909. <lb/>
S. T. White, <lb/>
ltd of J. L, Fleming. <lb/>
Weak <lb/>
Heart Action <lb/>
There arc certain nerves <lb/>
that control the action <lb/>
of the heart. When they <lb/>
become weak, the heart <lb/>
action is impaired. Short <lb/>
breath, pain around heart, <lb/>
choking sensation, <lb/>
fluttering, <lb/>
or rapid pulse, and other <lb/>
distressing symptoms fol- <lb/>
low. Dr. Miles Heart Cure <lb/>
is a medicine especially <lb/>
adapted to the needs of <lb/>
these nerves and the mus- <lb/>
structure of the <lb/>
heart itself. It is a <lb/>
strengthening tonic that <lb/>
brings speedy, relief. <lb/>
Try it. <lb/>
I marred with what I <lb/>
thought was stomach trouble, <lb/>
the told mo had heart <lb/>
trouble. tried man, remedies, <lb/>
when the Dr. almanac came <lb/>
Into my and I concluded to <lb/>
a Dr. Heart Cure. have <lb/>
on three and now am <lb/>
not at ail. I am cured and <lb/>
this medicine did It. I write la <lb/>
the that it will attract the at- <lb/>
of who suffer as I ilia. <lb/>
MKS. IX <lb/>
Main St. Ky. <lb/>
Your He Dr. Heart <lb/>
Cure, and we him to return <lb/>
of If II <lb/>
i benefit you. <lb/>
Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN W. L TINGLE <lb/>
furnished <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. Advertising rates <lb/>
attend the M. E water to the fields for <lb/>
Wanted to buy bushels morning to attend the M. E. water to the fields for hogs., <lb/>
Smith fire <lb/>
See our new J the graded <lb/>
and before Co. Dixon. caused by flue, <lb/>
your fall purchases. J. R- Smith, . A lamp was left burning on a <lb/>
Ayden Lumber Co. had his sewing machine at Exum nail's <lb/>
hand mas <lb/>
School books, bibles and <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Dinner baskets, pencil boxes, <lb/>
slates, pencils, ink erasers at <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Cook stoves, heaters and stove <lb/>
repairs at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
, patterns and magazines <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Rubber, and corrugated roofing <lb/>
R. Smith Co. <lb/>
To the you <lb/>
want an extra grade of <lb/>
call on W. E. Tingle- <lb/>
Car salt fine or course at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
If you want to insure <lb/>
property against fire. Tingle will <lb/>
do it. <lb/>
Gaudy and rubber belting <lb/>
pipe fitting valves at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
If you have any property to <lb/>
Tingle will sell it. <lb/>
Galvanized sinks nice to attach <lb/>
to your pumps for your water <lb/>
shelf at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
Windows, doors, lime, cement, <lb/>
hardware, locks, hinges at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
If you need a good open or <lb/>
top buggy, wagon or cart call <lb/>
R. Smith Co. Dixon. <lb/>
We will pay the highest mar- <lb/>
price for bushels of <lb/>
cotton seed delivered to us in <lb/>
any quantity. <lb/>
A nice line of coffins and <lb/>
caskets always on hand with a <lb/>
nice hearse at your service at <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. A; Dixon. <lb/>
An experienced blacksmith is <lb/>
waiting to shoe your horses and <lb/>
mules at J. Smith Co Dixon. <lb/>
Will gin your cotton for one <lb/>
twentieth pound, and give you <lb/>
the and ties, bring us <lb/>
your cotton. J. R. Smith Co <lb/>
Dixon. <lb/>
Mr. left Tuesday <lb/>
The Best Food for Workers. <lb/>
The food for those who work <lb/>
with hand or brain Is DOT at high <lb/>
priced. <lb/>
The best example of this it found In <lb/>
Quaker It stands the top <lb/>
that supply nourishment <lb/>
and vigor, without taxing the <lb/>
and yet it is the least <lb/>
food one can eat. <lb/>
This great rood value low cost <lb/>
make it an ideal toot families who <lb/>
want to get the greatest good from <lb/>
what they eat. <lb/>
Laborer, or farm hands, fed <lb/>
plentifully on Quaker will work <lb/>
better with less than If <lb/>
fed on almost any other kind of food <lb/>
AH of facts were and <lb/>
very Interesting <lb/>
HOPE WELL ITEMS. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
loot t night when it exploded foods wore lathered Pi-i <lb/>
tied last very lessor Fisher of Yale University <lb/>
badly. Dr. Frizzle amputated was narrow <lb/>
,, by <lb/>
one linger. <lb/>
Nice turned work, bucket, of Joe as no one was <lb/>
window and door frames made <lb/>
on short notice by J. R. Smith <lb/>
Co. Dixon. <lb/>
We regret to hear of the sud- <lb/>
den and untimely death of Mr. J. <lb/>
L. Keen, of Grifton. He was <lb/>
buried Monday. Mr. Keen had <lb/>
been a prominent figure in <lb/>
ton for a long time and will be <lb/>
sadly missed. <lb/>
Call on us for ceiling, flooring, <lb/>
and <lb/>
We guarantee <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co. Dixon. <lb/>
Quite a delegation of our Odd <lb/>
Fellows expect to attend the <lb/>
district meeting at Washington <lb/>
on Thanksgiving. <lb/>
J. R. May and wife, of Green <lb/>
ville. spent Sunday in town visit- <lb/>
Walter Gardner. <lb/>
Mrs. Fred and <lb/>
daughter spent Sunday visiting <lb/>
her daughter, Mrs. J. R. Smith. <lb/>
Tull West, who has been with <lb/>
J. J. Edwards Son this fall, <lb/>
has accepted a clerkship in Kin- <lb/>
We wish him good luck. <lb/>
The infant of B. J. Skinner <lb/>
died last Tuesday. It was <lb/>
ceded by its mother a few days <lb/>
ago. extend sympathy to <lb/>
the grief father. <lb/>
T. U and wife, of <lb/>
Wilson, are visiting at Jesse <lb/>
Cannon's. The class <lb/>
entertained at R. C. Cannon's in <lb/>
their honor Monday night. <lb/>
There will be service Thursday <lb/>
morning at o'clock at the <lb/>
Free Will Baptist church, and <lb/>
Thursday night at the Baptist <lb/>
church. <lb/>
It is so very dry in our <lb/>
that people have to carry <lb/>
at home at Mr. <lb/>
You'll And Quaker Oats re <lb/>
size packages, and <lb/>
sealed tics; the latter best for It. <lb/>
climates, <lb/>
A. M. COLLEGE. <lb/>
VIEWS OF A VISITOR. <lb/>
What He About Greenville on <lb/>
His Return Home. <lb/>
Mr. Robert N. editor <lb/>
Southern championship foot ball of the Spring Hope Leader and <lb/>
will be played. The A. j superintendent of schools of <lb/>
and M. team, with its coaches,, county, was one of the <lb/>
is daily practicing for visitors here at the meeting of <lb/>
game. The student-body is superintendents and the <lb/>
West Raleigh, Nov. <lb/>
is a few days before the <lb/>
learning many songs and yells <lb/>
with which to cheer their team <lb/>
on to victory when they meet V. <lb/>
P. I. on gridiron at Norfolk <lb/>
Thanksgiving day. It is to be a <lb/>
hard fought game but the Far- <lb/>
mer boys of Carolina hope to re- <lb/>
turn with Virginia's scalp. For <lb/>
Stephens and At A. <lb/>
M great stars, it will be their last <lb/>
game in Red and White and they <lb/>
will play as never before. For the <lb/>
other boys it will be a record <lb/>
training celebration on <lb/>
the 11th and 12th. In the next <lb/>
issue of his paper he gave a long <lb/>
account of the inauguration of <lb/>
President Wright, pointed out <lb/>
the excellence of the school and <lb/>
advised the people of his county <lb/>
who want their children well <lb/>
educated to send them here. He <lb/>
also had some very nice things <lb/>
to say about Greenville from <lb/>
which we copy the <lb/>
story would not be com <lb/>
breaking game and all will strive were we to leave unsaid a <lb/>
to star for Carolina. There are word praise for the good <lb/>
REPORT Of THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. <lb/>
At the Close of Business Nov. <lb/>
613.86 <lb/>
10,000.00 <lb/>
501.41 <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts 46,889.88 <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
Demand loans <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin cur. <lb/>
bank and other <lb/>
U. Notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock 26,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund 12,500.00 <lb/>
less <lb/>
cur. exp. and taxes pd. 1,457.40 <lb/>
Dividends unpaid 48.00 <lb/>
Deposits sub. to check 69,680.90 <lb/>
Cashier's checKs <lb/>
outstanding 648.98 <lb/>
Savings deposits 12,874.10 <lb/>
Total 1113,118.68 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY OF PITT. <lb/>
boys on the team from every <lb/>
section of the State, and their <lb/>
friends will be there to cheer the <lb/>
on to victory. <lb/>
Practically all the students will <lb/>
go. Every one who can should <lb/>
take advantage of the low rates <lb/>
and go to Norfolk to witness the <lb/>
greatest football game ever <lb/>
played in the South <lb/>
day. <lb/>
There will be a mass meeting <lb/>
in Hall Tuesday night <lb/>
Gov. Kitchin, Ex-Gov. Aycock, <lb/>
Mr. Josephus Daniels, members <lb/>
of the faculty, and others are <lb/>
invited to make short talks and <lb/>
help give the team an <lb/>
tic for they leave <lb/>
that night for Norfolk where <lb/>
they will get in final trim for <lb/>
game. <lb/>
Gov. Kitchin and family have <lb/>
been invited to go to the A. M. <lb/>
V. P. I. football game at the <lb/>
expense of the A. M. team. <lb/>
Many of the school girls and <lb/>
Raleigh people come out to wit- <lb/>
the dress parades of the <lb/>
each Monday afternoon <lb/>
Members of the agricultural <lb/>
faculty who assisted Prof. <lb/>
in the farm school near <lb/>
Winston last week, report most <lb/>
enthusiastic meeting. T h e re <lb/>
was an attendance of over <lb/>
every day. The extension work <lb/>
is thus proving a great success, <lb/>
farmers are beginning to realize <lb/>
there is much to learn about <lb/>
farming. Those interested <lb/>
should address Prof. at <lb/>
West Raleigh N. C. <lb/>
J. R. Smith, of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb/>
the above statement is true to the best my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to <lb/>
before me. this 19th day Nov- <lb/>
ember, 1909. <lb/>
HODGES. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH. <lb/>
R. C. CANNON, <lb/>
DIXON, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
Young Girls are Victims <lb/>
of headache, as well as older women, <lb/>
but all get quick relief and prompt <lb/>
cute from Dr. King's New Life Pills, <lb/>
the world's best remedy for sick and <lb/>
headaches. They make pure <lb/>
blood, and strong nerves and build up <lb/>
your health. Try them. at <lb/>
drug stores <lb/>
We are prepared to furnish you with <lb/>
House and Kitchen Furniture <lb/>
at the very prices. Cash or Installment. <lb/>
Come to see us and we will convince you <lb/>
AYDEN FURNITURE CO. <lb/>
NEXT DOOR TO <lb/>
NOTICE NOTICE <lb/>
We wish to call your attention to our new line of fall goods which <lb/>
we now have. We have taken great care in buying this year and we <lb/>
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Ginghams, No <lb/>
Laces and Embroideries and in that is carried in i <lb/>
Dry Goods Store. <lb/>
Come let us show you. <lb/>
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
Her Sister Dead. <lb/>
Mrs. R. Hyman received a tel- <lb/>
this morning bringing the <lb/>
sad intelligence of the death, in <lb/>
a Norfolk hospital, of her sister, <lb/>
Mrs. Jordan Edwards, of Mar- <lb/>
Mrs. Hyman has <lb/>
the sympathy of many friends <lb/>
in her sorrow. <lb/>
Honor Roll <lb/>
Of Utopia graded school Stand- <lb/>
ard, N. C, for four weeks, end- <lb/>
Nov. Roy Worth- <lb/>
Mildred Arthur, Viv- <lb/>
Case, Allen, Joe Jones, <lb/>
Charlie Maybelle <lb/>
Hemby, Bertha Willoughby. <lb/>
people of Greenville. Met at <lb/>
the station in an automobile, <lb/>
taken to the home of Dr. D. L. <lb/>
James, where we wire made to <lb/>
feel at home and permitted to go <lb/>
and come at will, driven over <lb/>
the city by Dr. given the <lb/>
use of his typewriter in looking <lb/>
after our newspaper <lb/>
taken to the depot <lb/>
day morning his son, Mr. <lb/>
David C. James, who by the way <lb/>
designed the monogram of the <lb/>
school which is used on all the <lb/>
college we can't <lb/>
mention all courtesies shown. <lb/>
Every other county superintend- <lb/>
and school principal had <lb/>
same sort of treatment. Allot <lb/>
the hundreds of visitors in town <lb/>
Friday were invited to go home <lb/>
with some one for dinner and <lb/>
spend the night, too. The <lb/>
tors were the guests of <lb/>
and the folks wanton to enter- <lb/>
them, and they were sorry <lb/>
there were not more guests in <lb/>
town. One man who came in a <lb/>
little late and registered at the <lb/>
hotel was caught on his way to <lb/>
the hotel from the school by a <lb/>
friend and forced to go home <lb/>
with him for dinner. It wasn't <lb/>
Greenville's fault that the <lb/>
hotel man made the visitor <lb/>
pay for a dinner he didn't eat, <lb/>
and Greenville folks are pull- <lb/>
all together now for a <lb/>
new hotel and manufacturing <lb/>
plants, and their success in the <lb/>
past leads us to believe they will <lb/>
come pretty near getting what <lb/>
they want Greenville, <lb/>
yours if you is the slogan <lb/>
of the city, and it is not a mean- <lb/>
jingle of words either. <lb/>
The folks there live the <lb/>
of that slogan every day, <lb/>
and if you don't believe it, go to <lb/>
see them and find out for your- <lb/>
self. The folks there entertain <lb/>
you not because they feel that it <lb/>
a duty, but because they want <lb/>
to, and then you want them to <lb/>
entertain you. There is no feel- <lb/>
of wishing you were at the <lb/>
hotel rather than in a private <lb/>
home. It is the spirit that <lb/>
brought the school to Greenville <lb/>
and it is the spirit that will <lb/>
the town great. There <lb/>
are other towns in North Caro- <lb/>
that could follow Green- <lb/>
example and thus gain <lb/>
many things. Nothing is too <lb/>
Hope Well, N. C. Nov. 22.- <lb/>
Rev. Sylvester Hassell, of <lb/>
at Hancock's <lb/>
Sunday. There was a large <lb/>
crowd present and everybody <lb/>
enjoyed his excellent sermon. <lb/>
Miss Mary Kittrell. <lb/>
ville, is visiting her cousins. <lb/>
Misses Maggie and Julia <lb/>
this week. <lb/>
Miss Geneva Edwards, of . <lb/>
H. S. made a weekend visit with <lb/>
her Miss Leona <lb/>
Carlo. Harris and Miss <lb/>
Kittrell. of Greenville, spent <lb/>
Sunday at Charles <lb/>
Paul of Winterville <lb/>
High school, spent Friday night <lb/>
at J. II. Skinner's. <lb/>
Zeno Allen, of Ballards X <lb/>
and Miss Vida <lb/>
horn, of Ayden, scent Sunday <lb/>
with Miss Rosalie Skinner. <lb/>
Miss Cora of <lb/>
Ayden, is spending this week <lb/>
with Miss Charity Worthington. <lb/>
D L. SKinner and Hunter Cox <lb/>
spent Sunday afternoon at Gum <lb/>
Swamp. <lb/>
Skinner, near Farm- <lb/>
ville, spent Saturday night with <lb/>
his uncle. J. K. Skinner. <lb/>
Tom Jackson, of <lb/>
and Jarvis of <lb/>
den, spent Sunday afternoon at <lb/>
J. H. Skinner's. <lb/>
Ed Wilson, of Newport New.-, <lb/>
Va., called at C. J. Smith's Sun- <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
Cell Worthington and his <lb/>
mother, of Riverside, spent Sun- <lb/>
day at B. J. <lb/>
Quite a large crowd attended <lb/>
the pound party at LaFayette <lb/>
Cox's Friday night. <lb/>
It is with sad hearts we an- <lb/>
the death little Helen <lb/>
Margery, daughter of B. J. <lb/>
Skinner, aged four months. It <lb/>
died at the home of its grand- <lb/>
father, J. H. and was <lb/>
laid to rest in the Cannon grave <lb/>
yard near here. <lb/>
Miss Alma Cannon, who is <lb/>
teaching near Winterville, spent <lb/>
from until Sunday with <lb/>
relatives and friends in this <lb/>
community. <lb/>
Rev. T. H. King, of Winterville, <lb/>
will preach a Thanksgiving <lb/>
at Hope Well Thursday at <lb/>
p. m. We hope to a large crowd <lb/>
will be present. <lb/>
B. J. Skinner and W. H. Bar- <lb/>
from near <lb/>
spent Sunday at J. H. Skinner's. <lb/>
We regret to hear Miss <lb/>
Jessie Cannon is confined to her <lb/>
home with We wish <lb/>
her a speedy recovery. <lb/>
Miss Faye Corey, of Ayden, <lb/>
spent Friday night with Miss <lb/>
Rosalie Skinner- <lb/>
We are having some warm <lb/>
weather for the time of year. <lb/>
WITH <lb/>
Gives Pent ml <lb/>
the Credit for <lb/>
it to . <lb/>
L JOSEPH V. W. t- <lb/>
I pleasure In <lb/>
valuable as u <lb/>
remedy. <lb/>
have <lb/>
three years with used <lb/>
everything in mi unlit <lb/>
I of your <lb/>
using two iv.-u- <lb/>
I can ii u <lb/>
the nun net. <lb/>
By until I your <lb/>
have never been v <lb/>
lion. C.<lb/>
with r <lb/>
and can <lb/>
remedy to my i.; as an i <lb/>
i and <lb/>
cure <lb/>
Ban now . <lb/>
and manufacture <lb/>
Fit <lb/>
an <lb/>
Ask your Druggist for a free <lb/>
Almanac <lb/>
Captured a of Crap Shooters. <lb/>
Monday Mr. W. C. <lb/>
Hines was returning with his <lb/>
blood hounds on a freight train <lb/>
from He got off the <lb/>
train above the junction just out- <lb/>
of town, and as he was com- <lb/>
on foot from tun on a <lb/>
; quad of playing crap. <lb/>
broke to and <lb/>
several of them not away, but he <lb/>
captured live and marched them <lb/>
down to jail. <lb/>
Kills Her Foe of Years. <lb/>
moat enemy I had <lb/>
fur M. <lb/>
Duncan, of Me., <lb/>
Dyspepsia. after <lb/>
anting or drinking and could <lb/>
sleep After man rem d failed <lb/>
and several me up. I <lb/>
tried Electric Hitters, h cured me <lb/>
Now Call eat <lb/>
I am old am to <lb/>
get h at-d back <lb/>
For Indigestion. <lb/>
petite, kidney trouble, lame back, <lb/>
female com pi its Only <lb/>
all dealers. <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
Building and Loan Growing. <lb/>
The directors of The Home <lb/>
Loan Association held <lb/>
their monthly meeting Tuesday <lb/>
afternoon. One item of business <lb/>
at this meeting was receiving <lb/>
the quarterly report of the <lb/>
secretary and treasurer. This <lb/>
report showed that in the eighth <lb/>
series, which began Nov, 6th, <lb/>
about shares were sold, <lb/>
bringing the total number of <lb/>
shares in the association to about <lb/>
The amount of loans is <lb/>
now approximately with <lb/>
other applications pending. The <lb/>
weekly dues on shares amounts <lb/>
to about The <lb/>
and what it is doing for Green- <lb/>
ville is something to be proud of <lb/>
Blow off Pipe <lb/>
The blow-off pipe of one of the <lb/>
boilers in the Tobacco <lb/>
Co. factory burst yesterday and <lb/>
scalded the fireman and his <lb/>
mother pretty badly, but their <lb/>
injures are not serious. <lb/>
European Plan. <lb/>
la <lb/>
BALTIMORE, MO. <lb/>
Rev. B. F. Huske returned <lb/>
Friday evening from Fayetteville <lb/>
where he was called last Friday <lb/>
to the beside of his aunt, Mrs. <lb/>
good for clever folks like those M. Pearce, who died Sun <lb/>
at <lb/>
MISS C. MEREDITH <lb/>
Graduate Nurse <lb/>
Ayden, North Carolina. <lb/>
day morning. The funeral <lb/>
services were conducted Monday <lb/>
afternoon. <lb/>
For Sale or Rent-A three <lb/>
horse farm near Greenville. <lb/>
Mrs. N. E. Anderson. <lb/>
d w <lb/>
LUXURIOUS ROOMS. SINGLE AND <lb/>
Without Balk,. SI Up.<lb/>
F-e. <lb/>
JOSEPH L. <lb/>
Scad <lb/>
The Brothers in yon homes, <lb/>
have com- to stay. Th joy <lb/>
for croup and pneumonia, never fails, <lb/>
and Grease for <lb/>
rheumatism and all aches and pains, <lb/>
all over the land by <lb/>
young and old. <lb/>
Manufactured <lb/>
THE GOOSE GREASE COMPANY, <lb/>
Greensboro, N. C. <lb/>
11-139 m w <lb/>
Lily's Oyster <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
s J l<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
CHILD VISITS HEAVEN. <lb/>
Lying <lb/>
She <lb/>
YORK COBB GET CONTRACT. <lb/>
A. AND M. COLLEGE NOTES. <lb/>
Sick With <lb/>
U Suddenly Healed <lb/>
The following is furnish- <lb/>
ed us by Mr. L- Willing- <lb/>
hem, of Wilson. N. C, formerly <lb/>
of Greenville. <lb/>
I was at Black Creek, N. <lb/>
little Iowa boat six miles <lb/>
of N. C , Mr. <lb/>
A. A. a young <lb/>
at that point, told me that his <lb/>
liter, Mrs A who lives <lb/>
Bear N. C, bad recently <lb/>
told of a little who had <lb/>
very mange I ex- <lb/>
a desire to see the child <lb/>
and see if I could her to tell <lb/>
me the story of her vision from <lb/>
her n lips. The young mer- <lb/>
chant told me that his brother <lb/>
was going over near there <lb/>
day and I very likely <lb/>
get him to take me to the place <lb/>
where the child lived. This <lb/>
done- <lb/>
found things as they were <lb/>
staled to I found a small <lb/>
girl, who will be eleven next Jan <lb/>
I gave her a Sunday <lb/>
paper which she seemed <lb/>
to but said that she <lb/>
read. <lb/>
things are spiritually <lb/>
there will be some <lb/>
people that will question the <lb/>
truth of this; as for myself, <lb/>
find no explanation of the story; <lb/>
I merely state the facts as they <lb/>
were given to me from the mouth <lb/>
little girl herself. <lb/>
Her parents are in very humble <lb/>
circumstances; she has had no ad- <lb/>
vantages whatever. Her <lb/>
are tenants on Mr. Addison <lb/>
near Kenly. Her <lb/>
father some years ago and <lb/>
her mother having married a <lb/>
second husband. She says, in <lb/>
her vision she saw own <lb/>
father in torment. She says that <lb/>
she was sick in bed tor two weens <lb/>
with scarlet fever and was <lb/>
very low at the of her <lb/>
vision, not having eaten anything <lb/>
from Sunday till Thursday. Her <lb/>
mother came in the room where <lb/>
the child lay and heard the little <lb/>
girl break out in a laugh and <lb/>
i am of <lb/>
This young girl is <lb/>
Elizabeth Deans, but is generally <lb/>
called Elizabeth or Lizzie Lizzie <lb/>
went on to tell was up <lb/>
there with Jesus when I rose <lb/>
from my bed that was my <lb/>
Jesus was the one that <lb/>
came to me; said there <lb/>
II and I said Jesus <lb/>
please heal my He <lb/>
said and eased it And <lb/>
He took my away <lb/>
and left the body lying there <lb/>
on the bed, and I could it as <lb/>
He took my spirit away. When <lb/>
I got up there to Heaven, I said <lb/>
that I did not want to go back, <lb/>
and He said. and God <lb/>
were of to go back <lb/>
and tell my people and warn <lb/>
them how to <lb/>
Although this little girl had not <lb/>
eaten anything from Sunday till <lb/>
Thursday and had been very low <lb/>
with scarlet fever for two weeks, <lb/>
after the Great Physician had <lb/>
visited her she got right up and <lb/>
to use her own words again <lb/>
a big mess of collards and some <lb/>
chicken <lb/>
is in torment and asked <lb/>
me to bring a drop of water to <lb/>
put on his parched tongue. God <lb/>
has water, the people up there <lb/>
want nothing co eat. Mama <lb/>
wanted me to go visiting today, <lb/>
but I told her no, that some <lb/>
people would be here to see me <lb/>
today. Next after I got to <lb/>
Heaven I saw God, saw so many <lb/>
pretty things <lb/>
A lady that was also in the <lb/>
room, while I was recording the <lb/>
above, said to Mr. William <lb/>
Aycock and myself, that we <lb/>
ought to have heard her talk <lb/>
just after her vision, of the <lb/>
pretty things that she saw and <lb/>
she looked up and said, can <lb/>
see it now. God says what to <lb/>
say right now, I can't talk and <lb/>
tell them unless what He says <lb/>
tell them. He told me last <lb/>
night I could not stay here <lb/>
I nave the names of two ladies <lb/>
living in Wilson that she says <lb/>
Work Orphanage at Clayton West N. C. <lb/>
Will Begin at Once. National Congress was <lb/>
Thursday night the trustees of I chef <lb/>
the orphanage of the Knights of <lb/>
Pythias met in Clayton to open <lb/>
bids for the new orphanage. <lb/>
The successful bidden on <lb/>
main building, York and Cobb, <lb/>
of Greenville, N. C; heating; <lb/>
ct, Crawford <lb/>
and Hill Supply Company. Win-1 <lb/>
plumbing contract, <lb/>
A. W. Holder Co., Statesville. <lb/>
There were twenty-four bid- <lb/>
seventeen on the main <lb/>
building. <lb/>
The work of construction will <lb/>
commence at once, as the build- <lb/>
mint be completed by June <lb/>
1st. 1910, in order to have the <lb/>
orphanage opening re <lb/>
next meeting of the <lb/>
Grand Lodge. <lb/>
The building to be erected will <lb/>
be the first of three that have <lb/>
been planned for the orphanage. <lb/>
It will accommodate thirty-seven <lb/>
orphans in to the keep- <lb/>
and their families. It will <lb/>
be a two-story building, having <lb/>
three s in the rear. It will <lb/>
be thoroughly equipped, having <lb/>
its own ting and <lb/>
plants and waterworks, school <lb/>
rooms <lb/>
UNIVERSITY NOTES <lb/>
More if Sales. <lb/>
Buck v at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
John D, at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
E. R. Boyd-114 at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at average <lb/>
John at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
at 33.-, at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
S. b. at <lb/>
a at at aver- <lb/>
age <lb/>
Frank at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average 37.69. <lb/>
Jesse at c, <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
average <lb/>
Boyd Daniels-90 at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
W. H. Sutton-142 at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at at at at <lb/>
a-. <lb/>
L i at <lb/>
at it <lb/>
at average <lb/>
J. J. Buck-62 at at <lb/>
at at <lb/>
average <lb/>
C. Dixon-124 at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
average <lb/>
W. A Morris-136 at <lb/>
at at <lb/>
at at at <lb/>
at average <lb/>
The total sales at the Star ware <lb/>
house for Tuesday, Nov. 16th. <lb/>
were 51.000 pounds at <lb/>
average 13.97. <lb/>
from Nov. 4th to 9th, The <lb/>
were held in Hall <lb/>
and many of the students <lb/>
availed themselves of the <lb/>
j to hear addresses by some <lb/>
of the most eminent men in <lb/>
American agriculture today. <lb/>
Among the speakers were <lb/>
James Wilson, Andrew M. <lb/>
and other prominent <lb/>
Thirty-seven States <lb/>
were represented by men who <lb/>
leaders in their respective <lb/>
states. They were men of <lb/>
intelligence to discuss wise <lb/>
all economic questions which <lb/>
confront the farmers of the <lb/>
nation today. This congress is <lb/>
tile . <lb/>
of farm-rs for the public side of <lb/>
agriculture. <lb/>
A very significant fact was <lb/>
that the northern and western <lb/>
states wire much better <lb/>
than the southern. Few <lb/>
were seen, while <lb/>
and some other western <lb/>
states had as many as forty <lb/>
gates. The South is advancing <lb/>
rapidly, and it is only a question <lb/>
of time when it will ranK among <lb/>
the first sections of the <lb/>
Raleigh did herself in <lb/>
entertaining the delegates of the <lb/>
Congress. In fact <lb/>
they were loud in their praise for <lb/>
Carolina and Raleigh. <lb/>
The visit of Ambassador James <lb/>
Bryce to Raleigh during the <lb/>
Congress was a notable <lb/>
event, because Mr. Bryce is <lb/>
recognized as one of the ablest <lb/>
diplomats and statesmen of his <lb/>
generation. <lb/>
A mass meeting of practically <lb/>
the entire student body was held <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C. Nov. <lb/>
The religious services of this <lb/>
week's chapel exercises were <lb/>
conducted by Rev. J. Wild- <lb/>
man, pastor of the Baptist <lb/>
church. Monday. Tuesday and <lb/>
Wednesday Dr. Kemp P- Battle <lb/>
gave interesting n <lb/>
of the early tile of the <lb/>
Tuesday morning Mr. <lb/>
spoke upon student <lb/>
help to the churches. The entire <lb/>
Friday morning exercises con- <lb/>
of a song service led by <lb/>
Chas. H. and Mr. Charles <lb/>
T. Woolen and engaged in by <lb/>
over students. <lb/>
The University tennis team, <lb/>
composed of George Fountain, a <lb/>
second year law student, and <lb/>
EVERY WOMAN WILL <lb/>
If you will send name and ad- <lb/>
dress we will mail you Free a package <lb/>
of Mother Gray's Australian-Leaf, a <lb/>
certain, pleasant herb cure for <lb/>
Women's ills. It is a reliable regulator <lb/>
and If you have pains <lb/>
in the hack. Urinary. Bladder or Kid- <lb/>
trouble, use this pleasant union of <lb/>
aromatic herbs, roots and leaves. All <lb/>
it, SO cents, or address. <lb/>
The Mother Gray Co., La N. Y. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of the power of con- <lb/>
in b certain mortgage deed <lb/>
delivered by Edward <lb/>
and wife Mary Laughing- <lb/>
house to R. A. Tyson on th.- 4th day of <lb/>
January 1914 a-d duly recorded the <lb/>
register of deeds office of county. <lb/>
North Carolina, in book 0-7 page <lb/>
the undersigned will expose to public <lb/>
sale before the court house in <lb/>
Greenville, to the h bidder, on <lb/>
Saturday the 11th day of December, <lb/>
o'clock noon, a certain tract <lb/>
I or parcel of land In mid in the <lb/>
I county of Pitt and State of North Car- <lb/>
Charles Venable, a member of the and follows, to <lb/>
, , . On the east by s run and the <lb/>
senior have made a triumph speer land, on the south by Tar star, <lb/>
sweep of the State of Virginia. . n the west to John Fleming heirs and <lb/>
on north by Fernando Ward and <lb/>
known the Mizell farm, and being <lb/>
the same land deeded by Wheeler Mar- <lb/>
tin, commissioner, to R A. and <lb/>
o the <lb/>
meet. In the four intercollegiate <lb/>
meets fall. North Carolina <lb/>
has not been scored and <lb/>
Professional Cards <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
Office opposite R. L. Smith <lb/>
tables, and next door to John <lb/>
Buggy new building. <lb/>
DR l L CAM <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
They defeated <lb/>
con, Richmond College, and the <lb/>
. . . ,.,. commissioner, n. n. i <lb/>
University of Virginia, capturing, by R A m to <lb/>
both doubles and Singles in each to <lb/>
. mortgage deed. of N <lb/>
her total score is to her <lb/>
opponents This is perhaps the <lb/>
most brilliant record in the his- <lb/>
of intercollegiate tennis in <lb/>
the South. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, <lb/>
This the 9th <lb/>
Moore Long, <lb/>
lay of November, 1909. <lb/>
R. A. Mortgagee. <lb/>
II lid <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
I By virtue of a decree of the Super- <lb/>
court of Pitt county, in special <lb/>
No. entitled, Pen <lb/>
and wife Martha Ann H <lb/>
et against Alfred et <lb/>
of economic geology, attended the undersign d commissioner will <lb/>
n. ,,,; sell for cash before the court home <lb/>
the second annual meeting of do r in at public auction <lb/>
the North Carolina Drainage at noon, on Saturday. December 18th. <lb/>
and made one of the blowing parcel <lb/>
Association, <lb/>
principal addresses before the <lb/>
association. Dr. Pratt is vitally <lb/>
interested in every economic <lb/>
need of North Carolina, and is <lb/>
doing more for the good roads <lb/>
movement than any other one <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Dr. Charles H. dean of <lb/>
the school of Applied Sciences, <lb/>
has been elected chairman of a <lb/>
or lot of land situated in the county of <lb/>
Pitt in and in the <lb/>
town of adjoining the lands <lb/>
of R. R. and Silas Mal- <lb/>
lard heirs and fronting the <lb/>
Washington and Greenville public <lb/>
r-ad, lying on the cast side of said <lb/>
id, . one half of an <lb/>
acre more or less, and being the fame <lb/>
lot of land whereon <lb/>
Senior, lived at time of his death. <lb/>
This November 16th. 1909. <lb/>
J. B. James, Commissioner. <lb/>
DR. S HASSELL <lb/>
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Office on Third street formerly <lb/>
pied by Dr. Bagwell. <lb/>
L. I. MOORE W. H. LONG <lb/>
Moore and Long <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
N C <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
Attorney-at-Law <lb/>
N. a <lb/>
Harry Skinner. Skinner, Jr <lb/>
H. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYERS. <lb/>
WHEDBEE <lb/>
Greenville N. C <lb/>
Wednesday night in Hall. I division in the American Chem- <lb/>
in behalf of foot ball cal Society, will preside <lb/>
re delivered by Professor Rid- <lb/>
dick, Messrs. Josephus Daniels, <lb/>
N. B. Broughton and others. <lb/>
The were most enthusiastic <lb/>
and joined heartily in the yells <lb/>
and songs. <lb/>
Mr. Skinner, the farm <lb/>
recently shred- <lb/>
ding his corn crop, which yielded <lb/>
an average of forty bushels per <lb/>
acre. This is a plain example of <lb/>
what modern farming can do on <lb/>
poor land. <lb/>
It is not best to let land be idle <lb/>
any time, therefore practical <lb/>
farmers should be careful to <lb/>
keep a growing crop on the soil <lb/>
throughout the year, in order <lb/>
that no plant food may be lost. <lb/>
Every acre on the college farm <lb/>
is now covered with growing <lb/>
wheat, oats, rye or crimson <lb/>
clover, and the land is improving <lb/>
all the while. <lb/>
Sale Town Lot in Ayden. <lb/>
On Saturday, Nov. at <lb/>
o'clock p. m. in the town of Ayden. <lb/>
will sell at public auction, for cash, <lb/>
one town lot, described us sit- <lb/>
in the town of Ayden, west of <lb/>
Venters Street, b lot No. in <lb/>
block and bounded on the east lots <lb/>
Nob. u and t, and on the south by <lb/>
over its sessions in Boston. Dr. <lb/>
by his inventions in <lb/>
industrial chemistry, is one of <lb/>
the best known chemists in <lb/>
America. By his invention of <lb/>
the Hefty turpentine CUp he Third Street and on the west lot No. <lb/>
saved the Southern turpentine <lb/>
farmers millions dollars. of H. Ci <lb/>
The annual debate between Mrs. M. L. Manning. <lb/>
the University of North Carolina <lb/>
and the University of j <lb/>
will be held Friday night; Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
in Chapel Hill. Barnett and I <lb/>
Highsmith represent Carolina. <lb/>
Convention. <lb/>
State vent ion of the <lb/>
Christian church is being held <lb/>
this week in Wilson. Preceding <lb/>
the convention, the C. W. B. M. <lb/>
held its meeting Tuesday, the <lb/>
address of welcome being de- <lb/>
livered by Mrs. T. L. <lb/>
Miss Mary Parrott, <lb/>
of Kinston. The reports of the <lb/>
different officers made a fine <lb/>
showing for the year's work and <lb/>
large increase along all lines. <lb/>
A feature of the women's meet- <lb/>
was an address by Mrs- Bes- <lb/>
Farrar a missionary <lb/>
to India. <lb/>
Those from Greenville in at- <lb/>
upon the convention are <lb/>
Rev. and Mrs. D. W. Arnold, E. <lb/>
A. Sr., and J. S. Tunstall. <lb/>
North Carolina Industries. <lb/>
The following new industries <lb/>
for North Carolina are reported <lb/>
by the Chattanooga <lb/>
lumber com- <lb/>
planing mill; <lb/>
hardware company. <lb/>
Fayetteville-$50,000 lumber <lb/>
company, <lb/>
Charlotte-Cotton oil <lb/>
factory. <lb/>
Elk Park-$10,000 planing mill. <lb/>
hosiery mill. <lb/>
chair factory. <lb/>
TRUTHFUL REPORTS. <lb/>
the <lb/>
l court clerk of Pitt county as ad- <lb/>
of the estate of J. H. <lb/>
, i deceased, notice is hereby <lb/>
, given to all persons indebted to the <lb/>
estate to make immediate payment to <lb/>
Most Popular Druggist Makes <lb/>
Remarkable Statement. <lb/>
, , , . the undersigned; and all having <lb/>
Dr. J. W. Bryan has at last obtained against the are <lb/>
for a remedy which they to present the same to the undersigned <lb/>
k tr, to on or before the 13th day of <lb/>
191-j. or this notice will be plead <lb/>
the <lb/>
are <lb/>
cure any <lb/>
ton <lb/>
i g <lb/>
Trouble. <lb/>
f food <lb/>
not digest well, if there is or pain in of recovery, <lb/>
in the stomach, if the tongue is coated j <lb/>
and breath bad, if there Is <lb/>
and Liver Pills <lb/>
will cure you. If they do not you h <lb/>
Dr. W. Bryan's personal guarantee <lb/>
to return your money. Liver <lb/>
Pills give quick relief and make per- <lb/>
cures of Constipation, <lb/>
and all Liver Troubles are <lb/>
strong statements, but Dr. Bryan <lb/>
This 13th day of November, 1909. <lb/>
S. T. <lb/>
ltd of J. H. <lb/>
Stray Taken <lb/>
I have taken up one black sow, <lb/>
unmarked, about pounds, <lb/>
very large ears. Owner can get <lb/>
-ESTABLISHED 1875- <lb/>
S M <lb/>
Wholesale and retail Grocer <lb/>
and Furniture Dealer. Cash <lb/>
paid for Hides, Fur, Cotton Seed <lb/>
Oil Turkeys, Eggs, Oak <lb/>
Bedsteads, Mattresses, etc <lb/>
Suits, Baby Carriages, Go <lb/>
Parlor suits Tables, Lounges, <lb/>
Safes, P. and Gail Ax <lb/>
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key <lb/>
West Ch Henry George <lb/>
Cigars, Cherries, Peach, <lb/>
as. Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup, <lb/>
Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar, Coffee, <lb/>
Soap, Food, Matches. <lb/>
Oil. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls, <lb/>
Garden Seeds. Oranges, Apples, <lb/>
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apples- <lb/>
Peaches, Prunes. Currants, <lb/>
Raisins, Glass and <lb/>
Wooden ware. Cakes and Crack- <lb/>
Macaroni. Best But- <lb/>
New Royal Sewing Machines <lb/>
and numerous other goods. <lb/>
Quality and quantity cheap for <lb/>
cash. Come see me. <lb/>
S M <lb/>
SUMMER IS GONE <lb/>
And now is a good time to have <lb/>
your summer suit nicely cleaned <lb/>
and so it can be put away <lb/>
and kept for months. It is time <lb/>
to bring your overcoat and have <lb/>
it cleaned and ed for win- <lb/>
perhaps it needs a new <lb/>
or re-lining. A little work on it <lb/>
may save buying a new one. I <lb/>
am ready to do work for you <lb/>
as it ought to be done. <lb/>
PAUL The Tailor. <lb/>
are not satisfied with the results go to <lb/>
Dr. Bryan and ask for your money. <lb/>
Also for sale by M. II. Sauls at <lb/>
den. N. C. <lb/>
charges. This Nov. 11th, 1909. <lb/>
. Allen on Ashley Allen farm. <lb/>
R. P. D. Winterville. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
Greenville Reads Them with <lb/>
common Interest. <lb/>
A Greenville citizen tells his <lb/>
in the following statement. No <lb/>
better evidence than this can be had. <lb/>
The truthful reports of friends and <lb/>
neighbors the best proof in the <lb/>
world. Read and be convinced. <lb/>
John G. Latham, street <lb/>
Greenville, N. C., Kid- <lb/>
Pills in my case far any <lb/>
other kidney remedy I had previously <lb/>
used. For some time my kidneys were <lb/>
disordered, the secretions being too <lb/>
frequent and painful in passage. When <lb/>
I read of Kidney Pills, I was <lb/>
so much impressed that I procured a <lb/>
box at John L. Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
They seemed to go directly to the Beat <lb/>
of my trouble and gave me relief n a <lb/>
Notice of Sale of Land. <lb/>
By virtue of a power of sale contain- <lb/>
ed in a certain mortgage deed executed <lb/>
and delivered by L. N. Edwards and <lb/>
wife S. J. R. Edwards to R. L. Cox, on I <lb/>
the 12th day of March, 1907, of rec-1 <lb/>
appears in the registers office <lb/>
Pitt county in book Q page <lb/>
undersigned will on Monday the 6th <lb/>
day of December, it being the first <lb/>
Monday of December, 1906, expose to <lb/>
public sale before the court door <lb/>
in Greenville, to the highest bidder for <lb/>
cash the following tract or parcel of <lb/>
land to Lying and being in Swift <lb/>
Creek township, Put county, adjoining <lb/>
the lands of J. M. Cox, Jr., <lb/>
Moore and others and being the tract <lb/>
or lot upon which situated the L. N. <lb/>
Edwards store, near Cox's Mill, con- <lb/>
11-100 of an acre more or less. <lb/>
This sale will be made to satisfy the <lb/>
terms of said mortgage deed. <lb/>
This the 26th day of October, 1909. <lb/>
R. L. Cox, Mortgagee. <lb/>
F. C. Harding. Atty. ltd <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
I And Provisions j <lb/>
My kidneys were restored <lb/>
condition and I felt <lb/>
m I short time. <lb/>
she has a message for. normal <lb/>
People are flocking Out there to batter in every <lb/>
For Side by all dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb/>
see her. <lb/>
do hereby certify to the fact <lb/>
that the above is true. W. F. <lb/>
Aycock, Black Creek, N. <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
State. <lb/>
Remember the <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
NOTICE OF SALE. <lb/>
On December the 15th 1909, I will <lb/>
offer for sale at farm about <lb/>
two and one half miles of Bethel, <lb/>
N. C, to the highest bidder for cash, <lb/>
the following <lb/>
One horse, three mules, cattle, hogs, <lb/>
corn, fodder, peanuts, hay, wagons, <lb/>
carts, plows, cotton planter, guano <lb/>
sower, all other things <lb/>
belonging to Bailey and Jenkins on <lb/>
Bald farm, and also part of my house- <lb/>
hold goods, as I will leave the farm. <lb/>
This Nov. 17th, C. W. Bailey. <lb/>
I Cotton Bagging and <lb/>
vs on <lb/>
Goods kept con- <lb/>
In stock. Country <lb/>
Produce Bought and Sold <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N G <lb/>
North a <lb/>
WITH <lb/>
The <lb/>
Mutual Life <lb/>
INSURANCE COMPANY, <lb/>
OF <lb/>
NEW YORK, <lb/>
OLDEST IN AMERICA. <lb/>
LARGEST <lb/>
IN <lb/>
THE WORLD. <lb/>
1843. Assets over <lb/>
H. BENTLEY HARRISS <lb/>
Next Dow <lb/>
N. CAROLINA <lb/>
J. C. LANIER <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Monuments <lb/>
Tomb Stones <lb/>
Iron Fencing <lb/>
JOHNSTON. <lb/>
. ENGINEER and <lb/>
Running repairs to all kind of <lb/>
Steam fittings, erecting Engines, <lb/>
Tobacco machinery, all a <lb/>
Agent for Machinery and <lb/>
Electrical novelties. Give us a trial. <lb/>
AH work guaranteed and terms <lb/>
, , mu Message left at H. L. Carr's <lb/>
Help the candidates in m receive prompt attention, or phone <lb/>
Reflector piano contest No, <lb/>
W. M. DAWSON <lb/>
Ladies and Gents Tailor, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Pressing, Altering, Dyeing, <lb/>
Scouring, Chemical and Dry Cleaning. <lb/>
Satisfaction or no charge. <lb/>
In of Herbert Edmonds Barbel <lb/>
Shop, <lb/>
Our Greenville, <lb/>
come. <lb/>
yours if you<lb/>
XI <lb/>
fit <lb/>
r, J,,. <lb/>
gM <lb/>
QUICKS <lb/>
Year <lb/>
. .<lb/>
m- v Tie upon <lb/>
WAVES. <lb/>
i . ., <lb/>
Hew It Is Curious <lb/>
To <lb/>
the <lb/>
sand it n honor stoat lie <lb/>
and <lb/>
AMI I In tin <lb/>
lilts, sums <lb/>
when. <lb/>
ROM <lb/>
OF--A P <lb/>
mt <lb/>
Original Bank- <lb/>
liar to by Use thought <lb/>
of a mil sensational ac- <lb/>
in qua Bl-<lb/>
In i <lb/>
train any annul. <lb/>
person on-j <lb/>
-line it i <lb/>
liven if he l.<lb/>
it<lb/>
Versatility, ard <lb/>
Shrewd Scotch <lb/>
I and Thermal, Thai <lb/>
Two Kind. That <lb/>
that <lb/>
an <lb/>
awl <lb/>
a I to a <lb/>
II him<lb/>
Sill lie S <lb/>
Is- I. i i <lb/>
u bi fib tut <lb/>
lie A <lb/>
there Is<lb/>
Mi. <lb/>
i ocean <lb/>
tides <lb/>
and <lb/>
corner Brans and will l,. U- an. <lb/>
, . i. tin rt <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
Than <lb/>
The<lb/>
I. <lb/>
to ilia en tile taut, <lb/>
as <lb/>
e M <lb/>
the y. <lb/>
Inn b <lb/>
ll t mi c en- <lb/>
lull<lb/>
ii ii a ail <lb/>
v, , <lb/>
it. <lb/>
W. Bank- <lb/>
In mi fa London <lb/>
We <lb/>
W its <lb/>
when one <lb/>
Oft<lb/>
on<lb/>
mm a <lb/>
the of<lb/>
; I. a. .-W <lb/>
Me floured Forth <lb/>
In .-, <lb/>
the . Wm finally <lb/>
Simple <lb/>
m l l . vi u-s. <lb/>
It <lb/>
ban <lb/>
-I. m <lb/>
id<lb/>
so <lb/>
,, , <lb/>
by n style of i <lb/>
over to<lb/>
I mil i. ; III <lb/>
open Man, the is <lb/>
is <lb/>
for of end on <lb/>
caused <lb/>
. Jot, <lb/>
ti <lb/>
kt noose- <lb/>
t lie, inn. i n . f half <lb/>
four <lb/>
It man. <lb/>
tan I in <lb/>
deadly trap eon- <lb/>
ii <lb/>
rill ill I <lb/>
is <lb/>
. In <lb/>
ho one <lb/>
T. n fl <lb/>
I It<lb/>
Th around <lb/>
when <lb/>
is <lb/>
with a fernS- <lb/>
n. to loosen the sand and <lb/>
T-S- <lb/>
Hint <lb/>
or <lb/>
to one are <lb/>
is round <lb/>
of water <lb/>
to the or the <lb/>
of a <lb/>
of tan more distant <lb/>
shaped <lb/>
of when it he work <lb/>
I n in. I I lie i -of <lb/>
the In <lb/>
In <lb/>
for to get <lb/>
fide Hi <lb/>
leer. <lb/>
hi, j,. <lb/>
11.1 r-V . -1<lb/>
Two w <lb/>
V toll I i <lb/>
in <lb/>
-Wail <lb/>
and <lb/>
worth a <lb/>
with . per cent lo <lb/>
lain on Hi, <lb/>
Heat would tie <lb/>
Is <lb/>
In n r- <lb/>
soiled <lb/>
U- C. Forbes la Van<lb/>
R to------ <lb/>
I . Hopeful. <lb/>
was <lb/>
. , -o <lb/>
dry <lb/>
. . <lb/>
ii-. <lb/>
To <lb/>
was for <lb/>
not stroke the <lb/>
. . , <lb/>
waited; <lb/>
the pretty <lb/>
lot of <lb/>
the <lb/>
for be In <lb/>
Hair V Li M a ., ., <lb/>
And <lb/>
American. <lb/>
. I . <lb/>
A flatting at tH. Facts, f <lb/>
. A farmer <lb/>
other <lb/>
tic- <lb/>
inn rattier a boot which able a Lain In n <lb/>
he would be lo m . <lb/>
only J lit n w <lb/>
the Home <lb/>
is ii. try <lb/>
in. u a. she herself <lb/>
i-i i iT <lb/>
No of i <lb/>
The r a <lb/>
die <lb/>
with <lb/>
old as your<lb/>
In rt. people <lb/>
ant. <lb/>
of course.- <lb/>
I i v. <lb/>
at- Is- <lb/>
of <lb/>
only <lb/>
by h Until <lb/>
I Its <lb/>
its T's- <lb/>
ail <lb/>
Sank from <lb/>
ocean.- <lb/>
Win Out <lb/>
Error. That by <lb/>
i. o-lino . <lb/>
it. j . i . j <lb/>
and its <lb/>
twin call your <lb/>
to <lb/>
a to <lb/>
hi this <lb/>
Ml i- vi of <lb/>
for ii you will learn <lb/>
la <lb/>
taken ins reel <lb/>
sack. you <lb/>
In a at <lb/>
sack in bis <lb/>
my dear sir. is nut <lb/>
no army <lb/>
If-the <lb/>
In- <lb/>
at earliest possible <lb/>
think f ma to know nil <lb/>
to <lb/>
exclaimed the <lb/>
.- <lb/>
ti U <lb/>
pa -I <lb/>
a veil tit I <lb/>
was a <lb/>
a out <lb/>
J had effect <lb/>
I nils <lb/>
tin, way. he <lb/>
ti a <lb/>
tell me that . <lb/>
veil when How was <lb/>
I km w have never been a<lb/>
in id tin <lb/>
is <lb/>
U -In i- <lb/>
Ulah <lb/>
to ct. -a <lb/>
of U- <lb/>
of <lb/>
full of <lb/>
of <lb/>
Mere <lb/>
the <lb/>
to. lie Do <lb/>
In tor <lb/>
t lie in. As supply <lb/>
the <lb/>
In I ilia-1, i <lb/>
of Urn <lb/>
-his <lb/>
., Bliss five <lb/>
society, <lb/>
this <lb/>
n o <lb/>
the <lb/>
st <lb/>
was an or- <lb/>
c- <lb/>
a Skill had a, <lb/>
u; <lb/>
i gM <lb/>
Mar i J a a <lb/>
mil. it lie W A. <lb/>
, UM <lb/>
gin <lb/>
the <lb/>
cashier being supplied <lb/>
in entirely under hit <lb/>
Lie , it is teas hat I<lb/>
this <lb/>
f- <lb/>
torpedo <lb/>
la-Ids electricity that<lb/>
dark- <lb/>
--i . . . i i <lb/>
-1 I T<lb/>
a mill, of ,; ., <lb/>
the Now <lb/>
H Ire -a <lb/>
ram mitt<lb/>
i i Bay, i<lb/>
as <lb/>
vast of Jacobite correspond- <lb/>
 r <lb/>
the opposite of me tin <lb/>
Do you know my <lb/>
i demur <lb/>
Sr, I should like<lb/>
will en. <lb/>
good <lb/>
think I bet got <lb/>
case he family asked. <lb/>
the lawyer <lb/>
should certain- <lb/>
, . <lb/>
for tho <lb/>
the prompt <lb/>
in- i . <lb/>
an old wait <lb/>
roll of bills and <lb/>
out. <lb/>
J her got all <lb/>
out if this any- <lb/>
how, van honestly <lb/>
just what my chances of <lb/>
a suit <lb/>
i -la-i left <lb/>
bis <lb/>
lo was <lb/>
Ids by <lb/>
was <lb/>
his <lb/>
of- i <lb/>
Hie<lb/>
dues i I <lb/>
sci-e. hi id <lb/>
i fill <lb/>
hoard of he <lb/>
lira <lb/>
tn <lb/>
ska <lb/>
in of <lb/>
Ia <lb/>
to i <lb/>
They were, a, <lb/>
by the and put- <lb/>
lb. <lb/>
or , <lb/>
It Mas due owl of thus, re- , <lb/>
to most, <lb/>
and <lb/>
their tn to a <lb/>
at a <lb/>
a. <lb/>
p n<lb/>
hi. New Tribune, <lb/>
A y.<lb/>
I haven't you asked<lb/>
that way, <lb/>
noticed Hint <lb/>
noticed <lb/>
of <lb/>
ibis <lb/>
ions <lb/>
laboring in <lb/>
thy voice expect net <lb/>
en from pole <lb/>
in-thud in his effort to <lb/>
honest <lb/>
Senator <lb/>
h- oil <lb/>
paid <lb/>
In- want,. lo off on BOSH <lb/>
body sum- <lb/>
. Hubby. Mot. <lb/>
i- for you lo become <lb/>
Mo la not to <lb/>
remain tat <lb/>
to a poker party Is a <lb/>
ton Post <lb/>
Ml. ,. , . <lb/>
out ever craving for I <lb/>
their <lb/>
Thou <lb/>
. <lb/>
And <lb/>
to <lb/>
Sal- <lb/>
tile, rest <lb/>
that <lb/>
a for <lb/>
in <lb/>
of 1708 via lie <lb/>
of by one Simon Hodge, <lb/>
that II <lb/>
teat U <lb/>
were i <lb/>
K mill <lb/>
cast on the <lb/>
documents had <lb/>
from n <lb/>
in <lb/>
hit Of f I <lb/>
tho the <lb/>
painful that <lb/>
if ion <lb/>
tho were t <lb/>
for a. 1-- a term of. <lb/>
and been <lb/>
York <lb/>
. II . <lb/>
more than <lb/>
Proverb, <lb/>
an, Win. <lb/>
of j , <lb/>
is <lb/>
poem. <lb/>
that <lb/>
by i <lb/>
U was I brides T <lb/>
. . . . . , . . . ll, -ii, i i a <lb/>
Ill I <lb/>
wrote<lb/>
ii A-<lb/>
you <lb/>
love my <lb/>
wife. And my ,<lb/>
in private News. <lb/>
i r <lb/>
of <lb/>
the<lb/>
printed exactly as it <lb/>
was <lb/>
. he ho<lb/>
well <lb/>
bring up your <lb/>
Ilka <lb/>
is. <lb/>
J the Newt.<lb/>
it down, on the <lb/>
the th <lb/>
I-, <lb/>
to handle, but for <lb/>
what I'll take<lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
V ST. I <lb/>
POOR PRINT <lb/>
v.<lb/>
i.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
THIS IS A BARGAIN <lb/>
event that will surpass anything <lb/>
ever attempted in the <lb/>
line in Greenville. <lb/>
FAIR WARNING <lb/>
WINTER GOODS <lb/>
at such low prices. Ask your <lb/>
coupons. <lb/>
Ground in <lb/>
it will be to your interest to see me. <lb/>
I also have some splendid Manufacturing sites on railroad sidings for s <lb/>
Terms to suit purchasers. <lb/>
This High-grade stock of Merchandise, consisting of Dry Goods, Dress Goods, <lb/>
Silks, and Children's Wearing Apparel, Shoes, Mattings, Furniture <lb/>
ha been thrown on the market to be sold, without serve, regardless of cost, or value by Dec. <lb/>
Everything offered in announcement for <lb/>
Great Bargain Carnival <lb/>
u marked at price that deserve attention; anything ever <lb/>
attempted in Greenville. <lb/>
The Prices Quoted Below <lb/>
have their real in conjunction with the quality of <lb/>
offered. reputation cf C. T. the quality of <lb/>
he carries is well known. <lb/>
A MIGHTY BARGAINS <lb/>
COAT SUITS. <lb/>
fine Suits, up-to-date, <lb/>
styles, finest at the following <lb/>
Regular price sale <lb/>
price sale p-ice. <lb/>
Regular price sale price. <lb/>
Regular price sale price. <lb/>
SILK AND DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
Very best colors and stripes, <lb/>
regular sale price . . f <lb/>
inch white Lawn, regular price <lb/>
white Lawn, regular price It, <lb/>
sale <lb/>
in solid and stripes, colors, <lb/>
regular price price. <lb/>
Black Taffeta Silks. wide, <lb/>
price sale price. <lb/>
Suitings in all durable colon, regular <lb/>
price lee. sale price. -09 <lb/>
Fancy silks in all the latest shades <lb/>
price 60.-, sale price. <lb/>
EMBROIDERIES, LACES, ETC. <lb/>
Regular price sale price. <lb/>
Regular sale price.- U <lb/>
Regular price sale <lb/>
Laces, regular price lie,<lb/>
Laces, regular <lb/>
price and sale price. . 31-2 <lb/>
In this department our price will prove a <lb/>
veritable revelation to th I economical buyer. <lb/>
LACE CURTAINS. ETC <lb/>
Curtains, regular price sale <lb/>
price per pair.--- <lb/>
Lace Curtains, fine patterns, regular <lb/>
price, sale <lb/>
Lace Curtains, most exclusive patterns, <lb/>
regular price sale price. <lb/>
Lace Curtains, regular price sale <lb/>
price. -59 <lb/>
Bed Spread-, price sale <lb/>
price-- <lb/>
Bed Spreads, regular price sale <lb/>
price. <lb/>
Comforts, regular price sale price . <lb/>
MEN and BOYS <lb/>
lot men's Suits regular price <lb/>
sale <lb/>
lot men's Suits, regular price <lb/>
sale price. <lb/>
lot men's Suits, regular . <lb/>
Men's regular price<lb/>
M. <lb/>
in <lb/>
TO BE GIVEN AWAY <lb/>
Thursday, at 2.00 P. <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY FREE <lb/>
coupons be nu in duplicate and on securely <lb/>
2.00 p. the numbers will be put; In box <lb/>
fastened, and en up well by who tour no <lb/>
drawn out by , disinterested child. holding <lb/>
number drawn out will receive <lb/>
person save <lb/>
NOTIONS. <lb/>
while hemstitched <lb/>
chiefs, regular price <lb/>
Men's white, hemstitched <lb/>
regular price , <lb/>
Men's e white hemstitched <lb/>
chiefs, regular price sale price <lb/>
Goo i Pins, regular price sale price <lb/>
two p for.-------; <lb/>
Good Thread, price <lb/>
price <lb/>
Good earl regular price <lb/>
price per dozen.--- <lb/>
Good safety s, <lb/>
Dries per card. <lb/>
Air Float Violet Powder, <lb/>
price s; price-----.-- <lb/>
Good T price <lb/>
price per <lb/>
Fine tooth best bristles, <lb/>
price sale price. <lb/>
Best needles, regular price per paper <lb/>
TAKE NOTICE <lb/>
.-. r T store will be <lb/>
Bo <lb/>
Furniture and Trunks. <lb/>
6.00, en <lb/>
regular price 1.50. <lb/>
price 1.50, <lb/>
Jumpers, reg- <lb/>
1.98 <lb/>
Trunks, 1.60. <lb/>
d stands, regular <lb/>
price 6.00. sale price.-. <lb/>
Bedsteads, <lb/>
10.00. sale w <lb/>
lot l <lb/>
price. <lb/>
lot Matting, regular <lb/>
price <lb/>
At, <lb/>
sale <lb/>
lot Matting, regular <lb/>
price. <lb/>
price sale<lb/>
solid Oak. <lb/>
20.00, sale price.- <lb/>
furniture, <lb/>
sale price.- <lb/>
Handsome parlor suit, nicely trimmed, <lb/>
plush back and bottom, sale price <lb/>
solid Oak Dressers, sale-price <lb/>
only. . <lb/>
I tot handsome Oak Chairs, regular price <lb/>
1.50, sale price. <lb/>
lot chairs, regular <lb/>
only. <lb/>
45.00 suit of furniture, solid Of, <lb/>
Foot, tale price. <lb/>
STAPLE DRY GOODS. <lb/>
Very best American in all pat- <lb/>
terns, price 6-c, sale price <lb/>
Sheet regular price W, <lb/>
price.-------. <lb/>
Beat checked Homespun, puce, <lb/>
sale 3-4 <lb/>
Best Percales, regular price U l-, <lb/>
sale price. <lb/>
Best drew regular price <lb/>
I price.-.- <lb/>
Best regular <lb/>
sale price.--- <lb/>
apron cheeked Ginghams, regular <lb/>
price sale <lb/>
Best Bleaching, regular price <lb/>
Best table Linen, regular price sale <lb/>
Best table regular price <lb/>
sale <lb/>
Good Towels, regular price l e, <lb/>
ale <lb/>
Good Towels, regular <lb/>
sale price. -.--- <lb/>
Good Towels, regular price X c,<lb/>
Fine Turkish Towels, regular A, <lb/>
gale price.-------.-- <lb/>
Broad Cloth, all colors, regular price <lb/>
sale price. <lb/>
MEN'S and SHOES <lb/>
tip and <lb/>
plain toe Shoes, price. <lb/>
Shoes, regular price sale <lb/>
price MO and <lb/>
2.60, sale price.--- <lb/>
lot and Mis Shoes, regular <lb/>
price price----- <lb/>
regular <lb/>
sale price<lb/>
work regular price<lb/>
Men price 2.00 <lb/>
sale <lb/>
Men's Shoes, regular price 2.60, sale <lb/>
price 6.00, sale <lb/>
sale <lb/>
price 8.25. sale <lb/>
fine Shoes price <lb/>
sale price.--- <lb/>
1.69 <lb/>
1.9 <lb/>
1.23 <lb/>
1.28 <lb/>
1.68 <lb/>
8.69 <lb/>
1.19 <lb/>
1.49 <lb/>
2.98 <lb/>
at the Big Store <lb/>
Look <lb/>
Look for <lb/>
The Big Red Sign <lb/>
L C- ARTHUR, <lb/>
Greenville, i. <lb/>
A Rate Opportunity. <lb/>
YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO INVEST <lb/>
AD <lb/>
in until you have inspected our stock. <lb/>
Wt have on our floors the most complete lb e of <lb/>
of every description ever shown in we invite <lb/>
you to inspect our lint it <lb/>
Rugs, Mattings, Art Squares, Window <lb/>
Shades, Toilet Sets, Etc. <lb/>
In fact everything to make your home comfortable. We <lb/>
are also sole for the celebrated Royal Electric Felt <lb/>
Mattresses, which has no equal. <lb/>
Taft Boyd Furniture <lb/>
Company <lb/>
LEADERS IN ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. CAROLINA <lb/>
AN EVENING <lb/>
SPENT <lb/>
With the most versatile pianists, could not <lb/>
possibly bring you more enjoyment than you, <lb/>
yourself could derive from either <lb/>
The <lb/>
Player Piano. <lb/>
The Milton, <lb/>
The Bros. <lb/>
Or Letter <lb/>
Player Pianos, <lb/>
In fact, with either of these Player Pianos <lb/>
as a companion, you have the advantage of <lb/>
playing the music music you best <lb/>
like, and playing it in that rich, full manner, <lb/>
bringing out the delicate beauties of the melody <lb/>
which even many skilled pianists fail to develop, <lb/>
and this, possible with the veriest novice, with- <lb/>
out your knowing one note from another. <lb/>
We will take your deaf and dumb piano in exchange. <lb/>
TERMS TO SUIT. <lb/>
When in Greenville, visit our Piano <lb/>
the finest music in Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
Why the participating, non-as- <lb/>
treasury , preferred per <lb/>
cent, stock of the United Wire- <lb/>
less Telegraph the best and <lb/>
safest investment ever offered <lb/>
since the days of the <lb/>
phone is because its system is in <lb/>
and profitable use on <lb/>
every coast steamship line of any <lb/>
in the United <lb/>
operating with great profit in j <lb/>
the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, <lb/>
On-at Lakes, and Gulf of Mexico j <lb/>
and is rapidly extending to for- <lb/>
lines also, land <lb/>
completely encircle the United <lb/>
States from Francisco to <lb/>
West, including Spokane. ; <lb/>
Cleveland, Toledo, <lb/>
Seattle, Detroit, Buffalo, Erie, <lb/>
Boston. Albany. New York City, <lb/>
Atlantic Philadelphia, <lb/>
Washington, <lb/>
Elizabeth Hatteras, Char-1 <lb/>
Savannah, Mobile, JacK- <lb/>
New Orleans. <lb/>
ton, etc. and new stations and <lb/>
steamers are being equipped <lb/>
daily; principal North Carolina <lb/>
towns to have stations. <lb/>
only wireless line transacting <lb/>
commercial business in the <lb/>
United States, Cuba, and South <lb/>
America; it maintains daily com- <lb/>
communication between <lb/>
New York and nearly <lb/>
2.000 miles overland; Seattle <lb/>
Washington, with <lb/>
hips at Japan, miles <lb/>
away at will; tested on lead- <lb/>
railroads on rapidly <lb/>
moving trains with great sue- <lb/>
total earnings year will <lb/>
a million dollars; Km.- <lb/>
government taken over <lb/>
Marconi system; coast <lb/>
in that country and open- <lb/>
ed same to steamers using this <lb/>
system; president of company <lb/>
now in London making contracts <lb/>
to equip large foreign lines and <lb/>
arranging plans for <lb/>
communication the <lb/>
tic to America. Th-re are over <lb/>
10.000 islands and hundreds of <lb/>
cities and towns and <lb/>
craft eager for equipment. U <lb/>
i. Government to compel <lb/>
steamers equip with wire- <lb/>
less and public demand <lb/>
it. Three large behind <lb/>
in filling orders for <lb/>
Over of this <lb/>
stock sold to representative <lb/>
business men of New Bern, <lb/>
Mm great through <lb/>
oat the South. Stock <lb/>
per share per <lb/>
cent, above and price, ad <lb/>
November to <lb/>
per predicted this <lb/>
will shortly enhance to a <lb/>
higher figure. Remember that <lb/>
each share of Bell Telephone <lb/>
stock that sold for a share, <lb/>
years ago has earned <lb/>
in dividends and made million- <lb/>
out of small <lb/>
Buy it for your wives, children <lb/>
and self and put away for <lb/>
future enhancement or may <lb/>
the opportunity of a life <lb/>
time. Communicate at once <lb/>
with W G. Boyd, <lb/>
Agent for Eastern N- L <lb/>
Rooms Elk's Temple, <lb/>
New Bern, N. C. <lb/>
Long Distance <lb/>
you want your to trot <lb/>
and poll strong boy your <lb/>
Hay, <lb/>
and Corn. <lb/>
of W. B. He will sell <lb/>
you Feed and More <lb/>
Money than any man in town, <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
Place it headquarter Corn, Hi v <lb/>
Oats, Cotton Seed Meal, <lb/>
Brand, Crick <lb/>
Corn, corn Meal kinds o <lb/>
Peed, Salt, Lime and Cement. <lb/>
S. J. NOBLES <lb/>
BARBER SHOP. <lb/>
Nicely every <lb/>
thing clean <lb/>
working the very <lb/>
barbers. Second to <lb/>
none in the State. <lb/>
B specialty. <lb/>
Opposite J. R. J. G. I <lb/>
Worn Women <lb/>
n Women, worn and tired from overwork, need a <lb/>
I ionic. That feeling of weakness or helplessness will <lb/>
I not leave you of itself. You should take Wine of <lb/>
that effectual remedy for the ailments and <lb/>
I weaknesses of women. Thousands of women have <lb/>
tried and write enthusiastically of the great <lb/>
I benefit it has been to them. Try experiment <lb/>
I use this reliable, oft-tried medicine. <lb/>
TAKE <lb/>
CARD US <lb/>
The Woman's Tonic <lb/>
Hare, of Pierce, Wed and afterward <lb/>
I was a sufferer from all aorta of female trouble, bad <lb/>
I pain in my side and legs, could not sleep, had shortness of breath. <lb/>
suffered for years, until my husband insisted on my <lb/>
I The first bottle gave mo relief and now I am almost <lb/>
I Twill help yon. <lb/>
AT ALL DRUG STORES <lb/>
fail to tee or write <lb/>
M. G. BRYAN <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
if you wart is way at <lb/>
TOMB STONES OR MONUMENTS <lb/>
r an, of Marble <lb/>
Ht ii for the Marble <lb/>
Co., mile, C , . n i <lb/>
Ike Cu <lb/>
wait tor meet. <lb/>
11-16 <lb/>
CENTRAL <lb/>
Barber Shop <lb/>
Herbert Prop. <lb/>
. in main sec- <lb/>
of the town Five chairs <lb/>
in operation each one <lb/>
w r a <lb/>
is <lb/>
sharp. Our towels clean. <lb/>
Modern electrical machine for <lb/>
dry shampoo and massage. La- <lb/>
dies waited on at their homes. <lb/>
Norfolk and Southern Railway <lb/>
Harm m. Receives <lb/>
Direct Through Train Service Between <lb/>
All Points in Eastern North Carolina <lb/>
and via Norfolk to All Eastern Cities. <lb/>
SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1st, 1909. <lb/>
TRAINS LEAVE <lb/>
B s. m., Daily, including Sunday f r Wilson, and intermediate <lb/>
at a. m. <lb/>
Sun fay intermediate stations. <lb/>
p. m. , <lb/>
m., for Mark y Edenton. <lb/>
Hertford, lily, ii t s <lb/>
Com e t at K. an h. <lb/>
for New Item, B. and <lb/>
p. m., Daily I Sunday for Washington stations. <lb/>
For further particulars, consult Norfolk Southern Railway Folder <lb/>
or apply to J. L. ticket agent, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
H. C. W. W. <lb/>
E. T. LAMB. Gen. NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
Furniture And House Furnishing Goods <lb/>
For Cash or on <lb/>
Formerly Occupied by Dispensary. Up stuck of everything <lb/>
in your House. Our Pi ices are low. <lb/>
BROWN SAVAGE <lb/>
Hour Mill <lb/>
few Acre, <lb/>
RAISE YOUR OWN BREAD <lb/>
A up to Flaw Mill, SO barrel, <lb/>
per Jay capacity, i bring erected <lb/>
N. C, wiN be ready t <lb/>
1910. For <lb/>
J. HAVENS, <lb/>
WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
INSURANCE <lb/>
C. L. WILKINSON <lb/>
Bonds, Life and Fire. <lb/>
How to Hang a <lb/>
Of have <lb/>
Now. he <lb/>
that there is one common meeting <lb/>
point among of all <lb/>
at any rate. B <lb/>
who believes in luck at all <lb/>
in the luck of the horse- <lb/>
, shoe. But did it ever you <lb/>
that there is a right and wrong way <lb/>
to hang s horseshoe You often <lb/>
in find it hung or <lb/>
i to tho door with the ends pointing <lb/>
downward, but in Ireland, where <lb/>
superstition is more reasonable, this <lb/>
There they always <lb/>
IMPORT BULBS <lb/>
are now arriving. We have a <lb/>
Plant early fur the bent <lb/>
results. Send new price <lb/>
re <lb/>
fur Cut <lb/>
Floral far all <lb/>
Mail, Telegraph, and or- <lb/>
promptly filled. <lb/>
CO., Florist, <lb/>
Flea m Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
Ill never so. . <lb/>
O I hang the horseshoe with the ends <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
DAIRY PRODUCTS. <lb/>
I have moved my Dairy to the John- <lb/>
son place, mile from town, and am <lb/>
better prepared than ever to furnish <lb/>
all Dairy Product. Will make delivery <lb/>
in town. Phone T 2-4. <lb/>
S. I. DUDLEY. <lb/>
COAL, WOOD <lb/>
and <lb/>
pHONE<lb/>
We hasp all kinds el ll dry <lb/>
Can famish time <lb/>
your stove, store, we <lb/>
keep in b e <lb/>
us your <lb/>
C. W. Harvey Co. <lb/>
PERRY CO. <lb/>
NORFOLK. VA. <lb/>
i Cotton Factors handler cf <lb/>
Banging. Tis and Bags. <lb/>
and shipment <lb/>
WILMINGTON <lb/>
STEAM LAUNDRY <lb/>
The Old Reliable Again Represented <lb/>
in Greenville <lb/>
Ti <lb/>
I have t k. ii th.- <lb/>
the Wilmington steam Laundry, <lb/>
it the people k. beat <lb/>
irk ill it has been <lb/>
re. This Is equip- <lb/>
work right, <lb/>
An. sail for deliver ye r <lb/>
pack a be left wall Willie <lb/>
at the slur the Dam j <lb/>
xi t Noble's barber chop, aid <lb/>
w ill serve you promptly. <lb/>
J. R. COREY. <lb/>
Can there be anything <lb/>
disagreeable than rough chapped j <lb/>
akin cream <lb/>
guaranteed for it at Coward <lb/>
P. M. JOHNSTON <lb/>
PLUMBING and <lb/>
STEAM FITTING <lb/>
Op. Hotel <lb/>
Get in The piano <lb/>
contest. <lb/>
II <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018071_0007" n="7"/>
<p>
ii I <lb/>
. v. . <lb/>
In Charge of Wm. G. MORRIS <lb/>
Act of The for and Rates on Application <lb/>
. . <lb/>
A . . <lb/>
I t , <lb/>
., ; <lb/>
l;. I ; <lb/>
I'll <lb/>
i ,; <lb/>
Y . . A ml <lb/>
i . . U y <lb/>
, I . <lb/>
id , t paper. , <lb/>
bit ion.- week on ac- <lb/>
e wot of the death of his father, <lb/>
ml night hen He leaves <lb/>
re today for home, where he is <lb/>
seeded. <lb/>
Peterson, an optician, has <lb/>
en in t town this week. <lb/>
Atlantic association <lb/>
n t i a close Thursday noon. <lb/>
to ,.; we <lb/>
t, l, c, . t ii i w give only the most <lb/>
O. <lb/>
Ministerial education was very <lb/>
G went to Green- discussed by Rev. G. T. <lb/>
, i . r I Walking, of General <lb/>
i Clothing up <lb/>
i A. W. Co. cussed s M. of <lb/>
. a and Luis St C, Craven county, and <lb/>
i. t . try. T. H. King mad the re- <lb/>
ft, b elation Wednesday. High school, <lb/>
. d tie- just in. prof. F. Stale <lb/>
, secretary mad a <lb/>
p. . m n and father <lb/>
the <lb/>
the urgent. <lb/>
Do You Own a Piano <lb/>
. <lb/>
. i <lb/>
v. <lb/>
f,;. and <lb/>
chi . call write A. <lb/>
mil ting C. inter- <lb/>
N. C. Tn J have the <lb/>
i,. the right price. <lb/>
Baptist Orphanage. <lb/>
to pend a of Me <lb/>
tin bar <lb/>
I mowing machine-,, <lb/>
. j,. , , and on <lb/>
in. Barber <lb/>
T. Bock by bis <lb/>
. . W spend <lb/>
u i v i ya v. and <lb/>
r i B. young couple <lb/>
marriage u <lb/>
days at City. <lb/>
We e up-u the <lb/>
they <lb/>
c are carrying a nice line of <lb/>
Collins and Caskets. Prices are <lb/>
right and can nice hearse <lb/>
A. U. tux Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
have received large lot <lb/>
for winter w <lb/>
Cannon, who <lb/>
near here, passed through <lb/>
Hr-n see us J. B. Carroll lest about a half <lb/>
We have just received a of fence fire Monday <lb/>
A W Ange Co. off new ground. <lb/>
who <lb/>
at <lb/>
a. in. by the pastor, T. H. <lb/>
in the Methodist at <lb/>
p. by Rev. Mr. All <lb/>
are invited to be present at each <lb/>
of there <lb/>
The infant child of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. died Sun- <lb/>
day morning. Th-w have our <lb/>
S; in their sad <lb/>
boor. <lb/>
Services in the Methodist <lb/>
church fourth Sunday. Rev. <lb/>
Mr. Snow will preach, <lb/>
went to Bethany last <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Vivian Roberson <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday at <lb/>
home at Gold Point. <lb/>
Rev. T. H, King went to <lb/>
i tun Sunday night. <lb/>
Several school spent Sun <lb/>
day with Miss Eva Langston. <lb/>
J. B. Kittrell. of <lb/>
spent night at his home <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Miss Laura Salisbury, of Has- <lb/>
who has been visiting Miss <lb/>
Eva Langston, returned to her <lb/>
home Monday. <lb/>
John Nichols, of <lb/>
is visiting relatives here this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. of Kinston, <lb/>
was in our yesterday. <lb/>
Miss Eula Price, who spent <lb/>
Saturday Sunday at home at <lb/>
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, <lb/>
In <lb/>
re widely <lb/>
u In MM <lb/>
S. ,,, Iron. El <lb/>
f coated. <lb/>
Take No Substitute. <lb/>
THE CONGRESS. <lb/>
I,., st ii g s on same. <lb/>
Rev. <lb/>
made a very excellent <lb/>
on State <lb/>
E. B. Lewis and S <lb/>
of made two very <lb/>
able a on Thomas- <lb/>
Mr. J. <lb/>
Bern, <lb/>
the <lb/>
made a very able <lb/>
orphans. <lb/>
Following the discussions on <lb/>
orphans-, Dr. of <lb/>
Raleigh, made a excellent <lb/>
address. <lb/>
Rev. B. W. made a returned Monday. <lb/>
very unique address on lam representing the oldest <lb/>
Missions. <lb/>
but by no means least, <lb/>
a very inspiring address on <lb/>
Foreign Missions, by Rev. C. L. <lb/>
Graves, of New Bern. <lb/>
All the discussions were of the <lb/>
highest order, and showed great <lb/>
preparation. <lb/>
The association, as a whole, <lb/>
was one of the best for several <lb/>
years. has indeed <lb/>
had a great feast- The attend <lb/>
was very good, and a few <lb/>
yesterday to times the house was to its <lb/>
peg i. accompanied by Miss <lb/>
Lucy <lb/>
Pitt County School <lb/>
manufactured by The A. G. Cox <lb/>
Company are <lb/>
mat <lb/>
are liberal. <lb/>
W lien in me come to set <lb/>
lave the you. <lb/>
the Thanksgiving <lb/>
services The Baptist <lb/>
at To o'clock. <lb/>
j glasses, dried fruits <lb/>
of and butler and <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
W. ii. Collins, of is <lb/>
visiting in nephew, f. <lb/>
week. <lb/>
We give you S bargain in <lb/>
nice slothing. <lb/>
Barrington, Barber A- Co. <lb/>
the association <lb/>
here, to her home <lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
Cooking and heating stoves <lb/>
and ranges just received. All <lb/>
bast material and up-to-date. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
Mrs. W. F. Jones, of <lb/>
is visit relatives here this week. <lb/>
The School <lb/>
are the desks for you. They are <lb/>
The music, too, <lb/>
was very good. Our people <lb/>
were very liberal in the enter- <lb/>
of the guests, all <lb/>
had an enjoyable time. We <lb/>
hope to have this noble body <lb/>
with us again in the near future. <lb/>
A new supply of hardware <lb/>
just in. A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
A new lot of lamps just in. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
We have just received a nice <lb/>
lot of dress goods. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Cattle want to <lb/>
and life and fire <lb/>
insurance companies in the world. <lb/>
Office in bank building. <lb/>
J. S. Ross, N. C. <lb/>
We are glad to learn that Mrs. <lb/>
A. G. Cox is still improving. <lb/>
Mr. who <lb/>
treat you was in our <lb/>
town yesterday. <lb/>
Several families have lately <lb/>
moved in our town. <lb/>
If you are not a subscriber to <lb/>
The Reflector, me your sub- <lb/>
so you can keep up with <lb/>
what is happening. W. G. <lb/>
agent. <lb/>
For nice hall racks, see us. A. <lb/>
W. Ange Ai Co. <lb/>
New La., Nov. <lb/>
The Southern Congress w I <lb/>
organ z-u in Washington D. C, <lb/>
at a meeting of <lb/>
Southern man from nearly <lb/>
Southern State. <lb/>
The parses of that <lb/>
were to intelligently exploit <lb/>
the resources of the South so <lb/>
that our people might be posted <lb/>
as to the value their posses- <lb/>
the best method of how <lb/>
utilize them, and an intelligent <lb/>
and united effort made to remove <lb/>
misconceptions which ex- <lb/>
in regard to our section. <lb/>
Able men all over the South <lb/>
forcibly expressed their views, <lb/>
and unanimously agreed as to <lb/>
the wisdom of a course of this <lb/>
character. <lb/>
without exception, the <lb/>
press threw their columns open <lb/>
for news and information in re- <lb/>
to th; work that we are <lb/>
carrying on, and gladly gave a <lb/>
helping hand, with w. <lb/>
thinK to wide spread <lb/>
the papers <lb/>
the the w hole <lb/>
of a material increase in land val- <lb/>
a marked improvement in <lb/>
regard to general conditions, and <lb/>
a re-awakened interest in civic <lb/>
pride, commercial development <lb/>
and pursuits. <lb/>
The men in this work represent <lb/>
each of the sixteen Southern <lb/>
States, and very varied lines of <lb/>
the and, with the ex- <lb/>
of the secretary have <lb/>
not received a dollar of salary, <lb/>
and have cheerfully given their <lb/>
time and energy for the cause. <lb/>
It has remained one paper, <lb/>
of Baltimore, to make itself <lb/>
conspicuous during the ten <lb/>
months by a continued series of <lb/>
insinuation and ridicule-at <lb/>
H not. and expect to own <lb/>
soon, you owe it o to ex- <lb/>
the display <lb/>
shown at the White <lb/>
A display really <lb/>
to a large <lb/>
In a glance yew will inspect a <lb/>
line of pianos not alone stand <lb/>
in character cf e, v and <lb/>
general in a class to <lb/>
itself, but you with prices <lb/>
that stand J here ard <lb/>
comparable an where. Eight <lb/>
different makes t select from, none <lb/>
of those cheap v e department <lb/>
store stencils, but each one a stand- <lb/>
ard, of acknowledged lame and <lb/>
reputation in the trade. Four <lb/>
player-pianos of known <lb/>
makes. <lb/>
We will take piano in <lb/>
exchange one of self play- <lb/>
We also cam the <lb/>
ORGAN, the standard of the world. <lb/>
Old organs and panes taken in ex- <lb/>
change, terms to s lit your <lb/>
When in <lb/>
G visit our <lb/>
White. <lb/>
to Carr Co. store. <lb/>
OF CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF WINTERVILLE, <lb/>
AT N. V. <lb/>
At the of business, Nov. <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
, Capital stork <lb/>
Surplus fund 050.00 <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured 898-81 less <lb/>
Furniture and pd 627.00 <lb/>
Due from J <lb/>
silver including . . . . , ,. <lb/>
minor currency 345.4-2 Deposits subject to ck <lb/>
Nut bank and other ; I cheeks <lb/>
D. 1,890.001 outstanding <lb/>
Total Total <lb/>
809.80 <lb/>
14,095.35 <lb/>
121,706.08 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. Pitt County, <lb/>
We, E. Green, Cashier and F. A. Asst. Cashier <lb/>
of the above named hunk, do solemnly swear that the state- <lb/>
is true to the best of our knowledge and belief <lb/>
F. A. <lb/>
Asst, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to be- <lb/>
fore me, this 10th day of Nov., <lb/>
R. II. Hunsucker, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. E. GREEN, <lb/>
Cashier <lb/>
A. G. Cox, <lb/>
It. II. Hunsucker, <lb/>
J. F. Harrington, <lb/>
Directors <lb/>
OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE, <lb/>
AT FARMVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
At the close of business Nov. 16th, 1909. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
SALE OF LAND. <lb/>
. Gold coin <lb/>
tempting to prove that no move Silver coin, including <lb/>
of this character throughout B <lb/>
., . . c. ,. Nut bank and other U. o. <lb/>
South could possibly benefit the, <lb/>
South. Perhaps the fact <lb/>
the editor of that paper was <lb/>
in a similar movement, <lb/>
which started in Philadelphia <lb/>
and dismally failed, is one of its <lb/>
17,171.19 <lb/>
1,070.50 <lb/>
80,086.88 <lb/>
21,986.88 <lb/>
742.50 <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the Super- <lb/>
court of Pitt made on the <lb/>
cay of November, HOB, In a ear- . <lb/>
therein pending motives, in this attack, and an- <lb/>
a stronger motive <lb/>
tor of J. W. rotter want w. . , <lb/>
Potter and others, I will, on brought out October <lb/>
day. December n d, the h w K Hearst's ex- <lb/>
court house door in Greenville, tell <lb/>
Notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
985.95 <lb/>
2.897.00 <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund 6,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided less <lb/>
cur. exp and taxes pd 1,247.7 <lb/>
Dividend unpaid 1,000.00 <lb/>
Bills payable 15,000.00 <lb/>
Time of deposits 11,881.12 <lb/>
Deposits sub. to check 80,646.70 <lb/>
Cashier's 1,317.50 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, R. Davis, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my <lb/>
edge and belief. J. DAVIS, Cashier. <lb/>
house i SO W, <lb/>
t put lie -ale to the highest bidder a of the letters <lb/>
wan, w joining the land of H. J. by the Standard <lb/>
buy cattle. R. D. Co. W. K. heir of i Company, which corporation <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Co. made owns larger interests and <lb/>
a shipment of a solid car of Pitt of Susan mercilessly throttles more com- <lb/>
J. W. Potter. , . ., . <lb/>
interests than all other <lb/>
organizations in the <lb/>
i; o ltd , United States. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
me, this 20th day of Nov., 1909. <lb/>
J. A. Mew born, <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
W. II. Lang, <lb/>
R. I, Davis, <lb/>
F. M. Davis, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
World's <lb/>
county school desk today. day <lb/>
is continually increasing. William of J. W. i <lb/>
place your <lb/>
G. Cox <lb/>
rapidly. Better <lb/>
early. A. <lb/>
Co., N. C. at Dr. II. O. Hyatt, of Kinston, <lb/>
Oysters We have them be in Greenville at Hotel <lb/>
day and Bertha Dec. 6th and 7th. the <lb/>
We have a full implicated being colored. The first Monday and Tuesday, for <lb/>
a wife of Jim Drake was spending purpose of <lb/>
Those who <lb/>
his wife to go want work will be charged <lb/>
no w d <lb/>
The highest price paid for went to the wood pile and in. <lb/>
to run Drake oil. and while <lb/>
to use the Drake-. A Scalded Boy's Shrieks. <lb/>
. durable and Turkeys, geese, eggs, at A. W. <lb/>
Prices right and workmanship; Ange Co s. a special- h, ;,.,, his Mr. Maria <lb/>
through the holidays. stabbed him in tie ,,. <lb/>
Mr. W H Rouse of Middle- men- Dr. county all thought h would die, Buck- <lb/>
Mrs. w. H. SaW wholly cured him. <lb/>
is visiting at J. B. Carroll's coroner, went out to hold an ,,, <lb/>
and found the facts about wounds, Curse fever sores, <lb/>
bolls, skin <lb/>
i of above given- <lb/>
U, mm . mo. as-a <lb/>
A Cox <lb/>
Co., N. C. <lb/>
Th re will be services in <lb/>
B tomorrow <lb/>
the <lb/>
all drug stores. <lb/>
Jailed Charge. <lb/>
The world's best-selling John and Lam Adams, broth- <lb/>
is the Bible. The total sales of era of Norwood Adams recently <lb/>
the works of all the most popular convicted of by <lb/>
authors of the day would Federal court in New Bern <lb/>
equal the yearly sale of the and sentenced to a term in the <lb/>
Christian Scriptures. we <lb/>
Each year there are printed brought here Friday and placed <lb/>
17.000,000 Protestant Bibles. Jail on charge of burning <lb/>
Testaments, and the home of Julia Gardner of <lb/>
such as the Psalms or the township, one of he <lb/>
rate more than against them in the <lb/>
e, ear. nose and throat hundred languages and dialects., recent counterfeiting trial. <lb/>
Of these Bibles 10.000,000 are These men had threatened to <lb/>
published by Bible societies, are i burn Julia's house it she <lb/>
sold far below cost, and against them in the trial, <lb/>
no financial pro to anybody. I which she did, and they <lb/>
The remaining 7.000,000 out their <lb/>
printed commercially, and yield threats. While all three of the <lb/>
a handsome profit to the were convicted of <lb/>
John and Lam were <lb/>
Of the 10.000.000 Bibles and turned loose on account of a <lb/>
parts of Bibles printed and disease they were supposed to <lb/>
by charity, almost j be suffering from. <lb/>
are issued by <lb/>
American Bible Society, and Sale- One <lb/>
7.000.000 more by similar organ- <lb/>
in Great <lb/>
in <lb/>
Magazine, for December. <lb/>
nice building <lb/>
L. L, Hamilton. <lb/>
ladies and shoes. I with Miss Clara w For and <lb/>
Barber Co Rev. B. F. Huske will preach an exile R Whichard at <lb/>
Sewing machines for sale from in the E office. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. . A U Z <lb/>
Cordially began to Dr. <lb/>
A new lot of dry goods and G Tl <lb/>
notions of all kinds just received, K-v. I. x hot i am as <lb/>
at Harrington. Barber . soon <lb/>
paid. a. n. u v Hem croup. of cold by on CO CHICAGO. U. S. <lb/>
We have just received a nice O. W. Rollins and E. V. COX at ; ,,,. l. ml or money refunded. <lb/>
lot of cloaks, give us a call. A. tended services in Ayden free. guaranteed by all drug- <lb/>
LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP <lb/>
law.<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, DECEMBER 1909. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
TEMPERANCE REPORT <lb/>
THE SOUTH. GOOD PIECE OF DETECTIVE WORK WHERE THE PREACHERS GO. <lb/>
ed to bring the South into o'clock on the 24th. <lb/>
W. Ange Co. <lb/>
I night. <lb/>
FOR SALE BY JNO. L. WOOTEN. <lb/>
Adapted by the N. C. at <lb/>
committee begs tore- <lb/>
port as <lb/>
all information <lb/>
coming to us from the North <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
other sources, as well from <lb/>
our o n and <lb/>
we learn that <lb/>
or the no license polio is the <lb/>
best policy for the . mi we <lb/>
desire to put ourselves on rec <lb/>
as opposed to any license system <lb/>
whatever. <lb/>
-Second-We realize that the <lb/>
battle is now on. Not all the <lb/>
advocates of license have been <lb/>
or have red. <lb/>
Many are now trying to <lb/>
the prohibition law odious <lb/>
t, or by Influencing <lb/>
others so. Io some at cur <lb/>
cities and rural <lb/>
it is a known fact that the <lb/>
u or tale of is <lb/>
on. Often this i done <lb/>
under th- guise of <lb/>
executive <lb/>
officers lake no cognizance of <lb/>
these violations. Sometimes the <lb/>
are indifferent. We be- <lb/>
that the law will fall into <lb/>
unless well enforced, <lb/>
therefore urge all <lb/>
officers to be true to their official <lb/>
enforcement of this <lb/>
law along v, lib other laws. We <lb/>
also citizens by <lb/>
ho are true to <lb/>
their in <lb/>
their favor. We note with <lb/>
many and <lb/>
are their full duty <lb/>
in this respect, we desire to <lb/>
express our appreciation and <lb/>
of tin <lb/>
believe that the <lb/>
spirit of Christianity and the <lb/>
doctrine of our church teach total <lb/>
abstinence, and therefore plead <lb/>
with all cur members to abstain <lb/>
from the cup. none ought <lb/>
to and the violation of <lb/>
law by buying from one who has <lb/>
no right to sell. <lb/>
believe that our <lb/>
experience as a prohibition State <lb/>
has proven that the <lb/>
near beer saloon is an evil and a <lb/>
cover for-the violation of law <lb/>
and we desire to protest against <lb/>
it <lb/>
oppose the inter- <lb/>
state liquor trade and the grant- <lb/>
of tax in our <lb/>
State, and our congress- <lb/>
men and senators at Washing- <lb/>
ton support legislation that will <lb/>
correct these evils. <lb/>
committee <lb/>
heard with pleasure the report <lb/>
of R. L. Davis, superintendent <lb/>
of the North Carolina Anti-Saloon <lb/>
League, and wishes to record <lb/>
approval of the work of <lb/>
organization. We are not <lb/>
mindful of the influential part it <lb/>
has taken in bringing North Car- <lb/>
to the forefront on <lb/>
prohibition question and we be- <lb/>
that it is still necessary as <lb/>
the church's agency to fight the <lb/>
foe, Therefore. w commend it <lb/>
to oar people, and recommend <lb/>
that our pastors take a collection <lb/>
for it as they do for the American <lb/>
Bible Society when they deem it <lb/>
and advisable. <lb/>
recommend <lb/>
that the Bishop appoint Rev. R. <lb/>
L. of the <lb/>
North Carolina Anti-Saloon <lb/>
League, he having been elected <lb/>
to that office by that organization. <lb/>
In response to the <lb/>
invitation of J. L. <lb/>
ponding secretary the Anti- <lb/>
Saloon League of America, we <lb/>
nominate Rev. D. H. Tuttle and <lb/>
H A Page, delegates, and Kev. <lb/>
J. Parker and Rev. T- N. <lb/>
Ivey, to the Anti- <lb/>
Saloon League Convention at <lb/>
Chicago. HI. December 6-7. <lb/>
1909 Wilcox. <lb/>
C. K. <lb/>
What It is in Developing, the <lb/>
Washington. D. C. <lb/>
Mississippi society, week, at <lb/>
first of the season, <lb/>
was addressed by G. Grosvenor <lb/>
Managing Director of the <lb/>
Southern Commercial Congress. <lb/>
His topic Approaching <lb/>
Victory of the <lb/>
The speech, which was entirely <lb/>
extemporaneous, was a sweeping <lb/>
summary of the South's great <lb/>
And Somebody is to Get a <lb/>
Piano. <lb/>
There are now only about three <lb/>
weeks more of The Reflector <lb/>
piano contest, as it will come to <lb/>
a close at noon on the 24th of <lb/>
December, Christ mas eye. Then <lb/>
the candidate who has recorded <lb/>
the highest number of votes will <lb/>
receive as a Christmas present <lb/>
the beautiful Boudoir piano op <lb/>
exhibition at the music store of <lb/>
White. Those who <lb/>
contemplate voting for their <lb/>
favorite must do so before the <lb/>
Pistol Several Tims by the <lb/>
j end Gets Back to Owner. J for Next Year. <lb/>
Recently a colored man named In the appointments read by <lb/>
Arthur Dupree, at work for Wilson just before ad- <lb/>
Mr. S. I. Dudley at his dairy Monday, of the N. C. <lb/>
farm. A day or two after the at Raleigh, the fol <lb/>
left Mr. Dudley allowing were made presiding <lb/>
fine Colt's pistol which he of the several <lb/>
when deputy sheriff- He be-; B. John. <lb/>
A M. COLLEGE NOTES. <lb/>
.--- <lb/>
resources; of their significance J stroke of the clock at noon <lb/>
in the later commercial develop- <lb/>
the United States; and <lb/>
the opportunity which they offer <lb/>
on that day, hence one minute <lb/>
after will be too late. The <lb/>
will close exactly at <lb/>
participation in national <lb/>
Mr. began <lb/>
by stating that it was idle to the- <lb/>
as to what would have been <lb/>
the effect upon the nation's his- <lb/>
if victory had come to the <lb/>
South in 1865. question was <lb/>
too complex for any man to ans- <lb/>
but any theory formed re- <lb/>
the South's victory along <lb/>
commercial lines positively led to <lb/>
the belief that a greater nation <lb/>
would come into being through a <lb/>
greater South; and that there- <lb/>
fore the victory of the South was <lb/>
something that the nation as a <lb/>
whole earnestly desire. <lb/>
Carrying out the idea <lb/>
Mr. explained the <lb/>
of Southern facts as <lb/>
if a general were to sit down to <lb/>
consider the forces that were at <lb/>
his disposal, the weak in <lb/>
hi own line which must be <lb/>
strengthened in order to produce <lb/>
a successful attack, and the forces <lb/>
that were arrayed against him. <lb/>
The speech full of <lb/>
and yet closely <lb/>
with interpretation that <lb/>
the effect was illuminating in- <lb/>
of bewildering. The <lb/>
statistics dealt with coastline, <lb/>
rivers, ports, min- <lb/>
in relation to <lb/>
forest distribution, temper- <lb/>
and rainfall as in <lb/>
agricultural development, etc. <lb/>
The effect was to show that, re- <lb/>
the gifts of nature in <lb/>
combination, no other of <lb/>
the United States could in <lb/>
way vie with the South, and <lb/>
yet notwithstanding this <lb/>
advantage the South was <lb/>
still unquestionably the least <lb/>
developed third of the United <lb/>
States. The weakness of the <lb/>
South shown to lie in s <lb/>
lack of self-knowledge leading <lb/>
to wavering confidence regarding <lb/>
the South's future development <lb/>
Mr. then proceeded to <lb/>
show that the Southern Com- <lb/>
Congress a <lb/>
ed effort to correlate and an- <lb/>
all the facts of the South <lb/>
in such s manner that the men <lb/>
of the South will come in an <lb/>
attitude of mind that <lb/>
can never be disturbed by <lb/>
set backs. He showed <lb/>
an attitude of mind <lb/>
would in itself bring victory be- <lb/>
cause victory is always first <lb/>
formed in the mind. He also <lb/>
showed that such general self- <lb/>
knowledge would prompt the <lb/>
whole South to more effective <lb/>
announcement of its resources <lb/>
and thus bring the nation at last <lb/>
to understand how much of its <lb/>
future greatness depends upon <lb/>
the South's development <lb/>
The remaining three weeks <lb/>
will mean much to the <lb/>
dates, and some of them are <lb/>
working with a determination to <lb/>
win this elegant The pub <lb/>
list does not show just <lb/>
how they stand, as we know <lb/>
some of them nave a large <lb/>
of votes which they have not <lb/>
turned in. But they should be <lb/>
careful not to hold them too late, <lb/>
as votes must be in on time to <lb/>
count. Nor should any <lb/>
date lose any time at work be- <lb/>
tween now and the 24th. Make <lb/>
up your mind that somebody else <lb/>
beside is at work for the <lb/>
prize, and do your best to get <lb/>
new subscribers to The Reflector <lb/>
and collect from old ones. <lb/>
Every one of our subscribers <lb/>
should feel an Interest in this con <lb/>
test. It cost nothing to vote, as <lb/>
you only have to pay your sub <lb/>
and give the votes to <lb/>
whom you If you have <lb/>
been promising to help a <lb/>
date with your votes, this month, <lb/>
before the 24th. is the time to do <lb/>
it. <lb/>
Miss Mary Johnson <lb/>
Miss Lottie Blow <lb/>
Miss R. Tucker <lb/>
Miss Mavis Evans 4.866 <lb/>
Miss Beulah Mum ford <lb/>
Miss Maud Mooring <lb/>
James Tingle <lb/>
School 1.900 <lb/>
Miss Lelia Stokes 1,600 <lb/>
Mrs. D. E Nichols 1,270 <lb/>
Subscribe or pay your <lb/>
and vote for somebody. Do <lb/>
it now. <lb/>
Dupree took the pistol, <lb/>
but had no evidence to that <lb/>
However, he told the c <lb/>
to Detective W. C. Hines. <lb/>
the latter got busy. <lb/>
As a result of Detective <lb/>
work Dupree is in jail and is <lb/>
likely to get back on the roads <lb/>
where he has been two or three <lb/>
times before. It turned out that <lb/>
i Dupree had stolen the pistol and <lb/>
the first disposition he made of <lb/>
it was to pawn it for He <lb/>
redeemed the <lb/>
C. Beaman. <lb/>
Fayetteville-J. T. Gibbs. <lb/>
Rockingham-W. H. Moore. <lb/>
L. Cunning- <lb/>
-R. F. <lb/>
Washington-A. <lb/>
E Underwood. <lb/>
City-E. H. Brown <lb/>
preachers for this <lb/>
district <lb/>
T. Plyler. <lb/>
E. Dixon <lb/>
R. Canipe. <lb/>
Swan Q by B, <lb/>
went back and <lb/>
pistol and sold it to another man <lb/>
for This man sold It to Watson. <lb/>
third party for who in turn , <lb/>
sold to a fourth party <lb/>
and the man who this price <lb/>
for it traded it for a set of <lb/>
harness, <lb/>
When Detective Hines got to <lb/>
the stopping place of the <lb/>
he explained the situation and <lb/>
there was a swapping back down <lb/>
the line until it got <lb/>
rightful owner. <lb/>
Justice C. D. gave <lb/>
Dupree a preliminary bearing <lb/>
and he was committed to jail. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Marriage <lb/>
Register of Deeds, W. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Special Sale. <lb/>
Taft Vandyke will on Wed- <lb/>
morning begin a big <lb/>
special sale to run for ten days. <lb/>
A half page advertisement tells <lb/>
you about it They have mark- <lb/>
ed prices down to a figure that <lb/>
will move the goods. <lb/>
Moore, baa issued the following <lb/>
marriage licenses since last re- <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
J. L. Harris and Nora Jolly. <lb/>
W. Grover Leggett and Lids <lb/>
E. <lb/>
Walter E. Johnson and <lb/>
Vinson. <lb/>
T. A. Nellie <lb/>
John Dew Martha Rainer. <lb/>
Clarence Vincent and <lb/>
M. Manning. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
B, W. Dupree and Mary <lb/>
Short Ran- <lb/>
Willie Jenkins and Annie <lb/>
Perkins. <lb/>
Noah Smith and Harriett Little. <lb/>
Henry Blount and Lula Best. <lb/>
Stephen Gardner and <lb/>
Hooks. <lb/>
Rouse and Harriet <lb/>
House. <lb/>
Oscar Cannon and Clara <lb/>
John Floyd and Lula Perkins. <lb/>
Ticks Yield of Beef and Milk. <lb/>
A cattle tick that has reached <lb/>
the engorged stage weighs about <lb/>
grains, about 1,600 such <lb/>
ticks a pound. cattle <lb/>
in the tick region often carry <lb/>
many thousands of these blood I <lb/>
tusking and as each <lb/>
tick during the period of its at- <lb/>
to an animal draws <lb/>
more than its own <lb/>
weight in it can be teen <lb/>
that these ticks an <lb/>
enormous drain on the cattle <lb/>
which they infest. This accounts <lb/>
for the fact that under such con- <lb/>
it is impossible to fatten <lb/>
cattle even on rich pasture d <lb/>
with an abundance of good feed. <lb/>
A large part of the nourishment <lb/>
that should go toward producing <lb/>
beef and milk is consumed by <lb/>
the ticks. In addition to the <lb/>
of blood and nourishment there <lb/>
is the never ceasing irritation <lb/>
caused by ticks, so that the <lb/>
existence of the infested <lb/>
is beset with continuous suffer- <lb/>
this of course also tends <lb/>
to keep them in poor condition. <lb/>
The shrinkage in the milk <lb/>
production of a cow harboring <lb/>
many ticks will average one <lb/>
quart a and the loss <lb/>
sioned thereby at cents a quart <lb/>
for the dairy cattle <lb/>
out of more than 4.000,000 below <lb/>
the quarantine line would amount <lb/>
to a day. Counting <lb/>
milking for each cow to the <lb/>
year would make the loss from <lb/>
this cause per annum. <lb/>
Full information as to how to <lb/>
get rid of the ticks, including <lb/>
directions for the preparation of <lb/>
dips and sprays, the arrange meat <lb/>
of pastures, etc-, may be obtain- <lb/>
ed free upon application to the <lb/>
Bureau of Animal Industry, <lb/>
Department of Agriculture, <lb/>
Washington. D. C. <lb/>
H. Shore. <lb/>
Supplied by <lb/>
Rt j <lb/>
Bridgers. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
W. Autrey. <lb/>
TarborO and A. <lb/>
to audit. L- <lb/>
Rocky Mount-First church, <lb/>
L. P. Howard. <lb/>
Rocky Mount and Mar- <lb/>
H- E. Tripp. <lb/>
Nashville-E. C. Sell. <lb/>
g F. Craven. <lb/>
Mount R. E. Stand- <lb/>
field. <lb/>
Elm City- B. E. Hunt. <lb/>
Wilton-G. F. smith. <lb/>
W. Martin <lb/>
H. Black. <lb/>
E Lance. <lb/>
Superintendent N. C. Anti- <lb/>
Saloon L. Davis. <lb/>
Tie preachers who <lb/>
served the Greenville church <lb/>
and in whom people here feel an <lb/>
interest, were sent to the follow- <lb/>
L. L. Nash to <lb/>
and Shady Grove, J. A. <lb/>
day to Burlington, F. A. <lb/>
to Dunn, H. M. Eure to Carthage, <lb/>
N. H. D. Wilson to Laurinburg. <lb/>
The conference next year will <lb/>
beheld in <lb/>
FARMERS UNION. <lb/>
Do not sell your furs and hides <lb/>
until you see E. M. <lb/>
opposite Norfolk Southern <lb/>
Now for the race to Christmas. <lb/>
Dr. H. O Hyatt, of Kinston, <lb/>
will be in Greenville at Hotel <lb/>
Bertha Dec. 6th and 7th. the <lb/>
first Monday and Tuesday, for <lb/>
the purpose of treating disease <lb/>
of the eye, nose and throat <lb/>
and fitting glasses. Those who <lb/>
done will be charged <lb/>
fee unless terms are <lb/>
in. s d w <lb/>
Effected Pitt <lb/>
J. Z, Speaker, <lb/>
For a weeks Mr, G, C. <lb/>
Hedgepeth, of Nash county, dis- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
Union, has in this county <lb/>
organizing local unions. These <lb/>
locals came together in the court <lb/>
house today hear an address <lb/>
by Mr. J. Z, Green, of Marsh- <lb/>
ville, who is State organizer, and <lb/>
to organize a county union. <lb/>
Quite a large number of farmers <lb/>
were present and there was <lb/>
much interest in the movement. <lb/>
Mr. J. F. Evans, agent of the <lb/>
farm demonstration work in the <lb/>
county, introduced Mr. Green, <lb/>
who made a speech that was in- <lb/>
and instructive. Mr. <lb/>
Green is editor of Our Home, at <lb/>
Marshville, which ranks with <lb/>
the best country papers in the <lb/>
South, and he is also a good <lb/>
speaker- He clearly showed the <lb/>
benefit to come to farmers <lb/>
through and co-op-<lb/>
Ia the Fleming Office. <lb/>
N. W. Outlaw, who recently <lb/>
moved here from to <lb/>
engage in the practice of law, <lb/>
ill occupy the on Third <lb/>
formerly used by the late <lb/>
J. L, Fleming, Instead of in the <lb/>
Masonic Temple building as was <lb/>
previously announced. His card <lb/>
will be found elsewhere in this <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
West Rah 1909. <lb/>
Thanksgiving day ended the <lb/>
football season. Our ream was <lb/>
to in <lb/>
V. F. L, which <lb/>
was the only defeat of the season. <lb/>
While we had not beer <lb/>
of victory, the big score was an <lb/>
unpleasant surprise to the three <lb/>
hundred and thousands <lb/>
of were in <lb/>
to witness the game. <lb/>
Already we planning to de- <lb/>
feat the V- P. I. boys next year. <lb/>
when the game will probably be <lb/>
played on North <lb/>
class championship foot- <lb/>
ball ironies will be played this <lb/>
weeK. Much rivalry exists <lb/>
between the several teams which <lb/>
are practicing every spare <lb/>
moment. <lb/>
i -I ex will <lb/>
begin Dec. the schedule <lb/>
been published. The <lb/>
past a busy as the <lb/>
pr were then <lb/>
on. The b study a gnat d. <lb/>
in that make an <lb/>
average of above ninety thereby <lb/>
getting exempt from <lb/>
the end of the term. <lb/>
d is very conducive to <lb/>
thorough work throughout <lb/>
j session. <lb/>
Dr. Retort Prof. <lb/>
left last week for Chicago. <lb/>
are m-nib. rs of the <lb/>
and will attend the <lb/>
great live stock <lb/>
shows while aw A at reed <lb/>
the is more ard better <lb/>
live ah similar <lb/>
the fertile sections Of the West. <lb/>
The i i and dormitories <lb/>
are completion. The <lb/>
dormitory is most beautiful <lb/>
one on the campus and adds <lb/>
much to the general attractive- <lb/>
of the- rids. Those who <lb/>
crowded with three in a <lb/>
room h anxiously await- <lb/>
the completion of this build- <lb/>
The Biological club will give <lb/>
to biologic <lb/>
classes of the female colleges of <lb/>
Raleigh Saturday night. The <lb/>
various committees are <lb/>
busy with their <lb/>
Dr. Hill much of <lb/>
last week in the interest of the <lb/>
college. It seems that the people <lb/>
are more and more <lb/>
anxious to barn about industrial <lb/>
education. county schools <lb/>
arrange to get President <lb/>
Hill as a speaker sometime <lb/>
the year, if possible. <lb/>
Thus far there has been no <lb/>
hazing and most probably there <lb/>
will de none. It a past <lb/>
here. No one need fear it at old <lb/>
A. <lb/>
GREENVILLE TOBACCO SALES. <lb/>
Whit The Market Has Been Doing <lb/>
This Season. <lb/>
Secretary E, B. Ferguson, of <lb/>
the Greenville Tobacco Board of <lb/>
Trade, furnishes us the following <lb/>
figures, taken from his official <lb/>
records, of the sales of leaf to- <lb/>
this season on the Green- <lb/>
ville market I <lb/>
For the month of November <lb/>
the were pounds <lb/>
for 234.293.29. an average of <lb/>
per hundred pounds. <lb/>
For tie preceding three <lb/>
months-August, September and <lb/>
October-the sales were <lb/>
for an average <lb/>
of per hundred pounds. <lb/>
For the four months up to <lb/>
Nov. 30th the sales were <lb/>
for an average <lb/>
of per hundred pounds. <lb/>
We are making son <lb/>
Stalk cutters, Disc and <lb/>
smoothing harrows. S. be- <lb/>
fore buying. J. R. J. <lb/>
POOR PRINT<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>