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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb/>
In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON <lb/>
I Authored Agent of The Eastern Reflector and Rites on Application <lb/>
The Pitt School i We have needles, bobbing <lb/>
manufactured by The A. G. Cox shuttles, for any sewing machine <lb/>
Manufacturing Company are in the country. Also needle <lb/>
cheat.; comfortable, neat and threaders, the very thing <lb/>
affected -es <lb/>
Harrington, Barber <lb/>
We have put in an assortment <lb/>
of patterns for all styles. <lb/>
durable. era liberal. <lb/>
When in the market to see <lb/>
us, we have the desk for you. <lb/>
Eugene Cannon went out to <lb/>
his borne new Bonn <lb/>
We are carrying a nice line of <lb/>
and Caskets. Prices are <lb/>
nice hearse <lb/>
A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. <lb/>
C. T and F. A <lb/>
s a to yesterday. <lb/>
Fir spring goods, <lb/>
laces tee us- <lb/>
N.-w lot just in. <lb/>
Co- <lb/>
Misses Norms <lb/>
Evelyn went to Greenville <lb/>
For nice fresh full see R. D <lb/>
on Thursdays, <lb/>
and Saturdays. <lb/>
M; j Vivian left <lb/>
for her home at <lb/>
Point. <lb/>
For cold drinks of ail kinds <lb/>
at H. L. Johnson's fountain. <lb/>
Miss Lee Nichols, of Ayden, <lb/>
was in town yesterday visiting <lb/>
Miss Hattie Kit <lb/>
Just received, a nice lot of <lb/>
ladies shoes. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co <lb/>
Cox came m from <lb/>
where ant <lb/>
attended the exercises <lb/>
of Meredith college. <lb/>
is the hind <lb/>
you need. See us. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Miss Bertha Carroll came in <lb/>
from Tuesday where she <lb/>
has been attending college- <lb/>
We call your attention to our <lb/>
new line of groceries. <lb/>
R. W. <lb/>
E. F. Tucker and family went <lb/>
to Walstonburg yesterday. <lb/>
For nice fresh corned herrings <lb/>
see A. W. Ange iv. Co. Winter- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
a number of our <lb/>
attended the closing <lb/>
the F. a. at Ayden. <lb/>
Straw hats are going fast, buy <lb/>
one, don't be W, Ange <lb/>
Mrs. Mollie Bryan went <lb/>
to Greenville today. <lb/>
Leave your orders for ice at H. <lb/>
L. Johnson's. Will be delivered <lb/>
any e in town. <lb/>
Miss Olive Butt and <lb/>
Cox, accompanied by Miss Louise <lb/>
came in from <lb/>
Salem Tuesday. <lb/>
Matting and oil cloth, the <lb/>
floor, buy some, cover it over. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber Co. <lb/>
Miss Crawford returned <lb/>
yesterday from Ayden <lb/>
by Miss Stella <lb/>
who will spend a few days with <lb/>
her. <lb/>
Before buying, see my line of <lb/>
post cards, H. L. Johnson. <lb/>
Mrs. Melissa Vincent returned <lb/>
from Ayden yesterday. <lb/>
Field peas and peanuts for <lb/>
sale by A. W. Ange Co., Win- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Miss Annie of <lb/>
was in town yesterday. <lb/>
To reduce our stock before in- <lb/>
we will offer for a <lb/>
limited time, cheap, for <lb/>
gingham calico, <lb/>
worsted dress goods, to <lb/>
suiting, percales, to <lb/>
motor waist <lb/>
goods, lawn, mohair <lb/>
wool effects. <lb/>
to table peaches. pie <lb/>
peaches, shirts. <lb/>
shirts, shirts, <lb/>
shirts, Call and see what <lb/>
we offer. A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. are rendering good service <lb/>
in the undertaking business. <lb/>
Coffins and caskets cheap with <lb/>
excellent hearse service. <lb/>
Let us frame that for <lb/>
yon. Any frame. <lb/>
A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
How is your soul Let <lb/>
us show you our new lot of <lb/>
shoes. Barter Co <lb/>
A nice six key soda fountain <lb/>
for sale. R. <lb/>
We have purchased the <lb/>
as the <lb/>
Milling and Mfg. and will <lb/>
be ready very soon to grind corn, <lb/>
do general repair work and dress <lb/>
timber. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
A nice lot of matting just in. <lb/>
A, W. Ange Co. <lb/>
Fresh corn herrings at <lb/>
Barber Co. <lb/>
We are now in to do <lb/>
grinding every day general <lb/>
repair work promptly. <lb/>
Harrington Barber Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. has sold this season ever <lb/>
cotton planters and <lb/>
guano sewers which would <lb/>
ally indicate a large cotton crop <lb/>
this year. <lb/>
New lot of dry goods and no- <lb/>
just in. Better while <lb/>
they cheap. <lb/>
A. W. <lb/>
A new lot of lamps just in. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Beef, sausage and fish, going <lb/>
cheap. R. W. at Johnson <lb/>
stand, on railroad street. <lb/>
You will never regret when <lb/>
you purchase a <lb/>
manufactured by A. G. Cox Man <lb/>
Co., Winterville. <lb/>
N. C- <lb/>
Miss Hattie left <lb/>
day for Greenville to attend the <lb/>
summer school at E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
M. B. Bryan went to Norfolk <lb/>
today. <lb/>
B. P. Manning and F. A. Ed- <lb/>
went to Norfolk Men <lb/>
day and returned <lb/>
H. J. Miss Lessie <lb/>
King went to Greenville <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Miss Miriam after <lb/>
spending Sunday and Monday at <lb/>
home, returned to Greenville <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
W. J. Bullock, of Grifton, <lb/>
spent Sunday with W. and J. <lb/>
L. Rollins. <lb/>
Tennis seems to be a popular <lb/>
game with some of our young <lb/>
people. <lb/>
Mrs. F. M. Crawford and Miss <lb/>
went to Greenville today. <lb/>
Misses Roland and Lena Cobb, <lb/>
Mary and Beulah <lb/>
Flanagan, of Farmville, came in <lb/>
Saturday to visit Misses <lb/>
and Cox left yes- <lb/>
for the summer school at <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Misses Cora and Car- <lb/>
roll came in Saturday to visit <lb/>
Misses Kate and La la Chapman. <lb/>
Miss May Whitehead, of <lb/>
Parmele, is visiting, Mies Pearl <lb/>
Hester. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cox went <lb/>
to Hanrahan yesterday to visit <lb/>
relatives. <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
N. C, May 31.- <lb/>
Mrs. J. M. Hyman and children, <lb/>
of Scotland Neck, came down <lb/>
from Wilson last Tuesday even- <lb/>
to visit her grandfather, f. <lb/>
E. Little, and left for her home <lb/>
Friday. Her mother-in-law, <lb/>
Mrs. Celie Ann Hyman, <lb/>
her. <lb/>
Mrs. Wyatt Eason and child- <lb/>
of were visit- <lb/>
her sister, Mrs. Mills Smith, <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Our section was well represent <lb/>
ed at the Union meeting at <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
So <lb/>
It ma y be overwork, be <lb/>
the ore Ha from In-<lb/>
With a well conducted LIVER <lb/>
one can So mountain of labor <lb/>
without fatigue. <lb/>
It odds a hundred par to <lb/>
earning; capacity. <lb/>
Horn be kept In healthful action <lb/>
by, only by <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Do You Own a Piano <lb/>
If not, you expect to own <lb/>
soon, you owe it to ex- <lb/>
the display <lb/>
i shown at the White <lb/>
I A display really <lb/>
to a large city. <lb/>
Io a glance you will inspect a <lb/>
line of pianos not alone stand <lb/>
in character of tot t, y and <lb/>
general in a class to <lb/>
itself, but I m with prices <lb/>
that stand here and <lb/>
incomparable am where. Eight <lb/>
different makes tr select from, none <lb/>
of those cheap western department <lb/>
tore stencils, but each one a stand- <lb/>
ard, of acknowledged fame and <lb/>
reputation in the trade. Four <lb/>
player-pianos of known <lb/>
We will take your piano ha <lb/>
exchange for one of ti self play- <lb/>
era. We alto carry the <lb/>
ORGAN, the standard of the world. <lb/>
Old organs and planes taken in ex- <lb/>
change, terms to s your <lb/>
When in visit out <lb/>
New Chamber Commerce <lb/>
The directors of the chamber <lb/>
of commerce of Greenville met <lb/>
in the office of Dr. D. L. James, <lb/>
Tuesday night, for the purpose <lb/>
of acting on the resignation of <lb/>
Elders Walters and Pittman. of Mr F M Wooten as president <lb/>
Ayden, are holding a protracted <lb/>
meeting in the Free Will Baptist <lb/>
church, at Arthur this week, <lb/>
and it will continue through <lb/>
Sunday. We hope that great <lb/>
good will be done. <lb/>
We thought the comet would <lb/>
soon be a thing of the past when <lb/>
it got in the west but it seems to <lb/>
to net higher every night and is <lb/>
more visible now than it was <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Today is my seventy second <lb/>
birthday. Wonder who will make <lb/>
me a birthday present. <lb/>
am requested to announce <lb/>
that Rev. W. F. Waters, of <lb/>
Ayden, will preach the funeral <lb/>
of Mrs. J. B. Rouse Sunday <lb/>
morning at o'clock. <lb/>
The resignation was and <lb/>
accepted, and Mr. H. A. White <lb/>
was elected <lb/>
dent of the organization. No <lb/>
secretary was elected at this <lb/>
time, tut a subsequent meeting <lb/>
will be held at an early date for <lb/>
that purpose. It is also the <lb/>
pose to arouse more interest in <lb/>
the chamber and have meetings <lb/>
oftener than during the past <lb/>
year. <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Next door to Carr Atkins Hardware Co. store. <lb/>
KING'S CROSS ROAD ITEMS. <lb/>
Marriage License. <lb/>
Register of W. M. Moore <lb/>
hats issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last report. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
Oscar H. Peele and Katie <lb/>
Wells. <lb/>
Allen J. Cox and Cornelia Es- <lb/>
Oakley. <lb/>
Eli Savage. Jr. and Jennie <lb/>
Gorham. <lb/>
Randolph and Ellie <lb/>
Gorham. <lb/>
Barnhill and Pauline <lb/>
Bland. <lb/>
Kings Cross Roads, May <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith and <lb/>
children spent last Saturday <lb/>
night and Sunday with Mrs <lb/>
Ed Carraway near Fountain. <lb/>
Little Ethel Reid Parker, <lb/>
of Falkland, spent last week <lb/>
with her grand-parents, Mr. <lb/>
Mrs. W. C. Moore. <lb/>
Little Miss Nannie Lee <lb/>
Matthews is visiting her aunt, <lb/>
Miss Ora Matthews, this week <lb/>
The people of this community <lb/>
are taking great interest in the <lb/>
choir practice at Cross Roads. <lb/>
We had a little crowd at the <lb/>
last meeting and hope to have <lb/>
more next time. <lb/>
DEATH OF MRS BETTIE MATTHEWS <lb/>
Last Wednesday morning at <lb/>
four o'clock Mrs. Matthews was <lb/>
called away. She had been a <lb/>
sufferer for about twelve months <lb/>
with heart dropsy. <lb/>
Mrs. Matthews was years <lb/>
of age. She leaves seven <lb/>
to mourn her death. She <lb/>
had been a member of the <lb/>
Baptist church for several <lb/>
years. Those who knew her <lb/>
best loved her most <lb/>
New Telephone Directory Oat. <lb/>
We are now delivering our <lb/>
new telephone directory, and we <lb/>
earnestly ask that all users of the <lb/>
telephone will call by number <lb/>
instead of name, as it very greatly <lb/>
expedites the service. It is not <lb/>
for our own good, but the sub- <lb/>
that we ask this Owing <lb/>
to our rapid growth it is <lb/>
hie for the operator to <lb/>
all the numbers and have to <lb/>
look up. thereby greatly <lb/>
reducing the efficiency of the <lb/>
service. In calling by number <lb/>
always call the figures singly, a <lb/>
call, or a- <lb/>
280-L. call, <lb/>
-L. Try this and you will like it <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Home Telephone Telegraph Co. <lb/>
WOODLAND ITEMS. <lb/>
Woodland. N. C. May 31.- <lb/>
Several our people attended <lb/>
the at Ayden last <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Mrs. Thomas Abrams. who <lb/>
has been spending sometime with <lb/>
her daughter. Mrs. A, W. Bar- <lb/>
went to Greenville Saturday <lb/>
to spend a while here. <lb/>
Mrs. L. G. spent a <lb/>
part of last week with her sister, <lb/>
Mrs. Ferny Smith, near Grifton. <lb/>
Mrs. Puss Barber, of Green- <lb/>
ville, is spending the week with <lb/>
her son, A. W. Barber. <lb/>
Miss is spend- <lb/>
sometime with Miss Hope <lb/>
Craft. <lb/>
We are having some fine <lb/>
weather this week for plow boys <lb/>
like myself. <lb/>
So far Mr. D. D. Haskett has <lb/>
shown the potatoes this-T <lb/>
Marvelous Discoveries <lb/>
mark the progress of <lb/>
age. Air on heavy <lb/>
without war <lb/>
inventions to kill men, and won- <lb/>
of wonders Dr. King's New Dis- <lb/>
Ufa When threaten <lb/>
by coughs, colds, la grippe, <lb/>
croup, hemorrhage, hay <lb/>
fever and cough or lung- <lb/>
For all bronchial affections it has <lb/>
no It relieves instantly. It's <lb/>
ears. James M. Black of <lb/>
N. C . R. R. No. a <lb/>
it eared Mas at an oust ins cough aX- <lb/>
season. <lb/>
A Pig Tail. <lb/>
A new use has been found for <lb/>
the phonograph. A certain <lb/>
of Spray bought a pig a <lb/>
farmer near and <lb/>
went to his get on Sun- <lb/>
day, and upon, the arrival at the <lb/>
home of the aforesaid farmer, it <lb/>
was found that he was entertain- <lb/>
the preacher that day. and <lb/>
was afraid to deliver the pig. on <lb/>
account of the minister being <lb/>
present, but here is where the <lb/>
phonograph came to the <lb/>
While the preacher listened to <lb/>
the strains of good old religious <lb/>
hymns, the farmer delivered the <lb/>
pig according to previous tn <lb/>
News. <lb/>
Nervous <lb/>
Break-Down <lb/>
Nerve energy is the <lb/>
force that controls the or- <lb/>
of respiration, cir- <lb/>
digestion and <lb/>
elimination. When you <lb/>
feel weak, nervous, <lb/>
table, sick, it is often be- <lb/>
cause you lack nerve <lb/>
energy, and the process <lb/>
of rebuilding and sustain- <lb/>
life is interfered with. <lb/>
Dr. has <lb/>
cured thousands of such <lb/>
cases, and will we believe <lb/>
benefit if not entirely <lb/>
cure you. Try it.<lb/>
and left, me <lb/>
or <lb/>
clans but ant <lb/>
sot bad I <lb/>
em away <lb/>
I killed pent- <lb/>
no relief, <lb/>
had I <lb/>
la a <lb/>
t much better, and I <lb/>
to Improve cared. I <lb/>
am la and never <lb/>
an opportunity <lb/>
sells Dr. New. <lb/>
end e him return <lb/>
first kettle N It <lb/>
OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF FARMVILLE, <lb/>
at n. o. <lb/>
At the close of business March 29th, 1910. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts secured <lb/>
and unsecured <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Cash items <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin, including <lb/>
minor coin currency <lb/>
Nat bank and other U. S. <lb/>
Notes <lb/>
204.40 <lb/>
040.55 <lb/>
837.00 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock <lb/>
Surplus fund 6,000.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits less <lb/>
cur. exp and taxes pd 4,086.89 <lb/>
Time of deposits 16,841.81 <lb/>
ts sub. to check 67,880.01 <lb/>
Cashier's 1,104.86- <lb/>
Total 1104,918.07 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, J 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. R. DAVIS, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before <lb/>
me, this 4th day of April. 1910. <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
Notary Public, <lb/>
ltd <lb/>
W. J. <lb/>
R. L Davis, <lb/>
F. M. Davis, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
The Up-to-date Hardware <lb/>
Store <lb/>
IT is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish, <lb/>
Stains, Building Material, Nails, Cook <lb/>
Stoves, Enamelware, Fine Cutlery, <lb/>
Handsome Chafing Dishes. <lb/>
We Carry a full Line of Wall Paints <lb/>
easy to put on and hard to come off. Place <lb/>
now with them and you will be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
K Special attention is called to our line of <lb/>
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders, <lb/>
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and <lb/>
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the <lb/>
very best quality. <lb/>
Don't fail to see us before buying, they <lb/>
can supply your wants. Give them a call. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
Evans Street, <lb/>
N. C<lb/>
USED UNIVERSALLY <lb/>
WHEN Metal Shingles were first introduced years <lb/>
you hid some excuse for bring <lb/>
But now <lb/>
I ll you do not know the <lb/>
acts in the case. <lb/>
Atlantic to the Pacific for all kinds <lb/>
of buildings, under all conditions. <lb/>
leak and as long as the <lb/>
building itself without needing <lb/>
For further detailed information apply to <lb/>
YORK COBB, Agents. <lb/>
THE EASTERN <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
Truth in Preference to notion. <lb/>
One Dollar Per <lb/>
No. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JUNE IO. <lb/>
IO. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
GENERAL ASSEMBLY CALLED <lb/>
SPECIAL SESSION. <lb/>
GOVERNOR ACTS IN <lb/>
EMERGENCY. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Session Set <lb/>
Asked Meet ea in <lb/>
Mailer of Beads. <lb/>
The General Assembly of <lb/>
North Carolina is culled to meet <lb/>
in extra session on Tuesday. <lb/>
June at o'clock. The <lb/>
proclamation for it was signed at <lb/>
yesterday afternoon by Gov <lb/>
Kitchin. <lb/>
The extra session is called by <lb/>
the Governor by the advice of <lb/>
the Council of State, and is for <lb/>
the of taking action in <lb/>
the emergency which has arisen <lb/>
because of the failure to sell the <lb/>
entire issue of the to <lb/>
refund the issue of of <lb/>
1880, which fall due on the first <lb/>
day of July. <lb/>
funding bonds bear an in <lb/>
rate of four per cent and <lb/>
of the entire issue there has only <lb/>
been subscribed <lb/>
yet not subscribed <lb/>
and it is to provide for this <lb/>
amount that the extra session is <lb/>
called. The expectation is that <lb/>
by increasing the rate to five <lb/>
per cent that the entire issue <lb/>
will be absorbed. <lb/>
THE CALL MAY Bit REVOKED. <lb/>
There is one chance against an <lb/>
extra session being held, and <lb/>
that chance depends upon the <lb/>
bankers and capitalists of the <lb/>
State. Governor Kitchin has <lb/>
written personally to every bank <lb/>
in North Carolina asking that it <lb/>
have representatives here at a <lb/>
conference on June eighth, the <lb/>
purpose of this being to see if the <lb/>
remainder of the issue of refund- <lb/>
bonds cannot be placed. If <lb/>
there is action taken at the meet- <lb/>
to take up the <lb/>
this will obviate the need for the <lb/>
extra and while <lb/>
no official statement out. it <lb/>
is understood that the en <lb/>
tire issue taken the call for the <lb/>
extra session will be revoked. <lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb/>
PROCLAMATION BY GOVERNOR <lb/>
To the the General <lb/>
Assembly of North <lb/>
By and with the advice of the <lb/>
council of state, an extraordinary <lb/>
occasion having arisen, t, W. <lb/>
Kitchin. governor of the State of <lb/>
North Carolina, in the exercise <lb/>
of the power conferred on me by <lb/>
the constitution of the State, do <lb/>
issue this my con- <lb/>
the general assembly in <lb/>
extra session on Tuesday, the <lb/>
14th day of June, 1910, at <lb/>
o'clock a. m., and do hereby <lb/>
notify and request senators <lb/>
and members of the of <lb/>
representatives of the general <lb/>
assembly of North Carolina to <lb/>
meet in their respective halls, in <lb/>
th Capitol in the city Raleigh at <lb/>
aid time, for the of <lb/>
considering the emergency re- <lb/>
from the inability of the <lb/>
state treasurer to sell in accord- <lb/>
with chapter public <lb/>
laws 1909, entitled act to <lb/>
authorize the issue of state <lb/>
bonds to pay the stats bonds <lb/>
which fall due on the first day <lb/>
of July, sufficient bonds <lb/>
to pay the present outstanding <lb/>
bonds of the issue of 1880, which <lb/>
mature on July 1.1910, and of <lb/>
enacting legislation to enable <lb/>
state treasurer to secure <lb/>
funds to pay said last <lb/>
mentioned bonds at their ma- <lb/>
For information of the <lb/>
of the General Assembly all <lb/>
Suite are requested to <lb/>
publish of this <lb/>
witness whereof, I have <lb/>
hereunto set my hand and caused <lb/>
.-i <lb/>
JAMES. <lb/>
fl Early is <lb/>
The first of the series of June <lb/>
weddings which <lb/>
pie are to see, took place in the <lb/>
Memorial Methodist <lb/>
church at o'clock this morning, <lb/>
when Miss Mary James became <lb/>
the bride of Mr. William T. <lb/>
Lipscomb, Jr. <lb/>
A few minutes before the <lb/>
hour, wedding <lb/>
march being beautifully <lb/>
by Miss Helen Forbes, the ushers, <lb/>
s. Charlie James. J Burt <lb/>
James, Burney Warren and John <lb/>
marched down <lb/>
aisle. They were followed by <lb/>
the two dames of honor, Mrs. C. <lb/>
C. Skinner, of New York City, <lb/>
and Mrs. Wilkinson, of Raleigh. <lb/>
They wore white mull over <lb/>
blue end pink carnations. <lb/>
The two maids of honor, MUs <lb/>
Charlotte of filming <lb/>
ton and Miss Goodwin, of <lb/>
Philadelphia, wore pink and car- <lb/>
white carnations. The four <lb/>
flower girl, Misses Ada James. <lb/>
Nell White, Francis Whedbee, <lb/>
and Ella Moseley Wilkinson, had <lb/>
meanwhile marched in and <lb/>
formed in front of the altar. <lb/>
The bride came in on arm <lb/>
of her father. Col. F. G. James; <lb/>
the groom entered from the pas <lb/>
tor's behind the altar, with <lb/>
his best man. Mr. Alexander L. <lb/>
Slow, Jr. The Reverend Mr. <lb/>
Oliver, of Florence, South Caro- <lb/>
performed the ceremony <lb/>
assisted by the Reverend J. H. <lb/>
Shore, of the Methodist church <lb/>
here. <lb/>
The bride wore a tan <lb/>
gown with hat <lb/>
gloves to match. She carried a <lb/>
large bouquet roses <lb/>
and the valley. <lb/>
Immediately after the <lb/>
amid a shower of rice <lb/>
from friends, who had assembled <lb/>
at the depot, the couple left, on <lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Line train for <lb/>
Lake they will <lb/>
spend their honeymoon. <lb/>
The affair was a <lb/>
morning church man-rage. <lb/>
A very informal rec was <lb/>
given Tuesday night at the h. me <lb/>
of the bride's parents exclusive- <lb/>
to out of town visitors, <lb/>
of the bridal party, <lb/>
relatives of the bride and groom <lb/>
elect The bridal party repaired <lb/>
to the residence after the <lb/>
rehearsal at and late <lb/>
supper served at The <lb/>
bridal presents, of which there <lb/>
was a lavish perfusion, were on <lb/>
display in the drawing room. <lb/>
The out of town guests present <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Skin- <lb/>
of New York City Rev. <lb/>
and Mrs. Oliver, of Florence. S. <lb/>
C; Mrs. Wilkinson, of Raleigh; <lb/>
Miss Charlotte Fennell, of <lb/>
Miss Mary Goodwin, of <lb/>
Philadelphia; and Mr. Frank <lb/>
Skinner, of New York City <lb/>
UNIVERSITY COMMENCEMENT. <lb/>
THE TRUE OPTIMIST. <lb/>
MUNICIPAL MATTERS. <lb/>
ATLANTIC HOTEL. <lb/>
by the Night <lb/>
Aldermen I <lb/>
Five received tho A. <lb/>
the five the Ph. <lb/>
G. three the L. L. B., and four <lb/>
teen M. D., a total of <lb/>
students degrees. <lb/>
honorary degree of L. L D. was <lb/>
awarded to such distinguished <lb/>
a Dr. K. P. Battle. Dr. <lb/>
George Winston. President J. <lb/>
I Foust the State Normal. <lb/>
E. J. Hale, and Dr. <lb/>
Thomas Hume. The Mangum, <lb/>
orators were H. E. Stacy, J. H <lb/>
L. C. and J. H. <lb/>
Johnson of the senior class. The <lb/>
principal commencement <lb/>
was delivered by Dr. Charles <lb/>
Foster Smith of the University <lb/>
of Wisconsin who made an <lb/>
able address upon in <lb/>
Commencement lasted four <lb/>
days, closing Tuesday. It was <lb/>
ushered in Friday night by the <lb/>
Y. M. C. A. reception, Saturday <lb/>
was class day. The class day <lb/>
exercises consisted in the class <lb/>
president's address by A. H. <lb/>
Wolfe, the history by K. <lb/>
Nixon, the presentation of the <lb/>
class gift by H. E. Stacy, <lb/>
reading of the last will d <lb/>
testament by Hoke and <lb/>
the class prophecy by John W <lb/>
Reeves The class exercises <lb/>
ball <lb/>
Mack I Extract Address Mist <lb/>
State. I <lb/>
Hill M C June 1-1 At 8.00 p. m- the college The board of aldermen met in City. June <lb/>
HUT, N. U WM regular monthly session, The Atlantic hotel the <lb/>
The 115th commencement of the night, with all the members of Mr I. <lb/>
University came to a g whose and had business to con- <lb/>
did close last morning the session until midnight. <lb/>
Miss said, in j. . Boyd was granted license <lb/>
W. W. Kitchin presenter n , . you u not carry on an undertaking <lb/>
diplomas in the name of the . , yet venture to hope ,,,. <lb/>
The street committee reported <lb/>
arts ad presents the high-. in to <lb/>
bachelor, art., , the J <lb/>
the world ever has and ever will I property, <lb/>
admire. optimism the world. and Ba to the sand work <lb/>
admires and this it is that <lb/>
man to his highest j The finance <lb/>
The man who is blessed to have the accounts <lb/>
such a spirit in storm turns and tax <lb/>
upward to the where checked up the <lb/>
h L,,,.,. ,. a, The market <lb/>
the remodeling of the market <lb/>
j house had been completed and <lb/>
I the building put in good sanitary <lb/>
condition. Ordinances govern- <lb/>
the market house were <lb/>
adopted. <lb/>
be sun shines, and <lb/>
though the long be t lick <lb/>
with he scans the <lb/>
in eager and not with <lb/>
despair, for the first gleam o <lb/>
the dawning light. is <lb/>
true optimist, what his of <lb/>
cheer has woo by stern fight- <lb/>
ills of life. <lb/>
spirit of true optimism his <lb/>
wrought every great event in <lb/>
the world's history and has been <lb/>
the foundation which --very <lb/>
great character has developed. <lb/>
There is honor always for the <lb/>
successful man and there is credit <lb/>
to the one who tries and fails, <lb/>
yet tries again. a min <lb/>
does not step to enjoy <lb/>
fruits of conquest, one <lb/>
disaster overtakes does be <lb/>
sit and wring his hands in <lb/>
despair, but rather makes the <lb/>
obstacles that oppose him step <lb/>
The cemetery was <lb/>
to pipes <lb/>
to such portions of the cemetery <lb/>
as deemed The special <lb/>
committee to look into the matter <lb/>
of procuring more ground for <lb/>
the cemetery asked for further <lb/>
time. <lb/>
The Committee to <lb/>
storage room for supplies for <lb/>
the water and light department <lb/>
was given further time ti make <lb/>
arrangements <lb/>
W. H. Allen was granted <lb/>
license conducts <lb/>
A voucher for was <lb/>
may one attain to <lb/>
-------1 high serenity, this calm <lb/>
were held in the afternoon. and <lb/>
seniors gathered under the rest- <lb/>
shades of the old Davie <lb/>
ping stones and over climbs in or of C. S. Forbes <lb/>
to higher in full settlement of all damage <lb/>
this tenacity and of a <lb/>
his property by reason of <lb/>
raising the street. <lb/>
The street committee was in- <lb/>
to take such steps as <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
The infant daughter or Mr. J. <lb/>
E Fleming died Friday afternoon <lb/>
at the home of its grandmother. <lb/>
Mrs- F. M. Smith, in South <lb/>
Greenville. The interment took <lb/>
place today at the Fleming burial <lb/>
ground in the country. <lb/>
the Great Seal of the State to be <lb/>
affixed. Done in the city of <lb/>
Raleigh this the third day of <lb/>
June, 1910. <lb/>
Seal of <lb/>
W. W. Kitchin, <lb/>
Governor. <lb/>
By the Governor. <lb/>
Alex. J. Fetid. <lb/>
Private Secretary, <lb/>
Poplar, smoked the pipe of <lb/>
sang songs, and burned the <lb/>
senior benches signalizing the <lb/>
passing of the class of 1910 from <lb/>
University life. <lb/>
The Beta Kappa society <lb/>
exercises were held in Gerhard <lb/>
hall The University of North <lb/>
Carolina is one the four <lb/>
of the South that has a <lb/>
chapter of honorary scholarship <lb/>
society which was founded at <lb/>
William and Mary in 1776. The <lb/>
members of the junior class who <lb/>
made the required mark on three <lb/>
year's work for admission into <lb/>
the were E. W. <lb/>
ton, president; A. L. Field, <lb/>
secretary; G. W. Thompson, W. <lb/>
T. Joyner, G. C. Mann, W. A. <lb/>
Dees, W. J. A. <lb/>
H. M. and R. L. Deal. <lb/>
Phi Beta Kappa address was <lb/>
delivered by Dr. Wm. Lyon <lb/>
Phelps of Yale and was one of <lb/>
the most magnificent ever de- <lb/>
livered in Gerrard hall. <lb/>
At the inter society <lb/>
Mr. Clarence Poe made a <lb/>
did address on relation of <lb/>
development of the average <lb/>
to the growth of the State. <lb/>
Mr- V. L. Stevenson spoke <lb/>
for the alumni. J. A. <lb/>
Highsmith and W. R. Edmonds <lb/>
poke for the student body. <lb/>
Sunday Dr. James Y. Fair and <lb/>
Rev. Plato Durham preached <lb/>
strong uplifting sermons. <lb/>
Monday was alumni day and <lb/>
reunions were held by the classes , <lb/>
of 1860, 1886, 1890, 1900, <lb/>
conscience The answer is are found to protect <lb/>
There is no royal road, only the the property of Dr. <lb/>
oath of training, of plodding, of j the sidewalk in front of his home <lb/>
hope, of endeavor, of la graded with the street. <lb/>
fixed or optimism <lb/>
is the faith that leads to achieve- <lb/>
for nothing be done <lb/>
without hope . <lb/>
optimist moves along tor investigation, <lb/>
progress and it, The board went into the <lb/>
while pessimist would keep <lb/>
stand still; the <lb/>
A claim of R. S. May for dam- <lb/>
age to properly on Dickinson <lb/>
avenue because of street grading <lb/>
was referred to Alderman Bowen <lb/>
Subscribe to the Reflector. <lb/>
the world at a <lb/>
consequence, pessimism in the <lb/>
of a family is the same as in <lb/>
the life of an individual; <lb/>
i m kills tho desire that urges <lb/>
man to struggle against poverty, <lb/>
ignorance and crime and dries <lb/>
up all the fountains of joy in the <lb/>
world. <lb/>
is sacred because it is <lb/>
the arena in which character is <lb/>
developed, the trials, the defeats, <lb/>
the disappointments, the <lb/>
the sorrows no leas than <lb/>
joys, the satisfactions, the <lb/>
pleasures and the triumphs are <lb/>
merely the tools placed in our <lb/>
hands to chisel out fine lines <lb/>
of a deathless character. <lb/>
let me Bay to you, if <lb/>
you would develop the strongest <lb/>
character, if the great <lb/>
eat success you must be a true <lb/>
optimist without fear and with- <lb/>
out discouragement, with calm <lb/>
hope and serene confidence, look <lb/>
boldly, triumphantly optimistic- <lb/>
ally to the future. <lb/>
societies in the annual inter- <lb/>
, society debate. Then came <lb/>
which dosed the <lb/>
1905. Mr. Parker of the <lb/>
class of 1890, one of the foremost <lb/>
lawyers of the New York bar, <lb/>
made a good sound talk on the <lb/>
North Carolina lawyer. The <lb/>
club save a play in the <lb/>
afternoon. At night G. W. <lb/>
Thompson and C. L. Williams <lb/>
of the Di and W. F- Taylor <lb/>
and E. W- Turlington, of the <lb/>
Phi did great credit to their <lb/>
with the presentation to <lb/>
each graduate a diploma and a <lb/>
Bible. <lb/>
The annual communication of <lb/>
Winterville Lodge No. <lb/>
A. M. will be held 3rd Thunder, <lb/>
June at SO <lb/>
All members to be <lb/>
present. Visiting Brethren <lb/>
cordially Invited. <lb/>
John Cheek. <lb/>
B. W. Tucker. See. <lb/>
kc <lb/>
an assistant police <lb/>
candidates whose <lb/>
been previously filed, <lb/>
and W. P. was pieced, <lb/>
his salary being month. <lb/>
A claim of Violet <lb/>
damage by a was referred <lb/>
to the water and light committee <lb/>
for investigation. <lb/>
The clerk of the board v. as <lb/>
granted leave of absence from <lb/>
town for a week. <lb/>
A petition from property own- <lb/>
was presented asking that an <lb/>
ordinance be adopted requiring <lb/>
the laying of side- <lb/>
walk on the south side of Fifth <lb/>
street An ordinance <lb/>
adopted in accordance with the <lb/>
petition. <lb/>
The water and light <lb/>
was instructed to place a <lb/>
light on Fourth street at the A. <lb/>
C. L. crossing. <lb/>
A committee consisting of Al- <lb/>
Carr, Flanagan and <lb/>
Higgs was appointed to look into <lb/>
the matter of personal protection <lb/>
at the crossings of the A. <lb/>
C. L. railroad. <lb/>
Accounts approved by the <lb/>
finance committee were ordered <lb/>
paid. <lb/>
By unanimous vote the board <lb/>
declined to accept the <lb/>
of E, B, J as <lb/>
of the third ward, and E. G. <lb/>
Flanagan as alderman of the <lb/>
fourth ward that was previously <lb/>
presented. <lb/>
G. James and , . <lb/>
R. W. King were presented as was elected u. <lb/>
trustee of the graded school to The board took a <lb/>
All out the unexpired term of J. Tuesday night, 7th. <lb/>
Morton. its <lb/>
evening, June 4th. <lb/>
hotel, fully equipped and <lb/>
in every small ready <lb/>
for this us occasion, at- <lb/>
a larger crowd of visitors <lb/>
than ever before. <lb/>
improvements in the <lb/>
hotel and on the grounds add <lb/>
charm to the natural <lb/>
of this seat r Con <lb/>
Crete file platform <lb/>
have recently been laid. The <lb/>
grounds and flower gardens have <lb/>
received very careful attention <lb/>
and the blooming plants give <lb/>
a touch of color. <lb/>
One of the-most attractive <lb/>
and convenient additions is the <lb/>
building of a on the <lb/>
left pier. will prove a <lb/>
pleasure to boiling, surf, and <lb/>
as drinks, <lb/>
candies, and en be <lb/>
chased here. <lb/>
interior of the <lb/>
been thoroughly <lb/>
n v off every convenience to <lb/>
us A roost <lb/>
c of assistants has <lb/>
gaged, and with the aid of <lb/>
the man- <lb/>
feels Rafe in assuring <lb/>
prompt <lb/>
N expense nor was <lb/>
considered when the <lb/>
ball room. <lb/>
with its eight hundred <lb/>
lights was transformed law a <lb/>
Japanese At interval <lb/>
below the balcony rail were <lb/>
large red and white fa s, <lb/>
from the high dome, in the <lb/>
of the room the balcony <lb/>
was EU.-pended garlands red <lb/>
and while alternating. <lb/>
On the main festoons of <lb/>
red and reached from <lb/>
to <lb/>
With the begot if effect <lb/>
was the e parasol <lb/>
from <lb/>
chandelier. From this parasol <lb/>
many garlands of lantern were <lb/>
strung. While at <lb/>
dripping from the ceiling and <lb/>
from many of lights wire <lb/>
parasols and <lb/>
No m-re or <lb/>
decoration could have been <lb/>
selected for this i cession- The <lb/>
faint red not <lb/>
only the dancers but the <lb/>
tors, too. <lb/>
A very beautiful was <lb/>
led by Mr. W. A. Allen, of Kins- <lb/>
ton, N. C. The dance begun at <lb/>
nine o'clock and many attractive <lb/>
novel were <lb/>
Seventy-five couples formed a <lb/>
line for the grand march. Tho <lb/>
beautiful gowned women were <lb/>
indeed fair representatives of <lb/>
North Carolina society. <lb/>
orchestra, of seven <lb/>
pieces-, furnished most splendid <lb/>
Immediately after the <lb/>
the guests engaged in a sail for <lb/>
a c tuple of hours. The music <lb/>
from the orchestra and the <lb/>
singing on board the boat made <lb/>
a most fitting climax for the <lb/>
opening day. <lb/>
Mrs. Walter Grimes and son, <lb/>
of Raleigh, have arrived for the <lb/>
summer. <lb/>
On the noted fisher- <lb/>
man, Mr. W. L. Kennedy and <lb/>
wife will arrive, Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
Kennedy spend each summer <lb/>
here, and their private <lb/>
the India, has been gotten in <lb/>
for them.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018099_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
NOTES FOR BUST <lb/>
New. Briefs far <lb/>
Dry Goods. Dress Goods. <lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
Anything you Deed can be found at oar <lb/>
Call to see u <lb/>
I. R. J. G. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
-ESTABLISHED 1875- <lb/>
S M <lb/>
Wholesale end retail Grocer <lb/>
and Furniture Dealer. Cash <lb/>
paid for Hides, Fur, Cotton <lb/>
Oil Turkeys, Eggs, Oak <lb/>
Mattresses, etc. <lb/>
Suits, Baby Carriages, Go-Cans. <lb/>
Parlor suits Tables, <lb/>
Safes, P. and Gail A <lb/>
Snuff, High Life Tobacco, <lb/>
West Cheroots, Henry <lb/>
Cigars, Canned Cherries, Peach <lb/>
es, Apples, Pine Apples, Syrup. <lb/>
Jelly, Meat, Flour, Sugar, <lb/>
Soap. Lye Magic Food, Matches <lb/>
Oil, Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls. <lb/>
Garden Oranges, <lb/>
Nuts, Candies, Dried Apple <lb/>
Peaches. Prunes. Currant <lb/>
Raisins. and <lb/>
Wooden ware. Cakes and <lb/>
era. Macaroni, Best <lb/>
New Royal Sewing <lb/>
and numerous other good- <lb/>
Quality and quantity cheap i <lb/>
cash. tee me. <lb/>
Halley's Comet <lb/>
la speeding Ito count at of <lb/>
miles per hour, according to hut <lb/>
reports. <lb/>
A H. engineer on N. A W. Ry <lb/>
feel would be doing you <lb/>
the public an if I did not tell <lb/>
what Conquering done for me. It <lb/>
cured me of t severe attack of Acute <lb/>
it me relief in twenty minutes <lb/>
I mi entirely free from mum. tad pain in <lb/>
three hours. <lb/>
keep a bottle with me on my <lb/>
For Indigestion, and <lb/>
there is nothing <lb/>
at drug torn, or tent <lb/>
prepaid on receipt of price. <lb/>
Manufactured by <lb/>
Leftwich Chemical Go. <lb/>
Lynchburg, Va. <lb/>
fosterer. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself i <lb/>
candidate for the office of Treat <lb/>
of Pitt county, subject t <lb/>
the action of the Democratic <lb/>
primary. C. T. <lb/>
May 1910. d <lb/>
The Reflector does job work. <lb/>
BIRD DOGS. <lb/>
Thaw Animals Are <lb/>
Clever. <lb/>
The wonderful intelligence of the <lb/>
well broken dog is often <lb/>
shown at trials, mm <lb/>
Country Life In America, field <lb/>
trial, is more <lb/>
in this country, a good <lb/>
chance to inly the psychology of <lb/>
the dogs, the instinct point game <lb/>
them in various ways. <lb/>
On a cold perfect winter day Mr. <lb/>
Tomlinson was handling the noted <lb/>
field trial winner Sum. He <lb/>
Was in normal health and very keen. <lb/>
After hunting about two hours hit <lb/>
handler cast him over into a patch <lb/>
of low growth hedge, and the party <lb/>
watching him run came up near a <lb/>
fence to get a better view of his <lb/>
work. Just as all eyes turned <lb/>
him they saw him tumble to <lb/>
the ground flat and limp, just as <lb/>
though he had struck an obscure <lb/>
or stone. <lb/>
Mr. Clemson, his owner, and a <lb/>
party of friends went cautiously tip <lb/>
to him. There he lay, stretched <lb/>
listlessly on his side, a muscle <lb/>
moving, his eyes dull and glazed. <lb/>
Consolation was offered Mr. Clem- <lb/>
son by the gentlemen witnessing <lb/>
the death of so capital a field <lb/>
performer as Uncle Sam and tho <lb/>
very remarkable manner in which <lb/>
he had died. <lb/>
Presently his handler came up <lb/>
and saw hint lying there just as tho <lb/>
others glazed, dull eyes <lb/>
and no perceptible breathing. As <lb/>
Tomlinson he <lb/>
thought ho noticed just the slight- <lb/>
est movement of his tail, lie spoke <lb/>
again and was of it. <lb/>
Turning to Mr. Clemson and his <lb/>
friends, he there <lb/>
re birds hero. Though I <lb/>
explain the action of the dog, am <lb/>
of it. Ho is very close to <lb/>
At that ha kicked tho of <lb/>
edge directly in front of the dog's <lb/>
nose, who all this time had never <lb/>
or regained his animated ex <lb/>
ed three close lying birds. To the <lb/>
surprise of all, the do; was instant- <lb/>
on his feet, eager again to be cast <lb/>
off. <lb/>
Person, who really with to become <lb/>
a In that <lb/>
while ace yet <lb/>
National <lb/>
will treat you <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Best In <lb/>
and Ceylon at S. M- <lb/>
One motion go cm <lb/>
for sale. Taft <lb/>
wanting me <lb/>
will call W. J. Turnage. <lb/>
Wedding presents for June <lb/>
brides can be found at Taft A <lb/>
VanDyke's. <lb/>
building for <lb/>
sale on easy terms, <lb/>
See Higgs Bros. <lb/>
Parker fountain pens, fountain <lb/>
pen ink. and library paste at <lb/>
Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
or doses will cure <lb/>
any case of chills and fever. <lb/>
Price <lb/>
For Sale-Good flush milch <lb/>
cow. Apply to Box No. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Cut glass suitable for bridal <lb/>
presents. Pharmacy, <lb/>
I have a nice lot of dry wood <lb/>
on hand, people wanting will call <lb/>
me up. Phone <lb/>
W. J. Turnage. <lb/>
It may pay you to call on <lb/>
C j. for prices before <lb/>
closing the deal for your Irish <lb/>
Potatoes. ltd <lb/>
of large, colored <lb/>
eye glasses in black leather case. <lb/>
Finder please return to J. C. <lb/>
Lanier. <lb/>
In West Greenville beautiful <lb/>
residence lots for sale on easy <lb/>
terms. See Higgs Bros <lb/>
We have a machine f retire <lb/>
baby carriages and <lb/>
only a few minutes required, <lb/>
Taft ft VanDyke. <lb/>
Twenty-six telephones added <lb/>
to the local exchange since May <lb/>
1st. Were you one of them If <lb/>
not order yours at once, don't <lb/>
worry your neighbor. <lb/>
Ice Cream from Washington <lb/>
City every day, it is delicious <lb/>
Pharmacy. <lb/>
For house and lot <lb/>
situated in South Greenville, on <lb/>
street between Tenth <lb/>
and Eleventh streets. For fur- <lb/>
information apply to D. M <lb/>
Clark. <lb/>
We will offer for the next <lb/>
days our entire line of lace am. <lb/>
embroidery at cost for cash, in <lb/>
order to close out that line. <lb/>
Central Mercantile Co. <lb/>
Use Hubbard's Top Dressing <lb/>
on your corn, cotton, oats, pea- <lb/>
nuts, potatoes etc, and increase <lb/>
the yield per cent. Car load <lb/>
just received by The Central <lb/>
Mercantile Co. d w <lb/>
EAST CAROLINA <lb/>
Record It. the <lb/>
STANDING OP THE <lb/>
P C<lb/>
Rocky<lb/>
Friday's games the East <lb/>
Carolina League were as <lb/>
Wilmington Raleigh <lb/>
Fayetteville Wilson <lb/>
Rocky Mount Goldsboro <lb/>
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. <lb/>
at Wilmington. <lb/>
Goldsboro at Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Fayetteville at Wilson. <lb/>
Quotations on northern <lb/>
today for potatoes were as <lb/>
Philadelphia <lb/>
92.60 for fancy. Cleveland <lb/>
for fancy. <lb/>
The Newspaper a a Basil m <lb/>
Not in s long time have we <lb/>
seen the case for newspaper <lb/>
advertising more and <lb/>
s at d than the <lb/>
following extract from the St. <lb/>
One more Franklin county <lb/>
business concern decides <lb/>
advertising wagons, bill- <lb/>
boards, store windows and other <lb/>
similar expensive and ineffective <lb/>
methods of advertising and will <lb/>
employ space in <lb/>
hereafter. They will all <lb/>
to it in time. Advertising pays, <lb/>
if the man has something to sell <lb/>
so regulates his advertising as <lb/>
to convince other people that it <lb/>
is worth buying. All <lb/>
for newspaper <lb/>
can be easily avoided or <lb/>
disregarded by the very pet-pie <lb/>
the advertiser tries hardest to <lb/>
attract, the man or woman that <lb/>
can afford to buy. <lb/>
will all come in <lb/>
Our contemporary is right, <lb/>
shadow of a doubt. <lb/>
Outdoor, street car, circular <lb/>
and letter advertising are <lb/>
efficient auxiliaries to newspaper <lb/>
publicity, but they are, after all. <lb/>
only auxiliaries. <lb/>
It is the j of general cir- <lb/>
that goes every day <lb/>
every week or three times a <lb/>
week into the homes of the <lb/>
mate consumers, that brings <lb/>
results in the way of salesman- <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
And, at the essential analysis <lb/>
newspaper advertising is simply <lb/>
salesmanship on paper. <lb/>
Fifty years ago. business <lb/>
of all natures, the <lb/>
store on down to <lb/>
the chimney sweeper, indulged <lb/>
in space-buying more or less <lb/>
tentatively, advertising at inter- <lb/>
and always a little <lb/>
as to the wisdom of the invest- <lb/>
Today it is universally <lb/>
that half of business build- <lb/>
lies in efficiency of <lb/>
and sense in methods; the <lb/>
half lies in judicious and <lb/>
newspaper advertising, <lb/>
And the art, which seems <lb/>
marvelous enough to the <lb/>
is even now only in its first <lb/>
stager. <lb/>
SUPPERS <lb/>
Summer <lb/>
Slippers for <lb/>
Women, <lb/>
Misses and <lb/>
Children in <lb/>
White Canvas <lb/>
Pumps. <lb/>
All sizes and widths <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
Norfolk wired <lb/>
by J. W. Perry A Co. <lb/>
Yesterday <lb/>
Middling 1-4 141- <lb/>
Low Middling 1414 <lb/>
LOW Middling 7-8 1414 <lb/>
1-8 <lb/>
Strictly Pr me i- <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
ow Grades g <lb/>
r- YOKE AND <lb/>
FUTURE MARKET <lb/>
by Cot A <lb/>
and Norfolk <lb/>
Co. Banker. <lb/>
July <lb/>
Dec <lb/>
at <lb/>
M 1-8 <lb/>
617-8 <lb/>
July Lard <lb/>
Sept <lb/>
Greta Mar reported by <lb/>
I B JiG. <lb/>
urn 1-4 <lb/>
May <lb/>
May Corn <lb/>
July <lb/>
Sept <lb/>
78- <lb/>
8-8 <lb/>
1-8 <lb/>
1200 <lb/>
CO <lb/>
to the Public <lb/>
I have opened a shop Green- <lb/>
ch t, for repairs <lb/>
of furniture, and I <lb/>
If you have any <lb/>
furniture bring It to me and I will <lb/>
make it new again. <lb/>
Reference- J. Z Gardner. <lb/>
WILLIAMS <lb/>
Mattress Maker ard <lb/>
Cobb f Co. <lb/>
NORFOLK. VA. <lb/>
Cotton Buyers, Brokers <lb/>
in Stocks, Cotton. Grain <lb/>
and Provisions. <lb/>
PRIVATE WIRE <lb/>
to New York. Chicago <lb/>
and New Orleans. <lb/>
THE BEST IN <lb/>
Furniture <lb/>
and House Furnishings <lb/>
is not too good for you. When you want the <lb/>
best, and prices that are in reach of your pocket <lb/>
book we can supply your wants. <lb/>
Taft Boyd Furniture Co. <lb/>
If you with us both <lb/>
QUEEN READY WIT. <lb/>
An. <lb/>
I hereby announce myself as a <lb/>
candidate for county treasurer <lb/>
for Pitt county subject to the <lb/>
action of the Democratic <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
Primary <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
Appropriated Prom the <lb/>
of Royalty. <lb/>
anger of King was <lb/>
a fortnight before lie could <lb/>
address to bin or look <lb/>
face mid to <lb/>
what conic to toy to her then <lb/>
wan u and disgrace <lb/>
to him. but tore could be ex- <lb/>
anyhow when he wan a 110- <lb/>
fool at ever to u beggar <lb/>
of a race of beggar. <lb/>
be. dress yourself, leave <lb/>
eight and my fur <lb/>
well good, me <lb/>
Baa v. ready. I <lb/>
prepared for this, at you'll remember, <lb/>
before ever I married you; <lb/>
he, remember your agreement <lb/>
three back of the <lb/>
I to carry out of your <lb/>
cattle at my <lb/>
be. you Ilka. <lb/>
Twill be a price to get rid of <lb/>
me <lb/>
only three. And before I've got <lb/>
them out you'll think <lb/>
la back burden yon <lb/>
he. <lb/>
the. sold, <lb/>
silver, and <lb/>
In abort time the king had a bur- <lb/>
den of thorn piled that near <lb/>
almost her Lack, and with It aha <lb/>
went out over the <lb/>
When laid It Sown come <lb/>
back in again the king, bat, <lb/>
will your back harden <lb/>
my back <lb/>
ho, up on our <lb/>
king gave a groan rent <lb/>
rocks. he the man to be <lb/>
daunted before any woman. Be <lb/>
with own the boy In whom <lb/>
hit heart was wrapped up and, <lb/>
teeth hard, on <lb/>
him out over <lb/>
drawbridge. <lb/>
When the come bock again <lb/>
he, then, your <lb/>
third last and we're done <lb/>
with yon forever, thank <lb/>
Rear, on me <lb/>
back <lb/>
King and hi good Queen <lb/>
ii ever after the Imp pleat and moat <lb/>
contented couple that Ireland ever <lb/>
knew, a parable for all kings and <lb/>
and married couplet In <lb/>
lived and died the wittiest <lb/>
lived aver after <lb/>
died the -and moot <lb/>
moat <lb/>
amiable king that Ireland ever knew. <lb/>
Ma <lb/>
Norfolk Southern R. R, <lb/>
NIGHT <lb/>
Pullman Sleeping Car Service <lb/>
between RALEIGH, N. C, and NOR- <lb/>
FOLK, VA., beginning June 5th. <lb/>
The local sleeping car line between Raleigh and Norfolk, vis Wilson. <lb/>
and Washington, without change. <lb/>
Read Down SCHEDULE <lb/>
Read Up <lb/>
p. m.<lb/>
II <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Greensboro, Southern Railway<lb/>
Hen S A. L. <lb/>
R. S and P. Railway <lb/>
Ra Union Station <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
on <lb/>
in in <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
mi. g on, via Wilson Ar. <lb/>
New Bern, via Ar. <lb/>
via Ar, <lb/>
Wilton Ar. <lb/>
GREENVILLE ArT <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
NORFOLK, Park Avenue <lb/>
p.<lb/>
a. m.<lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
mode at Norfolk with all lines diverging. <lb/>
For complete information, or of car apply <lb/>
G. T. agent, H. L, U. T. A <lb/>
N. C; F. <lb/>
to either of the <lb/>
Raleigh, N. .; W. J. Williams, <lb/>
C.; J L. Greenville, N. <lb/>
Bennett, New Bern, N. C. <lb/>
G. T. agent, H. L, <lb/>
N. C; F. V. <lb/>
C, H. L. N. C. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
T. H. <lb/>
H. C. W. W. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
C. T. store <lb/>
is where mothers teach their children to <lb/>
Big Bargains in Clothing, Hats. Shoes, Dry <lb/>
Dress Goods,. Notions and Millinery. That is <lb/>
where everybody goes. <lb/>
for <lb/>
He it Try Him <lb/>
ts Crasser. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Superior court clerk of Pitt county M <lb/>
administrator of the of Stephen <lb/>
C. Wooten notice la hereby <lb/>
given to persons indebted to <lb/>
to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the and all persona <lb/>
having are <lb/>
to to the <lb/>
for payment on or before <lb/>
the 2nd day of Jane, ml, or <lb/>
notice will plead In bar of recovery. <lb/>
day of Jane, 1910. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
I of Stephen C. Wooten. <lb/>
Greenville, yours if you <lb/>
come. <lb/>
Choice Cut Flowers <lb/>
but, <lb/>
el kM <lb/>
mt <lb/>
mm mm n skat mm <lb/>
Sara <lb/>
J. L ft CO., <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
Cards <lb/>
W. F. EVANS <lb/>
AT <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Office R. L. Smith ft <lb/>
and next door to John <lb/>
Buggy new building. <lb/>
N. W. OUTLAW <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
Office occupied by J. L. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
JAPANESE HEROISM. <lb/>
The Orv. Record of th. <lb/>
Submarine <lb/>
Clark <lb/>
N. Carolina <lb/>
S. J. Everett <lb/>
Attorney at Law <lb/>
mode on Real <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
L. L MOORE <lb/>
Moore <lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb/>
Long <lb/>
DR <lb/>
R. L CARR <lb/>
Dentist. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
JULIUS BROWN <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Barry Skinner. Jr <lb/>
B. W. Whedbee. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
LAWYERS. <lb/>
A WHEDBEE <lb/>
Greenville N- C <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Don't forget you have a b in- <lb/>
to visit <lb/>
Baker's Studio <lb/>
Every g well up to date <lb/>
Kodak work a specialty. <lb/>
Dr. F. Fitts. Osteopath <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
Dr. A. H. Zany, at <lb/>
Its if M la <lb/>
mt Flaw <lb/>
arc <lb/>
a. a. U f. m. <lb/>
Ht. <lb/>
I. MM <lb/>
. I. <lb/>
GUION GUION <lb/>
Attorneys at Law <lb/>
Practices where <lb/>
vices required, <lb/>
ally In the counties of <lb/>
Craven, Carteret, Jones <lb/>
Pamlico. and State and <lb/>
Federal Courts. <lb/>
Office Broad Street <lb/>
NEW BERN, N. C. <lb/>
CRUMB FROM THE CHILDREN'S <lb/>
Great t W tare ea thou . <lb/>
loves and to bare In Hie <lb/>
are for By of connected <lb/>
with our II It not alike to all to <lb/>
and to life to and <lb/>
of future will more off net of <lb/>
while only the faithful will exceeding and <lb/>
of In air, we are glad the Creator baa <lb/>
still In Inferior for cannot exercise <lb/>
now. but who must be dealt Age more along the <lb/>
lines of Our present study well illustrates grace <lb/>
those who <lb/>
The woman a not an <lb/>
with whom not entered Into covenant of those <lb/>
who at that time were without without because Divine <lb/>
provision for the of the Gentiles not yet opened up to them. <lb/>
When our Lord forth Apostle, to preach Gospel, all <lb/>
of diseases and catting out devils, be Instructed to past by all who <lb/>
were not and Samaritans. His words were, not Into the <lb/>
tar of the Gentiles and any city of Samaritans enter ye not, for <lb/>
am not sent to lost sheep of the house of With a few <lb/>
our miracles were to They were <lb/>
covenanted people. For reason Jesus Ignored petition of <lb/>
woman, crying mercy on me. O Lord, Son of David My daughter <lb/>
la vexed with a And Inter on be explained, am not <lb/>
but to sheep of of la not meet to take <lb/>
children's bread and east It to <lb/>
The term applied to Gentiles by as signifying <lb/>
their Inferiority. Our Lord merely made use of an expression common In bit <lb/>
day, and still common Palestine. But note the woman's Sue replied, <lb/>
Lord, yet eat of crumbs fall from Master's <lb/>
What perseverance, what faith, manifested How evidently <lb/>
believed Lord to be promised Heir of throne of <lb/>
David Jesus Intimated, bad inure faith than a majority of <lb/>
Ber request grunted woman, great Is Be It unto thee even <lb/>
thou Her daughter healed from hour. <lb/>
There are lesson, for us in this However degraded we may <lb/>
be by by heredity, by environment; however outcast from favor. <lb/>
we may sill know of Divine message la, Is Love <lb/>
If be chose first of all to manifest bis favor Abraham's children, It did <lb/>
not signify he had no love or cure for the remainder of mankind; merely <lb/>
Divine purpose must out In mankind through Divinely-appointed <lb/>
channels and In due time. We be sure that when we get to the <lb/>
standpoint of perfect knowledge In the hereafter we shall see wisdom In every <lb/>
feature of the Divine program. from standpoint It <lb/>
strange that God bas permitted a of sin and world <lb/>
far when be bus full power to word and to over- <lb/>
throw of evil and to Influences of blessing for <lb/>
deliverance of mankind from power of tin and and <lb/>
superstition; to give light for darkness; knowledge of God for and <lb/>
blindness. Studying the Divine of Ages, we tho lesson to be <lb/>
God will first select a Church dust and subsequently use the elect <lb/>
Church of toward Hie world of mankind. <lb/>
A little while, and permission of and the trials and difficulties of <lb/>
present life have served to chisel and polish the A <lb/>
while, and they be transformed Io the glorious likeness of their Redeemer <lb/>
beyond veil. And then a little and the blessings long promised to <lb/>
world In general will be dispensed children of God will first be fed <lb/>
from this table, and not merely crumbs will full for the remainder of <lb/>
race, but rich bountiful exceedingly abundantly more <lb/>
than we could have asked or thought. <lb/>
It la a great and Important truth that human beluga are more or <lb/>
less completely obsessed by evil spirits of human be- <lb/>
but the fallen the Scriptures declare. battle for year. <lb/>
against these Influences of demons not rightly informed of tho <lb/>
Bible teaching on subject, they come more and more under the occult in- <lb/>
with danger of entirely losing their It was probably some <lb/>
affliction this affected lb daughter of. She <lb/>
to that only I one quarter from which could <lb/>
get help. Hence her Importunity, when recognized Lord. <lb/>
In another of the word nil sin sickness may be to be <lb/>
of the devil, because nil are directly, or through heredity, Satan's <lb/>
work. Thus our Lord declared bad murdered our race by his <lb/>
falsehood to mother a murderer from the beginning and abode <lb/>
not In Through lie our race baa gone down Into sickness, men- <lb/>
moral and physical, and Is going down rapidly to the tomb. Thank God <lb/>
for the great Deliverer; thank God alto, for bit day of deliverance, tho <lb/>
Millennial Age, now nigh at baud I<lb/>
NOTICE OF AN ELECTION. <lb/>
of Ike Tows <lb/>
Notice hereby to the voter <lb/>
of the town of Greenville that the <lb/>
of Aldermen, at regular <lb/>
monthly meeting held on the nth day <lb/>
of May, 1910, ordered that on election <lb/>
be held with the char- <lb/>
of laid town, and the various <lb/>
amend menu on Monday, the <lb/>
day of June, in th various <lb/>
ward of said town, for the of <lb/>
electing one alderman from each of the <lb/>
Iva of said town. The alder- <lb/>
men elected from the second, third and <lb/>
fourth cont nu in office for <lb/>
two year, and those from fit at and <lb/>
ward for one year from July 1st, <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
Notice also hereby given that the <lb/>
board of aldermen have designated the <lb/>
following named in said ward <lb/>
of said town f r holding and conducting <lb/>
Said election, to <lb/>
Second stables. <lb/>
Third of- <lb/>
fourth Five <lb/>
Fifth office. <lb/>
Notice it alto hereby given the <lb/>
of the several <lb/>
of a town will be open at the <lb/>
designated above, on <lb/>
day, Thursday, and lit. <lb/>
2nd and from nine o'clock, a. m., <lb/>
to o'clock p. m., for the purpose, of <lb/>
allowing all pen register <lb/>
to do so. only these persons who nave <lb/>
duly will be allowed to vote. <lb/>
For the information of voter of <lb/>
the town, I desire to that <lb/>
term i of office of the following named <lb/>
gentlemen, n w member of board <lb/>
of aldermen of town will expire <lb/>
July 1st. 1910, and <lb/>
will be at election. <lb/>
B White <lb/>
Second A. <lb/>
Third Ward D. W. <lb/>
Four h A. Hays. <lb/>
Fifth Ward -W. <lb/>
tho 6th day of May. . <lb/>
II. W. Mayor. <lb/>
Th. Filipino <lb/>
A former in tho Philip <lb/>
pines tells dory of n <lb/>
I home my in time <lb/>
to see it climbing nut the win- <lb/>
with the hotter part of <lb/>
I so <lb/>
that tho finally dropped I lie <lb/>
clothes in tho <lb/>
A I up belong- <lb/>
a native <lb/>
insisted arresting me. . lie <lb/>
took me before a Filipino <lb/>
where I my story very plainly <lb/>
and emphatically. <lb/>
When had finished tho judge <lb/>
are dismissed, but you <lb/>
leave the clothes <lb/>
I insisted <lb/>
said ho, with sage de- <lb/>
liberation, can I tell that <lb/>
peak tho truth When tho <lb/>
come back to identify these clothe <lb/>
as the one ho you may have <lb/>
Companion.<lb/>
It remark a <lb/>
senator Henry Clay's <lb/>
Was absolutely Intangible to <lb/>
the moat labored description <lb/>
could not embrace II to <lb/>
understood It must be seen and fell <lb/>
Be orator by nature, lilt eagle <lb/>
eye bunted ardor or <lb/>
flashed indignation anon <lb/>
bis foe or wot suffused tear <lb/>
commiseration or of It Wt <lb/>
because be felt be made other <lb/>
foal. A gentleman after hearing on. <lb/>
of bis effort In I he senate <lb/>
described muscle <lb/>
the orator's face at work. Bit <lb/>
Whole body teemed as If <lb/>
part with a separate <lb/>
lite, and his small, whit band, with <lb/>
II blue rein apparently distended <lb/>
most to bursting, moved gracefully, <lb/>
but with all the energy of rapid and <lb/>
vehement gesture. The of <lb/>
the seemed that of a In- <lb/>
wrought up to III en- <lb/>
and brightly through th <lb/>
thin and transparent veil of Arab that <lb/>
invested <lb/>
a. Good. <lb/>
you any <lb/>
asked the man me drug <lb/>
bars replied the druggist, <lb/>
but I've tick Just <lb/>
is the of a mes- <lb/>
sage by <lb/>
who was command of the <lb/>
submarine So. which <lb/>
foundered maneuvering la <lb/>
bay. The message found <lb/>
In the running tower of the submarine <lb/>
after bad brought to the <lb/>
Is deepest regret that I <lb/>
write this message Io describe loaf <lb/>
of Ibis boat my fellow officers <lb/>
men, due to fault. <lb/>
would here specially locution that all <lb/>
steps have lie en taken to raise <lb/>
my comrades men ear <lb/>
neatly and calmly till end. I or- <lb/>
to dive with engine <lb/>
running, but as I found down <lb/>
too fur I tried to <lb/>
water to ballast <lb/>
tank, but unexpectedly work- <lb/>
these valves broke, I was left <lb/>
helpless, unable to boat. <lb/>
Meanwhile the leaks tilled water, <lb/>
boat at incline <lb/>
about degree. After <lb/>
striking the bottom began <lb/>
in. the switchboard was <lb/>
In water, all electric lights went <lb/>
out, the fuses burnt away, and the <lb/>
boat filled with poisonous <lb/>
to we experienced greatest <lb/>
difficulty in breathing. <lb/>
these condition, we worked <lb/>
our very pomp <lb/>
to empty main ballast lank, which <lb/>
I believe, we succeeded In doing, <lb/>
though we could not read <lb/>
owing to darkness. No electric cur- <lb/>
rent was available, I mentioned be- <lb/>
fore, and our last of rising to <lb/>
surface lay band <lb/>
pumps only. <lb/>
write this in the dim light coming <lb/>
from a. in. <lb/>
earnestly h but majesty to <lb/>
grunt me and to succor <lb/>
the families of my comrades sod men <lb/>
who hare lost their lives In this per- <lb/>
boat. This is my wish. <lb/>
1230 p. m <lb/>
la the utmost difficulty that <lb/>
I can breathe, though I urn we <lb/>
must have blown out the gasoline en- <lb/>
from looks. I cannot con- <lb/>
any more. p. <lb/>
Time. <lb/>
Latest Request. <lb/>
There is a clever hid who will <lb/>
get his living in this world. For <lb/>
playing truant maternal <lb/>
off his Casting one <lb/>
fond look at the of his <lb/>
existence, he paused at the door to <lb/>
am going to die, and <lb/>
when I am no more wish the doe- <lb/>
tor to cut me open and look at my <lb/>
The maternal heart filled <lb/>
with awful forebodings, and the ma- <lb/>
voice asked what he meant. <lb/>
wish it to be he an- <lb/>
I died of <lb/>
This was The small boy- <lb/>
was triumphant and retired to his <lb/>
little bed gorged to repletion. <lb/>
Toy Spaniel an Old <lb/>
The English toy spaniel is <lb/>
one of the oldest and <lb/>
most popular breeds of pet <lb/>
known. As far back as the days <lb/>
Charles the Martyr this breed <lb/>
much prized the ladies of the <lb/>
court. In the narrative of the ex- <lb/>
of Mary, queen of Scots, in- <lb/>
in Lord hand <lb/>
forwarded to the court, it was re- <lb/>
corded that one of the execution- <lb/>
found her little spaniel <lb/>
of practically the same type <lb/>
known in the <lb/>
under tho folds of her garments lo <lb/>
be near her and which would not be <lb/>
taken and Spur. <lb/>
Don't Buy a Piano Hurriedly <lb/>
Take Your Time <lb/>
plenty of it, and be extremely careful how <lb/>
you spend your piano money. <lb/>
Terms amount to very prom- <lb/>
cover a multitude can pet sat- <lb/>
terms anywhere, but a satisfactory <lb/>
piano at a precious places. <lb/>
We have makes under and <lb/>
cation as highest medium and low. Each <lb/>
grade is characterized by the price we ask for it. <lb/>
What ever price you are willing to pay for a piano. <lb/>
If bought from us, you will be getting legitimate <lb/>
value, as you won't be deceived in the grade you <lb/>
are getting. We have several self-player Pianos <lb/>
at bargain prices. <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. <lb/>
SCHEDULES <lb/>
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, <lb/>
and Effective April 1st, <lb/>
11.42 <lb/>
in. <lb/>
m. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
m. <lb/>
in. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
For further information, address ticket or <lb/>
W. J. I. M. T. C. A. <lb/>
WILMINGTON. N. O. <lb/>
i In <lb/>
S. J. NOBLES <lb/>
MODERN BARBER SHOP. <lb/>
laxity III Hie of <lb/>
notorious. No <lb/>
aver know It lie were or <lb/>
to affairs. Hut point of view g ex- <lb/>
plained Ills answer n friend of <lb/>
bit who knew lie bad an engage- <lb/>
to iii.- In a <lb/>
part of London who felt <lb/>
It most Impolitic fur Whistler <lb/>
to offend It was growing late. <lb/>
dear he Bald lo at <lb/>
last. I. frightfully late, you <lb/>
bare to dine with Lady <lb/>
Don't you think you'd I <lb/>
when everything Is <lb/>
I can paint like <lb/>
this Never Never they <lb/>
do until I get there <lb/>
never <lb/>
An Awful Jolt- <lb/>
you a now <lb/>
mid enviously. <lb/>
responded Biggs as he <lb/>
slowed up the near the <lb/>
ifs u beauty. Ev <lb/>
like <lb/>
are puncture <lb/>
she goes like the <lb/>
whiz Wish I owned <lb/>
tho are you fond of rid- <lb/>
I fond of riding Well, I <lb/>
should say <lb/>
here's a street car transfer <lb/>
I just found. I won't It, and <lb/>
M can homo on <lb/>
Way. <lb/>
can't decide which one of <lb/>
two I want lo <lb/>
marry either one of <lb/>
and discover Hint you got <lb/>
the wrung Philadelphia Record. <lb/>
DO YOU DRIVE TO TOWN <lb/>
farmer went lo market. <lb/>
Th. Foolish <lb/>
yum daughter loves <lb/>
poetry than that. <lb/>
She's fallen In love one of <lb/>
it <lb/>
To oneself on earth I. <lb/>
n t a bill a If on <lb/>
sill live simply <lb/>
Nicely furnished, every <lb/>
thing clean and <lb/>
working the very <lb/>
beet barbers. Second to <lb/>
none in the State. <lb/>
Cosmetics a specialty. <lb/>
Opposite J. R. J. G. <lb/>
NOTICE <lb/>
I have purchased the grocery <lb/>
neat of the II Trip-, on <lb/>
mi el, and will continue to carry it <lb/>
at the same stand. The buck I h <lb/>
enlarged and ed an <lb/>
I can year in <lb/>
groceries. <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
farmer <lb/>
at home. <lb/>
And find the market <lb/>
unfavorable for your <lb/>
produce The farmer <lb/>
who has a telephone in his home can telephone <lb/>
first The useless trips thus saved are worth tho <lb/>
cost of service. <lb/>
Under our plan the service costs but a trifle; <lb/>
the farmer owns the instrument the equipment. <lb/>
For information write to our nearest Manager <lb/>
for pamphlet, or <lb/>
HOME TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH CO. <lb/>
Henderson. N. C <lb/>
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb/>
H. HENRY HARRIS <lb/>
ARCHITECT <lb/>
ii Wilmington, N. C.<lb/>
S. A. L. <lb/>
SCHEDULE <lb/>
Trains <lb/>
ROUND LIMITED-No. <lb/>
1.46 a. Atlanta, Birmingham, <lb/>
and Jack- <lb/>
and i <lb/>
at Hamlet for Charlotte and <lb/>
THE SEABOARD MAIL-No. H, <lb/>
11.86 a m For <lb/>
with and car. Con- <lb/>
with r for washing-; <lb/>
tn, York, Roster- <lb/>
and <lb/>
THE FLORIDA FAST <lb/>
2.06 a. rat <lb/>
and Now Yo k do-p- <lb/>
and fining car, <lb/>
t n. A <lb/>
O. Cincinnati and Wet, i <lb/>
at Washington with <lb/>
and II. m O. for <lb/>
t. <lb/>
THE SI A HOARD N-. <lb/>
OS p. At lotto, <lb/>
Wilmington, <lb/>
phi. and a W. at. Parlor cat <lb/>
Hamlet. <lb/>
6.00 N.-. F for <lb/>
I.- Oxford <lb/>
THE FLORIDA FAST <lb/>
0.00 p. m. -for Atlanta, <lb/>
Mi is and <lb/>
and all mints. <lb/>
Pullman per. An Atlanta <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
ROUND M, <lb/>
p. m. -Arrives a. <lb/>
in , Washington a. m., New <lb/>
York p. m. Pullman to <lb/>
and car to New <lb/>
York <lb/>
C. B. RYAN, J. P. A. <lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. <lb/>
H. D. P. A. <lb/>
Raleigh. N. C. <lb/>
the<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018099_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE EASTERN <lb/>
I. j. WHICHARD, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. <lb/>
Year <lb/>
Six M nth <lb/>
Single Copy . <lb/>
rate may be upon <lb/>
at th business in The <lb/>
Evan and<lb/>
Entered in the office at Greenville <lb/>
N. C. a mail matter. <lb/>
think tie is <lb/>
the whole <lb/>
to run <lb/>
Wonder he make, <lb/>
to <lb/>
where it u not doing right. <lb/>
the prisoner go at the expire <lb/>
of that time. <lb/>
Taft says tin- <lb/>
country is threatened with <lb/>
and that something <lb/>
be done to give it a quietus<lb/>
A plucky Mew <lb/>
bottle nod held <lb/>
The bottle has been <lb/>
known to knock men out before. <lb/>
but not used in just the way this <lb/>
adopted. <lb/>
FRIDAY JUNE. 1910. <lb/>
Good When <lb/>
call again us <lb/>
If an- not an advocate of <lb/>
ii i i in he <lb/>
poorer every day <lb/>
they get by the tax lifter. <lb/>
The extra the <lb/>
ill enliven once <lb/>
more. <lb/>
See lax list taker early <lb/>
comes <lb/>
Isle in the <lb/>
Every horn- is just an <lb/>
nary w lien he conies up lo <lb/>
get on tax list- <lb/>
Up at they have ac- <lb/>
passed tome sentences fur <lb/>
though light ones. <lb/>
They will talk better <lb/>
for and it it <lb/>
a mighty good subject to <lb/>
We expect yet lo see this conn <lb/>
covered with such a net work <lb/>
will make it e <lb/>
pride of the East. Improve, <lb/>
the word <lb/>
The result of the primaries in <lb/>
the different wards, Friday <lb/>
night, shows a <lb/>
change in the of the <lb/>
next board of aldermen. In <lb/>
four of the wards new men were <lb/>
nominated, all of them young <lb/>
men of good business qualities- <lb/>
The outlook is for a good <lb/>
hoard of aldermen. <lb/>
dose of using . tin <lb/>
cause as a remedy which he <lb/>
evidently thinks is for <lb/>
it is the c <lb/>
p. who are concerned. <lb/>
kn which is preferable of the <lb/>
two. <lb/>
The Charlotte <lb/>
up for discussion again and the <lb/>
Stale papers are offering the <lb/>
usual advice to the Queen City <lb/>
ii about purchasing the <lb/>
building from the hardened <lb/>
owners. From the advertising <lb/>
it has had everybody knows <lb/>
Charlotte has auditorium <lb/>
right, if it is by <lb/>
who think have a <lb/>
are not doing the prohibition <lb/>
cause good by continually <lb/>
agitating the matter. Some go <lb/>
so far as to almost intimate that <lb/>
the voters of the State were <lb/>
into giving such a <lb/>
large majority for state wide <lb/>
prohibition in their argument <lb/>
Kill; the to become <lb/>
issue between the political par- <lb/>
ties. <lb/>
June may warm up enough for <lb/>
the editors to take a sea bath <lb/>
when they get to Wrightsville. <lb/>
We expect i boas I like <lb/>
to trade I hat little lathing suit <lb/>
off for lift overcoat <lb/>
about <lb/>
We are not worrying much <lb/>
over the of people the <lb/>
census report is going to give <lb/>
Greenville. It is very evident <lb/>
that there are many more people <lb/>
here than last time, and the <lb/>
number will be larger next <lb/>
So it in all right us long <lb/>
as the town keeps growing. <lb/>
The bankers of the State are <lb/>
being asked to come to the res- <lb/>
cue take the bonds which <lb/>
are being offered for sale. There <lb/>
is money enough in the of <lb/>
North Carolina to readily do this <lb/>
without any in. and <lb/>
to do mi would be an act of pa- <lb/>
and a manifestation <lb/>
State pride. If the hanks <lb/>
to the rescue the necessity fir <lb/>
the proposed extra session of the <lb/>
will <lb/>
Near bear is certainly <lb/>
knockout blows thick <lb/>
fast throughout North Carolina. <lb/>
towns, one after the other <lb/>
are barring its sale, either by <lb/>
high license or prohibition. <lb/>
Rocky is the first town <lb/>
to come under our notice, pro <lb/>
its sale under the Stale <lb/>
prohibition law against <lb/>
cant. We admire the action <lb/>
he board aldermen there haw <lb/>
taken against it. Doubtless a <lb/>
test will be made of the action <lb/>
under the State law permitting <lb/>
the sale of near beer as a soft <lb/>
drink, which we hope will result <lb/>
its prohibition. It is the <lb/>
greatest curse the prohibition <lb/>
cause has had to contend with <lb/>
The Supreme court of <lb/>
Unite States says the <lb/>
law is constitutional <lb/>
will <lb/>
the <lb/>
Some of the newspapers have <lb/>
gone to talking about <lb/>
Hotter again. That is just what <lb/>
lie likes, notoriety. <lb/>
The man who ii I,. ;, i, <lb/>
of tie <lb/>
his election . . ;. <lb/>
live to realize his <lb/>
If Solomon the no. <lb/>
in the penitent <lb/>
keeps on trying to escape <lb/>
he may get what is coming to <lb/>
him. <lb/>
I. M. of Elizabeth <lb/>
City, has been made assistant <lb/>
United States attorney of the <lb/>
eastern district of North Caro- <lb/>
Two important meetings are <lb/>
scheduled for Wrightsville this <lb/>
week, the press association and <lb/>
the good roads association. It <lb/>
goes without saying that the <lb/>
editors or very much interest- <lb/>
ed in both. No is doing <lb/>
for good roads than the <lb/>
newspaper men. <lb/>
We think the Wilmington Dis- <lb/>
patch will have an opportunity <lb/>
to go for the weather man over <lb/>
the kind he gives the press con- <lb/>
Unless the usual run of things <lb/>
change, there will be some sum- <lb/>
mer weather after awhile. <lb/>
Don't think it is to stay <lb/>
cool always, <lb/>
Wilmington it getting mighty <lb/>
near to it, thirty-six <lb/>
having been issued in <lb/>
that city. Must think summer <lb/>
visitors will take a big thirst <lb/>
along with them, <lb/>
Wadesboro a policeman re- <lb/>
signed his job to engage in the <lb/>
business. It is <lb/>
taken for granted that he <lb/>
the and under <lb/>
stands how to keep from being <lb/>
Nash county shows the proper <lb/>
spirit in the way of voting <lb/>
taxes for its schools. Tun <lb/>
districts that county voted <lb/>
Saturday. In one the vote was <lb/>
unanimous for the tax and in <lb/>
the other only votes were cast <lb/>
again it. This makes seven <lb/>
that have voted the <lb/>
tax this <lb/>
of a sorry dog in <lb/>
Cumberland county causing the <lb/>
death of one person with hydro- <lb/>
phobia and sending <lb/>
en others to receive the Pasteur <lb/>
treatment How strange it is <lb/>
that are allowed to run at <lb/>
large and to the lives <lb/>
of people. What happened in <lb/>
Cumberland is likely to <lb/>
happen any day in any <lb/>
One thing The Reflector be- <lb/>
must come sooner or later <lb/>
to all towns of consequence, is <lb/>
the commission form of govern- <lb/>
Better municipal ad- <lb/>
ministration can be given by <lb/>
three men sufficiently paid for <lb/>
their services than by a larger <lb/>
number who are not paid enough <lb/>
to afford to their own <lb/>
to look after public <lb/>
affairs. <lb/>
By an error of record lent <lb/>
from Davidson county, a prison- <lb/>
who sentenced to the <lb/>
penitentiary fur fifteen years <lb/>
was released at the expiration <lb/>
of two years. The commitment <lb/>
papers received at the <lb/>
had two years written thereon, <lb/>
The editor is off this week at- <lb/>
tending the press at <lb/>
Wrightsville. During his ab- <lb/>
Mr. L. Ames Brown will <lb/>
do the local reporting for the <lb/>
paper. He had considerable <lb/>
newspaper experience it <lb/>
University and is a good writer. <lb/>
The editorial department will <lb/>
be charge of Mr. C. W, <lb/>
of the paper, <lb/>
j the end will be. <lb/>
looked by both himself and <lb/>
I Mr. C. U. With <lb/>
these in charge the editor will <lb/>
life easy for u, few days <lb/>
not trouble his mind much <lb/>
about things th- shop. <lb/>
While we regret to see this <lb/>
section lose the day train which <lb/>
the S road has <lb/>
been operating between Wash- <lb/>
there are <lb/>
some good features the <lb/>
trains of the schedule. <lb/>
A Task. <lb/>
The trouble was of such <lb/>
a nature that the Gov- <lb/>
has found it necessary to <lb/>
all an extra session of the <lb/>
to take action. The rate <lb/>
interest was too low. People <lb/>
could pick up better <lb/>
investments almost anywhere <lb/>
else, and few capitalists will be <lb/>
in I willing to buy low rate <lb/>
bonds simply as a matter of sen- <lb/>
The bonds bear per <lb/>
cent- It is recalled by State <lb/>
Treasurer Lacy that certain <lb/>
was it that a State bond would <lb/>
find a ready market, some <lb/>
of the legislative finance <lb/>
committee insisted upon offer- <lb/>
a per cent, bond, which <lb/>
claimed, were advised, <lb/>
b flouted at It <lb/>
would seem that the duty of the <lb/>
legislature is simple and <lb/>
It has but to meet, call the roll <lb/>
proceed to raise the inter <lb/>
to or per cent-, adjourn <lb/>
and w a day's pay. So as to <lb/>
make the bill as light m <lb/>
in correcting its past error <lb/>
of <lb/>
May. <lb/>
We know what the new court <lb/>
going to look like but <lb/>
we do not know what it will <lb/>
coot One certain, that <lb/>
despite certain have <lb/>
been registered <lb/>
parts the there <lb/>
a town clock and a nice large <lb/>
one at that i <lb/>
After Saturday, the plans, <lb/>
which have been drawn by the <lb/>
famous architect P. <lb/>
will be advertised and <lb/>
a day set on which the different <lb/>
contracting builders who want <lb/>
the job can put in their bids. <lb/>
The new building will be some- <lb/>
what larger than the one which <lb/>
went down in the recent fire. <lb/>
It win be by feet There <lb/>
will be two large entrances, one <lb/>
from the side and the other to- <lb/>
wards Evans street just as be- <lb/>
fore The of the front <lb/>
entrance will not be as wide as <lb/>
the building itself, it was for <lb/>
the old court The small, <lb/>
hard to-get to gallery which <lb/>
a practically useless port of the <lb/>
-Id court will be <lb/>
by a roomy comfortable balcony. <lb/>
ground floor will have <lb/>
teen rooms, which will be <lb/>
ed into six sets of Be- <lb/>
sides the sheriff, clerk, register <lb/>
of deeds and other county <lb/>
in the old court the <lb/>
board of education and board of <lb/>
county commissioners will be <lb/>
allotted comfortable quarters in <lb/>
tie new building. A basement <lb/>
be extended under nearly <lb/>
ho whole building. It be <lb/>
for the of the new <lb/>
heating system which will <lb/>
be . <lb/>
The site of the Masonic Temple,. <lb/>
Which was destroyed in same <lb/>
ire as the court house, has been <lb/>
mi-chased by the county <lb/>
as a p to <lb/>
he grounds. . <lb/>
. <lb/>
The judicial convention for the <lb/>
Third Judicial District will be <lb/>
called early in July, no d. finite <lb/>
date having been set upon as yet. <lb/>
Of course nobody in Greenville is <lb/>
making any predictions, but a <lb/>
person glancing over the follow- <lb/>
figures will no doubt envy <lb/>
Mr. H. W. his chance <lb/>
of election. <lb/>
The different counties of the <lb/>
district will have the voting <lb/>
power given below in the con- <lb/>
soon to be<lb/>
Craven <lb/>
Greene jg <lb/>
Jones <lb/>
Pamlico <lb/>
Pitt w <lb/>
Total <lb/>
As yet there is no candidate <lb/>
out against the present <lb/>
bent C L. of Beau- <lb/>
fort, for the office of solicitor. <lb/>
Register of Deeds W. M. Moore <lb/>
ha issued the following licenses <lb/>
since last report; <lb/>
William and Mary E. <lb/>
Parker. <lb/>
COLORED. <lb/>
Stanley Kennedy and Pennie <lb/>
Harris. <lb/>
Chas. Corey and Bertha James. <lb/>
Cheapest teachers bureau in <lb/>
the country, wants to enroll com- <lb/>
teachers. Fine openings <lb/>
for all grades of school work. <lb/>
Schools supplied with teachers <lb/>
free. <lb/>
Piedmont Bureau. <lb/>
Durham, N. C. <lb/>
A Dreadful Wound. <lb/>
from a knife, tin can. rusty nail, <lb/>
works or of any other i de- <lb/>
prompt Buck- <lb/>
s to prevent blood <lb/>
poison or gangrene. It's the quickest <lb/>
surest heal, r for all such w. m <lb/>
also burns, boils, sores, skin <lb/>
Mons. eczema. hands, corns <lb/>
or puss, at all <lb/>
PAPER <lb/>
Since the board of aldermen <lb/>
applied to the blind tiger joints <lb/>
Mayor prescription <lb/>
an overdose of taxation certain <lb/>
sections of the city seem to be <lb/>
less frequented was the <lb/>
case before. That is a healthy <lb/>
condition of affairs. Not that <lb/>
there is any special virtue in <lb/>
those sections appearing desert- <lb/>
ed, comparatively, but the <lb/>
is a near <lb/>
The Norfolk Southern people <lb/>
want to do the best they can for cantor of . . .,, <lb/>
the sections they serve, and if j beer joint, better that <lb/>
they out the new schedules solemn stillness reign than ac <lb/>
do not meet requirements, other <lb/>
changes may follow later. All <lb/>
things must be it may <lb/>
be well enough to see how the <lb/>
new schedules are to work. <lb/>
Listen to this from the <lb/>
lie is a <lb/>
post card in the post office ad- <lb/>
dressed the Prettiest Girl in <lb/>
She might call for <lb/>
it, as it is <lb/>
who to give it to. We've got a <lb/>
whole bunch of pretty <lb/>
We blush, because really we do <lb/>
not know whether Brother <lb/>
Whichard is using the editorial <lb/>
or referring to the people <lb/>
of his town to possession of <lb/>
whole bunch of pretty <lb/>
Wilmington Dispatch. <lb/>
It the bill either way you <lb/>
on account of such <lb/>
So thought the mayor, so <lb/>
thought the board and so think <lb/>
we Free Press. <lb/>
Who can understand a woman <lb/>
When she is on the scent for a <lb/>
bargain might as well give <lb/>
her Here the papers have <lb/>
been full of of the <lb/>
Irish lace fakirs going about ply <lb/>
their trade and doing a rush- <lb/>
business the news <lb/>
paper exposure of the fake can <lb/>
not stop it A woman will bite <lb/>
with her eyes <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
New for <lb/>
A cotton seed oil and fertilizer <lb/>
factory with paid in <lb/>
capital, baa been organized at <lb/>
take t. <lb/>
u been ordered for the laying of <lb/>
boy. <lb/>
All of this talk some of the <lb/>
doing about the <lb/>
Is. we hp t T . <lb/>
The Progressive <lb/>
Farmer <lb/>
and Gazette <lb/>
RALEIGH. U. C, and <lb/>
MISSISSIPPI <lb/>
TRY IT <lb/>
Weeks-10 Cents <lb/>
We've got the kind of articles in our paper that you <lb/>
have been guess-work talk, but <lb/>
kind that steers you right. <lb/>
We want you to read the following series <lb/>
How to Double Your Cora Yields. <lb/>
How to Grow Live Stock in the South. <lb/>
in Prizes Our Com Club Boys. <lb/>
Short Talks About Fertilizers. <lb/>
DOUBLED WITH HALF THE <lb/>
I. T <lb/>
TEN WEEKS TRIAL ONLY CENTS <lb/>
You M your lion. Give your boy a <lb/>
lo compile l ; we are oil, ring our Cora Club Boys. <lb/>
Don't let Mi outs between but LI Coupe <lb/>
below and mail it once. V <lb/>
Coupon is Worth <lb/>
. AND GAZETTE. m-1 <lb/>
n. <lb/>
G m, <lb/>
Fit I mt <lb/>
.-mi <lb/>
ilk <lb/>
the foundation and work will <lb/>
begin as soon at the building <lb/>
material can be rushed to Farm <lb/>
ville. R. L. Davis is president <lb/>
of the corporation and B. M <lb/>
hence no blame can attach to politics Is, believe, Lang the <lb/>
the prison authorities for letting father of a wish. A t least they holders. <lb/>
i J in. . ., ,.; . <lb/>
I Cu. .,. <lb/>
-I K mm at Mun J <lb/>
This offer hi <lb/>
Sub- <lb/>
only <lb/>
it in and Mail To-day i<lb/>
. <lb/>
OUR AYDEN DEPARTMENT <lb/>
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb/>
Agent of The Eastern Reflector for vicinity. Ad rates furnished <lb/>
creditable one. <lb/>
him like you do a <lb/>
I book agent, and then wonder at <lb/>
the effort he is mating. <lb/>
The clock in the store of J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. was uncovered Thurs- <lb/>
day. It stopped st <lb/>
Mrs. G. Taylor won the <lb/>
piece set of chins, her time being <lb/>
Mr. J. F. Moore, of <lb/>
We are representing the oldest If you have news items, tell. Car cement, lime, nails and <lb/>
and strongest Life and Fire this scribe and help us to make; hay at J. R, Smith Go's. <lb/>
Insurance Co. in the world. this column a <lb/>
Cell us let us consult Don't treat <lb/>
you. Ayden Loan Insurance <lb/>
Co. are not ail <lb/>
H. L. Good, one of the we need your co-opera- <lb/>
students, is sick at the lion. R. W. Smith, <lb/>
home of J M. Bar field. June is said to be the poorest, Washington, won the second, a <lb/>
If you need s good open or I month in the year among the umbrella, Mrs. Minnie Turn- <lb/>
top buggy, or cart call financial world, and is commonly Mr the third a two pound can <lb/>
known as month. Wesson cooking oil. There <lb/>
Call us, phone large crowd much <lb/>
your houses and for you. You get <lb/>
Will sell your personal properly, <lb/>
land, stocks, bonds, or lend you <lb/>
money on reasonable <lb/>
Aden Loan insurance Co. <lb/>
en J. R. Smith Co. Dixon. <lb/>
Rev. J. R Tingle showed us a <lb/>
sample of his potatoes that were <lb/>
transplanted on 13th of April, <lb/>
Nancy Haw It was <lb/>
enough for This <lb/>
proves the Mr. Tingle <lb/>
can farm as well <lb/>
A nice line of coffins <lb/>
caskets always on hand a <lb/>
nice at your service at <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co's. mill. <lb/>
Messrs. Ax. and <lb/>
ten made a trip through Jones <lb/>
and Lenoir counties this <lb/>
making diligent search for <lb/>
Bovine for this market. <lb/>
Jno. A. Branch tells us while <lb/>
berry hunting, he captured three <lb/>
foxes, near half grown. He dis <lb/>
covered them under the trunk of <lb/>
an uprooted tree. <lb/>
Is the world growing better <lb/>
The Holiness people arrived Sat- <lb/>
pitched their tent and are <lb/>
attracting large crowds. <lb/>
Capt. D. G. Berry has cement- <lb/>
ed the side walk in front of <lb/>
Buckingham palace in Ghent. <lb/>
Now is s good time to advertise <lb/>
in the Ayden Department- <lb/>
R. W. Smith. <lb/>
Carlos Harris, of Greenville. <lb/>
in town Thursday. <lb/>
Cook stoves and for <lb/>
same at J. R Sail h Co's. <lb/>
Miss Bonnie U mo-d, after <lb/>
speeding days with Miss <lb/>
Lucy to <lb/>
her home a; <lb/>
Mr. J L. Tucker, near <lb/>
is very low what <lb/>
is thought to be paralysis. Mrs <lb/>
C. V. Cannon Mrs. W. <lb/>
You get a ticket <lb/>
with each dollar purchase. <lb/>
Corn oats and hay at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co. <lb/>
I What would Ayden do without <lb/>
Ayden Lumber Co. are Kev-E T. Phillips. He edits the <lb/>
preparing a house to install a PP introduces the speakers, <lb/>
Urge baud and two plan- the dead, supplies for the <lb/>
era. company is doing an ministers, is referee at <lb/>
immense business already, but the opening the clocks in stores, <lb/>
to operate their truly a great benefactor <lb/>
machinery they will our town. He has just return <lb/>
double business. f a meeting at Chapel <lb/>
if you have anything to buy or Hill alma mater- <lb/>
sell, let us drop it the Ayden <lb/>
column. <lb/>
J. B. Pierce has moved to his <lb/>
beautiful home in Ghent. <lb/>
poultry food and <lb/>
hawk killer at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Mrs E. M. Davenport, of <lb/>
Rocky Mount, is visiting her <lb/>
father, W. U. Harris. <lb/>
Call on us for ceiling. <lb/>
and <lb/>
We guarantee <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
J. R. Smith Co's. mill. <lb/>
Jesse of Black Creek, is <lb/>
idling her M. M. Sauls. <lb/>
Screen doors made to order or <lb/>
repaired on short notice at J. R. <lb/>
Smith Co's mill. <lb/>
Glad to see Ola Kittrell cut <lb/>
he been et to his <lb/>
loom with rheumatism. <lb/>
Prof. E. F. Mumford, <lb/>
Ayden, but now a teacher ii. <lb/>
the asylum, is here <lb/>
with his mother for a few days <lb/>
The Ho Telephone <lb/>
Co. has many improve <lb/>
his in our town for past <lb/>
been for to h with finished their work <lb/>
We are Manager G. W. Pres- <lb/>
et the boy's speech. lulls us he eleven <lb/>
sway and come another to his <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF <lb/>
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb/>
AT AYDEN, N. O. <lb/>
At the Close of Business 29th, 1910. <lb/>
Resources <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Furniture and fixtures <lb/>
Due from 60,902.88 <lb/>
Cash items OH <lb/>
Gold coin 40.00 <lb/>
Silver coin, including all <lb/>
minor coin cur. 1,288.09 <lb/>
bank and other <lb/>
U. Notes 8,785.00 <lb/>
Total 120,659.11 <lb/>
Liabilities <lb/>
Capital stock t 25,000.00 <lb/>
Surplus fund 12,600.00 <lb/>
Undivided profits, less <lb/>
cur. exp. and taxes pd. 5,421.89 <lb/>
Deposits sub. to check 60,180.20 <lb/>
Savings Deposits <lb/>
Cashier's checks <lb/>
outstanding <lb/>
Total <lb/>
27,268.90 <lb/>
287.62 <lb/>
1120,659.11 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb/>
COUNTY PITT. <lb/>
I, J. R. Smith, Cashier of the named bank, do solemnly swear that <lb/>
the above statement to the beet of my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
J. R, SMITH, Cashier. <lb/>
Subscribed sworn to <lb/>
before mt, this 4th day April, <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
Notary Public. <lb/>
J. R. SMITH. <lb/>
JOSEPH DIXON, <lb/>
R. C. CANNON, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
NOTICE NOTICE I <lb/>
is his equal in all good works. <lb/>
you want to buy, <lb/>
lease, sell or rent houses or land, <lb/>
or want a job for yourself, wife, <lb/>
daughter, mother or sister, or <lb/>
want to employ additional help, <lb/>
or sell what you have, there is <lb/>
no medium than the col <lb/>
of Reflector- <lb/>
R. W. Smith. <lb/>
C. O. Armstrong has returned <lb/>
from Chapel Hill. <lb/>
Prof. J. E- Sawyer, of <lb/>
N. C, a graduate, of <lb/>
college, has been elected principal <lb/>
of the Free Will Baptist Semi- <lb/>
nary, are being made <lb/>
to open the school on time. <lb/>
the co operation of this <lb/>
with Mr. Sawyer we <lb/>
expect to see its usefulness <lb/>
increased very largely. <lb/>
enterprising of J. J. <lb/>
Co. have purchased <lb/>
stock of Mrs. Minnie <lb/>
and will dispose of the <lb/>
and then convert the <lb/>
into an up-to date <lb/>
supply store <lb/>
chicken powders kills <lb/>
crows, owls and minks, <lb/>
remedy tor cholera, <lb/>
indigestion and leg weak- <lb/>
keeps them free from <lb/>
m causing them to pro- <lb/>
duce an abundance of eggs. <lb/>
a package at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Dr. E. Claire, of Edison, <lb/>
Ga. preached in the Free <lb/>
Baptist church here Thursday <lb/>
night. He tells us his success so <lb/>
far has been very gratifying in <lb/>
working for the seminary. There <lb/>
will be many improvements made <lb/>
before the fall session. This <lb/>
school should be the pride of our <lb/>
town and to the Free Will <lb/>
what Trinity is to the <lb/>
Wake Forest to the Baptist <lb/>
and Wilson to the Disciples. <lb/>
Car nails, barbed wire, lime <lb/>
and cement at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
patents magazines <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
and. rubber belting. <lb/>
black and galvanized pipe and <lb/>
other mill fittings at J. R. Smith <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Mrs. Ferebee, of Hertford, ac- <lb/>
companied by her sister, Mrs; <lb/>
D. G. Berry, is visiting relatives <lb/>
in Scotland Neck. <lb/>
At the meeting Monday night <lb/>
L F. the following officers <lb/>
were R. W. Smith, N. <lb/>
G; B. J. Skinner, V. G; Exum <lb/>
its most citizens- <lb/>
Messrs. E S. Laughinghouse, <lb/>
John Snip and Joshua <lb/>
L. gentlemen re <lb/>
sided in the immediate section of <lb/>
St. church- They were <lb/>
men of prudence, z <lb/>
staunch Democrats, good <lb/>
business men, and successful <lb/>
farmers. <lb/>
You can find almost anything <lb/>
you want in shoes, hits, dry <lb/>
goods, notions, trunks, <lb/>
school furniture, hard- <lb/>
ware, crockery, lime, cement, <lb/>
windows, <lb/>
screen windows and groceries st <lb/>
Smith Co's. <lb/>
The tax lister, B. J. Lancaster, <lb/>
will be here to list your taxes on <lb/>
June and <lb/>
churns, preserve jars, <lb/>
milk coolers Mason's fruit <lb/>
jars at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
The children of Mr. Jimmie <lb/>
Sugg, from the I. O. O. F. <lb/>
orphanage at Goldsboro, arrived <lb/>
yesterday to spend vacation with <lb/>
their mother. <lb/>
J. F. paints, varnish, <lb/>
cites and at J- <lb/>
R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Hiss Dollie Braxton, of the <lb/>
training school spent Sunday <lb/>
with Miss Eva Hart. <lb/>
Coal-tar, roof paint, at J. <lb/>
R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
J. H. Tripp spent Sunday at <lb/>
Morehead. <lb/>
We will repair your <lb/>
trucks, wagons, carts and other <lb/>
farm machinery on short notice <lb/>
at J. R. Smith Co's Mill. <lb/>
Mrs. Mumford is spend- <lb/>
the week with relatives at <lb/>
cradles and cultivator <lb/>
sweeps at J. R. Smith Co's. <lb/>
Dr. J. C. Caldwell filled Rev. <lb/>
C. M. Morton's appointment at <lb/>
the Christian church here Sunday <lb/>
night- <lb/>
See our and cent bargain <lb/>
counter-. J. R. Smith Co. <lb/>
a number of our Mason's <lb/>
attended funeral of J. L. <lb/>
Tucker Monday, took <lb/>
at St. John's near his <lb/>
home. <lb/>
JOSHUA LAWRENCE TUCKER <lb/>
The funeral service over the <lb/>
remains of the late Joshua <lb/>
Lawrence Tucker, of Grifton, <lb/>
Pitt county, took place in St <lb/>
John's Episcopal church. Moods <lb/>
afternoon at o'clock, the <lb/>
vice being conduced by the Rev. <lb/>
B. F. Huske, of Greenville, d <lb/>
the Rev. Jno. H Griffith, of <lb/>
Kins ton. <lb/>
The attendance upon this <lb/>
service by fr the largest <lb/>
the writer ever witnessed at t. <lb/>
burial in Pitt county. Fully <lb/>
carriages and buggies <lb/>
the church at the time of tie <lb/>
service, many coming from s <lb/>
distance. Immediately after t e <lb/>
church service, Grifton <lb/>
of Masons, of w hi -ii <lb/>
Tucker was a r. I <lb/>
had their interment service, in j <lb/>
a large number of <lb/>
took part. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker was years of <lb/>
age, and is survived by a v <lb/>
Mrs. Eliza Patrick Tucker, and <lb/>
the following named <lb/>
J. Tucker, of Grifton; <lb/>
Mrs Watt B. of <lb/>
Ayden; Mrs. Walter F. Hard <lb/>
Richmond, Va ; and Mrs. <lb/>
Clarence V. Cannon, of <lb/>
Miss Wheeler Tucker and <lb/>
Master Joshua L. Tucker, Jr. <lb/>
Mr. Tucker was one of most <lb/>
A Woman's Gr at Idea. <lb/>
how to make herself But <lb/>
without health it for her t be <lb/>
lovely the face, form or A <lb/>
weak, woman will be nervous <lb/>
and Constipation and k y <lb/>
chow in blot.-hes, skin <lb/>
and a wretched <lb/>
But Electric Bitters prove a <lb/>
go to women who want h a <lb/>
beauty and friends. Ti regulate <lb/>
stomach, liver a kidneys, purity the <lb/>
blood; give , bright eye , <lb/>
pure breath, velvety <lb/>
lovely complexion, good health. Try <lb/>
at all <lb/>
Dr. J. W. <lb/>
of California. <lb/>
the <lb/>
J. w. <lb/>
U clan, North Main A no- <lb/>
troubled with catarrh ct <lb/>
head fat many year. It all Ml d <lb/>
hearing light, <lb/>
money with <lb/>
and of local application to r- <lb/>
Pitt county, mo, but to no purpose until my <lb/>
Bis farming hardly was h the <lb/>
of <lb/>
I most say that I met most <lb/>
and satisfactory result. <lb/>
look hold of and <lb/>
out of my <lb/>
well alone toward tho <lb/>
of life, I am a <lb/>
as a-child over the requite, and <lb/>
like a man <lb/>
an Ideal Laxative. <lb/>
Ask your Druggist for a free <lb/>
Almanac for 1910. <lb/>
being excelled by any on in the <lb/>
county. A man of fine parts and <lb/>
influence indeed <lb/>
difficult to find one <lb/>
able to measure up to his stand- <lb/>
For many years Mr. <lb/>
of Be <lb/>
John's church, and deeply inter- <lb/>
in her welfare. <lb/>
As a Confederate veteran, he <lb/>
known, was a member <lb/>
of company E. <lb/>
under Capt. Jas. T. <lb/>
Was captured the the <lb/>
first day at on h home of Mr. J. E. of <lb/>
road, was in prison May 1910. and <lb/>
st Fort Delaware for six months, robbed one its jewel <lb/>
then at Point Lookout in wan born August <lb/>
ware Bay for another six months. long, w. s pi id and <lb/>
Exchanged, came home and was joy of her and <lb/>
then sent to Richmond, Vs. <lb/>
in the trenches at Petersburg , <lb/>
transferred to Gen. to bind her M H, <lb/>
gade. Was for a time May <lb/>
bearer of his regiment and her b <lb/>
rendered at Appomattox, <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
We wish to call your attention to our at <lb/>
we now have. We have taken great case in buying year <lb/>
think we can supply your wants in Shoes, Hats, Dress Gingham, No- <lb/>
Laces and Embroideries in fact anything that is carried In a <lb/>
Dry Goods Store. <lb/>
Came let us show you. <lb/>
Tripp, Hart Co., Ayden, N. C. <lb/>
it,, t recording secretary; H. G. <lb/>
Burton, financial secretary; J. R. <lb/>
We are prepared to you wan <lb/>
House and Kitchen Furniture <lb/>
at very prices. Cask or Installment. <lb/>
Com us ail will convince you <lb/>
AYDEN FURNITURE CO. <lb/>
NEXT DOOR TO <lb/>
Smith, treasurer. <lb/>
Are not our people making a <lb/>
by shipping their corn <lb/>
field peas elsewhere, when they <lb/>
so much needed st home <lb/>
We a true disciple of the <lb/>
et <lb/>
crops, and are sure the demand <lb/>
will overtax their supply, yet <lb/>
we see a great peas ship <lb/>
from here to other point. <lb/>
We regard self protection as the <lb/>
first law of nature. <lb/>
Within year Swift <lb/>
k has lost three <lb/>
of Respect. <lb/>
Whereas the W. C. T. U. of <lb/>
Bethel has sustained a great <lb/>
by the sudden death of one <lb/>
of its most loyal members, our <lb/>
friend and brother, Mr. Henry <lb/>
W. Martin, which has saddened <lb/>
our hearts and caused us to feel <lb/>
the uncertainty of life, wt there- <lb/>
j fore resolve, <lb/>
j While we bow in humble sub <lb/>
mission to our Fathers will, we <lb/>
feel and believe he is at rest and <lb/>
extend to bereaved and <lb/>
family our sympathies <lb/>
commend them to the care <lb/>
of Good Shepherd in whom <lb/>
he trusted- <lb/>
That a copy of these <lb/>
be sent to the White Rib- <lb/>
the bereaved wife <lb/>
family, also to the Greenville <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
Mrs. F. E. Bullock, <lb/>
Mrs Sarah White <lb/>
Mr . Frances M. James, <lb/>
Committee. <lb/>
In Your Homes to Stay <lb/>
The Joy for and <lb/>
never fail and Grease <lb/>
t for rheumatism and all <lb/>
and pains, p all over <lb/>
land by young and old. <lb/>
Sold by Pharmacy. <lb/>
N. C, and manufactured by <lb/>
THE GOOSE COMPANY. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
II 22-6 <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Quite a-number<lb/>
our people <lb/>
attended the children's day t x <lb/>
at Timothy Sunday. <lb/>
D. C. Stokes is on list. <lb/>
Miss Rosalie Stoke.-, of Wash <lb/>
is visiting relatives here. <lb/>
We had a nice rain Sunday <lb/>
night, which needed very <lb/>
much, <lb/>
John Dixon and Misses Martha <lb/>
Williams and Dolly Dixon, of <lb/>
Black Jack, were the guests of <lb/>
Miss Lizzie Stokes Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Belva Dixon, of Winter- <lb/>
is visit in her aunt, Mrs. L. <lb/>
Stokes. <lb/>
reconciled his prepare <lb/>
to her loved o In that <lb/>
land, whore there'll no <lb/>
sorrow pin i <lb/>
One Who Mums. <lb/>
Kept the King at Home, <lb/>
r the past we kept th- <lb/>
a I laxatives King's <lb/>
Life in our home and th- y <lb/>
prove j a tiles to all-oar <lb/>
writes Paul of N. <lb/>
Y. but for all <lb/>
stomach, liver and <lb/>
Only c at all druggists. <lb/>
Chicken Powder <lb/>
is to to <lb/>
Chickens aid Turkeys <lb/>
IF I <lb/>
THE Ml <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Mrs an aged lady, <lb/>
died Friday evening at the home <lb/>
of her son, Mr. O. C. <lb/>
on Dickinson avenue, west of the <lb/>
A. O. L. The remains were <lb/>
taken to the country today for <lb/>
interment. Deceased leaves four <lb/>
children, all grown. <lb/>
lily's Oyster <lb/>
Fresh Oysters <lb/>
Coming Every Day <lb/>
Serve Yon Any Way. Try Me <lb/>
MISS C MEREDITH <lb/>
Graduate Nurse <lb/>
Ayden, North <lb/>
I take , Died after ea. <lb/>
Chicken Powder , a chick of that <lb/>
and feed my old rooster, <lb/>
d-en on with it too, had been fed on <lb/>
Look at me and <lb/>
observe the Hawk. Powder. Alas <lb/>
Ira. Hark <lb/>
Kills Hawks. Crows, Owls ard <lb/>
Beet remedy far Cholera, Gm , <lb/>
limber Neck. and Leg <lb/>
Weakness. Keeps thorn free from <lb/>
Vermin, thereby causing them to pro- <lb/>
duce an a of eggs. Price <lb/>
and cent. <lb/>
only by <lb/>
W. H N. C. <lb/>
IT <lb/>
COWARD t WOOTEN<lb/>
a kart M aV, I. <lb/>
BALTIMORE. <lb/>
Single ant En- <lb/>
With or without baths, l <lb/>
day and op. Palatial limn. <lb/>
Rooms. Unsurpassed Br. w- <lb/>
in baths fret- <lb/>
co <lb/>
JOSEPH L HERMAN, <lb/>
lac<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018099_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
KING <lb/>
Story of j <lb/>
By GEORGE BARR <lb/>
. G.,. Bur <lb/>
k, <lb/>
of the <lb/>
SHAKE INTO SHOES <lb/>
in or state, out <lb/>
lo some one In <lb/>
tick of crowd about th-- antiseptic pow- <lb/>
He ,,,. rare, , <lb/>
r, <lb/>
. caught sight comfort of the see. <lb/>
gray Aliens Foot-Ease makes or <lb/>
lo the cries and feel easy. It is a certain cure <lb/>
extended band. for callous, <lb/>
He feet a It <lb/>
now heard the name the boy cried . ate. Try it <lb/>
King arrives in <lb/>
F s. cm- of and <lb/>
roe he ii i of a <lb/>
II King a for <lb/>
i c i the yo nil r of the <lb/>
, is John <lb/>
an American. Ill R n as. <lb/>
mi o . inter King and <lb/>
warns the <lb/>
the royal <lb/>
meats the prince end is <lb/>
f the lad's g Aunt Loraine. <lb/>
committee of ten, cot <lb/>
am the prince, m in an <lb/>
oh where t e <lb/>
is o a who is to kid Prince <lb/>
K n a i VI John <lb/>
e I son the mint as . <lb/>
how t-a hat. d carriage. The Hike of <lb/>
and ions I h id. Mar- Fen was lying back In the sent, his <lb/>
is it against the prince, j like that of a dead <lb/>
VII, IX g visit- the prince Is safer- shouted King <lb/>
S of the witch of look sap and Joyously. make It Thank <lb/>
me eh He, <lb/>
sees ii ye a crack j , <lb/>
in a door, an I for . <lb/>
he overpowered aid dragged J <lb/>
El . . u. r. that Mining voice. <lb/>
-Comer be called. <lb/>
with all hi lime heart. <lb/>
Two struck at the uncouth, <lb/>
desperate American as be lifted the <lb/>
from the ground and deliberately <lb/>
tossed her lot the <lb/>
Torn be A horse- <lb/>
man rode hi n He looked up as <lb/>
the animal's hoofs clattered <lb/>
about bis bead. with <lb/>
drawn sword. up to the <lb/>
carriage door, shouting words of re- <lb/>
st of the be loved. <lb/>
He n glimpse of her. holding <lb/>
the prince In bi-r arms, m line. <lb/>
face turned toward the mob. <lb/>
heard <lb/>
him <lb/>
From the swanned well <lb/>
hordes of tiring <lb/>
wildly into the ranks of <lb/>
guardsmen. fled from the <lb/>
as fast his strained <lb/>
would permit Mm. were <lb/>
striking all about <lb/>
Some one was his be- <lb/>
In the crowd. He turn- <lb/>
ed for a single glance backward. Little <lb/>
Mr. pale as a ghost, bis cap <lb/>
gone, bis clothing torn, was panting at <lb/>
his elbow. <lb/>
Soldiers came riding up from be- <lb/>
hind, turning to fire from their <lb/>
Into throng of cutthroats. <lb/>
by grim old with the Moody <lb/>
In center of troop there <lb/>
where By mail for c in <lb/>
stamps Don't ace pt any substitute. <lb/>
For FREE-ii I id Al- <lb/>
S. Le Roy, N. Y. <lb/>
Ms sad- <lb/>
owner of <lb/>
a I It. He U by Count <lb/>
and then taken to the under <lb/>
gr den toe comm of ten. <lb/>
XI Kin before c <lb/>
Even as King rushed out Into <lb/>
roadway a horseman galloped up from <lb/>
tee of hi-ts who to kill h m. i the direction of castle. He pulled <lb/>
brought to the den a d bis horse to bis haunches almost as <lb/>
Into lbs same worn wit King , the Amer <lb/>
XI I s a jailer, dons clot<lb/>
i into <lb/>
i at in which several of the <lb/>
leaders to t. <lb/>
XIV Kin manages to git Lora <lb/>
In- love.-, H-no e, and they hi e <lb/>
in car. XV on <lb/>
e root with a to I ill <lb/>
e R ii a- l pistes in s p <lb/>
K Air L r in. a e cs . into <lb/>
n car. They <lb/>
in an o an. w to the <lb/>
n in fro girl <lb/>
XVI <lb/>
Tun of the bomb <lb/>
HE scene Hint followed <lb/>
nil description, A score of <lb/>
id lay <lb/>
In the others crept <lb/>
with pain; Bash <lb/>
and tin; of lay in <lb/>
of the panic <lb/>
mingled with soft <lb/>
mud of Ki slimy, slip- <lb/>
ugly <lb/>
Olga was nothing <lb/>
left of bur We draw a roll across tie <lb/>
picture of Olga after the <lb/>
bomb left her hand. one may look <lb/>
the shattered <lb/>
that was on e n living, beautiful <lb/>
an. <lb/>
Down in an allay I lilt tower <lb/>
a worn team of <lb/>
TS <lb/>
INTO I II <lb/>
for a day re- <lb/>
turn of a master who was never to <lb/>
come back to them. God rest bis <lb/>
soul I <lb/>
King pi- himself up <lb/>
from street, bewildered, but <lb/>
unhurt revolutionists bad begun <lb/>
the assault on minions <lb/>
of the government. <lb/>
He looked back toward gory en- <lb/>
trance lo circus. There was Mar- <lb/>
mounted and swinging a saber <lb/>
on was a mass of car- <lb/>
oiled with white faced. pal- <lb/>
Bled prey from court of <lb/>
From somewhere near spot where <lb/>
Olga fell came a harsh, pen- <lb/>
them off Cut them off from <lb/>
the <lb/>
It was his cue. He Into the <lb/>
street and ran toward the carriages. <lb/>
snouting with all his <lb/>
back It Is Marians To the <lb/>
Then It was that he saw the prince. <lb/>
nor was standing on a seat on the <lb/>
should the newcomer, <lb/>
scowling down upon the young <lb/>
up here Quick, you <lb/>
It was bis face black with <lb/>
fury. had the hand <lb/>
of Mr. Hobbs on seeing help for King <lb/>
and was pulling up before him. <lb/>
There nothing for to do <lb/>
but to accept timely help of his <lb/>
rival. Au Instant later he was up <lb/>
and they were off after <lb/>
the last of <lb/>
you don't mind, count I'll try <lb/>
my grated the American. Hold- <lb/>
on with one arm, he turned and <lb/>
tired in of <lb/>
bowling crowd of rascals. <lb/>
to barracks gate. <lb/>
commanded Colonel <lb/>
prepared to admit none but the <lb/>
royal reserves, who are under Stand- <lb/>
orders to rt there in time of <lb/>
Over bis shoulder on biased <lb/>
to his was not idle <lb/>
my friend, nor philanthropy <lb/>
on my part. I was lo <lb/>
come and you. She would never <lb/>
have spoken to me again if I bad re- <lb/>
Ah. yes. I see She did <lb/>
It is not for yon <lb/>
I risk my <lb/>
murmured <lb/>
a wry smile his pale lips. <lb/>
mean, she is going to pay you In some <lb/>
way for picking me up. eh Well. I'll <lb/>
put an end to that. I'll drop off <lb/>
you can ride on <lb/>
wouldn't be a party to the game. Do <lb/>
you catch my <lb/>
would, said the count an- <lb/>
like to see you drop off <lb/>
while we're going <lb/>
got my pistol in the middle of <lb/>
your grated <lb/>
a bit or I'll scatter your vertebrae all <lb/>
over your system. Pull <lb/>
you cried <lb/>
done my part Colonel will <lb/>
bear He pulling his <lb/>
horse down. you are quite free <lb/>
to drop <lb/>
Less than a hundred yards behind <lb/>
loped a riderless horse. The dragoon <lb/>
who bad mi the <lb/>
saddle was lying <lb/>
far back in I he <lb/>
avenue, a bullet In <lb/>
his bead. Hob- <lb/>
to the mid- <lb/>
of the road. <lb/>
American <lb/>
threw up bis <lb/>
bands shout- <lb/>
ed briskly to <lb/>
bewildered ml <lb/>
Five seconds <lb/>
later King in <lb/>
the s a d e <lb/>
tearing along In <lb/>
the wake of the <lb/>
retreating guard. <lb/>
need <lb/>
men as Kin <lb/>
cried Colonel <lb/>
went the curing <lb/>
the long, wretched <lb/>
to the populace that Mar- <lb/>
had established <lb/>
and military governor of <lb/>
, principality pending abdication <lb/>
of prince and the I f a <lb/>
new and substantial regime. AH cit- <lb/>
were to <lb/>
the authority of the dictator. <lb/>
I Toward evening, after con- <lb/>
countless reports. Mar- <lb/>
removed his headquarters to <lb/>
tower, lie had fondly hoped to be In <lb/>
the castle ions before this <lb/>
In great <lb/>
old tower were now sci by <lb/>
bruised, defeated of law. <lb/>
Baron crushed In <lb/>
spirit broken of body, paced <lb/>
blackest and of them <lb/>
an. <lb/>
At t o'clock on Sunday rooming s <lb/>
small group of people gathered In <lb/>
square. A meeting was soon In <lb/>
A goods stood against <lb/>
the very spot on Olga <lb/>
nova died. Au man began <lb/>
crowd. <lb/>
In group might been teen <lb/>
most members of the of <lb/>
lo the midst of bis harangue the <lb/>
hand of William was arrested <lb/>
In one of Its most gestures. <lb/>
Peter Bruins was king at <lb/>
bead of a group of aliens, all armed. <lb/>
called out Peter <lb/>
lifting his band <lb/>
ceased bis <lb/>
I Marians desires the Immediate <lb/>
presence of <lb/>
I his office In tower I shall call <lb/>
, off He began with <lb/>
The name of each of bis <lb/>
I associates In the committee of ten fol- <lb/>
lowed. <lb/>
Ten minutes later every member o <lb/>
the committee of except Peter <lb/>
Brutus, was behind k bar, to- <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loans and discounts <lb/>
Overdrafts and <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
All other Stocks, Bonds <lb/>
and cs <lb/>
House<lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin, all <lb/>
minor cur. <lb/>
Nail, bk <lb/>
A notes <lb/>
Total <lb/>
623.00 <lb/>
2.286.61 <lb/>
Subscribed and sworn to before me, <lb/>
this 2nd day of April, 1910. <lb/>
H. D. Bateman, Notary Pub <lb/>
aura in <lb/>
as be waited Inside the <lb/>
for wild rider. <lb/>
General with a few of bis <lb/>
men, bloody and was the <lb/>
last of the little army to reach safety <lb/>
In castle grounds. <lb/>
The fortress, with all guns. Mores and <lb/>
ammunition, was to the bands of the <lb/>
Iron Count cohorts. <lb/>
had been taken <lb/>
oner with a whole platoon of lighting <lb/>
This was the last appall <lb/>
a bit of news to reach the horrified, <lb/>
forces In castle <lb/>
wise well s cruel man was <lb/>
He lost no time leaning <lb/>
a manifesto to stunned, <lb/>
of Edelweiss. of <lb/>
to at <lb/>
with shivering <lb/>
of them dumbly to them- <lb/>
selves the awful that <lb/>
had passed them. <lb/>
are to die sunset, <lb/>
stark how to punish <lb/>
sins. There Is no <lb/>
for anarchy. I shall wipe It to <lb/>
gasped William <lb/>
your friends- the <lb/>
true party <lb/>
Do speak again <lb/>
Captain limits, you will send criers <lb/>
abroad to notify citizens that I. <lb/>
Count ordered Hie <lb/>
of lo the plot <lb/>
to dynamite the prime, at sunset In <lb/>
the square. Away with the <lb/>
Then It till thou, <lb/>
the committee of ten found him <lb/>
Then It was that they came to know <lb/>
Peter Brutus <lb/>
The unrecognizable of <lb/>
had been buried quick- <lb/>
lime outside the city walls. There was <lb/>
something distinctly lo the <lb/>
fact that half s dozen deep graves <lb/>
were dug alongside hers hours before <lb/>
death lo wretches who were <lb/>
to occupy them. <lb/>
At o'clock Iron Count coolly <lb/>
sent messengers to the homes of <lb/>
leading merchants and bankers of tho <lb/>
with the the its. <lb/>
con, and <lb/>
manufacturers, were commanded to <lb/>
pear before at o'clock for <lb/>
purpose of discussing the welfare of <lb/>
the city and Its people. <lb/>
stated bis position clearly. <lb/>
He left room for doubt lo their <lb/>
minds. strings were bis hands. <lb/>
Without be <lb/>
loading men of city that be <lb/>
to lie the of <lb/>
n role or destroy <lb/>
of you who do expect or <lb/>
to live under my rule, which. I <lb/>
you. shall be a wise one. may <lb/>
leave city for other be said <lb/>
calmly, as soon as my deputies <lb/>
hare completed the formal transfer of <lb/>
all your belongings to crown <lb/>
I any, even to the minutest <lb/>
Permit me to add In <lb/>
gentlemen, transfer will <lb/>
not be a prolonged <lb/>
They back at and <lb/>
ed Into silence. <lb/>
am well aware that you love little <lb/>
Prince Robin. Now, respecting young <lb/>
master Robin, no great desire <lb/>
to kill <lb/>
He waited to see the effect of this <lb/>
brutal announcement His bearers <lb/>
stiffened and-yea, they held their <lb/>
. s <lb/>
has one and his <lb/>
lords. I trust you. as sensible <lb/>
will find the means to on- <lb/>
to him your advice that be seize <lb/>
the opportunity shall offer bits to es- <lb/>
with bis life. me Interrupt <lb/>
myself to call to your the <lb/>
fact that I sin punishing the anarchists <lb/>
at sunset To resume, U may <lb/>
return America, where be belongs. <lb/>
I will give him free and safe escort <lb/>
to th.- United Stales. If he chooses lo <lb/>
accept my kindly n- all well <lb/>
If not. gentlemen. I starve <lb/>
him out or blow down. It <lb/>
may Interest you to that I expect <lb/>
to s new In Una- <lb/>
stark. trust I may he address- . Demand <lb/>
log at least a few of the future , Due from Banks and <lb/>
lords of day, gentle- Cash Items <lb/>
At deepest gloom <lb/>
It was like a to <lb/>
the beleaguered household, a dream <lb/>
from which there seemed be no <lb/>
awakening. Colonel as <lb/>
of royal guard ruled mi <lb/>
Braze tore off his <lb/>
own epaulets presented himself <lb/>
to as a soldier of the file. <lb/>
Rubin, quite from <lb/>
his fright donned uniform of s <lb/>
colonel of dragoons, buckled <lb/>
on bis jeweled sword and. with boyish <lb/>
demanded at a of war <lb/>
Colonel reasons for sot go- <lb/>
forth to slay rioters. <lb/>
said <lb/>
real army Is outside the <lb/>
walls, not inside. We are a <lb/>
handful, less than men <lb/>
counting the wounded. Count <lb/>
heads army of several<lb/>
wants to get here be <lb/>
can kill me. Is that so. <lb/>
ii The prince was very pale, but <lb/>
quite calm <lb/>
l wouldn't put It just that way. <lb/>
I know You can't fool me <lb/>
I've that be wants to <lb/>
kill me. But how can be Nobody <lb/>
an. He ought to know that He <lb/>
must be <lb/>
must get word to cried <lb/>
several a A dozen men vol- <lb/>
to risk <lb/>
their lives In the <lb/>
attempt to find <lb/>
American hi the <lb/>
bills. Two men <lb/>
were <lb/>
Tot. They were to <lb/>
venture forth that <lb/>
very night. <lb/>
said <lb/>
as the <lb/>
council was on the <lb/>
point of dissolving. <lb/>
It all right for <lb/>
me to a <lb/>
Rob- <lb/>
said prime <lb/>
minister. <lb/>
Report of the Condition of <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
At <lb/>
fa the State of N. C, at the dose of March 29th. a <lb/>
1176,430.81 <lb/>
1,686.81 <lb/>
8,127.82 <lb/>
76,129.16 <lb/>
17,867.61 <lb/>
823,203.24 <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
Capital stock paid in <lb/>
Undivided profits, cur. <lb/>
expenses taxes pd. <lb/>
Time Car. of 64.786.06, <lb/>
sub to <lb/>
outstanding <lb/>
6.888.46 <lb/>
Total<lb/>
STATE OF H of Pitt, <lb/>
I. L. Little, Cashier of the shove-named do solemnly swear that <lb/>
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief, <lb/>
JAS. L. LITTLE, Cashier. <lb/>
J. . Andrews, <lb/>
B. W. <lb/>
J. G. Move, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
SAra. <lb/>
RT I <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
the Superior court <lb/>
Before O. ft Moore. Clerk <lb/>
Willis Johnston. P. V Johnston, J. <lb/>
B. Addi. M. Johnston, <lb/>
Ex-Pa. <lb/>
By vii of decree of the clerk of <lb/>
the court, made by D C <lb/>
Moore, clerk, on th i 26th d of <lb/>
in the above entitled e, <lb/>
commissioner will, on Sat- <lb/>
the 26th of e, mo, <lb/>
expose to public before c <lb/>
house door in to the high- <lb/>
eat I for cash the <lb/>
d scribed tract or parcel of land, U <lb/>
on the edge of the k- <lb/>
bank of Tar lifer a a point ere <lb/>
three h tree formerly et <lb/>
op ii site I lie lower edge of b, <lb/>
r ck runs nearly at right <lb/>
angles h th river to <lb/>
old line, thence <lb/>
down id slough to Parker s or R d <lb/>
Banks cress, thence down said creek <lb/>
to the river, thence up the river to the <lb/>
begin, in acres more <lb/>
CI and being the tract r <lb/>
parcel of land purchased by E. C. <lb/>
low y from too administrator of <lb/>
A. deceased, and being the <lb/>
second tract of land described in a deed <lb/>
from E. C to Susan O. John- <lb/>
Dec 23rd. 1880 and record- <lb/>
ed in the registers office in Pitt county <lb/>
in book Y This is to <lb/>
be made for partition, will be at <lb/>
o'clock m. on the day of Jane, <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
F. C. Harding, Commissioner. <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
Beaufort, N. Car. <lb/>
Delightful Seaside Resorts <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel Opens June 1st. <lb/>
Opening Ball June 4th. <lb/>
Beach <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
Cape Henry, Va. <lb/>
Only Ocean Resorts in. Virginia. <lb/>
Extremely Low Round Trip Excursion Tickets <lb/>
Spend Your Vacation at America's Greatest Seashore Resorts. <lb/>
Only a few Hours Travel at Minimum Expense a Max- <lb/>
of Pleasure. <lb/>
Surf Bathing, Tennis, Dancing, <lb/>
Travel Via. Norfolk Southern <lb/>
For complete information, apply to Norfolk southern <lb/>
Railroad Ticket Agent, or address, <lb/>
H. C. G. P. A. W. W. A. G. P. A. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
By virtue of the power of sale co <lb/>
tamed in two c- deeds of trust <lb/>
executed and delivered I- <lb/>
No. A. F. to Jan s <lb/>
L. t u Robert J. Cobb, one <lb/>
dated It, an i i th, r <lb/>
dated 1st day of September, <lb/>
and respectively d In the <lb/>
of deeds office of Pitt county, <lb/>
North Carolina, in book page <lb/>
eta. q and in book page <lb/>
V et e q. the undersigned will expose <lb/>
ti isl, before court house <lb/>
door in Gr to the highest bidder <lb/>
on May 34th. s certain <lb/>
lot parcel of land lying and in <lb/>
the county of Pitt and S-to of North <lb/>
and in the town of I c <lb/>
known the Masonic Tim <lb/>
property, fronting on Third <lb/>
feet and bounded on the sooth by <lb/>
street on the east by lot No. <lb/>
on which c of Pitt <lb/>
on the north by lot No. <lb/>
on the west the formerly j <lb/>
to Dr. W. Blow, except <lb/>
a part of let feet <lb/>
heretofore convey I to th town of <lb/>
Greenville and upon which water <lb/>
tend pipe of town is located. <lb/>
At same time and place we will <lb/>
sell the brick upon <lb/>
said lot, to y said de of tr it, <lb/>
This 16th day of April, 1910 <lb/>
I Little, <lb/>
Hoot. J. Cobb, <lb/>
Trustee . <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb/>
OFFERS EXCELLENT SERVICE BETWEEN <lb/>
Norfolk and Baltimore <lb/>
Elegant New Steamers Dining Rooms on Saloon Decks. <lb/>
Table Dinner, cents- Club Breakfast, to cents. <lb/>
service if desired. <lb/>
Steamers leave Norfolk from foot of Jackson St. daily <lb/>
at 6.15 p. m., arrive at Baltimore 7.00 a. m., connecting <lb/>
with rail lines for all points East and West. <lb/>
For further information and stateroom reservations, write <lb/>
C. L. CHANDLER, G A F. R. T. P. A, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA<lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work. <lb/>
j. J. JENKINS, <lb/>
Tin Shop Work, and <lb/>
Flits k Shim, <lb/>
in. <lb/>
J S. MOORING <lb/>
Urn Was. as firs she sad beget stoat <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Our <lb/>
come. <lb/>
your, if you <lb/>
Pulley bowen <lb/>
Home of Greenville N C <lb/>
ATLANTIC HOTEL <lb/>
far This <lb/>
Many Improve. Maw <lb/>
Morehead City. N. C. Jun <lb/>
The famous Atlantic hotel, at <lb/>
Morehead City. N. C. opened <lb/>
today for the season under the <lb/>
management that genial <lb/>
face. Col. P. Morton, <lb/>
whose reputation a sufficient <lb/>
guarantee of gilt-edge service <lb/>
The Atlantic hotel, famed all <lb/>
along the coast, is directly on the <lb/>
Atlantic ocean, and his <lb/>
for guests <lb/>
was expended during <lb/>
the past winter in an- <lb/>
improvements, the hostel y <lb/>
been renovated from bottom <lb/>
to top. New waller <lb/>
and boardwalks have been laid <lb/>
the mammoth pier has been re <lb/>
built and the magnificent <lb/>
room, which is the largest of any <lb/>
hotel in the South, has been <lb/>
handsomely and artistically <lb/>
orated in Japanese style. With <lb/>
its myriads lights law <lb/>
entrancing music and gallant <lb/>
men and women <lb/>
over the <lb/>
floors there will be presented a <lb/>
scene of entrancing beauty. <lb/>
The music is to be furnished by <lb/>
orchestra of <lb/>
musicians who have <lb/>
played for several y <lb/>
The grand opening ball, which <lb/>
it one of Hie social events of not <lb/>
only North Carolina but of many <lb/>
parts Virginia, is being looked <lb/>
forward to by the elite as an <lb/>
event of great social importance <lb/>
and will be given on next <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Morehead City is known far <lb/>
and wide for finest deep sea <lb/>
more strength <lb/>
in a bowl of <lb/>
Quaker Oats <lb/>
than in the same <lb/>
quantity of the same <lb/>
value of any <lb/>
food you <lb/>
other <lb/>
can eat. <lb/>
Most nourishing, <lb/>
least expensive <lb/>
in and bar<lb/>
SOLOMON <lb/>
HiGGS INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTE <lb/>
RENEW AUTO LICENSE. <lb/>
All Have to Renew <lb/>
The secretary of is send- <lb/>
out to the mobile owners <lb/>
in this state the blank <lb/>
for renewal license and <lb/>
anyone who does not renew be- <lb/>
fore July will have his <lb/>
and it will erst him <lb/>
to get license. <lb/>
The license only runs to July J, <lb/>
no matter when The <lb/>
renewal costs if owner s <lb/>
want to save four dollars they <lb/>
renew between now and <lb/>
the first day of July, betides <lb/>
their number. <lb/>
act <lb/>
for renewal of <lb/>
any certificate of registration <lb/>
shall be made to the secretary <lb/>
slate any time within thirty <lb/>
lays previous to the date of the <lb/>
expiration of such certificate <lb/>
and if no application <lb/>
for renewal is made during <lb/>
. above mentioned the <lb/>
fishing along th coast, and it shall cancel <lb/>
such certificate and reissue the <lb/>
not to catch from to <lb/>
blue fish, Spanish <lb/>
trout, and in one <lb/>
day. The is <lb/>
The hotel has numerous wide <lb/>
verandas and promenades. A <lb/>
vacation at the Atlantic I o el is <lb/>
well worth taking. Col. Morton <lb/>
the greatest <lb/>
in the history of the hotel. The <lb/>
grounds are brilliantly <lb/>
ed with electricity, new tennis <lb/>
courts have been opened, and <lb/>
one of the pleasant features is <lb/>
the sail motor boats. Being <lb/>
directly en the Atlantic <lb/>
the salubrious <lb/>
and life giving ozone <lb/>
acts so beneficially on jaded <lb/>
nerves. <lb/>
number. <lb/>
cured saved the life <lb/>
of my chi are the <lb/>
her eve y Iain's <lb/>
Colic, and <lb/>
This is world over where <lb/>
valuable r his been i <lb/>
N- r medicine in for diarrhea <lb/>
or bowel complaints has received mi h <lb/>
general oval. The seen t of the <lb/>
s of . Colic, Cholera <lb/>
Remedy is that it cutes. <lb/>
Sold by all druggists. <lb/>
Declare Rather be <lb/>
led Stay is <lb/>
n Shepard, the <lb/>
desperado, who confessed to the <lb/>
murder of Engineer Holt in Dur <lb/>
has again attempted to <lb/>
escape was but it is not <lb/>
expected that the will be <lb/>
fa el. <lb/>
Shepard. who has been kept in <lb/>
the State's prison until a very <lb/>
abort time ago. was sent to work <lb/>
at the camp at A <lb/>
letter to Superintendent Laugh- <lb/>
of the Suite's prison, <lb/>
yesterday <lb/>
about eleven o'clock he tried to <lb/>
escape and was shot by one of <lb/>
the guards. <lb/>
The report is that the shot <lb/>
which struck the is not <lb/>
thought to have s fatal <lb/>
wound, but that the <lb/>
are that will be laid up for <lb/>
two or mire. The super <lb/>
visor at the camp <lb/>
M-. S. J. and there has <lb/>
been no from his camp <lb/>
for years. <lb/>
Shepard i regarded as a most <lb/>
desperate character, and recently <lb/>
he declared in the State's <lb/>
rather be electrocuted <lb/>
than stay in the <lb/>
hi I mind evidently being set on <lb/>
an escape. In the State's Prison <lb/>
he been kept shackled since <lb/>
the HAM of his escape, when he <lb/>
got away, captured h, <lb/>
stole clothing and money while <lb/>
out, finally in <lb/>
county, officers <lb/>
him through the woods, de <lb/>
confessed to the murder of <lb/>
Engineer Holt of the Southern <lb/>
Railway, whom it will be <lb/>
was shot and killed in his <lb/>
cab as the engine stopped at the <lb/>
water tank in Durham. Shepard <lb/>
was sentenced to thirty years in <lb/>
the State Prison. News <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is so d <lb/>
an a that if you are not sat- <lb/>
using two-thirds of a bot <lb/>
tie according to your mo <lb/>
will be refunded. It is up to you U <lb/>
to try. bold by druggists. <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
Miss Dollie left Mon- <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Little Margaret, months-old <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. U. T. <lb/>
Evans, died this morning <lb/>
o'clock will be buried to <lb/>
morrow. Mr. Evans being in a <lb/>
hospital in Richmond makes the <lb/>
death of his little daughter <lb/>
the<lb/>
Marvelous Discoveries <lb/>
the progress of <lb/>
age. Air on heavy machines, <lb/>
t scrams without terrible <lb/>
invention to kill men and won- <lb/>
of King's New Dis- <lb/>
life when <lb/>
by coughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, <lb/>
croup, hay <lb/>
i fairer and whooping cough or lung <lb/>
For all affection it <lb/>
no equal it relieves It s <lb/>
the surest cure. M. Black, of <lb/>
N. C, R. R- No. write. <lb/>
it cured him of sf- <lb/>
all Other remedies failed. and <lb/>
SI. A bottle free. Guaranteed <lb/>
y all druggists. <lb/>
IT MS. <lb/>
N. C. June 1910. <lb/>
W. R. Whichard <lb/>
days with Mrs. J R <lb/>
Davenport this week. <lb/>
Mrs. B. R. of <lb/>
is visiting sister, <lb/>
Mrs. W. C. this week. <lb/>
The young men of <lb/>
expect to have a trip to Bath <lb/>
Sunday on a gas l oat. All <lb/>
pate a good time. <lb/>
and Stokes had n <lb/>
game of ball Saturday, scores <lb/>
and in favor of <lb/>
G. Z- Ricks is having a new <lb/>
store built. <lb/>
Mrs. Noah Jackson and <lb/>
K. V. Green in town visiting <lb/>
friends this week. <lb/>
Mrs. B. Satterthwaite is <lb/>
week. <lb/>
J. R, Davenport is having some <lb/>
surveying; done this week by Mr. <lb/>
Clark, of Greenville. <lb/>
E. B. Dixon has accepted a <lb/>
position at the mill of R. R. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Do not forget, Sunday school <lb/>
every Sunday at p. m., <lb/>
keep in mind, sermon next <lb/>
third Sunday morning for the <lb/>
young men especially. <lb/>
Watch flourish <lb/>
in her old age. <lb/>
DIXIE ICE <lb/>
Can be mode and in <lb/>
minutes cost of <lb/>
On cant a Plat. <lb/>
Stir contents of one package <lb/>
ICE CHEEP <lb/>
into a quart of milk and f <lb/>
No cooking, no heating, nothing; <lb/>
else to add. Everything but the <lb/>
ice and milk in the package. <lb/>
This S quarts of the most <lb/>
delicious ice cream you ever ate. <lb/>
S packages st your grocers, <lb/>
i by if doc keep It. <lb/>
la Hosts Paper Fellow Tea. <lb/>
When you go off for your sum <lb/>
mer vacation, bear in mind that <lb/>
The Daily Reflector would be a <lb/>
very visitor and keep <lb/>
you posted with what is going on <lb/>
at home. Leave a and <lb/>
your st the office, and <lb/>
we'll do the rest for s month. <lb/>
If yon are not satisfied after using <lb/>
according to directions two thirds of <lb/>
a bottle of Stomach and <lb/>
Liver Tab els, you can have you <lb/>
back. The tablet and <lb/>
orate the improve the <lb/>
regulate the bowels. Give them <lb/>
a get Sold by an drug- <lb/>
gists. <lb/>
Subscribe for The Reflector <lb/>
day to enter the E. C. T. T. S <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
May Holton came home <lb/>
from Atlantic Christian college <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Miss Lessie King, of Durham, <lb/>
is spending sometime with Miss <lb/>
John Hammond and Simpson <lb/>
of Conetoe, were at E. <lb/>
E. Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Lillie Owen, of Saratoga, <lb/>
who has been visiting the Misses <lb/>
returned to her home yes <lb/>
Miss Rosalie <lb/>
her. <lb/>
Prof. L. P. of La- <lb/>
spent Saturday night <lb/>
spent Saturday night with J. H. <lb/>
Cheek. <lb/>
Miss Pearl Nelson, of <lb/>
is Miss Annie E. <lb/>
lion. <lb/>
Miss Lillie Herring, Snow <lb/>
Hill, spent last week with the <lb/>
Misses <lb/>
Miss E. Allen <lb/>
home from school in Raleigh last <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Miss Pattie Sutton and <lb/>
Misses Evelyn Pattie, <lb/>
of Winterville, spent of <lb/>
week at Lorenzo <lb/>
Misses Bessie Barnhill, of Green <lb/>
ville, Lucy Manning, of <lb/>
Bethel, recently visited <lb/>
Miss Myrtle <lb/>
Misses Laura Salisbury, of <lb/>
Hassell, and Mary <lb/>
of, visited Misses <lb/>
Langston last week. <lb/>
T. N. Gilbert little <lb/>
daughter. Mildred Earle. spent <lb/>
Saturday with Mrs. J. Cheek. <lb/>
Henry Langston came home <lb/>
from Wake Forest Wednesday. <lb/>
Large crowds attended the <lb/>
Hookerton Union st <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Meta Abrams and Miss <lb/>
Mildred Allen, of Raleigh, who <lb/>
have been visiting their uncle, <lb/>
T. R. Allen, left Monday. <lb/>
Misses Carson Carrie <lb/>
Manning, of Bethel, visited Miss <lb/>
Myrtle last week. <lb/>
Mrs Louisa Langston, of <lb/>
who been spend- <lb/>
sometime with her son, C. H. <lb/>
Langston, left her <lb/>
today. <lb/>
Tie Exercises a Great <lb/>
-Began <lb/>
N. C. June <lb/>
first annual commencement ex <lb/>
Industrial <lb/>
t b la-t <lb/>
afternoon at o'clock <lb/>
sermon de- <lb/>
livered by M. B. M. Bugler, <lb/>
He chose for his <lb/>
subject, and Ye Shall <lb/>
Sn practical did be <lb/>
handle the j ct that <lb/>
present could go away with <lb/>
being greatly He <lb/>
urged th importance of seeking <lb/>
industrial education, and showed <lb/>
that no son could be truly <lb/>
religious i <lb/>
industry. one k <lb/>
proper in to <lb/>
maintain a I ugh and <lb/>
the <lb/>
of all he, seek <lb/>
eternal in <lb/>
at o'clock, <lb/>
program i e primary depart- <lb/>
in was <lb/>
by Jas. <lb/>
P. He spoke <lb/>
of the mI a in <lb/>
o Carolina that <lb/>
would trail he colored youth to <lb/>
the try that they <lb/>
may better z He <lb/>
said that lb would have a <lb/>
broad i in <lb/>
a needy of State, <lb/>
appealed j lb to give <lb/>
tangible to such <lb/>
a c i <lb/>
even program by <lb/>
the D Library Society <lb/>
was delivered by <lb/>
Prof. C. E Askew, president of <lb/>
Institute, r <lb/>
de zed the importance <lb/>
of a high moral <lb/>
He showed telling effect no <lb/>
or could <lb/>
hope r ii Don long as their <lb/>
taming thrown to the <lb/>
the exercises of <lb/>
the week with a very <lb/>
elaborate that a <lb/>
credit to tin Principal <lb/>
Chance the el-j ct of <lb/>
the what has been <lb/>
d during the <lb/>
He tithe students to <lb/>
aspire to lofty and at a I <lb/>
times cultivate as go <lb/>
to make men and women. <lb/>
The n entertainment <lb/>
f the school <lb/>
REPORT OF THE CONDITION <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co., <lb/>
AT N. O. <lb/>
At the close of business, March 1810. <lb/>
RE <lb/>
Loans and Discount. <lb/>
Overdraft <lb/>
and <lb/>
Due from <lb/>
Silver coin, all . <lb/>
minor <lb/>
National k <lb/>
r U. S. <lb/>
i Total <lb/>
I 31,7.1 Surplus<lb/>
a d <lb/>
of Deposit <lb/>
, Sub. to <lb/>
7.6 <lb/>
7,600.09 <lb/>
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, County of <lb/>
I, W. H Cashier of the above named do <lb/>
swear that the above statement is true to the best of <lb/>
knowledge belief- W. H Cashier. <lb/>
Subset and sworn to In <lb/>
this day of Apr , <lb/>
1911. S. T. <lb/>
Notary Public <lb/>
S W Jones. <lb/>
M. O Blount, <lb/>
Director. <lb/>
ONE BURIED THERE <lb/>
But Police Had Biro <lb/>
s Throws Awry <lb/>
Capt. A. J thought <lb/>
he had made a id an <lb/>
or two ago. H hid w <lb/>
to be out cal <lb/>
pile in the rear -if stow <lb/>
a police and hit lying <lb/>
on it. His first <lb/>
that Bad mi-d n-ii <lb/>
policeman and hi <lb/>
trash Getting <lb/>
he probed in the but <lb/>
found g a body <lb/>
Capt. d took the police <lb/>
badge and start d an <lb/>
Running up with Chief an <lb/>
Smith that officer informed him W. V, W. <lb/>
d. w.<lb/>
Groceries <lb/>
Provisions <lb/>
Cotton <lb/>
son<lb/>
Bo kilt <lb/>
that none t the mis <lb/>
and loosing at badge <lb/>
it as one that had <lb/>
been stolen from heat q <lb/>
if . The thief <lb/>
evidently became afraid <lb/>
it and threw it on the trash pile. <lb/>
How hat came then is an <lb/>
tier prop, <lb/>
GREENVILLE N S <lb/>
N t h C h r o I i n a <lb/>
Notice to <lb/>
Having before the <lb/>
Pitt . as <lb/>
executrix th will aid <lb/>
stomach aid <lb/>
Tablets will up th, g, hag. J to <lb/>
headache, p-eve-1 dependency ; and <lb/>
rate th who e system. M sail <lb/>
estate a a lo the gem <lb/>
to the on or <lb/>
h day of My, 1911. or M <lb/>
will be pi ad In bar of n every. <lb/>
I V. Merlin. Executrix <lb/>
ltd of II. W. <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
CATARRH GOES <lb/>
So Does S Throat, Bronchitis, <lb/>
Croup and Asthma <lb/>
You easily tell by res line the <lb/>
symptoms be I w. ether have <lb/>
catarrh or <lb/>
Offensive <lb/>
discharge fr. n the s , stoppage of <lb/>
note, of th; e, <lb/>
in throat pings in throat, a <lb/>
cough, p i nest, of h, <lb/>
spasms of coughing, <lb/>
low ed a limes, of mucus, <lb/>
difficulty in breathing, of ital <lb/>
a sensible <lb/>
remedy back if it for <lb/>
catarrh, called <lb/>
High which is a vaporised air. <lb/>
so antiseptic, when it is breathed <lb/>
over the inflamed and germ infested <lb/>
membrane, it kills all germ life, gives <lb/>
in and ea- <lb/>
The price, including hard rubber In- <lb/>
haler, is II. The hard rubber <lb/>
pocket inhaler will last a lifetime, <lb/>
that should you need a second bottle of <lb/>
you get it for cents <lb/>
World's <lb/>
Greatest <lb/>
mod <lb/>
Pain <lb/>
Remedy <lb/>
For<lb/>
Cramp;. <lb/>
ind Bone and <lb/>
Th j Ark on <lb/>
if where. <lb/>
C. V. Km <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
Bow often you get <lb/>
u thing done-a <lb/>
nail or or M- <lb/>
i Have a good <lb/>
tool box and be prepared for <lb/>
I emergencies. Our of tools <lb/>
a could and <lb/>
we will sos that year tool <lb/>
, t does not lack a single <lb/>
the I i i useful <lb/>
FROM <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
With rears experience <lb/>
making fines, he can please you <lb/>
Land S <lb/>
By virtue of power me by a <lb/>
mortgage d ed made i-y <lb/>
wife, ll <lb/>
on J of April w, aid <lb/>
registered in book D peg Pitt <lb/>
registry. ll I to th <lb/>
bidder for c-sh. curt <lb/>
house door ii at on <lb/>
the of June, it b- <lb/>
Monday, g <lb/>
Be in the town of <lb/>
st south west mer <lb/>
of the Joe on street a <lb/>
Stand theme a <lb/>
fit y feet to a <lb/>
to a corner, thence in n westerly <lb/>
about two a d forty <lb/>
feet to north <lb/>
wet con on thence <lb/>
feet to h c c one forth <lb/>
of an sere, more or <lb/>
This the 14th. day of May, <lb/>
S J. Everett atty. E. Brown. <lb/>
Mortgagee, <lb/>
Plumbing and Tinning <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get flames <lb/>
Horse Goods c <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Corey <lb/>
IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW <lb/>
What a Heap of Happiness it Would <lb/>
to Greenville Homes <lb/>
Hard do housework with an aching<lb/>
g, yOU hours of mis at leisure <lb/>
LANIER If women knew the cause-that <lb/>
W SeW HI as n j Backache pains from sick kid- <lb/>
much needless woo. <lb/>
Kidney Pills kidneys <lb/>
of this vicinity n- <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Mis. L. Payton ave <lb/>
Kinston, N. C, great <lb/>
I obtained from Do <lb/>
Iron Pills justifies mo in recommending <lb/>
them. A dull, g e. <lb/>
by through <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Stones <lb/>
by twinges through <lb/>
N C. my loins bothered me for n long time. <lb/>
w, j but or and <lb/>
, , u. .------ <lb/>
was caused additional <lb/>
of Land. <lb/>
By vi, of a decree of the C <lb/>
court of Pitt in special pro- <lb/>
No. entitled. J. A Grey <lb/>
wife, Grime <lb/>
Mitchell it sis. undersigned com- <lb/>
missioner will sell for cash before <lb/>
court house door in Greenville st noon, <lb/>
on July 2nd the fol- <lb/>
lowing described, piece or of <lb/>
and, situate in the county of Pitt and <lb/>
in township, adjoining the lands <lb/>
of Pep-, J- B. Evans, Ira <lb/>
and B. Worth con- <lb/>
fifteen acres being a part <lb/>
of the Porter land. Said land sold for <lb/>
partition. <lb/>
This May 24th. 1910. <lb/>
J B. James, loner <lb/>
kid DoM s Kid- <lb/>
Pills to me, I pro- <lb/>
cured a box. After taking contents, <lb/>
the pains in my ceased and <lb/>
h the kidney secretions <lb/>
For by dealers. Price <lb/>
cents. Foster Co , Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
sand <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
Lame boulder is Invariably <lb/>
by the <lb/>
an yields t h fr- <lb/>
of L v m Ml <lb/>
mons is not only an . if. <lb/>
but in no way to us. <lb/>
Sold by <lb/>
as<lb/>
. . .-<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018099_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
KING <lb/>
Story of <lb/>
By GEORGE BARR <lb/>
by Saw <lb/>
nut <lb/>
binds one <lb/>
of the crowd i bat surged <lb/>
IS He M some <lb/>
bet Do hate beard <lb/>
eyes caught <lb/>
f the If u gray that strutted <lb/>
SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES <lb/>
t -Ease, th antiseptic pow- <lb/>
It caret MM , m n. r <lb/>
Tons feet tad ink <lb/>
out Bin- <lb/>
I the age. <lb/>
t Fool-Ease makes t. or new <lb/>
response lo the cries and f.-. It is a certain cure <lb/>
the extended a call swollen. <lb/>
Be asking feet Alway Mt It t <lb/>
ow heard the name the boy cried , shoes. Try it t .-day tow <lb/>
with all bean. where By mail for c-Ma in <lb/>
Two , at uncouth. I . <lb/>
be the N. y. <lb/>
from grout d deliberately j <lb/>
her Iota <lb/>
be shouted. A <lb/>
rode hi i u. He looked up <lb/>
the clattered <lb/>
bout brad. Ton with <lb/>
fawn awed, was up to the <lb/>
door, ward of re- <lb/>
at of ha loved. <lb/>
He a ;. of her. holding <lb/>
prince In her white, <lb/>
face turned toward the nob. <lb/>
he <lb/>
Save Save <lb/>
From the well <lb/>
of <lb/>
wildly Into ranks of devoted <lb/>
from the <lb/>
now <lb/>
King in <lb/>
s. and <lb/>
me he n i of s, an-i, a <lb/>
II . . for permit Ufa. Bullets were <lb/>
ft e- Hi. yo r of the all about <lb/>
, John lie, <lb/>
an American. Ill l n <lb/>
mi o p die King and <lb/>
warm again-t the <lb/>
royal <lb/>
the <lb/>
t g Aunt Loraine. <lb/>
V committee of ten, <lb/>
;, net the m in <lb/>
where t e <lb/>
is a v who to Prince <lb/>
h VI John <lb/>
e mint at <lb/>
Soma on be- <lb/>
hind lo too crowd. He turn- <lb/>
ed for a tingle glance backward <lb/>
Ur. pale a cap <lb/>
gone, bit clothing torn, panting <lb/>
hit elbow. <lb/>
cam riding up from be- <lb/>
hind, turning to Ore from their Mid- <lb/>
ties the throng of cutthroat, led <lb/>
by the grim old man with blood <lb/>
tabor. In the center of the troop there <lb/>
ate him carriage. of <lb/>
ind I h mil id, Count <lb/>
v, g prince. <lb/>
VII. HI, IX and X -Kl the <lb/>
In hi of the witch of wok trap and <lb/>
me boa eh Id He <lb/>
i a crack <lb/>
in a door, an while a for the <lb/>
be and dragged <lb/>
mt a I It. He i- by Count <lb/>
War. then taken to the under <lb/>
den the comm of ten. <lb/>
XI Kin. before c <lb/>
Terse lying back In teat, hi <lb/>
face like that of a dead nun. <lb/>
prince It King <lb/>
Joyously. They'll make It <lb/>
Colonel turned in sad- <lb/>
and searched out owner of <lb/>
that role. <lb/>
be called. <lb/>
Even King out Into the <lb/>
roadway a horseman galloped up from <lb/>
tee of i-ts who to kill h m. i the direction of the castle, lie pulled <lb/>
tine i- brought to the den a d <lb/>
Into King <lb/>
XI I a a don hi i clot <lb/>
into <lb/>
a st tight in which of the <lb/>
-t leader ah to <lb/>
XIV Kin to git Lora <lb/>
In lover, a-ho e, and they bi e <lb/>
in a Ire car. XV on <lb/>
a c a bomb to Mil <lb/>
I'm, e R bin a- in a p <lb/>
K n- and I. r in. a e tied ff into <lb/>
the c r in car. <lb/>
back in an o Catt w in the <lb/>
in fro of girl <lb/>
xvi. <lb/>
THE OF <lb/>
, a, or.- that followed <lb/>
nil A wore of <lb/>
BI d lay <lb/>
In the others crop <lb/>
with <lb/>
and lay In the path <lb/>
of tilt panic <lb/>
with the soft <lb/>
mud of slimy, slip- <lb/>
ugly <lb/>
was <lb/>
left of bar draw a veil across <lb/>
picture of Olga after lug <lb/>
bomb left her band. one may <lb/>
upon quivering, shattered thing <lb/>
that ma OB n worn <lb/>
BO. <lb/>
Down in alley I tower <lb/>
a worn team f stood <lb/>
want tile m rev is <lb/>
the long. <lb/>
to populace that Mar <lb/>
had established as <lb/>
and military governor of <lb/>
principality the abdication <lb/>
of prince i e r a <lb/>
new and substantial regime. AH <lb/>
were to <lb/>
the of the dictator. <lb/>
Toward evening, after many <lb/>
and reports. Mar- <lb/>
removed his to <lb/>
tower. bad fondly hoped to In <lb/>
the before ibis <lb/>
Two and In great <lb/>
old tower were now act by <lb/>
bruised, defeated of the law <lb/>
Baron In <lb/>
and broken f body, paced the <lb/>
Market and narrowest tell of them <lb/>
At t o'clock Sunday morning a <lb/>
small group of people gathered in <lb/>
square. A meeting was soon In <lb/>
A good hot stood over <lb/>
the very on Olga <lb/>
died. An cad began <lb/>
the crowd. <lb/>
the might bale been <lb/>
most member of committee of ten. <lb/>
lo the midst of bit harangue <lb/>
band of William arrested <lb/>
In one of II most emphatic gestures. <lb/>
Peter Brutus was king at <lb/>
bead of a group of all armed. <lb/>
called out Peter <lb/>
lifting hi hand Imperatively. <lb/>
The ceased bis <lb/>
desire I lie Immediate <lb/>
presence of at <lb/>
bl office In tower I shall call <lb/>
off lie began <lb/>
name of each of <lb/>
baa and <lb/>
lords I mat that you. as <lb/>
gentlemen, will Bod the meant to <lb/>
to your advice that ha <lb/>
the I shall offer to <lb/>
rapt bis life. It me Interrupt <lb/>
myself to call to your attention the <lb/>
fact u am <lb/>
sunset. To resume, boy may <lb/>
return to here be belongs. <lb/>
I will give him free and safe escort <lb/>
t Called If he to <lb/>
accept my kindly terms, till well and <lb/>
If not. gentlemen. I starve <lb/>
him out or v.- the down. It <lb/>
may Interest you to bear that expect <lb/>
to establish t new In <lb/>
stark. trust I may l- address- <lb/>
at least a few of the future <lb/>
lords of day. gentle- <lb/>
to <lb/>
THE BANK OF GREENVILLE <lb/>
At GREEN <lb/>
in the N. C, at the of March 29th. <lb/>
bit horse to almost as <lb/>
ha was riding over dodging Amer- j In the commute of ten fol-<lb/>
TBS i II <lb/>
for a day night, awaiting the re- <lb/>
turn of a master who never to <lb/>
coma back to them. rest hi <lb/>
tool I <lb/>
King himself up <lb/>
from the dazed, bewildered, but <lb/>
had begun <lb/>
the on millions <lb/>
Of government. <lb/>
He looked back toward tut gory en- <lb/>
trance lo circus. There Mar- <lb/>
mounted and twinging a <lb/>
on high. Ahead t mate of car <lb/>
filled with white faced, pal <lb/>
prey from the court of <lb/>
From somewhere near where <lb/>
Olga fall came a pen- <lb/>
them off Cut them off from <lb/>
the <lb/>
It was bis cut. He dashed into the <lb/>
street and ran toward the carriages, <lb/>
homing with hi <lb/>
back I To <lb/>
Then It was that be saw the prince. <lb/>
nor standing on a teat on to <lb/>
lean. <lb/>
newcomer, <lb/>
scowling down upon young man <lb/>
up here Quick, you <lb/>
It bl face black with <lb/>
fury had seized the hand <lb/>
of Mr. on seeing help for King <lb/>
and pulling him up before hi <lb/>
There was nothing for to do <lb/>
but to accept timely help of III <lb/>
rival. Au Instant later be was up <lb/>
behind and they were off after <lb/>
the list of the dragoons. <lb/>
you don't mind, count. I'll try <lb/>
my grated American. Hold- <lb/>
on with one arm, be turned mid <lb/>
the of the <lb/>
howling crowd of <lb/>
to the barracks gates. <lb/>
Colonel <lb/>
prepared to none but the <lb/>
royal reserves, are under stand <lb/>
lag order to there In time of <lb/>
Over bis <lb/>
to Ida as not <lb/>
roles, my friend, nor philanthropy <lb/>
on my part. I M <lb/>
come and fetch you. She would <lb/>
have to me if I bud re- <lb/>
Ah. yes. I sag She did <lb/>
cried <lb/>
It Is not for yon <lb/>
I risk my <lb/>
a wry smile his pale lips. <lb/>
mean, she la going to pay you In Home <lb/>
way for picking me up. eh Well. I'll <lb/>
put end lo that. I'll drop off <lb/>
i hen you call ride on tell <lb/>
wouldn't be a party to game. Do <lb/>
you catch my <lb/>
You would. said count an- <lb/>
like to Mt you drop off <lb/>
we're going at <lb/>
got my pistol the middle of <lb/>
your grated <lb/>
a bit or I'll scatter your all <lb/>
over your <lb/>
you cried <lb/>
done my put Colonel will <lb/>
bear He began pulling his <lb/>
hone down. you quite free <lb/>
to drop <lb/>
than a hundred yards behind <lb/>
loped a riderless horse. The <lb/>
had tat <lb/>
saddle lying <lb/>
far back <lb/>
avenue, a bullet In <lb/>
hit bead. Hob <lb/>
to mid- <lb/>
of road. <lb/>
the American <lb/>
threw up bit <lb/>
hands and shout- <lb/>
ed briskly lo the <lb/>
bewildered ml <lb/>
Five seconds <lb/>
later King In <lb/>
the and <lb/>
tearing along in <lb/>
wake of <lb/>
retreating guard. <lb/>
need <lb/>
men at <lb/>
cried Colonel <lb/>
us he waited gates <lb/>
wild rider. <lb/>
General with a few of <lb/>
men, bloody and heartsick, w <lb/>
hut of the army to reach safety <lb/>
In cattle <lb/>
The fortress, all gun, stores and <lb/>
wit bands of the <lb/>
Iran Count and bis cohorts. <lb/>
bad . . u <lb/>
lowed <lb/>
Ten minute later every member o <lb/>
committee of ten. except <lb/>
Brutus, behind lo k and bar, <lb/>
At rattle the <lb/>
It a to <lb/>
the beleaguered I . a dream <lb/>
from which there to be <lb/>
awakening Colonel a swat <lb/>
of royal guard mi <lb/>
Bras tore off lib <lb/>
own and presented himself <lb/>
to as a soldier of file. <lb/>
Robin, recovered from <lb/>
hit flight, dunned uniform of a <lb/>
colonel of the royal dragoons, hackled <lb/>
on bis boyish <lb/>
teal, demanded at a of war <lb/>
Colonel reasons for not go- <lb/>
forth to slay rioters. <lb/>
said the <lb/>
bitterly, real army I the <lb/>
not inside. We a <lb/>
handful, lots than men an <lb/>
the wounded. Count Mar- <lb/>
army of several then- <lb/>
sand. <lb/>
want to get here he <lb/>
can kill me. Is that so. Colonel <lb/>
prince very pal, bat <lb/>
quite calm. <lb/>
I wouldn't put It Just that way. <lb/>
I know ton can't fool me <lb/>
I've always that he wants to <lb/>
kill me. But how can be Nobody <lb/>
can. He ought to know that. He <lb/>
be awful <lb/>
must get word to cried <lb/>
several a breath. A men vol. <lb/>
to risk <lb/>
lives In <lb/>
to find <lb/>
American hi the <lb/>
hills. Two men <lb/>
were <lb/>
Tot. were to <lb/>
venture forth that <lb/>
very <lb/>
said <lb/>
the prince as the <lb/>
council was on the <lb/>
point of dissolving. <lb/>
It all right for <lb/>
mo to ask a <lb/>
Rob- <lb/>
on id prims <lb/>
minister. <lb/>
RESOURCES. <lb/>
Loan and <lb/>
Overdraft and <lb/>
unsecured <lb/>
All other Stocks. Bonds <lb/>
and <lb/>
House <lb/>
Fix. j <lb/>
j Demand lotto <lb/>
, Doe from Banks and <lb/>
Cash Items <lb/>
Gold coin <lb/>
Silver coin, all <lb/>
minor <lb/>
Nail, bk meet I <lb/>
notes j <lb/>
RT <lb/>
WAS rat <lb/>
with t whole of B tilling <lb/>
tablet. but appall <lb/>
a bit of n to retch lbs horrified, <lb/>
force In castle <lb/>
it wall at a cruel man <lb/>
Ha lost no in Issuing <lb/>
I manifesto to the <lb/>
of Edelweiss, of <lb/>
TO BIB T <lb/>
with their shivering associates. <lb/>
all of them dumbly muttering to them- <lb/>
selves the awful sentence that <lb/>
bad passed upon <lb/>
are to die sunset, <lb/>
knows bow to punish <lb/>
sin. There hi no <lb/>
for anarchy. I shall wipe It out to <lb/>
your gasped William <lb/>
are your friends the <lb/>
true party <lb/>
Do not speak again <lb/>
Captain you will send criers <lb/>
abroad notify citizens that I. <lb/>
Count have ordered <lb/>
of the ringleaders la plot <lb/>
to dynamite prince, at sunset In <lb/>
the Away with the <lb/>
it and not till then, <lb/>
committee of ten found <lb/>
Then It that they cams to know <lb/>
Peter <lb/>
The unrecognizable corpse of Olga <lb/>
had been burled quick- <lb/>
lime outside the city walls. There <lb/>
something distinctly In the <lb/>
fact that half a dozen deep graves <lb/>
were dug alongside hers before <lb/>
death came to the were <lb/>
them. <lb/>
At o'clock tbs Iron Count coolly <lb/>
to the homes of <lb/>
leading and bankers of the <lb/>
with <lb/>
tn toe <lb/>
manufacturers, were commanded to <lb/>
pear before him at o'clock for tbs <lb/>
purpose of welfare of <lb/>
By and its people. <lb/>
Mariana stated hi clearly. <lb/>
Ha left room for doubt Id <lb/>
minds. airings were hands. <lb/>
Without hesitation be Informed the <lb/>
leading men of the city that be was <lb/>
to be the Prince of <lb/>
frill or destroy <lb/>
These of you who do expect or <lb/>
desire to live my nils, which. I <lb/>
you. shall be a wise one, may <lb/>
leave the city for other be said <lb/>
as my deputies <lb/>
completed formal transfer of <lb/>
all roar belongings to tbs crown treat- <lb/>
I even to minutest <lb/>
Mia. Permit me to lo that <lb/>
gentlemen, tbs transfer will <lb/>
not be a prolong -d <lb/>
They glared back at him <lb/>
ed Into silence. <lb/>
am well a ware that little <lb/>
Prince Now, respecting young <lb/>
master Robin, I have no grout desire <lb/>
kill <lb/>
Be waited to to the effect of this <lb/>
announcement. DIs bearer <lb/>
held their <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
He fore C. Moore, Clerk <lb/>
Willis Johnston. F. V Johnston, J. <lb/>
B. John-ton and M. <lb/>
By vii of decree of the clerk of <lb/>
tho court, by C <lb/>
Moore, clerk, on th 26th day of <lb/>
in the above entitled e, <lb/>
d will, on Sat- <lb/>
the 25th i of c, 1910, <lb/>
exp to public tale before the c <lb/>
door in to the high- <lb/>
eat I for cash the f Mowing <lb/>
d tract or parcel of land, U <lb/>
ginning on the edge of the <lb/>
bank of Tar a a point era <lb/>
three h lit tree- formerly <lb/>
op-n i I he lower edge of the b , <lb/>
r and runs there nearly at right <lb/>
h river to <lb/>
old line, <lb/>
down id to Parker a or R d <lb/>
Banks cress, thence down said creak <lb/>
to river, thence up river to the <lb/>
f, cont it B seres more <lb/>
or and being the tame tract r <lb/>
parcel of land purchased by B. C. <lb/>
low y from the administrator of <lb/>
A. deceased, and being the <lb/>
a tract of land described in a deed <lb/>
from E. C. to Susan O. John- <lb/>
Dec 23rd. and record- <lb/>
ed in the registers office in Pitt county <lb/>
in book Y-S, page it lo <lb/>
be mid for partition, will be at <lb/>
o'clock m. on tbs day of Jane, <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
P. C. Commissioner. <lb/>
623.001 <lb/>
1.666.81 <lb/>
2,400.00 <lb/>
8.127 m <lb/>
76,129.16 <lb/>
Total <lb/>
LIABILITIES. <lb/>
stock paid in <lb/>
Undivided profit, lei car. <lb/>
expenses and taxes pd. <lb/>
64.786.06 <lb/>
sub <lb/>
Si <lb/>
150,000.0 <lb/>
237.814 M <lb/>
Total <lb/>
3.24 <lb/>
STATE OF County of Pitt, <lb/>
I, L. Little, of the bank, do ear that <lb/>
the above true to best at my knowledge and belief. <lb/>
JAS. L. LITTLE, <lb/>
Subscribed sworn lo before me, <lb/>
this 2nd of April, 1910. <lb/>
H. D. Bateman, Notary Pub <lb/>
Correct- A <lb/>
J. A. Andrew, <lb/>
B. W. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
Morehead City <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
Beaufort, N. Car. <lb/>
Delightful Seaside Resorts <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel Opens June 1st. <lb/>
Opening Ball June 4th. <lb/>
Beach <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
Cape Henry, Va. <lb/>
Only Ocean Resorts in. Virginia. <lb/>
Extremer Low Excursion Tickets <lb/>
Spend Your Vacation at America's Greatest Resorts. <lb/>
Only a Travel at Minimum Expense a Max- <lb/>
of Pleasure. <lb/>
Surf Bathing, Tennis, Sailing. <lb/>
Travel Via. Norfolk Southern <lb/>
For complete information, apply to any Norfolk Southern <lb/>
Ticket Agent, or address, <lb/>
C. G. P. A. W. W. A- G. P. A. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
By virtue of power of sale co <lb/>
tamed in two c of trust <lb/>
executed and delivered <lb/>
No. A. P. to Jam. e <lb/>
L. Little Robert J. Cobb, one <lb/>
dated It, r <lb/>
lit day of <lb/>
and r cord d in the <lb/>
of deeds office of Pitt county, <lb/>
North Carolina, in book page <lb/>
et q and in book <lb/>
et s- q tbs will expose <lb/>
ti before th court house <lb/>
door in Greenville to the highest bidder <lb/>
on Tuesday, May 24th. 1810, a certain <lb/>
lot parcel of land lying and being in <lb/>
the county of Pitt and S-. ti of North <lb/>
and in town of I e <lb/>
known the Masonic Tim <lb/>
El property, fronting on Third street <lb/>
j fast and bounded on the south by <lb/>
said street, on the by lot No. <lb/>
on which the e e of Pitt <lb/>
on north by lot No. <lb/>
on the west formerly <lb/>
to Dr. W. J. Blow, except <lb/>
a pin of said let feat <lb/>
heretofore conveys I the town <lb/>
Greenville and upon which the water <lb/>
stand pip of said town is located. <lb/>
At Urn and place will <lb/>
tell the brick upon <lb/>
aid lot, to y de of tr <lb/>
Terms of sale <lb/>
This 16th day of April. 1910. <lb/>
James I. Little, <lb/>
Robt, J. Cobb, <lb/>
Oar Greenville, your if you <lb/>
come. I <lb/>
CHESAPEAKE LINE <lb/>
EXCELLENT SERVICE BETWEEN <lb/>
Norfolk and Baltimore <lb/>
Elegant New Steamers Dining Room on Saloon Decks. <lb/>
Table Dinner, cent. Club Breakfast, to cents. <lb/>
service if desired. <lb/>
Steamers leave Norfolk from foot of Jackson St. daily <lb/>
at 6.15 p m., arrive at Baltimore 7.00 a. connecting <lb/>
with rail lines for all points East and West. <lb/>
For and stateroom reservations, write <lb/>
C. L- CHANDLER, G A. F. R. T. P. A. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA <lb/>
Roofing and Sheet Metal Work. <lb/>
J. J. JENKINS. <lb/>
Tin Shop Repair Work, Mi <lb/>
Fins in mi <lb/>
Tb. <lb/>
J S. MOORING <lb/>
Ian <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
Pulley bowen <lb/>
Horn of Fa Greenville N C<lb/>
Ma. I <lb/>
Morehead City. N. G. Jan <lb/>
The famous Atlantic hotel, <lb/>
Morehead N. C. opened <lb/>
today for the r the <lb/>
management that genial <lb/>
Col. P. Morton, <lb/>
whose reputation is a sufficient <lb/>
guarantee of service <lb/>
The Atlantic hotel, famed I <lb/>
long the coast, is directly on the <lb/>
Atlantic ocean, his <lb/>
for guests <lb/>
was expended during <lb/>
the past winter in repairs <lb/>
improvements, the hostel y <lb/>
been renovated from bottom <lb/>
to top. New walk.- <lb/>
boardwalks have been laid <lb/>
the mammoth pier has been re- <lb/>
built the magnificent <lb/>
room, which is the largest of <lb/>
hotel in the South, has been <lb/>
handsomely artistically <lb/>
orated in style. With <lb/>
its myriads of lights and th <lb/>
entrancing gallant <lb/>
men and handsome women <lb/>
over the pal shad <lb/>
floors there will be presented s <lb/>
of entrancing beauty. <lb/>
The music is to be furnished by <lb/>
orchestra of <lb/>
musicians who <lb/>
for several y <lb/>
The grand opening ball, which <lb/>
it one lite social events of not <lb/>
only North Carolina but of many <lb/>
pint is being look-id <lb/>
toward to by the elite as an <lb/>
event of <lb/>
and will be given on <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Morehead City is known far <lb/>
and wide for finest sea <lb/>
fishing along th-t coast, and it i <lb/>
not to catch from to <lb/>
blue fish. <lb/>
trout, and in one <lb/>
day. The is <lb/>
The hotel has numerous wide <lb/>
verandas and promenades. A <lb/>
vacation at the Atlantic o el it- <lb/>
well worth taking. Col. Morton <lb/>
anticipates the greatest <lb/>
in the history of the hotel. Th- <lb/>
grounds are brilliantly <lb/>
ed with electricity, new tennis <lb/>
courts have been opened, and <lb/>
one of pleasant features is <lb/>
the tail motor boats. Being <lb/>
directly on the Atlantic <lb/>
guests enjoy the salubrious <lb/>
and life giving ozone <lb/>
sett so beneficially on jaded <lb/>
nerves. <lb/>
There's more <lb/>
in a bowl of <lb/>
Quaker Oats <lb/>
than in the same <lb/>
quantity or the same <lb/>
value of any other <lb/>
food you can eat. <lb/>
Most nourishing, <lb/>
least expensive <lb/>
Fads Ur- <lb/>
I. ft <lb/>
SOLOMON <lb/>
INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTE <lb/>
RENEW AUTO LICENSE. <lb/>
All Hare Thirty lo Renew <lb/>
The secretary of is send- <lb/>
out to the automobile owners <lb/>
in this state the blank <lb/>
for renewal license and <lb/>
anyone who does not renew be- <lb/>
fore July I will have his license <lb/>
and it will erst him <lb/>
to get license. <lb/>
The license only runs to July <lb/>
no matter when issued. The <lb/>
renewal costs if owners <lb/>
to save four dollars they <lb/>
renew between now and <lb/>
the first of July, betides <lb/>
losing their number. <lb/>
act <lb/>
for renewal of <lb/>
any certificate of registration <lb/>
shall be made to the secretary <lb/>
o. state any time within thirty <lb/>
lays previous to the date of the <lb/>
of such certificate <lb/>
if no application <lb/>
for renewal is made during <lb/>
time above mentioned the <lb/>
secretary of state shall cancel <lb/>
such certificate and reissue the <lb/>
number. <lb/>
eared r saved the life <lb/>
of my are the expressions y.-u <lb/>
hear eve y <lb/>
Colic, and <lb/>
ii the world over where <lb/>
valuable r has been introduced. <lb/>
N . r medicine in for <lb/>
or bowel complaints received u h <lb/>
general oval. The t of <lb/>
at of Colic, Cholera <lb/>
and i Remedy it that it cures. <lb/>
Sold by all druggist. <lb/>
1st Stay is <lb/>
Shepard. the <lb/>
desperado, who confessed to the <lb/>
murder of Engineer Holt in Dur <lb/>
ham, has again attempted to <lb/>
aid was shot, but it is not <lb/>
expected that the wound will <lb/>
fa el. <lb/>
Shepard. who has been kept in <lb/>
the Suite's prison until a very <lb/>
short time ago. sent to work <lb/>
st the camp at A <lb/>
letter to Superintendent Laugh- <lb/>
of the State's prison, <lb/>
that yesterday <lb/>
about eleven o'clock he tried to <lb/>
escape was shot by one of <lb/>
the guards. <lb/>
The report is that the shot <lb/>
which struck the is not <lb/>
thought to have inflicted a fatal <lb/>
wound, but that the <lb/>
are that hi be laid up for <lb/>
two or mire. The super <lb/>
visor at camp is <lb/>
M-. S. J. and there has <lb/>
been no from his camp <lb/>
for th i p <lb/>
Shepard is regarded as a <lb/>
desperate recently <lb/>
he declared in the State's <lb/>
d rather be electrocuted <lb/>
in the <lb/>
bis mind evidently being set on <lb/>
an escape. In the State's Prison <lb/>
he been kept f-hackled <lb/>
the of his escape, when he <lb/>
got away, captured and <lb/>
stole clothing money while <lb/>
out, finally in <lb/>
Alamance county, officers <lb/>
him through the woods, <lb/>
confessed to the murder of <lb/>
Engineer Holt of the Southern <lb/>
Railway, whom it will be <lb/>
was shot and killed in his <lb/>
cab as the engine stopped at the <lb/>
water tank in Durham. Shepard <lb/>
was sentenced to thirty years in <lb/>
the State Prison. News <lb/>
ft Observer. <lb/>
a Great Success <lb/>
Afters. <lb/>
N. C June J.-The <lb/>
first annual commencement ex <lb/>
e b la-t Sunday <lb/>
afternoon at o'clock. The <lb/>
baccalaureate sermon was de- <lb/>
livered by Rev. M. B. M. Bu <lb/>
He chose for his <lb/>
subject, and Ye Shall <lb/>
practical did be <lb/>
handle the j ct that 1.0 one <lb/>
present go away will <lb/>
being greatly He <lb/>
urged th importance of <lb/>
industrial education, showed <lb/>
that no sun could be truly <lb/>
religious habits <lb/>
industry. one <lb/>
r to <lb/>
REPORT <lb/>
The Bethel Banking Trust Co., <lb/>
AT N. O. <lb/>
At the close of March<lb/>
Loans and Discount-, <lb/>
see. T , . <lb/>
and <lb/>
Due from U x. <lb/>
Silver coin, including all v i <lb/>
minor c-in . r r of Deposit <lb/>
, , Sub. to <lb/>
lots t l. <lb/>
7.510 <lb/>
STATE OP NORTH CAROLINA, County of Pitt, <lb/>
I W. H Cashier of the above-named bank, <lb/>
swear that the above statement true to the heat of <lb/>
knowledge belief. W. H Cashier. <lb/>
Chamberlain's is so d <lb/>
on a guarantee that if you are not sat- <lb/>
lifted after two-thirds of s but <lb/>
tie according to directions, your mo <lb/>
will be refunded. It ii up to you lo <lb/>
to try. Sold by all <lb/>
ITEMS <lb/>
Little Margaret, months-old <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. <lb/>
Evans, died this morning about <lb/>
o'clock and will be buried to <lb/>
morrow. Mr. Evans being in a <lb/>
hospital in Richmond the <lb/>
death of his little daughter all <lb/>
the <lb/>
Marvelous <lb/>
mark the progress of the <lb/>
Air on heavy <lb/>
without wires, terrible war <lb/>
invention to kill men and that won- <lb/>
of King's New Dis- <lb/>
when threatened <lb/>
colds, la grippe. <lb/>
hay <lb/>
and whooping cough or lung <lb/>
For all bronchi, it ha <lb/>
no equal it relieves instantly- <lb/>
the cure, at. Black, of <lb/>
N. C. R. R. No. <lb/>
it cared him of sf- <lb/>
tr all failed. and <lb/>
SI, A bottle <lb/>
j all <lb/>
DIXIE ICE CREAM <lb/>
Can made in <lb/>
minutes cost of <lb/>
On a Plato. <lb/>
Stir contents of one package <lb/>
ice caw <lb/>
Into a of milk and f <lb/>
No cooking, no nothing <lb/>
else to Everything but the <lb/>
ice and milk in tbs package. <lb/>
This makes t quarts of most <lb/>
ice you <lb/>
t at your grocers, <lb/>
or by mail if be docs not keep It. <lb/>
ate Hook t. <lb/>
Tb Ch U try, t. <lb/>
IT MS. <lb/>
N. C. June 1910. <lb/>
W, R. Whichard spent <lb/>
days with Mrs. J R <lb/>
Davenport this week. <lb/>
Mrs. B. R. of <lb/>
is visiting sister, <lb/>
Mrs. W. C. this week. <lb/>
The young men of <lb/>
expect to have a trip to Bath <lb/>
Sunday on a gas AU <lb/>
pate a time. <lb/>
and Stokes had n <lb/>
game of ball Saturday, scores <lb/>
and in favor of <lb/>
G. Z. Ricks is having a new I <lb/>
store built. <lb/>
Mrs. Noah Jackson and <lb/>
K. V. are in town visiting <lb/>
friends this week. <lb/>
Mrs. B. B. Satterthwaite is <lb/>
tick week. <lb/>
J. R. Davenport is having some <lb/>
surveying done week by Mr. <lb/>
Clark, of Greenville. <lb/>
E. B. Dixon hat accepted a <lb/>
position at the mill of R. R. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Do not forget, Sunday school <lb/>
every Sunday at p. m. and so <lb/>
keep in mind, sermon next <lb/>
third Sunday morning for the <lb/>
young men especially. <lb/>
Watch flourish again <lb/>
in her old age. <lb/>
Let Paper Tea. <lb/>
When you go off for your turn <lb/>
mer vacation, bear in mind that <lb/>
The Daily Reflector would be a <lb/>
very agreeable visitor and keep <lb/>
you posted with what is going on <lb/>
at home. Leave a quarter and <lb/>
your address at the office, and <lb/>
we'll do the rest for a month. <lb/>
If yon not satisfied after using <lb/>
according to directions of <lb/>
of Stomach <lb/>
Liver Tab eta, yon can have you mom y <lb/>
back. The cleanse and <lb/>
orate the improve the dig <lb/>
regulate Give them <lb/>
a trill and get Sold by all drug- <lb/>
gist. <lb/>
Subscribe for Tho Reflector <lb/>
Miss left Mon- <lb/>
day to enter the E. C. T. T. S. <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
Miss May Holton came home <lb/>
from Atlantic Christian college <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Miss Lessie King, of Durham, <lb/>
spending sometime with Miss <lb/>
Eva <lb/>
John Hammond and Simpson <lb/>
of Conetoe, were at E. <lb/>
E. Saturday and Sunday. <lb/>
Miss Lillie Owen, of Saratoga, <lb/>
who has been visiting the Misses <lb/>
returned to her home yes <lb/>
Miss Rosalie <lb/>
her. <lb/>
Prof. L. P. of <lb/>
Grange, spent night <lb/>
spent night with J. H. <lb/>
Cheek. <lb/>
Miss Pearl Nelson, of Grifton, <lb/>
is Miss Annie E. <lb/>
hon. <lb/>
Miss Lillie Herring, Snow <lb/>
Hill, spent last week with the <lb/>
Misses <lb/>
Miss E. Allen came <lb/>
home from school in Raleigh last <lb/>
Saturday. <lb/>
Pattie Sutton and <lb/>
Misses Evelyn and Pattie, <lb/>
of Winterville, spent part of last <lb/>
week at Lorenzo <lb/>
Misses Bessie Barnhill, of Green <lb/>
ville, and Lucy Manning, of <lb/>
Bethel, have recently visited <lb/>
Miss Myrtle <lb/>
Misses Laura Salisbury, of <lb/>
and Mary Whitehurst, <lb/>
of, visited Misses Eva <lb/>
Langston last week. <lb/>
N. Gilbert and little <lb/>
daughter. Mildred Earle. spent <lb/>
Saturday with J. Cheek. <lb/>
Henry Langston came home <lb/>
from Wake Forest Wednesday. <lb/>
Large crowds attended the <lb/>
Hookerton Union at <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday- <lb/>
Miss Meta and Miss <lb/>
Mildred Alien, of Raleigh, who <lb/>
have been visiting their uncle, <lb/>
T. R. Allen, left Monday. <lb/>
Misses Carrie Carton and Carrie <lb/>
Manning, of Bethel, Miss <lb/>
Myrtle week. <lb/>
Mrs Louisa Langston, of <lb/>
who been spend- <lb/>
sometime with her son, C. H. <lb/>
Langston. left tor her <lb/>
proper in order <lb/>
maintain u high and <lb/>
the <lb/>
of all he, seek <lb/>
eternal ill <lb/>
at o'clock, <lb/>
program it e primary depart- <lb/>
was <lb/>
delivered ti Rev, <lb/>
P. Greenville, He spoke <lb/>
the a in this <lb/>
section o. N Carolina that <lb/>
would trail colored youth to <lb/>
the industry <lb/>
may z lie <lb/>
that i b -I would have a <lb/>
broad i .-s in such <lb/>
a needy . of State, <lb/>
appealed j t people to give <lb/>
tangible encouragement to <lb/>
a c i <lb/>
Tuesday program by <lb/>
Society <lb/>
Tho delivered by <lb/>
Prof. C. E Askew, president of <lb/>
Tar Kiwi Institute, Washington. <lb/>
He zed the importance <lb/>
of mat high moral <lb/>
He showed telling effect no <lb/>
or could <lb/>
hope r n so bug their <lb/>
ware thrown to the <lb/>
winds <lb/>
Wednesday the exercises of <lb/>
the week with a very <lb/>
elaborate t was a <lb/>
Chance of the cl-jct of <lb/>
the ii nil what has been <lb/>
d during the session. <lb/>
He tithe students to <lb/>
aspire to lofty and at a I <lb/>
times cultivate such habits as go <lb/>
to make men and women. <lb/>
The , n <lb/>
if <lb/>
s are. <lb/>
and sworn to be- <lb/>
mi this 6th of Apr . <lb/>
i T. Carson, <lb/>
Notary <lb/>
S M Jones. <lb/>
M. O Blount, <lb/>
Staton, <lb/>
Directors. <lb/>
i W. <lb/>
OR I iN <lb/>
NO ONE BURIED THERE. <lb/>
Bat Hid Evidently <lb/>
Awry <lb/>
A. i <lb/>
he had made a id an <lb/>
or two ago. H had m <lb/>
to be out coal <lb/>
pile in the his store <lb/>
saw a police hit lying <lb/>
on it His first w.- <lb/>
that somebody red a <lb/>
policeman and buried i <lb/>
trash Getting s <lb/>
he probed down in the pile M Fresh kept <lb/>
found g a body there. M In k. <lb/>
Capt. Gr took th p -lice Bo <lb/>
badge and start- d an <lb/>
up with C hi. f . . <lb/>
Smith that officer informed him g I <lb/>
Provisions <lb/>
Cotton Ragging <lb/>
on <lb/>
that none of the mis <lb/>
and at the badge <lb/>
he it as one had <lb/>
been from heat q <lb/>
The thief had. <lb/>
evidently became t. i p <lb/>
it and threw it on the trash pile. <lb/>
How hat there is <lb/>
tier <lb/>
GR-EN VILLE R <lb/>
th Carolina <lb/>
to <lb/>
I in irk- qualified lief ore the <lb/>
c i r t o; Pitt I as <lb/>
executrix o th hat aid U-ti- <lb/>
aid liver of W. W. Martin, <lb/>
aid liver t <lb/>
will up a. e t mA <lb/>
h headache, p-eve- mM. ,., <lb/>
and rate the who e system, b J C .,, <lb/>
by <lb/>
LINIMENT <lb/>
CATARRH GOES <lb/>
So Does S Throat, <lb/>
Croup and Asthma <lb/>
You can easily by the <lb/>
symptom w. w ether yon <lb/>
catarrh or <lb/>
sin-, <lb/>
discharge fr. n Hie n s , of <lb/>
vole, tick- <lb/>
in throat pings in thrust, a <lb/>
cough, p heat, of h. <lb/>
spasms of <lb/>
low ed a limes. of mucus, <lb/>
difficulty in breathing-, of <lb/>
W have a <lb/>
remedy back if it for <lb/>
catarrh, called <lb/>
High o which a vaporised air. <lb/>
so that it is breathed <lb/>
over the inflamed and germ <lb/>
membrane. It kills germ give <lb/>
in minutes, and ea- <lb/>
The price, including hard robber In- <lb/>
haler, is only It. The hard rubber <lb/>
pocket inhaler will last a lifetime, so <lb/>
that should you need a bottle of <lb/>
you cm get it for cents <lb/>
World's S <lb/>
Greatest <lb/>
Bawl <lb/>
Pain <lb/>
Remedy <lb/>
Cramps. <lb/>
Bone and Muscle <lb/>
a, has I on <lb/>
and tit.<lb/>
and W<lb/>
all clams against I <lb/>
a r to the Same <lb/>
to on or the <lb/>
of 1911. or <lb/>
he pi ad in of r. every. <lb/>
i This day of May. <lb/>
V. Mai-tin. Executrix <lb/>
of H. W. <lb/>
Land S <lb/>
By virtue of power me by a <lb/>
l ed made i-y <lb/>
Edward a-d wife, Ii . <lb/>
Not Quite <lb/>
How often you can get a m <lb/>
nail or driver or <lb/>
Kr lacking. a good <lb/>
box and prepared for <lb/>
let. Our Una of tools <lb/>
Ii a you could and <lb/>
we will sea that tool <lb/>
box does not lack a single <lb/>
useful ti <lb/>
Of Course <lb/>
You get s <lb/>
Horse Goods t c <lb/>
of ------v <lb/>
GET <lb/>
Tobacco Flues <lb/>
FROM <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
With years experience in <lb/>
making fines, he can please you- <lb/>
Edwards, <lb/>
on the April aid <lb/>
registered in book D i S. Pitt <lb/>
county II e I to the <lb/>
st bidder for c-h. <lb/>
door ii at noon, on <lb/>
the day of it l- <lb/>
inf Monday, g <lb/>
, . <lb/>
Be in the town of <lb/>
n-r-c t south wist <lb/>
of the Joe on street m <lb/>
d, thanes a <lb/>
about two feet to a <lb/>
to a corner, thence In a westerly <lb/>
two a d forty <lb/>
feet to Williams north <lb/>
we t on thence in <lb/>
a ion about fifty <lb/>
feet c <lb/>
of acre, more or <lb/>
This the day of 1910. <lb/>
E. S. Brown. <lb/>
Mortgagee. <lb/>
Plumbing and Tinning <lb/>
S J. Everett atty. <lb/>
Tomb Stones <lb/>
IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW <lb/>
What a Heap of Happiness it Would <lb/>
Bring to Greenville Homes <lb/>
Hard to do work with an <lb/>
g, you hours of mis <lb/>
J C L women on knew the cause-that <lb/>
I. b. It n It I Si II paint come from lick kid- <lb/>
I live much woe. <lb/>
Kidney <lb/>
of this vicinity n- <lb/>
done them. <lb/>
Mis. L. Cameron, Payton Be., <lb/>
Kinston, N. C, gr. at <lb/>
I obtained from Do n a <lb/>
Iron Pill me in recommending <lb/>
A dull, e, <lb/>
a a <lb/>
companied by twinges through <lb/>
loins bothered me for h long time. <lb/>
Sale of Land. <lb/>
By vii toe of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
court of Pitt county in special pro- <lb/>
No. entitled, J. A <lb/>
and wife, Grime <lb/>
Mitchell it the com- <lb/>
missioner will sell tor cash before <lb/>
court house door in Greenville st noon, <lb/>
on July 2nd the fol- <lb/>
lowing piece or parcel <lb/>
and, in the county of Pitt M <lb/>
adjoining the lands <lb/>
of Pop-, J. B. Evans, Ira <lb/>
and Lewis H. Worth con- <lb/>
fifteen acres being a part <lb/>
of the Porter land. Said land told for <lb/>
partition. <lb/>
This May 24th, 1910. , <lb/>
B. Junta, Commits <lb/>
III <lb/>
I had but little enemy or and <lb/>
caused by a <lb/>
kid Having s Kid- <lb/>
Pills to me, I pro- <lb/>
cured After taking the content, <lb/>
the in my and <lb/>
h the kidney <lb/>
For by dealers. Price SO <lb/>
cents. Co . Buffalo, <lb/>
New York, sole agents for the United <lb/>
States. , , <lb/>
Remember <lb/>
take no other. <lb/>
Lame i boulder it Invariably <lb/>
by of the muscles <lb/>
yields t h fr- <lb/>
of L n <lb/>
ii not only pro.-.; an effectual, <lb/>
but in no way to use. <lb/>
Sold by all <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018099_0006" n="6"/>
<p>
DEPARTMENT <lb/>
I In Charge of F. A. EDMONDSON <lb/>
Authorized Agent of The Eastern tor And Rates on Application <lb/>
The Pitt County School I We have needle bobbins <lb/>
manufactured by The A. G. Ox shuttles, foe any sewing machine <lb/>
Manufacturing Company are in the country. Also needle. <lb/>
cheap; comfortable, neat and threaders, the very thing for <lb/>
Terms are liberal, affected eyes or dark <lb/>
Barber <lb/>
We have pat in an assortment <lb/>
ITEMS. <lb/>
When in the market come to see <lb/>
u., we have the desk for you. <lb/>
C. T. Cw A. <lb/>
went Greenville <lb/>
. .- , <lb/>
We are carrying a nice line <lb/>
Cuffing Caskets. Prices are <lb/>
right and can nice hearse <lb/>
service. A. G. Mfg. Co. <lb/>
Eugene Cannon went to <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Fur spring dress goods, <lb/>
laces see us- <lb/>
New lot just in. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber Co- <lb/>
F. C. Nye and family left <lb/>
today to visit Ins <lb/>
people <lb/>
nice fresh see R. D. <lb/>
on Thursdays, <lb/>
and Saturdays. <lb/>
Eugene Caution, Miss <lb/>
Cox, C. T. Co and Hiss Maude <lb/>
went to den <lb/>
today. <lb/>
For cold drinks of all <lb/>
at L Johnson's fountain. <lb/>
Smith and Miss Magda- <lb/>
Cox in to at- <lb/>
tend the house party of Mis <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
Just received, a nice lot of <lb/>
ladies shoes. <lb/>
Barber Co <lb/>
Misses Nina Dixon <lb/>
came in yesterday from the <lb/>
summer school to a few <lb/>
days at home. <lb/>
The is the Kind <lb/>
you need, See us. <lb/>
A. Ange Co. <lb/>
Miss Lena who has been <lb/>
visiting Mis Cox, re <lb/>
turned to home at Conetoe yes- <lb/>
We call your attention <lb/>
Dew line of groceries. <lb/>
R. W. <lb/>
For nice fresh corned herrings <lb/>
see A. W. Ange Co., Winter- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Straw hats are going fast, buy <lb/>
one, don't be W. Ange <lb/>
Leave your orders for ice at H. <lb/>
L. Johnson's. Will be delivered <lb/>
anywhere in town. <lb/>
Matting and oil cloth, the <lb/>
floor, buy some, cover it over. <lb/>
Harrington. Barber Co. <lb/>
Before buying, see my line of <lb/>
post cards, L. Johnson. <lb/>
Field peas and peanuts for <lb/>
sale by A. W. Ange Co., Win- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
To reduce our stock before in <lb/>
we will offer for a <lb/>
limited time, cheap, for <lb/>
calico, <lb/>
worsted dress goods, to <lb/>
suiting, percales, to <lb/>
motor cloth, waist <lb/>
goods, lawn, mohair <lb/>
wool effects, <lb/>
to table peaches, pie <lb/>
peaches, Sic; shirts. <lb/>
shirts, shirts. <lb/>
shirts, Call and see what <lb/>
we offer. A. W. Ange Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. are rendering good service <lb/>
in the undertaking business. <lb/>
Coffins and caskets cheap with <lb/>
excellent hearse service. <lb/>
Let us frame that for <lb/>
yon. Any size frame. <lb/>
A. W. Ange ft Co. <lb/>
O. W. Rollins spent Sunday <lb/>
in Ayden. <lb/>
M. B. Bryan returned Tuesday <lb/>
from a business trip to Norfolk. <lb/>
Misses Cox and Maude <lb/>
Louise went to Green- <lb/>
ville Tuesday evening to spend <lb/>
a few days with Miss Ward <lb/>
Moore. <lb/>
Mrs. Alexander, of Ayden, <lb/>
pent Sunday here with her <lb/>
sister Mrs. W. L. House. <lb/>
F. F. Cox and J. E. Greene <lb/>
went Greenville Saturday even- <lb/>
Mrs. Maggie Butt and Mis- <lb/>
Olive went to Greenville Mon- <lb/>
jay. <lb/>
of patterns for all styles. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber ft Co, <lb/>
How Is your soul Let <lb/>
us show you our new lot of <lb/>
shoes. Barker Co <lb/>
A nice six key soda fountain <lb/>
for sale. R. <lb/>
We have purchased the <lb/>
the <lb/>
Milling and Mfg. and will <lb/>
be ready very soon to grind corn, <lb/>
do general repair work and dress <lb/>
timber. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
A nice lot of matting just in. <lb/>
A. W. Ange ft Cc. <lb/>
Fresh herrings at <lb/>
Barber ft Co. <lb/>
We are now in to do <lb/>
grinding every day and general <lb/>
repair work promptly. <lb/>
Harrington Barber ft Co. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing <lb/>
Co. has sold this season ever <lb/>
cotton planters and <lb/>
guano sewers which would <lb/>
ally indicate a large cotton crop <lb/>
this year. <lb/>
New lot of dry goods and no- <lb/>
just in. Better while <lb/>
they tie cheap. <lb/>
A. W. Ange ft Co. <lb/>
A new lot of lamps just in. <lb/>
Harrington, Barber Co. <lb/>
Beef, sausage and fish, going <lb/>
cheap. R, W. at Johnson <lb/>
stand, on railroad street. <lb/>
You will never regret when <lb/>
you purchase a <lb/>
manufactured by A. G. Cox Man <lb/>
Co., Winterville. <lb/>
Mrs. Evelyn Cox left for <lb/>
to our Seven Springs Saturday evening <lb/>
to visit her daughter. <lb/>
F. F. Cox spent Sunday at <lb/>
C. T. Cox is on the road again. <lb/>
Jesse Rollins and M. B. <lb/>
attended services in Ayden Tues- <lb/>
day night. <lb/>
J. R. Smith, of Ayden, in <lb/>
town today. <lb/>
The A. G. Cox Mfg. Co. seem <lb/>
to be delivering tobacco trucks <lb/>
and flues to the farmers early <lb/>
this season. <lb/>
F. F. Cox went to Greenville <lb/>
Tuesday evening. <lb/>
Mrs. W. J. and children, <lb/>
who have been visiting relatives <lb/>
here, left Tuesday evening to <lb/>
spend a few days in Raleigh. <lb/>
Miss Lessie King went over to <lb/>
Greenville Tuesday morning to <lb/>
spend a few days visiting friends <lb/>
relatives there. <lb/>
F. A. Edmondson left Tues- <lb/>
day evening for Wayne county, <lb/>
where he will spend a day or two <lb/>
with his parents. <lb/>
A- G. Cox. J. D. Cox, Joseph- <lb/>
us Cox Henry Langston <lb/>
went to Greenville Monday. <lb/>
Misses Edith Beulah V urn- <lb/>
ford, of Ayden, spent Sunday <lb/>
here visiting friends and <lb/>
Rev. N. C. Duncan came in <lb/>
Tuesday from Hope Mills. <lb/>
Eugene Cannon, better known <lb/>
as the clever book- <lb/>
keeper for the A. G. Cox Mfg. <lb/>
Co., is off on a vacation tor a <lb/>
few weeks. <lb/>
Miss Eva Langston returned <lb/>
to the E. C. T. T. Tuesday <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
Miss Laura Cox came in <lb/>
day night from Louisville, Ky., <lb/>
where she has been preparing <lb/>
herself for the foreign field. <lb/>
Prof. F. C. Nye and family <lb/>
left Monday morning- to visit <lb/>
relatives in Fairmont. <lb/>
The force, which baa been <lb/>
putting up new telephone poles <lb/>
and lines around here; returned <lb/>
to Greenville yesterday. <lb/>
June is <lb/>
booming, Mr. J. B. Joyner <lb/>
Jacob Wilson have completed <lb/>
their large store house, and last <lb/>
Thursday they put in a nice <lb/>
stock of groceries. They ex- <lb/>
to do extensive grocery <lb/>
business. The firm will be <lb/>
Known as Joyner ft Wilson. <lb/>
Robt. Strickland continues to <lb/>
do s grocery at Arthur <lb/>
and Mr. B. F. Crawford a <lb/>
large store considerably on the <lb/>
way to completion. <lb/>
The meeting carried on all of <lb/>
last week by Walters, Pittman <lb/>
and Jones was a great success. <lb/>
The Rev. R. F. Pitman preached <lb/>
from Monday night until Friday <lb/>
night, inclusive, and did some of <lb/>
the best preaching that we have <lb/>
ever heard. A good many others <lb/>
said the same. He could hold a <lb/>
congregation nearest spell bound <lb/>
of any one we ever heard. He <lb/>
received fifteen converts in the <lb/>
church during the five nights that <lb/>
he was there. He and Rev. R. <lb/>
R. Jones left Saturday morning <lb/>
for their appointments and Rev. <lb/>
Walters received three Saturday <lb/>
night, making eighteen in all. <lb/>
It was a glorious meeting, as <lb/>
good if not the best that May's <lb/>
chapel has ever had. The <lb/>
was administered Sunday <lb/>
evening by the pastor, W. F. <lb/>
Walters, of Ayden, in the <lb/>
presence of a very largo con- <lb/>
course of spectators. Interest <lb/>
in the meeting ran so high that <lb/>
the house was crowded to over- <lb/>
flowing several nights and Sun- <lb/>
day. Rev. Walters Heft Sunday <lb/>
evening for Ayden. <lb/>
Miss Etta Gay, of <lb/>
was visiting at F. M. Smith's <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Miss Lee Nichols and Esther <lb/>
of Ayden, were visiting <lb/>
at Ivy Smith's last week. <lb/>
Misses Little and <lb/>
Mayo, of Wilson, came <lb/>
Saturday evening to visit re- <lb/>
and friends in our section <lb/>
for a week. <lb/>
Mr. and C. C. Cobb, of <lb/>
Norfolk, were visiting at Cobb- <lb/>
dale Saturday and f and <lb/>
B. P. Cobb took them <lb/>
ville Sunday <lb/>
Cobb is going to remain for a <lb/>
few weeks. <lb/>
The nine went up <lb/>
and played a game of <lb/>
ball Saturday evening and came <lb/>
out victorious. The game stood <lb/>
to in favor of <lb/>
ITEMS. some, but he doesn't know how <lb/>
They were tracked then <lb/>
N. C. June -Miss some across the field. <lb/>
Louise Satterthwaite left for A few months back they came <lb/>
to visit Miss Lillian around to W. A. getting <lb/>
Baker, Friday. eight at one time. And again at <lb/>
base bail team Avery's taking all but <lb/>
play Grimesland Saturday, June the rooster. Again at <lb/>
11th, IS at p. hi. on nine at one time. We all hope <lb/>
land baseball ground. they will get a mess after a while <lb/>
Miss Charlotte Ricks went to the rest of us can have some. <lb/>
Ayden Monday to friends. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Roberson is in R. C. White his bride, <lb/>
town visiting her aunt, Mrs. L. formerly Miss Clara of New <lb/>
Ross. j Bern, returned from their bridal <lb/>
Several young men took the trip Tuesday afternoon and are <lb/>
trip to Bath Sunday. The boat at the home of Mrs. J. L. Flem- <lb/>
Advice to the Aged. <lb/>
bar . chew <lb/>
IMPARTING VIGOR <lb/>
to MM <lb/>
an adapted to <lb/>
to anS <lb/>
left Hall at 5.30 o'clock <lb/>
and reached Washington at 6.30, <lb/>
remaining half an hour then left <lb/>
for Bath. When near Bath the <lb/>
boat a shore and got <lb/>
stuck. We were delayed about <lb/>
one and a half hours, reached <lb/>
Bath at noon. The table was <lb/>
set and everybody ate a large <lb/>
dinner consisting of pig, chicken, <lb/>
beef, hoe cake, pickles and <lb/>
plenty to drink, such as was <lb/>
refreshing. We went to the <lb/>
oldest church in the State, where <lb/>
we were treated very kind and <lb/>
given a piece of brick that the <lb/>
was built of. The day <lb/>
being rainy we did not remain <lb/>
as long as we intended, but every- <lb/>
body had a very nice time. <lb/>
Misses Bonnie Dixon and <lb/>
Myrtle Latham, of Wharton's <lb/>
were here visiting Mrs. G. Z. <lb/>
Ricks a few days week. <lb/>
Mrs. Martha Thigpen and <lb/>
daughter, Esther, are visiting <lb/>
Mrs. J. P. Fleming. <lb/>
The Standard Oil <lb/>
on his way to Friday was <lb/>
delayed about four hours by the <lb/>
bridge breaking in with him at <lb/>
Run. <lb/>
Don't forget Sunday school <lb/>
every Sunday afternoon at <lb/>
o'clock, and also a sermon <lb/>
Third Sunday for young men. <lb/>
Let all turn out. <lb/>
Far Sal. <lb/>
One of hen feed <lb/>
chick feed. F. V. Johnston. <lb/>
Do You Own a <lb/>
II not, and you to own <lb/>
you owe it o your to <lb/>
the ma display <lb/>
shown at the man White <lb/>
A display 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, y and <lb/>
general in a class to <lb/>
itself, but you m with prices <lb/>
that stand here ard <lb/>
incomparable am where. Eight <lb/>
different makes select from, none <lb/>
of those cheap we-tern department <lb/>
WOODLAND ITEMS. <lb/>
store stencils, tut each one a stand- <lb/>
aid, cf acknowledged fame and <lb/>
reputation in the trade. Four <lb/>
player-pianos known <lb/>
snakes. <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 tit your <lb/>
When in Greenville visit our <lb/>
BETHEL SOCIAL CIRCLES. <lb/>
Woodland, N. C. <lb/>
and Mrs. W. R. W. spent <lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday with <lb/>
their daughter, Mrs. Craft, <lb/>
near Falkland <lb/>
Misses Lessie Garris and <lb/>
Martha spent Saturday <lb/>
and Sunday near <lb/>
Owing to the rainy weather <lb/>
there were but few at Sunday <lb/>
school Sunday. <lb/>
We are having some nice <lb/>
showers of this week. <lb/>
Mrs. S. M. Manning has been <lb/>
spending a few days over in <lb/>
section with relatives. <lb/>
Miss Nobles is spending <lb/>
a few days in Ayden. <lb/>
Seems if there are some ore <lb/>
or two that like chickens <lb/>
here. Monday night a week ago <lb/>
someone went to W. L. <lb/>
and took three chickens, on <lb/>
to W. R. W. and took <lb/>
Our yours if you <lb/>
come. <lb/>
People Delightful Perch <lb/>
Party. <lb/>
On Friday evening from to <lb/>
o'clock Miss Mamie Blair. of <lb/>
Thomasville, delightfully enter- <lb/>
at Hotel mount, a <lb/>
of her friends at a porch <lb/>
party. <lb/>
As the guests arrived they <lb/>
were received by Miss Elizabeth <lb/>
Jones Dr, Ward who direct- <lb/>
ed them to the punch bowl <lb/>
sided over by Mrs. J. A. Staton. <lb/>
The entertainment of the <lb/>
evening consisted of vocal and <lb/>
instrumental music and a very <lb/>
interesting contest, entitled <lb/>
Girl I met in The <lb/>
successful contestants were Miss <lb/>
Maude Barnhill and Dr. Ward, <lb/>
the being a fan and book. <lb/>
At the close of the contest de- <lb/>
refreshments were <lb/>
ed consisting of ice cream and <lb/>
cake, salted peanuts and candy. <lb/>
The were very <lb/>
pretty indeed. In the hall <lb/>
ware used the punch <lb/>
bowl and table being decorated <lb/>
in them, ft white parasol bus <lb/>
ponded over the bowl had <lb/>
pinned over it with a <lb/>
large bunch tied on the <lb/>
la the parlor white were <lb/>
used. the porch Japanese <lb/>
lanterns hung which added I <lb/>
to tile attractiveness of <lb/>
Nervous <lb/>
Break-Down <lb/>
Nerve energy is the <lb/>
force that controls the or- <lb/>
of respiration, cir- <lb/>
digestion and <lb/>
elimination. When you <lb/>
feel weak, nervous, <lb/>
table, sick, it is often be- <lb/>
cause you lack nerve <lb/>
energy, and the process <lb/>
of rebuilding and sustain- <lb/>
life is interfered with. <lb/>
Dr. has <lb/>
cured thousands of such <lb/>
cases, and will we believe <lb/>
benefit if not entirely, <lb/>
cure you. Try it. <lb/>
A M M <lb/>
to Improve <lb/>
an<lb/>
W. t- <lb/>
Onto <lb/>
sails Dr. Miles <lb/>
him J <lb/>
haul h It talk <lb/>
Medical Co, Elkhart, <lb/>
White. <lb/>
Next door to Atkins Hardware Co. <lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
BAKER HART <lb/>
The Up-to-date Hardware <lb/>
Store <lb/>
is the place to buy you Paint, Varnish, <lb/>
Stains, Material, Nails, Cook <lb/>
Stoves, Enamelware, Fine Cutlery, <lb/>
Handsome Chafing Dishes. <lb/>
We Garry a full Line of Wall Paints <lb/>
easy to put hard to come off. Place <lb/>
now with them and you will be <lb/>
pleased. <lb/>
ET Special attention is called to our line of <lb/>
FARMERS GOODS, consisting of Weeders, <lb/>
the best Cultivators made, both in riding and <lb/>
walking. Full line of WIRE FENCING of the <lb/>
very best quality. <lb/>
Don't fail to see us before buying, they <lb/>
can supply your wants. Give them a call. <lb/>
Baker Hart <lb/>
Evans Street, , N. C. <lb/>
UNIVERSALLY <lb/>
WHEN Metal were introduced <lb/>
you had some excuse being <lb/>
But now <lb/>
If you are it can only be because you do not know the <lb/>
facts in the case. <lb/>
They arc used today from the Atlantic to the for all kinds <lb/>
of buildings, under all conditions. <lb/>
are fireproof, never leak and last as long as the <lb/>
building itself without needing repairs. <lb/>
For further detailed information apply to <lb/>
YORK COBB, Agents. <lb/>
MERIDITH COLLEGE. <lb/>
Among lit for Women Id the South. . tar. <lb/>
in Liberal Arts cowing nine and Including <lb/>
count for the A. B. degree. Mm <lb/>
Violin and Voice Culture. School of Art, <lb/>
cornea in Education and Bible, <lb/>
Music, including Piano. Pipe <lb/>
including Decoration, Designing and Painting-School of Academy <lb/>
which prepare stud, nu for college a <lb/>
director. Full literary course per year, i. eluding tuition, board, room, <lb/>
light, best, physician, nurse, ordinary medicine and all minor feel, <lb/>
In Club, to lot Next session Sept 1910. <lb/>
R. T. VANN, President, <lb/>
Rakish, <lb/>
THE 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, JUNE <lb/>
1910. <lb/>
No. <lb/>
WHAT THE EDITORS DID. <lb/>
the Pres. Mr. Ass Mrs. W. T Jr , <lb/>
Matters the j At the <lb/>
Some people have an idea that By night or day the of <lb/>
the annual conventions of the Mr. Mrs. Charles A. Moseley <lb/>
editors of the State are merely on North College street is <lb/>
occasions for and and beautiful. <lb/>
having a good time. Some of Last evening on the occasion <lb/>
this comes of course, of a reception and dance given by <lb/>
there is no class of people more j Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Moseley <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
WITH MISS MATTIE KING. <lb/>
Beautiful <lb/>
live to matters affecting <lb/>
State than the editors, and that <lb/>
they do things at their <lb/>
is shown by some of the <lb/>
resolutions adopted ct the recent <lb/>
Wrightsville meeting. Here are <lb/>
some of the matters discussed <lb/>
and embodied in the <lb/>
the sense of this body <lb/>
that the movement to erect a <lb/>
suitable monument to perpetuate <lb/>
the memory of Edgar William <lb/>
Nye, who lived and labored and <lb/>
died in Carolina is worthy <lb/>
the j in honor of Mr. W- T. Lipscomb <lb/>
and bride, of Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
and Miss Adelaide Or. of Char- <lb/>
the brilliancy and beauty <lb/>
the interior challenged the <lb/>
admiration of the merry th <lb/>
assembled therein. <lb/>
Three large rooms and a wide <lb/>
ball, thrown en suite, made an <lb/>
ideal ball room. To the elegance <lb/>
of natural appointments was <lb/>
added the beauty and fragrance <lb/>
of flowers-all that May and <lb/>
June furnish for just such lovely <lb/>
of our sympathy and practical events <lb/>
help and we would hereby give <lb/>
the movement our en- <lb/>
and approval. <lb/>
desire to go on record <lb/>
favoring New as the <lb/>
most suitable place for holding <lb/>
the proposed Panama Exposition, <lb/>
and we urge the newspapers of <lb/>
North Carolina to exert all their <lb/>
influence in this direction. <lb/>
Stonewall Jackson Train- <lb/>
School deserves and should <lb/>
have the sympathy and support <lb/>
of every newspaper in North <lb/>
Carolina, and we trust that the <lb/>
next legislature will pursue a <lb/>
more liberal policy toward this <lb/>
long needed and valuable <lb/>
The work is under <lb/>
table management and we <lb/>
to mention th heroic <lb/>
flee a newspaper man, Mr. J. P. <lb/>
Cork, Concord, is making in <lb/>
its behalf. <lb/>
would urge our brethren <lb/>
of the press to aid in every <lb/>
way the great work our <lb/>
State Board of Health is doing <lb/>
the prevention and cure of <lb/>
disease. This board looks to the <lb/>
newspapers of the State for help <lb/>
and we they may not be <lb/>
disappointed. The board asks <lb/>
for space in our papers to instruct <lb/>
and inform the public along the <lb/>
lines of sanitation and the gen <lb/>
care and protection of the <lb/>
public health, and we hope that <lb/>
so far as it is possible, the <lb/>
columns of our papers will be <lb/>
placed at the disposal of this <lb/>
agency of help and healing. <lb/>
endorse and approve the <lb/>
suggestion of Mrs. Charles D. <lb/>
president of the <lb/>
man's Betterment Association, <lb/>
that a-week be set apart for the <lb/>
discussion of the objects and <lb/>
purposes of the association in the <lb/>
columns e very paper connected <lb/>
with this Association; and we <lb/>
would urge upon the editors the <lb/>
importance of magnifying this <lb/>
great work in every way <lb/>
and of supporting <lb/>
encouraging these good women <lb/>
in this labor of <lb/>
it is the sense of this <lb/>
meeting that the best use that <lb/>
can be made of the State con- <lb/>
is in the construction of <lb/>
public roads, and the counties <lb/>
desiring same should have the <lb/>
first right to use them for the <lb/>
purpose; provided they to <lb/>
the-state a <lb/>
per day for each convict, the <lb/>
State to bear all <lb/>
The wide was <lb/>
Set with palms and ferns, <lb/>
a veritable palm garden with <lb/>
cooling breezes for the dancers. <lb/>
A reception of an hour gave <lb/>
ample opportunity for the guests <lb/>
to meet the guests of honor. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. stood <lb/>
first in the receiving line, she in <lb/>
black lace over silk, next <lb/>
Miss Moseley, charming in white <lb/>
silk, with trimmings of lace and <lb/>
touches of blue about the low-cut <lb/>
waist. To Miss Moseley's right <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Lipscomb, <lb/>
the latter in an gown of <lb/>
pink chiffon over pink silk, with <lb/>
trimmings of chiffon roses <lb/>
the tunic and ornamenting <lb/>
the waist Her jewels were <lb/>
amethysts set in pearls. <lb/>
Miss Adelaide Orr was t Mrs. <lb/>
Lipscomb's right. She wore a <lb/>
lovely gown of white chiffon over <lb/>
yellow satin, trimmed with <lb/>
low chiffon rosebuds. <lb/>
Dancing commenced at <lb/>
o'clock, music being furnished by <lb/>
Mr. Harry Asbury and assistants. <lb/>
During the evening delicious <lb/>
punch was by Mrs. C. M. <lb/>
Beardon, Asheville, guest of <lb/>
Moseley. The bowl was <lb/>
set in a bed of daisies. Ices fol- <lb/>
lowed the dance. <lb/>
Chronicle, 10th. <lb/>
Deals of Mr. A. L. <lb/>
The many friends and ac- <lb/>
in this city of Mrs. <lb/>
A. L. Morgan Miss Leonard <lb/>
will be to learn of <lb/>
her death in Ala. <lb/>
The sad intelligence of her death <lb/>
came in a telegram today to her <lb/>
her former schoolmate <lb/>
friend, Mrs. E. B. Mrs. <lb/>
Morgan is remembered here as <lb/>
Miss Leonard Pitts, for it was <lb/>
during her college days st Salem, <lb/>
N. C. that she visited Mrs. <lb/>
here, where she made <lb/>
many lasting friends and ac- <lb/>
Cape. Mayo Dead. <lb/>
Capt. M. S. Mayo, aged <lb/>
years, died suddenly st his home <lb/>
in Washington a few days ago. <lb/>
Capt. Mayo was for many years <lb/>
captain of steamers plying Tar <lb/>
well known in the <lb/>
towns along the river. <lb/>
appropriate out of the general <lb/>
treasury for this purpose at <lb/>
it annually, the said <lb/>
to be apportioned <lb/>
State to bear an expends of <lb/>
maintenance ears and guarding y twice the <lb/>
of the convicts, counties the <lb/>
nob maintain chain gangs shall <lb/>
baas preference in leasing <lb/>
prisoners. <lb/>
is further resolved that it <lb/>
is the sense of this meeting <lb/>
the State should give to the <lb/>
counties composing the State <lb/>
assistance in the actual <lb/>
of their roads, and should <lb/>
amount allotted by the State; <lb/>
and provided further, that such <lb/>
moneys as are apportioned by <lb/>
the State to the counties, and <lb/>
that raised by the county to <lb/>
meet the State allotment, shall <lb/>
be spent in the construction of <lb/>
public roads, whose location <lb/>
plans specifications for con <lb/>
the <lb/>
State highway <lb/>
Great Work for Teacher in East <lb/>
Carolina-Ear j II meat Large. <lb/>
The summer school for teachers <lb/>
now being run in Greenville at <lb/>
the East Train- <lb/>
School is probably the most <lb/>
import int summer school ever <lb/>
held in North Carolina. With an <lb/>
enrollment of nearly teachers <lb/>
coming from every North Caro- <lb/>
east of Raleigh and <lb/>
many west of city, a <lb/>
faculty of ten efficient, <lb/>
working teachers-each one a <lb/>
proven master in his department <lb/>
the school, now in its first <lb/>
doing a work that is start- <lb/>
ling in its earnestness and <lb/>
in its scope. Summer schools <lb/>
have been held in North Caro <lb/>
Una at which the attendance <lb/>
nearly trebled that of the school <lb/>
now running in Greenville; but <lb/>
the statement is confidently <lb/>
made by Prof. W. H. <lb/>
superintendent of public <lb/>
in Pitt county and an <lb/>
tor of state-wide reputation, that <lb/>
in consideration of the vigor and <lb/>
conscientiousness of the work <lb/>
and the number of teachers <lb/>
reached who have hitherto not <lb/>
been attracted by summer <lb/>
schools. in the his- <lb/>
of North Carolina has ever <lb/>
shown such wonderful spirit <lb/>
along educational <lb/>
In the past, many teachers <lb/>
have looked upon summer schools <lb/>
as a nice place to spend enjoy- <lb/>
ably the summer's vacation. In <lb/>
the summer school in Greenville <lb/>
the is notice <lb/>
able for its absence. The <lb/>
line though not as stringent, is just <lb/>
as really present as in any of the <lb/>
colleges of state- Each <lb/>
teacher who registers is given <lb/>
the choice of five courses ranging <lb/>
from to hours each. After <lb/>
registration one is expected and <lb/>
required be present at every <lb/>
meeting of every class which has <lb/>
her name upon its roll. <lb/>
But with this discipline and <lb/>
rule of hard work the teachers <lb/>
are extremely well satisfied. <lb/>
They all seem to think that the <lb/>
East Carolina Training school is <lb/>
giving them just what they need. <lb/>
The teachers are giving evidence <lb/>
of their appreciation and hearty <lb/>
approval of conduce of the <lb/>
school by spirit OH <lb/>
and encouragement which <lb/>
they display on every occasion. <lb/>
The faculty numbering only <lb/>
ten men and women are being <lb/>
worked severely to give, as <lb/>
as they do, the fifty <lb/>
courses which they offer. <lb/>
dent Robert H. Wright is the <lb/>
of the work. H. <lb/>
E. Austin, teacher of Geography <lb/>
Agriculture. Professor C. <lb/>
W. Miss Maria <lb/>
D. Graham. Mr. <lb/>
Meadows, of Texas, English; <lb/>
Miss Kate W. Lewis, Drawing; <lb/>
Mr. Knight, Professor <lb/>
School-Management; <lb/>
Miss Mary Arrington. Primary <lb/>
Mrs. Ogden, Household <lb/>
Miss Bishop music <lb/>
Miss Bishop an <lb/>
course in <lb/>
mental music. <lb/>
The courses offered embrace <lb/>
the entire work required in <lb/>
public schools. Two terms of <lb/>
ten weeks each have been given. <lb/>
The first which began March <lb/>
and ended May had an enroll- <lb/>
of The second term <lb/>
begun on May which will run <lb/>
until July has already <lb/>
names on its registration list, <lb/>
and teachers are coming in on <lb/>
every train. Scarcely could <lb/>
be accommodated in the college <lb/>
buildings, the others are boarding <lb/>
in the city. <lb/>
by <lb/>
Loraine Home were united <lb/>
Rev. B. F. Huske. <lb/>
Skilled hands had handsomely <lb/>
decorated the church for the <lb/>
occasion, the chancel being a <lb/>
bower of palms and ferns, the <lb/>
arch wreathed in evergreens, <lb/>
and cape <lb/>
Though the hour was the <lb/>
edifice was more than filled with <lb/>
admiring friends who had as <lb/>
to witness this union of <lb/>
As Mis Helen Forbes played <lb/>
the wedding march the bridal <lb/>
party and took <lb/>
respective places. First came <lb/>
the ushers. Messrs. R. C. <lb/>
W. L Hall. Home <lb/>
and Z. P. Vandyke. <lb/>
Following these the dame <lb/>
of honor, O. R. Brown, of <lb/>
Henderson, dressed in white <lb/>
lingerie with black hat, carrying <lb/>
a bouquet of carnations. <lb/>
The bride, in an elegant travel <lb/>
suit of Alice blue, with Per- <lb/>
trimmings and jewel but- <lb/>
tons, carrying a bouquet of sweet <lb/>
peas, entered with brother, <lb/>
Mr. John L Home, who gave <lb/>
her away. <lb/>
As these approached the altar <lb/>
the groom with his brother, Mr. <lb/>
B. F. Tyson, entered from the <lb/>
vestry met them. <lb/>
The impressive ring ceremony <lb/>
of the Episcopal church <lb/>
used. At its conclusion the <lb/>
bridal party first drove to the <lb/>
former home of the bride on <lb/>
Greene street, and from <lb/>
they proceeded to the A. C. L. <lb/>
depot to depart on a bridal tour <lb/>
to Washington City, Baltimore <lb/>
and Virginia Beach. <lb/>
This marriage has been looked <lb/>
forward to with much interest. <lb/>
as both are well known and pop <lb/>
Mr. Tyson for several <lb/>
years been city clerk and tax <lb/>
collector. The esteem of their <lb/>
friends was shown in the very <lb/>
large number of bridal <lb/>
received. <lb/>
A BAD CUSTOM <lb/>
M,. i. Cb-r<lb/>
At 7.45 o'clock this morning Raleigh. June <lb/>
in St Paul's Episcopal superintendent of the <lb/>
was witnessed a very beautiful Home, died this morn- <lb/>
marriage, when the destinies of He been in feeble <lb/>
Mr. C. Tyson and Miss health for sometime. He had <lb/>
been superintendent of the home <lb/>
for twelve years. <lb/>
-The <lb/>
store of Brothers, on <lb/>
street enter d by <lb/>
three men last night and about <lb/>
worth of merchandise was <lb/>
carried away and over <lb/>
worth of merchandise was scat <lb/>
over the floor, being piled <lb/>
up as high as two feet in some <lb/>
places. Entrance was effected <lb/>
from the rear by the use of a <lb/>
ladder and breaking out a <lb/>
The burglars left a note saying <lb/>
they just <lb/>
Asheville, June a fit <lb/>
of jealousy last night at Marshal, <lb/>
miles from here, Fred Call- <lb/>
well shot and probably; fatally <lb/>
wounded his sweetheart, Miss <lb/>
Myrtle Lowe, about ears of <lb/>
age. Both are well connected in <lb/>
Madison county. <lb/>
High Point. June 14.- The <lb/>
little girl of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
residing on North Main street. <lb/>
this morning while out playing <lb/>
caught of a live wire. <lb/>
A gentleman passing saw <lb/>
the condition the little girl <lb/>
was in, and tried to pull her <lb/>
loose from the wire, but the cur- <lb/>
rent was strong that it took <lb/>
another man to take her away. <lb/>
While the child was not burned <lb/>
was seriously she is suffering very <lb/>
much from nervousness. Her <lb/>
condition at a late hour today is <lb/>
still unchanged. <lb/>
numerous merry- <lb/>
makings made <lb/>
when Mr a Mattie King <lb/>
was he me to a Urge number <lb/>
of Tuesday in honor <lb/>
of h Misses Sallie <lb/>
, of mi Lura <lb/>
Carter, of Wilson. P <lb/>
hearts dice was of the <lb/>
amusements of the evening, the <lb/>
prize going to <lb/>
whose the <lb/>
largest number of punches. She <lb/>
two guests of <lb/>
honor to draw and Mi Carter <lb/>
was the final of the <lb/>
receiving party <lb/>
consisted Miss Carter with J. <lb/>
Suit Janus, Miss P. with <lb/>
S. and the <lb/>
hostess with Ba-com L. Wilson. <lb/>
in the punch was <lb/>
served in rear hall, Miss <lb/>
Lillian Carr wit; Mr. J <lb/>
son and Miss Margaret Blow <lb/>
with Mr. Charles Haskett <lb/>
siding at the bowl. <lb/>
Among the out-of-town guests <lb/>
were Misses Charlotte Fennell. <lb/>
of Wilmington, and Mary Good- <lb/>
win, of <lb/>
Invitations were sent <lb/>
young of the <lb/>
NEW MASONIC ROOM. <lb/>
Thai <lb/>
Comet. <lb/>
It has been noticed that people <lb/>
attending marriages in churches <lb/>
have a custom that should be <lb/>
corrected. When the bridal <lb/>
party is retiring from the church, <lb/>
as soon the ushers, who go <lb/>
last, have passed the aisle, the <lb/>
audience has a habit of filling <lb/>
the aisle rushing behind <lb/>
them, thus cutting off the exit <lb/>
of the family and special guests <lb/>
until the audience is out This <lb/>
custom causes more or less con- <lb/>
fusion sometimes interferes <lb/>
with the bridal party reaching <lb/>
in waiting for them. <lb/>
On such occasions it is proper <lb/>
for the audience to remain in <lb/>
their seats until not only the <lb/>
bridal party, but also <lb/>
the family and special guests <lb/>
who occupy reserved have <lb/>
retired from the church. <lb/>
the Build <lb/>
The Masons of Greenville <lb/>
soon have their new lodge m <lb/>
ready for occupancy. Their n <lb/>
quarters are in the second story <lb/>
of the newly erected Winslow <lb/>
building on Fifth and Washing- <lb/>
ton streets. The front room of <lb/>
the building will be occupied by <lb/>
the public library will be <lb/>
in operation st date. A <lb/>
small room behind this front <lb/>
room is room, <lb/>
containing a large locker whose <lb/>
use is known only to those who <lb/>
have been put there. <lb/>
The large room in the rear <lb/>
is the lodge room proper. It <lb/>
is by feet. A fine <lb/>
carpet has been nut <lb/>
down at s cost of dollars. <lb/>
The furniture which a part <lb/>
already arrived, is heavy <lb/>
mahogany with black leather <lb/>
upholstering. The walls are <lb/>
in blue. <lb/>
With the arrival of tho re- <lb/>
of the furniture, prob- <lb/>
ably the latter part of this week, <lb/>
the Masons will take charge of <lb/>
their rooms. <lb/>
Sta College. <lb/>
We desire to call n to <lb/>
the advertisement of the State <lb/>
Normal and Industrial college <lb/>
which this <lb/>
Every year shows a steady <lb/>
growth in this institution devoted <lb/>
to the higher education of the <lb/>
women of North Carolina. <lb/>
The college last year a <lb/>
total enrollment of students. <lb/>
Ninety of the ninety-eight <lb/>
ties of the State had <lb/>
in the student Nine- <lb/>
tenths of all the graduates of <lb/>
this institution have taught or <lb/>
are now teaching in the schools <lb/>
of North Carolina. <lb/>
The dormitories are furnished <lb/>
by the State and board is pro- <lb/>
at actual cot. Two <lb/>
appointments to the <lb/>
apportioned the <lb/>
counties according to <lb/>
school population, will be award- <lb/>
ed to applicants the mid- <lb/>
of July. Students wish <lb/>
to attend this institution next <lb/>
year should make application <lb/>
early as possible, as the capacity <lb/>
of the dormitories is limited. <lb/>
for the East Carolina <lb/>
Training school not quite two <lb/>
years ago. The first regular <lb/>
session closed May after <lb/>
doing effective work with a <lb/>
registration of students from <lb/>
all over and central <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
Already the Training school <lb/>
like the State University is feel <lb/>
cramped with its small <lb/>
Seashore <lb/>
Beginning Sunday, the <lb/>
Norfolk Southern railroad will <lb/>
operate Sunday excursion trains <lb/>
between Raleigh and Beaufort. <lb/>
This train will leave Raleigh at <lb/>
a. m., pass Greenville at <lb/>
a m., reach Morehead City <lb/>
at p. m., arriving at Beau- <lb/>
fort st p. m. Returning <lb/>
will Beaufort at p. m., <lb/>
Morehead City at p. m. pass <lb/>
Greenville at p. m., arriving <lb/>
. <lb/>
equipment in face of its <lb/>
. to do gigantic work <lb/>
The first ground was broken in North Carolina. <lb/>
To Late Hob. W. R. <lb/>
At the recent annual meeting <lb/>
of the trustees of the N. C. A. <lb/>
M. college for the colored race, <lb/>
at Greensboro, the following <lb/>
record was made up in the min- <lb/>
attention of the board of <lb/>
trustees is called to the death of <lb/>
Hon. W. R. Williams, of Falk- <lb/>
N. C. It was deemed fit- <lb/>
ting that a memorial page be set <lb/>
apart to the memory of the late <lb/>
member, and that the board go <lb/>
on record as testifying to the <lb/>
faithful, patriotic service of its <lb/>
former member, and as <lb/>
the loss the college the <lb/>
State have sustained in the death <lb/>
of a faithful member and a <lb/>
patriotic <lb/>
Rev. D. A. Windham, of Sara- <lb/>
toga, will preach at <lb/>
Chapel Sunday morning <lb/>
public is <lb/>
. mi these <lb/>
at Raleigh at night. The M <lb/>
round trip fare from all invited t- <lb/>
between and Wilson is services. <lb/>
between Wilson <lb/>
Arthur between Greenville <lb/>
and Chocowinity <lb/>
And it keeps right on raining.<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>